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It should go on your neighbors insurance, he's the one whos responsible for the damage.
Technically, you can put a water trampoline on land. However, it is not recommended as you might damage it. Nobody wants a hole in their water trampoline.
If in California your neighbor is responsible for any damage that his tree has done to your property.
If by trampboarding you mean using a skateboard deck on a trampoline then no. It very well could if the wheels were attatched, but generally using only the deck will not harm the trampoline.
the owner of the gazebo if they were negligent the maintenance of it. Your homeowners insurance would cover the damage. However, some insurance companies provide up to $500 for property damage to coverage others absent of liability.
Your homeowners policy will cover this under personal property. You must be careful though...most policies (in New York) exclude coverage for liablilty for a tramopline. You may be opening doors for a cancellation.
No.
Where I live:Rule 1: car or person causing the damage is responsible.Rule 2: In the case of a hit and run where the at fault driver can not be caught your insurance needs to cover the damageRule 3: The owner of the car park is not at fault ever UNLESS you can show how "He" was negligent and contributed to the damage.
Internal engine damage.
I suppose that could happen if the wind caught it and blew it into your neighbors car.
yes it does for HQ trampoline its about 5-10 years and for a Cheaper trampoline it would be about 3-8 years. Also it depends on how you use it like bouncing a trampoline with multiple people who are very heavy can shorten its life also if you jump on it when it has water can severely damage the Mat and the stretch out the springs.
Yes. I know it's difficult to keep an eye on your children every minute of every day. But the fact remains, a child obviously cannot be held financially responsible for causing damage to someone else's property. So the burden falls to you. It's your child, so it's your responsibility, regardless of how attentive or inattentive a parent you are. I mean, it's certainly not your downstairs neighbors who are responsible for the damage! You can say "it's not my fault, my kid did it" all you want, but that argument falls apart when you consider that you are expecting your neighbors to pay for the damage done by some kid they don't even know.