If you are driving a car on British roads without a license then you are also without insurance, you have no right to claim for any damage to your vehicle.
If it was your fault, then regardless of their license status they can still sue you. Their license status only affects their likelihood of getting a citation for driving without a license (and maybe insurance) but it does not affect your liability. You'd still be liable for the accident no matter whether they had a license or not.
Well, the driver who hit the other vehicle would still be liable, but it would be a matter for insurance to pursue, not the police, since the 2nd driver left the scene. Certainly, leaving the scene creates a window of doubt with regard to the damage, but it's not really enough to get the at-fault driver off the hook.
If your license is suspended, you should not be driving any vehicle, including a company vehicle. The company should not allow you to drive.
You are still responsible for her and her decisions Legally the owner of the vehicle is going to be held liable.
It seems logical to me that your personal injuries (bodily injury) would be covered by the third party's insurance still because their vehicle caused your injuries (just llke if you were a pedestrian, etc). As far as vehicular damage, I'm not sure .. I would assume that varies from state to state.
Yes, you may be liable for any damage or injury caused by the new owner, should they get in an accident, if the title of the car is still in your name. You should submit a Notice of Sale form to your local DMV, which will clear your name from the title.
Probably not, but you need to follow the legalities to getting the child support order ended so that you are still not liable.
If you Transferred your NY license to a Florida driver license can still get tickets on your NY license
First of all insurance companies don't cancel policies without notice. Second, it doesn't matter if you had current coverage or not if someone else was responsible for the damage to your car. File the claim with the insurance company that was covering the at fault driver.
depends on individual state laws. were you sighted for anything. more importantly, was he? ask your ins company to be sure, but i'd fight it.
no
Yes you are