You sure can! The only thing you have to prove is that the property (either the land or the building) forced you to drive on it and then made you get into an accident and if the owner knew the property was going to do this and did not prevent it they could be "negligent". So for example, you are driving down the street and the land moved one of its buildings into the street forcing you to drive onto the property where you had the accident and you then struck a different building on that property, and the owner new the land was going to do this and that the building was planning on causing your vehicle damage, but then chose to do nothing about it you could sue them.
the person that owns the car
To find out if a person owns property in Idaho, you can do a property search. This can be done using an online property search engine. Or you can visit the courthouse in the locality you are looking and search the property records there.
Either the cars owner or the insurance company who paid for the totaled vehicle
The property inside the home is taken away by the person who now owns it. The person who owns the home could offer to purchase the property (which saves a lot of moving and buying replacements) or should arrange a time for it to be collected.
Ownership is the legal term that describes the property a person possesses.
the person who owns the car
When a person with no next-of-kin dies owning property, their property 'escheats' to the state.
An estate can be two things: all the property a living person owns and all the property a person owns at the time of their death. Once a decedent's estate has been probated the heirs-at-law or beneficiaries under the will become the owners of that property.
A landlord is a person that takes care of a property. An owner is the person that owns the property. This can be the same person. An owner can also hire a landlord.
the representation of the worldly goods and property a person owns and what property and goods are left after a person is deceased
the representation of the worldly goods and property a person owns and what property and goods are left after a person is deceased A+
If a person builds a home on land that they don't own, the home will become the property of the person who owns the land.