Yes, if the hit-and-run driver is eventually known, if you suffered personal injury, you may sue for damages over and above what your insuror will pay you for. If it only resulted inproperty damage to your car, usually it is your insurance company who will handle it.
yes
Insurance companies which have car insurance policies usually have information on car accident compensation. Also law firms which handle cases like this probably have information.
You'll need to file an accident report, then notify your insurer of the loss occurrence. If your have collision or uninsured motorist coverage on your policy, your insurer can handle it for you. Your insurance insurance company pays you, they would then seek subrogation from the at fault driver.
Probably, if you were insured 2 years ago.
Yes you can. that is why you have to trade insurance information when an accident occurs. They will handle it from there and will most likely want to do an investigation.
Let your insurance company know everything that you know about the accident and about what the other person's insurance company has proposed, and then let your insurance company handle the rest. If the other person was 100% at fault for the accident, your insurance company has a very powerful incentive to reject the counter-party settlement offer of a 50/50 split. Let your insurance company know everything that you know about the accident and about what the other person's insurance company has proposed, and then let your insurance company handle the rest. If the other person was 100% at fault for the accident, your insurance company has a very powerful incentive to reject the counter-party settlement offer of a 50/50 split.
It depends. Parking lots are private property so the usual rules of the road don't apply. In some states it is 50-50 as far as who's at fault, because both drivers have a responsibility to watch for other drivers. Do not admit fault and let the insurance companies handle it.
You can use the term "insurance associate" in a sentence like this: "The insurance associate helped customers understand their policy coverage and file claims efficiently."
it depends on what property you were in. if it was private business property, and damaged your car. it is possiable that property owner is liable for the damage. best way to handle this kind of situation is let your insurance agent or provider to deal with it. they will consult with both parties and determine who's fault it is.. asian623 http://www.myspace.com/scionturboracing
Let your insurance company/agent handle the claim--they will collect from the other insurance if there is a valid claim. You'll need a police report.
yes, do it NOW.......waiting will only cause you problems, be honest and your company will more than likely handle this..........