Yes, Of course you have to pay if you are At Fault. If take a gun and you shoot somebody on private property you will also have to pay for that? " Yes" . We are always responsible for damage we cause to another, whether accidental or intentional, on private property or public property.
Yes. you are responsible for damage to private property. the owner does not have to have a reflector on the chain. its his and he owns it. ok. what you can do is go to the owner accept responsibility for the damage you caused and offer to replace or pay for it.
The car with coverage appears to be at fault and would therefore be liable to pay for the damage.
Obviously the person who caused the damage is responsible. If I thought my neighbor's homeowner's insurance would pay for my car if it is wrecked on his property, I'd drive it right into the side of his house!
Property damage liability is the coverage section of your liability auto insurance that will pay for physical damage to the vehicle or other property of another person if you are At Fault in an auto accident. This coverage would pay for repairs of the person's car or whatever else is damaged.
Property damage liability is the coverage section of your liability auto insurance that will pay for physical damage to the vehicle or other property of another person if you are at fault in an auto accident. This coverage would pay for repairs of the person's car or whatever else is damaged.
Based on your description the car that backed into the other car should pay for the damages. You can't get a ticket for backing into someone's car unless they were either drunk or had no license, both instances in which police should be summoned.
No Fault insurance ONLY deals with medical injuries to you if you are driving. No Fault has nothing to do with property damage liability. If you hit a parked car, then your Property Damage Liability coverage would pay to repair the parked car and your own Collision coverage (if you have it...it's optional) would pay to repair your car.
Yes, as long as the car is parked on private property. Cars stored on private property and not "in service" are the same as any other property, If the insured runs into your parked car our your house the insurance will pay. That's not quite correct. If the damage was intentional, meaning that the driver of the insured car deliberately struck the uninsured parked car, then the at fault driver's insurance will NOT pay because of a clause in the policy that excludes coverage for 'intentional acts' like criminal activity (which is what this is). So the parked car's owner would have to pursue a civil case against the at fault driver and try to collect against their personal assets.
Yes, unless you can PROVE who it was, or that it was a government car, that hit you.
No, only "comprehensive" coverage would pay for that. Liabiility AKA PLPD AKA property damage and liability ONLY covers other vehicles you may damage in a crash YOU have caused.
They can only pay for the car damages, property damage other than the car, or personal injury. Property damage usually means damage to objects other than cars that were hit. Personal injury is your medical bills.
If you get the car back you have to pay storage, if there was even a pair of sunglasses inside the car they can charge you for property.