The closest you will come is an attorney who specializes in insurance and the choice of gender is yours.
It makes no difference. It is still a valid claim, regardless if the other driver has the same insurance as yours. The same laws and regulations apply.
There is no law or statute of limitations for filing insurance claims. The limits are set by the insurance policy, so read yours and see what the time limits are.
I wouldn't THINK that just because you filed a claim against your employer that you would be fired for that alone. An insurance company has literally thousands of claims filed every year, yours would simply be one among many - - UNLESS, they found out that you were exercising some inappropriate internal pressure to have your claim approved.
Sorry, the driver with no insurance can claim of your insurance. He/she has no legal right to lodge such unauthorised claim.
Selling your car with insurance claim pending, will simply null and void your insurance claim. Because your damaged car can be subjected to inspection by the Assessor of the Insurance Co. for assessment of the insurance claim any time.
to claim something is yours. example: my staked his claim by saying the house was his
No it is considered stolen if someone currently has something of yours in their possesion without your permission.
A claim is a liability on part of the insurance company. If a customer makes a claim it means that the insurance company has to pay the customer for the amount is eligible to claim and hence it is a expenditure on the balance sheets of the insurance company.
One can file a claim with Affirmative Insurance by going on the official Affirmative Insurance website. Then one can press the button 'Submit A Claim' to file a claim.
How much increase auto insurance after claim
That's not very likely. The insurance company does not file your claim, they accept your claim notice from you. You have to file your claim with the company, not the other way around.