The car that caused the first wreck is responsible for both wrecks for is initial wreck caused the wreck following it.
No, The other persons Insurer is not responsible for the coverages or lack of coverage you decided to purchase from your own insurer.
AnswerIf you were parked and you were exiting the vehicle (car not in motion), the other car is at fault. A parked car with door open or closed is still a parked car.AnswerThis MIGHT be a comparative negligence incident in which both of you may share fault. It depends on several factors: Was your door open all the way before the vehicle drove in? Did you open it the moment the car drove through? Was EITHER party paying attention?
zinkoff runs into a parked car i dont know what page
Answers.com is the company who runs it, but each contributor is responsible for their own contributions.
Answers.com is the company who runs it, but each contributor is responsible for their own contributions.
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.
Each state is responsible for and runs its own unemployment insurance program.
i gess so
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Personally I would sue the person for damages in a civil court for payment of the repair or replacement of the car.
The referee.
You will get a raise. Seriously, was your supervisor driving his/her personal car or a company vehicle. You will need to file the claim with the company that was insuring your supervisor.