Being untruthful may be reason to pay a claim, but it may. I would ask a question that was more specific.
The present perfect tense of "lie" as in to not tell the truth is "have lied."
You are being lied to because they do not want you to find out the truth.
The person that lied to you about the insurance would have to pay for it. you could even take them to court. If they lied about the insurance on your car, they could be arrested under a small amount.
That's confusing. Well, if he ALWAYS lies, and he said that he lied, would mean he had told the truth though he could have lied so the situation may be a lie
You may still feel guilty because that lie could have hurt someone. That someone could even be you. Telling the truth was the first step. Suffering the consequences is the second. Third: Forgiving yourself. -I disagree with the above. When you lied you did something wrong. Feeling guilty is a result of this. To not feel guilty you have to be truly sorry you did something wrong and ask forgiveness of the person you lied to. Asking forgiveness of God is something I would also recommend, as He doesn't hold with lying, and is more important than the person you lied to.
If they find out you lied they can deny the claim.
Tell them the truth, apologize, and except the consequences
tell my friend sorry and tell the truth
Maggie always knows the truth. She has a gift for knowing when she is lied to. :)
No, the correct way to spell it is "He lied to you." "Lied" is the past tense of the verb "to lie" (not telling the truth).
You need to understand that if you have been caught in lies, there will be less of a tendency for people to want to believe you. You aren't ENTITLED to have people trust you, you need to earn trust. If you have lied in the past, it's reasonable for him to not trust you. Most reasonable people won't.