Unfortunately, parking lots are not covered under municipal or state traffic laws. As such, unless there are definite witnesses or other obvious evidence, insurance companies will tend at assume that no one is At Fault in the accident and each individual will claim their own damages.
To avoid the car from rolling forward.
It is your fault.
They are never parked on the runway . They park on taxiways designated for parking.
When parked.
A car parked alongside a highway at night should have their parking lights on.
you mean valet parking dont they take away your car if you valet parking on the blue??? ^_^
In the parking hardstands.
Assuming the parking lot was open, and the car had every right to be parked there. The owner of the snowplow, and possibly the operator of it would be liable for damages to the parked car.
no matter where a vehicle is parked, the moving vehicle is at fault every time.
It has been suggested that: " Loading zones are usually for delivery trucks or semi trucks delivering goods to the warehouse or store, so if your car was in the loading zone and you were not given permission to unload something you had in the car, then it's your fault for being there in the first place, and if it was just a car going by and it hit you, then they would be at fault as well." However, this ignores the fact that parked cars usually do not "cause" the collision merely by being there, whether or not legal. Otherwise, drivers would be free to collide with anything that gets in the way in violation of any law. No-parking zones are not usually for protecting other drivers from collisions with parked cars, but rather for the convenience of traffic or abutting businesses. Who is at fault if you hit a car at an expired parking meter? Whether a car is legally parked or not, the driver of every other moving vehicle has a positive obligation to pay attention and stop before hitting it! Simply parking illegally will almost never excuse another driver from hitting the parked car. The parking driver has an obligation to the TOWN to obey the signs, but unlike moving violations, has no obligation to other drivers to follow the parking law, with rare exceptions. You can't sue someone for illegally parking on a public street, especially after you crash into them. No obligation, no negligence, no fault, no payment.
They parked it in a parking lot.
In brief, if they can get to it, yes they can.