yes, as the company is a legal entity, and it can be sued by the director if the shareholders of a company use the company as the alter ego of the shareholders.
can a bank sue its director for non payment of loan
Yes as long as you provide proof he is liable..
yes...
yes but only if it is a company fault and not your own.
This depends very much on the size of the company. You can be a managing director of your own company that just employs you, so not as much pay as, say, the managing director of ICI.
The tenses of "sue" are sue, sued, suing. I will sue the company. She sues everyone. (or She sued Tom.) He will be suing the company.
Easy, you go to company and sue it.
A director can borrow money from his/her company. So theoretically, borrowing money to help a director to buy or sell own shares is possible. Because, by definition we know that a company is an artificial being. So, there may be relationship between a person and a company or more precisely a director and a company; there is nothing to do "How that money will be utilized by that director." The most important question to the lender will be whether he/she get back the money or not, what to be done with that money is not a primary query for the lender. But company law of a country may or may not accept that.
Director's Company was created in 1982.
ask them
yes a jewelry company can sue someone with good cause.
Usually one cannot sue their own company if the accident was a fault of their own. If someone else hit you and caused you to hit the pole, the other person's insurance would be liable.
Very unlikely, there is no blacklist of those who have sued an insurance company.
yes. you can sue an at fault driver if his insurance company refuses to pay your claim. it would not be proper to sue the insurance company.