No, it is a mistake on the companies behalf, not yours.
Get proof from the vehicle department and drop it on your broker's desk.
and are they to charge by day or hourly?
as many days as it is there if the car is there they can charge
When you take a loan out on a car, the company that loans you the money requires you to carry insurance to cover the loss of the vehicle in an accident. If you do not provide them with information, or do not carry insurance, they will get insurance for you, and charge you the cost.
no because the storage fee that the finance company charged you was what the repo company charged on the invoice. the finance company had no other reason to charge storage fee's they did not store it
yes, depends on how long it sits in your car
CAREFUL! You may still be liable for a charge of "leaving the scene." To have had an "accident" generally implies that you struck SOMETHING. What is it that you struck, who owns it, and did you notify them?
Your question makes (2) assumptions. (1) that you were cited and (2) the violation has points. Not all vehicle code violations have points associated with them. Points are only assigned by the state to your driving record (license) upon conviction. When/if your insurance company reviews your driving record and sees the accident (not the points) and that you are listed as unit or vehicle 1 (at fault) then they may charge a surcharge
YES, they are also responsible for items missing from the vehicle, most will cut you a check after some pestering
Officers do not need to see the actual crime in order to make a charge. Just as officers rarely witness the murder cases in which they make arrests, they need not witness traffic offenses if there is sufficient other evidence to support the charge. In the case where a passenger in a vehicle pulled the brake and caused and accident, a charge of careless driving is probably warranted, because the passenger's testimony that he/she operated the brake suggests that the driver was operating the vehicle in such a manner to allow the passenger to have partial control over the vehicle.
Yes, if it was a "true" accident. My wife once backed in one of our cars from the garage and didn't notice the second car was in the driveway.... Yes, stupidity but it happened. It wasn't fabricated a mere distraction. The bad part is that being your own insurance, they will charge you 2 deductibles, one for each vehicle.
Possibly. If you hide the vehicle they could charge you with GTA. Grand Theft Auto. Remember, they own it and you don't.