You should have verified that the guy had his own insurance. Check with your homeowners insurance to see if they will pay--if he doesn't have his own insurance.
Yes you can be responsible for the expenses because you can get in trouble with the law and will have to pay back the money if the engagement was not true to begin with. It can be considered as fraud.
It depends on how it broke. If you or your guest/visitor broke something you must pay for it. If it broke because of normal wear and tear then you're not responsible.
The way you ask the question, one answer is this: When an opera company's expenses exceed its income and money reserves, one can consider the opera 'broke'.
If your mother died without any assets but died flat broke, you are not responsible for her bills. You do not have to pay her bills out of your own money. (You have to pay any expenses you arrange for after she dies. If you buy a funeral you have to make sure it is paid for.) However, if your mother left you money and you are the executor of her estate, you must pay her bills.
digestion
She broke 12 pencils.
That depends -- what broke it?
The Christians broke away from the Temple and from Judaism during the Roman days.
Generally, a parent's estate is responsible, the children are not--even when the children are not broke--, unless the children have committed themselves to pay for the obligation in some other way.
barbaro did not. He broke a back leg.
if you make your property a section 8 property who is responsible for problems that occur on the house
Well if you broke the window you are responsible for it. If someone else did it is not your fault it is the other persons, fault, and you shouldn't really break a window.