Sure, once they have obtained a judgment against the party responsible for whatever they had to pay for, if there is no voluntary payment, they can file a lien on property, turn it over to a collection agancy, in some states even yank your drivers's license.
Yes.
If the collector decides to file suit they must do so by using an attorney licensed to practice in the debtor's state and through the appropriate court venue (usually circuit) in the county and state where the debtor resides.
The exception to this would be a collection's attorney who is licensed to arbitrate unsecured debt. However, a plaintiff receiving an arbitration award would still have to file for and execute a judgment under the laws of the debtor's state of residency.
The insurance policy will be transferred in the name of the new property owner and will be entitled to all benefits against the said policy.
If you have collision coverage on your vehicle you can collect from your insurance company for the damages. You will not have to pay the deductible if you were determined by the insurance company to not be at fault for the accident. They then go after the other insurance company to get the money they paid you back. If you do not carry collision coverage then you need to file with other insurance company, they will then decide who was at fault for the accident if their party was at fault they then pay you for the damages to your vehicle.
You can't unless they tell you who they are insured with. Who a person is insured with or even if they have insurance is a private matter between the insured and the insurance company. Now, if there is an accident and the police come to the scene they will collect that information and put it in the accident report. This is why it is crucial to always call the police to the scene of the accident no matter how much the other person begs to give them a break. Always, always!!! call the police to the scene of an accident. The exception is if the accident is on private property.
if your accident is severe enough and the other person is underinsured - then you could collect from their insurance (must be their policy limits) and your insurance under the "underinsured coverage" or UIM - Underinsured motorist
If you qualify for coverage under the policy.
In most cases, yes.
No, you can't. When you collect from your insurance company, they will pursue the other driver's insurance because the accident wasn't your fault. When your insurance company finds out that you collected from the other insurance company already, they will come after you. It's called double-dipping and it most likely wouldn't end well.
Why would you want to have such? It is illegal to collect twice on an auto accident. Your insurance is based on where you live and I think that would be in one state.
You do not have to reimburse your insurance company if the accident is the fault of the other driver and the claim is made on their insurance. If the accident is the fault of the other driver and their insurance does not cover everything and you make a claim on your insurance for reimbursement, your insurance will subrogate (collect back) from the other company.
If the police report says the other driver was at fault, try to recover from his or her insurance company. If you don't have collision coverage, you can't collect from your insurance company.
Let your insurance company/agent handle the claim--they will collect from the other insurance if there is a valid claim. You'll need a police report.
Repair it make a planter out of it sell it for scrap Without collision insurance you are out of luck unless the accident was the other guys fault, in which case his insurance will pay you for the value of your car and collect the remains.