You can only sue if you breach the limited tort threshold.
First do you have causation to sue? And if you do, the venue is decided by where the tort took place. So what ever happened, was in another county, then the venue (trial) will have to be held in that county.
Yes. Theft is a tort (a civil wrong) known as conversion or misappropriation.
tort law
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.
if you submit a claim through what they consider proper procedure, assuming you have coverage according to your policy, and they deny your claim, then yes. you can sue for actual damages. depends on tort vs limited tort in your policy if you can sue for pain and suffering. they should pay for it as long as your policy covers hit and run and you don't have a cap.
The Federal Tort Claims Act permits private parties to sue the United states in a federal court for most torts committed by a persons acting on behalf of united States.
yes a jewelry company can sue someone with good cause.
You need to be more specific about where the loss occurred. If it happened in a no-fault jurisdiction, your right to sue is typically more limited than in a tort jurisdiction.
The US government is protected by "Sovereign Immunity". In 1946 Congress passed The Federal Tort Claims Act giving individual LIMITED right to sue the government.
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.