If there was no contact between cars, then there would have been no damage to the cars. Was a person injured? What did the accident consist of? If nothing was damaged and nobody was harmed, there may have been sloppy or illegal driving, but there was no accident. And if it is a matter of a violation of driving rules (going through a stop light, for example) a police officer can issue a citation, but only if he or she was there at the time and saw it happen.
Contact the authorities in the area the accident occured, surely they will be able to provide assistance.
The other person can sue you because you are at fault for the accident.
Who is at fault has to do with the accident itself not the insurance coverage. A police report of the accident and looking at the proximate cause of the accident help determine fault.
I can only speak for Florida because that is where I live and it is a no fault State. In Florida it really would make no difference to you if the other driver did not inform his insurance company of an accident. Really, you would only have to file a claim with your own company and contact his insurance company after the accident. I would just make sure you have the other drivers info so that you can contact them about the accident.
You should contact your insurance company and let them know. Your insurance company should take care of the rest.
The first step for filling a motor accident claim is contacting your insurance company. The other person in the accident also needs to contact their insurance company.
Your insurance information and contact information would suffice.
After a car accident, one must immediately contact their insurance company to file an auto accident insurance claim, even when the other driver was at fault. Make sure to have all the other driver's insurance information so that the other company can thoroughly investigate.
You can submit it to your own carrier, they will assist you in finding this out, you can contact the police dept, and run the plate, or contact the dmv in your state.
That depends how costly the accident was. If the other driver is uninsured I doubt anything. But if everything is legit and you go get an estimate and your insurance adjuster will discuss that for you.
The word 'neither' is an indefinite pronoun; a word that takes the place of a noun for not one and not the other of two people or things. The indefinite pronoun 'neither' is considered a singular form. Example:Neither of the pedestrians saw the accident.The word 'neither' is also an adjective (when followed by a noun) and a conjunction. Examples:Neither pedestrian saw the accident.The pedestrian could not see the accident, neither could any of the other drivers.
It means neither. It is like the word 'or,' which means either, but it means neither. In grammar, you use it like other conjunction word like 'and' and 'or.'Example:They were neither cheap nor convenient.