Maybe, it is not possible to give an exact answer without knowing the state of residency. States establish the laws pertaining to the repossession of vehicles and other such creditor actions.
its not
ask Micheal Jackson
YES, if they have the folks, ect. to do it. A lot of note lots do so.
The bank's repossession of their house left the family with no place to live.
yes it can be done
You cannot move a car that is not yours from where it has been parked. You might have to look for the owner and let him remove the car. If you're talking about repossession agents, they are NOT allowed to enter or move any vehicle other than the one they are there to repossess. You can move that car if you want to go somewhere immediately you can call up a lifter and lift that car up and move your car.
As long as the parked vehicle is parked properly and not illegally parked in any manner, then the vehicle that rear-ended the parked car is at fault. Now if the parked car is sitting illegally (such as double parked or parked in a no parking zone, etc.) then the parked car is at fault or even both the parked car AND the car that hits it are BOTH at fault.
There may be local ordinances that don't allow it. In most cases a car is not considered a habitation and they will make you move.
Auto insurance
The car that rolled into the parked car is at fault.
It would be the car who had parked illegally because he was not parked in a legal spot.
If a car is parked (so it wasnt moving, standing still), the other car is in fault.