In the US, you can be sued by pretty much anybody for pretty much anything. Whether the suit will be successful or not is up to the court; it may be dismissed for insufficient grounds, for example. You should contact an attorney with the details in order to get a better answer.
No
If you own or partially own the car, yes, you can be sued also.
No. It was abolished by the Missouri Supreme Court in 2003 as an antiquated concept in law.
because her first husband ray j, his sisters sued her as revenge for breaking up with him
Dred Scott sued for his freedom after moving to Missouri with his owner. The case, Dred Scott v. Sandford, reached the U.S. Supreme Court in 1857 and resulted in a decision that further entrenched slavery in the United States.
They didn't get sued.
If you anyone money, you can be sued.
yes
Yes.
A borrowee is an individual or a company that borrows money from a borrower, though this term is not correct. The grammatically correct term is borrowed.ex: XYZ lent money to ABC. XYZ sued the borrowed because it was not receiving its capital back.Although a word 'borrowee' is not a correct term, it is sometimes used in financial world of business to describe an entity that an individual or an institution has 'borrowed' money from, NOT the one borrowing who is the 'borrower.'example:A 'borrower,' out of desperation, 'borrowed' money from a 'borrowee' with high interest rate and caused himself to fall into deeper financial trouble.Also, 'borrowed' is not grammatically correct term of either a 'borrowee' or a 'borrower,' but is only a past form of a verb, 'borrow.'
If husband on ss, and has hospitial bill, can they garnish wife incom