yes you can
Yours
You were driving, you got the ticket. Even if it was a faulty equipment ticket, it will be on your record.
Do you have car insurance? Yours will cover it. Your friend if he is a true friend, will cover the deductible.
Since you are not suppose to even be on the road without insurance, you will get a fat ticket for this and probably have your license suspended. Also, you will have a VERY hard time getting insurance. If you are lucky enough to get insurance, your premiums will be nearly impossible to afford. The other driver's insurance will pay for her own damages and maybe yours, but that will be a battle all by itself.
the person driving the car you are resonsible for making shure everything is working while u are driving wether its your car or not..
If the other driver is 100% at fault his will. If you are at fault both yours and the owner's car insurance are potentially on the hook, yours for driving negligently, the owner's for negligence in entrusting their vehicle to a negligent driver, among other things.
if you park in handicap without the handicap sign if you have it or not is $190. if you park with the handicap sign and its not yours its $290
Nope, once you sign, the car is yours. You can still pay the loan for the car without insurance.
Under most policies, the car owner's insurance will cover you and the damage done to the vechicle. If the fault was yours, their insurance company may request that your insurance pays for some of the damage, or that you pay for the person's deductible.
If it is yours, the ticket and money.
Its YOURS!
Your personal auto insurance will be secondary to the insurance of the vehicle that you are driving (assuming you do not own it and it is not a business vehicle). If you get involved in a car accident while you are operating a vehicle that is -not- yours, then the insurance of that vehicle has to pay first, and if that insurance is not enough (or is not there) then your insurance will kick in. Notice that if you get pulled over by police they will ask you to show proof of insurance on the vehicle (not your insurance.) The law requires all vehicles to be insured, not individuals.