You would have to file a claim for both vehicle and pay the deductibles for each vehicle. You cannot use liability insurance on your own vehicle because you cannot be liable against yourself. This prevents people from purposefully hitting their own vehicles.
I am assuming you mean for an injury and there is coverage on both vehicles involved? If you have medical pay perhaps, state laws very. Check with your company. If you mean for the damage to the vehicles I see no way for there to be coverage as a passenger.
A motobike accident claim would be an insurance claim for an accident involving a motorized two-wheel vehicle, such as a motorcycle, moped, or electric bicycle.
Every jurisdiction has their own 'price schedule' for various violations. The question is too vague to be answered here. I think this type of violation is usually cited as a result of an accident between two vehicles.
The accident can appear for up to 3 yrs on your driver license. It usually goes from the actual date of the accident.
In many states you have up two years to submit a claim for accidents. But statues of limitation vary from state to state.
No. You cannot insure a vehicle that you do not own. The exception would be in a family situation where two spouses own two vehicles and insure them on one policy.
when you own two battlefield games, you can claim veteran status
both, there will be two different claims, a comprehensive claim on the theft, (damage that was done by the theif) and a collision claim on the wreck you had when you got it back, and yes both deductibles would apply.....
No, you can not. The only way any additional coverage is effective if purchased before an accident. This means, you're stuck with all expenses if you don't have "comprehensive" coverage.
If the occurrence is not a traffic accident then it will most likely be a comprehensive claim and therefore if you have comprehensive coverage then you will pay your comprehensive deductible. The comp deductible is usually the lower of the two deductibles.
This may result in a situation where each driver will need to file a claim with their own insurance company for the damage to there vehicle and then the two insurance companies may make a decision as to who was at fault at a later date. Sometimes fault is never determined.
States vary in statute of limitation laws. In Georgia it is 2 years from the date of the accident. Meaning you can file a loss claim to the offending insurance carrier any time during that two year period.