yes
No. the trucking company is ultimately responsible not the transportation broker. his job is to get the tuckning outfit jobs, but they have to carry their own insurance.
You can treat this the same way you would treat an accident on the roadway. Ask your insurance broker to contact your neighbor's broker, to settle how the damage is fixed and who pays for it.
No. The carrier only contracted to transport the item - nothing else. They are not liable for any other factors except the safe arrival of the item. Your problem is with the shipper or the broker who arranged the shipment. Check your contract, odds are that you will find this item addressed somehere in the "boilerplate" language.
Punishment for theft: of an indictable offence and is liable to imprisonment for a term not exceeding two years, or where the value of what is stolen does not exceed five thousand dollars
The answer, in most cases, is Yes. The actual circumstances will determine the guilt, if at all, of the broker concerned (as well as the relevant agent if he/she is charged with the misrepresentation). The basic principle is the lack of compliance with the industry's recognized Code of Ethics and Rules of Business Conduct.
No. He would have to be found 'guilty,' 'liable,' or 'at fault' before action could be taken against his license. Before that happens it is just an un-substantiated allegation.
Liable and flyable. I'm not liable if it's not flyable or not reliable!Plyable, Liable,
No, a co signor would not be liable. A co-buyer would be liable.
Bestiality is illegal under Canadian Law. Section 160. (1) of the Canadian Criminal Code states that "every person who commits bestiality is guilty of an indictable offence and liable to imprisonment for a term not exceeding ten years or is guilty of an offence punishable on summary conviction".
the driver and the owner is liable for anything
He is liable for the damages caused to the property.
The driver and the owner is liable.