No. This is something that you did on purpose and the damage is not caused by a "covered cause" under the terms of the policy. Generally it must be damage caused by one of the covered causes and must be sudden and accidental.
It depends on the insurance.
NO
Liability would only cover the insured for his damage to the property of someone else. Your insurance will have to cover the damage to his truck.
You need insurance to protect yourself from a lawsuit by private people. Since you are not dealing with vendors they nobody will probably ask you to see a copy of your policy but without insurance you are not covered. The answer would basically be the same to "do I need Homeowners insurance if i don't have a mortgage".
There are many concerns for the animal welfare involving livestock hauling. The well-being of the animals can be significantly damaged by hauling animals in large quantities. Also there is concern for health problems linked to the hauling of livestock.
Nothing, you are at fault. If you were implying that since they didn't see you, they can't prove it was you, then the obvious proof is in the damaged vehicles and with any witnesses. Just don't admit fault, let the police do that and the insurance companies can fight it out.
hauling of provision
Trains are designed for hauling heavy loads.
You might try an insurance company named Transportation Casualty in Ft. Lauderdale, FL. They insure a lot of sand and gravel haulers.
This will depend on year and brand of truck, a driver record, number of miles truck will be driven in a year, and type of freight a driver will be hauling
An average commercial trucking insurance rate is hard to pin point without more information. The price will depend on the nature of the trucking business, the size, age, make and model of your truck as well as how many drivers there will be and what their level of experience and driving history is. For instance; if you are hauling hazardous material or very expensive cargo you will have a different rate than someone hauling light, inexpensive, stable goods.
General liability refers to products completion and labor, while cargo is specific to transportation, such as hauling equipment or goods. The cargo insurance would kick in if there was damage to the goods in transit. General liability would cover goods in your warehouse or on the docks.