There are many situations where a third party may need to obtain property insurance such as, Estate Executors, Court Appointed Trustees, Dependents, Bailees, Tenants, Persons holding POA, or living wills, etc..
You can not insure the property of another when no insurable interest exists. It would be unlawful to insure the property or life of another where the intent is to gain unduly from another persons loss.
You must have an insurable interest to effect valid coverage. Property must be insured in the name of the owner. So if you want to buy someone else a policy for their property you can certainly pay the bill for some else's property insurance but you can not insure it in your own name. If you insured someone else's home in any name other than the legal property owner and it burned down or suffered some other loss, the Insurance company can not legally pay your claim simply because the property does not belong to you. They would also not have to pay the owner because he or she was not an insured on the policy. The proper way to insure it would be under the name of the legal owner, If you also have an insurable interest in the property, then your name can be added as a co-insured. Should a claim arise, the claim check would be issued under both names.
When you damage someones property you are liable for the costs of that damage. If you fail to pay for the damage you caused and the homeowners insurance company pays the bill, Then you now owe the Insurance company what you failed to pay to the homeowner. Its no different from an Auto Insurance accident. If you were at fault or rather "Liable" for the accident and you fail to pay the bill. The other vehicles Insurance may fix their insureds car and send you the bill. Just because someone else has to pay for the damages you caused does not mean you don't still owe the money. They only paid because you failed to pay timely. Think about this for a minute What if you Robbed a Bank. Naturally the Bank is insured so they will get their money back right away. Does that mean the bank robber gets to keep the money he stole? Of course not. If and When the Bank robber is finally caught he will still owe back the money he stole. But since the bank has already been reimbursed by its Insurer you now owe that money to the Insurance company who covered the theft.
you will have to try and notify them to come get it and keep all records of phone calls and letters sent to them letters must be certified if they do not come get it after all this and at least 30 days it is safe to say it is yours and they would have to take you to court try and get it back and at that point you could charge them storage fee
Do you mean someone else other than the business? It depends on who "someone else" is. If "someone else" is an employee of the business, than you may be able to sue the business under agency law (the employee, in the eyes of the law, is acting as the business). If you mean "someone else" as in someone who has no stake in the business, you will probably only be able to sue that individual. I am assuming you fell on the business' property and that is where you feel you may have a claim against the business. If some action or lack of action on the part of the business or one of its employees (acting as employees) caused your injury, you may have a claim against them. If a third party intentionally injured you on the business' property, you may only have a claim against the business if the business reasonably should have foreseen that a violent act would occur on its property but failed to take steps to reduce the risk (e.g. if you broke your collarbone when you were being mugged and there is a history of such crimes on that property or in the vicinity). You should consult an attorney (which I am not) for a full, professional review of your legal rights and potential claims.
Most policies would be written to restore the policy holder from damage that occurs on the insured property to items that are kept on the property. If you were responsible for the other person's property (you were borrowing it) and you could document the loss, you could argue that you should be made whole. You could, under most policies, seek replacement cost for property damage that was caused by your actions on your property (you drop a bucket of paint off a ladder onto your buddy's car parked in your driveway). This, on some policies, is extended to damage caused by you or occupants of the insured property while riding a bicycle, covered under the policy, off your property. Likewise, damage caused by your dog that gets loose may be covered. There is no way to give a tighter answer than "Maybe". You need to discuss the specific incident with your homeowners' claim adjuster. You may need to have notified the insurance company of certain things beforehand. It is unlikely that your homeowners' policy will pay for a 'big-ticket' item unless you had itemized it beforehand e.g., you are storing your buddy's car in your garage and the garage burns...if you didn't notify that you were storing the car, you may be on the hook for it.
Propety Damage covers you if you damage someone elses property. Liability covers you in the event of a lawsuit.
No, the insurance has to be on your car not someone elses.
That is fraud!
um... yeah if your on your parents insurance....... i think
If you owned it, you claim on your insurance.
yes you can but if you wreck and they have insurance their car will be ok but your screwed
Larceny is stealing someone elses property, so your answer is stealing firearms
You home owners liability insurance should cover it.
That depends on the law of your state.
Yes, You are still respnsible for the damage you cause to others. A suspicion that someone elses property may or may not be insured or properly taxed is irrelevant to the fact that you dmaged their property and are legally liable for those damages.
Registration, license plate number and title right?
Most insurance companies will not, they require you to have an "insurable interest" in the vehicle.