Answer may depend upon who owned it (you, someone else, partly yours), why you had it (borrowed, entrusted), how destruction occurred (malicious, reckless, negligent, unforeseeable accident), what type of property it was (irreplaceable, valuable to all, sentimental value only, intangible property), and where it occurred (which state/country), among other things.
It is a criminal violation - usually charged as Vandalism or Malicious Destruction of Property.
The answer to this question cannot be known. The presiding judge will have the final answer on this. The person that destroyed the property is probably chargeable with civil contempt of court, which carries no jail time - but also possibly for the criminal charge of destruction of property.
the Valdas reputation was so bad that we called it the destruction of property
Vandalism
yes
burgundy
Intentional destruction of property is vandalism.
The consequences of the destruction of the bison were that Native Americans struggled to survive without their means of clothing, weapons, foots, etc. and were forced onto reservations where they suffered from starvation from the lack of bison.
Graffiti is 'vandalism,' 'destruction of property' and insofar as it pertains to a public school building, 'destruction of government property'
Consequences?æof epidemics include death and destruction. It can also cause fear, panic, and worry in the population which can lead to crime.
Vandalism, destruction of property.
Yes, driving across someone else's grass is trespassing and any destruction would be destruction of property. They could bring suit for both.
Foreclosure results in the buyer losing the property.