The car will be carried or thrown some distance, usually not very far, and will likely be a total loss. Any occupants are likely to be injured or killed.
The car would be taken up in the air and destroyed and if your in the car then the chances of living is moderate
YOU DIE
it will burn into pieces
Unfortunately many animals do die in tornadoes, depending on the strength of the tornado. Animals will naturally hide, and I would imagine that they generally make it through such situations because most are quite small and obviously can't get caught in a car or a collapsing house when a tornado strikes, and certainly those that can hide underground probably come out unscathed most often.
you will have to sue them because it is your car not there's
Nothing really happens to the person in a car when the vehicle gets struck by lightning as long as they remain in the car. Once a person touches a metallic part of the car and the ground at the same time, they run the risk of electrocution.
the motor gets lubricated.
Get to a nearby sturdy building if possible. If you have no access to shelter and the tornado is in the distance driver perpendicular or diagonal to the tornado's path depending on what the road allows. If the tornado is getting close get out of the vehicle and lie down in a ditch or depression. Do not seek shelter under a bridge.
You will have to pay fines if your car gets impounded for no insurance, registration, and inspection in PA. You will have to registration before the car is released.
it gets damaged the authorities remove and impound the vehicle.
In most states they auction it.
To a car? It overflows and the junk gets everywhere.