You must be the owner's personal driver, I guess.
Ask the person who is driving the car who the owner is.
Owner.
The owner's insurance covers the car and usually whomever is driving it. Many people drive cars that belong to someone else. If you are a licensed driver, you'll be covered.
The insurance company. They have in theory bought the car or what was left of it.
one word answer: YES
Who is the owner of the car your adult daughter was driving, you or her? If you, you can both be liable. Her as the driver, and you as the owner of the vehicle
No, the offense (DUI) is Driving Under the Influence (of alcohol) and it applies to the driver of the car not the owner.
The owner of the parked car is at fault if they open their door into traffic. Their insurance should pay for the damages to the driving car.
In California, the registered owner of the car is the primary responsible party, but you can both lose your driver's license for driving an uninsured vehicle, or fell to meet "financial responsibility" i not to mention getting a stiff fine for no insurance in ca.
Unless the car was stolen (and this has been reported), in the UK the car owner will be held responsible unless they can provide the name and address of the person who was driving. However, if someone else was driving (by implication with your permission) the police may also want to check on the insurance that that person had to drive your car.
Yes. The owner takes out the policy and adds on people who drive the vehicle. The owner can be listed on the policy as a non-driver which might make the policy cheaper.
ABSOLUTLY NOT, UNLESS YOU ARE STORING IT BUT NOT FOR DRIVING PURPOSES