and are they to charge by day or hourly?
Yes.
After a car accident, the owner of the vehicle is typically responsible for paying the storage fees.
Then the people will be charged with insurance fraud.
no because the storage fee that the finance company charged you was what the repo company charged on the invoice. the finance company had no other reason to charge storage fee's they did not store it
Yes, you can, and you usually will.
More than likely you will be charged with the accident and may be charged with leaving the scene of an accident. It will be up to the police department to investigate the accident and determine if you did indeed hit the vehicle.
In Oregon, the maximum fee allowed for vehicle storage is $30 per day. This limit applies to vehicle storage facilities and is intended to protect consumers from excessive charges. Storage providers may charge additional fees for specific services, but the daily storage rate itself cannot exceed this cap.
If someone in a vehicle accident is injured or killed, one or all of the drivers involved in the accident may be charged with vehicular manslaughter or felon reckless or drunken driving, depending on the circumstances. The driver charged does not necessarily have to be the one who caused the accident.
I'm pretty sure it's indefinitely Once a customer is given a pick up date (normally that day or the next) anything beyond that can be charged storage fees up until the vehicle is removed. A lot of repair shops have a maximum length of time they will store a vehicle though, and once that is met or exceeded they reserve the right to repossess the vehicle to cover storage fees.
In New Hampshire, the maximum fee allowed for vehicle storage is $15 per day. This rate applies to vehicles stored by a towing company or an impound lot. Additionally, the law mandates that vehicle owners must be notified of the storage fees and any changes to them.
Yes! It happened to me in Georgia!
He was charged with DWI and vehicle homicide and his license was provoked till he turns 21