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the first step in suing for medical neglegence is to determine if the patient was actual neglected followed by seeking legal council.
Findlaws.com and using google.com to search local court rules (rcw)s
She is suing you and you must notify your insurance company of the lawsuit. They will pay, make an offer to settle or defend you.
The tenses of "sue" are sue, sued, suing. I will sue the company. She sues everyone. (or She sued Tom.) He will be suing the company.
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It doesn't matter. You are suing there insurance company not the company.
Unless you sue in a contributory negligence state (meaning if the plaintiff was in any way at fault they are not entitled to relief), an unlicensed driver may sue the other party for negligence. Depending again on the state you are suing in and if they are a pure comparative negligence (ny) or modified comparative negligence (nj) your relief will possibly be reduced by your amount of fault. If in a modified comparative negligence state, if you are more than 50% at fault you are barred from recovery.
Sent them a letter which clearly states that will not pay anything to the company you are suing. According to the law you are entitled to do so (IF you have sent the letter, if you didn't do so you will still have to pay!!).
Yes. But it is very unlikely to happen because of the culture. A Dominican child wouldn't ever think of suing their parent for something like this.
Allow me to explain a complicated law in simple terms: parental immunity bars a child less than 18 years old from suing the parents for negligence or intentional torts.
someone should
The amount of money that someone can sue for totally depends on what they are suing for and who they are suing. There have been many cases in which a company or person has been sued for millions of dollars.