Employee Liability Act
Good Samaritan Law
The law that provides accident insurance for workers is typically workers' compensation laws, which vary by country and state. These laws require employers to provide insurance benefits to employees who are injured or disabled as a result of their job. Workers' compensation covers medical expenses, lost wages, and rehabilitation costs for employees who are injured on the job.
Yes collision insurance is in fact required by law. This will protect the other person if you are at fault for an accident.
In California, the law is, if you in fact have an accident in California without insurance, and the dmv finds out about it, your license will be suspended for 1 year.
Vittorio Colasso has written: 'L' assicurazione infortuni' -- subject(s): Accident Insurance, Law and legislation, Accident insurance
You are subject to liability insurance requirements whether or not an accident occurs. An accident has nothing to do with liability requirements. You are required to have liability insurance of at least the minimum required by your state before getting into a vehicle and driving it. Driving is what triggers the law.
nope.
Liability insurance for drivers is a requirement in the state of Mississippi. The other party involved in this accident does not have insurance. I do have liability insurance. The accident was not reported although law enforcement was called and an accident report was completed. The other party now wants me to fix her automobile. What are my rights in this situation?
A minimum of $20,000 per person and at least $40,000 per accident in liability insurance in case they cause an accident that caused bodily harm is what is required under the Connecticut law.
Law that requires workers to contribute to social security and medicare.
Drivers become subject to the liability insurance law when accident damages amount to a state-specific threshold, commonly set at around $500. This means that drivers must carry liability insurance coverage to pay for damages they cause in an accident, once the threshold is reached.
Yes! You sure can! You have already broken the law to drive without insurance. . . They by YOU yourself causing the accident, you are definitely liable for license removal. --Feefhh:myspace.com/feefhh