Call the police.
Towing driver.
You should discuss the situation with an attorney who can review the details and explain your liability, if any. The attorney will want to know if you allowed the driver to use the car regularly or if you reported it stolen. If you helped to buy and register a car knowing it was for an unlicensed driver you may have some liability.You should discuss the situation with an attorney who can review the details and explain your liability, if any. The attorney will want to know if you allowed the driver to use the car regularly or if you reported it stolen. If you helped to buy and register a car knowing it was for an unlicensed driver you may have some liability.You should discuss the situation with an attorney who can review the details and explain your liability, if any. The attorney will want to know if you allowed the driver to use the car regularly or if you reported it stolen. If you helped to buy and register a car knowing it was for an unlicensed driver you may have some liability.You should discuss the situation with an attorney who can review the details and explain your liability, if any. The attorney will want to know if you allowed the driver to use the car regularly or if you reported it stolen. If you helped to buy and register a car knowing it was for an unlicensed driver you may have some liability.
It is currently not legal for a driver to drive around in a damaged car. If caught by a police officer, the driver can face stiff penalties including a fine or confiscation of their vehicle.
The term "car driver" is not possessive. A "car driver" is compound noun for a person who is capable of driving a car.Example: We should hire a car driver to show us the sights.The possessive form is "car's driver", the driver of the car.Example: The car's driver did not stop at the stop sign.
yes you can sue anybody. but it all depends on how badly you or your car was damaged and if the other person has insurance.
No. The driver of the car that threw the rock has no way of knowing that his car caused the accident.
When car A has shockproof glass and car B has normal glass as their window pane and when they meet with an accident and both cars windows are damaged, car A's driver may not get injured but the driver in car B will get injured
The driver of your car. The person opening the door is at fault, but in this case she's only nine, so the fault goes to the driver, who should have controlled the child. OR... the idiot who failed to realise that the door was open!
She didn't know that Eric was the driver of the car. He was helping his dad escape and she was trying to stop the car not knowing that Eric was who she was shooting at.
yes
The other parties liability should if it was their fault. Your liability should cover the vehicle you damaged.
If you have collision coverage on your car, your insurance co will pay for your damages. However, if you don't have such coverage, you're stuck with all bills.