Well, 1964 Impalas rear window seals become weathered and then it will fill the car with water as it runs into the cab and under the back seat. The water source may also be a front windshield seal worn out at the bottom too. Or you actually you may have a weather seal on a door that is partially missing damaged or just destroyed. So somewhere along the door perimeter that rubbery seal thing may need to be patched somehow or replaced. It actually may have just come unattached through a person contacting it when getting in and out of the vehicle. Maybe just push or work it back into place? Check the door that doesn't leak to see how the seal is 'properly' placed. Good luck.
PS Also, some older cars and probably not a 90's Chevy, sometimes when they have a leaking 'cab heater'core in earlier cars will spew h2o into the cab under the dash onto the front floor as well. Usually passenger side of the interior front.
That depends. If the renter has their own flood insurance then the renter could certainly file a claim on it they have a flood loss. If your asking can the renter file a claim on the Property owners flood insurance then the answer would be no. The owners flood insurance would be specific to the owners property, not property belonging to a tenant.
"There is a flood."
The opposite of a flood would be a drought.
They loved seeing the Nile flood because it would make their dirt into soil and it's great for planting plants.
egypt... where else would it flood:)
no flood control would be stoping a flood a flood plainis land that is covered by water during a flood,formed from sediments depsited by a river
It was believed that the gods gave the pharaohs their powers to make the Nile flood for the farmers.
That would be called a flash flood.
yes, it does
it would be helpful if we knew which great flood you mean...
because they are weak and they can't build stuff
If you live in an area that gets a lot of flash flood and flood warnings I would suggest getting it.