You would go to the county court house. I strongly advise finding an attorney to help you though.
You should file your car insurance claim with Geico within 24 hours. You should always call your insurance company as soon as you possibly can.
One can file a claim with Affirmative Insurance by going on the official Affirmative Insurance website. Then one can press the button 'Submit A Claim' to file a claim.
You have 10 days to file a claim with your insurance company.
Yes, you do not need a police report to file a insurance claim.
To file a life insurance claim, a call can be made to the insurance agent of the policy who can help fill out any necessary forms. Certified copies of the death certificate should be submitted with the life insurance policy.
They should not drop you before a claim is settled. If they have contact your state department of insurance and file a complaint.
Only if you intend to file a claim.
That's not very likely. The insurance company does not file your claim, they accept your claim notice from you. You have to file your claim with the company, not the other way around.
You do. You can always file a claim. The insurance company may not honor the claim and may reject it, but they can't stop you from filing one.
You need to file an insurance claim on any accident in which a claim is going to be made on both parties.
It is very easy for one to file an auto accident insurance claim with Progressive Insurance. One can file an auto accident insurance claim with Progressive Insurance by calling a Progressive agent by phone or filling out a form on the official Progressive webpage.
You can file a claim against your insurance company for an action caused by another person with no insurance if you are covered for such an occurance. An example would be if you had uninsured motorist coverage and were hit by someone without auto insurance. However if you want to file a 'claim' against the person directly who has no insurance there is no one to file the claim against. The only alternative here is to sue the person in court.