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A parked car should not protrude into the traffic lane at all. Get your wheels within 6 inches of the curb and you'll be out of the traffic lane. If you have an oversized vehicle, find off-street parking.
As long as the parked vehicle is parked properly and not illegally parked in any manner, then the vehicle that rear-ended the parked car is at fault. Now if the parked car is sitting illegally (such as double parked or parked in a no parking zone, etc.) then the parked car is at fault or even both the parked car AND the car that hits it are BOTH at fault.
It is your fault.
no matter where a vehicle is parked, the moving vehicle is at fault every time.
The vehicle should be parked in neutral, with the handbrake on.
Any vehicle that was not parked.
depends on whether or not the car is parked well. if the car is parked properly, in the right spot then it should be the car that hit it that is at fault.
yes
Any time a vehicle hits a parked vehicle or other stationary object, the operator of the moving vehicle is responsible.
The owner of the car that caused the damage. They have a duty to engage their parking break.
Yes. You are responsible for parking your vehicle in a way that damage will not be caused to another's vehicle. So say you park on a hill and the vehicle rolls back and hits another vehicle, you are liable.
Parking at O'Hare International Airport is only free if a vehicle is parked for under ten minutes. After that, the rate increases by $2.00 an hour for each hour the vehicle is parked in an O'Hare lot. However, there are economy lots available which provide discounted rates.