Since I don't know all the facts, I can only make an assumption. So I'l tell you what happened to me. I was traveling along a through road and a car came through a stop sign from my right without stopping at the sign. The car struck the side of my vehicle. The driver of the vehicle that ran the stop sign and struck my vehicle was issued a ticket for failure to yield. His insurance company wrote me a check for the damages without question. The other driver was At Fault. Hope this applies to you.
The car at fault would be the one leaving the stop sign because it's failing to yield to the car traveling straight (that is, if the vehicle going straight has no stop sign).
Well, unless you have an excuse YOUR at fault. it would be your fault because you are supose to do a total check arouond your vehicle before you get in
yoo are
You as the driver will be considered the at-fault party, being that cyclists and pedestrians always have the right of way.
Who was at the stop sign first? It is like a four way stop but only two ways. At a 4 way stop, the first vehicle to the stop sign has the right of way. When only the cross-street has stop signs, if one vehicle has stopped and the other is still approaching the stop sign, the first vehicle may proceed, including making a left in front of the approaching vehicle. But once both have stopped, the left turning vehicle must yield.
Usually the person who is behind is at fault. The driver is to keep a safe distance at all times. Rear end collisions are 99 percent of the time the following cars fault.
Stopping, Parking or Standing ProhibitedWithin 30 feet of a flashing beacon, stop sign or traffic-control signal.Source: Ohio BMV- Digest of Motor Vehicle Laws
Was the other vehicle moving or parked? If it was parked or stopped at a stop sign or red light then yes it was most likely your fault. If the person put their vehicle and backed into you then it would be their fault and not yours. There are several different ways that this could have occured with different measures of liability. The question is asked too simply to give you an answer.
There are many variables that insurance companies and police look at to see who is at fault. For example, did the car that got hit run a stop sign or were they speeding at the time of the accident.
The first sign that a heater core is bad is the lack of heat from the blower motor on a vehicle. The second sign that a heater core is bad is water on the floor of the passenger side foot well on a vehicle.
If the traffic signals do not work, it is to be treated as a four-way stop sign. It says so in the vehicle code.
In Canada it's the person backing up that would be at fault considering you were slowing down for a stop sign. If you happened to be speeding and came around a corner and hit the person backing out that is a different story.