It's the driver in #2 who is responsible. He should have steered more safely.
If the property owner or person in lawful control of the property wishes to obtain ownership rights to the abandoned vehicle (Which has been on their property for more than 30 days), the legal owner of the vehicle must be identified. To identify the vehicle owner, the property owner or person in lawful control of the property must request a title and lien search from the Wyoming Department of Transportation.
friction
In most cases, the owner of the trees or bushes is responsible for maintaining them. However, if the overgrowth extends onto your property, you have the right to control it.
The livestock owner is.
No, generally wildlife control agencies will only handle problems with animals on public property. You are responsible to deal with problems on your own property.
If 'you' were at fault, or there was no other party involved (ie: backing into a pole..), then 'you' are. Even if 'you' were on the policy, it only covers damage to other vehicles/property/people, no coverage for dmg to car itself. If the vehicle was in the care, custody, and control of someone given permission to drive it, then that someone is responsible for any and all damage to the vehicle.
you are responsible for your property. with that being said if your tree grows out of control onto your neighbors property then you must pay for the removal and its damaged that is caused.
The executor is responsible for all estate property. They control who has access to that property. It is common for them to collect the keys or have the locks changed to preserve the estate.
Technically, yes - you're supposed to be licensed to even be in actual physical control of the vehicle. However, this is not enforceable on private property.
If it is relative to an auto insurance policy, it for property damage caused to someone else's property. You or someone in control of your vehicle causes damage to anothers property, could be another vehicle, or some other type of property. ( personal liability/property damage) Coll would mean damage to your vehicle due to collision, and Comp would mean your comprehensive coverage for your vehicle for damage due to things like hitting a deer, or hail damage for example.
you control the vehicle
no