Not if they found out.
It provides liability coverage for claims, lawsuits, judgements and legal defense cost for the insured in the event that your product injures or kills some body.
If they murdered the passenger, then there is not much you can do.
almost every company that produces meat. Rarely will you find a company that kills the animals sanely.
Nope! Because your dead!
While it is, strictly speaking, possible the policy contains an exclusion for this sort of death, it's almost certainly going to pay...unless, perhaps, it can somehow be proven that the father acted with intent to activate the policy.
NO Please better state your question. Fair? Fair Plan? Who kills your dog? Who pays for it?
Generally, a person who kills another cannot benefit from the death. For example, a husband who murders his wife cannot inherit from her estate. It would pass to her other heirs. A son who kills his father cannot inherit from his father's estate. A sister who kills her brother in order to get his inheritance will lose her right to benefit from the estate. All the above mentioned murderers must be found guilty in order to be barred from inheritance.
The question can be interpreted in a couple of ways. First, if it refers to life insurance (a type of first-party coverage), assuming that the insured was forthright in completing the application (that is, answering all health and lifestyle questions honestly), and the policy was nonetheless issued, it is likely that that the insurer will honor the policy and pay death proceeds. A situation may be, for example, if the insured dies from liver illness due to over-consumption of alcohol. Alternatively, the question may refer to third-party coverage, such as auto liability insurance. A circumstance that might arise is that the insured is driving while legally intoxicated, has a collision, and kills someone. Many policies have an exclusion for this type of act, because drink driving, if proven, is a crime, tantamount to an intentional act. Liability policies generally cover accidental, not intentional acts, so the insurer may put up a fight over coverage for the occurrence. As an aside, the law of many states is such that drunk driving can give rise to a claim for punitive damages if the insured injures someone, say, in an auto collision. In order to avoid the potential exposure to punitive damages, the insurer may decide to honor the claim, despite the fact that it may have a technical coverage defense based upon the above explanation.
nobody was in the house when it collapsed ......thats how not hard to realize
it doesn't specifically kill 99.99 or 99% of germs but it helps us lot it kills our germs about 55% germs it just say it kills 99.99% germs so people can buy it lot and the shopkeeper will make lot of money or the company man
By killing people. A kill is 10 points but you get extra points for different kinds of kills.
Willy Loman kills himself by crashing his car so that the life insurance money may be used to start a business for Biff