Yes, if their vehicle was legally parked (or even it were not), and you hit their vehicle. The fact they are uninsured does not obsolve you from your responsiblity to pay for the damages that your negligence caused. That being said, if it were an old car, they may just not care about the damage. I'm sure you have discussed this with them, and provided your insurance information, or offered to pay out of pocket for their damage, so surely they will give you an answer soon.
It depends on the type of insurance, the terms of the contract and the circumstances.
Not against your own insurance.
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.
A medical claim is the application for compensation against a health insurance policy or against another's liability insurance policy for the covered portion of a covered event.
Anytime you make a claim with your own insurance company against someone else's company or their company directly, the company taking the claim by law has to fully verify and investigate the claim being made. Not only that, no insurance company in their right mind would pay out insurance claims without checking them out first.
Probably. Contact your insurance. They may file against your neighbor's insurance.
Generally, a claim can be cancelled. If you do not want the insurance to pay a claim, the company will be glad not to pay it.
no
Of course you can. You will want a lawyer, however.
If you purchased an owner's title insurance policy and now you find the deed that conveyed the property to you was fraudulent you should make a claim against the title insurance AND against the malpractice insurance of the attorney who represented you when you purchased the property. Someone didn't do their job.
This means that a claim has been made AGAINST you. Your insurance company, in most instances, will not pay the third party until they have discussed the claim with you and verified what happened.
A claim...against what, exactly? Is he dead, and you want to make a claim against his insurance? I'd say that is reasonable.