Want this question answered?
A vehicle on public property needs a license. If you have it parked on your own property, it does not have to be licensed.
Depending on what year the vehicle, if the vehicle year is pre-cat it could cause a back fire under deacceleration. If the vehicle year is post-cat it could cause false 02 readings.
You could purchase a book of vehicle templates from impact or ingram and calculate it from the drawings
Half of a building could fall of on you and you dieYou could fall into the crack and burn you to death.
Luck.
That one could go both ways. If you have collision coverage on the vehicle, it could be covered as part of the tow expense. However, your liability coverage is responsible for repairing the claimant's building.....and that would include removing the vehicle from their building!
You sure can! The only thing you have to prove is that the property (either the land or the building) forced you to drive on it and then made you get into an accident and if the owner knew the property was going to do this and did not prevent it they could be "negligent". So for example, you are driving down the street and the land moved one of its buildings into the street forcing you to drive onto the property where you had the accident and you then struck a different building on that property, and the owner new the land was going to do this and that the building was planning on causing your vehicle damage, but then chose to do nothing about it you could sue them.
The vehicle could fall on you, hurting you or the vehicle. you could damage the vehicle. You can damage the building housing the lift. It could break while the vehicle is in the air and you will have trouble getting it down.
With permission of the owner of the vehicle and the property, you could do so without legal consequences. However, if you did something to damage that vehicle or caused damage to property with that vehicle, insurance would reject the claim.
They have the right to enter any property to secure the vehicle provided it does not interfere with keeping the peace and doing so does not cause damage to the vehicle or other property. Keep in mind however that if you are the one making noise about them repoing the vehicle, they are not the ones notkeeping the peace, you are. As such, you could be the one arrested. Wouldn't that be insult to injury?
YES In most jurisdictions, In some places (where I live ) the police must be there and observe to protect both reposseser and property holder.It is illegal in most places to hide the vehicle or attempt to block the repossession of a vehicle.So I (If I were doing this) could enter onto or into a persons property and if that person is unavailable or unwilling to move a blocking vehicle I can move that vehicle taking "REASONABLE"care to not do any property damage.I can then take the target vehicle.
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.
No. It is a violation to "operate" a motor vehicle on suspended licenses. It is illegal to drive the vehicle even on a test drive. Now that is if you were to drive the vehicle on a public highways, roadways, and streets. You could drive the vehicle around the parking lot (if private property) or on some one's private property is legal.
Yes. But you could potentially sue for any damage caused.
They don't give "minimum" weights for commercial vehicles. Theoretically, you could classify a motorcycle as a commercial vehicle if you were using it to carry property.
A vehicle on public property needs a license. If you have it parked on your own property, it does not have to be licensed.
Karl F. Benz is credited with building the first gasoline powered vehicle in 1885-86.