Of course. In fact, place of incident DOES NOT MATTER. The fact is you hit their car on your property, even though whether or not it was your property has nothing to with it. You made the contact, therefore you are liable.
Yes. If someone damages your property, they're liable.
If you rear end another vehicle, you are almost certainly going to be held liable. Being on private property does not affect the issue of liability.
You liable if someone gets hurt on your property no matter what.
You are still responsible for her and her decisions Legally the owner of the vehicle is going to be held liable.
yes.......usually only thing private property has to do with claims investigations is make it more difficult, as no police report will generally be written......if your son is negligent and liable for the loss, he is....private property or no........on your property or not.......if he is negligent, he is negligent and will be liable (you as the gaurdian) for the loss........more info is needed for me to help.......facts of loss...your vehicle or another? who owns vehicle? permission or not to drive? etc....
Yes you will remain liable
it would be the driver/owner of the vehicle...the insurance (assuming there is ins) on the vehicle would be liable for the repair to the fence assuming of course that the driver of the vehicle had the owners permission to drive subject to any exclusions in the policy
Technically, no, it would be trespass. They could be liable for any damages that were caused.
The other person would be liable for damages. This is because owners are expected to keep their animals under control and on their property. If the dog came on to your property, you should not be liable for anything.
A parent is liable of any damages their children do. The car owner is not liable for any damages caused if the vehicle was stolen.
The fault lies with the vehicle that cause the accident. When someone borrows a car, the car owner can be liable because the allowed someone to drive the vehicle. Often this type of accident has to be sorted out in court.
No. The only person who is liable is the person who hit your vehicle.