I would ask, or ''wander'' by when I saw their vehicle out, if there is damage that 'matches up' with the damage to your vehicle I'd ask them about it.
Measure the height of the damage on your car and check the neighbors car for damage at that height. If you cant find any, you dot have any evidence on which to ake a claim.
Yes.
The person who caused the damage.
Yes. You are responsible for parking your vehicle in a way that damage will not be caused to another's vehicle. So say you park on a hill and the vehicle rolls back and hits another vehicle, you are liable.
If you hit a parked car, the deductible applies to your vehicle, not the parked car. The other vehicle is covered by your liability coverage and there is no deductible attached. You pay the deductible on the repairs to your vehicle, usually to the shop after the work is completed, the insurance company handles the balance directly.
A car is generally more susceptible to hail damage when parked, as it has no mobility to evade the hail. When driving, the speed can help reduce the impact of hail, as the vehicle moves through the storm rather than remaining stationary. However, if the hail is particularly large or the storm is severe, even a moving vehicle can sustain damage. Overall, parked cars are usually at a higher risk for significant hail damage.
driver of parked vehicle
neighbour
Talk to your neighbors, anyone see anything? Look for damage to vehicles in your area that will ''match up'' with the damage to your vehicle.
If the other vehicle was parked, there was no other driver to have license, insurance or registration. The driver who hit the parked vehicle is at fault and is liable for all damages to the parked vehicle.
As long as the parked vehicle is parked properly and not illegally parked in any manner, then the vehicle that rear-ended the parked car is at fault. Now if the parked car is sitting illegally (such as double parked or parked in a no parking zone, etc.) then the parked car is at fault or even both the parked car AND the car that hits it are BOTH at fault.
Yes, police can tow a vehicle parked on private property if it is illegally parked or if it is obstructing traffic or posing a safety hazard.