Sounds confusing, but there seems to be a fair amount of fault all around. Was car #2 pushing a disabled vehicle onto the highway, or did he rear-end #1 on the service ramp? If disabled, it shouldn't have been on the highway except behind a tow truck (I know, lots of us have done it, but it's still against the law.), so whoever was behind the wheel and the pushing driver were both at fault. And if it was an accident on the ramp, #2 was definitely at fault.
Well it's his fault cause he should have been watching were he was going.
If the umpire or a player suspects that someone has an illegal serve, a Service Judge would be brought to the court for the duration of the match. A service judge is simply another umpire who is trained to identify illegal serves. The service judge watches all the servers and calls "fault" upon seeing an illegal serve. Upon hearing the fault call, the umpire reports that a service fault has been called and indicates the next server and the score.
Has the tire valve stem on your vehicle been pushed in?
Yes, check if your bike tire valve stem has been pushed in.
I have been a client of OCRA Worldwide for several years and can't fault their service. Yes, they are as good as they claim!
Far and away, DirecTV has the highest customer satisfaction rates in the industry. I have had their service since last July and I would concur that they have great customer service. Every time I have called them for just about anything they have been extremely accommodating and have not pushed me into any other products. I have been impressed with the service!
Objects can be both pushed and pulled. When an object moves in a direction away from the force applied, it is considered to have been pushed. Conversely, when an object moves in the direction of the force applied, it is considered to have been pulled.
whoever crossed the center line and made contact I don't think "being passed" has ever been the cause of an accident. Of course the car that had the blowout and swerved is at fault.
The umpire or line judge simply calls the ball out. They don't have to explain anything, but occassionally a player may ask the chair umpire to confirm the call. In major tournaments, there may be a challenge system in place that allows players to challenge a chair umpire's or line judge's call using replay cameras, but even then, the umpire doesn't have to explain anything, they just say whether the point will be replayed or they call a new score.
If a fault occurs in an area where rock layers have been folded, the type of fault it is likely to be is thrust faulting. This type of fault will have the ground on one side of the fault, move up and over adjacent ground.
The alpine fault is located in New Zeland. There have been no major earthquakes on the main portion of it. The fault mover 30mm a year!
No, since UFOs have never been proven to exist, no highway is needed for landing.