Rental cars are insured. You can not rent a car without insurance. The insurance will cover the theft so long as the renter is not found to have been involved in the disappearance of the vehicle.
Of course. Customers never return cars CC fraud Cars stolen off the lots Customers cars are stolen Bandit Tow Companies. Customers cc is declined at rtn and no way to pay Just to name a few
Unfortunately - yes, rental cars do get stolen. Most rental comapnies have theft insurance, but usually have some sort of deductible. Rental cars get stolen from customers all the time. If you were to accept the Lost Damage Waiver from most companies, the car would be covered, there is NO deductible. Now if you were to leave the keys in the car, or give them to someone and they took off with the car; you are out of luck. This is correct. LDW/CDW (depends on the state) would cover the car as long as the contract was not violated and as long as it wasn't stolen due to your neglect to protecting the car.
You are fully responsible for any loss or damage to a rental car. If you do not have insurance to cover this or have not purchased insurance from the car rental company, they will go after you for the full cost of the rental vehicle.
Absolutely, if their car is not returned when stated in the rental agreement, the car is and will be reported stolen.
because you are gay
The person who stole the car is at fault. If you are trying to place blame on the parking garage, I suggest you read their parking agreement. I would bet they state clearly they are not responsible for stolen vehicles. If they do not, you may have a case. But you would have to prove they did not use reasonable care in protecting your vehicle. Do you not have insurance?
YOU are responsible for the debt that is secured by the "stolen" car. Be sure to make a police report on the 'stolen" car.
You can report is stolen and hope their homeowners insurance will cover its replacement.
Do you mean an Impound yard or Pay for parking garage? If so, they are but you may have to go through small claims court to collect.
Yes, a friend has his stolen - they took it apart using his tools in the garage and carried it out through the side door.
The mechanic. He should have liability insurance to cover it. A lot of the service tickets have fine print about the shop not being responsible for fire theft, or other damage. So if you have signed a ticket, they may not be responsible.
In CA it's just 5 days after the agreed upon return date.