For the company vehicle? No. Unless they're one of these glorified sharecroppers known as lease operators.
yes. you can sue an at fault driver if his insurance company refuses to pay your claim. it would not be proper to sue the insurance company.
Only if the truck driver was at fault.
You will continue to pay insurance premium to renew the policy,irrespective of the claim to be submitted after truck accident.
As much as their company decides to pay them.
It might be possible. Depends on the company and their agreement with the finance company.
There are many different pay scales for a CDL truck driver. Much of the pay debate will depend upon whether you do long trips or day trips, drive your own truck or drive a company truck, or the basic contract between you and the trucking company for which you are employed.
The owner of the car is liable for the accident itself and the damage. However, the insurance company might have to pay for it, depending on the owners insurance cover.
It is more likely you will be sued by the insured driver's insurance company. Just because the other driver had insurance, that does not exonerate you from having to pay damages if you are liable.
Walmart is the company that pays the most mileage for a truck driver. States such as California and Texas pay the most.
Let's see if I can follow this. Insurance company A is at fault because of actions caused by driver A. Driver B who is not at fault is injured, but is unlicensed, and Auto B has been totalled. Insurance company A is going to have to pay damages to Driver B for property damage as well as for injuries because Driver A is deemed at fault. The fact that Driver B is unlicensed is a non-moving violation and Driver B will have to pay a substantial fines for these issues.
You do not sue the insurance company. Any suit is filed against the at fault party only. The insurance company will defend their client and pay damages according to the terms of the policy.
This will depend on the type of insurance coverage. The insurance company can decide to go to court and argue that since the driver was uninsured, then they should not be liable for damages.