It does not pay for your vehicle. You would have to have collision insurance. In a one vehicle accident, liability only would come into affect if you caused damage to another person's property.
The scilly isles in Britain they just off the coast of Cornwall
If the object came off the other vehicle there liability coverage will pay for the damage. If it came off the road and was just kicked up by their vehicle then they are not liable for the damage. In that case it is called road hazard and would not be covered by the other parties insurance. Your insurance will pay for it if you have physical damage coverage on your vehicle.
There is no difference between Contingent Liability and Off Balance Sheet Liability.
In California, anyway, you need full insurance coverage on a car the whole time it is financed. After its paid off, you can drop a bunch of the coverage and just carry liability.
You are required to have at least Liability Coverage for the vehicle before ytou drive it off the lot!
Absolutely. Even if you pay cash for the vehicle you will need to prove that you have liability insurance in order to legally drive off the lot. If you are financing the vehicle you will have to show that you have liability and physical damage coverage before driving off the lot. The dealer will contact your insurance agent to verify that the coverage is in force and will add the vehicle to your policy with the coverage that they require and that you want.
It is possible to write off a liability. When doing this, you need to write it off as 'other income'.
If your ford quits while driving and you cant get it to restart, try pushing the fuel shut off button. This is usually located on the passenger side of the vehicle in the floor board area. in cars the most common place is in the trunk compartment. square box with a button. this is an emergency switch that shuts the fuel off to your vehile if you wreck to keep the vehicle from catching on fire. usually the only time it would shut your fuel off other than a wreck is if you hit a hard bump or jolted the vehicle some how, or the switch may be bad and need replacing which rarely happens.
No
If you wreck your vehicle, the insurance company pays you off and you give them the title for the vehicle. The insurance company then turns around and sends the vehicle to an auction (usually for dealers and wholesalers only) and sell it. Most of the time a salvage company will buy the car for parts and the insurance company can recoup some of their money.
The vehicle behind you. Even though your car made contact with the front vehicle, if you're forced into the front vehicle, you can't be held liable. The adjusters who investigate liability on this claim will definitely want to get the statement of that front driver, because liability essentially hinges on what he or she says. If, for instance, the front driver says he felt just one "bump," it means the middle vehicle was pushed into him. If he says he felt two "bumps," it generally means the middle vehicle rear-ended the front vehicle, bounced off, and was then pushed back into the middle vehicle by the rear vehicle. (This isn't always true, however, because some collisions are hard enough that a middle vehicle can bounce back and forth).
the fan stays on for about 5 mins on alot of vehicles...if it cuts off eventually then it is normal, if it just stays on indefinatly then there is some electrical problem.