The ticket is attached to the car, and the owner of the car. We loaned someone a vehicle of ours years ago, and she racked up many parking tickets at a college. Guess who was responsible for the tickets, the owner is. Unless the ticket is handed to you with your name on it, the owner is responsible.
Yes, you can get a ticket for blocking your own driveway if it violates local parking regulations or obstructs emergency access.
Cost of double parking in a school zone is going to depend on the laws in the jurisdiction that issued the ticket. Each city, town and state gets to establish their own penalties.
That will depend on the licensing law in the location that issued the ticket. Each state and community gets to set its own penalties.
No, anyone can own a handicapped vehicle. However, if you wish to use a handicapped parking space you must obtain a permit through the DMV.
Whatever gear will make the vehicle move away from the airplane if it starts to move under its own power with no one at the controls.
yes, unfortunately, you do. The exception is that you will eventually have a warrant out for you. Jail time is the other option.
Cities and towns can set their own ticket prices. In addition, there are different fines for different violations. Parking in a Handicap Zone or beside a fire hydrant usually runs a lot higher than parking too long at a meter. It is not uncommon to find parking fines between $50 and $100 for parking in zones where there is no parking. In addition, your car can be towed away, which may cost another $200 to recover.
That will depend on the specific jurisdiction. Each city, town and state can set their own penalties.
Yes, if you are blocking your neighbor's free access or causing any inconvenience. Even if you own the property you own it subject to your neighbor's right to use it. Neither one of you can park on the driveway so as to block the other party.
You are subject to a ticket for driving without insurance the moment one wheel of an uninsured vehicle touches the pavement of a public road under it's own power.
Both partys are at fault and each party will need to file there vehicle under there own insurance. Parking lot accidents are always share fault unless one of the vehicle was parked, but since both vehicles were backing out at the same time, both partys are at fault unless you get a kind person to admit it was there fault.
One must be the legal age of majority to register a vehicle.