==Complex question== There are a lot of unknowns in your question. One is left to wonder why you wouldn't eagerly call the police and/or file a report yourself after the other party (call him Party B) fled the scene, whether you were required to or not. One can only assume that there was little or no damage to your vehicle. We can also assume that the configuration of the accident was not favorable to Party B, which is why he was in a hurry to scram. (Or perhaps he wasn't where he was supposed to be at the time of the fender-bender and didn't want an official police report to document his location.) Whatever the case, if there was visible damage to Party B's vehicle, then you should have been concerned about potential reports and claims -- false or accurate -- he could make against you. But to try to answer your question, you may still be liable for the damage you caused to Party B's vehicle, but his fleeing the scene may mitigate substantially his claim against you because, by leaving, he assumed the risk of something happening to his car -- and intervening event that would break the proximate-causation chain. Further, leaving the scene of an accident with visible damage is a criminal act in some states and is, per se, negligent, which may also militate against him.
If you recall lessons that help you through life; don't ever touch another persons' stuff, especially another man's wife.
The driver of the borrowed car, if at fault, would be liable in this case. If no report is filed, either with the police, or their insurance company, most likely no one would be held liable.
Police are liable for the damage that they do to your car. You can file for damages against the police department to get your money.
If no drugs were found and you were aquitted completely, then they are liable for damages.
No, but they can write "refused to sign" if they like.
The person who hit you if it wasn't your fault.
yes
The insurance adjuster denied Mack's claim, stating that according to the police reporting naming Mack as the cause of the accident, they were not liable to pay his claim.
Contact the police.
yes,........ tickets are only issued if the police observe an infraction
you are held liable by the local police jurisdiction in your area of travel with the motor vehicle ... please consult the local police department
Hopefully a police report was filed at the scene of the accident where you were allegedly hit. (?) Ask to see the owners police report of the accident where they claim you hit them. Always have a police report when any accident occurs - even if the car got a tiny itty bitty ding. An accident is an accident, and to protect your rights, you need to call the police and have that police report filed. If none of that exists, then it becomes your word against another persons and can only be solved in a courtroom. In normal situations, the vehicles owner is held liable for the actions of anyone who drives their car.