As a responsible owner, you should always assume that everyone is looking for a reason to sue you. And people can and will sue you for ANY reason under ANY circumstance. That does not mean they will win, but you don't want the hassle. Always crate your dog, whether pit or any other breed, when new people enter your house. An ounce of prevention.................
No, that's what pet insurance is for. you can however sue the attacker.
yes
You can sue anyone you want, But you would lose in this circumstance. You would also be required to cover all the legal expenses and attorney fees for the entity you sued after you lose the case. Homeowners Insurance does not cover auto accident claims, that's what auto insurance is for.
I am a homeowner and have a roommate. Can they sue me if they get hurt on my property?
the standard policy says two years
You can sue anybody you want. Even the President. But in this case, the insurance company did not cause your sons death. You will need to sue the neighbor directly and if he has liability coverage then his insurance company might defend him in the suit.
No you'd have to file your loss notice with the company that insures your car or your medical insurance policy. Homeowners Insurance policies provide no coverage for the automobiles.
HO insurance policies are typically all risk and as such would cover such loss
No. To help with the question...will you sue yourself?
Technically, you do not sue the insurance company. You sue the homeowner on the basis of what the owner may have done to cause the injury. The insurance company is there simply to pay the damages awarded to you by the jury.
As a minor you can not sue anyone, you need your parents to do so. And if you get abused at home you can call the Child Protective service or the police. If the physical altercation cause such damage you need surgery etc it would go on the health insurance your parents have and that you are on.
NO, of course not. It is not possible to liable to ones self. Your homeowners Liability coverage will pay the cost of defending you in court if someone brings a suit against you. It would also pay for certain judgements won against you should the court find you liable. In order to file suit against your own homeowners liability insurance you would basically have to sue yourself. I'm sure that any judge would throw the case out just before he orders you to seek psychiatric treatment.