Wiki User
∙ 12y agoFinancial Responsibility
Wiki User
∙ 12y agoEvery state has their own laws covering insurance and liability for damages.
(OSHA)
Just like any other accident,, You are responsible for the damage you caused. Either file a report with your insurer so they can cover the damage you caused, or pay them yourself for the Damage. It's your choice. The law requires you be Financially Responsible.
because he may have any injuries
to make managing files financially profitable
No. This means that there may be some injuries which requires a medical check up.
IT IS ILLEGAL IF YOU CAUSED THE ACCIDENT OR IF YOU ARE DIRECTLY RESPONSIBLE FOR THE PERSON OR PERSONS INJURED IN THE ACCIDENT, SUCH AS A PARENT, WIFE, HUSBAND, IMMEDIATE FAMILY MEMBER. A PERSON IS NOT RESPONSIBLE TO REPORT OR ASSIST IN ANY CRIME OR ACCIDENT THAT THEY DID NOT CAUSE OR HAVE A DIRECT AND RESPONSIBLE RELATIONSHIP TO A PERSON INVOLVED IN THE ACCIDENT THAT REQUIRES LIFE SAVING ATTENTION.AnswerIf you were at fault for the accident and if there any injuries reported, yes, it is a felony.
There are various operators that you can use. Things can be true based on equals, not equals, less than and greater than, so all of the operators for those can be used. To act based on them all being true requires the use of the AND function.
Where a single item is made on its own by one operator which takes time and requires highly skilled,experienced operators
OSHA requires that all personel operating a forklift obtain a forklift operators certification.
Every US state requires parents to be financially responsible for their minor children. In regards to insurance (medical, dental) whether or not the non custodial parent is required to pay for it; depends upon the laws of the state in which the support is granted and/or the terms of the support order.
No, parents are responsible legally and financially for their child(ren) until they reach the state's legal age of majority. The legal age of majority in all states except for one is 18; in Nebraska it is 19. No, you are responsible for your child until the age of 18 or unless the child is emancipated (16 in most states) and that requires legal paperwork. no you can't