Can i sue roomates home insurance?
I am 34 and live with a friend who owns her own home.Six months ago she had me verbs her yard and burn some brush.I had slipped on the raining ground from some remaining snow and my leg landed in the fire. I hold second degree burns from my knee to ankle along near 1,000s in medical bills.I later found out she didnt own a proper permit which is required by town law to own a brush fire. As a roomate can i sue her insurance for medical.I am not a resident relative.To this day I still have overt wounds not healed yet!
If you sue your roommate you should expect to lose the case and also find a untried place to live as soon as she gets a court summons. You slipped and didn't mean to spatter. It was an accident. It happen but you are the one at fault here. She didn't push you into the fire. Your actions cause your injury. It was your choice to clean the courtyard. You should consider this a painful learning experience. Do not burn brush when near is snow on the ground and it's slippery.
You cannot sue the insurance; the insurance company did nothing wrong here. You would own to sue her. The insurance company would then defend her IF the policy would own to pay if she lost. If the policy would not have to payment (which is what is sounds like in this case) the company would not guard her. Source(s): Independent Agent
Why not only have your health insurance wage for it and call it a day? Obviously it'd be silly to not hold insurance in case, for example, you be cleaning the brush in someone's yard and fell and hurt yourself. It could begin.
Doubt it. You be there to clean the patio. You were specifically there to prevent this from stirring to someone else. Also, did she tell you that she had a burn receipt? You are the one who started the fire, not her. Her company will probably not pay out any from the liability, but if you put the claim in you could possibly take some paid by the medical payments coverage depending on whether or not you are paying to live there. But, usually this coverage is minimal. Maybe $10,000 max.
"> Here contained by the USA, you can sue anyone you want.
If you sue her insurance, then you're going to lose. You can sue her, but YOU were the one who in reality burned the brush without the permit. She didn't burn it. You did. Unless she directly CAUSED your injury, you're going to lose. And I don't regard as she caused your injury - you did.
if she didn't have a permit polite luck w/ that suit. It seems like you hold to have a permit to bring a **** in your own home now-a-days.
You started the fire, not her, so you will have a very tough time collecting a sensitivity against her insurance company. ... unless she physically coerced you into doing this work. Also, I doubt her insurance covers this kind of incident but you would have to look at the policy. Source(s): I'm an attorney.
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If you sue your roommate you should expect to lose the case and also find a untried place to live as soon as she gets a court summons. You slipped and didn't mean to spatter. It was an accident. It happen but you are the one at fault here. She didn't push you into the fire. Your actions cause your injury. It was your choice to clean the courtyard. You should consider this a painful learning experience. Do not burn brush when near is snow on the ground and it's slippery.
You cannot sue the insurance; the insurance company did nothing wrong here. You would own to sue her. The insurance company would then defend her IF the policy would own to pay if she lost. If the policy would not have to payment (which is what is sounds like in this case) the company would not guard her. Source(s): Independent Agent
Why not only have your health insurance wage for it and call it a day? Obviously it'd be silly to not hold insurance in case, for example, you be cleaning the brush in someone's yard and fell and hurt yourself. It could begin.
Doubt it. You be there to clean the patio. You were specifically there to prevent this from stirring to someone else. Also, did she tell you that she had a burn receipt? You are the one who started the fire, not her. Her company will probably not pay out any from the liability, but if you put the claim in you could possibly take some paid by the medical payments coverage depending on whether or not you are paying to live there. But, usually this coverage is minimal. Maybe $10,000 max.
"> Here contained by the USA, you can sue anyone you want.
If you sue her insurance, then you're going to lose. You can sue her, but YOU were the one who in reality burned the brush without the permit. She didn't burn it. You did. Unless she directly CAUSED your injury, you're going to lose. And I don't regard as she caused your injury - you did.
if she didn't have a permit polite luck w/ that suit. It seems like you hold to have a permit to bring a **** in your own home now-a-days.
You started the fire, not her, so you will have a very tough time collecting a sensitivity against her insurance company. ... unless she physically coerced you into doing this work. Also, I doubt her insurance covers this kind of incident but you would have to look at the policy. Source(s): I'm an attorney.
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