Friday, May 23, 2014

car accident..what happens if?




jamrunna


One person is at fault. One of the parties ( the one at fault) gives the other party their drivers license info and number but the other party forgets to give the one at fault their info. The police are called but one of the parties (the one at fault) leaves the scene before the report is filed ..after they were told everything was ok but no insurance, registration or car plate numbers were taken down by either party....


Answer
well it sounds like the offending party gave his information and phone number, give the info to the police and let them deal with it. If there was minor damage to his vehicle and not yours then you have no worries anyway, if you didn't take down his plate number my question is why not if he had time to give you his information and phone then you had time to write down his plate number. I hate when people don't take responsibility for their mistakes, i'm not saying it was all your fault , but it isn't all his fault either he wrote down his info, why didn't you write down yours? If you told him everything was ok than i would take that to mean, you had no damage to your car and he can leave if there is no damage to another persons property, a report only needs to be filed if there is damage to someone else's property.

License Plate help please ?




Modder


Hey everyone. So I'm looking for a car that my dad sold almost ten years ago. This car was his pride and joy, and I've been wanting this car back for years. I have the name of the guy he sold it to, the city, last license plate, and other info on it. Is there anyway you guys could help me find the car, look up where he is, the license plate, anything ?
Here's what I have

1969 Buick Riviera
Sold to - Orlando Palmeres (Palmeras?)
San Jose, CA
License plate at time of sale - XDN919 ( Old black and yellow license plate)



Answer
If the license plate number you gave was your father's license plate, then the vehicle would no longer have that plate on the car. The new owner would need to have registered the car in their name and would have been issued a new license plate ( unless they had a current plate from another vehicle that could be transferred ). You could use a "paid search service" in an attempt to track down the buyer. It's very difficult to get information on people these days because of all the new "Privacy Laws" each state has.




Powered by Yahoo! Answers

No comments:

Post a Comment