Nobody can be held legally liable for an act of nature. Your auto Insurance comprehensive coverage will cover damages to your car. It does not matter who owned the tree or where it came from.
If you have this kind of coverage on your automobile policy, that could be a source of monies you need to either repair or replace the car.
If the tree fell because the association was cutting down the tree and it fell, the association's master policy may cover the event.
If the tree fell on your car parked in the garage attached to the condominium, and you live there and carry an HO-6 condominium policy, you may have coverage under this policy.
After you've exhausted all these resources, you may want to sue, depending on what caused the tree to fall. You are unclear as to why the tree fell: natural mayhem caused by a storm, badly executed logging or simply the age and poor state of health of the tree. The details may help you determine whom to sue, if you are inclined to do so.
Sorry but your homeowners policy will most likely have to pay for the damages on your property. I assume that the tree fell due to a storm and that it was a live tree when it fell. This is an act of God and is not covered unless it was caused by your neighbor's negligence. If it was a dead tree that you had notified your neighbor needed to be removed and he didn't do it or if it was obviously dead and in his front yard where he had to see it every day he may have been negligent and his policy or he personally may have to pay. Otherwise your policy will pay for your damage and his policy will pay for damage on his property.
Nobody is liable for an act of nature. The comprehensive portion of your own auto insurance would cover the damages to your own car.
He fell off the ladder and broke his arm.We will fell this tree.
Yes you would need insurance on a vehicle you can not drive cause what if there was a storm and a tree fell on it and it had really bad damages than what would you do.
If a tree falls on a road, Presumably a public road just call the city or county, They will have it removed. If a tree falls on a private road. Call the owner of the road. It would be his responsibility to remove it.
Try Walmart.
Nobody is liable for an act of nature. Each property owner would responsible for their own insurance to cover resulting damages and debris removal from their own property.
Hurricane IKE is responsible.
Perhaps had you not been driving on the sidewalk, the tree wouldn't have hit you. But seriously, if the city failed to maintain the tree and a branch fell on your car and damaged it, you should be able to file a claim against the city or the owner of the property on which the tree stands. The laws regarding tree maintenance vary from city to city.
To fell a tree = transitive I fell = intransitive
An example is to fell a tree, meaning to chop it down.
If your husband was cutting down or trimming a tree and the result was damage to your neighbors property, that would indicate direct liability. You and your husband are liable for the cost of damages he caused.