PeterE wrote:
SafeSpeed wrote:
spankthecrumpet wrote:
I believe that the vast majority of comprehensive policies that allow you to drive other people's cars insist the other cars are already insured - this is an obvious source of confusion...
I don't believe that - because I have NEVER seen any such clause in an insurance policy. Has anyone got one? What does it say exactly?
Mine says:
Quote:
The main driver... would be insured to drive any motor car not belonging to him and not hired to him under a hire purchase or lease agreement and provided the motor car is being used within the limitations of use as long as he has the owner's consent. Cover would be restricted to Third Party Liability only.
No mention of already having an insurance policy. Although obviously for the car to be taxed it would have to have had an insurance policy in application at the time of it being taxed, which had subsequently lapsed. A common circumstance under which this might happen is if an elderly driver was hospitalised and therefore was in no position to renew his insurance.
Mine merely states with the owners permission, mentions nothing about the registered keeper. To obtain a policy the insurance policy can insist on the policy holder being the registered keeper, yet the vehicle owner may be the other partner as in my case. The owner is not registered in any way nor is liable under current DVLA policy which is why the authorities assume that the RK is the owner etc.
Technically when my girlfriend allows her father to drive my vehicle using his insurance, he is uninsured as I haven't expressly given my permission as the terms of his insurance require. Similiarly, should my girlfiend's policy lapse, her father again would be able to drive my car using his policy, with my permission; ANPR would however show that there was no valid insurance policy against the vehicle because of the limitations of ANPR and the DVLA database in assuming that the RK is the owner.
It is not compulsory in law that states that one has to carry their insurance policy with them at all times, yet my vehicle could be seized by the Police because a computer states that the vehicle is uninsured. I state yet again, it is not the vehicle that is insured, it is the driver and as such the system is flawed until such time that DVLA and the Police get their act together.
Remember too, to tax a vehicle now, you can actually obtain a one day policy, print off the document, buy the tax and you're away for a year so in reality means nothing.
http://www.freeindex.co.uk/article(One- ... -Insurance)_127.htm