basingwerk wrote:
It is the driver who is insured, not the car. Any person with a policy that insures him or her to drive the car could do so. The car does not have to be named in the policy - it could be ( and often is) specified by a global condition such as 'any car' or 'any car not belonging to him or her' and such like. That is the type of policy garages use to allow them to drive customer cars to and fro. Any such database would therefore be at best a partial solution.
I know we cover drivers rather than cars, that's why I said "car/driver". I agree that the database isn't perfect. It's an assumption on my part, but I think the database must distinguish between drivers who are covered by "any vehicle" clauses and those who aren't. At least I hope it does. If it was just which cars had been insured (you know what I mean

) the database wouldn't be worth much. My insurance company says it doesn't put "any driver" clauses on all policies (think it's always there for customers over 25 or something, but otherwise you're stuck with the vehicle on the policy). If I was stopped in a different car the police would have to know if my policy lets me drive it.
basingwerk wrote:
I AM NOT A LAWYER. And I don't mean to shout. What I am saying is that my policy does not say that the 'any body else's vehicle' has to be insured, not does the law.
Nor does mine. Don't know about the law, IANAL either

(thanks for the definition).
I'm thinking about what you were saying about insurance for parked cars and defintions of use on public roads. Sure, in reality a parked car isn't being used in the way that we'd normally interpret the word. But I'm wondering if even being parked and unoccupied is still classed as "use". After all, it's occupying space on the road, so it could be argued that by taking up 50 or so square foot of tarmac constitutes usage (of the road rather than the car). It's just that I've always had the impression that an uninsured car on the driveway is okay, but parked on the road is a no-no. Perhaps this is for situations like SafeSpeed's hypothetical handbrake failure, though you'd have to wonder how they'd sort it out if an uninsured car kept on a sloped driveway had a brake failure and rolled out onto the road. Ahhh brain hurts. Stuff it, I think I'll carry on leaving it in gear when I park on a hill.
I think we really need to ask InGear about all this.
Edit: Traffic Cops again this evening. Bloke with clapped out old uninsured car parked on the road had it towed (and eventually crushed - probably cheaper to get another clapped out old banger than insure the one the police dragge away

). Bloke gave copper the "bought it this morning" one, like that was going to work for more than a nanosecond. But one of Bloke's mates/neighbours asked why the copper didn't just make him leave it on the driveway (erm, so he doesn't drive it again half an hour after copper has gone maybe? Besides, didn't see any driveways.). Still, it does seem strange that we have a system where car that isn't covered by insurance can be towed if parked on the road, but the same car is okay on a driveway. Not exactly the point of this thread, I know, but still curious.