In Victoria Australia, a person can file a claim against another person while driving an unregistered permit, but only if they have obtained and displayed a permit to drive the vehicle
If your driving a unregistered vehicle..... I lost my license for a year and had to pay $2000.00 fine for no insurance to. ITS NOT WORTH IT!
A $117 Dollar Fine...If insurance is current.
Yes...
If you don't have insurance how will it go against your insurance?
yes
This depends on the insurance policy. Usually your car is covered, no matter who is driving it. However, if you are driving a car and the owner doesn't have insurance, then your insurance would pay if you got in an accident.
$365 here in southern California
There can't be a way for it to be held against YOU. Other insurance companies can't bug you for their mistakes.
The insurance will not stand if some one else was driving the car, in Florida.
Auto Insurance follows the car not the driver. My son's girlfriend was driving his car when they where in an accident and his insurance was responsible.
Speeding is a sure sign that you WILL have an accident soon, and the insurance company is well with-in their rights to protect themselves against bad drivers. They do this in a number of ways. One is to raise your insurance costs, to make you more aware of your driving mistakes. Another way is to cut you off, based on your driving convictions.
If you are driving an unregistered motor vehicle on a public highway in Connecticut and are contacted by police, the most likely result will be the officer writing you a ticket for operaration of an unregistered motor vehicle and having your car towed, since unregistered vehicles cannot be driven on public roads. The ticket will cost you $117 and the tow bill (which will NOT be covered by AAA since you are in violation of the law) will be a minimum of about $80. The state statute regarding operation of an unregistered motor vehicle is CGS 14-12a.