An insurance company generally does not pay the lien holder directly. The vehicle owner is responsible for paying for insurance coverage and will often deal with the insurance company themselves after a collision has taken place.
In that case, the money will be kept deposited with the insurance company as unclaimed amount. In absence of the beneficiary, the insurance company can pay the money to the legal heir of the policy holder, but that has to be sufficiently proved in the Court of Law.
no
If you are named as Certificate Holder on a Certificate of Insurance, the insurance company MAY or (in some instances) HAS TO notify you if the policy cancels prior to the renewal date.
You can engage yourself with an insurance company either through employment or by becomming an agent. Or, your involvement may be in the form of a policy holder of the particular insurance company.
The excess is what the policy holder has to pay before the insurance company starts to pay. If excess is $100 Damage is $300 the policy holder gets $200.
The car owner and the policy holder better be the same person. If not nobody will be able to get the money. You cannot insure a vehicle that you do not own. If you do the insurance company cannot pay the policy holder because they don't own the vehicle. They can't pay the vehicle owner because they don't have a contract of insurance with the insurance company.
holder
Yes. Being on the insurance doesn't make someone the car's owner. Only the deed holder or the lien holder can be classified as the owner and can claim that the car is stolen. yes
Sum assured is the minimum amount payable by the insurance company in case of death of the policy holder. In such case the policy holder select the sum assured or coverage. Than it is mandatory for insurance companies to pay out this sum in case of the unfortunate death of the policy holder.
A named insured is someone that has an insurable interest in a property. They don't need to be the deed holder. The deed holder is the person that owns the property. For example if you rent a house from someone. You have a insurable interest in your property that is inside the house. The deed holder has an insurable interest in the house itself and not the contents that are not fixtures. So the insurance company could issue a renters policy to the renter and he would be a named insured and the insurance company could issue a policy to the owner and he would be a named insured. 2 different policies covering different things.
In case of death of the policy holder, with beneficiary already deceased and there is no will, the Insurance Company will pay only to the Legal Heir of the Policy Holder. The death claim will be kept in abeyance till the legal heir proves his legal identity to the satisfaction of the Insurance Company.