If your asking will your auto liability insurance pay for a traffic citation, No. They don't pay for the illegal acts of the insured.
Your auto liability insurance is accident insurance.
Personal liability insurance provides additional coverage to other insurance policies. Without personal liability insurance, any thing that one's home or car insurance could not cover, one would have to pay out of pocket. Personal liability insurance will cover those fines.
The penalty for not having liability insurance varies by state, but common consequences include fines, license suspension, and vehicle impoundment. It is illegal to drive without liability insurance in most states, so it is important to have coverage to avoid these penalties.
If varies state to state, and some have very harsh penalties, including severe fines.
No, it does not discharge legal fines and/or penalties.
The penalties for violating the Antideficiency Act can include administrative discipline, such as reprimand or suspension, as well as personal liability for the amount involved in the violation. In some cases, criminal penalties, such as fines or imprisonment, may also apply.
Penalties include fines and imprisonment.
For full information on the fines and penalties for polluting in the US, check out the EPA's website. Link provided below.
In Tennessee, drivers are required to carry auto liability insurance that meets the state's minimum coverage requirements. The minimum liability coverage limits in Tennessee are 25/50/15, which means $25,000 for bodily injury per person, $50,000 for bodily injury per accident, and $15,000 for property damage per accident. Failure to carry the minimum required liability insurance may result in penalties such as fines, license suspension, or vehicle registration suspension.
Volker Kaiser has written: 'Verbandssanktionen des Ordnungswidrigkeitengesetzes' -- subject(s): Contraventions (Criminal law), Criminal liability of juristic persons, Fines (Penalties)
It varies depending on state law, but penalties can include fines, jail time, license suspension, or vehicle impounding.
If you were in an accident yes it would, if you are talking about having insurance to cover criminal charges and fines, I'm pretty sure that is illegal.
A. Mitchell Polinsky has written: 'A damage-revelation rationale for coupon remedies' -- subject(s): Actions and defenses, Econometric models, Economic aspects, Economic aspects of Products liability, Products liability 'Mandatory versus voluntary disclosure of product risks' 'Amenities and property values in a model of an urban area' 'Economics and liability for accidents' 'Optimal fines and auditing when wealth is costly to observe' -- subject(s): Administration of Criminal justice, Costs (Law), Economic aspects, Economic aspects of Fines (Penalties), Fines (Penalties), Mathematical models, Wealth 'Optimal cleanup and liability after environmentally harmful discharges' -- subject(s): Econometric models, Liability for hazardous substances pollution damages 'Notes on the symmetry of taxes and subsidies in pollution control' 'Decoupling liability' -- subject(s): Fines (Penalties), Liability (Law), Mathematical models 'An empirical reconciliation of micro and grouped estimates of the demand for housing' 'Legal origins and modern stock markets' 'Economic analysis of law' 'An introduction to law and economics' -- subject(s): Economics, Law, Law and economics