Usually the insurance policy of the owner of the car is primary and then if the driver of the car has a policy of their own then it is secondary.
It is my understanding that the car owner's insurance pays for the person who was hit. The driver's insurance is responsible for the car he/she was driving.
tottaly the owner because it not really your sons car
Yes, If a Registered Owner with a valid license and current Registration and Insurance pays the necessary fees and or fines they can get the car out.AnswerNO. If you could everyone without a valid license would add another person to the registration.
The owner of the car must pay for the license plates fines. It is illegal to drive with expired license plates.
When a fine is given out, it is directly to the driver or owner. And by NASCAR rules whoever the fine is to must pay the fine.
The fees and fines are the responsibility of the registered owner. You can sue the driver if you want to get the money back
The Parents. Owned!
The rule of thumb is that the owner's insurance pays first and, if that coverage is inadequate, the driver's car pays.
You do, In fines and Court costs
No. A co-owner is one of the owners. If he's an owner it is obviously not theft. If you file a theft report against an owner you could be jailed for filing a false police report. Also, if the driver is stopped the car will be impounded resulting in costly fees and fines.
The driver.