Read your policy.
No, even if it did, it would be less than you deductible anyway. Car keys cost about 7 dollars to replace by a brand car dealer. all you have to do is give the dealer your vin number.
When your car is 'stolen", you file a stolen car report with the cops. Then your INSURANCE will pay off the loan. The lender will deal with the insurance co. and alls well. You dont have a car, but no payments either. BTW, the insurance co. HAS to be sure its stolen or they wont pay the loan off.
The insurance should pay the loan (if your lucky it'll pay all of it) If there was no insurance then you still have to pay for the loan. I had a car stolen and I had to keep paying for it until the insurance finally paid it off and I was left with $50 in the end to get a new car with.
IF the car was stolen, reported as stolen to the cops, the ins. should be paying the loan off. IF the ins. co. does not think the car is stolen, they wont pay and its as if the car was NOT stolen. So, you have to pay notes and insurance on the collateral. Bottom line??? HELP the ins. prove it was stolen and the problem will go away. MERRY CHRISTMAS.
Probably because the owner did not exercise normal precautions and by leaving the keys in the vehicle actually participated in its theft. Call that lawyer who advertises on TV. If he can't get the insurance to pay, he'll get a judgment against the owner. The owner of a stolen vehicle is not responsible for the actions of the thief that stole their vehicle. If there is no liability on the owner, the insurance company does not owe the claim for property damage to others.
Of course not! It wasn't stolen or wrecked, it was taken from you for failure to pay on the loan!Be sure to cancel the insurance.
Insurance is supposed to return the car to the condition it was before it was stolen.
If the police can't find the car thief, your insurance will have to pay for it. If they CAN find the car thief and he/she has nothing, your insurance will STILL have to pay for it.
Most insurance companies will only pay the blue book value of the car at the time that it was stolen. Check the Kelley Blue Book or the National Automobile Dealers Association for approximate values.
NO, all insurance companies require you to carry insurance on a vehicle with a lien. What if it catches on fire or is stolen.
Unfortunately, there is nothing you can do with your insurance company. If you only have liability insurance, they do not pay anything to have your vehicle replaced.