Usually the insurance on the vehicle covers any driver who has the permission of the owner of the vehicle to drive the car.
The vehicle is insured not the individual. You can pay for and obtain the insurance in the name of the owner with you listed as an insured operator.
that depends on their insurance policy
the difference between a proposer and the insured is that a proposer is a person or an entity who is seeking insurance and an insuerd is someone or an entity covered by an insurance policy
No. * i say Depends on your policy. Call your insurance person.
You google it
You have to ask the insured. By Law, the Life Insurance company cannot tell you unless they have proof that the Insured is dead. They would be violating the privacy law. *Check with The Center for Life Insurance Disputes.
The car is insured not the driver however many policies have restrictions as to who may drive the insured vehicle.
No. A homeowners insurance policy is specific to the property of the named insured.
There are many reasons why someone would want to get event insurance coverage. In case someone has an accident or something during an event it is important to be insured.
The un-insured driver will have to turn to their health insurance company for coverage if he carried no auto insurance.
not if you are personally insured to drive that vehicle on your own policy
It seems that the insurance company thinks that you and he still have the same address. I doubt an insurance company would require someone who does not reside at your address to be listed as an insured on your policy simply because he was your boyfriend. I don't know how to access DMV records, but private investigators do. Hopefully the address on his driving record is no longer the same as yours.