This is a question for your agent. It could be an administrative error.
bill gates
If you cosigned for the loan you are joint owners of the car.
You must have an insurable interest to effect valid coverage. Property must be insured in the name of the owner. So if you want to buy someone else a policy for their property you can certainly pay the bill for some else's property insurance but you can not insure it in your own name. If you insured someone else's home in any name other than the legal property owner and it burned down or suffered some other loss, the Insurance company can not legally pay your claim simply because the property does not belong to you. They would also not have to pay the owner because he or she was not an insured on the policy. The proper way to insure it would be under the name of the legal owner, If you also have an insurable interest in the property, then your name can be added as a co-insured. Should a claim arise, the claim check would be issued under both names.
Depending who insured you.
an insured bill
Bill & Tom where asked that, and they replied "yes, why not ?"
Yes, but he is unlikely to get paid. The family of the deceased owes nothing for the decedent's debt load unless they cosigned a loan.
Someone else would have.
The Bill of Rights-
1787 -It insured the rights of the citizens of America; the natural rights.
THer is no fine per say for damage to someone elses vehicle unless you were doing something illegal at the time the damage occurred. You are howver, legally responsible for all cost of repair to the vehicle you damaged. If you are insured then you should submit the repair bill to your insurance company and they will take care of it for you.
If someone came to our country you would like to know what the dollar bill was saying. Or what it was worth!