Results 11 to 15 of 15
-
01-05-2007, 07:20 AM #11Senior Member
Can anyone help me with this
Originally Posted by surreys princess
-
01-05-2007, 04:14 PM #12Senior Member
Can anyone help me with this
You're putting yourself and your son in a mighty dangerous situation there, Sauce. I live in Texas, too, and am the parent of a son who's now 20, so we've been dealing with car and insurance issues for four years.
You should definitely do whatever it takes to get your boy a hardship license. The insurance won't cover him or the car if there's an accident until he's a licensed driver and he's specifically added to the insurance policy. If there were an accident and your son or someone else were badly injured, you would be held financially responsible for that accident and would be a sitting duck for a lawsuit filed by the injured party or his insurer. If the medical or property damages that person suffered as a result of that accident ended up being covered by his own insurer because they were caused by an uninsured teenaged driver, the victim's insurance company would come after you in an instant to re-coup the money they had to shell out. Also, if police found out you were letting your son drive without a license or insurance, they're fairly likely to alert Child Protective Services to investigate whether other instances of parental neglect might be occurring in your household. It's just not worth the chance if you weight the risk against the benefit of his driving, and no matter how good a driver he is, accidents can and do happen. With teenaged boys, they happen with alarming frequency.[SIZE=\"4\"]\"That best portion of a good man\'s life: his little, nameless, unremembered acts of kindness and love.\"[/SIZE]
[align=center]William Wordsworth, English poet (1770 - 1850)[/align]
-
02-22-2007, 01:36 PM #13Senior Member
Can anyone help me with this
i dont know about texas but in cali ya car wouldnt be covered because he is an unlisenced driver and him being a minor your responsible for if he fucked any thing up you would be responsible for that too that and sometimes they confincate cars for not having a licence or insurance
...
when i was a kid i had a bmw from a wreaking yard cost 300$ and about another 700 in hoses belts radio and tune up was never registered untill i had a licence insured either thought being if i fucked up hopefully i could get my parrents off the hook by making my self out to be a delinquent in court witch should be easy driving an unregistered uninsured car that was never properly transfered muhahahaha
-
02-24-2007, 06:04 AM #14Senior Member
Can anyone help me with this
Originally Posted by birdgirl73
the person who hit my wife didn't have a permit, much less a liscense.... the insurance company is still paying us...
i still think you should do whatever it takes to get it all completely legal... but like i said, the insurance is paying us, and the driver didn't even have a permit (and around here, dunno about your city, for a permit to even be legal ontop of that, there has to be a liscensed driver with 1+ year experience in the front passanger seat)
-
02-24-2007, 06:33 AM #15Senior Member
Can anyone help me with this
From my understanding, if your son has a valid restricted lisence, then hes covered under your insurance automatically. Also, I believe there are exceptions to the lisence, such as if hes driving to and from work, and possibly school.
HOWEVER, these could just be Florida state laws, and not wherever youre at.
Check into it man.