Many people who divorce do have a clause in the decree regarding insurance beneficiaries. If the decree is written this way and/or the policy includes her as a beneficiary, then she certainly has rights.
Yes
Trying to get insurance to cover an accident that has already happened is Insurance Fraud, which is a Felony.
you were the at fault driver for the simple fact that you did not have insurance. Which means you should not have been on the road in the first place. If you had'nt been on the road the accident would'nt have happened.
It does not matter if he was drunk or had no insurance. We would need the details of how the accident happened.
The insurance should cover an accident while it was in force. If you had insurance 2 months ago and the accident happened 2 months ago, coverages should apply. If the accident happened today and the coverage stopped 2 months ago, there should not be coverage.
NO. the accident happened while he had his fathers car insurance. If he switches insurance he still uses the insurance he had when he got into his accident. However, your health insurance with pick up the difference.
if you add them AFTER they have an accident, they will not be covered for anything that happened during, or as a result of, the accident
The other person's insurance. This just happened to me.
This is not so simple a question to answer without more details, but in the UK if you have building and contents insurance which covers liability of the householders - that insurance can be used to pay the liability of householder's negligence, but it would be your boyfriend that is sued. If however the accident happened on your premises - both occupier's can be sued depending on the circumstances of what happened. See the related link entitled "Occupiers Liability" to see the duty that is owed by an occupier of premises.
In most insurance claims, the burden of proof is on the claimant - in other words, YOU have to prove the accident occurred for them to pay off the claim.
If this happened to me, I would find out what my insurance company can do and from there contact the police or file a civil or small claims suit. None, if the accident wasn't reported to the police.
Yes as long as your policy was active when the accident happened.