No. The insured must be the owner of the vehicle. You cannot insure something that you do not own. This is in any state. You don't want to find this out when you have a claim. The insurance company cannot pay a claim on a vehicle where the owner of the vehicle is not the insured on the policy. As a matter of full disclosure, I own and operate a small Independent Insurance Company in Central Georgia and have for the past 22 years. Prior to that I worked as an agent for a direct writer of insurance for 3 years.
No, In the state of MA the car must be insured under the registered persons name. No
A car can be registered and insured by a number of people. Usually they are one and the same. A car can be insured with having it registered to you if you would like to drive it.
NO
Yes, you can be, but you need to have insurance and registration in the state you reside.
Depends on your insurance company.
not in any state or thru any insurance company I know of.
The state where the policy was written.
That question doesn't really make sense. Yes your vehicle can be registered anywhere you have place of residency but uhh insurance is who ever your insurance company is IE. USAA, State Farm.....
If the vehicle is currently registered (i.e.: has valid current tags) the state requires that it be insured. If the vehicle is not currently registered, it is not required that it be insured - but NOBODY may operate it.
This depends on a few factors. If it is sitting on a public road then it must be insured. Some states will not allow you to have a vehicle on your property that is not registered, and to be registered it must be insured so check your state laws.
Only if the truck driver was at fault.
You cannot do this in any state. An auto insurance policy is a legally binding contract between two parties. The named insured must be the owner of the vehicle and no one else. The only exception to this is in the case of two legally married persons in that vehicles owed by either one is allowed to be on an insurance policy of either one of them.
No it must be covered by an insurance policy valid in the state of registration.