As long as your daughter is under 18 or 22 in som cases you can be held liable for any of her actions
They will have to take the uninsured driver to court. Or if you have uninsured driver policy with your insurance, they will pay it.
Yes!
In nearly all states, each of those is a separate crime. 1) Driving uninsured. 2) Leaving the scene of an accident.
Bad things, will mostly likely get a few citation from police. If he is found to be at fault he could be liable for the damage.
You should get in trouble because you caused the accident.
The owner of the vehicle is usually held liable.
Only if the driver was responsible and only for his liability
this is tricky, dependant on the state laws...you are driving an uninsured vehicle, you have insurance on another vehicle of your own, you get into an accident that is your fault...the owner of the vehicle is a passenger in the car and is injured...your policy should step in and cover this uninsured vehicle (assuming you have collision coverage on your policy) you chose to drive, (doesn't matter you didn't know it was uninsured) and if your neglience resulted in this passengers injuries your policy will likely pay for their injury subject to any exclusion in the policy.....sorry.....
The at-fault driver's insurance will pay for all property and bodily injury damages.
Sure. You violated the rules, they don't have to allow you to drive. It is a privilege, not a right.
There are several issues here. Who's fault was it to cause the accident. Are you in a "no fault" state? Did the other driver have insurance or just did not have proof? Does the boyfriend have a uninsured motorist rider on his policy? These are questions that have to be answered before we can proceed.
No. The car is insured and your son's policy will provide coverage up to its policy limits.