Depends on which country. In Canada for example, no. Since insurance is given by vehicle. In the USA, yes, since a person is insured.
No proof of insurance on the vehicle. Just because you have one car with insurance does not mean that you are covered on any vehicle that you drive. Your best bet is to add the vehicle to your policy, go to court, show them you now have proof of insurance, and you should be okay then.
Yes my boyfriend got insurance on my van without telling me
NO. It is illegal to drive a motor vehicle on public roads without proof of Financial Responsibility.
when you get your licence but the insurance will be exspensive.
If they were the permissive driver of your vehicle in an accident (and got the dui), your policy will be paying for the damages (subject to any policy exclusions, and assuming the drunk was at fault) Insurance stays with the vehicle. So any rate increase that this accident generates will be on your policy, as well (of course) as your collison deductible. If you are asking what happens if they were just driving your vehicle and got a dui, no accident or loss. I doubt anything will happen. You might want to rethink who you let drive your vehicle though.
You can type in classic car insurance and put the kind of car you got. And it will show up the quotes for your vehicle. Depending on the age of the vehicle.
No Macauley Keeper hasnt got a girlfiend. He is gay
He hasnt got any sister :D
More than likely it will be much cheaper to be on you mothers insurance. If you have your own vehicle you will need insurance, depending on the circumstances, you may want to be designated as driver of the cheaper vehicle to insure even if that is not your vehicle.
The owner of the car. If YOU got a ticket because YOU were operating an uninsured vehicle on a public road, YOU are responsible for the ticket. There may also be a citation for the owner for having the vehicle registered without the required insurance.
The person operating the vehicle is the first one responsible. The owner of the vehicle can also be held responsible. If your under 18 and an adult allowed you to drive, they can be held responsible if, they knew you would operate it recklessly or knew you didn't have a licence.
It shouldn't matter who was driving. The insurance company is responsible for the VEHICLE not the driver.