No.
No. You cannot insure something that you don't own. This is a fact of life. The insured and the vehicle owner must be the same with the only exceptions being members of a household immediate family, which does not include parents, brothers, sisters, friends, or boyfriends of the insured. If you are insured and you add a car owned by anyone except your spouse or dependent children living in your home, and the car is damaged, the insurance company cannot pay you for damage to a vehicle you don't own, and cannot pay the owner, because they don't have an insurance contract with the company. There is no way around this. If you add a vehicle you don't own to your policy the company will not pay for damages to said vehicle. They cannot legally do so. It makes no difference if the owner is a rated driver or not. You mother must have her own policy.
Yes as long as the named insured is not a spouse, or if the spouse does not drive and does not have a drivers license the spouse can also be excluded.
No. The check must be endorsed by whomever the check is made out to. This will be the insured on the policy. If the spouse was not the named insured on the policy then she cannot legally endorse the check unless he gives her power of attorney or if he is deceased and she is designated as administrator of the estate by the court.
Yup. Pay your bill.Your spouse has the same right to the vehicle as you do. Your problem is that your paying nothing on the vehicle - so she has to pick up the bill. If she is paying the bill, then she deserves to have the vehicle. If you are paying the bill, then you deserve to have the vehicle. You cannot "one-up" your spouse by driving a vehicle that also has her name on it, and not paying for it. Your credit and her credit will suffer. My advice? Pay your bill. She has the right to the vehicle until you do.
No you cannot sue your spouse on that ground. However, you can divorce him.No you cannot sue your spouse on that ground. However, you can divorce him.No you cannot sue your spouse on that ground. However, you can divorce him.No you cannot sue your spouse on that ground. However, you can divorce him.
Yes, The insured can add a spouse to the policy as a co-insured. You don't have to be on the deed.
No. First your girlfriend cannot be an insured on your medical insurance because she has no legal rights as she is not a family member. Read your policy and you will see who is allowed to be an insured on your policy. Secondly, even if she was your legal spouse the pregnancy is a preexisting condition and would not be covered anyway.
If an insured has a policy where there is no named beneficiary, or the named beneficiary is deceased, then the benefit will be paid to the insured's estate.
its lion
By saying that your name is not on the registration, I assume that it also is not on the title. If you or your spouse do not own the vehicle you cannot insure it. It doesn't matter how you ask the question. You must have interest in the vehicle to insure it.
As long as the insurance is in your name only you just call the insurance companyBUTThis may be illegal unless the person driving the vehicle knows and agrees
No. You cannot insure a vehicle that does not belong to you. If you were to add the vehicle without telling the insurance company that it doesn't belong to you there will be no coverage and any claim will be denied. You will have wasted your money.