Not usually, your insurance generally goes up when you have a moving violation.
if your vehicle is licensed in NJ, and has NJ plates on it, and you have NJ insurance, they cannot ticket you in PA for having expired NJ inspection.
The owner of the vehicle
Usually not, but the answer does depend upon how you were driving around. A LEO may, at his/her discretion, issue a warning citation which will only require a trip to the local vehicle administration to purchase a new sticker.
To report an expired inspection sticker you could call your mom nono jk just call your local police
Most insurance companies will specify that the driver must be 'road legal'. That means a valid driving licence for the vehicle must be held, an expired licence is not a 'valid' licence.
you must have your own insurance on the vehical to be covered, if you did not have insurance you are braking the law and therefore no there is now way out.
Legallly you cannot operate vehicle with an expired inspection sticker
If you don't own a vehicle, or have no intention of driving, you do not have to maintain auto insurance.
no
If the vehicle has insurance it will cover damage to the other vehicle but not the one you are driving. Now if you have insurance on another vehicle your insurance will cover the damage to the vehicle that you where driving even though it is not on your policy.
Nothing, current inspection is not required to transfer a motor vehicle title in North Carolina.
I was told (when it came time to pay property tax), that you may have a car with no or expired tags, inspection sticker, insurance, and/or city sticker, BUT that you may still be charged property tax on the vehicle. There may also be local ordinances restricting where the car may be legally parked. With the car I had (as described above), I was not required to pay property tax due to the age/excessive mileage of the vehicle.