well ya should
No you cant
If you knowingly let someone with no license drive your car, not only are you liable if he has a wreck. You could loose your license if he just gets pulled over for a bad tail light!
The New Adventures of Beans Baxter - 1987 Beans Gets His Drivers License 1-16 was released on: USA: 21 November 1987
If a child has a driver's license, the child has to be listed as a driver somewhere on an insurance policy. The child can have their own policy and then the parents rates would not go up. Usually it is less expensive for a child to be listed on a parents policy rather than getting their own policy. If the child truly is not driving a household vehicle than the only way for that child to not be rated is to turn in the driver's license. That should be fine since the child "isn't driving anyway". The child can still get a state I.D. that isn't a driver's license. If the child isn't going to drive there is no reason to list them. The previous is correct, just should have gotten an I.D. and not a drivers license. It may depend on the country or state. Where I am the insurance company would have no way of knowning if someone in you house got a drivers license without you letting them know.
More information is needed. What type of passenger, where, and restrained for what.
no, she doesn't have to until she gets her lisence.
Of course you will still have to pay for it. And the ticket is probably already in the system and will appear when you go for the new license.
Your CDL IS your license. If your CDL gets yanked, you don't retain a regular drivers license - you're revoked, period.
Not necesarily, but if you don't tell them and the kid gets into a wreck in your car the consequences may be quite bad for YOU.
Mine doubled. It wasn't much to begin with, because I only carry liability on an old car. So it went from $600 a year to $1200.
He is covered under his parents' policy until he gets his own car and license.
Often out of state tickets will not show up on your license if you just pay them. Failing to pay a ticket brings it to the attention of the state, and it gets put into the state drivers license database. Once that happens, the insurance companies get a copy of it and it affects your insurance rates.