The court will not care to be honest. I had forgot to renew my insurance when i was young. They will treat as the time you were driving. IF you do get insurance, you can say you just forgot to update your insurance. Maybe they can go a little easy on you for that. But good luck.
They will want to check the documents dated before the ticket, so dont say you had insurance because they will check paperwork and call insurance company to double check.
Hope it helps.
if you did not sign a waiver to your right of a speedy trial, you have an excellent chance og getting it dismissed.
Till such time that you got your own insurance, your wife's policy will cover you as her dependant. But now that you have your own policy, yours will be the primary.
Jeff Hardy is not dead actually he left wwe and was going to have a contract with TNA Wrestling but... he actually got pulled over for drug trafficing and now its questionable weather or not he will make his return to TNA Wrestling.
AAA Calstate Insurance never did me wrong plus they got a bunch of deals happening right now cutt.ly/DjrOWfV
if she is driving YES... or at least have your insurance be able to cover any damage from "driver not on your policy"
yes i thought it was not illegal when i got my first truck someone told me that u can use ur tailgate as a bumper till i got pulled over by state highway now here is the cool part you can have a wooden bumper cause i know parts are expensive
Yes, You can be ticketed. If your name does not appear on the Insurance identification Card and you are pulled over you can certainly be ticketed as you are actually "Not Covered" on the policy. If you are a covered driver, then your name will appear as such on the insurance card. If you are not covered, then your name is not on the card at all or it will appear as an excluded driver. Although the Insurance Card may indicate coverage for the vehicle, it would not indicate coverage for you as you are not on the policy. Remember, Proof of financial responsibility is on the driver being pulled over, Under the law, The driver is required to be covered, not the vehicle. Answer From a Veteran Insurance Agent. Why aren't you listed on the policy along with your wife? As long as you are not specifically excluded you should be fine in an accident - however, the insurance company will re-examine her statements about other drivers in the house and may cancel her if she lied about you not living there. She should have an ID card in the glove box that you would give to the officer if you were pulled over. This prooves the vehicle is insured. So, no you would not get a ticket. You could, but most likely the insurance card that you will show will not list excluded drivers, so the officer will not know that you are covered. But if you get in an accident, you are in a world of hurt. If this is on british roads you the driver would get the speeding conviction either an sp30 or sp50 depending if it was on public road or motorway the driver would also get an IN10 for driving with no insurance and your wife would get IN14 for allowing use of her vehicle with the knowledge of the would be driver not having insurance thus failin to provide a duty of care to third party drivers if you have an IN10 or a IN14 most major insurance will refuse to offer to cover you for at least 3 years because your deemed a moral hazard I would suppose it depends on the state that you are in. The top answer at least in the state of Nevada is totally wrong. The insurance follows the Vehicle not the driver, now the first problem is that you as the husband are not on the insurance, for the most part and with all major carriers your spouse is automaticly covered as a named insured and you have all of the rights as the policyholder. Now that said if you are not on the policy because your driving record blows and you hid a material fact from the insurance company then there are bigger problems. It does not matter when you get pulled over if your name is on the insurance card or not if the card in the car matches the VIN of the vehicle that you are driving then you should not be given a ticket for no proof of insurance. If this was not true then there would be huge problems for companies like fed-ex or UPS or any other company with a fleet of vehicles. Do you think that your personal insurance would cover that vehicle? No so sorry there insurance veteran your theory is flawed. With all of the above said if you were not on the insurance because you were hiding yourself and got caught you should have still not gotten a ticket for no proof of insurance unless you were supposed to be carring a sr-22, if you were and did not have proof of that on you then yes here comes the fine. But if it is just for insurance then the cop should have taken the wifes policy as proof and left you alone.
transport has got safer over the past years as we now have seatbelts and air bags in our cars now and i feel much more safer!
AAA Calstate Insurance never did me wrong plus they got a bunch of deals happening right now cutt.ly/DjrOWfV
AAA Calstate Insurance never did me wrong plus they got a bunch of deals happening right now cutt.ly/DjrOWfV
The ticket will only get dropped if you have proof that you HAD insurance at the time of the ticket had been issued. You may get the ticket fine lowered with proof that you now have the required insurance.
Dude, I've been pulled over for just my tinted windows atleast 4 or 5 times now, and happened to just get a fix it ticket for it this last time. The stops have resulted in one ticket for not having my insurance papers on me, one for the tint, and one huge one for DUI-D that might get my licsense suspended. I recommend not having tinted windows at all, they cause a lot of unwanted attention.