tottaly the owner because it not really your sons car
No, there is no such thing an an "insurance card" in Massachusetts. The insurance information is on the registration, you can't get the registration without it.
Sure you can. However, you will be stopped, ticketed, and your vehicle will be impounded. Sorry.
You'll be ticketed for driving with an invalid registration and driving without insurance, and you still owe that money to the bank.
In Texas if you a caught driving without insurance you will be ticketed. I believe this is true in most states.
If you prove the registration in court, they will drop the charges. You will still be charged with driving on revoked license.
You have insurance and drivers license is expired can you be ticketed
You will be pulled over and ticketed for no license plate. (registration is required for licensing)
You cannot drive a vehicle without insurance for any time. This means you must purchase insurance before you put the vehicle on the road or you are immediately in violation of state law. You also cannot purchase a tag and registration in Georgia without having insurance. The state has a computerized system that keeps up with insurance and registration. Many police vehicles are now equipped with a system that works like radar except that it tells whether you have current insurance and whether or not your registration is current. I had a client parked at work whose insurance had cancelled two days earlier but she was ticketed at work for not having current insurance.
You get ticketed and fined, regardless of whether you were at fault or not, Auto Insurance is required by law in the state of Louisiana. You get ticketed and fined, regardless of whether you were at fault or not, Auto Insurance is required by law in the state of Louisiana.
There should be no question for your insurance. Your friends insurance will be affected, not yours. unless there was something wrong with the vehicle( ie. suspension or bad registration) any moving violations are specific to the license holder, not the auto. Hope this helps you feel a little better about the situation.
Pretty sure it doesn't matter, you will still be ticketed.
Yes, If you are not an insured under the definitions and terms of the owners insurance policy then you "can" be ticketed. Whether you will be ticketed depends on whether the attending officer checks his computer to see if you are in fact an insured driver or not.