There is no difference - just two different ways of saying the same thing. However, there can be a difference between the policy owner/holder and the life assured.
The policy owner/holder is the individual or company who applied for the policy and pays the premiums. The life assured is self-evidently the person whose life is insured. If the policyholder and life assured are the same person, i.e. the policy is an "own life" policy, upon their death the guaranteed death benefit, or sum assured as it is known, is paid to the deceased's estate, or into a trust if one has been set up. If the life assured is not the policyholder then the sum assured is paid to the policyholder.
Only individuals or companies who have an "insurable interest" can apply for a policy on someone's life. There are a number of situations that can qualify as an insurable interest but the most common are a company taking out a policy on the life of a director or other employee, partners in a business on the life/lives of their fellow partner/s, and an individual on the life of their spouse.
stake owner is a person who have any stake in a company .he may be a supplier ,distributer
The holder is the owner, In the case of Life Insurance , the person paid is the beneficiary .
Lien holder is paid first, any balance goes to registered owner.
The car owner and the policy holder better be the same person. If not nobody will be able to get the money. You cannot insure a vehicle that you do not own. If you do the insurance company cannot pay the policy holder because they don't own the vehicle. They can't pay the vehicle owner because they don't have a contract of insurance with the insurance company.
The life insurance owner is the person who buys the policy and has control over it, while the insured is the person whose life is covered by the policy.
The insured is the person whose life is being insured, while the owner is the person who owns the policy and has control over it. The owner can make changes to the policy and decide how the benefits are used, even if they are not the insured person.
In any life insurance policy, though there is provision for appointment of nominee, on maturity the proceeds will be payable to the policy holder if he/she is alive. By this way, the owner of the policy and the beneficiary is the same person.
Do you mean as owner or as beneficiary? Either way, yes.
If the policyholder (policy owner) is also the insured, then no one does. The policy proceeds (assuming the policy is in force at the time of death) are paid according to the designated beneficiary(ies), and the contract ceases to exist. If the policyholder (owner) is not the insured, then the policy ownership would flow according to the owner's will.
A registered owner is the person who has purchased or is purchasing the vehicle for their own use, while the legal owner would be a lien holder like a bank or other financial institution that actually owns the vehicle until it is paid off.
Yes. Being on the insurance doesn't make someone the car's owner. Only the deed holder or the lien holder can be classified as the owner and can claim that the car is stolen. yes
The owner of the car listed on the insurance policy.