yes
As long as she has the correct insurance that allows the car to lent to a friend then it should cover you.
If it was someone you lent your car to, then it should
A person may need cover for a single day if they have borrowed a car from someone whose own insurance policy does not cover this. Similarly, it could be taken out by someone who has lent a car to someone else.
Yup ... your insurance should cover the damages. The dealer lent you a car in good faith stipulating that the vehicle is returned on the date and time agreed and in the same condition.
Money lent to a friend can be recovered from an enemy means that tensions can arise between friends when money is involved. The lender may feel that the borrower has taken advantage of them in some way and the borrower may feel that the lender expects more praise for loaning them money.
It is possible bacause Jesus once have his passion on the cross.
In a perfect world, they would pay. Unfortunately, your car is covered by your insurance company and if the accident was the fault of your friend (in your car), then you insurance company must pay. If all of this was without your permission, you could press charges and try taking the person to small claims court for damamges.
Robbing Peter to pay Paul
What you have to sell is worth whatever someone will pay you for it. If the goods have been lent, then the owner can give you a purchase price or at least its insurance value.
liability insurance goes with the driver, so the drivers insurance would pay for it. If the driver does not have insurance, then the owner of the car's insurance would pay if the vehicle was knowingly lent.
If your Insurance company paid the claim then yes they can surcharge you for any chargeable accidents they paid out on your policy.
Halifax carries loans for automobiles, homes, businesses, life insurance and also boat and motorcycle insurance. The rates depend on the amount, coverage and time the money is lent to you.