Quizzes & Puzzles3 mins ago
Cant Be Right Surely?
23 Answers
my step son (student) driving along and a car reversed out causing step son to spin and hit another car. The driver of the reversing car has admitted reliability! (relief)!! My stepsons car was badly damaged so he now has a courtesy car until insurance is sorted. We are utterly shocked that he has received an email today stating that
car
market value £500
Less excess £750
Less remaining insurance premium £519.24
Settlement Figure is -(minus) £769.24
I still cant get my head around this. One day he has a car (fully comp of coarse) a week later he has no car and owes £769. And to add insult to injury he has to give the courtesy car back that his mam has just filled to the brim with petrol
car
market value £500
Less excess £750
Less remaining insurance premium £519.24
Settlement Figure is -(minus) £769.24
I still cant get my head around this. One day he has a car (fully comp of coarse) a week later he has no car and owes £769. And to add insult to injury he has to give the courtesy car back that his mam has just filled to the brim with petrol
Answers
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Surely if he took out the insurance say in December then he would only be liable to pay installments until the Insurance Company is no longer liable. If he had sold the car, instead of writing it off, he would not be expected to pay back the remaining Insurance installments would he? Also if the other driver has claimed liability then the your sons Insurance Company will sue the other drivers Insurance company so you son should owe nothing.
The remaining insurance premium is payable whatever else happens. As ubasses points out, the premium is an annual one and the insurers offer you the facility to pay it monthly. It's just the same as buying a TV on credit. If you get burgled the day after you buy it and it gets stolen the remaining instalments are still payable.
I think they may struggle to charge your stepson the difference between the market value of his car and the excess (i.e. £250). An excess is designed to make the policyholder liable for the first £x of any claim. It is not designed to provide the insurers with funds should a claim be for less than the excess. There are two ways to demonstrate this:
If he made no claim at all (i.e. just swallowed the cost of the incident himself) no payment would be due to the insurers.
If his car was worth more than the excess and he sustained £500 worth of damage the insurers could not expect a £250 payment so that he could get it repaired at his own expense.
His best bet would be to persue the reversing driver for £500. This is the most he can expect, it being the market value of his car. But alas he is stuck with the £519 policy payments.
I think they may struggle to charge your stepson the difference between the market value of his car and the excess (i.e. £250). An excess is designed to make the policyholder liable for the first £x of any claim. It is not designed to provide the insurers with funds should a claim be for less than the excess. There are two ways to demonstrate this:
If he made no claim at all (i.e. just swallowed the cost of the incident himself) no payment would be due to the insurers.
If his car was worth more than the excess and he sustained £500 worth of damage the insurers could not expect a £250 payment so that he could get it repaired at his own expense.
His best bet would be to persue the reversing driver for £500. This is the most he can expect, it being the market value of his car. But alas he is stuck with the £519 policy payments.
It occurs to me that it is a bit of a cheek to insist the whole of an annual insurance is due prior to receipt of the service. You use it up a moment at a time. Fairness suggests it should be paid for and due at the same rate. In which case it's not credit, it's up an front payment demand that they'll relent on month by month.
Cheeky bees these companies. Demand cake and eat it. And they all get away with it.
Cheeky bees these companies. Demand cake and eat it. And they all get away with it.
So what happens when you sell your car and you've been paying the insurance by DD? I've never ever been asked by an insurance company to repay the total amount owing on a Policy because I've cancelled the insurance due to sale of vehicle -the most I've been charged was a small admin fee because I did not take out the new car Insurance with the same company.
The insurance company is wrong, he does have to pay the £519 .24 but as the excess is more than the car is worth there should just be no payout on that.
As the other party has admitted liability they ( or rather their insurance)should pay his excess and pay for a courtesy car. That is what happened to me when someone drove into me on my side of the road.
As the other party has admitted liability they ( or rather their insurance)should pay his excess and pay for a courtesy car. That is what happened to me when someone drove into me on my side of the road.
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thanks guys for all of your replys. my stepson has rang his insurance to say hes not accepting their offer but he has been told that the man that admitted liability has changed his mind to say that it wasnt his fault. clearly it was there was a witness and its obvious by the damage who was at fault.