Quizzes & Puzzles1 min ago
no road tax
14 Answers
if you are caught with your car parked or being driven and you have no road tax (for whatever reason) will this invalidate your insurance? surely if you had an accident even if it was the third parties fault it would be said that the vehicle should not be on the road without road tax in the first place and the onus would be on you.
your thoughts please...i really want to bring someone down a peg!!
your thoughts please...i really want to bring someone down a peg!!
Answers
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According to this, yes it does invalidate your insurance, (and rightly so!)
According to this, yes it does invalidate your insurance, (and rightly so!)
There are two aspects to motor insurance:
1. That required by law (essentially this covers the driver for damage or injuries he may cause to third parties).
2. Additional cover. This usually takes the form of either �Fire & Theft� additions to the policy or �Comprehensive� cover which also provides for repair or replacement of the policyholder�s own vehicle in the event of an accident.
Cover required by law cannot be repudiated by the insurers save on a few very limited grounds. Mainly this is where the driver is disqualified from driving. Third Party claims in all other circumstances (including where the car is not taxed, does not have a valid MoT or where the driver has broken the law when causing an accident - for example, speeding or careless driving) must be honoured.
Additional cover can be repudiated provided the exceptions are listed in the policy wording. I do not believe any of the major insurers make such an exception for untaxed vehicles. Mine insists that an MoT (if applicable) must be in force (though this would not facilitate non-payment of Third Party claims) , but it says nothing about tax.
I don�t know where �No Penalty Points� gains its information from, but it is wrong. I have posed a question to their �experts� and will post the answer (if I get one).
1. That required by law (essentially this covers the driver for damage or injuries he may cause to third parties).
2. Additional cover. This usually takes the form of either �Fire & Theft� additions to the policy or �Comprehensive� cover which also provides for repair or replacement of the policyholder�s own vehicle in the event of an accident.
Cover required by law cannot be repudiated by the insurers save on a few very limited grounds. Mainly this is where the driver is disqualified from driving. Third Party claims in all other circumstances (including where the car is not taxed, does not have a valid MoT or where the driver has broken the law when causing an accident - for example, speeding or careless driving) must be honoured.
Additional cover can be repudiated provided the exceptions are listed in the policy wording. I do not believe any of the major insurers make such an exception for untaxed vehicles. Mine insists that an MoT (if applicable) must be in force (though this would not facilitate non-payment of Third Party claims) , but it says nothing about tax.
I don�t know where �No Penalty Points� gains its information from, but it is wrong. I have posed a question to their �experts� and will post the answer (if I get one).
Nowhere in Part 6 of the RTA 1988 (this is the part dealing with road traffic act liabilities) does it state that no road tax means no insurance.
So for Act liabilities, you are insured whether you have road tax or not.
Nowhere in a private motor policy does it state no road tax means no insurance.
So contractually insurers are obliged meet their contractual obligations - for example own damage.
Simple as that really.
So for Act liabilities, you are insured whether you have road tax or not.
Nowhere in a private motor policy does it state no road tax means no insurance.
So contractually insurers are obliged meet their contractual obligations - for example own damage.
Simple as that really.