Death Of Three Young Ladies Backpacking...
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No best answer has yet been selected by bobis. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.There is an alternative to Loosheads answer, though he has given a good answer.
If the "friend" is not a "friend" then you could say she did not have permission to use your car but she took it without your knowledge, the police would then charge her for taking without consent and she would face any charges and you would be in the clear. Perhaps you can advise your friend of this.
If you do not want to do this then follow Loosehead's advice.
Allowing a vehicle to be used uninsured carries an IN12 conviction - this can be endorsed with 6 points, so it's possible a new driver can lose their licence.
Unfortunately, the defence that the friend told her he/she had insurance will not be deemed a satisfactory defence, and your daughter should have requested to see the insurance certificate.
It's not a nice situation, but the police won't accept ignorance as a valid excuse for not prosecuting in the majority of cases.
If the friend says he/she never told your daughter this, you have one word against the other, and I would suspect (based o ncases I've seen) that they will both be liable for prosecution.
Ok Kempie pick holes, I used one word "abet" to replace your entire paragraph, note it as a small "a" it was to avoid going into the actual offence. abet is just a word it has no definition in law. The IN12 offence discribed by gouldc is essentially aiding and abeting the offence.
Anyway Bobis the case pivots on whether your daughter thought he had insurance and she did. It would help though if her "friend" also told the police that he convinced her that he had.
The only appropriate offence here would be permitting (the friend) to drive without insurance. (She could not be said to have "caused" him to drive as she has no power of compulsion over him.
However, you cannot in law be considered able to permit something you have no knowledge of, so if she had no reason to believe he was uninsured at the time, I would argue that there is no case against her to answer.