Twitching & Birdwatching1 min ago
driving without insurance special reasons
Hi My daughter (aged 20) recently passed her driving test and about 2 weeks later her friend asked her to drive him and some friends to a Uni do as he had been drinking. Her friends said she would be covered under his insurance as he said he was fully comp. She drove a little way and was stopped by the police (she hadn't done anything wrong, hadn't been drinking etc)) they asked her for her documents and she said it wasn't her car so they said she needed to bring in her ins docs next day. She went the next day with her friend and his docs and was in shock when the police said they did not cover her. She was a named driver for our car at the time but of course that doesn't cover her for other cars. She genuinely believed she was covered is there any chance that she could please special reasons and does anyone know what the best way to approach this is? She is such a good kid and would never have driven if she hadn't thought she was insured.
Answers
[Two Part Answer]
There have been one or two bits of misleading information given among some of the answers.
Firstly, assuming your daughter is not covered by any other policy as has been suggested, she has no defence and no mitigation. It is absolutely her responsibili ty to ensure she was covered. She did not do so, and that’s that.
She should...
She should...
14:02 Tue 23rd Nov 2010
-- answer removed --
Thanks for all your replies. We know she is "legally" guilty but she is morally innocent and we just want to help her in any way we can. The summons may well not come until April just as she is about to do her finals. She is worrying about this all the time, it feels like she has already been punished out of all proportion. Thanks again for the replies so far but would really appreciate if anyone has constructive advice about how to go about claiming special reasons and the chances of special reasons being accepted by the Magistrates.
A few people have already told you that will not happen and she will be charged for it. I don't think you can claim she is morally innocent, it is up to her to check she is insured, there's not really any way around that and saying "I didn't know" isn't going to let her off. In the eyes of the law, she should have known.
> Her friends said she would be covered under his insurance as he said he was fully comp.
That's not what 'fully comprehensive' means, though...
> She is such a good kid and would never have driven if she hadn't thought she was insured
As has already been pointed out, ignorance is no excuse before the law.
That's not what 'fully comprehensive' means, though...
> She is such a good kid and would never have driven if she hadn't thought she was insured
As has already been pointed out, ignorance is no excuse before the law.
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