The new section 144A of the Road Traffic act requires, essentially, all vehicles to be insured in their own right (the wording is quite verbose, but that’s what it means). A person keeping a vehicle on the road without such insurance is guilty of an offence.
I can’t agree that insurers who insist on this legislation being complied with before providing DOC cover are doing their policyholders a disservice. On the contrary, I believe those who do not are potentially placing their policyholders in a parlous position. I say this mainly because of the potential for seizure. It would be no fun, even if you are immune from prosecution because you have a valid DOC provision on your policy only to find your mate’s car gets seized leaving you stranded because it is not insured in its own right. It’s perfectly easy to establish whether a vehicle is on the MID. The owner of the vehicle is perfectly entitled to query the database himself and I don’t think anybody would think of taking action if the other driver did so himself (even though technically he may be guilty of a minor infringement of the Data Protection Act).
I think the reason why insurers specifically exclude the recovery of seized vehicles from the pound from the DOC facility is that the purpose of the seizure is to remove from the road vehicles that contravene S144A. It would make no sense if they were to be released, still in contravention on that Section, into the custody of a person using a DOC facility.
As I said earlier the new Continuous Insurance regulations have been a complete game-changer for some aspects of motor insurance.