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Originally Posted by hachette I have now spoken to my friend so I can verify some queries made by Mossycat. The mother and son both owed a car prior to her taking an insurance on her son’s car. The idea was that his car to be loaned on temporary basis when her car was scrapped until such time she is able to sort herself with her own transport. Broker was notified by phone call only. They did not request it in writing. The broker did not refuse to insure his mother as a prime driver when son telephoned them. He told them at the time the car was registered to him so they informed him he should change his V5 to his mum name and he has confirmed he will do so. She does not remember receiving or completing an insurance proposal form but can not be sure. The cover note was received showing his mum as a policy holder and him as a second driver She was insured with different insurers when she had her own car. His mum was named on her son’s policy when he owned the car but he was not named on her policy when she had a car as he never drove it. She thinks she was the last person to drive it but can not be sure. By issuing proceedings against Chaucer insurance I mean I used a web site called “moneyclaimonline” where you can take legal action against person/company who owes you money. |
OK thanks for that.
Your answers have closed down some options that may have been arguable in Court.
A proposal form MUST have been completed. The mother MUST have completed the proposal form (either online, by telephone or on paper).
The broker obviously advised the son that the car MUST be registered to his mum (ie the policyholder) and the son agreed to do this. Therefore it is MOST likely that it was conditional upon this that the contract was effected. (Hence why the Barrister advised that no action would succeed against the insurer).
The cover note was issued on the basis of the proposal and subject to the laws of contract. The contract was breached because the policyholder did not own the car. Therefore the cover note is worthless because the policy is void at inception (it never existed).
In my opinion (feel free to ignore this or seek further legal advice) form what I have read I would state the following.
The Insurer (Chaucer) offered a policy subject to their terms and conditions.
The policyholder accepted these terms and conditions and a cover note was issued.
A claim arose, in the course of the claim it was discovered that the terms and conditions of the Insurer had NOT been met. The Insurer refuses to deal with it, informs the policyholder and withdraws from anything further to do with investigating the claim, the salvage (the remains of the car).
The mother continues to hire a car in full knowledge that the insurer has refused to deal with the claim. This is her responsibility and nobody else's.
The mother is aware that the claim has been refuted but continues to allow the car to stay at the location it was recovered to, any storage charges after the date that the claim was turned down will be her responsibility.
The V5 is a legal document, I am no expert on it but I would be fairly certain that it would state that the dates entered must be CORRECT and also when you sign it you CONFIRM everything to be correct. The son signed over the car on 20/12/07 in the eyes of the law.
Whether I accept an error was made by the son or not is irrelevent, all errors have consequences, some more serious than others.
A Court of law will look at the facts, and the fact is that the terms and conditions were not met by the policyholder. Therefore the contract never existed.
The above is based purely on what I have seen on this thread, I have not seen the paperwork, nor do I know for certain that the insurer is indeed relying on breach of contract and if so on the remedy of void ab initio. My comments are based on my best understanding and instincts and should in no way either deter or encourage you from seeking further advice or persuing this matter.
I am sorry if this wasn't what you wanted to hear, but it is my opinion.
Mossy