On
23 May 2025 at 10:12 stew 1 Said:
Hi all.
I bought the house from a chap who had been renting it out to tenants, so all services were fully checked out and ‘proper.’ The gas engineer was satisfied with the installation and had no issue with the setup, so that’s good.
The git who crashed the car had borrowed it off a friend. The Police found he had no insurance, no licence, and was drunk. The car was untaxed and SORN, and had no MOT.
It was however insured… I informed the vehicle’s insurance company. The owner, to my knowledge, has yet to report it!
Claim is going through my home insurance, who will no doubt battle it out with the vehicle insurer.
It’s a quagmire of paperwork, phone calls, emails, victim statements, etc. The driver lives two doors away, and is renting from a housing association, so I’ve reported him. There is a list of ‘previous’ so they’ve served him a section 8 notice to vacate. My other neighbours have been very supportive.
It’s quite the learning curve. I just want a quiet life! 🙄
You’re lucky that there is insurance. If an uninsured driver has an accident the motor insurers bureau will check if there is ANY insurance on the vehicle and if there is then that policy must suffer the claim regardless of who is driving or even if they don’t know. It’s a good reason to make sure that if you sell a vehicle you do not leave the insurance policy to run its course (as some people do, especially young drivers, to gain that extra year’s no-claims discount). You can end up losing out big time if something like this happens and your only fault would be not thinking to cancel or suspend the cover.
It’s good news for you/your insurer though. Since there’s an active policy there is a way to recover costs. Make sure you inform your insurer that the vehicle has an active policy in case they don’t think to check further than the driver. It might make a big difference to how your own insurer approaches your rebuild and repair costs if they know that another company is footing the bill.