Waiting for a cover note
Author
Discussion

boiler

Original Poster:

217 posts

275 months

Monday 17th March 2003
quotequote all
I have a quick question - just curious I suppose.

I brought a Tiv at the beginning of February, and insured it with a reputable insurer. They sent a cover note for the first 30 days whilst I completed to paperwork. The 30 days is up, and I haven't received anything back. Spoke to them today, obviously the paperwork that I filled in got lost somewhere in the post (thanks Postman Pat ) They are sending another cover note and another copy of the paperwork for me to fill in.

The question is, can I drive the Tiv tonight, as work was $hite today, and I need a . What would happen if it was nicked, or worse I had an accident. They have taken a years premium but could they wriggle out of the cover.

Andy.

smeagol

1,947 posts

304 months

Monday 17th March 2003
quotequote all
I believe you are insured and OK. A lot of Insurance advertises say you can be "insured over the phone" which is effectively what you have done I presume you have paid the premium so therefore insured. I once had a curtesy car delivered to my place of work whilst they took my car away and I had to be insured for it. I rang from work and was covered emediatly so I could drive home. AFIK The cover note is only sent to provide as evidence if you get a producer and you get 7 days for it, (so it should arrive within that).

outlaw

1,893 posts

286 months

Monday 17th March 2003
quotequote all
want Adrian Flux was it, by any chance. They well known for that one.

>> Edited by outlaw on Monday 17th March 23:27

Dr Bob

637 posts

282 months

Tuesday 18th March 2003
quotequote all

outlaw said: want Adrian Flux was it, by any chance. They well known for that one.



Agreed, was with adrian flux for a bit last year and mighty unimpressed with the service I received.
- were cheapest though!
CH

loaf

850 posts

281 months

Tuesday 18th March 2003
quotequote all
s147 RTA 1988 states that a policy is not in force until a certificate has been delivered by the insurer to the insured. Phone-based insurers get round this by using the concept of a verbal contract - an insurance policy is just another contract - and all contracts are made up of an offer, an acceptance, and a consideration. Once you've proposed the risk and the insurer has quoted you a premium (offer) you've accepted it (acceptance), and you've made arrangements for payment (consideration) the contract between you and the insurer is in force under law and off you go. Get a policy number - not just the cover note number - and you should be OK.

Edited cos grammar was crap. Twice.
>> Edited by loaf on Tuesday 18th March 10:04

>> Edited by loaf on Tuesday 18th March 11:01