Motor insurance
Most people know something about motor insurance. This is because any vehicle driven on public roads must have a certain level of insurance.
The Road Traffic Act ensures that drivers must meet liabilities they incur should they injure other people or cause damage in an accident.
The person who is injured is known as the third party. The first and second parties are the car driver and their insurance company respectively. The third party may be a pedestrian, a passenger in the car driven by the insured person, or the driver or passenger in another vehicle.
The injured third party can claim compensation from the driver of the offending car. The driver then relies on his or her insurers to pay the other person's claim.
Different Types of Motor Policy
The law says that drivers must have insurance against third party injury or damage claims and that the insurer must give to the insured a certificate of motor insurance. However, most motor insurance policies provide far more extensive cover than this. There are four basic types of cover available in Britain:
* Act only - This brings only the minimum required by law - third party liability risks incurred on public roads. Policies of this type are very rarely issued. Few motorists would be content to rely on them unless, because of a poor driving record, they could not obtain any other cover.
* Third party - As well as covering the insured when driving on public roads, this type of policy applies on private property. It covers third party claims and provides protection against other legal liabilities. For example passenger indemnity, covering the possibility that a passenger in the car may cause an accident perhaps by carelessly opening the door and knocking a cyclist over. It also provides cover against certain legal costs.
* Third party fire and theft - In addition to the protection given by third party insurance, this type of policy covers loss or damage to the insurer's own car as a result of fire, theft, or attempted theft.
* Comprehensive - The widest form of cover available, although it cannot protect against every conceivable risk. In addition to the covers described in 1, 2 and 3, comprehensive cover protects in other valuable ways. The most important of these is accidental damage cover -policyholders can have their own damaged vehicle repaired or replaced. Comprehensive policies also include personal accident insurance, providing payments for death and specified serious injuries such as the loss of a limb or sight. Such payments are usually restricted to the policyholder and his or her wife or husband. Other cover with a comprehensive policy can include small amounts of medical expenses cover for anyone in the insured car, who is injured in an accident, and for loss or damage to personal effects in the car.
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Mr.Shashi kiran
- skiranks
- bangalore, India