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Liability for insured 18 year old child

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rmwnmdn

Junior Member
What is the name of your state (only U.S. law)? Texas

I have an 18 year old who, I have discovered, texts while she is driving. She is on my insurance policy. What is my liability in the event that she kills or permanently disables someone in an auto accident? Would it protect me to put her on a separate insurance policy?
 


It would be smarter to have your daughter own the vehicle. It will eliminate your liability. Owner's liability statutes and negligent entrustment actions are against the owner of the automobile, not the person who pays for insuring the automobile.
 
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Antigone*

Senior Member
What is the name of your state (only U.S. law)? Texas

I have an 18 year old who, I have discovered, texts while she is driving. She is on my insurance policy. What is my liability in the event that she kills or permanently disables someone in an auto accident? Would it protect me to put her on a separate insurance policy?
You would be better off not allowing her to get behind the wheel of a deadly weapon under your watch. She is not mature enough to handle the responsibility of driving a vehicle. The sad thing about it is that if you continue to allow her to drive your vehicles, you are just as responsible for any crimes she commits behind the wheel.

This kind of behaviour really hits home. You see a hit and run driver hit my daughter's car and she is now disabled for life and in a vegitative state. I never knew who hit my daughter because they ran, but I believe down to the depth of my bones that they were either drunk, texting or distracted somehow.

Your daughter may be the cause of someone's else hurt, hopefully you do not contribute to that.
 

Banned_Princess

Senior Member
It would be smarter to have your daughter own the vehicle. It will eliminate your liability. Owner's liability statutes and negligent entrustment actions are against the owner of the automobile, not the person who pays for insuring the automobile.
that would not eliminate moms liability.

Injured or dead persons estate can go after the house daughter lives in, which would be...

right, moms house.

You need to take away that child's car and or phone.
 

Zigner

Senior Member, Non-Attorney
that would not eliminate moms liability.

Injured or dead persons estate can go after the house daughter lives in, which would be...

right, moms house.

You need to take away that child's car and or phone.
Really? So, a person who rents a house exposes the owner of the house to liability? Really?
 

ecmst12

Senior Member
As long as she lives in your household there is a chance you could be named in a lawsuit, because they will be looking for possible umbrella coverage from your homeowners insurance (which you should have, by the way). The best protection is the highest liability coverage you can afford.
 

csi7

Senior Member
As long as she is on your policy, you will be held responsible.

For your personal safety, I would sit down with her, explain the rules of staying on your policy. The financial consequences of an accident while texting are far reaching.
 

Zigner

Senior Member, Non-Attorney
As long as she lives in your household there is a chance you could be named in a lawsuit, because they will be looking for possible umbrella coverage from your homeowners insurance (which you should have, by the way). The best protection is the highest liability coverage you can afford.
Ahhhh - but to be clear. Being named does NOT equal having liability ;)
But I do agree that, if named, one must defend.
 

rmwnmdn

Junior Member
Cell texting in vehicle

To those of you who responded take away the phone and the car, rest assured that is what we plan to do if she is caught texting again. She knows this. We could go on and discuss the addicting nature of technology which is why there ought to be a law prohibiting all use in a car. But how many people will die before we pass such a law?
 

ecmst12

Senior Member
There are specific cell phone laws in a lot of places, and driving while distracted is usually illegal all on its own. Laws don't make people any less stupid.
 

HighwayMan

Super Secret Senior Member
To those of you who responded take away the phone and the car, rest assured that is what we plan to do if she is caught texting again. She knows this.

And what if she's not caught but keeps doing it anyway? Who is supposed to catch her?
 

Country Living

Senior Member
To those of you who responded take away the phone and the car, rest assured that is what we plan to do if she is caught texting again. She knows this. We could go on and discuss the addicting nature of technology which is why there ought to be a law prohibiting all use in a car. But how many people will die before we pass such a law?
You don't need a law to make your daughter quit texting and driving. You need strong parental controls. The way you put it, she can text to her little heart's content as long as she's not caught. Pull the keys and her driver's license NOW so she'll have a clear understanding what she's doing is dangerous. She has to earn the right to get them back.

OR she leaves the cell phone with you when she has the car.
 

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