What is the name of your state (only U.S. law)? New York
We have six cars insured in our name (not rich - worth about 65K in total) and 3 were destroyed by flooding last week and 1 was damaged. The two intact cars are a 15 year old Camaro and a 12 year old Excursion. Our insurance company is one of the top 5.
All damaged cars had full coverage including rental car and I have always played it completely honestly with my ins company as to who drives what.
My wife, I, and my 25 year old daughter have rentals. The problem is my 17 year old son. He is listed as the principal operator on the car he uses. No rental company will allow him to drive. At face value I would understand that, but my neighbor was allowed to rent a car for his kid (17 also). Eventually I got the rental company to explain that their minimum driver age is 21 but their agreement with my insurance company lowers that to 18 while they have contracts with some other top insurance companies that allow their customers to drive the rentals at 16 (like my neighbor). Of course, my insurance company is pointing the finger at the rental company saying it is all their policies. I even managed to get a supervisor from ins and a supervisor from rental and me on a 3-way call together. The result was the rental guy telling the ins guy that they need to negotiate a different agreement on the corporate level if they want 17 year old customers to drive disaster cars.
So this leaves me with the options of not having my 17 old drive for a few weeks (at least); letting him drive a sports car (NO!); or letting him drive the largest production SUV ever made (maybe).
My point is ins sold me rental coverage for a car with a principal operator that they knew would not be allowed to drive a rental.
I think I should be compensated but am not sure what to ask for.
- I don't think a refund of the rental coverage premium is sufficient ($50) because the loss did occur.
- Do I ask for the $30 per day and just say I will use it for paying people to drive him around?
- Do I let him drive the Excursion (8 mpg at this point) as his everyday car and ask the ins company to pay for fuel?
It isn't a huge amount of money (especially since I have about 50K of uninsured damage to my house) but it is wrong.
Any suggestions would be appreciated. If they are not willing to compensate me, is it reasonable to report this to the state insurance commissioner?
We have six cars insured in our name (not rich - worth about 65K in total) and 3 were destroyed by flooding last week and 1 was damaged. The two intact cars are a 15 year old Camaro and a 12 year old Excursion. Our insurance company is one of the top 5.
All damaged cars had full coverage including rental car and I have always played it completely honestly with my ins company as to who drives what.
My wife, I, and my 25 year old daughter have rentals. The problem is my 17 year old son. He is listed as the principal operator on the car he uses. No rental company will allow him to drive. At face value I would understand that, but my neighbor was allowed to rent a car for his kid (17 also). Eventually I got the rental company to explain that their minimum driver age is 21 but their agreement with my insurance company lowers that to 18 while they have contracts with some other top insurance companies that allow their customers to drive the rentals at 16 (like my neighbor). Of course, my insurance company is pointing the finger at the rental company saying it is all their policies. I even managed to get a supervisor from ins and a supervisor from rental and me on a 3-way call together. The result was the rental guy telling the ins guy that they need to negotiate a different agreement on the corporate level if they want 17 year old customers to drive disaster cars.
So this leaves me with the options of not having my 17 old drive for a few weeks (at least); letting him drive a sports car (NO!); or letting him drive the largest production SUV ever made (maybe).
My point is ins sold me rental coverage for a car with a principal operator that they knew would not be allowed to drive a rental.
I think I should be compensated but am not sure what to ask for.
- I don't think a refund of the rental coverage premium is sufficient ($50) because the loss did occur.
- Do I ask for the $30 per day and just say I will use it for paying people to drive him around?
- Do I let him drive the Excursion (8 mpg at this point) as his everyday car and ask the ins company to pay for fuel?
It isn't a huge amount of money (especially since I have about 50K of uninsured damage to my house) but it is wrong.
Any suggestions would be appreciated. If they are not willing to compensate me, is it reasonable to report this to the state insurance commissioner?