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Yes. Vehicle registration simply documents who legally owns the vehicle. You don't actually have to have a drivers license to own it.
Basically the definition is as follows. Any person who has regular access to your vehicle would not be considered an occasional driver. If your son has insurance on his own vehicle then that coverage would follow him to a borrowed vehicle and there would be no need for this question. If he has no other auto or auto insurance and / or his drivers license reflects your home address, then obviously he is an authorized regular driver of your vehicle. Where the person lives, At home, not at home, does not determine his status as an occasional or regular driver. The question is does he have regular access to the vehicle in question whenever he needs or wants to drive. The best way to prove that he is an occasional driver would be to demonstrate that he owned his own vehicle at the time of the accident, that his vehicle was insured at the time. that the address on his drivers license reflects an address other than yours and that his vehicle was registered at his home address which is also not your address. State laws require that Drivers Licenses and Vehicles be registered at the address of the owner. If he had no vehicle, no insurance, and/or had a vehicle or drivers license registered at your address then it would likely be impossible to prove that he is only an occasional driver.
When you get a 'ticket' for violating a State Statute, City Ordinance, or Driving Code the violation is not tied to the license plate on the vehicle. The license plate is associated with the "registered owner" of the vehicle.When you get a 'ticket', it is associated with your driver's license, and the 'violation' is put in the driving record that is tied to your driver's license.You (if you are the registered owner of the vehicle) can get new license plates for your vehicle for many different reasons, unfortunately the tickets (violations) you get while driving (in any vehicle) are all associated with your driver license, not the vehicle's license plate.If you are referring to having been given a 'parking ticket', then the officer has 'called in' the license plate number and issued that parking ticket to the registered owner of the vehicle, which is also put on the person's driving record.Changing the license plate will not get you out of paying a parking ticket.
The only requirement is that the vehicle you take your test in be legally registered and insured.
Police and driver agencies can certainly ascertain who the last registered keeper of the vehicle was and their address.
yes its part of the agreement but you can have part ownership helping a friend out with there car as there needs to be one licence registered
You would have to contact the DVLA (Driver and Vehicle Licensing Authority) at Swansea... Write to them at:- Driver and Vehicle Licensing Agency Swansea SA6 7JL
That would be an ineresting situation since both the driver and his vehicle need to be registered and licensed within the state of the driver's/owner's legal residence. In other words, the holder of a Wisconsin driver's license is supposed to be a resident of Wisconsin and, consequently, is supposed to register his vehicle in Wisconsin.
No, but if you wish to actually drive a vehicle, you will need to have insurance on that vehicle. A driver must also have a valid driver's license. Anyone who wishes to drive a car on a public street needs to have that vehicle registered and licensed as well as having liability insurance on that vehicle.
Why not. That unlicensed vehicle owner could be disabled and hired a licensed driver to drive the vehicle.
In such a case, the ticket is sent to the registered owner of the vehicle. Most of the time, since the ticket is tied to the vehicle, not the driver, no points are assessed to the driver. If the owner wasn't driving the vehicle at the time, they can always go grab the actual driver and try to make them pay the fine.