Drive Other Car Coverage
– Part Two
In Part One, we
mentioned that households who don’t have personal auto coverage because the
vehicle they use is owned by a business face coverage gaps. The gaps are due to
the limitations of basic commercial auto coverage. However, the problems may be
addressed by adding an option called Drive Other Car Coverage. The option is
usually flexible to meet various needs.
The additional
protection allows liability coverage to be extended to non-owned or hired
vehicles. If every person in the household is listed, this coverage extension
applies to everyone. The amended policy would then be available to provide
liability coverage for any auto that is hired or borrowed by household’s
members. There are two exceptions. First, no member of the household can own
the vehicle. Second, the vehicle cannot be one that anyone in the household is
working on in the course of running a business as a car dealer, repair
operation or parking lot.
Let’s revisit Joe
from Part One. Remember that Joe hit a minivan when he ran a stop sign. The
accident happened while he was operating a friend’s car. If Joe’s commercial
auto policy was amended by a Drive Other Car form, he would have coverage up to
the amount that appears in that form. Coverage would apply to the damage and
injury caused by Joe.
A Drive Other Car
Coverage form extends Auto Medical Payments And Uninsured And Underinsured
Motorists Coverage to protect non-owned and hired vehicles when driven by any
member of the insured household. Family members include any person related by
blood, marriage or adoption to the individual listed on the form, provided they
are a resident in the household. Wards and foster children are included in the
definition. Note that all of the above coverages must also appear as selections
in the form. They must also appear with respective insurance limits.
A Drive Other
Coverage option typically expands coverage by changing a commercial auto
policy’s definition of “Who is an Insured.” The named individual and all of his
family (who reside in the household) become insureds under the auto policy but
only for the items where a premium is indicated and only while the individual
or the family member are traveling in an auto not owned by the insured nor the
individual listed nor any of the family members. For instance, in Part One we
discussed Cindy, who was injured as a passenger while returning home from a
shopping trip. Under the modified policy, Cindy would be covered for
underinsured motorist coverage up to the limit scheduled in the endorsement.
Another issue
handled by a Drive Other Car Coverage option is Physical Damage Coverage for
non-owned or hired vehicles. Usually this coverage is extended to the scheduled
individual and spouse only. There is no coverage for family members and there
is only coverage for the spouse if the spouse lives in the scheduled
individual’s home.
The coverage
expands the definition of covered auto to include a private passenger type
vehicle that is under the control of the scheduled individual and the spouse.
The auto cannot be owned by the individual or any family member and cannot be
used by the individual or spouse in a business operation involving car repair,
car sales or parking. In the situation in part one featuring Ginger and Jake,
the same tree abuse happens during the test drive, but this time the company
policy on her husband’s car is modified by a Drive Other Car Coverage option.
That insurance will pay Jake for the damage to his vehicle. After the repairs,
Ginger may well go ahead and buy it.
If your
household’s vehicle situation is similar to what has been discussed by this
two-part article, you might want to get together with an insurance professional
to arrange for proper coverage.
COPYRIGHT: Insurance Publishing Plus, Inc. 2008
All rights reserved. Production or distribution, whether in
whole or in part, in any form of media or language; and no matter what country,
state or territory, is expressly forbidden without written consent of Insurance
Publishing Plus, Inc.