Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My daughter’s car was badly damaged in a hit and run at the end of March. There is an insurance problem, and the car is still sitting on the street where it was hit. It is not drivable. We don’t know who hit it.
Her car was in her father’s name until the title was signed over to her in early March. She got an insurance policy on the car, dated from when the title was signed over. Her father had a massive stroke about a year ago, and died about 2 weeks ago. He has been unable to manage his own affairs since the stroke. His sibling has been managing the general affairs since I left the area.
Now, the insurance issue: her father’s policy was not cancelled. It was supposed to end due to nonpayment a couple of weeks ago. Geico and Progressive just keep giving my daughter the run around. She is only 20, and really doesn’t understand anything they’re asking for. There is no executor. The POA died with him.
What can her or I do to get them to fix her car? “Could have,” and “should have” answers really aren’t that helpful to me. I cannot change the past. It has been a difficult time for everyone since he went into hospice care. I need some help on moving from where we are right now.
If your daughter owns the car as per the title signed to her on the date of the accident and has her own insurance on that date, she should only deal w/ her insurance policy.
to add, mentioning the other non canceled policy will just delay and make things confusing. You just say I only know about the policy assigned to your daughter and that's it.
Per OP’s most recent post, daughter does not own car. Deceased father does.
i thought that the title was signed over to the daughter before the accident e.g. early march
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My daughter’s car was badly damaged in a hit and run at the end of March. There is an insurance problem, and the car is still sitting on the street where it was hit. It is not drivable. We don’t know who hit it.
Her car was in her father’s name until the title was signed over to her in early March. She got an insurance policy on the car, dated from when the title was signed over. Her father had a massive stroke about a year ago, and died about 2 weeks ago. He has been unable to manage his own affairs since the stroke. His sibling has been managing the general affairs since I left the area.
Now, the insurance issue: her father’s policy was not cancelled. It was supposed to end due to nonpayment a couple of weeks ago. Geico and Progressive just keep giving my daughter the run around. She is only 20, and really doesn’t understand anything they’re asking for. There is no executor. The POA died with him.
What can her or I do to get them to fix her car? “Could have,” and “should have” answers really aren’t that helpful to me. I cannot change the past. It has been a difficult time for everyone since he went into hospice care. I need some help on moving from where we are right now.
If your daughter owns the car as per the title signed to her on the date of the accident and has her own insurance on that date, she should only deal w/ her insurance policy.
to add, mentioning the other non canceled policy will just delay and make things confusing. You just say I only know about the policy assigned to your daughter and that's it.
Per OP’s most recent post, daughter does not own car. Deceased father does.
i thought that the title was signed over to the daughter before the accident e.g. early march
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My daughter’s car was badly damaged in a hit and run at the end of March. There is an insurance problem, and the car is still sitting on the street where it was hit. It is not drivable. We don’t know who hit it.
Her car was in her father’s name until the title was signed over to her in early March. She got an insurance policy on the car, dated from when the title was signed over. Her father had a massive stroke about a year ago, and died about 2 weeks ago. He has been unable to manage his own affairs since the stroke. His sibling has been managing the general affairs since I left the area.
Now, the insurance issue: her father’s policy was not cancelled. It was supposed to end due to nonpayment a couple of weeks ago. Geico and Progressive just keep giving my daughter the run around. She is only 20, and really doesn’t understand anything they’re asking for. There is no executor. The POA died with him.
What can her or I do to get them to fix her car? “Could have,” and “should have” answers really aren’t that helpful to me. I cannot change the past. It has been a difficult time for everyone since he went into hospice care. I need some help on moving from where we are right now.
If your daughter owns the car as per the title signed to her on the date of the accident and has her own insurance on that date, she should only deal w/ her insurance policy.
to add, mentioning the other non canceled policy will just delay and make things confusing. You just say I only know about the policy assigned to your daughter and that's it.
Per OP’s most recent post, daughter does not own car. Deceased father does.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My daughter’s car was badly damaged in a hit and run at the end of March. There is an insurance problem, and the car is still sitting on the street where it was hit. It is not drivable. We don’t know who hit it.
Her car was in her father’s name until the title was signed over to her in early March. She got an insurance policy on the car, dated from when the title was signed over. Her father had a massive stroke about a year ago, and died about 2 weeks ago. He has been unable to manage his own affairs since the stroke. His sibling has been managing the general affairs since I left the area.
Now, the insurance issue: her father’s policy was not cancelled. It was supposed to end due to nonpayment a couple of weeks ago. Geico and Progressive just keep giving my daughter the run around. She is only 20, and really doesn’t understand anything they’re asking for. There is no executor. The POA died with him.
What can her or I do to get them to fix her car? “Could have,” and “should have” answers really aren’t that helpful to me. I cannot change the past. It has been a difficult time for everyone since he went into hospice care. I need some help on moving from where we are right now.
If your daughter owns the car as per the title signed to her on the date of the accident and has her own insurance on that date, she should only deal w/ her insurance policy.
to add, mentioning the other non canceled policy will just delay and make things confusing. You just say I only know about the policy assigned to your daughter and that's it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My daughter’s car was badly damaged in a hit and run at the end of March. There is an insurance problem, and the car is still sitting on the street where it was hit. It is not drivable. We don’t know who hit it.
Her car was in her father’s name until the title was signed over to her in early March. She got an insurance policy on the car, dated from when the title was signed over. Her father had a massive stroke about a year ago, and died about 2 weeks ago. He has been unable to manage his own affairs since the stroke. His sibling has been managing the general affairs since I left the area.
Now, the insurance issue: her father’s policy was not cancelled. It was supposed to end due to nonpayment a couple of weeks ago. Geico and Progressive just keep giving my daughter the run around. She is only 20, and really doesn’t understand anything they’re asking for. There is no executor. The POA died with him.
What can her or I do to get them to fix her car? “Could have,” and “should have” answers really aren’t that helpful to me. I cannot change the past. It has been a difficult time for everyone since he went into hospice care. I need some help on moving from where we are right now.
If your daughter owns the car as per the title signed to her on the date of the accident and has her own insurance on that date, she should only deal w/ her insurance policy.
Anonymous wrote:My daughter’s car was badly damaged in a hit and run at the end of March. There is an insurance problem, and the car is still sitting on the street where it was hit. It is not drivable. We don’t know who hit it.
Her car was in her father’s name until the title was signed over to her in early March. She got an insurance policy on the car, dated from when the title was signed over. Her father had a massive stroke about a year ago, and died about 2 weeks ago. He has been unable to manage his own affairs since the stroke. His sibling has been managing the general affairs since I left the area.
Now, the insurance issue: her father’s policy was not cancelled. It was supposed to end due to nonpayment a couple of weeks ago. Geico and Progressive just keep giving my daughter the run around. She is only 20, and really doesn’t understand anything they’re asking for. There is no executor. The POA died with him.
What can her or I do to get them to fix her car? “Could have,” and “should have” answers really aren’t that helpful to me. I cannot change the past. It has been a difficult time for everyone since he went into hospice care. I need some help on moving from where we are right now.
Anonymous wrote:She hasn’t even finished retitling the car. She had to get repairs done after failing inspection. She has the repairs done, and 72 hours later, it was smashed. She had C&C coverage through both policies. Progressive specifically said ownership of the car is not relevant here. The two policies are what matter.
These are a lot of questions that aren’t particularly relevant to my question here. They’re are 2 policies. They keep saying she needs x,y or z, and bouncing her back and forth.
Anonymous wrote:She hasn’t even finished retitling the car. She had to get repairs done after failing inspection. She has the repairs done, and 72 hours later, it was smashed. She had C&C coverage through both policies. Progressive specifically said ownership of the car is not relevant here. The two policies are what matter.
These are a lot of questions that aren’t particularly relevant to my question here. They’re are 2 policies. They keep saying she needs x,y or z, and bouncing her back and forth.
Anonymous wrote:Has she made a claim with GEICO to get it fixed? If the car is insured under her own policy, then they should fix. If GEICO wants to go after Progressive to get reimbursed, that’s between them and shouldn’t hold up the repairs. It sounds like something else might be going on though, like maybe the car isn’t actually insured. Did she file a police report to document the hit and run? Submit photos or whatever else GEICO is asking for? Insurance companies always ask for information when you make a claim.
Ideally she could have Progressive handle the repairs so that her rates don’t go up, but there might not be coverage for the car under that policy after she obtained title and her dad died.