House Bill 487
142nd General Assembly (2003 - 2004)
Bill Progress
Out of Committee 6/30/04
The General Assembly has ended, the current status is the final status.
Bill Details
6/16/04
AN ACT TO AMEND TITLE 18 OF THE DELAWARE CODE RELATING TO AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE AND DRIVER EXCLUSION.
Under current Delaware law, an insurer may exclude a driver if the driver has violations that mandate exclusion under the insurer's underwriting guidelines. However, the law does not allow an insurer to exclude a driver from the policy at the request of the first named insured unless the excluded driver has such violations. (In other words, parents would have difficulty excluding their child.) The changes in subsection (a) fix this problem and clarify that, unless the exclusion is at the request of the first named insured, it must comply with the insurer's underwriting guidelines.
Also, if a driver is excluded, the law seems to require that the agent or insurer make sure that the excluded driver either has another separate policy from the same company, a policy from another company, or has turned in his or her driver license in 30 days to the DMV. If the excluded driver does not do this, the insurer must cancel the underlying policy. This procedure has several problems. First, the law does not contemplate that the excluded driver may not own a car and, thus, is not required to get insurance. Second, if the excluded driver fails to comply with the requirements of the law above, the insurer has to cancel the underlying policy from which the driver was excluded. This makes no sense. If parents exclude a teen-age son and he refuses to get insurance or turn in his license (or is not required to have insurance because he does not own a car), the parents' policy is cancelled. The bill corrects this anomaly by saying that the failure of the excluded driver to comply with getting a policy or turning in his or her license (unless he or she does not own a car) does not invalidate the exclusion and, thus, allows the underlying policy to remain in effect with the exclusion.
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Takes effect upon being signed into law
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