I received citations for 1 no insurance and 2 no registration on a borrowed vehicle. After paying those citations can I turn around and sue the owner of the vehicle?
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I received citations for 1 no insurance and 2 no registration on a borrowed vehicle. After paying those citations can I turn around and sue the owner of the vehicle?
I received 2 citations of no insurance and registration on a friends vehicle. He told me his registration is considered a CLASSIC and that I could use my own insurance but of those statements were wrong once I received 2 citations. He has refused to help me pay and since then I’ve gone on to pay the fines. Can I turn around and sue him for the costs of those tickets totaling 575.00?
Asked on May 1, 2018 under General Practice, Texas
Answers:
SJZ, Member, New York Bar / FreeAdvice Contributing Attorney
Answered 6 years ago | Contributor
No, you cannot sue him for this, regardless of what he told you. The law puts the obligation on you to make sure you only drive a car when there is insurance and registration: if you did not confirm that you did not need those things here, that is your responsibility legally.
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