Until your ex buys insurance with you as the OWNER and him as the PREMIUM PAYER, he has not really fulfilled the court order. I would suggest you ask your lawyer to inform the ex of this. The best way to push this along is to have your ex meet you at the lawyer's office and have an agent/broker present with an application to get insurance. This way you can witness that the ex is not intentionally sabotaging the underwriting process and that you are the sole owner on the policy.
2007-03-07 09:35:32
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answer #1
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answered by Christopher B 1
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If you are still not married, than no, you can not buy or obtian a copy of an insurance policy without what is known as an "insurable interest" for most policies ( home, car, etc) this means at least part ownership of the property, for life it usually means you are the insured, the beneficiary, or some other type of interested party ( if it comes from your company they can see it ( sand medical records save hipps waivers) )
2007-03-06 11:26:05
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answer #2
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answered by pjmattus 2
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No. That is private information. Just like, he can't get a copy of YOUR life insurance policy. And guess what - he can produce a copy for the judge, but YOU won't get to see it. You'll just have to take the judge's word for it. And THEN, he can change the beneficiary to his new girlfriend, and you won't even know about it, and neither will the judge. Or he can cancel it.
The ONLY way to be sure that there's a life policy out there, is for YOU to be the owner, but he would have to consent to it. So if you're going to a judge, make it so that he's required to consent to YOU taking out a policy on him. Then YOU are required to pay the premiums, and YOU control the beneficiary clause.
2007-03-06 12:21:13
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous 7
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unless the policy is owned by you, you will have to get the court to request the policy. Its confidential info. Even if you know who it is, the policy #, the amount or anything else, they may not give you that info. Ask the court to order it, & that will be fine. Dont need to ask the agency, they are only following the law.
2007-03-06 10:59:34
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answer #4
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answered by ricks 5
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No. If your name is not listed on the policy as an insured (not a benificiary) then you cannot obtain a copy due to privacy laws.
2007-03-06 10:54:16
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answer #5
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answered by angel09 2
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Why don't you just ask your ex? I doubt the agent could give you that information. It's private. If you tell him he either gives it to you willingly or you will take him to court, then I imagine he'll go with the path of least resistance.
2007-03-06 10:52:24
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answer #6
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answered by leaptad 6
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Just one comment: This could be used against you in a court of law.
2007-03-06 10:57:19
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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The court should be requesting that evidence if it is required by them. Ask them to provide documentation
2007-03-06 10:53:08
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answer #8
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answered by chris m 5
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INsurance contracts are private. Only the owner can authorize you to see it.
2007-03-06 11:07:22
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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It is private and you can not get it.
2007-03-06 10:51:59
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answer #10
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answered by wish I were 6
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