Subject: Re: caus highway
Date: Apr 04, 2002 @ 19:23
Author: acroorca2002 ("acroorca2002" <orc@...>)
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awfully high impact if it actually reached mexico

there is a somewhat similar pair of roads there tho
between lukeville & quitobaquito arizona
running practically alongside each other for fully 10 miles
tho not quite as close together as this
& you can switch over there illegally & without insurance
if you find the break in the barbed wire

but there are no accidents in reality
& evidently the mexican napoleonic style code takes cognizance of
this fact

i know
i once had an accident there & had to pay a fine for simply having
had it

no sympathy for victims
indeed no victims
very sensible really
but that may be why you need special insurance

m

--- In BoundaryPoint@y..., Jon Amato <jamato@b...> wrote:
> Now, here's an interesting question - what would happen if a car
were
> somehow to end up in Mexico after such an accident? Most auto
insurance
> policies issued in the U.S. contain specific wording that excludes
> coverage in Mexico (although Canada is fine).
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Doug Murray [mailto:doug@d...]
> Sent: Wednesday, April 03, 2002 2:20 PM
> To: BoundaryPoint@y... <mailto:BoundaryPoint@y...>
>
> Subject: Re: [BoundaryPoint] caus highway
>
>
>
> Actually there is a bit of a ditch... there, anyway. Unless you
had a
> 4x4, you'd get hung up. What I wonder is what would happen if there
> were an accident on this stretch -- and the cars left the country
they
> were in. Even better, what would happen if an American car crossed
into
> Canada causing an accident -- and the Canadian car spun into
America.
> How would insurance & health coverage be affected?