Why These Records Matter
When a crash report lists the wrong owner, that mistake can create confusion about basic claim handling. In a car accident case, ownership records may help show which vehicle was involved, whether a policy was tied to that vehicle, and who the insurer should contact for information. They can also affect how an insurer evaluates possible underinsured motorist or medical payments issues, even though the police report alone does not control those coverage decisions.
In North Carolina, law enforcement officers investigate reportable crashes and prepare written reports that identify the people and vehicles involved. But a crash report is still just one piece of the file. In practice, reports can be inaccurate or incomplete, especially when the officer has limited information at the scene or receives conflicting statements.
What to Request
- Core documents: The crash report, any supplemental crash report, the vehicle registration, title information if available, and the declarations page or other basic proof of insurance for the vehicle or household policy at issue.
- Helpful add-ons: Photos of the vehicle and tag, repair records if they identify the vehicle, correspondence from the insurer showing how the vehicle was listed, and any written statement clarifying who owned the vehicle on the date of the crash.
How to Request Them (General Steps)
- Identify the holder: The crash report is usually available through the investigating agency or the North Carolina DMV records system. Registration and title information may come from vehicle records, while insurance information usually comes from the policyholder or insurer.
- Authorization: Some records require a signed authorization or a formal records request. Insurance documents are often easiest to gather from the person who bought the policy or from counsel already handling the injury claim.
- Follow-up: Keep a simple log of when each request was made, who responded, and what was produced. If the report appears wrong, ask whether the officer can issue a supplemental report or note the correction in the file.
What to Do If Records Are Delayed, Missing, or Incorrect
- Document the problem clearly. A short written summary identifying the incorrect owner entry and the records that contradict it can help keep the claim focused.
- Do not assume the crash report ends the issue. Insurers often compare the report against registration, policy information, and their own investigation before making a coverage decision.
- If the report cannot be changed quickly, provide the correcting documents anyway. A claim can still be evaluated using other reliable records.
- If the ownership issue affects underinsured motorist or medical payments questions, legal counsel may help organize the documents and frame the issue without relying only on the report.
How This Applies
Apply to your facts: Here, the reported owner and the insurance file do not clearly match, which can create confusion about whether the relevant coverage is tied to a particular vehicle, a named insured, or another available source of benefits. That does not mean coverage is automatically unavailable. It usually means the insurer needs better records, such as registration information, policy documents, and any correction or supplement to the crash report, before it can sort out whether underinsured motorist or medical payments coverage may be in play.
What the Statutes Say (Optional)
- N.C. Gen. Stat. § 20-166.1 – North Carolina requires investigation and written reporting of reportable crashes, including information about the persons and vehicles involved.
Conclusion
If a police report lists the wrong vehicle owner, treat it as a records problem, not the final word on your case. In North Carolina, the report helps start the investigation, but ownership and possible coverage issues are usually confirmed through registration records, policy documents, and follow-up reporting. One practical next step is to gather the crash report, registration, and available insurance paperwork in one place and have a licensed North Carolina attorney review the mismatch promptly.