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97 Denver L. Rev. F. 1 (2019)

handle is hein.journals/dnvrlwfv97 and id is 1 raw text is: 








NAVIGATING THE ROADWAYS OF AUTOMOBILE LIABILITY
                            INSURANCE

      MONICA  L. C. LESTER, ESQ. OFMCELROY,   DEUTSCH,  MULVANEY   &
                           CARPENTER,  LLP

    Motor  vehicle financial responsibility statutes vary from state to state,
but every state requires motorists to purchase some form of automobile
liability insurance.' Pursuant to the Motor Vehicle Financial Responsibil-
ity Act,  Colorado  requires automobile  owners   purchase  automobile
liability insurance for losses arising out of the ownership, maintenance or
use of a motor vehicle.2 Motor vehicle includes automobiles, low-pow-
ered scooters, trailers, and semitrailers.3 Motor vehicle does not include
toy vehicles, snowmobiles, off-highway vehicles, or vehicles designed to
be used primarily on rails.4

    Liability insurance provides coverage for bodily injury to another
person or property damage to another person's vehicle or property.' Colo-
rado is a tort state, meaning fault determines who is liable for injuries
resulting from an auto accident.6

    Minimum   Coverages

    The  minimum   liability insurance coverages required in Colorado in-
clude:
     •   $ 25,000 for bodily injury or death to any one person not at fault
         for an accident;
     •   $ 50,000 for bodily injury or death to all persons not at fault for
         an accident;
     •   $ 15,000 for property damage in any one accident.7

     Motorists may purchase automobile liability policies providing cover-
ages more  extensive than the minimums.8

    MedPay




    1.    Jeffrey W. Stempel, The Insurance Policy as Social Instrument and Social Institution,
51 WM. & MARY L. REV. 1489, 1497-98, (Mar. 2010) ([E]very state effectively requires auto insur-
ance in order to license a car.).
     2.   C.R.S. § 42-7-101, etseq.; C.R.S. § 10-4-635(1)(a).
     3.   C.R.S. § 10-4-601(6); C.R.S. § 42-7-103(8).
     4.   C.R.S. § 10-4-601(6).
     5.   C.R.S. § 42-7-103(2).
     6.   Trevor M. Gordon, To Reform or Repudiate? An Argument on the Future of No-Fault
Auto Insurance, 17 QUINNIPIAC HEALTH L.J. 63, 75, 2013-2014.
     7.   C.R.S. § 10-4-620; C.R.S. § 42-7-103(2).
     8.   C.R.S. § 10-4-621(1).

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