Road Rescue cover

Offered by some private car insurers as part of the car insurance. Covers the cost of call-out and roadside repairs (subject to exceptions), vehicle recovery to a garage, hire car to continue a journey or return home, rail fare to cover cost of collecting the car after repair, transportation of the car and occupants to destination or home or overnight hotel accommodation up to specified limits.

Road Risks insurance

Motor trade policy permitting driving of own and customers vehicles on a road or temporarily garaged during a journey. Use of vehicles is restricted to motor trade use and social, domestic and pleasure. There are wide ranging options for driving by the insured, the insured’s spouse, employees and friends and named additional drivers. Further extensions include loan and hire, unaccompanied demonstration, private hire or windscreen cover. Cover can be comprehensive, third party fire and theft or third party. Risks on the insured’s premises are covered under internal risks policies. See POINTS BASIS; NAMED DRIVER BASIS; TRADE PLATE BASIS.

Road Traffic Act 1988, Part VI (Compulsory Insurance Requirements)

It is unlawful to use, or permit use of, a motor vehicle on a road without a third party policy or security (s.143). Minimum cover is liability for death or injury and for property damage up to £250,000 under a policy issued by an authorised insurer belonging to the Motor Insurers’ Bureau and meeting EC requirements. The policy must also cover emergency treatment. The insurer’s right to avoid an ‘Act’ claim is restricted (s.148). See ACT ONLY POLICY; CAR SHARING; MOTOR INSURANCE CERTIFICATES.

Robbery

UK: Stealing by force or threat of force (Theft Act 1968, s.8).
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The felonious taking, either by force or by fear of force, of the personal property of another, commonly known as a hold-up.
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US: The taking of property from a person by force or threat of violence.
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The unlawful taking of property by violence or threat of violence. According to Section 390 of the Indian Penal Code “Theft is robbery if in order to the commission o for in the committing of the theft or in carrying away or in attempting to carry away property obtained by theft, the offender, for that end, voluntarily causes (or attempts to cause) to any person death or hurt or wrongful restraint or fear of instant death or hurt or wrongful restraint. Extortion is robbery if the offender, at the time of committing the extortion, is in the presence of the person put in fear, and commits the extortion by putting that person in fear of instant death, of instant hurt, or of instant wrongful restraint to that person, or to some other person, and, by so putting in fear, induces the person so put in fear then and there to deliver up the thing extorted. (The offender is said to be present if he is sufficiently near to put the other person in fear of instant death, of instant hurt, or of instant wrongful restraint.” Refer also: “Theft.”. Refer also “Extortion”.

Rogue trading

Covers financial institutions for direct financial losses caused by traders acting outside their authority. Unauthorised trading means trading which at the time of trade is: (a) in excess of permitted financial limits; or (b) outside of permitted product lines; or (c) not with a designated counterparty. The policy does not cover simple errors or losses caused by traders acting on behalf of third parties and that part of any loss that is deemed to have been authorised. Cover is usually arranged in conjunction with a bankers’ blanket bond.

RPI escalation

Rate of annual increase in respect of annuity and pensions payments to help them maintain purchasing power. The annuity payments increase in line with increases in the retail price index, a cost of living index, subject, usually, to a cap of 5 per cent per annum. This contrasts with a level annuity that remains unchanged no matter how long it runs.

Rules for Construction of Policy

Twelve rules set out in the Schedule to the Marine Insurance Act 1906 for the purpose of interpreting the marine insurance policy. The rules relate to such phrases as ‘lost or not lost’; at and from; from; from the loading thereof; safely landed; touch and stay; perils of the sea; pirates; thieves; restraint of princes; barratry; all other perils; average unless general; stranded; ship; freight; and goods.

Run-off account

A year of account of a Lloyd’s syndicate which has been left open after the date at which that account would normally have been closed by reinsurance. See OPEN YEAR.
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A year of account which has not been closed as at the date at which it would normally have been closed and which remains open.