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England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Parker v McClaren [2021] EWHC 2828 (QB) (22 October 2021) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2021/2828.html Cite as: [2021] EWHC 2828 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(sitting as a Deputy Judge of the High Court)
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LAUREN PARKER (acting by her Litigation Friend, Nigel Parker) |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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CLIVE MCCLAREN |
Defendant |
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Jacob Levy QC (instructed by Weightmans LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 28th, 29th, 30th June & 1st July 2021
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Crown Copyright ©
Deputy Judge Mathew Gullick QC:
Introduction
"7. Before turning to the substance of the judgment I set a general observation about the evidential difficulties faced by Courts and litigants in civil proceedings which revolve around the reconstruction of fast moving and traumatic events such as this road traffic accident.
8. There are many claims arising out of accidents, be they on the road, in the home or in the workplace, in which it is simply not possible to conclude with absolute precision what occurred. The law does not require the Court to do so. The task for the Court is not to reach a conclusion based on 'certainty' as to what occurred but rather to come to a reasoned view as to the most probable explanation. In many accidents there will be a range of confounding factors which render the task of precise reconstruction of events impossible. This case exemplifies many of these factors. The trial concerns an event that from beginning to end lasted no more than a few seconds. It was not recorded on CCTV or a 'dashcam' and the few eye-witnesses to the collision all viewed events from different positions in the road and pavement. There was little 'hard evidence' such as extensive damage to the car that would enable ready reconstruction. [The Claimant's] physical injuries in themselves do not provide clear answers to the core questions, nor (as explained later) does the evidence from the accident reconstruction experts.
9. A Court attempts to reconstruct the most probable answers to the core questions by applying established forensic tools to such evidence as is available. It looks at the evidence in its totality, it seeks to understand the relevant layout of the scene, identify any objective facts that might act as lodestars by which more subjective opinion and recollection can be tested, scrutinises carefully the accounts of witnesses of fact and experts, both in the witness box and in earlier written statements – and it applies to all of this a fair dose of common sense.
10. All of this will strike those well used to litigation as a statement of the obvious. It is nevertheless important to spell out the evidential task, and the legal standard applied, so that others, not least the parties themselves, can well understand the basis on which I have proceeded to analyse this case."
Background to the Accident
Circumstances of the Accident: the Defendant's Evidence
Circumstances of the Accident: Expert Evidence
i) Section 10: The Claimant's speed, at least at the moment of impact, appeared to have been slow, i.e. only walking pace. Dr Searle reached this conclusion because of the diagonal direction of the marks on the vehicle's bonnet, the small lateral distance over which the Claimant had travelled before coming to rest on the road, and that the Claimant had kept her orientation after the accident rather than turning or tumbling.
ii) Section 12: The Claimant, unaware of the Defendant's approaching vehicle, attempted to walk across the road and on becoming aware of the situation had turned to face the car. If walking to the point of impact from a standing start, a distance of 6.4 metres, the Claimant would have taken between 4.9 and 7.3 seconds. If running, the time would be 3.1 to 4.5 seconds.
iii) Section 13: The collision could have been avoided if the Claimant had looked to her left before starting to cross the road. After the impact, the car had taken a similar distance to stop to that taken by the Claimant, suggesting that the brakes had already been applied when the impact occurred, but that the car had not stopped at the time of impact. Whether the Claimant was walking or running, there would have been sufficient opportunity for the Defendant to stop if he had seen the Claimant leaving the kerb, even if he had been travelling as fast as 30 mph.
i) Section 5.1: The damage to the Defendant's car was modest, consistent with a low speed impact of approximately 15-20 mph. There was a small dent to the offside bonnet, cracking to the offside of the front registration plate, and marks on the bonnet and the nearside windscreen. However, the windscreen was not broken or cracked. Even at low speeds (17 mph), a study of tests using dummies had demonstrated that a windscreen would fracture through contact with the dummy's head ("Vehicle damages and longitudinal throwing distances when using biofidelic dummies in comparison to conventional dummies" by Kortmann & Hoger – which I shall refer to as "the Kortmann Paper"). The angle of the 'line' of the damage on the Defendant's vehicle was approximately 30 degrees, relative to the centreline of the car. If the speed of the car was 15-20 mph then this would suggest that the Claimant's speed was about 9-11 mph (i.e. about 3.9 to 5.2 metres per second), which is consistent with her running rather than walking at the moment of collision. Had the Claimant been walking then the pattern of damage would be much more closely aligned with the centre of the Defendant's vehicle.
ii) Section 5.2: The point of collision was approximately 5.2 metres from the southern pavement and 2.0 metres from the northern pavement.
iii) Section 5.3: Using 50th percentile speeds reported in academic literature for 'jogging' (which Mr Wade considered would approximate more to running across a road, as opposed to speeds given for 'sprinting'), it would have taken the Claimant approximately 1.5 seconds to travel from the southern footway to the point of collision. At the 85th percentile speed this would have reduced to 1.2 seconds. These times would be slightly longer if the Claimant had been stationary at the kerb. The paper used by Mr Wade was "Pedestrian Speeds" by Jerry Eubanks, a collision reconstruction expert based in California, published in 1998. I shall refer to it as "the Eubanks Paper".
iv) Section 5.4: Using mathematical formulae based upon the distance that the Claimant travelled after being projected off the front of the car (the 'throw distance'), Mr Wade calculated the speed of the vehicle as likely being around 22 mph (within a range of 17 mph to 27 mph). Calculations based on the car's stopping distance also suggested speeds somewhat in excess of 20 mph, although they were dependent on precisely how far the vehicle had been reversed after coming to a stop (which was unknown) and also on assuming full braking from the point of collision to the car coming to a stop. Mr Wade considered these calculations to be illustrative only. He did not consider that speeds in excess of 20 mph were consistent with the damage to the car.
v) Section 5.5: There was street lighting installed at the scene of the accident and additional light would have been cast from lighting from the premises along both sides of the road. Police photographs and CCTV show that there would have been sufficient ambient light for a pedestrian to be seen in the carriageway. The Claimant would have had a clear view of the Defendant's vehicle when she entered the carriageway. The headlights of the approaching car would have been clearly visible.
vi) Section 5.6: If the Claimant was running when crossing the road (i.e. using the 'jogging' speeds in the academic literature relied on by Mr Wade), then the collision was unavoidable; the car might have slowed down by as much as 9 mph prior to the collision, but only then if the Defendant had a 'Perception Response Time' ("PRT") at the lower end of the range, had detected the Claimant when she left the kerb, and had achieved full emergency braking after the minimum brake build-up time.
i) Section 2: A pedestrian making the crossing from the southern to northern pavements would need to give some clearance to the pedestrian railings on the northern side. A laser scan of the scene as the police found it showed the front of the Defendant's car at 6.2 metres past the railings and blood from the Claimant's head injury at 8.0 metres past the railings. The Defendant had said that he had reversed about a foot (0.3 metres) after the collision, so the initial rest position of his car was taken to be 6.5 metres past the end of the railings. The Claimant's centre of gravity, based on the position of the blood, would have been 7.4 metres from the end of the railings.
ii) Section 3: The collision point appeared likely to be located about 0.5 metres to the east of the pedestrian railings. The dent on the front of the Defendant's car appeared to have been made by the Claimant's hip and was 0.2 metres to the offside of the vehicle's centreline. On the police scan, the vehicle's centreline was 5.6 metres from the offside kerb (from which the Claimant had travelled). The point of collision was therefore 5.4 metres from the offside kerb.
iii) Section 5: The 'throw distance' of the Claimant's centre of gravity was approximately 6.9 metres. The Defendant's car had come to rest about 6.0 metres beyond the point of impact.
iv) Section 6: The experts differed slightly on the distance which the Claimant would have travelled. Dr Searle considered that a pedestrian standing with their toes at the kerb edge would have their hip 0.2 metres further back, which would make the distance of travel to the point of impact 5.6 metres. Mr Wade considered that the position of the Claimant's hip was uncertain and so used the distance from the kerb edge of 5.4 metres.
v) Section 7: In addition to the impact with the Claimant's hip, damage lower on the Defendant's car appeared to have been made by the Claimant's legs. She had then gone onto the bonnet, making further damage marks. One of those had been recorded by the police and was linear in form. It appeared to have been made by a harder object such as a button, buckle or stud. Mr Wade considered it might also have been made by a watch or jewellery on an outstretched hand. There were a couple of minor dents on the nearside of the linear mark, and a scratch on the rear edge of the bonnet. The Claimant's head and possibly upper body appeared to have contacted the lower part of the windscreen.
vi) Section 8: The experts agreed that there were three potential indicators of the speed of the vehicle at impact. These were: the 'throw distance' of the pedestrian, the braking distance of the vehicle, and the level of damage. Of these, interpretation of damage was more subjective than the other two methods. As to the interpretation of the damage:
a) Dr Searle considered that the study relied on by Mr Wade in support of his view on the damage, which involved staged collisions using dummies, was unhelpful because the staged collisions were made with larger dummies and using smaller cars than involved in this accident. When allowing for the relative sizes of the pedestrian and car in the present case, a speed of 20 mph or more was supported even without the windscreen having cracked. Mr Wade considered that the tests were relevant, and that although the dummies used in the tests were likely taller and heavier than the Claimant the differences in the sizes of the dummies and vehicles used in the tests did not undermine their relevance in considering the profile of the damage caused in this collision when compared with the test collisions. Mr Wade's opinion, based on the damage, was that the speed of the car was between about 15-20 mph, but likely no higher than 20 mph. Image 4 in this Appendix to this Judgment shows the damage to a VW Polo car used in the tests described in the Kortmann Paper, relied on by Mr Wade.
b) The experts disagreed about the angle of the progression of the damage across the bonnet of the car. Dr Searle considered that the linear mark was of significance because it was a prolonged contact from something either on, or trapped beneath, the Claimant's body. He considered it was not consistent with e.g. an object such as a watch or a ring on an outstretched hand, because such items would simply bounce off. The angle of the linear mark gave a ratio of 1 in 4, which was the best way of determining the ratio of the speeds of the car and of the Claimant. Mr Wade disagreed with these conclusions of Dr Searle, considering that it was unsafe to consider only the angle of the linear mark as its cause was unknown. When considering all the damage to the vehicle, the angle of damage was closer to 26 degrees, giving a ratio of 1 in 2. Image 5 in the Appendix to this Judgment is a diagram prepared by Mr Wade indicating the approximate positions of the damage to the Defendant's car and plots the angles across the car.
vii) Section 9: The experts agreed that 'lateral throw' did not indicate what the speed of either the Claimant or of the Defendant's car was in isolation, but that it did provide an indication of the ratio of their respective speeds.
a) Dr Searle considered the Claimant had continued laterally after impact by more than a metre (although less than the 1.9 metres suggested by Mr Wade), whilst travelling over 7 metres longitudinally. That ratio would indicate that she had been travelling at about one-fifth of the speed of the Defendant's car (i.e. 4 mph if the Defendant's car had been travelling at 20 mph). Even if the 'lateral throw' had been reduced due to the Claimant hitting the kerb, the ratio would be no more than one in four.
b) Mr Wade considered that calculations based on 'lateral throw' were skewed by the Claimant having struck the northern pavement, the collision occurring at a relatively low speed and that the Claimant had first contacted the offside centre of the Defendant's vehicle, which was curved and would have reduced her lateral speed across the width of the car. He considered this was the least accurate method of considering pedestrian movement speed. His view was that the 'lateral throw' should be calculated as the distance from the dent on the offside of the bonnet to the blood found on the road, which was 1.9 metres. This would suggest a speed for the Claimant of between 4 and 5.4 mph.
viii) Section 10: The experts relied on different research as to the speeds normally represented by walking or running:
a) Dr Searle relied on the study "Pedestrian Speeds and Acceleration", conducted by Jakub Zebala, Piotr Ciepka and Adam Reza of the Institute of Forensic Research in Krakow, Poland, published in 2013 (which I shall call "the Zebala Paper"). They conducted a time-distance analysis of test subjects crossing roads at the subjects' own interpretation of the speeds 'slow walk', 'ordinary walk', 'fast walk', 'running' and 'sprinting'. Each subject was observed covering the measurement distance three times in each manner. For females aged 21-30, the range of speeds observed for 'running' was between 2.0 metres per second and 3.6 metres per second. These were somewhat lower than the speeds that had been observed in two earlier studies, one of which (Strouhal, Kuhnel & Hein) gave a range for 'running' speeds of females in this age group of 2.7 metres per second to 3.6 metres per second, and the other (Eberhardt & Himbert) a figure of 4.0 metres per second. The sample size of the Zebala study was relatively small – 26 females and 28 males across all age groups. Nine of the females were in the 21-30 age group.
b) Mr Wade relied on the data given in one of the tables in the Eubanks Paper. Mr Eubanks had, for the purposes of the data in this particular table, had 541 'joggers' observed in a beach area. The ages of the joggers were estimated by the observers. 52 female joggers were placed in the 20-30 age group. The speed for the 15th percentile of this group was 2.8 metres per second, for the 50th percentile it was 3.5 metres per second and for the 85th percentile it was 4.2 metres per second.
c) The experts were agreed that if the Claimant had started to cross the road from a stationary position, that would add to the time taken to reach the point of impact. They agreed that the Zebala Paper showed that starting from stationary added about 0.4 to 0.8 seconds to the time needed to reach the point of impact, with a median of 0.6 seconds.
ix) Section 11: The experts prepared a table setting out calculations of the time which the Claimant would have taken to reach the point of collision from the southern pavement, based on their respective travel distances of 5.4 and 5.6 metres, calculated both from a standing start and at a constant speed. Calculations were given on three bases: [a] using the angle of damage to the Defendant's car; [b] using the 'lateral throw' distance (both based on assumed speeds of the Defendant's car of 15 and 20 mph) and [c] based on the speeds given for walking and running in the studies upon which the experts had relied. The times given in this table for the Claimant to travel from the southern pavement to the point of collision vary from as little as 1.5 seconds to as much as 6.4 seconds, depending on the method of calculation used and the constants (such as the crossing distance and the speed of the Defendant's vehicle) that are assumed for the purposes of the particular calculation.
x) Section 12:
a) The experts recorded that they were largely in agreement about the speed of the Defendant's vehicle normally represented by the distance over which the Claimant was projected forwards in the accident. Two commonly used formulations by accident investigators, in use by the police and recommended by the Home Office, resulted in a median value of 19.4 mph (Searle and Searle) and a median value of 21.0 mph (Smith and Evans). Mr Wade's view was that the formulae would likely lead to an overestimate of the speed of the Defendant's car as it was likely that the collision had occurred before the Defendant's PRT had elapsed and so the car was likely not being braked at impact.
b) Dr Searle calculated that based on the braking distance of the Defendant's car, using the lowest braking rate measured by the police when testing the vehicle, that at 15 mph the car would stop in just over 3 metres. Even on the lowest recorded braking rate the 6 metres braking distance after impact represented a speed of 20.7 mph at impact. Mr Wade agreed with Dr Searle's calculations but considered that information about the precise nature of the skid tests conducted by the police was limited – e.g. whether the Defendant's own vehicle was in fact used, whether the test was conducted with ABS enabled or disabled, or from what speeds the braking tests were performed. He considered that given the usual nature of such police tests, which in his experience were conducted by trained police drivers applying maximum braking effort at 30-40 mph, attempting to apply the maximum recorded deceleration over a very short distance and from a low speed would give shorter distances than in reality and be misleading.
c) Dr Searle's overall view was that the speed of the Defendant's vehicle at impact was 20 mph or perhaps a little more. Mr Wade's opinion was that the level of damage to the car, particularly the unbroken windscreen, was not consistent with a speed higher than 20 mph. Mr Wade considered that the 'throw' distance and braking distance calculations provided overestimates because the car was likely either not braked before impact, or full braking deceleration did not commence until after impact. His view was that the speed of the car at impact was likely in the range 15-20 mph.
xi) Section 13: The experts disagreed about the time over which the Defendant could have responded to a hazard:
a) Dr Searle considered that PRT and 'brake lag' were different and consecutive periods. PRT was composed of the time to perceive the hazard, the time to decide to brake in response, and the time to transfer the foot to the brake pedal. 'Brake lag' was made up of 'dwell' by a driver on the brake pedal before starting to press it, and the effect of the short but finite term taken to build up the force applied. In the case of the Defendant, 'dwell' was irrelevant because of his evidence that he had "hit the brakes", i.e. landing his foot on the brake pedal and applying pressure in a single movement. Dr Searle had increased the PRT time to take into account the period for maximum braking. Dr Searle considered that reliance on the paper by Greibe, used by Mr Wade, would greatly overestimate the extent of brake lag for a professional driver (such as the Defendant, who had been a professional driver his entire working life). Relying on research by Martin & Holding, Dr Searle considered that the PRT should be extended by either 0.175 seconds or 0.075 seconds to reflect the time to maximum brake pressure. Mr Wade considered this methodology to be incorrect, and that PRT and 'brake lag' should be added together.
b) The experts were agreed that the Defendant would have had a reaction time between seeing the Claimant in the road and responding to her as a hazard. Research by Olson reported a median PRT of 1.1 seconds for unalerted drivers who, without warning, encountered an obstacle. The PRT for an 'alerted' driver (who expected to encounter an obstacle but did not know when) would be 0.4 seconds faster.
xii) Section 14: The experts were agreed that if the Defendant had not seen the Claimant until well into her crossing, or if he had been slow to apply the brakes, there would have been little opportunity for speed loss before impact. However the duration of braking was unknown because it was not known where the Claimant was first seen in the course of her crossing. If the Claimant had been sighted very late, then there would have been little time for loss of speed before impact, even if the Claimant had been walking.
xiii) Section 15: The experts agreed that how far the Defendant's car was from the point of collision when the Claimant began to cross was also subject to uncertainty. This would depend on the car's travelling speed, the duration of the Claimant's crossing and the extent of any pre-impact braking.
xiv) Section 16: The experts here dealt with avoidability.
a) The experts agreed that if the Claimant had been walking across the road and had been detected by the Defendant at the moment she left the kerb, the Defendant would have been able to stop from any speed within the 30 mph limit.
b) The experts agreed that given the overall distance the Claimant had to travel to reach the opposing kerb (7.3 metres), if the Defendant's car had been travelling at 74 per cent of its actual speed she would have reached the kerb before it arrived, if the Defendant's car was at the same point in the road when she began her crossing and not reducing speed. So if the Defendant's car had been approaching at 20 mph, a speed of 15 mph would have allowed the Claimant to cross the road. If the Defendant had been able to brake and reduce speed, the Claimant would have reached the far kerb if he had been travelling at a slightly greater percentage of his actual speed.
c) The experts also agreed that if the Defendant had been travelling at a slower speed which resulted in a stopping distance of 6.0 metres less, the collision would have been avoided because the Defendant would have braked in time, again assuming that the situation was otherwise the same as in the accident. The slower speed required to stop in time would depend on the actual speed of travel, the Defendant's PRT and 'brake lag', on which the experts differed. Dr Searle considered that if the Claimant had been travelling at 20 mph, a speed of 14 mph would have enabled him to brake in time; at 15 mph, the speed needed to brake in time would be 8 mph. Mr Wade considered that the relevant speeds were 13.8 mph (for an actual speed of 20 mph) and 9.2 mph (for an actual speed of 15 mph).
d) The experts agreed that if the Defendant had seen the Claimant as a hazard slightly earlier and so started his braking 6 metres before he did, the collision would have been avoided. Dr Searle considered that for an approach speed of 20 mph, this would be achieved by braking 0.67 seconds earlier, and that the Defendant would have gained that time had he seen the entirety of the crossing; the Zebala Paper showed that a pedestrian setting out to run would take 0.8 seconds to accelerate to the speed of a fast walk, so that if the Claimant was running when first seen by the Defendant then he missed the first 0.8 seconds of her journey. If the Defendant had seen the Claimant on the kerb before she started to cross then his response would have been an additional 0.4 seconds faster (as an 'alerted driver') and braking would have started 1.2 seconds before it actually did. Mr Wade considered however that this was unrealistic because it was based on a driver undertaking an emergency response to a pedestrian on the far side of the road, which would make driving in urban areas impossible.
e) Dr Searle's overall opinion was that the Defendant's speed at impact was 20 mph, and the Claimant's speed at impact was about a quarter of that figure, i.e. 5 mph. With a slightly slower approach speed, or a slightly earlier response by the Defendant, there would have been no collision.
f) Mr Wade's overall opinion was that the speed of the car at impact was in the range 15-20 mph, that the Claimant was running when the accident occurred, and that based on the likely crossing time and the typical driver PRT, depending on when they first detected the pedestrian a driver would have little to no opportunity to brake and slow the car before the collision. Mr Wade agreed with the mathematics of Dr Searle's avoidability calculations, but did not consider them particularly relevant because they depended on a judgment by the Court of what the appropriate speed for the conditions was and when it would have been realistic for a driver to have first detected the Claimant as a hazard.
i) Dr Searle said that there were three factors that would increase the percentage of its actual speed at which the Defendant's car would have had to travel in order to avoid the collision from 74 per cent to a higher figure. These were: the amount of braking before impact; if the Claimant had accelerated to a running speed from a standing start (because the calculation of 74 per cent assumed a constant running speed throughout) and calculating the figure on the basis of the Claimant clearing the Defendant's car rather than reaching the kerb (because there would have been a gap between the nearside of the car and the kerb). The latter issue on its own would increase the percentage from 74 per cent to about 80 per cent.
ii) Dr Searle accepted that several aspects of his initial report were incorrect, including the distance that the Claimant had travelled to the point of impact and also that the Claimant was not walking. The times that Dr Searle had given in his initial report for the Claimant travelling to the point of impact were incorrect. Dr Searle said he had benefited from his discussion with Mr Wade.
iii) In the cross-examination of Dr Searle and subsequently in Mr Wade's evidence-in-chief, it was suggested that if the Defendant had achieved maximum deceleration then there would be some indication on the road or the tyres of this having happened. Dr Searle rejected this proposition, noting that it had not been raised with him by Mr Wade. His evidence was that this might have been the case in the early days of anti-lock braking systems, but not in the case of modern cars.
iv) The report of the police accident investigator demonstrated that the police skid tests had been performed in the Defendant's car with the anti-lock braking system enabled, as it had been at the time of collision (see [27(x)(b)], above).
v) Mr Wade accepted that if the Defendant's evidence was correct that he had braked at or before the point of collision, then if travelling at 20 mph he would have avoided the collision by braking 0.67 seconds earlier than he in fact did (and for a speed of 15 mph, 0.89 seconds earlier), and that there was enough time for the Defendant to have brought his car to a halt if he had concluded the Claimant was a hazard as she left the kerb or even if he had first seen her in the centre of the offside lane. Mr Wade however cast doubt on the correctness of the Defendant's evidence that he had braked before the collision occurred, considering that he could only have braked after the impact and therefore that he was travelling at the point of impact at a speed below 20 mph.
vi) Mr Wade also sought in his oral evidence to question the value of the 'avoidability' calculations set out in the Joint Statement, although he did not dispute their mathematical correctness.
Findings of Fact
The Defendant's Speed
i) The speed limit was 30 mph. The Defendant's evidence, which I accept, was that he was travelling at a significantly lower speed than that immediately prior to the accident, because of the danger that might arise from the many pedestrians on the northern and southern pavements and because of the layout of the road (including the presence of traffic signals and the impending sharp right turn which he would have made shortly after the accident occurred). Thus it is improbable that the Defendant was travelling at a speed close to the 30 mph limit; the evidence does not support that.
ii) Although the Defendant said in his police interview, very shortly after the accident, that he was not travelling "fast" prior to the accident, he did not give an indication of his exact speed, or (for example) positively assert that he had been, or believed that he was, travelling at only 15 mph.
iii) The Defendant said in his witness statement (signed by him two years after the accident) that he was "not driving faster than 20 miles per hour", that "it felt to me that I was driving at around 15 miles per hour" and that one of the reasons for this was "because the vehicle came to a stop so quickly". This evidence is not, in my judgment, inconsistent with a speed around 20 mph. The Defendant's belief that he might have been travelling at only 15 mph is, in my judgment, no more than a matter of impression on his part.
iv) The Defendant was more certain in his oral evidence at trial that he had been travelling at only 15 mph. However, this certainty was not based upon any apparent improvement in his recollection, e.g. a memory of having looked at the car's speedometer before the accident. Indeed, the Defendant positively accepted that he had not looked at his speedometer and that ultimately his own view of his speed was no more than an "estimate" or a "good idea" of what he had been doing. The Defendant's oral evidence on this issue was not consistent with much of the other evidence in the case, not least his own witness statement, where the speed of his vehicle was put in much more equivocal terms. I do not consider that I can accept the Defendant's oral evidence on the issue of his vehicle's speed. In my judgment, the Defendant's evidence on this issue at trial was the product of his having – as he accepted had done – gone over the accident a lot in the intervening period of more than four years, and having convinced himself that he was doing a safe speed of 15 mph.
v) I accept, however, the Defendant's evidence that he saw the Claimant in front of his car prior to the collision occurring and that he depressed the brake pedal prior to the impact with the Claimant. The Defendant accepted when it was put to him by Mr Maskrey that his braking and the collision were almost instantaneous. I accept Mr Maskrey's submission that the Defendant managed to brake before the impact and that his car had decelerated at the moment of impact. The braking distance is consistent with a speed of 20 mph.
vi) The experts were agreed that a braking distance of 6 metres would equate to a speed of 20.7 mph at impact. I accept the Defendant's evidence that he "hit the brakes" before his car collided with the Claimant, and therefore that there was at least some degree of braking developed prior to impact. Mr Levy submits that the speed of 20.7 mph derived from the braking distance of 6 metres should be treated with caution because it assumes that the Defendant's car had achieved maximum deceleration at the beginning of the 6 metre distance. I do not, however, accept that this measure of the Defendant's speed can be discounted entirely for that reason. The Defendant's evidence, which I accept, was that he had depressed his brake hard in advance of the impact with the Claimant. The research papers relied on by both experts (Martin & Holding's paper "Average Driver Behaviour in Emergency Situations" used by Dr Searle, and Greibe's paper "Braking Distance, Friction and Behaviour" used by Mr Wade) both indicate that the delay in achieving full braking can be very short indeed (most 'average' drivers doing so within 0.3 seconds according to the former, and a typical range of 0.3 to 1.0 seconds according to the latter, with 'professional' drivers at the lower end of that range). Further, as Mr Maskrey pointed out, if the Defendant had been travelling at 15 mph (as he claimed to have been) then the car's stopping distance would have been just 3 metres. If the Defendant's vehicle took 6 metres to stop after the point of impact then if it had been travelling at only 15 mph he could not have braked until after the collision occurred.
vii) As to 'longitudinal throw', the two calculations used produced median figures of 19.4 mph and 21.0 mph, respectively. I prefer Dr Searle's evidence over that of Mr Wade as to the impact of any 'carry'. The authors of the Kortmann Paper state in section 1:
"… Furthermore, a none-braking or partially braked car, especially at lower collision speeds, can carry the dummy after the collision. This is followed by a long transport phase in which the dummy is first released from the vehicle when the car is rapidly decelerated. The subsequent occurring longitudinal throwing distances in the crash tests can thereby be extended almost arbitrary [sic] and is therefore no longer suitable for limiting [sic] the collision speed."
Dr Searle's evidence was that the longitudinal throw calculations used were not abstract but were referenced to impacts where the speed was already known. The 'longitudinal throw' distance in the present case was similar to that found in 20 mph impacts where the speed was known; and unless there was any particular reason for 'carry' in the present case to be more than in the generality of 20 mph impacts, then the calculations would be reliable. Mr Wade did not provide any evidence to support to the extent to which 'carry' can distort the result of the longitudinal throw distance calculations. The statement in the Kortmann Paper, which I have quoted above, is in the introductory passage and is the entire extent of the consideration given to this point in that paper. The authors refer to the possibility that a test dummy may be carried during a collision in these circumstances ("… can carry the dummy after the collision…"). The authors go on to state that their tests were conducted so as to avoid there being a "carrying phase", but the purpose of the tests which resulted in the Kortmann Paper was not to assess the impact of 'carry' on longitudinal throw distances but instead the relative merits of two different types of test dummy. The Defendant's evidence about the Claimant travelling over the bonnet of his car does not, in and of itself, establish that there was any additional 'carry' in this particular accident. There is, in my judgment, force in Mr Maskrey's submission that Mr Wade's evidence on this issue was an unestablished hypothesis.
viii) Mr Levy submitted, relying on Mr Wade's evidence, that the relatively modest damage to the Defendant's vehicle in this accident supported a finding of a lower speed than 20 mph. I do not consider that this is the most reliable indicator in the circumstances of this case, or that the considerable reliance placed by Mr Wade on the Kortmann Paper is warranted. Mr Wade's evidence, based on the Kortmann Paper, is that it would be expected that at a speed of 20 mph the Defendant's windscreen would have been broken. The Kortmann Paper itself was not considering this precise question, but rather the relative merits of using 'biofidelic' test dummies as opposed to 'conventional' test dummies. I do not consider that this part of the evidence should lead me to conclude that the Defendant's speed was under 20 mph (or indeed as low as 15 mph), for the reasons given by Dr Searle, namely that the dummies used in the Kortmann tests were significantly larger than the Claimant (being 89 kg, compared to the Claimant's weight, estimated in her pre-accident medical notes, of 70 kg) and the bonnet of the test vehicle (a Volkswagen Polo hatchback) was slightly different to that of the Defendant's car, including being shorter. I reject Mr Levy's submission that I should draw the inference from the Kortmann Paper that if the Defendant's car had been travelling at or close to 20 mph then the Claimant's head would have shattered the windscreen. In my judgment, it is not safe to draw that inference from the Kortmann Paper. I also note that there appears to have been only very modest, if any, other damage to the front of the Volkswagen Polo in the test staged at 27.5 kph (17 mph), which was with a 'biofidelic' dummy.
ix) Mr Wade's suggestion that if the Defendant had achieved full braking then there would have been tyre marks on the road was made for the first time at trial. I do not consider that I can accept this proposition, which was disputed by Dr Searle, as affecting the overall assessment of the Defendant's speed at impact. As Mr Maskrey submitted, it was not at all satisfactory for this point to be raised for the first time at trial. In any event Dr Searle's view was supported by the authors of the paper "Confidence limits for impact speed estimation from pedestrian projection distance" (Simms, Wood & Walsh, 2004), who note in the abstract to their paper that, "… Pedestrian projection distances are an important means to determine collision speed, particularly as tyre brake marks are not readily observable with ABS brakes…"
What was the Claimant doing?
i) In his oral evidence, the Defendant said that he had seen someone running on the southern pavement (the side of the road from which it is agreed the Claimant was on before entering the carriageway), but that this person appeared to be running away from him. This was not something that he had mentioned in his interview with the police (although, in fairness to the Defendant, there does not appear to be any particular reason why he should have done so, given the questions which he was asked), and nor was it mentioned in quite these terms in his witness statement, which he had adopted in his evidence-in-chief at trial. In his witness statement, the Defendant repeatedly referred to the heavy pedestrian traffic on both the pavements, and then stated:
"Out of my peripheral vision as I was passing by the Slug and Lettuce bar I recall seeing a person running to my right hand side. I then recall seeing a face illuminated in my headlights, facing me, in the carriageway. I engaged my brakes hard, but unfortunately was unable to avoid a collision. The pedestrian had run into the path of my vehicle, I recall that she ran across my path at what seemed some speed – afterwards I thought she must have been running away from someone as she was moving fast."
ii) When he was cross-examined, the Defendant said that as he was crossing the bridge he saw someone running fast on the southern pavement, travelling towards the city centre (i.e. in the same direction as the Defendant's car). He said that this person looked like they were running from something, somehow they had crossed into the road, and that is when his headlights had picked them up. The Defendant however accepted that he had not seen the Claimant leave the southern pavement, suggesting in his oral evidence that he had probably lost sight of her until his headlights picked her up. He also accepted that having seen the person running on the southern pavement, he had not slowed down his vehicle or taken any other action in response.
iii) Mr Maskrey submitted that the Defendant's evidence on this issue was not satisfactory, in particular given the lack of the same detail that was given in the oral evidence at trial on this issue in the Defendant's witness statement. Whilst the Defendant might have given more detail in his witness statement, I do not consider that I should reject his evidence that he observed a pedestrian running on the southern pavement prior to the accident. In my judgment, however, applying the civil standard of proof to the evidence which I have, I am not able to conclude that it was the Claimant whom the Defendant had seen running on the southern pavement prior to the collision. There were many people on the southern pavement; on the basis of the evidence given, I am not in a position to conclude that it is more likely than not that it was the Claimant running on the southern pavement towards the city centre. The Defendant was unable to remember, for example, what the Claimant had been wearing, and there was a lack of clarity and consistency in the answers which he gave in oral evidence as to whether the person he had seen running on the southern pavement was indeed the Claimant.
iv) Mr Maskrey submitted that I should find that the Claimant walked into the road, having not seen the Defendant's car, that she had then appreciated the car's approach, and that only then had she started to run across the road. In my judgment, however, the evidence does not support Mr Maskrey's submission. The Defendant's evidence was that the Claimant was running in the road. He was the only witness of fact called by either side. There is nothing in the evidence given by the Defendant to indicate that the Claimant's speed increased from a walk to a run, or that it did so because she had appreciated that the Defendant's car was coming towards her. I do not regard it as inherently unlikely, as Mr Maskrey submitted it was, that the Claimant would have set out to run across the road in the first place. Quite why she was crossing the road at all is unclear (no evidence having been called by either party on this question; I do not accept the inference drawn by the Defendant that because the Claimant was running then she must have been running away from something). Equally, I do not consider that I should just assume, as Mr Maskrey invited me to, that the Claimant must have begun to cross the road at a walking speed unless a positive reason to the contrary can be demonstrated. That assumption is also to discount the evidence of the one witness of fact – the Defendant – who said that he saw the Claimant running across the road. It also involves reaching a conclusion that the Claimant, having begun to cross the road at a walking pace, saw the Defendant's car (which was the only vehicle on the road) and in response decided to accelerate rather than to slow down in order to let it pass.
v) Mr Maskrey also submitted that it was unlikely that the Claimant, who was on a night out in York city centre with friends, would have been wearing footwear conducive to running. I reject this submission. There was no evidence about what the Claimant was wearing. The Claimant might or might not have been wearing footwear which made it difficult for her to run; but it cannot, in my judgment, be assumed that just because the Claimant was socialising with friends in a city centre on a Saturday night she would have been wearing shoes which would make running difficult or impossible. Indeed the Defendant's evidence – which I have accepted, and which I emphasise was the only evidence of fact given by any witness at trial – was that when he saw the Claimant she was indeed running.
i) The Eubanks Paper is an observation of people apparently running for pleasure and/or sport in a beach/resort area, with no indication of e.g. the surface conditions or whether the subjects were regular runners. The Zebala Paper is, in contrast, a study of people crossing short distances over a road, with speeds calculated from a time-distance analysis of digital video recordings.
ii) The Eubanks Paper states that the observers 'estimated' the ages of the 'joggers' to within five years. It therefore seems that the subjects were classified according to the observers' (visual) impression of their ages; the paper certainly does not indicate that any of the 'joggers' were asked to give their ages to the authors. This uncertainty gives rise to the potential for significant error in the figures given for the age groups.
iii) I do not agree with Mr Wade that because the sample size for the Eubank Paper is larger than that of the Zebala Paper, it is thereby to be treated as more a reliable indicator of pedestrian speeds, particularly given the issues with its methodology which I have identified above. In any event, of the 541 'joggers' observed for the purposes of the Eubanks Paper, only 52 were assessed as being females in the 20-30 age range.
iv) The Eubanks Paper states in its conclusion that: "Work of this type cannot, however, be considered complete and should be supplemented by continued testing and observations of pedestrians in different situations."
v) Whilst the Zebala Paper does give slightly lower speeds for females 'running' than two other studies referenced in the paper itself, the speeds are broadly comparable with one of the other studies referenced in the paper, that conducted by Strouhal. To the extent that the study conducted by Eberhardt & Himbert in 1977 gave a single speed for the German term "laufen" for females aged 20-30 of 4 metres per second (although it is not clear how this speed was arrived at), I do not consider that it should lead to me rejecting the analysis in the Zebala Paper.
i) As to the significance of the angle of the damage to the front of the Defendant's vehicle, I prefer Dr Searle's approach to that of Mr Wade. In my judgment, the linear mark on the bonnet of the Defendant's vehicle was clearly made by a prolonged contact between the vehicle and a hard object. I accept Dr Searle's evidence that it is far more likely that this contact resulted from something on the Claimant's body (e.g. a buckle or button on her clothing), which would have had the weight of the Claimant behind it. It is a linear mark made by a single object and is, for the reasons given by Dr Searle, therefore of great assistance in calculating the ratio of the respective speeds of the Claimant and the Defendant's vehicle. Mr Wade's approach of calculating a 'best fit' line does not ascribe any particular significance to the linear mark, and also may place undue emphasis on the outlying marks on the edge of the windscreen of the Defendant's car, which were not (as with the linear mark) caused by prolonged contact between the vehicle and the Claimant, and may well have been caused by e.g. an outstretched hand rather than the Claimant's body. I therefore prefer Dr Searle's view that the angle of damage is supportive of a ratio of speeds of 1:4, i.e. if the Defendant's car was travelling at 20 mph then the Claimant was travelling at 5 mph (which is 2.2 metres per second).
ii) As to the issue of 'lateral throw', there was not, as I see it, much between the views of the experts here. Dr Searle's view was that it resulted in a speed ratio of 1:5 or possibly 1:4. On the basis that, as I have found, the Defendant's car was travelling at 20 mph then the Claimant would have been running at 4-5 mph. Mr Wade's view was that the Claimant's speed based on 'lateral throw' was between 4 and 5.4 mph.
The Defendant's reaction: what happened, and when?
"It is obvious that the starting point for a time-distance analysis of an accident is the beginning of pedestrian motion. However, from the driver's point of view what is important is that actual moment of emergency arising, when he is able to recognize the pedestrian's motion rather than simply the pedestrian motion onset, which the driver would not be able to recognize. There is absolutely no doubt that sometime must pass between the start of the pedestrian's motion and the moment the driver would notice this motion. During this time gap the pedestrian will move over some distance… In practice we can assume that in favourable visibility conditions, in a situation when the driver must exercise particular caution, the pedestrian's minimum dislocation necessary for the driver to notice his motion is about 0.4 m. Following the results of our research, it can be determined that the pedestrian starting from a stationary position can cover this distance in a time of 0.3 s to 1.2 s…"
Mr Levy's submission, which I accept, is that the Claimant would not have presented herself as a potential hazard until she had travelled about half a metre or so from the edge of the kerb into the carriageway. Even then, however, she was emerging from the background of a crowd of other pedestrians. I accept the view of Mr Wade and the submission made by Mr Levy in reliance on it that there will be a time before the commencement of the driver's PRT in which the hazard is developing, i.e. a period of time during which the pedestrian is not even perceivable as a hazard. That appears to me to be the point being made by the authors of the Zebala Paper. Equally, however, I accept Mr Maskrey's submission that on his own evidence the Defendant falls to be considered as an 'alerted driver', so affecting his PRT after the point at which the Claimant became a hazard on this basis, because the Defendant was aware of the possibility of pedestrians coming out into the road at this point.
The Law
"27. In the vast majority of cases the assessment of liability in road traffic accidents turns on an assessment of facts. The key legal question is simply whether the established facts do, or do not, fall below the standard to be expected of a reasonable road user. This is not therefore an area rich in legal learning. Two well known cases do however illustrate how the Court calibrates what the standard of a reasonable driver is.
28. A helpful starting point is the observations of Latham LJ in Lunt v Khelifa [2002] EWCA Civ 801 that a car is "potentially a dangerous weapon". This means that those driving cars owe clear duties of care to those around them. Compliance with speed limits and proper awareness of potential hazards can often be critical in determining whether a driver fell below the level of reasonable care expected of them.
29. The standard is however of a reasonable driver not the ideal driver. This was a point made by Laws LJ in Ahanonu v South East London & Kent Bus Company Ltd [2008] EWCA Civ 274:
"There is sometimes a danger in cases of negligence that the court may evaluate the standard of care owed by the defendant by reference to fine considerations elicited in the leisure of the court room, perhaps with the liberal use of hindsight. The obligation thus constructed can look more like a guarantee of the claimant's safety than a duty to take reasonable care.""
"We also accept that this court is always reluctant to interfere with the trial judge's judgment of what apportionment between the parties is 'just and equitable' under the 1945 Act. But a finding as to which, if either, of the parties was the more responsible for the damage is different from a finding as to the precise extent of a less than 50% contribution. There is a qualitative difference between a finding of 60% contribution and a finding of 40% which is not so apparent in the quantitative difference between 40% and 20%. It is rare indeed for a pedestrian to be found more responsible than a driver unless the pedestrian has suddenly moved into the path of an oncoming vehicle. That is not this case. The court 'has consistently imposed upon the drivers of cars a high burden to reflect the fact that the car is potentially a dangerous weapon': Latham LJ in Lunt v Khelifa [2002] EWCA Civ 801, para 20."
"It seems to me that it may well be that the judge in this case was generous in his approach to the liability of the appellant; for it seems to me that the appellant undoubtedly must bear a substantial burden for this accident. He was the one who created the dangerous situation by stepping out as he did into the carriageway when the respondent's vehicle was so close. But nonetheless, bearing in mind the fact that this court has consistently imposed on the drivers of cars a high burden to reflect the fact that a car is potentially a dangerous weapon, I find it difficult to see how I could properly categorise the judge's apportionment in this case as plainly wrong."
"24. The judge had to make an assessment as to the proportion of responsibility for the driver and the pedestrian. The judge appears to have been influenced by the fact that when Mr Lunt walked from the refuge into the western side of the carriageway the defendant's vehicle would probably have been 20 to 25 metres away, and the judge was satisfied that had the defendant been keeping a proper lookout he would, in the two seconds it took him to reach the point where the collision occurred, have been able to take effective evasive action by steering to his nearside. In those circumstances the judge considered that the driver was two-thirds to blame.
25. Like Lord Justice Latham, I would not necessarily have reached the same conclusion myself. But it was certainly a conclusion which the trial judge was entitled to reach, bearing in mind always that a motor car is a potentially lethal instrument."
"It is submitted by Mr Taylor QC on behalf of the appellant that the judge should have found the respondent's degree of blameworthiness was "very high" and certainly more than that of the appellant. I cannot agree. The fault of the respondent was not to ease off on the accelerator in anticipation of the risk that the pedestrian, whom he had seen or ought to have seen, might decide to cross the road in an untoward way. The fault of the appellant was to take a deliberate risk of an accident in running across the road in front of the taxi which had the right of way. In my view the appellant was far more to blame than the respondent."
"40. As the Extra Division recognised, it is necessary when applying section 1(1) of the 1945 Act to take account both of the blameworthiness of the parties and the causative potency of their acts. In relation to causation, the Extra Division based its view that "the attribution of causative potency to the driver must be greater than that to the pedestrian" on the fact that "a car is potentially a dangerous weapon". Like the Court of Appeal in Eagle v Chambers, I would take the potentially dangerous nature of a car being driven at speed into account when assessing blameworthiness; but the overall assessment of responsibility should not be affected by the heading under which that factor is taken into account. Even leaving out of account the potentially dangerous nature of a car being driven at speed, I would not have assessed the causative potency of the conduct of the defender as being any less than that of the pursuer. This is not a case, such as Ehrari v Curry [2007] EWCA Civ 120; [2007] RTR 521 (where contributory negligence was assessed at 70%), in which a pedestrian steps directly into the path of a car which is travelling at a reasonable speed, and the driver fails to take avoiding action as promptly as he ought to have done. In such a case, the more direct and immediate cause of the damage can be said to be the conduct of the pedestrian, which interrupted a situation in which an accident would not otherwise have occurred. Nor is it a case, such as Eagle v Chambers (in which contributory negligence was assessed at 40%) or McCluskey v Wallace (where the contributory negligence of a child was assessed at 20%), in which a driver ploughs into a pedestrian who has been careless of her own safety but has been in his line of vision for long enough for him easily to have avoided her. In the present case, the causation of the injury depended upon the combination of the pursuer's attempting to cross the road when she did, and the defender's driving at an excessive speed and without keeping a proper look-out. If the pursuer had waited until the defender had passed, he would not have collided with her. Equally, if he had slowed to a reasonable speed in the circumstances and had kept a proper look-out, he would have avoided her.
41. Given the Extra Division's conclusion that the causative potency of the defender's conduct was greater than that of the pursuer's, their conclusion that "the major share of the responsibility must be attributed to the pursuer", to the extent of 70%, can only be explained on the basis that the pursuer was considered to be far more blameworthy than the defender. I find that difficult to understand, given the factors which their Lordships identified. As I have explained, they rightly considered that the pursuer did not take reasonable care for her own safety: either she did not look to her left within a reasonable time before stepping out, or she failed to make a reasonable judgment as to the risk posed by the defender's car. On the other hand, as the Extra Division recognised, regard has to be had to the circumstances of the pursuer. As they pointed out, she was only 13 at the time, and a 13 year old will not necessarily have the same level of judgment and self-control as an adult. As they also pointed out, she had to take account of the defender's car approaching at speed, in very poor light conditions, with its headlights on. As they recognised, the assessment of speed in those circumstances is far from easy, even for an adult, and even more so for a 13 year old. It is also necessary to bear in mind that the situation of a pedestrian attempting to cross a relatively major road with a 60 mph speed limit, after dusk and without street lighting, is not straightforward, even for an adult.
42. On the other hand, the Extra Division considered that the defender's behaviour was "culpable to a substantial agree". I would agree with that assessment. He had to observe the road ahead and keep a proper look-out, adjusting his speed in the event that a potential hazard presented itself. As the Extra Division noted, he was found to have been driving at an excessive speed and not to have modified his speed to take account of the potential danger presented by the minibus. The danger was obvious, because the minibus had its hazard lights on. Notwithstanding that danger, he continued driving at 50 mph. As the Lord Ordinary noted, the Highway Code advises drivers that "at 40 mph your vehicle will probably kill any pedestrians it hits". As in Baker v Willoughby and McCluskey v Wallace, that level of danger points to a very considerable degree of blameworthiness on the part of a driver who fails to take reasonable care while driving at speed.
43. In these circumstances, I cannot discern in the reasoning of the Extra Division any satisfactory explanation of their conclusion that the major share of the responsibility must be attributed to the pursuer: a conclusion which, as I have explained, appears to depend on the view that the pursuer's conduct was far more blameworthy than that of the defender. As it appears to me, the defender's conduct played at least an equal role to that of the pursuer in causing the damage and was at least equally blameworthy.
44. The view that parties are equally responsible for the damage suffered by the pursuer is substantially different from the view that one party is much more responsible than the other. Such a wide difference of view exceeds the ambit of reasonable disagreement, and warrants the conclusion that the court below has gone wrong. I would accordingly allow the appeal and award 50% of the agreed damages to the pursuer."
"The conclusion to be drawn from the detailed information provided in the experts Joint Statement about avoidability is, in my view, relatively straightforward. If the Claimant's case on the facts and on what can be expected from a reasonable driver is correct, then the Defendant's failure to meet the standards of a reasonable driver caused the collision, and so the case on negligence will be made out."
I agree with the submission made on behalf of the Claimant that this case contains no point of principle on the issue of avoidability calculations. The case was, in any event, decided not on any question of causation but on the issue of whether the defendant's driving fell below the standard of a reasonable driver.
Conclusions
Liability: Speed
Liability: Observation
Contributory negligence
i) A motor car is a potentially lethal instrument and there is a high burden on those who drive them. If the Defendant had kept to a reasonable speed in the circumstances, the accident would not have occurred. Furthermore, the Defendant was aware of the possibility of pedestrians coming into the road in this very area of York city centre: what happened is exactly what the Defendant anticipated could happen. It was not, in that respect, a wholly unexpected event from the Defendant's perspective.
ii) The Claimant created the dangerous situation by stepping out into the carriageway when the Defendant's car was so close. There were no other cars travelling in either direction and she could easily have waited for the Defendant's car to pass before crossing. If she had looked before she entered the road and waited for the Defendant to pass, the accident would not have occurred. This is not however a case, such as Belka v Prosperini, in which a pedestrian has taken a deliberate risk by knowingly running across the path of an oncoming car.
I conclude, in the light of my findings of fact and my view of the respective causative potency and blameworthiness of the parties, that liability for this accident should, in the particular circumstances of this case, be apportioned equally between the Defendant and the Claimant.
APPENDIX
Image 1: View from the bridge over the River Ouse approaching the scene of the accident from the Defendant's direction of travel, 60 metres from the location of the accident, taken in daytime (from Dr Searle's report).
Image 2: View from the Defendant's direction of travel, 20 metres from the location of the accident, taken at night (from Mr Wade's report); there was no scaffolding on the southern pavement when the accident occurred.
Image 3: Plan showing the position of the Defendant's car after the accident (from Mr Wade's report).
Image 4: Damaged Volkswagen Polo after a test collision with a `biofidelic' dummy at 17 mph (from the Kortmann Paper).
Image 5: Diagram produced by Mr Wade showing the approximate areas of damage to the Defendant's car, with angles of 14, 26 and 34 degrees (from the Joint Statement).