On the face of it this cyclist appears a little hard done by.
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Fixed that for you.This appeared on CUK forum a few days ago, the cyclist was deemed 50% liable as he failed to avoid hitting a Zombie with her face stuck in her PHONE. Yet he sent out enough warning signals, the law is an ass.
If it was a car that hit her nothing would have happened.
Yes, that was the basis of the judge's decision I believe.Fixed that for you.
I suppose that it could also be argued that if you have enough time and forethought to sound your electronic horn, and shout a warning of your approach, then you could have equally enough time to stop. Or, at least slow down sufficiently enough to not knock the both of you clean out.
Hardy a precedent, it's been true for a long time for car drivers. If you've driving a car and somebody steps out in front of you, be it an adult, a kid, a deaf person..., you'd be expected to make an emergency stop. You might blow your horn, if there was time, in the hope that they might jump out of the way to lessen the chance of hitting them.I think the crucial point is the judges comments "he did proceed when the road was not completely clear" & "cyclists must be prepared at all times for people to behave in unexpected ways".
Does this set a precedent or are all road users expected to have the same level of care
Cyclists hate losing momentum and often try to swerve past anyone in the way, but that is a big mistake. Braking should always be the default action since pedestrian movements are unpredictable.It seems that this cyclist concentrated on blowing his horn rather than stopping or avoiding a collision.
That's not the full story. Like the guy that killed the woman, the cyclist had plenty of time to avoid her, so chose to steer behind her, but then, at the point of no return, she woke up, panicked and jumped back into his path.Fixed that for you.
I suppose that it could also be argued that if you have enough time and forethought to sound your electronic horn, and shout a warning of your approach, then you could have equally enough time to stop. Or, at least slow down sufficiently enough to not knock the both of you clean out.
Yes, emergency stops are necessary for all sorts of reasons.That's not the full story. Like the guy that killed the woman, the cyclist had plenty of time to avoid her, so chose to steer behind her, but then, at the point of no return, she woke up, panicked and jumped back into his path.
This happens to me very often when I use my bell or shout. I therefore tend not to let them know I'm coming as long as I have plenty of room to get by.
One time, there was a man and a toddler walking in both lanes of a split cycle/footpath. I rang my bell as I approached in plenty of time. In a nice organised way, the man put the boy on the far edge of the footpath and them stepped over the cycle path onto the grass the other side. It was a steep downhill, so now I knew it was safe and I had the entire path to myself, I started accelerating again. At the last moment, the man dashed over to the other side, grabbed the boy and attempted to carry him back to the grass where the man had been standing before. He was in total panic. It made absolutely no sense to carry the boy back because both of them were quite safe on the footpath. Anyway, I have good brakes and I was able to do an emergency stop with a bit of a skid from both wheels. I think I have good redactions from half a million miles on a motorbike, and my brakes helped a lot, but I bet many cyclists would have hit that guy and the kid. They would have then been in the same situation as the cyclist in the OP.