- Jul 10, 2003
- 27,766
As noted in my original post: I had looked left. Then checked right, which is the direction from which the greatest risk would arise and therefore the logical place to check last.
But yes, I take your logic and suspect you may be right. However, I suspect I may also be at least partially right - the bus also had a responsibility to ensure that any overtake was conducted in a safe manner. As such, I wouldn't be surprised to have a 50-50 ruling in such a case.
Final word: as a general rule of thumb (and one I've always lived by having spent most of my driving life as a motorcyclist), the #1 rule is that as a driver you always have a responsibility to do everything you can to avoid an accident. it doesn't matter whose ultimate "fault" the accident would be legally / for insurance: if you can, through your own actions, avoid or prevent an accident ... you should.
Which is why in my case I was able to avoid it, and why in over 25 years as a driver/rider I've only ever had one incident, which was caused by a car driver deciding to turn right around a roundabout from a left-turn only lane while I turned left from the centre lane (as allowed by the markings), and I only classify it as an incident as my handlebar clipped his wing mirror. I'd thankfully left plenty of room between me and him on entry (using the furthest right I could in the centre lane).
Unfortunately it's a bit like the person doing an emergency stop on an open road for no reason whatsoever and you rear ending them. Logically and morally, I would suggest it is their fault. However, legally it's 100% yours.
I agree you do develop a '6th sense' over time, so often seeing what is likely to happen way ahead and I think it's the main reason young drivers have more accidents. Limiting them to 'slower' cars, higher insurance, black boxes, 6 points rule etc have all helped immensely. I was sitting behind the wheel of a 3 litre Capri within a few months of passing my test 40 years ago
And riding motorbikes is a great way of concentrating on developing your 6th sense
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