Post by Stuart A. BronsteinSeems to me the second car stopped a whole lot sooner than it would
have (or should have) if it hadn't run into one that was stopped.
It's not unreasonable to say that if the second car had stopped
normally then the third car would have been able to stop.
That doesn't let her off the hook, but it could mitigate her
culpability.
All drivers have a responsibility to look a little further ahead than
the boot (trunk) of the car in front. You cannot plan ahead if you let
the person in front of you dictate your speed and road position.
(driving too close to them) The OP's daughter should thank the deities
that she was not seriously hurt and that no-one was killed. Twisted
metal can be repaired or replaced... twisted people, not so much.
Driving within the distance you can see to be clear is a far more
complex issue than dealing with the question of how much clear space do
I have in front of my moving car. It also involves travelling at the
ideal road speed for the weather conditions, the available lighting and
the awareness of all possible potential hazards, whether they are fixed
and pre-existing or mobile and created by other drivers.
I think that your point about reasonable mitigation, while potentially
credible, is seeking to provide that mitigation might be based upon one
ideal future possible act. That sort of approach to the application of
the law (what would have been ideal even though it did not happen)
would create a nightmare scenario. It would have the law attempting to
guess at the future intent of a driver, in seeking to apportion blame
in a driving accident dispute, before they knew themselves what they
had intended to do or how they would react to a given set of
circumstances, being based upon their own skills and their perception
of the scene before them. Isn't it a basic tenet of any code of law
that the miscreant should know, with reasonable certainty, what to
expect in any given set of circumstances?
While driving into someone else's car may not be a criminal act, it can
be deemed to be a crime, depending on the circumstances. Generally
speaking, it appears to be reasonably settled ground that the driver
who drives into a car in front of them, would normally have been in
control of their own vehicle and so that type of 'accident' is usually
considered to have been avoidable. It implies a degree of
inattentiveness and lack of skill (on the driver's part) if they run
into an obstacle that was either stationary or they had failed to read
the road ahead and collided with another moving vehicle, that was
travelling in the same direction as their own car and was immediately
in front of them.
summarised: It is reasonable to suppose that the driver of a vehicle
will take care to drive safely, despite the constantly changing vista
of road conditions and traffic which they will encounter. To blame the
changing nature of the scene before the driver is tantamount to
saying... 'I cannot drive safely (I don't respond well to changing road
conditions) therefore my conduct should be excused/mitigated because the
driver in front of me did not cope with the situation they had faced'.
That would be a perverse application of the law, in my view. IANAL
--
numpty