Technology1 min ago
Creating A Hazard On The Motorway.
20 Answers
If a driver runs out of fuel in the middle lane of a motorway and another vehicle rear ends it, is the stranded driver guilty of an offence?
Answers
The person behind the car that stops has no warning anything is going to happen, running out of fuel doesn't switch on the stop lights. The person that ran out of fuel, on the other hand had plenty of warning, fuel gauge, flashing light etc, s/he should not have been in the middle lane. In my opinion that person is driving without due care and attention.
16:16 Mon 20th Feb 2017
Running out of fuel is not in itself an offence, from what I can tell.
There appears to be a great many debates about it online however! Some seem to suggest Clarkson said it on one show or another, so a pinch of salt would be required.
As for the creating an obstruction part, there would be a question of why they didn't get over to the hard shoulder? This seems like it could be the basis of some kind of offence.
Someone smarter will be along to answer fully for you shortly I am sure.
There appears to be a great many debates about it online however! Some seem to suggest Clarkson said it on one show or another, so a pinch of salt would be required.
As for the creating an obstruction part, there would be a question of why they didn't get over to the hard shoulder? This seems like it could be the basis of some kind of offence.
Someone smarter will be along to answer fully for you shortly I am sure.
The person behind the car that stops has no warning anything is going to happen, running out of fuel doesn't switch on the stop lights. The person that ran out of fuel, on the other hand had plenty of warning, fuel gauge, flashing light etc, s/he should not have been in the middle lane. In my opinion that person is driving without due care and attention.
If you hit the car in front you are guilty of an offence. A car could stop because it had a fault, I have seen it happen. I was behind a white van in the center lane of the motorway, suddenly there was a lot of smoke and the van stopped dead in the the middle lane. I managed to slow and get past without hitting it as I was a safe distance behind. It looked like the van engine / gearbox had blown up. If I had hit it it would have been my fault.
I have also run out of fuel in a hire car because there was a fault in the fuel gauge, it was still showing 1/3 full when it ran out.
Another time my fuel pump packed up so the car just stopped in the middle of the road.A common fault in old cars the fuel pump diaphragm splits without warning.
I have also run out of fuel in a hire car because there was a fault in the fuel gauge, it was still showing 1/3 full when it ran out.
Another time my fuel pump packed up so the car just stopped in the middle of the road.A common fault in old cars the fuel pump diaphragm splits without warning.
Section 7(2) of the Motorways Traffic (England and Wales) Regulations 1982 states:
"Where it is necessary for a vehicle which is being driven on a carriageway to be stopped while it is on a motorway . . . by reason of a breakdown or mechanical defect or lack of fuel, oil or water, required for the vehicle . . . the vehicle shall as soon, and in so far as is reasonably practicable, be driven or moved off the carriageway on to, and may stop and remain at rest on, any hard shoulder which is contiguous to that carriageway"
So it's the duty of a driver which is running out of fuel (which will normally be evidenced by it 'coughing and spluttering' for a bit before it actually stops) to get it onto the hard shoulder where it is reasonably practicable to do so.
That's not always easy. For example, I've had a vehicle I was driving break down in queuing traffic on a motorway, while I was in the middle lane. As the obstruction ahead cleared, the two lanes on either side of me started moving again, with me left stranded in the middle (and with a long queue of vehicles behind me).
As I see it, unless he blatantly ignored the warning signs that he was running out of fuel (and made no attempt whatsoever to get to the hard shoulder) the stranded driver in your question is NOT guilty of any offence. The driver who runs into the back of his car though most definitely IS guilty of 'driving without due care and attention'.
"Where it is necessary for a vehicle which is being driven on a carriageway to be stopped while it is on a motorway . . . by reason of a breakdown or mechanical defect or lack of fuel, oil or water, required for the vehicle . . . the vehicle shall as soon, and in so far as is reasonably practicable, be driven or moved off the carriageway on to, and may stop and remain at rest on, any hard shoulder which is contiguous to that carriageway"
So it's the duty of a driver which is running out of fuel (which will normally be evidenced by it 'coughing and spluttering' for a bit before it actually stops) to get it onto the hard shoulder where it is reasonably practicable to do so.
That's not always easy. For example, I've had a vehicle I was driving break down in queuing traffic on a motorway, while I was in the middle lane. As the obstruction ahead cleared, the two lanes on either side of me started moving again, with me left stranded in the middle (and with a long queue of vehicles behind me).
As I see it, unless he blatantly ignored the warning signs that he was running out of fuel (and made no attempt whatsoever to get to the hard shoulder) the stranded driver in your question is NOT guilty of any offence. The driver who runs into the back of his car though most definitely IS guilty of 'driving without due care and attention'.
Sorry but I did not hit submit, do not know what happened.
2 A lorry jackknife in front of me and skid across all 3 lanes.
3 A car in front of me had 3 canoes on the roof rack, the rope holding them snapped and the canoes fell off, one hit my bonnet but bounced over my roof with no damage. Another car got one of the canoes jammed under it and hit the center reservation barrier.
2 A lorry jackknife in front of me and skid across all 3 lanes.
3 A car in front of me had 3 canoes on the roof rack, the rope holding them snapped and the canoes fell off, one hit my bonnet but bounced over my roof with no damage. Another car got one of the canoes jammed under it and hit the center reservation barrier.
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