Quizzes & Puzzles9 mins ago
Who's To Blame.
The scene is a car park . Owner 1 is returning to car to leave carpark, sees another car arriving and parking in the bay behind owner1's car. Owner 2 parks and gets a wheelchair out of boot. Owner 1 decides to reverse out of bay whilst owner 2 is putting up wheelchair. Owner 1 reverses back slowly and hits owner 2's car. When owner 1 gets out to see what happened owner 2's car is only partly in the parking bay and is on an diagonal angle.
owner 2 says owner 1's at fault as owner 1 hit the back of owner 2's car. Owner 1 is not so sure as owner 2's car was not properly parked. When this was mentioned to owner 2. owner 2 said they had to leave room to get disabled person out of car.
owner 2 says owner 1's at fault as owner 1 hit the back of owner 2's car. Owner 1 is not so sure as owner 2's car was not properly parked. When this was mentioned to owner 2. owner 2 said they had to leave room to get disabled person out of car.
Answers
Owner 1. If a moving vehicle hits a stationary vehicle the mover is almost always at fault.
20:50 Wed 07th May 2014
my next door neighbour reversed into a parked car outside his house,tried to claim through his own insurance against the owner of the parked car even got the police involved, neither wanted to know.
As said if you hit a stationary vehicle its your fault for not looking, also again as said it could of been a child not a car...
As said if you hit a stationary vehicle its your fault for not looking, also again as said it could of been a child not a car...
Interesting Chas. A child can well be small enough not to be seen by anything the driver could look at from the drivers' seat. So in the case of an accident it seems to me that the driver could not have reasonably avoided the accident: are they then still responsible for something they could not reasonably have prevented ?
you cannot just drive into a space assuming that its empty - you must be sure.
you should have been looking backwards into the space - or lack of - you were heading for ... as it is you must have guessed!
as they said, they hadnt yet finished parking as they had to get the wheelchair out. they are entitled to stop their car to exit it.
as someone else said - it wouldnt matter if they were parked in a preposterous manner - you are still not allowed to drive into them
driver one is 100% at fault
you should have been looking backwards into the space - or lack of - you were heading for ... as it is you must have guessed!
as they said, they hadnt yet finished parking as they had to get the wheelchair out. they are entitled to stop their car to exit it.
as someone else said - it wouldnt matter if they were parked in a preposterous manner - you are still not allowed to drive into them
driver one is 100% at fault
My first thought is.... if anything changes to the space that #1 will be reversing into they need to double check, even if it means getting out of the car and looking.... but perhaps #2 should have been more aware of their surroundings such as engine noise from other vehicle starting and moving.... I would say 50/50.