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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (King's Bench Division) Decisions >> Hetherington v Blythe [2023] EWHC 41 (KB) (16 January 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/KB/2023/41.html Cite as: [2023] EWHC 41 (KB) |
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KING'S BENCH DIVISION
MANCHESTER DISTRICT REGISTRY
B e f o r e :
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CONRAD HETHERINGTON (by his litigation friend Deborah Hetherington) |
Claimant |
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- and – |
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ANNA ELIZABETH BLYTHE |
Defendant |
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Mr Allen KC (instructed by Horwich Farrelly Limited) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 12th, 13th and 14th December 2022.
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Crown Copyright ©
His Honour Judge Bird :
The scene
The evidence
a. Mrs Blythe. Her main statement was given on 10 June 2017 before these proceedings were commenced. She also gave a statement to the police on 4 June 2017. In her police statement, she recalls passing cars parked outside the Spar store. She became aware of a "a running person coming in from my left hand side…..[he] just came from nowhere. I tried to swerve, but then as I was braking [his] head hit the windscreen and bounced [off]". In the witness statement provided a few days later she describes the pedestrian "running at the car from [her] left hand side". As soon as she saw the pedestrian her recollection is that she braked and "swerved to the right." At paragraph 61 of the statement, Mrs Blythe says this: "The point of impact to my vehicle was the front and bonnet and windscreen I think to the driver's side of the vehicle".
b. Peter Heggie has provided 4 statements, one to the police on 16 April 2017 and others in the litigation in November 2020 and June 2021. In the police statement Mr Heggie explains that he was driving directly behind Mrs Blythe. He recalled parked cars outside Spar. He noticed Mrs Blythe move towards the centre line at the same time as Mr Hetherington came onto the road from the nearside pavement: "he seemed to be bounding across the road as if trying to beat the traffic…it was almost as if the male was throwing himself in front of [Mrs Blythe's car]". In his later statements Mr Heggie describes the claimant as moving into the road in a strange way, "not walking or running but sort of bounding". In statements given in June 2021 and November 2020 he describes that the claimant "ran from the nearside pavement" and that he saw him "run into the road".
c. Jillian Hewitt has provided 3 statements. The first was given to the police on 25 April 2017, others were given in 2020 and 2021. She was travelling in the opposite direction to Mrs Blythe and Mr Heggie and in my judgment had a good view both of Mr Hetherington and of the front of Mrs Blythe's car. She describes the traffic as "busy but slow moving". In the police report she says that her attention was drawn to "what I thought was a child in the [other] lane running out into the path of [Mrs Blythe's car]. The child clipped the front passenger corner of the car and then his whole body just hit the windscreen and he was thrown off into the road". In her witness statements for these proceedings she notes that the claimant is not a child but an adult. Her evidence is "at the time of the accident….I had thought that the person that had run into the road was a child, as I didn't think an adult would run into traffic in such a way".
d. Mark Ormerod was a police officer at the time of the accident. He has now retired from the police service after 22 years' service. He compiled the collision report. There was some discussion about the report and the symbols that appear on it. The experts do not rely on the diagram, and it was not drawn as part of the forensic examination. I need say no more about it or about his evidence.
e. Sergeant Stephen Wakefield is recently promoted. He was the collision investigator. He prepared a detailed report (to allow decisions to be made about any prosecution) which is dated 12 June 2017. He took photos at the scene before the Defendant's car was moved and recorded the scene by reference to surveyed data points. The report was prepared without reference to any witness or other documentary evidence. Sergeant Wakefield noted the windscreen damage and pointed out that, although the vehicle was dirty, there were no wipe marks (or clean marks) on the bonnet. There was no physical evidence to indicate the initial point of impact with the car body. Appended to the report are 18 images, representing a relevant selection of the images captured on the day of the accident. Some show scratches to the nearside front wing of the car and others show a wipe mark to the nearside valance (the lowest part of the car immediately forward of the front wheels). Further photographs taken by Sergeant Wakefield at the scene show the wipe marks on the valance. There is no mention of the valance wipe marks within the body of the report.
f. Sergeant Hill was at the scene shortly after the accident. He made notes in which he recorded both fact and opinion. He was not responsible for any forensic investigation and there was no suggestion that he was qualified to conduct such an investigation.
Oral evidence
a. It is likely that the closer to the events in question a record of what happened was made, the more reliable that record will be.
b. How a witness statement is taken can affect its reliability.
c. The recollection of a witness who was traumatised by the events they recall is likely to be less reliable that the evidence of witnesses who were not so traumatised.
Fact finding and issues
a. Where did Mr Hetherington first make contact with the Defendant's car?
b. At what speed was Mr Hetherington moving when first contact was made?
c. Where was Mrs Blythe's car at the point of impact?
d. Could Mrs Blythe have avoided the impact?
Where did Mr Hetherington first make contact with the Defendant's car?
At what speed was Mr Hetherington moving when first contact was made?
Where was Mrs Blythe's car at the point of impact?
a. before the collision Mrs Blythe was positioned close to the centre line of the road. She had passed cars parked at the Spar bays and was aware that there were parked cars in the further bays. I am satisfied (and it was not suggested) that there were no cars (and no bus) at the bus stop.
b. She steered to the offside at the point at which she noticed Mr Hetherington in an attempt to avoid him hitting the car. Mrs Blythe may have swerved a little before she applied the brake. I accept Dr Walsh's evidence that the perceived reaction time for swerving is, on average, around 0.4 seconds quicker than the perceived reaction time to braking. The movement took that car towards the centre line. Given the state of traffic (I accept Mrs Hewitt's description that the traffic was "busy but slow moving") Mrs Blythe would need to correct her course to avoid moving into oncoming traffic.
c. Given the very short time available for Mrs Blythe to react before the collision and the short time between initial impact and the windscreen impact, the steer to the offside and corrective steer must have taken effect at or very shortly after the windscreen impact. Neither the initial manoeuvre nor the corrective measure in my view is relevant to the outcome of this trial.
Could Mrs Blythe have avoided the impact?
Liability
Context
Conclusion