Otago Daily Times

Ban for driver after fatal careless driving

- ROB KIDD Court reporter rob.kidd@odt.co.nz

A GRANDFATHE­R of 11 was using a pedestrian crossing, on his way to get medication for a neighbour, when he was killed by an errant driver, a court has heard.

The man behind the wheel on July 4 — 22yearold Isaac James Usher — was not the man who hit him, but the force at which he hit the stationary car in front shunted it through the Macandrew Rd crossing and into the victim.

Rex Archibald Harbott (87) was conscious when emergency services arrived but his condition rapidly deteriorat­ed.

Hours later, a CT scan confirmed his head injury was unsurvivab­le and he died early the following morning.

Usher pleaded guilty to careless driving causing death and appeared in the Dunedin District Court yesterday where he was banned from driving for nine months and ordered to make a donation of $2000 to charity.

Mr Harbott’s family said they did not want financial compensati­on from the driver.

They said they simply hoped Usher learned from the incident.

The court heard the victim, who lived in Macandrew Rd, was walking to the pharmacy for a neighbour with mobility issues when tragedy struck.

Usher, who was heading south, took his eyes off the road.

When he looked up, the car ahead of him had stopped and he was unable to avoid slamming into its rear.

The defendant later told police he had tried to slam on the brakes but had missed the pedal.

‘‘We are all guilty of momentary lapses in concentrat­ion,’’ defence counsel Anne Stevens QC said.

Her client was an apprentice mechanic and planned to undertake a 14week training programme in the United States, such was his motivation to succeed, she said.

The driving disqualifi­cation was going to have serious consequenc­es for Usher as he would need a lift to his job and would be unable to assess his work by driving vehicles he had repaired.

‘‘It’s not just a mechanic going for a joyride,’’ Mrs Stevens said.

She accepted Usher should be banned and ordered to pay reparation but she vehemently argued against the imposition of community work.

‘‘This isn’t somebody going out to commit a criminal offence. We don’t need him to labour for the country to correct things,’’ Mrs Stevens said.

‘‘His remorse is unquestion­able . . . he must live with this death for the rest of his life.’’

Police prosecutor Stewart Sluis rejected the assertion Usher’s carelessne­ss was at the lowest end of the scale.

The driver was driving on a residentia­l street, approachin­g a pedestrian crossing, a point at which his attention should not have wandered, he said.

Community magistrate Simon Heale acknowledg­ed there was no criminal intent on the part of Usher and the sentence reflected his level of carelessne­ss.

He stressed the penalty should not be seen as indicative of how important Mr Harbott was to his friends and family.

‘‘Their grief will continue, likely for a lifetime,’’ Mr Heale said.

Usher, the court heard, had an arrangemen­t to pay off nearly $11,000 for the damage caused to the other car.

 ?? PHOTO: CHRISTINE O’CONNOR ?? Isaac Usher was banned from driving for nine months for causing a crash which killed an elderly pedestrian.
PHOTO: CHRISTINE O’CONNOR Isaac Usher was banned from driving for nine months for causing a crash which killed an elderly pedestrian.

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