Montreal Gazette

Ontario man acquitted of careless driving

Coughing fit led to fatal 2008 car crash

- ALLISON JONES THE CANADIAN PRESS

TORONTO — A man whose coughing fit led to his hitting and killing a woman at the side of a road has been acquitted of careless driving because a judge ruled he didn’t mean to close his eyes.

Ottavio Ariganello was seized by a violent, choking-like cough as he was driving in a semi-rural area of Halton Hills, Ont., on Feb. 21, 2008, he testified at his trial. He said his eyes closed because of the coughing and he became dizzy.

His car veered off the road and hit Carolyn McTavish, 50, who was on the shoulder of Winston Churchill Blvd., collecting her mail. She was pronounced dead at the scene.

Ariganello was originally convicted of careless driving, but he appealed to the Ontario Court of Justice and Judge Lesley Baldwin found that the justice of the peace was mistaken in finding that Ariganello chose to close his eyes.

“This is a case of an involuntar­y physical reaction to a coughing/ choking episode, which through no fault of the appellant resulted in his eyes closing for a matter of seconds,” Baldwin wrote in her decision dated Jan. 17.

Ariganello had a sore throat when he woke up that day, he testified, and he took a spoonful of medicine. He nonetheles­s coughed throughout the day at his early-morning job as a maintenanc­e man at an ice arena, a co-worker testified.

He left work at 1:15 p.m. and took his normal route home, travelling about 50 kilometres an hour, when all of a sudden he started to cough “harshly,” he testified.

“I was like light-headed, dizzy, ’cause I was coughing so hard,” Ariganello testified. “I had no control over anything.”

He began slowing his car down because he was choking but didn’t want to brake abruptly and get hit from behind, the judge said.

Ariganello wasn’t aware his car was swerving off the road until it hit a snow bank, he testified. Even then he wasn’t aware he had hit McTavish until he got out of his car, the judge said.

He called 911 and the police officer who responded noted Ariganello was coughing, the judge said.

“Where an accident has occurred, the fact that serious injury or death has resulted is not, except in unusual cases, relevant to an assessment of whether there has been a departure from the standard of care which would justify a finding of careless driving,” Baldwin wrote.

“The Crown had to show a sufficient departure from the standard of a prudent and reasonable driver to make the driving ‘deserving of punishment.’ ”

The Crown would not comment on whether it intends to appeal the decision.

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