The Scotsman

Is twenty plenty out of built-up areas?

Imposing a nationwide blanket control measure would be a turning point in motoring legislatio­n, says Louise Gallagher

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DRIVE through the centre of any Scottish city or town and it’s impossible not to notice the 20mph zones that have sprung up.

Designed in part to protect pedestrian­s, cyclists, horse riders and other vulnerable road users, the restrictio­ns could soon be appearing beside even longer stretches of road. A Member’s Bill introduced to the Scottish Parliament last month by Mark Ruskell MSP aims to reduce the general speed limit across Scotland from 30mph to 20mph. This Bill is the Restricted Roads (20mph Speed Limit) (Scotland) Bill.

In the papers accompanyi­ng his Bill, Ruskell insists he wants to give local councils the power to raise the speed limit back to 30mph where appropriat­e. Yet imposing an initial nationwide blanket control measure would mark a major turning point in motoring legislatio­n.

While the safety benefits in reducing speed limits in highly pedestrian­ised areas are well documented, extending the 20mph limit to roads in general could lead to an increase in the number of speeding offences being reported unless driver behaviour changes. The interactio­n between speed and civil liability has always been more subtle. This is because speed does not automatica­lly signal negligence in civil cases.

An 2011 High Court case from England helps to illustrate this: in Malasi v Attmed, a cyclist hit the front nearside of a taxi after riding through a red light at a T-junction. The cyclist brought a claim against the taxi driver because, although the taxi driver had a green light in his favour, the taxi had been travelling at 40-50mph in a 30mph zone.

The High Court found that the accident could have been avoided if the cyclist hadn’t ridden through the red light or if the cyclist had noticed the taxi and slowed down, even slightly. However, if the taxi driver had not been travelling so quickly, the collision could also have been avoided. The taxi driver was found liable to pay compensati­on to the cyclist but the compensati­on was reduced by 80 per cent because of the cyclist’s own negligence.

The Scottish approach to cases involving “vulnerable road users” is neatly set out in the case of Moffat v Zenith Insurance, which was heard earlier this year. The pursuer was a cyclist who was riding behind a car that signalled before turning left; the cyclist tried to undertake the car and hit it. The sheriff found that the accident was not the fault of the car driver and so no liability was establishe­d.

In addressing the question “Do the circumstan­ces give rise to an inference of breach of duty?”, the sheriff noted: “It is clear the propositio­n – ‘that there was a collision between a bicycle and a car, therefore there is a presumptio­n that the driver of the car was to blame’ is not the law. But in my view, neither is it the law that ‘the driver of a car did not see a cyclist before a collision occurred, therefore there is a presumptio­n that the driver did not look properly’.”

Efforts have been made to assist vulnerable road users in making com- pensation claims by seeking to introduce “strict” or “presumed” liability into Scots civil law.

Strict liability would mean that the taxi driver in Malasi and car driver in Moffat would automatica­lly be liable tocompensa­tetheclaim­antsbecaus­e, under strict liability, the question of fault is irrelevant. The impact of such changes, if introduced, would unfairly penalise drivers and in turn their insurers, who would need to compensate irrespecti­ve of fault. Such chang-

es would inevitably lead to an increase in motor premiums affecting all vehicle drivers.

Under presumed liability, drivers would be presumed, as a matter of law, to be at fault and held at fault unless they could prove otherwise. It is difficult to see the legal logic of either strict or presumed liability. Individual cases in this area are often fact-sensitive. The general rule that a person seeking compensati­on needs to prove his or her case makes sense.

This is an area likely to develop with the further advances we are seeing in autonomous and driverless vehicles and how they interact with vulnerable road users. At this stage, we could perhaps all agree that by reducing our speed, more accidents are likely to be avoided but when they do unfortunat­ely occur, the extent of any injuries should be reduced – and that must be good for everyone.

Louise Gallagher is a partner in the Glasgow office of BLM

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 ??  ?? 0 The safety benefits of reducing speed limits in highly pedestrian­ised areas are well documented
0 The safety benefits of reducing speed limits in highly pedestrian­ised areas are well documented
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