Originally Posted by Fr_Chuck
I don't agree, merely being over the legal limit while an offence to be ticketed for ( and possiblely the more seroius of the traffic tickets written on this accident) if the police department had a real traffic investigation, it will be specific as to how the accident happened. (I am not telling you what is right or wrong, I am telling you what actually happens, which is what I believe the guy asking the question wants to know. And the reality is that if you were drunk, and involved in an accident, you are gonna share a portion of the liability in a civil action. Right or wrong...that's the way it works in the real world.)
A car eiher runing a light, or stop sign or just pulling out, hitting a car moving in a legal manner. It is hard to show any proof of fault on the part of the driver in car 2 ( assuming it is car 2 since car 1 in police accident reports are suppose to be the car they beleive at most fault.) (you show fault based upon the way that alcohol affects perception-reaction time. A normal sober person take .75-1.5 second to perceive a threat, then apply the brakes. An intoxicated person has a drastically different time as you might imagine. To use your example of an intersection collision.....assume two cars are traveling 40 mph as they approach an intersection, a one second difference in the time it takes you to hit the brake is the difference between a near miss and a broadside collision. But that is just one way you show it, I could give you a million, but you get the point.)
I would want to read the police report real close. And of course see what training the police officer had in traffic investigation(your average cop has nothing more than the brief training course they give in the academy of which accident scene investigation was a minor part, but it doesn't matter because the reconstruction experts brought in by both sides wil make the officer seem incompetant), see if his post is current and so on. I do know how to try and shift blame.
But of course I answer to a higher judge these days, and I do like to perfer to look at what is morally right more than what can be done legally if you really want to.
I know we could destroy the character of the driver who was drinking, confuse a jury with experts showing how his driving was impaired and the such. Of course the driver in the other car will not argure this point, since it releases him of part of the liablity, his lawyer will be all for it.
I know the trend is to sue as many and for as much as you can. (it isn't a trend....it is sound legal practice and protecting the rights of your client) I would say since I now have two slightly different versions of the accident, I would have to say if the police report puts blame on both drivers, then yes but if it puts all the blame on the 1 driver I still would not do it.
Police report would be evidence in court (of course it would be admitted, but the officers statements regarding liability would be redacted (erased) because they are heresay unless they witnesed the accident[they are taking someone elses word for the way the accident happened. They cannot testify to this, you must bring in the original declarent to testify]) , the officers could testify in court, if the police officers made any notes they could be used in court. (it would depend what the notes said, see above)
photos the officers took ( I hope they took photos of the accident for evidence) (the cops don't usually take pictures unless there is a death) As a traffic investigator I often testified in court. Even testified against city police who wrote up the reports wrongly.
Beleive me I am not defending drunk drivers, they cause enough deaths and accidents, and I would like to see every bar in the US closed.
But I beleive in putting blame where it belongs not trying to do social justice though law suits.