SafeSpeed wrote:
I'd like to explore that idea that a forgivable "small error of judgement" could possibly result in a death. I've been trying to imagine suitable small errors of judgement, and I'm finding it hard. Are any of these "a small error of judgement":
* changing lane without checking a blind spot?
* pulling out without looking properly?
* falling asleep while driving?
Or are they seriously negligent driving? Enquiring minds want to know!
It could be argued that any error of judgment that results in a fatality could be regarded as "seriously negligent".
However, what we are discussing here are those actions that the courts would currently class as careless driving - falling below the standards expected of a competent, responsible driver, rather than dangerous driving - falling
far below those standards. The debate is about sentencing, not the nature of the offence.
Although it isn't in the legal definition, I always tend to think that a "dangerous driving" charge requires there to be something deliberate or systematic about the bad driving - such as overtaking in the face of oncoming traffic, driving on the wrong side of the road, gross speeding in urban areas, aggressive tailgating etc.
We all make mistakes on the road. A "good" driver will make fewer mistakes, but he won't make none at all. Someone recently wrote in this forum "I drive a high mileage, I don't have any accidents," which struck me as being a dangerously complacent and self-deluding attitude. In the vast majority of cases, a mistake will have no adverse consequences, but very occasionally it will do.
In another thread we've been discussing "SMIDSY" accidents where a driver looked but failed to see an oncoming vehicle. Given a combination of poor light, restrictive road alignment, and mind distracted by work or family problems, this could all too easily happen. With the benefit of hindsight, someone could say "if only I'd looked more carefully", but the fact is that they didn't, but weren't in any sense being consciously negligent. Many years ago, I had a "near miss" in these circumstances with a young lad on a moped, who ended up coming off his bike, although I didn't hit him. Fortunately he wasn't hurt, but the consequences could all too easily have been more serious.
The proposed law doesn't make five years' imprisonment a mandatory sentence for causing death by careless driving, it merely makes it available to the courts. One would hope that sentences of imprisonment would only be used where the behaviour of the driver was obviously somewhat irresponsible or negligent, but not sufficiently bad as to justify a charge of dangerous driving. There will also inevitably be an element of "trading down" from the charge of "causing death by dangerous driving" if the CPS knows that a prison sentence is available for the lesser offence - which is one to which it would be difficult to mount a successful defence given that a fatality had occurred and the driver was to some degree at fault.
But there is a concern that genuine, innocent one-off errors such as the kind I described above will lead to prison, which strikes me as being unjust. We should also bear in mind that any responsible person at fault in a fatal accident will have it on their conscience for the rest of their lives.
If something is not done deliberately, and is a genuine one-off rather than part of a pattern of behaviour, a prison sentence will not serve three of the four reasons normally used to justify it - deterrence, protection of society and rehabilitation. Nor is it in any meaningful sense punishment, as you can only punish someone for something they had a choice about doing. All it does is to satisfy a rather primitive desire for retribution on the part of society - someone has died, therefore someone else must suffer.