Lizban said:
Read my response - it acknowledges this point - (by stating the reversal of the burden of proof i.e guilty before innocent in very base terms). I also argue against this. All incidents should be judged on merits.
If we want equal rights on the road we need to take our responsibilities as well.
But I would be loathed to extend this principle to compensation claims for RTAs.
1) Strict Liability doesn't cover criminal proceeding arising from the accident. Burden of proof would be exactly the same for vehicular criminal prosecutions as for all other criminal prosecutions - with the prosecution.
2) Liability would refer to civil compensation proceedings (insurance claims in essence), where the liability is assumed to be on the side of the least vulnerable in the accident, unless evidence shows otherwise.
Currently, a cyclist is least likely to be at fault for a road accident (according to statistics excluding cycling accidents involving children), and are more likely to be the most injured. Yet the system means they end up having to prove that the other party is liable, thus allowing insurance companies to draw out proceedings by insisting that every part of a claim establishes their client's liability. Thus claims with clear fault on the motorists part get drawn out as the vulnerable party has to establish that things like whether or not the client was wearing a helmet, or had a reflector, or wore reflective patches didn't have a bearing on the accident. If the liability was reversed, then the insurance companies would have to prove that, for example, a cyclist involved in an accident whilst not wearing a reflective jacket was a major factor in the cause of the accident and mitigated liability.
The change wouldn't put the cyclist in a favoured position, it would simply level the playing field. It should also be noted that vehicles are used under license on the roads, as opposed to cycling and walking which is a right. So the license assumes extra responsibility which should be reflected in civil proceedings.
All the Daily Wail rantings about cyclists being able to flout the law with impunity and then empty the pockets of the insurance companies if they hit a car is just bollox.