Linford
Guest
So it was the van driver who was at fault for heeding the request to pass and yet your 215 passage demands that trained drivers who have taken lessons and passed a test take instructions from kids on horses. If that is the case which clearly it is, then the rider was at fault for giving the WVM an instruction that was clearly quite dangerous.
A flash of the headlights or a nod is actually determined as a warning in law, and not 'it's ok, i'm giving way to you as i'm feeling generous'
As a trained and experienced driver, it is up to the WVM to determine if it is safe to cross into the opposite carriageway which might bring him into the path of oncoming vehicles. If the horse rider felt that her horse was likely to do anything erratic as the WVM were to overtake, then she would ask him to wait until given the signal that it was safe for him to then go past her. This is entirely different to him using his observational skills to see if whilst executing the overtake, that he were to put you and your missus in danger.
The same applies to sailing craft on the waterways - they always have right of way over powered craft as they sometimes have to take an erratic course due to the winds etc.