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|publisher=The Judicial Council of California
|publisher=The Judicial Council of California
|year=2003
|year=2003
|quote=A person must use reasonable care in driving a vehicle. Drivers must keep a lookout for pedestrians, obstacles, and other vehicles. They must also control the speed and movement of their vehicles. The failure to use reasonable care in driving a vehicle is negligence. ... The '''common-law duty''' supplements statutory driving regulations: "[A driver is] under a duty, both by statute and '''common law''', to operate his vehicle without negligence so as to abstain from injuring any other person or his property." ... The '''common-law requirement''' goes to the issues of lookout and control. Regardless of whether a driver was complying with the speed limit, "[he was] still bound to anticipate that he might meet persons at any point of the street and in order to avoid a charge of negligence he was bound to use '''ordinary care''' and to keep an ordinarily careful lookout for such persons and '''keep his machine under such control as would enable him to avoid a collision'''}}</ref> notwithstanding whatever the care of an ordinary person.<ref name="60 Cal. App. 764"/><ref name="22 Cal.2d 111"/><ref name="121 Cal. 227">{{cite court |litigants=Herbert v. Southern Pac. Co., 121 Cal. 227 |vol=121 |reporter=Official California Reports |opinion=227 |pinpoint= |court=[[Supreme Court of California]] |publisher=Bancroft-Whitney; LexisNexis |date=June 20, 1898 |url=http://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/CACourts/ |accessdate= |quote=the cases arising from injuries suffered at railroad crossings have been so numerous, and upon certain points there has been such absolute accord, that what will constitute ordinary care in such a case had been precisely defined, and, if any element is wanting, the courts will hold as matter of law that the plaintiff has been guilty of negligence. And, when injury results which might have been avoided by the use of proper care, ... the amount of care, as well as the nature of it, has been settled.}}</ref><ref name="CA Handbook"/><ref name="CDL"/>{{refn| In addition to being old common law principle, ACDA case law [[jurisprudence]] buttressed the legislature's implicit intent in its Basic Speed Law, and further limited transference of liability for ACDA negligence to the state—under the [[California Tort Claims Act]]—for [[Geometric design of roads#Effects of insufficient sight distance|insufficient sight distance]] at the speed of which the driver chose. See [http://www.dmv.ca.gov/pubs/vctop/d11/vc22350.htm CVC § 22350], [http://www.dmv.ca.gov/pubs/vctop/d11/vc22358_5.htm CVC § 22358.5], [http://law.onecle.com/california/government/830.4.html Cal Gov. Code § 830.4], [http://law.onecle.com/california/government/830.8.html Cal Gov. Code § 830.8], and [http://law.onecle.com/california/government/831.html Cal Gov. Code § 831]. See [http://www.justia.com/trials-litigation/docs/caci/1100/1120.html CACI Form 1120] for details. |group="Note"}}
|quote=A person must use reasonable care in driving a vehicle. Drivers must keep a lookout for pedestrians, obstacles, and other vehicles. They must also control the speed and movement of their vehicles. The failure to use reasonable care in driving a vehicle is negligence. ... The '''common-law duty''' supplements statutory driving regulations: "[A driver is] under a duty, both by statute and '''common law''', to operate his vehicle without negligence so as to abstain from injuring any other person or his property." ... The '''common-law requirement''' goes to the issues of lookout and control. Regardless of whether a driver was complying with the speed limit, "[he was] still bound to anticipate that he might meet persons at any point of the street and in order to avoid a charge of negligence he was bound to use '''ordinary care''' and to keep an ordinarily careful lookout for such persons and '''keep his machine under such control as would enable him to avoid a collision'''}}</ref> notwithstanding whatever the care of an ordinary person.<ref name="60 Cal. App. 764"/><ref name="22 Cal.2d 111"/><ref name="121 Cal. 227">{{cite court |litigants=Herbert v. Southern Pac. Co., 121 Cal. 227 |vol=121 |reporter=Official California Reports |opinion=227 |pinpoint= |court=[[Supreme Court of California]] |publisher=Bancroft-Whitney; LexisNexis |date=June 20, 1898 |url=http://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/CACourts/ |accessdate= |quote=the cases arising from injuries suffered at railroad crossings have been so numerous, and upon certain points there has been such absolute accord, that what will constitute ordinary care in such a case had been precisely defined, and, if any element is wanting, the courts will hold as matter of law that the plaintiff has been guilty of negligence. And, when injury results which might have been avoided by the use of proper care, ... the amount of care, as well as the nature of it, has been settled.}}</ref><ref name="CA Handbook"/><ref name="CDL"/>{{refn| In addition to being old common law principle, ACDA case law [[jurisprudence]] buttressed the legislature's implicit intent in its Basic Speed Law, and further limited transference of liability for ACDA negligence to the state—under the [[California Tort Claims Act]]—for [[Geometric design of roads#Effects of insufficient sight distance|insufficient sight distance]] at the speed of which the driver chose. See [http://www.dmv.ca.gov/pubs/vctop/d11/vc22350.htm CVC § 22350], [https://web.archive.org/web/20100531182754/http://www.dmv.ca.gov/pubs/vctop/d11/vc22358_5.htm CVC § 22358.5], [http://law.onecle.com/california/government/830.4.html Cal Gov. Code § 830.4], [http://law.onecle.com/california/government/830.8.html Cal Gov. Code § 830.8], and [http://law.onecle.com/california/government/831.html Cal Gov. Code § 831]. See [http://www.justia.com/trials-litigation/docs/caci/1100/1120.html CACI Form 1120] for details. |group="Note"}}


Many states have further passed [[statutes]] which require their courts to more inflexibly weigh the ACDA in their determination of reasonable speed or behavior. Such statutes do so in part by designating ACDA violations as a citable driving offense, thus burdening an offending driver to rebut a [[Negligence per se|presumption of negligence]]. States with such explicit ACDA [[standard of care]] provisions include: Iowa,<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.legis.iowa.gov/DOCS/IACODE/2001/321/285.html |title=Code § 321.285 Speed restrictions. |publisher=The State of Iowa |accessdate=August 6, 2013 |quote=Any person driving a motor vehicle on a highway shall drive the same at a careful and prudent speed not greater than nor less than is reasonable and proper, having due regard to the traffic, surface, and width of the highway and of any other conditions then existing, and no person shall drive any vehicle upon a highway at a speed greater than will permit the person to bring it '''to a stop within the assured clear distance ahead''', such driver having the right to assume, however, that all persons using said highway will observe the law.}}</ref> Michigan,<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.legislature.mi.gov/(S(rgjlv4453ryguemx2ko5fpzi))/printDocument.aspx?objectName=mcl-257-627&version=txt |title=§ 257.627 Speed limitations |publisher=The State of Michigan |accessdate=August 6, 2013 |quote=§ 257.627(1) A person operating a vehicle on a highway shall operate that vehicle at a careful and prudent speed not greater than nor less than is reasonable and proper, having due regard to the traffic, surface, and width of the highway and of any other condition then existing. '''A person shall not operate a vehicle upon a highway at a speed greater than that which will permit a stop within the assured, clear distance ahead'''.}}</ref> Ohio,<ref>{{cite web |url=http://codes.ohio.gov/orc/4511.21v1 |title=Revised Code § 4511.21(A) Speed limits - assured clear distance |publisher=The State of Ohio |accessdate=August 6, 2013 |quote=§ 4511.21(A)(A) No person shall operate a motor vehicle, trackless trolley, or streetcar at a speed greater or less than is reasonable or proper, having due regard to the traffic, surface, and width of the street or highway and any other conditions, and no person shall drive any motor vehicle, trackless trolley, or streetcar in and upon any street or highway at a greater speed than will permit the person to bring it '''to a stop within the assured clear distance ahead'''.}}</ref> Oklahoma,<ref>{{cite web |url=http://oklegal.onenet.net/oklegal-cgi/get_statute?98/Title.47/47-11-801.html |title=Oklahoma Statutes § 47-11-801 |publisher=The State of Oklahoma |accessdate=August 6, 2013 |quote=A. Any person driving a vehicle on a highway shall drive the same at a careful and prudent speed not greater than nor less than is reasonable and proper, having due regard to the traffic, surface and width of the highway and any other conditions then existing, and '''no person shall drive any vehicle upon a highway at a speed greater than will permit the driver to bring it to a stop within the assured clear distance ahead'''.}}</ref> Pennsylvania,<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.legis.state.pa.us/WU01/LI/LI/CT/HTM/75/00.033.061.000..HTM |title=75 Pa. Cons. Stat. § 3361. Driving vehicle at safe speed |publisher=The State of Pennsylvania |accessdate=August 6, 2013 |quote=No person shall drive a vehicle at a speed greater than is reasonable and prudent under the conditions and having regard to the actual and potential hazards then existing, '''nor at a speed greater than will permit the driver to bring his vehicle to a stop within the assured clear distance ahead'''.}}</ref> and Texas.<ref>{{cite web |title=Transportation Code, Title 7, Ch. 545, §545.062(a) |publisher=State of Texas |accessdate=February 2016 |url=http://www.statutes.legis.state.tx.us/Docs/TN/htm/TN.545.htm |quote=An operator shall, if following another vehicle, maintain an '''assured clear distance''' between the two vehicles so that, considering the speed of the vehicles, traffic, and the conditions of the highway, the operator can safely stop without colliding with the preceding vehicle or veering into another vehicle, object, or person on or near the highway.}}</ref>
Many states have further passed [[statutes]] which require their courts to more inflexibly weigh the ACDA in their determination of reasonable speed or behavior. Such statutes do so in part by designating ACDA violations as a citable driving offense, thus burdening an offending driver to rebut a [[Negligence per se|presumption of negligence]]. States with such explicit ACDA [[standard of care]] provisions include: Iowa,<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.legis.iowa.gov/DOCS/IACODE/2001/321/285.html |title=Code § 321.285 Speed restrictions. |publisher=The State of Iowa |accessdate=August 6, 2013 |quote=Any person driving a motor vehicle on a highway shall drive the same at a careful and prudent speed not greater than nor less than is reasonable and proper, having due regard to the traffic, surface, and width of the highway and of any other conditions then existing, and no person shall drive any vehicle upon a highway at a speed greater than will permit the person to bring it '''to a stop within the assured clear distance ahead''', such driver having the right to assume, however, that all persons using said highway will observe the law.}}</ref> Michigan,<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.legislature.mi.gov/(S(rgjlv4453ryguemx2ko5fpzi))/printDocument.aspx?objectName=mcl-257-627&version=txt |title=§ 257.627 Speed limitations |publisher=The State of Michigan |accessdate=August 6, 2013 |quote=§ 257.627(1) A person operating a vehicle on a highway shall operate that vehicle at a careful and prudent speed not greater than nor less than is reasonable and proper, having due regard to the traffic, surface, and width of the highway and of any other condition then existing. '''A person shall not operate a vehicle upon a highway at a speed greater than that which will permit a stop within the assured, clear distance ahead'''.}}</ref> Ohio,<ref>{{cite web |url=http://codes.ohio.gov/orc/4511.21v1 |title=Revised Code § 4511.21(A) Speed limits - assured clear distance |publisher=The State of Ohio |accessdate=August 6, 2013 |quote=§ 4511.21(A)(A) No person shall operate a motor vehicle, trackless trolley, or streetcar at a speed greater or less than is reasonable or proper, having due regard to the traffic, surface, and width of the street or highway and any other conditions, and no person shall drive any motor vehicle, trackless trolley, or streetcar in and upon any street or highway at a greater speed than will permit the person to bring it '''to a stop within the assured clear distance ahead'''.}}</ref> Oklahoma,<ref>{{cite web |url=http://oklegal.onenet.net/oklegal-cgi/get_statute?98/Title.47/47-11-801.html |title=Oklahoma Statutes § 47-11-801 |publisher=The State of Oklahoma |accessdate=August 6, 2013 |quote=A. Any person driving a vehicle on a highway shall drive the same at a careful and prudent speed not greater than nor less than is reasonable and proper, having due regard to the traffic, surface and width of the highway and any other conditions then existing, and '''no person shall drive any vehicle upon a highway at a speed greater than will permit the driver to bring it to a stop within the assured clear distance ahead'''.}}</ref> Pennsylvania,<ref>{{cite web |url=http://www.legis.state.pa.us/WU01/LI/LI/CT/HTM/75/00.033.061.000..HTM |title=75 Pa. Cons. Stat. § 3361. Driving vehicle at safe speed |publisher=The State of Pennsylvania |accessdate=August 6, 2013 |quote=No person shall drive a vehicle at a speed greater than is reasonable and prudent under the conditions and having regard to the actual and potential hazards then existing, '''nor at a speed greater than will permit the driver to bring his vehicle to a stop within the assured clear distance ahead'''.}}</ref> and Texas.<ref>{{cite web |title=Transportation Code, Title 7, Ch. 545, §545.062(a) |publisher=State of Texas |accessdate=February 2016 |url=http://www.statutes.legis.state.tx.us/Docs/TN/htm/TN.545.htm |quote=An operator shall, if following another vehicle, maintain an '''assured clear distance''' between the two vehicles so that, considering the speed of the vehicles, traffic, and the conditions of the highway, the operator can safely stop without colliding with the preceding vehicle or veering into another vehicle, object, or person on or near the highway.}}</ref>

Revision as of 19:40, 20 July 2016

The Assured Clear Distance Ahead (ACDA) is the distance ahead of any terrestrial locomotive device such as a land vehicle,[1][2][3] watercraft,[4][5][6] skates, or skis,[7][8][9][10][11][12][13][14][15][16][17] although commonly an automobile, which can be seen to be clear of hazards by the driver, within which they should be able to bring the device to a halt;[18] drivers generally may not pose an "immediate hazard" upon where or when they cannot assure such distance ahead is clear. It is one of the most fundamental principles governing ordinary care and the duty of care for all methods of conveyance, and is frequently used to determine if a driver is in proper control and is a nearly universally implicit consideration in vehicular accident liability.[19][20] The rule is a precautionary trivial burden required to avert the great probable gravity of precious life loss and momentous damage[21][22][23][24][25][26][27][28]—the former of which has a priceless intrinsic value and a pricey to invaluable instrumental value.[29][30] Satisfying the ACDA rule is necessary but not sufficient to comply with the more generalized basic speed law, and accordingly, it may be used as both a layman's criterion and judicial test for courts to use in determining if a particular speed is negligent, but not to prove it is safe. As a spatial standard of care, it also serves as required explicit and fair notice of prohibited conduct so unsafe speed laws are not void for vagueness.[31][32][33]

This distance is typically both determined and constrained by the proximate edge of clear visibility, but it may be attenuated to a margin of which beyond hazards may reasonably be expected to spontaneously appear. The rule is the specific spatial case of the common law basic speed rule,[34] and an application of volenti non fit injuria. The two-second rule may be the limiting factor governing the ACDA, when the speed of forward traffic is what limits the basic safe speed, and a primary hazard of collision could result from following any closer.[35]

ACDA as common law rule or statute

Origins

As with the genesis of most legal doctrine governing problems which precede a legislative solution, the ACDA principle generally originates to decisional precedent by high courts which reasoned general common sense rules of conduct of which naturally follow from the repetitive process of determining specific culpability.[6][22][36][37][38][39] Legislation often subsequently followed which either superfluously codified and endorsed or revised these principles,[5][40] of which courts would in turn continue to flesh out the details.[41][42][43] By the late 1920s, the term "assured clear distance ahead" came into widespread use as the identity of this standard of care.[44][45] Much of the earliest published record naturally pertains to high stakes wrecks[6][38] among vessels[46] or vehicles[47] as defined in those times, though the obvious principle applies to chariots and might in fact be time immemorial.[34][48][49]

Present

Horses may still be expected to use the roadways, as well bicycles and automobiles.[50][51][52] The former are a regular appearance in both urban areas and in the country, and are commonly exercised by commuters and Amish. Many roads are unchanged since the 1800s while controlled-access highways have been invented specifically for the automobile.[53] Ships now have marine radar that allows one to view tens of miles beyond the eye. "At common law a motorist is required to regulate his speed so that he can stop within the range of his vision. In numerous jurisdictions, this rule has been incorporated in statutes which typically require that no person shall drive any motor vehicle in and upon any public road or highway at a greater speed than will permit him to bring it to a stop within the assured clear distance ahead."[19][34] Decisional law usually settles the circumstances by which a portion of the roadway is assuredly clear without it being mentioned in statute.[54] States where the judiciary has explicitly established the state's ACDA law include Indiana,[55] Iowa,[43] Kansas,[56] Louisiana,[57][58] Michigan,[59][60][61] New York,[62] North Carolina,[63] Ohio,[42][64] Tennessee,[39][65] Vermont,[66] and Wisconsin.[38][67] California maintains this duty,[68][69][70][71][72][73][74][75] notwithstanding whatever the care of an ordinary person.[76][77][78][79][80][Note 1]

Many states have further passed statutes which require their courts to more inflexibly weigh the ACDA in their determination of reasonable speed or behavior. Such statutes do so in part by designating ACDA violations as a citable driving offense, thus burdening an offending driver to rebut a presumption of negligence. States with such explicit ACDA standard of care provisions include: Iowa,[81] Michigan,[82] Ohio,[83] Oklahoma,[84] Pennsylvania,[85] and Texas.[86]

States which apply the principle by statute to watercraft on navigable waterways include all 171 member states of the International Maritime Organization,[87] notwithstanding membership: Great Britain and its common law inheriting Commonwealth of Nations,[6][36] The United States,[22][37][41] Florida,[88] Hawaii,[89] Illinois,[90] Louisiana,[91] Michigan,[92] Montana,[93] Oregon,[94] Texas,[95] and West Virginia.[96]

Most state issued driver handbooks either instruct or mention the ACDA rule as required care or safe practice.[18][79][97][98][99][100][101][102]

Explicit ACDA statutes and regulations,[103] especially those of which create a citable driving or maritime offense, are aimed at preventing harm that could result from potentially negligent behavior—whereas the slightly more obscure common law ACDA doctrine is most easily invoked to remedy actual damages that have already occurred as a result of such negligence. Unsafe speed statutes are immune from being void for vagueness[33] when they contain explicit ACDA clauses. Explicit and implicit ACDA rules govern millions of North American drivers.

Universal Standard of Care

There has been an increased interest in the ACDA as a universal standard of care[104][105] that has been brought about by recent technological and social changes such as: event data recorders,[106][107] dashcams, self-driving cars,[108][109] safe cities and multi-use movements,[110][111][112][113][114][115][116][117][118][119][120] and a movement to reduce claims by speeders against governments for "dangerous conditions" when operating speeds exceed a roads inferred design speed.[121]

Collision liability has historically benefited the law profession by being cloaked as a mixture of fact and law, but with EDR's precisely preserving "a state of facts" often repeated with differing trial outcomes, collisions are less a question of fact, but of law.[104][105][122][123][124] Electronic access to precise EDR data and rulings with new ideological modeling tools, can now expose judges as consistent political advocates for differing special road user interests.[125][126][127][128] Furthermore, the law needs to be clear, precise, and uniform[129][130] at a national level for the panoply of automobile manufacturers with the strict liability for their programming of law-abiding self-driving vehicles.[108][109] It is foreseeable that two self-driving car makes can collide because their algorithm of the law letter is different;[108] a resolvable issue that has been troubling human drivers for decades. The ACDA is a standard with descriptive mathematics, much of which are used in reverse by road engineers when designing or re-engineering roads to a speed criteria—for which its users were expected to follow.[131]

In a trend epitomized by the Great American streetcar scandal,[128][132] and accelerated by red scare[133] hysteria, automobile interests became very powerful through the 1980s, even filing one-sided amicus curiae briefs to narrow precedent making it difficult for all prior types of users to exercise their easement to the roadways; its goal was towards making all roads controlled-access highways. In at least one jurisdiction, it could no longer be said "as a matter of law" whether a cyclist is a discernible object for which a motorist with proper lookout had a duty see; an intolerant jury could fault a cyclist for "being in the way" notwithstanding that objects are less discernible and more "sudden" as one travels with reckless speed.[64] Common law precedent was eroded through the creation of distinctions where none really exists (i.e. visibility of cyclist v.s. pedestrian v.s. warning triangle). These successes in-part contributed to mass congestion, smog, high fuel prices, and obesity, which waned the power of this lobby, and now green multi-modal transportation is Federally encouraged.[111][112][113][114] The ACDA common law rule is more critical than ever to public safety in such multi-modal environment. A continued lack of such standard, or its effective enforcement by both police and judges may substantially diminish the legality of humans ever driving in the future.[134][135][136][137][138]

Determining the ACDA

Static ACDA

Forward "line-of-sight" distance

The range of visibility of which is the de facto ACDA, is usually that distance before which an ordinary person can see small hazards—such as a traffic cone or buoy—with 20/20 vision. This distance may be attenuated by specific conditions such as atmospheric opacity,[72] blinding glare,[139] darkness,[18][73] road design,[71][140] and adjacent environmental hazards including civil and recreational activities,[34] horse-drawn vehicle,[51] ridden animal,[51] livestock,[51] deer,[141] crossing traffic,[142] and parked cars. The ACDA may also be somewhat attenuated on roads with lower functional classification.[25][34][140] This is because the probability of spontaneous traffic increases proportionally to the density of road access points, and this density reduces the distance a person exercising ordinary care can be assured that a road will be clear; such reduction in the ACDA is readily apparent from the conditions, even when a specific access point or the traffic thereon is not.[143][Note 2] Furthermore, even though a through-driver may typically presume all traffic will stay assuredly clear when required by law, such driver may not take such presumption when circumstances provide actual knowledge under ordinary care that such traffic cannot obey the law.[143] During times of darkness, one can see ahead about 250 feet with low beams, and about 350–500 feet with high beams.[18] This clear distance corresponds to a maximum safe speed of 52 mph and 65-81 mph respectively on dry pavement with good tires,[144] which is attenuated further by convex and lateral road curvature; safe speed is always dynamic.

Intersections

As a corollary to the rule that drivers generally may not pose an "immediate hazard" upon where or when they cannot assure such distance ahead is clear, it follows that others may presume that no vehicle is posing an "immediate hazard" from beyond where they can see with proper lookout. Where there are cross roads or side roads with view obstructions, the assured clear distance terminates at the closest path of potential users of the roadway until there is such a view which assures the intersection will remain clear. In such situations, approach speed must be reduced in preparation for entering or crossing a road or intersection or the unmarked pedestrian crosswalks[145][146] and bike paths[147] they create because of potential hazards.[148][149][150][151][152][153] This jurisprudence arises in-part because of the known difficulty in estimating the distance and velocity of an approaching vehicle,[153][154][155] which is psychophysically explained by its small angular size and belated divergence from an asymptotically null rate of expansion, which is beyond the subtended angular velocity detection threshold (SAVT) limits of visual acuity[156][157][158][159][160] by way of the Stevens' power law[159] and Weber–Fechner law, until the vehicle may be dangerously close; subjective constancy and the visual angle illusion[161] may also play a role.[Note 3][Note 4] Vehicles that are approaching an intersection from beyond the SAVT limit cannot be reliably distinguished between moving or parked, though they may be traveling at such an imprudent speed as to pose an immediate hazard. In this circumstance, it is impossible for the entering driver to have fair notice that his or her contemplated conduct is forbidden by such hazard,[31][155] and any legal expectation to the contrary would implicate violating the vagueness doctrine of the US Constitution.[31][Note 5] It is the duty of the through-driver to slow down[80][149][150][151] and apply the ACDA principle specifically to the intersection.[18][34][49][140][142] See Table of detection thresholds.

When approaching an un-signalized intersection controlled by a stop sign, the assured clear distance ahead is:

Normal acceleration "ai" for a passenger vehicle from a stop up to 20 mph is about 0.15g, with more than 0.3g being difficult to exceed.[148] The distance "di" is the sum of the measured limit line setback distance—which is typically regulated by a Manual on Uniform Traffic Control Devices, at often between 4 and 30 feet in the United States[162][163][164]—and the crosswalk, parking lane, and road shoulder width. A vehicle accelerating from a stop travels this distance in time ti=2diai while through traffic travels a distance equal to their speed multiplied by that time. The time tpc, for the stopped motorist, is the sum of perception time and the time required to actuate an automatic transmission or shift to first gear which is usually between 12 to one second.[165]

ACDA as a function of horizontal sight distance

Horizontal clearance is measured from the edge of the traveled way to the bottom of the nearest object, tree trunk or shrub foliage mass face, plant setback, or mature growth.[131][166] Horizontal sight distance is not to be confused with the clear recovery zone which provides hazardous vegetation set-back to allow errant vehicles to regain control, and is exclusive to a mowed and limbed-up forest which can allow adequate sight distance, but unsafe recovery.[166] The height and lateral distance of plants restrict the horizontal sight distance, at times obscuring wildlife which may be spooked by an approaching vehicle and run across the road to escape with their herd.[141][166] This principle also applies to approaching vehicles and pedestrians at uncontrolled intersections and to a lesser degree by un-signalized intersections controlled by a yield sign. Horizontal sight distance "dhsd" affects the ACDA because the time ti=dhsd/Vi it takes for an intercepting object, animal, pedestrian, or vehicle with speed "Vi" to transverse this distance after emerging from the proximate edge of lateral visibility affords a vehicle with speed "V" a clear distance of "V*ti." Thus, the assured clear intercept distance "ACDAsi" is:

The faster one drives, the farther down-road an interceptor must be in order to be able to transverse the horizontal sight distance in time to collide, however this says nothing of whether the vehicle can stop by the end of this type of assured clear distance. Equating this distance to the total stopping distance and solving for speed yields one's maximum safe speed as purely dictated by the horizontal sight distance.


Dynamic "following" distance

The ACDA may also be dynamic as to the moving distance past which a motorist can be assured to be able to stay clear of a foreseeable dynamic hazard—such as to maintain a distance as to be able to safely swerve around a bicyclist should he succumb to a fall—without requiring a full stop beforehand, if doing so could be exercised with due care towards surrounding traffic. Quantitatively this distance is a function of the appropriate time gap and the operating speed: dACDA=tgapv. The assured clear distance ahead rule, rather than being subject to exceptions, is not really intended to apply beyond situations in which a vigilant ordinarily prudent person could or should anticipate.[19] A common way to violate the dynamic ACDA is by tailgating.

Measurement

The most accurate way to determine the ACDA is to directly measure it. Whereas this is impractical, sight distance formulas can be used with less direct measurements as rough baseline estimates. The empirical assured clear distance ahead calculated with computer vision, range finding, traction control, and GIS, such as by properly programming computer hardware used in autonomous cars, can be recorded to later produce or color baseline ACDA and safe speed maps for accident investigation, traffic engineering, and show disparities between safe speed and 85th percentile "operating" speed.[167] Self-driving cars[168][109] may have a higher safe speed than human driven vehicles for a given ACDA where computer perception-reaction times are nearly instantaneous.

Discretion

The Assured Clear Distance Ahead can be subjective to the baseline estimate of a reasonable person or be predetermined by law. For example, whether one should have reasonably foreseen that a road was not assuredly clear past 75–100 meters because of tractors or livestock which commonly emerge from encroaching blinding vegetation is on occasion dependent on societal experience within the locale. In certain urban environments, a straight, traffic-less, through-street may not necessarily be assuredly clear past the entrance of the nearest visually obstructed intersection as law.[34][140][143][153] Within the assured clear distance ahead, there is certainty that travel will be free from obstruction which is exclusive of a failure to appreciate a hazard. Collisions generally only occur within one's assured clear distance ahead which are "unavoidable" to them such that they have zero comparative negligence including legal acts of god and abrupt unforeseeably wanton negligence by another party. Hazards which penetrate one's proximate edge of clear visibility and compromise their ACDA generally require evasive action.

Drivers need not and are not required to precisely determine the maximum safe speed from real-time mathematical calculations of sight distances and stopping distances for their particular vehicle.[154] Motor vehicle operators of average intelligence[105][169] are constantly required to utilize their kinesthetic memory in all sorts of driving tasks including every time they brake to a full stop at a stop line in a panoply of conditions.[69][170] Like throwing a softball, one does not have to mathematically calculate a trajectory or firing solution in order to hit a target with repeated accuracy. During the earliest stages of learning how to drive, one develops a memory of when to start braking (how long it takes) from various speeds in order to stop at the limit line.[170] While there may be a degree of variance of such skill in seasoned drivers, they generally do not have the discretion in engaging in a behavior such as driving a speed above which no reasonable minds might differ as to whether it is unsafe or that one could come to a stop within the full distance ahead.[151][169]

Seconds of distance to stop rule

Drivers and law enforcement alike can easily[171] use a rule of thumb to estimate minimal stopping distance in terms of how many seconds of travel ahead at their current speed. For speed "v" in miles per hour, this rule of thumb is as follows:

If this distance is greater than the ACDA, they need to slow down. While most experienced drivers develop a broad intuition required by everyday breaking,[170] this rule of thumb can still benefit some to recalibrate expectations for rare hard breaking, particularly from high speeds. Additional simple corrections can be made to compensate for the environment and driving ability. Read more about the Seconds of Distance to Stop Rule.

ACDA Rule specific case generalized to the Basic Speed Law

The ACDA distances are a principal component to be evaluated in the determination of the maximum safe speed (VBSL) under the basic speed law, without which the maximum safe speed cannot be determined. As mathematical statements are more precise than verbal statements alone,[21] the relation of the ACDA as a subset of the basic speed rule for land based vehicles may be objectively quantified as follows:

The value of the variable "e" is the sine of the angle of inclination of the road's slope. For a level road this value is zero, and for small angles it approximates the road's percent grade divided by one hundred.

[Note 6]

The maximum velocity permitted by the Assured Clear Distance Ahead is controlling of safe speed (VBSL) for only the top and two cases. Safe speed may be greater or less than the actual legal speed limit depending upon the conditions along the road.[148]

[Note 7]

See reference VBSL derivations for basic physics explanation.

ACDA: forward line-of-sight

For the top case, the maximum speed is governed by the assured clear "line-of-sight", as when the "following distance" aft of forward traffic and "steering control" are both adequate. Common examples include when there is no vehicle to be viewed, or when there is a haze or fog that would prevent visualizing a close vehicle in front. This maximum velocity is denoted by the case variable , the friction coefficient is symbolized by —and itself a function of the tire type and road conditions, the distance is the static ACDA, the constant is the acceleration of gravity, and interval is the perception-reaction time—usually between 1.0 and 2.5 seconds.[172][173]

See Table of safe speed versus forward line-of-sight

ACDA: horizontal line-of-sight

The second case describes the relationship of horizontal sight distance on safe speed. It is the maximum speed at which a vehicle can come to a full stop before an object, with speed Vi, can intercept after having emerged and traveled across the horizontal sight distance "dhsd." Urban and residential areas have horizontal sight distances that tend to be closely obstructed by parked cars, utility poles, street furnishing, fencing, signage, and landscaping, but have slower intercepting speeds of children, pedestrians, backing cars, and domestic animals. These interceptors combined with dense usage results in collisions that are more probable and much more likely to inflict harm to an outside human life. In rural areas, swift-moving spooked wildlife such as deer,[141] elk, moose, and antelope are more likely to intercept a roadway at over 30 mph (48 kph). Wildlife will frequently transit across a road before a full stop is necessary, however collisions with large game are foreseeably lethal, and a driver generally has a duty not to harm his or her passengers. The foreseeable intercept speed or defectively designed horizontal sight distance may vary "reasonably" with judicial discretion.

See Table of safe speed versus horizontal line-of-sight

ACDA: intersectional setback

This third case regards safe speed around un-signalized intersections where a driver on an uncontrolled though street has a duty to slow down in crossing an intersection and permit controlled drivers to be able pass through the intersection without danger of collision.[151] The driver on the through street must anticipate and hence not approach at an unsafe speed which would prevent another driver from being able to enter while traffic was some distance away, or would be unsafe to a driver who has already established control of the intersection under a prudent acceleration ai, from a stop at a limit line a distance dsl away.[165]

ACDA: following distance

The pedantic fourth case applies when the dynamic ACDA "following distance" (dACDAd) is less than the static ACDA "line-of-sight" distance (dACDAs). A classic instance of this occurs when, from a visibility perspective, it would be safe to drive much faster were it not for a slower-moving vehicle ahead. As such, the dynamic ACDA is governing the basic speed rule, because in maintaining this distance, one cannot drive at a faster speed than that matching the forward vehicle. The "time gap" tg or "time cushion" is the time required to travel the dynamic ACDA or "following distance" at the operating speed. Circumstances depending, this cushion might be manifested as a two-second rule or three-second rule.

See Table of 2-second following distances

Critical speed

In the fifth case, critical speed Vcs applies when road curvature is the factor limiting safe speed. A vehicle which exceeds this speed will slide out of its lane. Critical speed is a function of curve radius "r," superelevation or banking "e," and friction coefficient "μ;"[148] the constant "g" again is the acceleration of gravity. However, most motorists will not tolerate a lateral acceleration exceeding 0.3g (μ=0.3) above which many will panic.[174] Hence, critical speed may not resemble loss of control speed.[174] Attenuated "side" friction coefficients are often used for computing critical speed.[166] The formula is frequently approximated without the denominator for low angle banking which may be suitable for nearly all situations except the tightest radius of highway onramps.[166][175] The principle of critical speed is often applied to the problem of traffic calming, where curvature is both used to govern maximum road speed, and used in traffic circles as a device to force drivers to obey their duty to slow down when approaching an intersection.[149][150]

See Table of curvatures and critical speeds

Surface control

The bottom case is invoked when the maximum velocity for surface control Vcl is otherwise reached. Steering control is independent from any concept of clear distance ahead. If a vehicle cannot be controlled so as to safely remain within its lane above a certain speed and circumstance, then it is irrelevant how assuredly clear the distance is ahead. Using the example of the previous case, the safe speed on a curve may be such that a driver experiences a lateral acceleration of less than 0.3g despite that the vehicle may not slide until it experiences 0.8g. Speed wobble, hydroplaning, roll center, fishtailing, jackknife tendencies, potholes, washboarding, frost heaving,[176] and tire speed rating are other factors limiting Vcl.

Safe speed

Safe speed is the maximum speed permitted by the basic speed law and negligence doctrine. Safe speed is not the same as the 85 percentile operating speed[177] used by traffic engineers in establishing speed zones.[148][162][178][179] Fog, snow, or ice can create conditions where most people drive too fast, and chain reaction accidents in such conditions are examples of where large groups of drivers collided because they failed to reduce speed for the conditions.[148][180] The speeds at which most people drive can only be a very rough guide to safe speed,[148] and an illegal or negligent custom or practice is not in itself excusable.[76][105][181] Safe speed approximates the inferred design speed adjusted for environmental alterations and vehicle and person specific factors when VACDAs is the limiting factor.[182] The Solomon curve concept can create an approach-avoidance conflict within the driver who wishes neither to drive faster than is lawful and the conditions allow nor have an unsafe speed discrepancy between other vehicles on the road; it is never legal to go faster than the speed limit, and unilaterally reducing the risk of the latter can lead to a mass crash caused by the former.[180]

Relationship of posted speed limits to the explicitness of driver care standard

Many people are challenged by the concept of unsafe speed because they find it vague and arbitrary.[33] It is well known that people instead resolve such challenges by attribute substitution,[183] which in this case can mean simply emulating the behaviors of others. In accord with the cultural theory of risk, indeed a substantial part of a driver's risk perception comes from comparing their contemplated conduct to the behavior of others; this includes the safeness of a given speed, notwithstanding the actual risk. As a result of this uncorrected vagueness, group behavior can often be in opposition to safe speed and still be governing a hazardous posted speed limit. By Federal law, posted speed limits are generally within 5 mph of the 85th-percentile speed of free-flowing traffic.[131][162][178][179][184] Functionality, this amounts to citizens "voting" a street's speed limit with their gas pedal from the influence of groupshift. As people generally follow explicit rules all the time of which they do not agree, it is often simply a jurisdiction's failure in their law to sufficiently quantify and disseminate fair notice of an explicit standard of care, such as the ACDA rule. Most DMV driver manuals teach the practice, but far fewer states explicitly back it up in their actual statutes and law enforcement.[18][79][97][98] If drivers were mindful of the ACDA, the operating speed would by definition not exceed the inferred design speed.[131][179] Furthermore, many jurisdictions increasingly distorted[185] policing focuses on driving while "influenced," often pull-over slower quartile sober night-time drivers moving no faster than they can stop within the radius of their headlights;[18] this discourages adjusting speed downward from anything but the posted "maximum speed" permitted by law—which is determined as previously described.

Famous tragedies

Actor James Dean's 85 mph car crash, Princess Diana's death, and the sinking of the RMS Titanic[22][41] after colliding with an iceberg at night are all well publicized tragedies which resulted from a failure to maintain an assured clear distance ahead.

"Assurance" beyond proximate edge of clear visibility as transference of liability

A general principle in liability doctrine is than an accident which would not have occurred except for the action or inaction of some person or entity contrary to a duty such as the exercise of proper care was the result of negligence. The liability space from which one can recover[186] is typically, themselves, other parties, or nobody.[187] Jurisdictional exceptions permitting one to legally take "assurance" that the distance will be clear beyond the proximate edge of clear visibility and choose such a speed accordingly, transfers classic common law liability from that driver for his or her "blind" actions. This duty to assure clear distance ahead is inevitably transferred, as an externality to everybody or thing else who must instead warn the driver, such as the government, its road engineers, and maintainers.[77][121][188]

As it is generally probable and foreseeable that, chance will permit, and at some point there will be an obstruction beyond some driver's line of sight, such an entitlement challenges centuries[6][36] of precedent in negligence doctrine in addition to posing difficult policy and engineering challenges. It also violates the calculus of negligence[21] because speed is an inherent factor in vehicular accidents which are a leading cause of priceless life loss[23][26][27][29][30][153] and lawsuits, and the burden of a precautions speed is radically lower than the former.[30]

The assumption of risk resulting from the unsafe activity of driving faster than one can stop within one's vision, does not depend ex post facto on what you happened to hit, for which by nature you could not have known; it could have been a moose or a luxury car. Furthermore, modern times still provide no legal remedies for Darwinian misfortune upon the entire class of unwarnable accidents where drivers and their passengers would not have collided into the likes of a moose,[141] livestock,[51] fallen tree, rock, jetsam, horse-drawn vehicle,[51] stalled vehicle,[189] school bus, garbage truck, mail carrier, snowplow, washout, snow drift, or slid off the road, were it not for their decisions to drive faster than dictated by the assured clear distance ahead. Regardless of what behavior an authority might encourage by fabricating new rights, it remains timeless that constituents cannot sue the wind for causing a wreck when it inevitably violates a "modern right to drive faster than permitted by the ACDA" by failing to warning them it knocked down a tree in a forest with lots of trees which all eventually fall down. In this specific regard, jurisdictions which grant drivers the liberty to be fools from their own folly, are also condoning the collateral damage and life loss which is expected to occur. Moreover, modern life-entrusting consumers of driving services and driver-less cars[109] who suffer such caused injury are left without legal remedy for foreseeable outcome of imprudent speed; this in-turn unnecessarily transfers a substantive portion of the ACDA liability space into act of god, government claims, strict liability, or other findings from legal fiction which the justice system generally abhors. What modern times are changing is that one may assure the distance is clear ahead virtually through the Internet of Things, as smart cars connect to get information from smart highways or pass what they see ahead or measure to traffic behind.[190] A fundamental corollary of the ACDA rule is that technology, expectations, and desires may modernize, but the laws of physics can not and do not.[48][49] The deceleration coefficients and reactions times may change from conveyance by chariot, horse and buggy, internal combustion engine, electric motor, and by driver-less car, but the equations governing stopping distances are immutable. Finally, where it is the policy of the law not to fault well intending diligent citizens for innocent mistakes,[154][155] human life reaps continued benefit from the ACDA duty of which instills the necessary room to survive uninjured from such foreseeable and excusable error while adding redundancy in the responsibility to avoid a collision; mere unilateral duties laid down to assure the safety of others tend to result in hazardous risk compensation by those unfettered parties[191] resulting in a moral hazard.

Allowing one to drive faster than their vision permits them to safely stop, results in there being no core standard of care regarding safe speed making unsafe speed laws void for vagueness.[32] The ACDA minimum standard gives fair notice of what conduct is prohibited, and people of ordinary intelligence can apply their breaking experience or the seconds of distance to stop rule to the distance they can see;[170] once one is allowed to cruise-on without control beyond the edge of visibility, there is little consensus on what arbitrary speed is unsafe, or what to assume of the vague conditions there-past.[33]

To be able to guarantee "assurance" beyond proximate edge of clear visibility, in doing so exempting ACDA duty, a road must be designed and maintained such that there is not a chance of obstruction in one's lane beyond the proximate edge of clear visibility. A road's vertical profile must be assured to have such a curvature as not to hide hazards close behind its crests. Discretion for drivers and pedestrians to enter onto a potentially occupied lane from a side street must be assuredly eliminated such as with fences, merge lanes, or signalized access. There must also be an assurance of no opportunity for animals and debris to enter from side lots, and that there are continuous multi-hourly maintenance patrols performed. Furthermore, such road sections must be distinguished from other roads so that the driver could clearly and immediately know when he or she may or may not take such extended "assurance." Few roads might meet these requirements except some of the highest functional classification controlled-access highways such as freeways and autobahns.[25]

Even if such criteria are met, the law must also exempt driver liability for maintaining clear distance ahead. In most democracies, such liability for failures of the distance to remain clear beyond line of sight would ultimately be transferred to its taxpayers.[121] This only generally occurs when governments have been tasked by constituents or their courts to take the responsibly to design and maintain roadways that "assure" the distance will be clear beyond the proximate edge of clear visibility. Pressures to make such changes may arise from cultural normalization of deviance and unnecessary risk, misunderstanding the purpose of the road functional classification system, underestimation of increased risk, and reclamation of commute time.[25]

One of the greatest difficulties created by such an extension of the ACDA is the frequency at which roads reduce their functional classification[25] unbeknownst to drivers who continue unaware they have lost this extended "assurance" or don't understand the difference. Such nuance in applicable jurisdictions is a prolific source of accidents.[149] In the United States, there is no explicit road marking promising clear distance beyond line of sight in the Manual on Uniform Traffic Control Devices, although there are signs communicating "limited sight distance," "hill blocks view," "crossroad ahead," and "freeway ends."[192] A partial solution to this challenge is to remove driver discretion in determining whether the ACDA is extended beyond line of sight, by explicitly designating this law change to certain marked high functional classification roadways having meet strict engineering criteria.[25]

The ACDA rule is analogous to aviation visual flight rules, and its discussed exception—allowed only in a well regulated control zone—is analogous to instrument flight rules. Unlike both visual and instrumental flight rules, where federal and international administrative law applies seamlessly and uniformly across the states, the ACDA rule governing ground transportation is relatively variegated across states and judicial circuits.[32][62][130][193][194] Primitive patchwork governance over a prominent interstate commercial subject, in a modern era where citizens quickly and more frequently travel father than ever before, creates problems for modern driver-less cars which are programmed, distributed, sold, and traded at national levels.[129][168][109] As opposed to a strict standard of care,[78][104][105][195] delegation of such standard to a jury[196] assumes the representativeness heuristic[197] for twelve people to determine ordinary care representative of everyone while ignoring its insensitivity to sample size, which of course when applied to multiple cases involving identical situational circumstances results in many verdicts with opposing extreme views,[105] which works against the utility of the law by making it arbitrarily vague.[104][105] A national uniformity standard which either administratively lays down the ACDA law as has been done for aircraft, or requires states to legislatively enact in order to receive federal DOT funding as has been done for the national legal drinking age, is a subject of debate for those who argue far more people die in cars than in aircraft.[23][26][153][198] While group polarization towards safety has shifted the criminal blood alcohol threshold below levels for which the risk is statistically marginal,[24][199] the tolerance for speeding—of which each speed unit increment carries an equatable risk relative to BAC[24]—remains relatively neglected. Speed is responsible for more crashes and economic loss than is alcohol.[23] The discrepancy may be partly explained by powerful special interest groups that are lobbying against drunk driving and for loser speed regulation.[185][200]

Derivations

Case 1: Safe speed as a function of forward line-of-sight

Derivation of ACDA 1
Forces on a vehicle skidding down a grade of angle θ.

Starting with Newton's Second Law of Motion and the Laws of Friction:

Equating the net force to mass times acceleration:

Invoking the equations of motion and substituting acceleration:

Small-angle approximation:

Substituting the small angle approximations, and exploiting that the product of a small angle squared, in radians, with the friction coefficient, θ2μ, is insignificant (for a steep 20% slope and a good friction coef. of 0.8, this equals (.2)2x0.8≈0.03):

Now, the total stopping distance is the sum of the breaking and perception-reaction distances:

Isolating zero as preparation to solve for velocity:

Completing the square or invoking the quadratic formula to find the solution:

Use small-angle approximation to obtain a more field-able version of the above solution in terms of percent grade/100 "e" instead of an angle θ in radians:

Substituting the angle as described produces the form of the formula of case 1 ():

The Basic Speed Law constrains the Assured Clear Distance Ahead to the total stopping distance, and the small angle value of road grades approximates the superelevation "e."

Many roadways are level, in which case the small angle approximations or superelevation may be dropped altogether:

This model ignores the effects of air drag, rolling resistance, lift, and relativity as a vehicle's great momentum and weight dominate these factors; they increase the complexity of the formulas while insubstantially changing the outcomes in practically all driving situations except ultra-low-mass bicycles stopping from inherently dangerously high speeds; usability to the layman and conformance with current standard engineering assumptions[131][144] is the objective and a vehicle's lift factor is often inaccessible. Learn a level ground model with most of those effects here or read about the automobile drag coefficient.

Case 2: Safe speed as a function of horizontal line-of-sight

Derivation of ACDA 2

The time required for an obstruction with speed vi to transect the horizontal sight distance di:

The time required to travel down a road at speed v to said obstruction of distance d away:

Equating the two times:

Solving for this distance:

Equating this to the total stopping distance, which is the sum of breaking and perception-reaction distances:

Isolating zero, and factoring out a v:

Solving for the non-trivial case (or may distribute v in equation above and apply quadratic formula for same result):

The solution to the above equation, which provides the maximum safe speed as a function of horizontal sight distance, intercept velocity, and road-tire friction coefficient:

Case 3: Safe speed as a function of intersectional setback

Derivation of ACDA 3

The time required for a vehicle to enter a controlled intersection from a stop is the sum of the perception time (tp), the time required to actuate an automatic transmission or shift to first gear (tc), and the time to accelerate and enter or traverse the road (ta). The sum of the first two quantities is tpc.

The time required for a vehicle entering with acceleration ai to transect the sum of the setback and shoulder distances di under uniform acceleration ai from a stop via the equations of motion:

The time required to travel down a road at speed v to said obstruction of distance d away:

Equating the two times:

Solving for this distance:

Equating this to the total stopping distance, which is the sum of breaking and perception-reaction distances:

Isolating zero, and factoring out a v:

Solving for the non-trivial case (or may distribute v in equation above and apply quadratic formula for same result):

The solution to the above equation, which provides the maximum safe speed as a function of horizontal setback, intercept acceleration, and road-tire friction coefficient:

Case 4: Safe speed as a function of following distance

Derivation of ACDA 4

From the equations of motion:

Isolating for speed:

Case 5: Safe speed as a function of critical speed

Derivation of ACDA 5
Forces on a vehicle skidding down a grade of angle θ.

Starting with Newton's Laws of Motion, the Laws of Friction, and Centripetal force:

Substituting formulas for Centripetal force, frictional force, and gravitational force:

The normal force is equal and opposite to the sum of the gravitational and centripetal components:

Isolate v terms:

Then solve for v:

To obtain:

This is the full solution, however most corners are banked at less than 15 degrees (≈28% grade), so in such conditions, a fieldable small angle approximation may be used.

Substituting small-angle approximations sinθ≈θ, cos≈1-θ2/2:

Exploit that a small angle squared, in radians, is insignificant by substituting θ2≈0 which obtains the formula used in case 5 (also tanθ≈e):

Seconds of distance to stop rule

Derivation of Seconds of distance to stop rule

The Seconds of distance to stop rule is ultimately originated to and proved by the following basic physics:

We first obtain the total stopping distance, and then convert it into travel time—which is more applicable by the driver.

Invoking the equations of motion

where

The time it takes to casually traverse the stopping distance at the travel speed is

Substituting the former into the latter

Now this can be simplified into the rule of thumb form

by noting

substituting (US Customary units)

(dry) or (wet) or (snow); , (convert mph to fps);

hence

(dry), (wet), and (snow)

we get seconds of distance to stop rule (in MPH)

(dry pavement)
(wet pavement)
(snow, hard-packed)

The dry rule does allow one to travel faster in dry weather, but expect emergency deceleration to be a bit uncomfortable. If one desires to remember only one rule, use the wet one. However, because the difference between wet and dry is half-a-second at 30 MPH and one second at 60 MPH, and because dividing by two is easier than three, we can use a correctable rule of thumb:

................(instead add 2+ in wet or complex conditions, and also instead divide by 10 in snow/ice)

The rule is very easy to apply in one's head while driving: simply divide your speed (MPH) by 10 and again by 2, then add 1. That's it! If one is going sixty mph, divide by ten to get 6, then divide by two to get 3; adding a one-second reaction time, we get that you can generally stop beyond 4 seconds of distance ahead. Drivers that require additional perception-reaction time, such as novices, elderly, or those in complex or adverse environments can benefit by adding additional seconds.[201][202]

The time to traverse your stopping distance at travel speed should not be confused with the breaking time to come to a full stop, which is a number nearly twice this value ( t=v/μ g+tptr ). As one is continually slowing down while breaking, it will naturally take longer to get to the stopping limit.

A more correct perception-reaction time of one-and-a-half seconds is commonly used by the mathematically inclined.[144][173] Doing so to obtain your "Seconds of distance to stop" for dry pavement and then converting time to actual distance by multiplying it by the travel velocity and 22/15 to convert MPH to fps will yield results in close agreement with this table.

Tables of reference constants and safe speeds

Reference Constants

Table of perception-reaction times

Table of perception-reaction times
Perception-reaction times [seconds][172][203]
Anticipated Object Unexpected Object Unexpected signal
0.72 1.28 1.27

Table of tire-roadway friction coefficients

Table of tire-roadway friction coefficients
Average value of tire friction coefficient[204]
Road surface Peak value (μs) Sliding value (μd)
Asphalt and concrete (dry) 0.80 − 0.90 0.75
Asphalt (wet) 0.50 − 0.70 0.45 − 0.60
Concrete (wet) 0.80 0.70
Gravel 0.60 0.55
Earth road (dry) 0.68 0.65
Earth road (wet) 0.55 0.40 − 0.50
Snow (hard-packed) 0.20 0.15
Ice 0.10 0.07

See also Tire friction and rolling resistance coefficients

Table of acceleration values

Table of acceleration vales
Acceleration values[148]
Car Truck Bicycle
0.15g 0.085-0.138g[205]

See Car specific accelerations

Table of intercept values

Table of intercept vales
Approach speeds of hazards which may foreseeably intercept the roadway
pedestrian(walk/run) bicycle cat dog deer elk
3.1-5.6 mph/27.78 mph[206] 14.7f/s[207] 29.8 mph 63.5 km/h 48.2 km/h 72.4 km/h

See more animal intercept speeds. See article on speed.

Table of tire speed ratings

Table of tire speed ratings
Tire speed rating[208]
Code mph km/h Code mph km/h
A1 3 5 L 75 120
A2 6 10 M 81 130
A3 9 15 N 87 140
A4 12 20 P 94 150
A5 16 25 Q 100 160
A6 19 30 R 106 170
A7 22 35 S 112 180
A8 25 40 T 118 190
B 31 50 U 124 200
C 37 60 H 130 210
D 40 65 V 149 240
E 43 70 Z over 149 over 240
F 50 80 W 168 270
G 56 90 (W) over 168 over 270
J 62 100 Y 186 300
K 68 110 (Y) over 186 over 300

See article on Tire Codes

Safe Speeds

Table of ACDA: forward line-of-sight

Table of ACDA: forward line-of-sight
Average safe speed as a function of assured clear distance ahead[144]
ACDA [meters] ACDA [feet] Safe speed [km/h] Safe speed [mph]
1 3.3 2.3 1.4
2.5 8.2 5.6 3.5
4 13.1 8.6 5.3
5.5 18.0 11.4 7.1
7 23.0 14.1 8.8
8.5 27.9 16.7 10.4
10 32.8 19.1 11.9
15 49 27 16
30 98 45 28
45 148 60 37
60 197 73 45
75 246 84 52
90 295 95 59
105 344 105 65
120 394 114 71
135 443 122 76
150 492 130 81
165 541 138 86
180 591 146 91
195 640 153 95
210 689 160 99
225 738 166 103
240 787 173 107
255 837 179 111
270 886 185 115
285 935 191 119
300 984 197 122

The speed values in this table are produced from the formula using an "average" coefficient of friction (μ) of 0.7, and a perception-reaction time of 1.5 seconds. Speed values specific to a given circumstance can be obtained with the same formula using the appropriate reference constants specific to the circumstance.

Table of ACDA: horizontal line-of-sight

Table of ACDA: horizontal line-of-sight
Safe speed as a function of horizontal clearance for 9 km/h (5.6 mph) intercept object (i.e. child)
HSD [meters] HSD [feet] Safe speed [km/h] Safe speed [mph]
3.0 10 0 0
4.0 13.1 4.9 3.1
4.5 14.8 14.8 9.2
5.0 16.4 24.7 15.4
5.5 18.0 34.6 21.5
6 20 44 28
7 23 64 40
8 26 84 52
9 30 104 65
10 33 124 77
11 36 143 89
12 39 163 101

This table demonstrates why alleyways, parking lots, parks, and residential areas frequently set 5-15 mph speed limits when the side clearance from the road is less than 15 feet. An urban or residential street which permits a maximum speed limit of 25 mph under its very best conditions (roadsides cleared of visual obstructions past a 20-foot maintained right of way), may in practice be unsafe to drive at more than 10 mph within sections with utilized curbside parking. This table also suggests that the safe speed could be greater than a statutory 25 mph posted speed, where roadside clearance is sufficient such that no "foreseeable" object could emerge from the proximate edge of roadside visibility, transect the cleared area, and intercept the lane before the driver could come to a halt. However, wary road design engineers may have differing views of foreseeable intercept speeds than that reflected by the 85th percentile speed chosen by the public. This can have unfortunate consequences where a mass commuting public is unfamiliar with or does not appreciate specific local hazards. Narrow lane widths are purposely used for traffic calming, because careful drivers universally choose their speed depending on the roadway width.[209] Standard horizontal clearances are commonly set by AASHTO guidelines or a jurisdiction's department of transportation.[131][210]

Safe speed as a function of horizontal clearance for 16 km/h (10 mph) intercept object (i.e. domestic animals)
HSD [meters] HSD [feet] Safe speed [km/h] Safe speed [mph]
7 23 4 2
8 26 15 9
9 30 26 16
10 33 37 23
11 36 48 30
12 39 59 37
13 43 70 44
14 46 82 51
15 49 93 58
16 52 104 65
17 56 115 71
18 59 126 78
19 62 137 85
20 66 148 92
21 69 159 99
22 72 171 106
23 75 182 113
24 79 193 120
25 82 204 127
Safe speed as a function of horizontal clearance for 48.2 km/h (30 mph) intercept object (i.e. deer)
HSD [meters] HSD [feet] Safe speed [km/h] Safe speed [mph]
20 66 0 0
21 69 3 2
22 72 7 4
23 75 11 7
24 79 14 9
25 82 18 11
26 85 22 14
27 89 26 16
28 92 29 18
29 95 33 20
30 98 37 23
31 102 40 25
32 105 44 27
33 108 48 30
34 112 51 32
35 115 55 34
36 118 59 37
37 121 62 39
38 125 66 41
39 128 70 43
40 131 74 46
41 135 77 48
42 138 81 50
43 141 85 53
44 144 88 55
45 148 92 57
46 151 96 59
47 154 99 62
48 157 103 64
49 161 107 66
50 164 110 69

The speed values in these tables are produced from the formula using an "average" coefficient of friction (μ) of 0.7, and a perception-reaction time of 1.5 seconds. Speed values specific to a given circumstance can be obtained with the same formula using the appropriate reference constants specific to the circumstance.

Table of ACDA: intersectional setback

Table of ACDA: intersectional setback
Approach speed as a function of setback distance (acceleration=0.15g)[211]
Setback [meters] Setback [feet] Approach speed [m/s]
0 0 0
0.5 1.6 11.3
1 3 16
1.5 4.9 19.6
2 7 23
3 10 28
4 13 32
5 16 36
6 20 39
8 26 45
10 33 51
12 39 55
14 46 60
16 52 64
18 59 68
20 66 72
22 72 75
24 79 78
26 85 82
28 92 85
30 98 88

Table of following distances

Table of following distances (2 second rule)
Following distance (2 second rule)
Speed [km/h] Speed [mph] Following distance [meters] Following distance [feet]
0 0 0 0
5 3 3 9
10 6 6 18
15 9 8 27
20 12 11 36
25 16 14 46
30 19 17 55
35 22 19 64
40 25 22 73
45 28 25 82
50 31 28 91
55 34 31 100
60 37 33 109
65 40 36 118
70 43 39 128
75 47 42 137
80 50 44 146
85 53 47 155
90 56 50 164
95 59 53 173
100 62 56 182
105 65 58 191
110 68 61 200
115 71 64 210
120 75 67 219
125 78 69 228
130 81 72 237
135 84 75 246
140 87 78 255
145 90 81 264
150 93 83 273

Table of critical speeds

Table of critical speeds
Average physical critical speeds on level surface (e=0, μ=0.7)
Radius [meters] Radius [feet] Safe speed [km/h] Safe speed [mph]
5 16.4 21.1 13.1
10 33 30 19
20 66 42 26
30 98 52 32
40 131 60 37
50 164 67 41
60 197 73 45
70 230 79 49
80 262 84 52
90 295 89 56
100 328 94 59
110 361 99 61
120 394 103 64
130 427 108 67
140 459 112 69
150 492 116 72
160 525 119 74
170 558 123 76
180 591 127 79
190 623 130 81
200 656 133 83

The speed values in this table are produced from the formula using an "average" coefficient of friction (μ) of 0.7 and zero superelevation. Speed values specific to a given circumstance can be obtained with the same formula using the appropriate reference constants specific to the circumstance.

Average psychological critical speeds on level surface (e=0, μ=0.3)[174]
Radius [meters] Radius [feet] Safe speed [km/h] Safe speed [mph]
5 16 14 9
10 33 20 12
15 49 24 15
20 66 28 17
25 82 31 19
30 98 34 21
35 115 37 23
40 131 39 24
45 148 41 26
50 164 44 27
55 180 46 28
60 197 48 30
65 213 50 31
70 230 52 32
75 246 53 33
80 262 55 34
85 279 57 35
90 295 59 36
95 312 60 37
100 328 62 38
105 344 63 39
110 361 65 40
115 377 66 41
120 394 68 42
125 410 69 43
130 427 70 44
140 459 73 45
145 476 74 46
150 492 76 47
155 509 77 48
160 525 78 49
170 558 81 50
175 574 82 51
180 591 83 51
185 607 84 52
190 623 85 53
200 656 87 54
205 673 88 55
210 689 89 56
220 722 92 57
230 755 94 58
240 787 96 59
245 804 97 60
250 820 98 61
260 853 100 62
280 919 103 64
300 984 107 66
320 1050 110 69
340 1115 114 71
360 1181 117 73
380 1247 120 75
400 1312 124 77
420 1378 127 79
440 1444 130 80
460 1509 132 82
480 1575 135 84
500 1640 138 86

Most motorists will not tolerate a lateral acceleration exceeding 0.3g (μ=0.3) above which many will panic.[174]

Table of detection thresholds

Table of detection thresholds: SAVT
Table of detection thresholds: SAVT
Speed [KM/H] Speed [MPH] Detection Distance [m] Detection Distance [ft] Time to Collision [s]
5 38
10 54
15 66
20 77
25 86
30 94
35 101
40 108
45 115
50 121
55 127
60 133
65 138
70 143
75 148
80 153

See also

Notes

  1. ^ In addition to being old common law principle, ACDA case law jurisprudence buttressed the legislature's implicit intent in its Basic Speed Law, and further limited transference of liability for ACDA negligence to the state—under the California Tort Claims Act—for insufficient sight distance at the speed of which the driver chose. See CVC § 22350, CVC § 22358.5, Cal Gov. Code § 830.4, Cal Gov. Code § 830.8, and Cal Gov. Code § 831. See CACI Form 1120 for details.
  2. ^ For this reason, full corner sight distance is almost never required for individual driveways in urban high-density residential areas, and street parking is commonly permitted within the right-of-way.
  3. ^ While the Gestalt effect is generally valuable in processing visual information, ambiguity such as that specific to approaching distant vehicles can also lead to problematic multistable perception, erroneous filling-in, and spectacular failure such as the Ebbinghaus illusion, Delboeuf illusion, and Ponzo illusion. Such honest human error insidiously arises through unconscious inferences from insufficient, distracting, or illusory information—it is especially important to foresee such hazard at intersections.
  4. ^ Under the worst-case scenario, a driver will make decisions alone based upon the "looming motion" of oncoming headlights or silhouette of an anonymous vehicle, which must reach a certain proximity in order to exceed the visual expansion acuity threshold, . Given a vehicle of size and distance , the visual angle is: . Its derivative with respect to distance is . An approaching vehicle of constant velocity will decrease the distance at rate . The time rate of visual expansion is obtained from the rate at which the subtended angle grows with decreased distance, multiplied by the rate at which the distance lessens with time: . It follows that . Hence, an approaching vehicle's looming motion is not perceivable until , where the S2/4 term is omitted with small-angle approximation. The units of measurement for size, distance, and velocity variables must be of the same system (i.e. multiply by 22/15 to convert MPH to ft/s or 5/18 to convert km/h to m/s or π/180 to convert deg to requisite rad). Read more about this topic
  5. ^ The overbreadth doctrine is also implicated whereby to avoid the risk of legal consequences for using blind intersections for which there is no fair notice of other traffic bringing a prohibition of its use into effect, persons with no alternative route are dissuaded from the liberty of free movement, expression, and to peacefully assemble. Hence the law's effects are thereby far broader than intended or than the U.S. Constitution permits. Furthermore, as insufficient intersectional sight-distance is often often symptomatic of old, urban high-density neighborhoods, with multiple tenant households saturating narrow street parking,—predominately lower social-economic environments—entire classes of people may be unequally discouraged from even leaving their houses. The through-driver is not adversely affected in this regard, by being compelled to slow down as to be able to stop to avoid collision with entering car or pedestrian as required by law.
  6. ^ In most jurisdictions, judicial notice shall be taken of the total stopping distance, and such notice is therefore logically and substantively taken of the maximum speed permitted to brake within the stopping distance as applied to the ACDA. The latter is merely the inverse function of the former. Furthermore, fundamental mathematical relationships are themselves subject to judicial notice. For example, using the and values that produced Code of Virginia § 46.2-880 Tables of speed and stopping distances, one simply obtains the same velocities that produced the stopping distance in the statute: Metric (SI) – Speed in km/h from distance in meters: US customary – Speed in MPH from distance in feet:
  7. ^ Safe Speed will be outputted in the same terms as the input units. Entering a distance in feet and an acceleration in terms of feet/s2 will produce a safe speed in terms of feet/second. To convert to miles per hour, multiply by 22/15. Entering distance and acceleration in terms of meters will output a speed in meters per second, which may be converted to kilometers per hour by multiplying by a 18/5 (or 3.6) factor.

References

  1. ^ "Assured Clear Distance Ahead Law & Legal Definition". US Legal, Inc. Retrieved 2013-08-27. ACDA or "assured clear distance ahead" requires a driver to keep his motor vehicle under control so that he can stop in the distance in which he can clearly see.
  2. ^ "Illinois Compiled Statutes, Ch. 625, Illinois Vehicle Code. Sec. 11-1427". The State of Illinois. Sec. 11-1427(a) Careless Operation. No person shall operate any all-terrain vehicle or off-highway motorcycle in a careless or heedless manner so as to be grossly indifferent to the person or property of other persons, or at a rate of speed greater than will permit him in the exercise of reasonable care to bring the all-terrain vehicle or off-highway motorcycle to a stop within the assured clear distance ahead.
  3. ^ Peri v. L. A. Junction Railway, 22 Cal.2d 111, 22 California Reports, 2nd Series 111 (Supreme Court of California 3 May 1943) ("it does not follow that a railroad company will be permitted to run its trains under all conditions at any rate of speed it may choose. It must regulate its speed with proper regard for the safety of human life and property, especially when running through towns and cities. The character of a crossing, it has been well reasoned, affects the duty of the railroad company toward...travelers upon the public highway, and its trains must pass over dangerous crossings at a less rate of speed proportionate to the danger.").
  4. ^ "Liability of Motorboat Owners and Operators for Injury or Damage". US Legal, Inc. a person should operate a motor boat at a rate of speed less than that which will permit him to bring it to a stop within the assured clear distance ahead.
  5. ^ a b "International Regulations for Preventing Collisions at Sea" (PDF). International Maritime Organization (IMO), United Nations. October 20, 1972. Part B, Section I, Rule 6: Safe speed...Every vessel shall at all times proceed at a safe speed so that she can take proper and effective action to avoid collision and be stopped within a distance appropriate to the prevailing circumstances and conditions...See International Regulations for Preventing Collisions at Sea, 33 USC 1602: International Regulations, and Executive Order 11964 {{cite web}}: External link in |quote= (help)
  6. ^ a b c d e The Batavier, 40 English Reports in Law and Equity 19–27, 25 (Great Britain. Courts.; Great Britain. Parliament. House of Lords.; Great Britain. Privy Council. Judicial Committee July 14, 1854) ("Page 25: At whatever rate she (the steamer) was going, if going at such a rate as made it dangerous to any craft which she ought to have seen, and might have seen, she had no right to go at that rate. ... at all events, she was bound to stop if it was necessary to do so, in order to prevent damage being done ... See more English Reports in Law and Equity").
  7. ^ "Skier Responsibility Code". The National Ski Areas Association. Always stay in control, and be able to stop or avoid other people or objects.
  8. ^ "Colorado Revised Statutes 33-44-109(2)". The State of Colorado. Each skier has the duty to maintain control of his speed and course at all times when skiing and to maintain a proper lookout so as to be able to avoid other skiers and objects.
  9. ^ "Georgia Code, Title 43, Ch.43A, Sec.7". State of Georgia. GA Code § 43-43A-7(1)(2): Each skier expressly accepts and assumes the risk of any injury ... Each skier has the duty to maintain control of his or her speed and course at all times and to maintain a proper lookout so as to be able to avoid other skiers and objects, natural or manmade. ... See Official GA Code here {{cite web}}: External link in |quote= (help)
  10. ^ "Idaho Statutes, Title 6, Ch. 11, §6-1106". State of Idaho. §6-1106: it shall be the duty of each skier to ski within the limits of the skier's own ability, to maintain reasonable control of speed and course at all times while skiing, ... and to refrain from acting in a manner which may cause or contribute to the injury of anyone.
  11. ^ "Maine Revised Statutes, Title 32, Ch. 133, §15217". The State of Maine. M.R.S. §15217(4) ... it is the duty of the skier to ski within the limits of the skier's own ability, to maintain control of the rate of speed and the course at all times while skiing, ... to refrain from acting in a manner that may cause or contribute to the injury of the skier or others.
  12. ^ "408.342 Duties of skier in ski area; acceptance of dangers". State of Michigan. While in a ski area, each skier shall do all of the following...Maintain reasonable control of his or her speed and course at all times.
  13. ^ "New Mexico Statutes, Ch. 24, Sec. 15, Duties of the skiers(B)". State of New Mexico. NM Stat § 24-15-10(B): ... it shall be the duty of each skier to ski within the limits of the skier's own ability, to maintain reasonable control of speed and course at all times while skiing, to heed all posted warnings, to ski only on a skiing area designated by the ski area operator and to refrain from acting in a manner which may cause or contribute to the injury of anyone.
  14. ^ "North Dakota Century Code, Title 53, Ch.09 Sec. 06" (PDF). State of North Dakota. §53-09-06: ... it is the duty of each skier to ski within the limits of the skier's own ability, to make reasonable control of speed and course at all times while skiing, ... and to refrain from acting in a manner which may cause or contribute to the injury of anyone...
  15. ^ "Oregon Revised Statues § 30.985(1)(f)&(g)−Duties of skiers". State of Oregon. Skiers shall not overtake any other skier except in such a manner as to avoid contact and shall grant the right of way to the overtaken skier.
  16. ^ "West Virginia Code §20-3A-5(f). SKIING RESPONSIBILITY ACT: Duties of skiers". The State of West Virginia. §20-3A-5(f) Each skier has the duty to maintain control of his or her speed and course at all times when skiing and to maintain a proper lookout so as to be able to avoid other skiers and objects
  17. ^ "General Statutes of Connecticut, Vol.9, Title 29, Ch.538, Sec.29-212". State of Connecticut. Connecticut General Statutes §29-212(b): Each skier shall assume the risk of and legal responsibility for any injury to his or her person or property caused by the hazards inherent in the sport of skiing. Such hazards include, but are not limited to ... Variations in the terrain of the trail or slope ... variations in surface or subsurface snow or ice conditions,... variations are caused by snow making, snow grooming or rescue operations ... bare spots ... marked lift towers ... trees or other objects not within the confines of the trail or slope ... collisions with any other person by any skier while skiing...
  18. ^ a b c d e f g "Section 2 – Driving Safely" (PDF). Commercial Driver License Manual 2005. United States Department of Transportation. July 2014. pp. 2–15, 2–19, 2–26, 13–1. [pg 2-15] 2.6.4 – Speed and Distance Ahead: You should always be able to stop within the distance you can see ahead. Fog, rain, or other conditions may require that you slowdown to be able to stop in the distance you can see. ... [pg 2-19] 2.8.3 – Drivers Who Are Hazards: Vehicles may be partly hidden by blind intersections or alleys. If you only can see the rear or front end of a vehicle but not the driver, then he or she can't see you. Be alert because he/she may back out or enter into your lane. Always be prepared to stop. ... [pg 2-26] 2.11.4 – Vehicle Factors: Headlights. At night your headlights will usually be the main source of light for you to see by and for others to see you. You can't see nearly as much with your headlights as you see in the daytime. With low beams you can see ahead about 250 feet and with high beams about 350-500 feet. You must adjust your speed to keep your stopping distance within your sight distance. This means going slowly enough to be able to stop within the range of your headlights. ... [pg 13-1] 13.1.2 – Intersections As you approach an intersection: Check traffic thoroughly in all directions. Decelerate gently. Brake smoothly and, if necessary, change gears. If necessary, come to a complete stop (no coasting) behind any stop signs, signals, sidewalks, or stop lines maintaining a safe gap behind any vehicle in front of you. Your vehicle must not roll forward or backward. When driving through an intersection: Check traffic thoroughly in all directions. Decelerate and yield to any pedestrians and traffic in the intersection. Do not change lanes while proceeding through the intersection. Keep your hands on the wheel.
  19. ^ a b c James O. Pearson (2009). "Automobiles: sudden emergency as exception to rule requiring motorist to maintain ability to stop within assured clear distance ahead". American Law Reports--Annotated, 3rd Series. Vol. 75. The Lawyers Co-operative Publishing Company; Bancroft-Whitney; West Group Annotation Company. p. 327.
  20. ^ Leibowitz, Herschel W.; Owens, D. Alfred; Tyrrell, Richard A. (1998). "The assured clear distance ahead rule: implications for nighttime traffic safety and the law". Accident Analysis & Prevention. 30 (1): 93–99. doi:10.1016/S0001-4575(97)00067-5.
  21. ^ a b c United States v. Carroll Towing Co., 159 Federal Reporter, Second Series 169, 173 (United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit January 9, 1947) ("Since there are occasions when every vessel will break from her moorings, and since, if she does, she becomes a menace to those about her; the owner’s duty, as in other similar situations, to provide against resulting injuries is a function of three variables: (1) The probability that she will break away; (2) the gravity of the resulting injury, if she does; (3) the burden of adequate precautions. Possibly it serves to bring this notion into relief to state it in algebraic terms: if the probability be called P; the injury, L; and the burden, B; liability depends upon whether B is less than L multiplied by P: i. e., whether B > PL. See ruling here").
  22. ^ a b c d Newton v. Stebbins, 51 U.S. 586, 51 United States Reports 586 (Supreme Court of the United States December 1850) ("it may be a matter of convenience that steam vessels should proceed with great rapidity, but the law will not justify them in proceeding with such rapidity if the property and lives of other persons are thereby endangered. ... It is a mistake to suppose that a rigorous enforcement of the necessity of adopting precautionary measures by the persons in charge of steamboats to avoid damage to sailing vessels on our rivers and internal waters will have the effect to produce carelessness and neglect on the part of the persons in charge of the latter. The vast speed and power of the former, and consequent serious damage to the latter in case of a collision, will always be found a sufficient admonition to care and vigilance on their part. A collision usually results in the destruction of the sailing vessel, and not infrequently in the loss of the lives of persons on board.").
  23. ^ a b c d "Overview: 2013 data. (Traffic Safety Facts. Report No. DOT HS 812 169)" (PDF). Washington, DC: National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. July 2015. motor vehicle crashes in 2013 were the leading cause of death for children age 4 and every age from 16 to 24. ... In 2013, there were 32,719 people killed in the estimated 5,687,000 police-reported motor vehicle traffic crashes; an estimated 2,313,000 people were injured; and an estimated 4,066,000 crashes resulted in property damage only. An average of 90 people died each day in motor vehicle crashes in 2013, one fatality every 16 minutes. ... The estimated economic cost of all motor vehicle traffic crashes in the United States in 2010 (the most recent year for which cost data is available) was $242 billion. ... When quality of life valuations are considered, the total value of societal harm from motor vehicle crashes in the United States in 2010 was an estimated $836 billion. ... Speeding is one of the most prevalent factors contributing to traffic crashes. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |authors= ignored (help)
  24. ^ a b c C.N. Kloeden; A.J. McLean; V.M. Moore; G. Ponte. "Travelling Speed and the Risk of Crash Involvement" (PDF). NHMRC Road Accident Research Unit, The University of Adelaide. p. 54. the relative risk of an injury crash when travelling at 65 km/h in a 60 km/h speed limit zone is similar to that associated with driving with a blood alcohol concentration of 0.05 g/100mL. By strange coincidence, if the blood alcohol concentration is multiplied by 100, and the resulting number is added to 60 km/h, the risk of involvement in a casualty crash associated with that travelling speed is almost the same as the risk associated with the blood alcohol concentration. Hence, the risk is similar for 0.05 and 65, as noted; for 0.08 and 68; for .12 and 72, and so on...
  25. ^ a b c d e f "Speeding Counts...on all roads!" (PDF). Federal Highway Administration (FHWA). November 2000. Almost one of every three traffic fatalities is related to speeding, and speeding is a safety concern on all roads, regardless of their speed limits. However, much of the public concern about speeding has been focused on high-speed Interstates. The Interstate System actually has the best safety record of all roads and the lowest fatality rate per mile traveled. ... The difference in fatality rates by road classification reflects the difference in road design and use. The Interstate System is designed for high speeds, efficient movement of people and goods over long distances, with no at-grade intersections. Drivers have a clear view of the road, traffic, and signs. Collectors and local roads, however, are designed to provide more land access and lesser mobility. They may have sharp curves, steeper grades, and sight restrictions. The local road may also be shared by a high concentration of children and adult pedestrians, bicyclists, and an older user population.
  26. ^ a b c Leighton Walter Kille (October 5, 2014). "Transportation safety over time: Cars, planes, trains, walking, cycling". Harvard Kennedy School's Shorenstein Center and the Carnegie-Knight Initiative. Since 1980 the average horsepower of U.S. cars more than doubled, and speed limits have risen significantly, greatly increasing the potential for damage, loss of life and injuries. ... "One might argue that transportation equipment, and in particular the motor vehicle, must be the most dangerous machines that we interact with on a daily basis," the researcher states. "The annual toll in motor vehicle crashes exceeds the deaths resulting from the next most dangerous mechanical device, firearms, by about 40%."
  27. ^ a b Herbert William Heinrich (1931). Industrial accident prevention: a scientific approach. McGraw-Hill. LCCN 31004075. OCLC 571338960. for every accident that causes a major injury, there are 29 accidents that cause minor injuries and 300 accidents that cause no injuries
  28. ^ Benjamin Preston (January 8, 2016). "Insurers Brace for a Self-Driving Future (and a Fading Need for Insurance)". The New York Times. p. B3.
  29. ^ a b Binyamin Appelbaum (February 16, 2011). "As U.S. Agencies Put More Value on a Life, Businesses Fret". The New York Times. The Environmental Protection Agency set the value of a life at $9.1 million...
  30. ^ a b c Frank Partnoy (July 21, 2012). "The Cost of a Human Life, Statistically Speaking". The Globalist. when the U.S. government permitted states to raise the speed limit from 55 to 65 miles per hour, many states did so, and drivers saved time by driving about two miles per hour faster on average. However, fatality rates rose by about one-third. Overall, people in the United States saved about 125,000 hours of driving [or about $1.5 million] per lost life. ... researchers have reached a consensus that $1.5 million is much too low [to trade-off for a life]. ... The Environmental Protection Agency set the value of a human life at $9.1 million. Meanwhile, the Food and Drug Administration put it at $7.9 million...
  31. ^ a b c Connally v. General Construction Co., 269 United States Reports 385, 391 (Supreme Court of the United States January 4, 1926) ("That the terms of a penal statute creating a new offense must be sufficiently explicit to inform those who are subject to it what conduct on their part will render them liable to its penalties is a well recognized requirement, consonant alike with ordinary notions of fair play and the settled rules of law, and a statute which either forbids or requires the doing of an act in terms so vague that men of common intelligence must necessarily guess at its meaning and differ as to its application violates the first essential of due process of law.").
  32. ^ a b c State of Montana, v. Rudy Stanko, 1998 MT 321, HN 30 (Supreme Court of Montana 23 December 1998) ("...we conclude that that part of § 61-8-303(1), MCA, which makes it a criminal offense to operate a motor vehicle "at a rate of speed ․ greater than is reasonable and proper under the conditions existing at the point of operation" is void for vagueness on its face and in violation of the Due Process Clause of Article II, Section 17, of the Montana Constitution.").
  33. ^ a b c d Jim Robbins (December 25, 1998). "Montana's Speed Limit of ?? M.P.H. Is Overturned as Too Vague". The New York Times. The challenge to the speed limit was brought by Rudy Stanko, a cattle buyer in Billings who had contested three tickets. "I asked a cop how fast I could go and he never gave me an answer," Mr. Stanko said today. "They said it's up to the discretion of the cop and that ain't right. Let us decide how fast we want to travel." Although the court threw out a speeding ticket Mr. Stanko had received for traveling 102 miles an hour, it upheld two reckless driving counts -- one for traveling 117 m.p.h., the other for 121 m.p.h. Both violations were on two-lane highways as he crested a hill.
  34. ^ a b c d e f g Reaugh v. Cudahy Packing Co., 189 Cal. 335, 189 Official California Reports 335 (Supreme Court of California July 27, 1922) ("[The basic speed law] is but a reiteration of the rule, in statutory form, which has always been in force without regard to a statutory promulgation to the effect that drivers or operators of vehicles, and more particularly motor vehicles, must be specially watchful in anticipation of the presence of others at places where other vehicles are constantly passing, and where men, women, and children are liable to be crossing, such as corners at the intersections of streets or other similar places or situations where people are likely to fail to observe an approaching automobile."). See Official Reports Opinions Online
  35. ^ "Rear-End Collision: When the Lead Driver May Be at Fault". Nolo. Most of us have heard that the tailing driver is to blame for any rear-end accident. In large part, this is due to the assured clear distance ahead (ACDA) rule, which requires that a driver generally maintain an assured clear distance between his vehicle and anything in front of him.
  36. ^ a b c The Europa, 2 English Reports in Law and Equity 557–564, 564 (Great Britain. Courts.; Great Britain. Parliament. House of Lords.; Great Britain. Privy Council. Judicial Committee June 11, 1850) ("Page: 564 Whether any given rate is dangerous or not must depend upon the circumstances of each individual case, as the state of the weather, locality, and other similar facts. See more English Reports in Law and Equity").
  37. ^ a b The Colorado, 91 U.S. 692, 91 United States Reports 692 (Supreme Court of the United States October 1875) ("when steamships are approaching another ship so as to involve risk of collision, they shall slacken their speed or, if necessary, stop and reverse, and the express provision is that every steamship shall, when in a fog, go at a moderate speed.").
  38. ^ a b c Lauson v. Town of Fond du Lac, 141 Wis. 57, 123 N. W. 629, 25 L. R. A. (N. S.) 40., 141 Wis. 57 (Wisconsin Supreme Court 1909) ("the driver of an automobile, circumstanced as was the driver of the car in which the plaintiff was riding, and operating it under such conditions as he operated his machine on the night of the accident, is not exercising ordinary care if he is driving the car at such a rate of speed that he cannot bring it to a standstill within the distance that he can plainly see objects or obstructions ahead of him").
  39. ^ a b Garner v. Maxwell, 360 S.W.2d 64, 360 S.W.2d 64 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee December 20, 1961) ("What is known as the "The assured clear distance rule" arises out of the decision of the Supreme Court in 1914 in the case of West Construction Co. v. White, 130 Tenn. 520, 172 S.W. 301, in which case it was held that the failure of a plaintiff to stop his car within the distance lighted by the headlights of the car, and thus avoid a collision, amounted, as a matter of law, to contributory negligence which barred plaintiff's suit.").
  40. ^ "Revised Statutes (1878), Title XLVIII (48), Chapter 5: Navigation, Section 4233, rules for preventing collisions". Congress of the United States. 1878. Rule twenty-one. Every steam-vessel, when approaching another vessel, so as to involve risk of collision, shall slacken her speed, or, if necessary, stop and reverse: and every steam-vessel shall, when in a fog, go at a moderate speed
  41. ^ a b c The Nacoochee v. Moseley, 137 U.S. 330, 137 United States Reports 330 (Supreme Court of the United States December 8, 1890) ("every steam-vessel, when approaching another vessel, so as to involve risk of collision, shall slacken her speed, or, if necessary, stop and reverse; and every steam-vessel shall, when in a fog, go at a moderate speed. ... She was bound, therefore, to observe unusual caution, and to maintain only such a rate of speed as would enable her to come to a standstill, by reversing her engines at full speed, before she should collide with a vessel which she should see through the fog. ... whatever rate a steamer was going, if she was going at such a rate as made it dangerous to any craft which she ought to have seen, and might have seen, she had no right to go at that rate.").
  42. ^ a b Curtis v. Hubbel, 42 Ohio App. 520, 182 N. E. 589, 42 Ohio App. 520 (Court of Appeals of Ohio May 31, 1932) ("Statute requiring drivers to maintain speed permitting them to stop within assured clear distance ahead held applicable to both day and night driving ... Motorist unable, because of insufficient headlights, to see pedestrian until within few feet, must be able to stop within such distance, and failure to drive at speed permitting such stopping is negligence per se.").
  43. ^ a b Lindquist v. Thierman, 216 Iowa 170, 216 Iowa 170 (Supreme Court of Iowa May 15, 1933) ("it is evident that the words "within the assured clear distance ahead", as used in the statute, signify that the operator of the automobile, when driving at night as well as in the day, shall at all times be able to stop his car within the distance that discernible objects may be seen ahead of it.").
  44. ^ "Ohio General Code, Section 12603". July 21, 1929. Section 12603, General Code, which was amended at the legislative session of 1929 (113 Ohio Laws, 283), becoming effective July 21, 1929, wherein, for the first time, appears the following: "No person shall drive any motor vehicle in and upon any public road or highway at a greater speed than will permit him to bring it to a stop within the assured clear distance ahead."
  45. ^ "Iowa General Code, Section 5029 (1931)". 1931. I.G.C., § 5029 (1931): any person driving a motor vehicle on a highway shall drive the same at a careful and prudent speed not greater than nor less than is reasonable and proper, having due regard to the traffic, surface and width of the highway, * * * and no person shall drive any vehicle upon a highway at a speed greater than will permit him to bring it to a stop within the assured clear distance ahead.
  46. ^ "Revised Statutes (1878), Title I General Provisions, Chapter 1, Section 3: Vessel". Congress of the United States. 1878. The word "vessel" includes every description of water-craft or other artificial contrivance used, or capable of being used, as a means of transportation on water.
  47. ^ "Revised Statutes (1878), Title I General Provisions, Chapter 1, Section 4: Vehicle". Congress of the United States. 1878. The word "vehicle" includes every description of carriage or other artificial contrivance used, or capable of being used, as a means of transportation on land.
  48. ^ a b Richard M. Nixon (October 1936). "Changing Rules of Liability in Automobile Accident Litigation". Law and Contemporary Problems. 3 (4). Duke University School of Law: 476. ISSN 1945-2322. The courts before and since that time, almost without exception, have insisted that the rules of law applicable to automobile cases, were no different from those which had been developed in the days of the horse and buggy.
  49. ^ a b c Cook v. Miller, 175 Cal. 497, 175 Official California Reports 497 (Supreme Court of California June 19, 1917) ("The cause of plaintiff having no time to avoid the collision was not the speed of the automobile, for it had come practically to a stop at the instant of the collision. It was his own speed that shortened his time. ... A horse can travel at the rate of fifteen miles an hour, and even faster, for a short time. But in the days of exclusively horse-drawn vehicles one who crossed a street at such a place going at fifteen miles an hour would have been considered reckless. There have been city ordinances forbidding a team from crossing a street intersection faster than a walk. ( Stein v. United Railroads, 159 Cal. 371, [113 Pac. 663].) Since our eyes have become somewhat accustomed to greater speed, the recklessness of fifteen miles an hour may not seem so obvious, but the danger is the same. ... A speed which carries a person twenty-two feet in one second of time at a "blind corner," with standing auto trucks projecting twelve feet into the street, obstructing the vision of the intersecting street until the last truck is reached, and with a wagon ahead of him, is not that speed which a person exercising ordinary prudence would choose at such a place, out of due regard for his own safety or that of others. Such speed may not be unusual at the present time, even under similar circumstances. But the person who receives an injury from a collision, while going at that rate under the conditions here existing, should not expect the other person to pay him the damages caused thereby.").
  50. ^ "California Vehicle Code §21050". State of California. every person riding or driving an animal upon a highway has all of the rights and is subject to all of the duties applicable to the driver of a vehicle
  51. ^ a b c d e f "California Vehicle Code §21759". State of California. The driver of any vehicle approaching any horse drawn vehicle, any ridden animal, or any livestock shall exercise proper control of his vehicle and shall reduce speed or stop as may appear necessary or as may be signalled or otherwise requested by any person driving, riding or in charge of the animal or livestock in order to avoid frightening and to safeguard the animal or livestock and to insure the safety of any person driving or riding the animal or in charge of the livestock.
  52. ^ "California Vehicle Code §21200". State of California. A person riding a bicycle or operating a pedicab upon a highway has all the rights and is subject to all the provisions applicable to the driver of a vehicle by this division, including, but not limited to, provisions concerning driving under the influence of alcoholic beverages or drugs
  53. ^ Leyden Street remains unchanged since 1620
  54. ^ "New York Jurisprudence". Automobiles and Other Vehicles (4A). West: § 720. It is negligence as a matter of law to drive a motor vehicle at such a rate of speed that it cannot be stopped in time to avoid an obstruction discernible within the driver's length of vision ahead of him. This rule is known generally as the `assured clear distance ahead' rule * * * In application, the rule constantly changes as the motorist proceeds, and is measured at any moment by the distance between the motorist's vehicle and the limit of his vision ahead, or by the distance between the vehicle and any intermediate discernible static or forward-moving object in the street or highway ahead constituting an obstruction in his path. Such rule requires a motorist in the exercise of due care at all times to see, or to know from having seen, that the road is clear or apparently clear and safe for travel, a sufficient distance ahead to make it apparently safe to advance at the speed employed. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  55. ^ Pennsylvania R. Co. v. Huss, 96 Ind. App. 71, 180 N. E. 919, 96 Indiana Appellate Reports 71 (Court of Appeals of Indiana May 6, 1932) ("it is a violation of the law, and, therefore negligence, to drive an automobile at such speed, in the daytime or night time, that it cannot be stopped within the distance that objects can be seen ahead if proper lights are used").
  56. ^ "Fisher v. O'Brien, 99 Kan. 621, 192 Pac. 317, L.R.A. 1917F, 610 (1917)". {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  57. ^ Demerest v. Travelers Insurance Company, 234 La. 1048, 234 La. 1040 (Supreme Court of Louisiana April 21, 1958) ("the jurisprudence of this state is that: "when visibility is materially impaired because of smoke, mist, dust, etc., a motorist should reduce his rate of speed to such extent and keep his car under such control as to reduce to a minimum the possibility of accident from collision; and as an extreme measure of safety, it is his duty, when visibility ahead is not possible or greatly obscured, to stop his car and remain at a standstill until conditions warrant going forward.").
  58. ^ Carriere v. Aetna Cas. Co., 146 So.2d 451, 146 So.2d 451 (Court of Appeal of Louisiana. Fourth Circuit October 1, 1962) ("The law is settled to the effect that a motorist is held to have seen an object which, by the use of ordinary care and prudence, he should have seen in time to avoid running into it, and that the driver of an automobile is guilty of negligence in driving at a rate of speed greater than that in which he could stop within the range of his vision.").
  59. ^ Spencer v. Taylor, 219 Mich. 110, 188 N.W. 461 (1922), 219 Mich. 110 (1922).
  60. ^ Gleason v. Lowe, 232 Mich. 300, 232 Mich. 300 (Supreme Court of Michigan October 1, 1925) ("...every man must operate his automobile so that he can stop it within the range of his vision, whether it be daylight or darkness. It makes no difference what may obscure his vision, whether it be a brick wall or the darkness of nightfall. ... He must ... be able to see where he is going, and if his range of vision is 50 feet, if he can see 50 feet ahead of him, he must regulate his speed so that he can stop in a distance of 50 feet; if he can see 20 feet ahead of him, he must regulate his speed so that he can stop within 20 feet, and so on.").
  61. ^ Ruth v. Vroom, 245 Mich. 88, 222 N. W. 155, 62 A. L. R. 1528, 245 Mich. 88 (Supreme Court of Michigan December 4, 1928) ("It is settled in this State that it is negligence as a matter of law to drive an automobile at night at such speed that it cannot be stopped within the distance that objects can be seen ahead of it; and, if a driver's vision is obscured by the lights of an approaching car, it is his duty to slacken speed and have his car under such control that he can stop immediately if necessary. ... The rule adopted by this court does not raise merely a rebuttable presumption of negligence. It is a rule of safety. ... It is not enough that a driver be able to begin to stop within the range of his vision, or that he use diligence to stop after discerning an object. The rule makes no allowance for delay in action.").
  62. ^ a b O’Farrell v. Inzeo, 74 A.D.2d 806 (1st Dept. 1980), 74 A.D.2d 806 (New York Supreme Court, Appellate Division 1980) ("It is negligence as a matter of law to drive a motor vehicle at such a rate of speed that it cannot be stopped in time to avoid an obstruction discernible within the driver's length of vision ahead of him. This rule is known generally as the `assured clear distance ahead' rule * * * In application, the rule constantly changes as the motorist proceeds, and is measured at any moment by the distance between the motorist's vehicle and the limit of his vision ahead, or by the distance between the vehicle and any intermediate discernible static or forward-moving object in the street or highway ahead constituting an obstruction in his path. Such rule requires a motorist in the exercise of due care at all times to see, or to know from having seen, that the road is clear or apparently clear and safe for travel, a sufficient distance ahead to make it apparently safe to advance at the speed employed.").
  63. ^ Morris v. Jenrette Transport Co., 235 N.C. 568 (Supreme Court of North Carolina May 21, 1952) ("It is not enough that the driver of plaintiff's automobile be able to begin to stop within the range of his lights, or that he exercise due diligence after seeing defendants' truck on the highway. He should have so driven that he could and would discover it, perform the manual acts necessary to stop, and bring the automobile to a complete stop within the range of his lights. When blinded by the lights of the oncoming car so that he could not see the required distance ahead, it was the duty of the driver within such distance from the point of blinding to bring his automobile to such control that he could stop immediately, and if he could not then see, he should have stopped. In failing to so drive he was guilty of negligence which patently caused or contributed to the collision with defendants' truck, resulting in injury to plaintiff."...it was his duty to anticipate presence of others, [...] and hazards of the road, such as disabled vehicle, and, in the exercise of due care, to keep his automobile under such control as to be able to stop within the range of his lights").
  64. ^ a b Blair v. Goff-Kirby Co., 49 Ohio St.2d 5, 7 (Supreme Court of Ohio December 29, 1976).
  65. ^ "West Constr. Co. v. White, 130 Tenn. 520, 172 S.W. 301 (1914)". It was negligence for the driver of the automobile to propel it in a dark place in which he had to rely on the lights of his machine at a rate faster than enabled him to stop or avoid any obstruction within the radius of his light, or within the distance to which his lights would disclose the existence of obstructions ...If the lights on the automobile would disclose obstructions only ten yards away, it was the duty of the driver to regulate his speed of his machine that he could at all times avoid obstructions within that distance. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  66. ^ Steele v. Fuller, 104 Vt. 303, 104 Vt. 303 (November 1932) ("Operator of motor vehicle has duty at all times to maintain lookout for persons and property on highway, and to use reasonable care to avoid inflicting injuries on such persons or property. ... Operator of motor vehicle is chargeable with knowledge of objects in highway which are in plain view. ... One who drives automobile along public highway in dark must drive at such speed that automobile can be stopped within range of its headlights. ... Rule that automobile operator may assume that other motorists would not obstruct highway unlawfully, and would show statutory lights if they stopped, applies only in favor of one whose own conduct measures up to that of prudent and careful man in like circumstances.").
  67. ^ Mann v. Reliable Transit Co., 217 Wis. 465, 259 N. W. 415, 217 Wis. 465 (Wisconsin Supreme Court 1935).
  68. ^ Satterlee v. Orange Glenn School Dist., 29 Cal.2d 581, 29 Official California Reports, 2nd Series 581 (California Supreme Court Jan 31, 1947) (""proper conduct of a reasonable person under particular situations may become settled by judicial decision or be prescribed by statute or ordinance.""). See California Official Reports: Online Opinions
  69. ^ a b Wilding v. Norton, 156 Cal.App.2d 374, 156 Official California Appellate Reports, 2nd Series 374 (California Appellate Court December 27, 1957) ("The so-called basic speed law is primarily a regulation of the conduct of the operators of vehicles. They are bound to know the conditions which dictate the speeds at which they can drive with a reasonable degree of safety. They know, or should know, their cars and their own ability to handle them, and especially their ability to come to a stop at different speeds and under different conditions of the surface of the highway. See Official Reports Online").
  70. ^ Lutz v. Schendel, 175 Cal. App. 2d 140, 175 Official California Appellate Reports, 2nd Series 140 (California Appellate Court Nov 6, 1959) (""It is the duty of the driver of a motor vehicle using the public highways to be vigilant at all times and to keep the vehicle under such control that to avoid a collision he can stop as quickly as might be required of him by eventualities that would be anticipated by an ordinarily prudent driver in like position.""). See California Official Reports: Online Opinions
  71. ^ a b Falasco v. Hulen, 6 Cal. App. 2d 224, 6 Official California Appellate Reports, 2nd Series 224 (California Appellate Court April 17, 1935) (""Driving between 60 and 65 miles an hour over the brow of a hill, where one's view is obstructed and one cannot see what is on the opposite side of the hill for a sufficient distance to control the speed of his car, is an act showing a reckless disregard of the safety of others; and in said action, under the evidence, the jury was entitled to conclude either that defendant was driving at such a reckless rate of speed that he could not control the car, or that he was driving at such a high rate of speed that he did not perceive that the highway ahead of him afforded an unobstructed passage." (CA Reports Official Headnote #[9])"). See California Official Reports: Online Opinions
  72. ^ a b Cannon v. Kemper, 23 Cal. App. 2d 239, 23 Official California Appellate Reports, 2nd Series 239 (California Appellate Court October 21, 1937). Driver traveling at 35 MPH when rain limited visibility to 25 feet held negligent when 65 feet were required to stop car on wet road. See California Official Reports: Online Opinions
  73. ^ a b Bove v. Beckman, 236 Cal. App. 2d 555, 236 Official California Appellate Reports, 2nd Series 555 (California Appellate Court Aug 16, 1965) (""A person driving an automobile at 65 miles an hour on a highway on a dark night with his lights on low beam affording a forward vision of only about 100 feet was driving at a negligent and excessive speed which was inconsistent with any right of way that he might otherwise have had." (CA Reports Official Headnote #[8])"). See California Official Reports: Online Opinions
  74. ^ "California Civil Jury Instructions (CACI): Form 706. Basic Speed Law (Veh. Code, § 22350)". The Judicial Council of California. 2003. A person must drive at a reasonable speed. Whether a particular speed is reasonable depends on the circumstances such as traffic, weather, visibility, and road conditions. Drivers must not drive so fast that they create a danger to people or property.
  75. ^ "California Civil Jury Instructions (CACI): Form 700. Basic Standard of Care". The Judicial Council of California. 2003. A person must use reasonable care in driving a vehicle. Drivers must keep a lookout for pedestrians, obstacles, and other vehicles. They must also control the speed and movement of their vehicles. The failure to use reasonable care in driving a vehicle is negligence. ... The common-law duty supplements statutory driving regulations: "[A driver is] under a duty, both by statute and common law, to operate his vehicle without negligence so as to abstain from injuring any other person or his property." ... The common-law requirement goes to the issues of lookout and control. Regardless of whether a driver was complying with the speed limit, "[he was] still bound to anticipate that he might meet persons at any point of the street and in order to avoid a charge of negligence he was bound to use ordinary care and to keep an ordinarily careful lookout for such persons and keep his machine under such control as would enable him to avoid a collision
  76. ^ a b Reinders v. Olsen, 60 Cal. App. 764, 60 California Appellate Reports 764 (California Appellate Court February 13, 1923) ("the fact of knowledge on the part of plaintiff relating to the "custom" or, rather, practice, of automobile drivers ... no such practice could be binding on plaintiff so as to excuse defendant from violating the statute in that regard, provided that such act was the proximate cause of the accident. See Official Reports Opinions").
  77. ^ a b Peri v. L. A. Junction Railway, 22 Cal.2d 111, 22 Official California Reports, Second Series 111 (Supreme Court of California 3 May 1943) ("Today it is a matter of common knowledge that automobiles are driven at night on our great, wide, straight highways at speeds which do not allow adequate time or space in which to stop for unusual objects such as freight trains completely obstructing the highway unless some warning of the possible or probable presence thereof is given, especially where, as in the case of such trains, the bodies of the cars are apt to be above the direct beams of the automobile lights which the law requires to be projected below 42 inches at 75 feet from the vehicle. Recognizing this, our counties and state highway department place conspicuous warnings of all variations from the normal road. Drivers of ordinary prudence have grown to rely on the presence of such warnings. See Official Reports Opinions Online").
  78. ^ a b Herbert v. Southern Pac. Co., 121 Cal. 227, 121 Official California Reports 227 (Supreme Court of California June 20, 1898) ("the cases arising from injuries suffered at railroad crossings have been so numerous, and upon certain points there has been such absolute accord, that what will constitute ordinary care in such a case had been precisely defined, and, if any element is wanting, the courts will hold as matter of law that the plaintiff has been guilty of negligence. And, when injury results which might have been avoided by the use of proper care, ... the amount of care, as well as the nature of it, has been settled.").
  79. ^ a b c "Visual Search: How Well Can You Stop?". Driver Handbook (PDF). State of California: Department of Motor Vehicles. 2015. p. 39. If something is in your path, you need to see it in time to stop. Assuming you have good tires, good brakes, and dry pavement: At 55 mph, it takes about 400 feet to react and bring the vehicle to a complete stop. At 35 mph, it takes about 210 feet to react and bring the vehicle to a complete stop. Adjust your driving speed to the weather and road conditions (refer to the "Basic Speed Law" in the "Speed Limits" section). Turn on your lights during the day, if it is hard to see or you cannot see at least 1,000 feet ahead of you.
  80. ^ a b "Section 13: On-Road Driving". California Commercial Driver Handbook (2014-2015) (PDF). California Department of Motor Vehicles. 2015. pp. 2–19, 13–2. [pg 2-19] 2.6.4 – Speed and Distance Ahead[:] You should always be able to stop within the distance you can see ahead. Fog, rain, or other conditions may require that you slow down to be able to stop in the distance you can see. ... [pg 13-2]13.1.2 – Intersections As you approach an intersection: • Check traffic thoroughly in all directions. • Decelerate gently.Brake smoothly and, if necessary, change gears. • If necessary, come to a complete stop (no coasting) behind any stop signs, signals, sidewalks, or stop lines maintaining a safe gap behind any vehicle in front of you. • Your vehicle must not roll forward or backward. Note: Do not enter the intersection if there is insufficient space to clear it. When driving through an intersection: •Check traffic thoroughly in all directions. •Decelerate and yield to any pedestrians and traffic in the intersection. •Do not change lanes while proceeding through the intersection. •Keep your hands on the wheel.
  81. ^ "Code § 321.285 Speed restrictions". The State of Iowa. Retrieved August 6, 2013. Any person driving a motor vehicle on a highway shall drive the same at a careful and prudent speed not greater than nor less than is reasonable and proper, having due regard to the traffic, surface, and width of the highway and of any other conditions then existing, and no person shall drive any vehicle upon a highway at a speed greater than will permit the person to bring it to a stop within the assured clear distance ahead, such driver having the right to assume, however, that all persons using said highway will observe the law.
  82. ^ "§ 257.627 Speed limitations". The State of Michigan. Retrieved August 6, 2013. § 257.627(1) A person operating a vehicle on a highway shall operate that vehicle at a careful and prudent speed not greater than nor less than is reasonable and proper, having due regard to the traffic, surface, and width of the highway and of any other condition then existing. A person shall not operate a vehicle upon a highway at a speed greater than that which will permit a stop within the assured, clear distance ahead.
  83. ^ "Revised Code § 4511.21(A) Speed limits - assured clear distance". The State of Ohio. Retrieved August 6, 2013. § 4511.21(A)(A) No person shall operate a motor vehicle, trackless trolley, or streetcar at a speed greater or less than is reasonable or proper, having due regard to the traffic, surface, and width of the street or highway and any other conditions, and no person shall drive any motor vehicle, trackless trolley, or streetcar in and upon any street or highway at a greater speed than will permit the person to bring it to a stop within the assured clear distance ahead.
  84. ^ "Oklahoma Statutes § 47-11-801". The State of Oklahoma. Retrieved August 6, 2013. A. Any person driving a vehicle on a highway shall drive the same at a careful and prudent speed not greater than nor less than is reasonable and proper, having due regard to the traffic, surface and width of the highway and any other conditions then existing, and no person shall drive any vehicle upon a highway at a speed greater than will permit the driver to bring it to a stop within the assured clear distance ahead.
  85. ^ "75 Pa. Cons. Stat. § 3361. Driving vehicle at safe speed". The State of Pennsylvania. Retrieved August 6, 2013. No person shall drive a vehicle at a speed greater than is reasonable and prudent under the conditions and having regard to the actual and potential hazards then existing, nor at a speed greater than will permit the driver to bring his vehicle to a stop within the assured clear distance ahead.
  86. ^ "Transportation Code, Title 7, Ch. 545, §545.062(a)". State of Texas. Retrieved February 2016. An operator shall, if following another vehicle, maintain an assured clear distance between the two vehicles so that, considering the speed of the vehicles, traffic, and the conditions of the highway, the operator can safely stop without colliding with the preceding vehicle or veering into another vehicle, object, or person on or near the highway. {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help)
  87. ^ "Member States". International Maritime Organization (IMO), United Nations. Retrieved 2016. Members of IMO are governed by International Regulations for Preventing Collisions at Sea—Part B, Section I, Rule 6: Safe speed {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help)
  88. ^ "Boating Safety". Excessive speed is a rate of speed greater than is reasonable or prudent without regard for conditions and hazards or greater than will permit a person to bring the boat to a stop within the assured clear distance ahead.
  89. ^ "HAWAII ADMINISTRATIVE RULES, TITLE 13, DEPARTMENT OF LAND AND NATURAL RESOURCES, SUBTITLE 11, OCEAN RECREATION AND COASTAL AREAS, PART II, BOATING, CHAPTER 244" (PDF). The State of Hawaii. HAR §13-244-7 Careless operation. No person shall operate any vessel in a careless or heedless manner so as to be grossly indifferent to the person or property of other persons, or at a rate of speed greater than will permit that person in the exercise of reasonable care to bring the vessel to a stop within the assured clear distance ahead.
  90. ^ "Illinois Compiled Statutes, Ch. 625, Boat Registration and Safety Act. Sec. 5-1". The State of Illinois. Sec. 5-1. Careless operation. No person shall operate any watercraft in a careless or heedless manner so as to endanger any person or property or at a rate of speed greater than will permit him in the exercise of reasonable care to bring the watercraft to a stop within the assured clear distance ahead.
  91. ^ "Louisiana Laws - RS 34:851.4 — Careless operation". The State of Louisiana. 2006. Any person who shall operate any watercraft ... at a rate of speed greater than will permit him in the exercise of reasonable care to bring the watercraft to a stop within the assured clear distance ahead shall be guilty of the crime of careless operation...Also See LA. Dept. of Wildlife and Fisheries regulations {{cite web}}: External link in |quote= (help)
  92. ^ Torrez v. Willett, 366 Mich. 465, 366 Mich. 465 (Supreme Court of Michigan May 18, 1962) ("Hereafter any motor boat, launch, or other water craft operated on the inland waters of this State or the waters connected with the Great Lakes. No such motor boat shall be operated on any of said waters in a reckless manner or at an excessive rate of speed so as to endanger the life or property of any person in or on said waters, having due regard to the presence of other boats, bathers or objects in or on such waters and of any other conditions then existing, and no person shall operate such motor boat on said waters at a rate of speed greater than will permit him to bring it to a stop within the assured clear distance ahead."").
  93. ^ "§ 23-2-523(4). Prohibited operation and mooring -- enforcement". The State of Montana. Retrieved August 6, 2013. § 23-2-523(4): A person may not operate or knowingly permit a person to operate a motorboat or vessel at a rate of speed greater than will permit the person, in the exercise of reasonable care, to bring the vessel to a stop within the assured clear distance ahead. However, nothing in this part is intended to prevent the operator of a vessel actually competing in a regatta that is sanctioned by an appropriate governmental unit from attempting to attain high speeds on a marked racing course.
  94. ^ "Oregon Revised Statues § 830.315 - Reckless operation speed". § 830.315(2) No person shall operate any boat at a rate of speed greater than will permit that person in the exercise of reasonable care to bring the boat to a stop within the assured clear distance ahead.
  95. ^ "Boating Safety: Operate at a Safe Speed". The State of Texas. Excessive speed is a rate of speed greater than is reasonable or prudent without regard for conditions and hazards or greater than will permit a person to bring the boat to a stop within the assured clear distance ahead.
  96. ^ "Article 7, Chapter 20 of the Official Code of West Virginia" (PDF).
  97. ^ a b Alaska Driver Manual (PDF). State of Alaska. p. 28. A person may not drive a vehicle upon a highway at a speed greater than will permit them to stop within the assured clear distance ahead
  98. ^ a b "North Carolina Driver's Handbook" (PDF). N.C. Division of Motor Vehicles. pp. 51, 66. The faster you are moving, the farther ahead you must be able to see to allow enough distance for stopping ... Never drive at a speed at which you cannot stop within the distance you can see on the road ahead
  99. ^ Driver's Manual (PDF). Oklahoma Department of Public Safety. p. 8-2.
  100. ^ Driver's Manual (PDF). Iowa Department of Transportation. p. 39.
  101. ^ Road Users Manual (PDF). Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada. p. 49.
  102. ^ Road Users Manual (PDF). Prince Edward Island, Canada. p. 88.
  103. ^ "49 CFR 392.14 - Hazardous conditions; extreme caution". US Code of Federal Regulations. United States Government Publishing Office. Extreme caution in the operation of a commercial motor vehicle shall be exercised when hazardous conditions, such as those caused by snow, ice, sleet, fog, mist, rain, dust, or smoke, adversely affect visibility or traction. Speed shall be reduced when such conditions exist. If conditions become sufficiently dangerous, the operation of the commercial motor vehicle shall be discontinued and shall not be resumed until the commercial motor vehicle can be safely operated. Whenever compliance with the foregoing provisions of this rule increases hazard to passengers, the commercial motor vehicle may be operated to the nearest point at which the safety of passengers is assured.
  104. ^ a b c d Baltimore & Ohio R. Co. v. Goodman, 275 U.S. 66, 275 United States Reports 66 (Supreme Court of the United States October 31, 1927) ("In an action for negligence, the question of due care is not left to the jury when resolved by a clear standard of conduct which should be laid down by the courts ... If, at the last moment, [he] found himself in an emergency, it was his own fault that he did not reduce his speed earlier or come to a stop.").
  105. ^ a b c d e f g Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr. (1881). "Lecture III—D. Liability for unintended Harm is determined by what would be Blameworthy in Average man". The Common Law. Little, Brown and Company. p. 108,122,123. The standards of the law are standards of general application. The law takes no account of the infinite varieties of temperament, intellect, and education which make the internal character of a given act so different in different men. ... [Page 122] the averment that the defendant has been guilty of negligence ... that his alleged conduct does not come up to the legal standard. ... the question whether the court or the jury ought to judge of the defendant's conduct is wholly unaffected by the accident, ... it is entirely possible to give a series of hypothetical instructions adapted to every state of facts which it is open to the jury to find. ... the court may still take their opinion as to the standard. ... [page 123] ...supposing a state of facts often repeated in practice, is it to be imagined that the court is to go on leaving the standard to the jury forever? ... if the jury is, on the whole, as fair a tribunal as it is represented to be, the lesson which can be got from that source will be learned.... the court will find ... the conduct complained of usually is or is not blameworthy, ... or it will find the jury oscillating to and fro, and will see the necessity of making up its mind for itself. There is no reason why any other such question should not be settled, as well as that of liability for stairs with smooth strips of brass upon their edges.
  106. ^ "Federal Motor Vehicle Safety Standards; Event Data Recorders". Federal Register. Washington, D.C.: United States Government Publishing Office. December 12, 2012.
  107. ^ "Event Data Recorder Supported Vehicles" (PDF). Rimkus Consulting Group, Inc. July 2015.
  108. ^ a b c "Here's why lawyers are 'salivating' over self-driving cars". Business Insider Inc. Retrieved February 2016. When, in the near future, a driverless car gets into an accident with another driverless car, it's going to be difficult to establish who is at fault. Is it the "driver," the car company, or even the programmer? ... "There's going to have to be some changes to the laws," David Strickland, former head of the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, told Bloomberg. "There is no such thing right now that says the manufacturer of the automated system is financially responsible for crashes." {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help)
  109. ^ a b c d e Le Vine, Scott; Liu, Xiaobo; Zheng, Fangfang; Polak, John (2016-01-01). "Automated cars: Queue discharge at signalized intersections with 'Assured-Clear-Distance-Ahead' driving strategies". Transportation Research Part C: Emerging Technologies. 62: 35–54. doi:10.1016/j.trc.2015.11.005.
  110. ^ "Urban Street Design Guide". National Association of City Transportation Officials. Streets comprise more than 80% of public space in cities, but they often fail to provide their surrounding communities with a space where people can safely walk, bicycle, drive, take transit, and socialize. Cities are leading the movement to redesign and reinvest in our streets as cherished public spaces for people, as well as critical arteries for traffic.
  111. ^ a b "Caltrans Backs Innovative Street Design Guides to Promote Biking and Walking". California Department of Transportation. April 11, 2014. In an effort to support the construction of more multimodal local streets and roads, Caltrans today endorsed National Association of City Transportation Officials' (NACTO) guidelines that include innovations such as buffered bike lanes and improved pedestrian walkways.
  112. ^ a b Eloisa Raynault; Ed Christopher (May 2013). "How Does Transportation Affect Public Health? (FHWA-HRT-13-004)". Public Roads. 76 (6). Washington, D.C.: Federal Highway Administration.
  113. ^ a b "CDC Transportation Recommendations". Atlanta, GA: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. The U.S. transportation system has been shaped by multiple policy inputs and concrete actions which have arisen from transportation and community planners, funding agencies and others at Federal, state and local levels. Today, the system is designed to move people and goods efficiently; however, there is a growing awareness across communities that transportation systems impact quality of life and health.
  114. ^ a b "Smart Growth and Transportation". Washington, DC: United States Environmental Protection Agency. Historically, transportation planners have overlooked the important role streets play in shaping neighborhoods. For decades, decisions about street size and design in many communities have focused on getting as many cars as possible through the streets as quickly as possible. Street design determines whether an area will be safe and inviting for pedestrians, bicyclists, and transit users, which affects the viability of certain types of retail, influences land values and tax receipts, and shapes overall economic strength and resilience.
  115. ^ "Transportation". Smart Growth America. People want more transportation choices, whether it's to save money on gas, to get into shape by walking or biking to their destinations, or to have a more relaxing commute. Communities can provide these choices by making it easy for residents and visitors to drive, walk, bike, or take transit.
  116. ^ "More Choices, Less Traffic". National Resource Defense Council. our auto-centric transportation system -- built for the previous century -- is increasing pollution and the nation's addiction to oil. After 50 plus years of building sprawl-spurring highways, experience shows that we cannot pave our way out of gridlock; instead, new road capacity is quickly filled up and the fiscal burden of its upkeep puts us back at square one. It is time to revamp America's ailing road and rail networks to create a competitive, 21st century solution.
  117. ^ "Transportation Choices for Sustainable Communities".
  118. ^ "What is universal access?". humantransport.org. Universal access is the goal of enabling all citizens to reach every destination served by their public street and pathway system. Universal access is not limited to access by persons using automobiles. Travel by bicycle, walking, or wheelchair to every destination is accommodated in order to achieve transportation equity, maximize independence, and improve community livability.
  119. ^ "Blunders in Traffic Law and Enforcement". Bicycle Blunders and Smarter Solutions. LAB Reform.
  120. ^ "Assured Clear Distance Ahead and Vision Zero". BikeWalk NC. October 2015.
  121. ^ a b c William Kenworthy (January 1, 2000). Killer Roads: From Crash to Verdict (2nd ed.). Lexis Law Pub. ISBN 978-0327100164.
  122. ^ Van Praag v. Gale, 107 Cal 438 (Supreme Court of California June 6, 1895) ("As a general proposition cases of negligence (to which those of contributory negligence form no exception) present a mixed question of law and fact, in which it devolves upon the court to say, as matter of law, what is or amounts to negligence, and upon the jury to say as matter of fact, whether or not in the particular case the facts in proof warrant the imputation of negligence. The court furnishes the standard; the jury adjusts the facts, and pronounces them as up to or falling short of the requirements of the standard.").
  123. ^ Doyle v. Eschen, 5 Cal.App 55 (California Court of Appeal February 21, 1907) ("usually the consideration of negligence, including "contributory negligence," involves "a mixed question of law and fact, in which it devolves upon the court, to say, as a matter of law, what is or amounts to negligence, and upon the jury to say as matter of fact whether or not in the particular case the facts in proof warrant the imputation of negligence. The court furnishes the standard; the jury adjusts the facts and pronounces them as up to or falling short of the requirements of the standard. When, however, the facts are clearly settled, and the course which common prudence dictates can be readily discerned, the court should decide the case as matter of law.").
  124. ^ Malinson v. Black, 83 Cal.App.2d 375, 377-378 (California Court of Appeal January 27, 1948) ("Respondent testified that he came to a complete stop at the boulevard stop sign, surveyed the highway, saw that no cars were approaching from the right, and that the nearest car, presumably appellant's, approaching from the left, was at a distance of approximately 80 yards north of the intersection. Having concluded that he had plenty of time to safely cross the intersection, he proceeded in, looking straight ahead. ... we cannot declare such conduct to be negligence as a matter of law.").
  125. ^ ""Martin-Quinn" measures of judicial ideology". University of California.
  126. ^ Andrew Cabasso (September 3, 2015). "Vehicles Lawyers Should Not Drive". Lawyerist.com. There must be some way to show clients you have won a lot of high-worth cases. How about an Audi A8, a Mercedes S-500, or a Lexus LS? Nope. Every lawyer has one of those. You need a car that shows that you are in a much higher tax bracket. You need a car that is worth more than your clients' homes. And they need to know it. Because when you hire "The Champ" (presumably the nickname you gave yourself), the client needs to know they will win their case and you will get a very nice contingency fee out of this one.
  127. ^ "Influence & Lobbying: Transportation". Washington, DC: Center for Responsive Politics. The transportation sector is heavily involved in lobbying at the federal level, and expenditures have eclipsed $240 million each year from 2008 to 2012. ... two of the sector's most active lobbying clients, have attempted to influence legislation relating to transportation safety and security, travel taxes, and the authorization of federal funds for roads and railways.
  128. ^ a b United States v. National City Lines, Inc., et al, 186 F.2d 562 (United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit January 3, 1951) ("On April 9, 1947, nine corporations and seven individuals, constituting officers and directors of certain of the corporate defendants, were indicted on two counts, the second of which charged them with conspiring to monopolize certain portions of interstate commerce...the conspiracy to monopolize had consisted of a continuing agreement and concert of action upon the part of defendants under which the supplier defendants, Firestone, Standard, Phillips, General Motors and Mack, would furnish capital to defendants National, American and Pacific, and the latter companies would purchase and cause their operating companies to purchase from the supplier companies substantially all their requirements of tires, tubes and petroleum products; the capital made available by the supplier defendants would be utilized by National and Pacific, to purchase control of or financial interest in local public transportation systems, located in various states, when the securing of such control and interest would further the sale of and create an additional market for the products of the supplier defendants to the exclusion of products competitive therewith...as National and Pacific acquired local transportation systems in the other sections of the country, those markets would be allocated to and preempted by a company selling petroleum products in such sections...").
  129. ^ a b R. J. H. (January 1937). "The Uniform Motor Vehicle Act in Virginia". Virginia Law Review. 23 (3). Virginia Law Review Association: 351. doi:10.2307/1067282. The attempt of this conference was to reduce road accidents among the states, and to this end an exhaustive study of road conditions and accidents was made. The need for such uniformity is obvious when we consider that the late 1920's the major part of the traffic regulation was by municipalities; it had mainly been enacted ten to fifteen years before and hence left out of account the vast increase in number, speed, and use of automobiles. Each town and city had a different set of rules, confusing the motorist on tour. This dangerous chaos has been largely obviated by the substantial enactment in most states of the Uniform Act...
  130. ^ a b Stuart Silverstein (November 20, 2012). "Traffic Deaths: A Surprising Dimension of the Red State-Blue State Divide". FairWarning. blue states tend to adopt stronger safety laws, while red states opt for looser regulation
  131. ^ a b c d e f A Policy on Geometric Design of Highways and Streets (6th ed.). American Association of State Highway and Transportation Officials. 2011. ISBN 978-1560515081.
  132. ^ United States v. National City Lines, 334 US 573 (Supreme Court of the United States June 7, 1948).
  133. ^ "National Defense Highway System". Global Security. Retrieved 2016. In 1956 President Eisenhower signed legislation establishing the National System of Interstate and Defense Highways (about 41,000 miles of roads). Since then, DOD has continued to identify and update defense-important highway routes. The National Defense Highway system was designed to move military equipment and personnel efficiently {{cite web}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help)
  134. ^ "Why You Shouldn't Be Allowed to Drive". Time Magazine. 25 February 2016.
  135. ^ Jay Samit (20 January 2016). "Driving a car will be illegal by 2030". Wired Magazine.
  136. ^ Kevin Drum (January 22, 2016). "When Will It Become Illegal to Drive a Car in the United States?". Mother Jones.
  137. ^ Phil LeBeau (17 March 2016). "Musk: Someday, driving a car will be illegal". CNBC.
  138. ^ Jay L Zagorsky (17 March 2016). "Driverless Cars Will Put Half Our Cops Out of Work". Newsweek Magazine.
  139. ^ Hatzakorzian v. Rucker-Fuller Desk Co., 197 Cal. 82, 197 Official California Reports 82 (Supreme Court of California September 21, 1925) (""Under the circumstances of the present case -- the narrowness of the unpaved portion of the highway, the darkness of the night and the blinding of Kennell by the glare of the lights reflected from the headlights of the approaching machine -- the highway over which Kennell was traveling was beset by danger of an extraordinary character from the time his vision became so obscured as to make it impossible for him to see plainly the road before him to the time that he struck the deceased. Thus the ordinary care with which Kennell was charged in driving his car over the highway required such an amount of such care as was commensurate with the exactions of the extraordinary dangerous circumstances under which he was then operating his car. The respective rights and duties of drivers of automobiles and other vehicles and of pedestrians have repeatedly been by the courts of this state clearly pointed out.."").
  140. ^ a b c d Riggs v. Gasser Motors, 22 Cal. App. 2d 636, 22 Official California Appellate Reports, 2nd Series 636 (California Court of Appeal September 25, 1937) (""It is common knowledge that intersecting streets in cities present a continuing hazard, the degree of hazard depending upon the extent of the use of the intersecting streets and the surrounding circumstances or conditions of each intersection. Under such circumstances the basic law...is always governing.""). See Official Reports Opinions Online
  141. ^ a b c d "Targeting mitigation efforts: The role of speed limit and road edge clearance for deer–vehicle collisions". The Journal of Wildlife Management. 78: 679–688. 2014. doi:10.1002/jwmg.712. speed limit reduction and road edge clearance are both powerful mitigation tools to reduce the number of [Deer–vehicle collisions].
  142. ^ a b Allin v. Snavely, 100 Cal. App. 2d 411, 100 Official California Appellate Reports, 2nd Series 411 (California Court of Appeal November 14, 1950) (""A driver by insisting on his lawful right of way may violate the basic speed law as provided by Veh. Code, § 22350, and thus become guilty of negligence."(CA Reports Headnote #[2])").
  143. ^ a b c Leeper v. Nelson, 139 Cal. App. 2d 65, 139 Official California Appellate Reports, 2nd Series 65 (California Court of Appeal Feb 6, 1956) (""The operator of an automobile is bound to anticipate that he may meet persons or vehicles at any point of the street, and he must in order to avoid a charge of negligence, keep a proper lookout for them and keep his machine under such control as will enable him to avoid a collision with another automobile driven with care and caution as a reasonably prudent person would do under similar conditions.""). See Huetter v. Andrews, 91 Cal. App. 2d 142, Berlin v. Violett, 129 Cal.App. 337, Reaugh v. Cudahy Packing Co., 189 Cal. 335, and Official Reports Opinions Online
  144. ^ a b c d "Tables of speed and stopping distances". The Sate of Virginia.
  145. ^ "California Vehicle Code §275(a)". The State of California. "Crosswalk" is...That portion of a roadway included within the prolongation or connection of the boundary lines of sidewalks at intersections where the intersecting roadways meet at approximately right angles, except the prolongation of such lines from an alley across a street.
  146. ^ "California Vehicle Code §21950(a)&(c)". The State of California. The driver of a vehicle shall yield the right-of-way to a pedestrian crossing the roadway within any marked crosswalk or within any unmarked crosswalk at an intersection, except as otherwise provided in this chapter. ... The driver of a vehicle approaching a pedestrian within any marked or unmarked crosswalk shall exercise all due care and shall reduce the speed of the vehicle or take any other action relating to the operation of the vehicle as necessary to safeguard the safety of the pedestrian.
  147. ^ "California Vehicle Code §231.6(a)". The State of California. A "bicycle path crossing" is ...That portion of a roadway included within the prolongation or connection of the boundary lines of a bike path at intersections where the intersecting roadways meet at approximately right angles.
  148. ^ a b c d e f g h J. Stannard Baker (1963). Traffic Accident Investigator's Manual for Police (2 ed.). The Traffic Institute, Northwestern University. pp. 43–48. LCCN 62-20895.
  149. ^ a b c d Grasso v. Cunial, 106 Cal. App. 2d 294, 106 California Official Reports, 2nd Series 294 (California Court of Appeal August 27, 1951) ("Nor is a plaintiff required to yield the right of way to one a considerable distance away whose duty it is to slow down in crossing an intersection. See Official Reports Opinions Online").
  150. ^ a b c Whitelaw v. McGilliard,179 Cal. 349, 179 Official California Reports 349 (Supreme Court of California December 4, 1918) ("The rule regarding right of way does not impose upon the person crossing the street the duty of assuming that the other will continue across an intersecting street without slowing down, as required by law. See Official Reports Opinions Online").
  151. ^ a b c d Page v. Mazzei, 213 Cal. 644, 213 Official California Reports 644 (Supreme Court of California 21 September 1931) ("Where a car has actually entered an intersection before the other approaches it, the driver of the first car has the right to assume that he will be given the right of way and be permitted to pass through the intersection without danger of collision. He has a right to assume that the driver of the other car will obey the law, slow down, and yield the right of way, if slowing down be necessary to prevent a collision. ( Keyes v. Hawley, 100 Cal. App. 53, 60 [279 Pac. 674].) Nor is a plaintiff required to yield the right of way to one a considerable distance away whose duty it is to slow down in crossing an intersection. See Official Reports Opinions Online").
  152. ^ Fitts v. Marquis, 127 Me. 75, 127 Maine Reporter 75 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine March 15, 1928) ("If a situation indicate collision, the driver, who can do so by the exercise of ordinary care, should avoid doing injury, though this involve that he waive his right of way. The supreme rule of the road is the rule of mutual forbearance.").
  153. ^ a b c d e Raymond S. Nickerson; The National Research Council (September 15, 1995). "9". Emerging Needs and Opportunities for Human Factors Research. The National Academies Press. doi:10.17226/4940. ISBN 978-0309052764. In the United States, motor vehicle accidents are the leading cause of death for people between the ages of 1 and 38 and are responsible for more deaths than all other causes combined between the ages of 15 and 24 ... the difficulty of estimating distance and velocity is assumed to account for the frequency of accidents involving a vehicle turning left in the face of oncoming traffic. ... many laws require operators of vehicles to accomplish tasks that are not within their capabilities. This leads to unnecessary litigation and appellate reviews and creates a disrespect for laws. If statutes such as the Assured Clear Distance Ahead rule and regulations governing the use of alcohol were examined in relation to the behavioral sciences literature on human capabilities and limitations while operating a vehicle, the findings could lead to more rational laws and codes ... In stark contrast with automobile travel, commercial aviation is the safest form of mass transportation.
  154. ^ a b c Malinson v. Black, 83 Cal. App. 2d 377, 83 Official California Appellate Reports, Second Series 377 (California Appellate Court January 27, 1948) ("It is apparent that plaintiff misjudged the speed of the truck and was mistaken as to his ability to cross Anaheim Street in front of it with safety. However, every mistake of judgment is not negligence, for mistakes are made even in the exercise of ordinary care. See Official Reports Online.").
  155. ^ a b c Nevis v. Pacific Gas & Electric Co., 43 Cal.2d 626, 43 Official California Reports, Second Series 626 (Supreme Court of California November 9, 1954) ("Nonnegligent ignorance of the facts which bring a regulation into operation will support a finding that violation thereof is civilly excusable. See Official Reports Online").
  156. ^ Hershel Weinberger (19 February 1971). "Conjecture on the Visual Estimation of Relative Radial Motion" (PDF). Nature. 229: 562. doi:10.1038/229562a0.
  157. ^ Joseph S. Lappin; Duje Tadin; Jeffrey B. Nyquist; Anne L. Corn (January 2009). "Spatial and temporal limits of motion perception across variations in speed, eccentricity, and low vision". Journal of Vision. 9 (30): 1–14. doi:10.1167/9.1.30. Displacement thresholds for peripheral motion were affected by acuity limits for speeds below 0.5 degrees/s.
  158. ^ Paul R. Schrater; David C. Knill; Eero P. Simoncelli (12 April 2001). "Perceiving visual expansion without optic flow". Nature. 410: 816–819. doi:10.1038/35071075. When an observer moves forward in the environment, the image on his or her retina expands. The rate of this expansion conveys information about the observer's speed and the time to collision...this rate might also be estimated from changes in the size (or scale) of image features...we show,...observers can estimate expansion rates from scale-change information alone, and that pure scale changes can produce motion after-effects. These two findings suggest that the visual system contains mechanisms that are explicitly sensitive to changes in scale.
  159. ^ a b Errol R. Hoffmann; Rudolf G. Mortimer (July 1996). "Scaling of relative velocity between vehicles". Accident Analysis & Prevention. 28 (4): 415–421. doi:10.1016/0001-4575(96)00005-X. ISSN 0001-4575. Only when the subtended angular velocity of the lead vehicle exceeded about 0.003 rad/s were the subjects able to scale the relative velocity
  160. ^ Michael E. Maddox; Aaron Kiefer (September 2012). "Looming Threshold Limits and Their Use in Forensic Practice". Proceedings of the Human Factors and Ergonomics Society Annual Meeting. 50 (1): 700–704. doi:10.1177/1071181312561146. A number of laboratory researchers have reported values of the looming threshold to be in the range of 0.003 radian/sec. Forensic practitioners routinely use elevated values of the looming threshold, e.g., 0.005-0.008, to account for the complexity of real-world driving tasks. However, only one source has used data from actual vehicle accidents to arrive at a looming threshold – and that value, 0.0275 rad/sec, is an order of magnitude larger than that derived from laboratory studies. In this study, we examine a much broader range of real-world accident data to obtain an estimate of the reasonable upper end of the looming threshold. The results show a range of 0.0397 to 0.0117 rad/sec...
  161. ^ Melvyn A. Goodale (1 July 2011). "Transforming vision into action" (PDF). Vision Research. 51 (13): 1567–1587. doi:10.1016/j.visres.2010.07.027. ISSN 0042-6989. PMID 20691202.
  162. ^ a b c "Title 23, Code of Federal Regulations, Part 655.603". US Government Publishing Office. The MUTCD approved by the Federal Highway Administrator is the national standard for all traffic control devices installed on any street, highway, or bicycle trail open to public travel in accordance with 23 U.S.C. 109(d) and 402(a)...Where State or other Federal agency MUTCDs or supplements are required, they shall be in substantial conformance with the National MUTCD.
  163. ^ "3B.16.10". California MUTCD 2014. California Department of Transportation. p. 681. Chapter 3B.16.10: If used, stop and yield lines should be placed a minimum of 4 feet in advance of the nearest crosswalk line at controlled intersections...In the absence of a marked crosswalk, the stop line or yield line should be placed at the desired stopping or yielding point, but should not be placed more than 30 feet or less than 4 feet from the nearest edge of the intersecting traveled way.
  164. ^ "405.1". California Highway Design Manual. California Department of Transportation. 2012. pp. 400–14. Chapter 405.1: Set back for the driver of the vehicle on the crossroad shall be a minimum of 10 feet plus the shoulder width of the major road but not less than 15 feet.
  165. ^ a b A Policy on Geometric Design of Rural Highways. American Association of State Highway and Traffic Officials. 1969. p. 394. Where an obstruction, which cannot be removed except at prohibitive cost, fixes the vertices of the sight triangle at points that are less than the safe stopping distances from the intersection, vehicles may be brought to a stop (after sighting other vehicles on the intersecting road) only if they are traveling at a speed appropriate to the available sight distance.
  166. ^ a b c d e "Geometric Design And Structure Standards" (PDF). Highway Design Manual. California Department of Transportation. pp. 200–1, 200–2, 200–3, 200–4, 200–7, 200–10, 200–11, 200–20.
  167. ^ Geoff Manaugh (November 15, 2015). "Sightlines/The Dream Life of Driverless Cars". The New York Times. p. MM68. One of the most significant uses of 3-D scanning in the years to come will not be by humans at all but by autonomous vehicles.
  168. ^ a b Matt Richtel; Conor Dougherty (September 2, 2015). "Google's Driverless Cars Run Into Problem: Cars With Drivers". The New York Times. p. A1. Google's fleet of autonomous test cars is programmed to follow the letter of the law. But it can be tough to get around if you are a stickler for the rules. ... One Google car, in a test in 2009, couldn't get through a four-way stop because its sensors kept waiting for other (human) drivers to stop completely and let it go. The human drivers kept inching forward, looking for the advantage — paralyzing Google's robot. ... "It's always going to follow the rules, I mean, almost to a point where human drivers who get in the car and are like 'Why is the car doing that?'" said Tom Supple, a Google safety driver during a recent test drive on the streets near Google's Silicon Valley headquarters. ...the technology, like Google's car, drives by the book. It leaves what is considered the safe distance between itself and the car ahead. ...Dmitri Dolgov, head of software for Google's Self-Driving Car Project, said that one thing he had learned from the project was that human drivers needed to be "less idiotic." ... The laser system mounted on top of the driverless car sensed that a vehicle coming the other direction was approaching the red light at higher-than-safe speeds. The Google car immediately jerked to the right in case it had to avoid a collision.
  169. ^ a b Fox v. City and County of San Francisco, 47 Cal.App.3d 164, 47 Official California Appellate Reports, 3rd Series 164 (California Appellate Court April 14, 1975) ("drivers with mental disabilities are required to exercise the ordinary care required of an adult without such disability. See Official Reports Online.").
  170. ^ a b c d James J. Gibson; Laurence E. Crooks (July 1938). "A Theoretical Field-Analysis of Automobile-Driving". The American Journal of Psychology. 51 (3): 453–471. doi:10.2307/1416145. ISSN 0002-9556. OCLC 473102987.
  171. ^ "Common Core State Standard for Mathematics" (PDF). Common Core State Standards Initiative. p. 27. See 4th grade math level
  172. ^ a b Taoka, George T. (March 1989). "Brake Reaction Times of Unalerted Drivers" (PDF). ITE Journal. 59 (3): 19–21.
  173. ^ a b Paul L. Olson; Michael Sivak (February 1986). "Perception-response time to unexpected roadway hazards" (PDF). Human Factors. 28 (1): 91–96. doi:10.1177/001872088602800110. PMID 3710489. Perception-response (PR) time, the time from the first sighting of an obstacle until the driver applies the brakes, is an important component of stopping sight distance. ... The results indicate a 95th percentile PR time of about 1.6 s for both age groups.
  174. ^ a b c d John C. Glennon; Paul F. Hill. Roadway Safety and Tort Liability (2 ed.). Lawyers & Judges Publishing Company, Inc. p. 293.
  175. ^ "Critical Speed Calculator". The CAD Zone. Inc. 2015.
  176. ^ State of Montana v. Rudy Stanko (Supreme Court of Montana 23 December 1998) ("the road was narrow, there were hills and curves which presented some degree of obstruction to the view ahead, and there was an occasional frost heave on the surface of the road.   A reasonable speed under these circumstances would require a calculation of sight distances and stopping distances for the particular vehicle. ...The arresting officer described in detail the roadway where Stanko was operating his vehicle at 85 miles per hour.   The roadway was very narrow with no shoulders.   There were frost heaves on the road which caused the officer's vehicle to bounce.   The highway had steep hills, sharp curves, and multiple no-passing zones.   There were numerous ranch and field access roads in the area which ranchers use for bringing hay to their cattle.   The officer testified that at 85 miles per hour, there was no way for Stanko to stop in the event there had been an obstruction on the road beyond the crest of a hill.   In the officer's judgment, driving a vehicle at the speed of 85 miles per hour on the stretch of road in question posed a danger to the rest of the driving public."), Text.
  177. ^ "Speed Concepts: Informational Guide". US Department of Transportation. Operating speed - the speeds at which vehicles are observed operating during free flow conditions. Free flow speeds are those observed from vehicles whose operations are unimpeded by traffic control devices (e.g., traffic signals) or by other vehicles in the traffic stream. The 85th percentile of the distribution of observed speeds is the most frequently used measure of the operating speed.
  178. ^ a b "Title 23 Code of Federal Regulations, Part 625.4". U.S. Government Printing Office.
  179. ^ a b c "2009 Edition Chapter 2B. Regulatory Signs, Barricades, and Gates". Manual on Uniform Traffic Control Devices (MUTCD). Federal Highway Administration. [Page 21] Sect.1A.13 —214. Speed—speed is defined based on the following classifications: (a) Average Speed—the summation of the instantaneous or spot-measured speeds at a specific location of vehicles divided by the number of vehicles observed. (b) Design Speed—a selected speed used to determine the various geometric design features of a roadway. (c) 85th-Percentile Speed—the speed at or below which 85 percent of the motor vehicles travel. (d) Operating Speed—a speed at which a typical vehicle or the overall traffic operates. Operating speed might be defined with speed values such as the average, pace, or 85th-percentile speeds. (e) Pace—the 10 mph speed range representing the speeds of the largest percentage of vehicles in the traffic stream. [page 58] Section 2B.13 Speed Limit Sign (R2-1) Standard: 01 Speed zones (other than statutory speed limits) shall only be established on the basis of an engineering study that has been performed in accordance with traffic engineering practices. The engineering study shall include an analysis of the current speed distribution of free-flowing vehicles. ...12 When a speed limit within a speed zone is posted, it should be within 5 mph of the 85th-percentile speed of free-flowing traffic
  180. ^ a b Maev Kennedy (September 6, 2013). "'All you could hear was cars crashing': 120-car pile-up on Sheppey bridge". The Guardian. the probable cause of the accident was "stupid driving". ... "It's really bad to travel too close to the car in front in good conditions and if you do it in foggy conditions it's an absolute recipe for disaster."
  181. ^ Iain A. McCormick; Frank H. Walkey; Dianne E. Green (June 1986). "Comparative perceptions of driver ability–A confirmation and expansion". Accident Analysis & Prevention. 18 (3): 205–208. doi:10.1016/0001-4575(86)90004-7. ISSN 0001-4575. a substantial majority of drivers, up to 80%, would rate themselves above average on a number of important characteristics
  182. ^ "Speed Concepts: Informational Guide". US Department of Transportation. Inferred design speed – the maximum speed for which all critical design-speed-related criteria are met at a particular location.
  183. ^ Kahneman, Daniel (December 2003). "Maps of Bounded Rationality: Psychology for Behavioral Economics". American Economic Review. 93 (5). American Economic Association: 1449–1475. doi:10.1257/000282803322655392. ISSN 0002-8282.
  184. ^ "National Committee on Uniform Traffic Control Devices (NCUTCD)".
  185. ^ a b David J. Hanson. "Mothers Against Drunk Driving: A Crash Course in MADD". alcoholfacts.org. The proportion of traffic fatalities that are alcohol-related has dropped dramatically, in part because of MADD's good efforts. ...The biggest problem in reducing drunk driving fatalities now consists of the hard core of alcoholic drivers who repeatedly drive with BAC's of .15 or higher. But MADD has now decided to go after social drinkers and to eliminate driving after drinking any amount of alcohol beverage. This change appears to reflect the influence of a growing neo-prohibitionist movement within MADD. ... if MADD really wants to save lives, it will go after the real problem drivers
  186. ^ "CA Civil Code §3333". The State of California. For the breach of an obligation not arising from contract, the measure of damages, except where otherwise expressly provided by this Code, is the amount which will compensate for all the detriment proximately caused thereby, whether it could have been anticipated or not.
  187. ^ Cordova v. Ford, 46 Cal. App. 2d 180, 46 California Appellate Reports, Second Series 180 (California Appellate Court 7 November 1966) (""All courts are agreed that the mere fact of a collision of two automobiles gives rise to no inference of negligence against either driver in an action brought by the other. ...When a vehicle operated by A collides with a vehicle operated by B, there are four possibilities. A alone was negligent; B alone was negligent; both were negligent; or neither. Of these four only the first will result in liability of A to B. The bare fact of a collision affords no basis on which to conclude that it is the preponderant probability. The odds are against it.""). See Official Reports Opinions Online
  188. ^ Chowdhury v. City of Los Angeles, 38 Cal.App.4th 1187, 38 Official California Appellate Reports, 4th Series 1187 (California Appellate Court September 5, 1995) (""A public entity does not create a dangerous condition on its property ‘merely because of the failure to provide regulatory traffic control signals, stop signs, yield right-of-way signs, or speed restriction signs . . . .’ (§ 830.4.) If, on the other hand, the government installs traffic signals and invites the public to justifiably rely on them, liability will attach if the signals malfunction, confusing or misleading motorists, and causing an accident to occur. See Official Reports Opinions Online").
  189. ^ Self v. State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Co., 183 So. 2d 68, 183 So.2d 68 (Court of Appeal of Louisiana, Third Circuit February 15, 1966) ("The law imposes upon a following motorist a duty to exercise great care, sometimes referred to as extraordinary care. ... As a rule, when a following vehicle collides with the rear of the lead car, the following driver is considered to be at fault.").
  190. ^ "Connected Vehicle Pilot Program". US Department of Transportation. The U.S. DOT connected vehicle research program is a multimodal initiative that aims to enable safe, interoperable networked wireless communications among vehicles, infrastructure, and personal communications devices.
  191. ^ Sam Peltzman (August 1975). "The Effects of Automobile Safety Regulation". Journal of Political Economy. 83 (4). University of Chicago Press: 677–726.
  192. ^ "Manual on Uniform Traffic Control Devices for Streets and Highways" (2009 ed.). US Dept. of Transportation, Federal Highway Administration. 2012. pp. 117, 119, 127. ISBN 978-1598045369. The use of warning signs should be kept to a minimum as the unnecessary use of warning signs tends to breed disrespect for all signs.(2C.02.02)...Vehicular Traffic Warning signs should be used only at locations where the road user's sight distance is restricted, or the condition, activity, or entering traffic would be unexpected.(2C.49.03)
  193. ^ "State traffic data: 2013 data (Traffic Safety Facts. Report No. DOT HS 812 196)" (PDF). Washington, DC: National Highway Traffic Safety Administration. September 2015. Montana had the highest fatality rate per 100 million VMT (1.90) in the United States, while Massachusetts and the District of Columbia had the lowest (0.58 and 0.57) in 2013. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |authors= ignored (help)
  194. ^ "General statistics". Insurance Institute for Highway Safety (IIHS). The fatality rate per 100,000 people ranged from a low of 3.1 in the District of Columbia to a high of 22.6 in Montana. The death rates per 100 million vehicle miles traveled ranged from 0.56 in the District of Columbia to 1.96 in Montana.
  195. ^ Healthcare at Home Limited v. The Common Services Agency, [2014] UKSC 49 (Supreme Court of the United Kingdom 30 July 2014) ("It follows from the nature of the reasonable man, as a means of describing a standard applied by the court, that it would be misconceived for a party to seek to lead evidence from actual passengers [i.e. "the right-thinking member of society," "the officious bystander," "the reasonable parent," "the reasonable landlord," "the fair-minded and informed observer,"...] on the Clapham omnibus as to how they would have acted in a given situation or what they would have foreseen, in order to establish how the reasonable man would have acted or what he would have foreseen. Even if the party offered to prove that his witnesses were reasonable men, the evidence would be beside the point. The behaviour of the reasonable man is not established by the evidence of witnesses, but by the application of a legal standard by the court. The court may require to be informed by evidence of circumstances which bear on its application of the standard of the reasonable man in any particular case; but it is then for the court to determine the outcome, in those circumstances, of applying that impersonal standard."), Text.
  196. ^ Newton N. Minow; Fred H. Cate (Winter 1991). "Issue on the Selection and Function of the Modern Jury: Article: Who is an Impartial Juror in an Age of Mass Media?, 40 Am. U.L. Rev. 631". American University Law Review. 40: 631. We have a criminal jury system which is superior to any other in the world; and its efficiency is only marred by the difficulty of finding twelve every day men who don't know anything and can't read.
  197. ^ Amos Tversky; Daniel Kahneman (August 1971). "Belief in the law of small numbers". Psychological Bulletin. 76 (2): 105–110. doi:10.1037/h0031322. people have erroneous intuitions about the laws of chance. In particular, they regard a sample randomly drawn from a population as highly representative, I.e., similar to the population in all essential characteristics.
  198. ^ "US Civil Aviation Accident Statistics". National Transportation Safety Board.
  199. ^ Francesca Racioppi; Lars Eriksson; Claes Tingvall; Andres Villaveces (2004). "Preventing road traffic injury: a public health perspective for Europe". World Health Organization: 47. ISBN 9289010932. See Figure 5.2 (Chapter 5, page 47) {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  200. ^ Aaron Claverie (August 13, 2015). "TEMECULA: Inquiries prompt new speed survey". The Press Enterprise. the city took a look at the speed limit after Kelly, with support from the Automobile Club of Southern California, presented a detailed breakdown of why he feels the survey was incorrect.
  201. ^ Lora Warshawsky-Livne; David Shinar (Spring 2000). "Effects of uncertainty, transmission type, driver age and gender on brake reaction and movement time". Journal of Safety Research. 33 (1): 117–128. doi:10.1016/S0022-4375(02)00006-3. ISSN 0022-4375. Perception-reaction time increased significantly from 0.32 to 0.42 s (P<.05) as uncertainty increased but brake-movement time did not change. Perception-reaction time increased (from 0.35 to 0.43 s) with age but brake-movement time did not change with age. Gender did not affect perception-reaction time but did affect brake-movement time (males 0.19 s vs. females 0.16 s).
  202. ^ FC Donders (January 1969). "On the speed of mental processes". Acta Psychologica. 30: 412–31. doi:10.1016/0001-6918(69)90065-1. ISSN 0001-6918. OCLC 1447968. PMID 5811531.
  203. ^ National Cooperative Highway Research Program (1997). "2". NCHRP Report 400: Determination of Stopping Sight Distances (PDF). Transportation Research Board (National Academy Press). p. 24. ISBN 0-309-06073-7.
  204. ^ J.Y. Wong (1993). Theory of ground vehicles (2 ed.). Wiley. p. 26. ISBN 9780471524960.
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  206. ^ "Effects of obesity and sex on the energetic cost and preferred speed of walking". Journal of Applied Physiology. 100 (2): 390–398. 2006. doi:10.1152/japplphysiol.00767.2005. {{cite journal}}: Unknown parameter |authors= ignored (help)
  207. ^ "CAMUTCD". California Department of Transportation. p. 984. a bicyclist riding a bicycle 6 feet long to clear the last conflicting lane at a speed of 14.7 feet/sec
  208. ^ "European Tyre and Rim Technical Organisation Standards Manual 2010 G6" (PDF). The European Tire and Rim Technical Organization.
  209. ^ "Urban Street Design Guide: Lane Width". National Association of City Transportation Officials. as the width of the lane increased, the speed of the roadway increased
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  211. ^ "405.1". California Highway Design Manual. California Department of Transportation. 2012. pp. 400–14. Set back for the driver of the vehicle on the crossroad shall be a minimum of 10 feet plus the shoulder width of the major road but not less than 15 feet.

Further reading: tertiary sources

  • James O. Pearson (2009). "Automobiles: sudden emergency as exception to rule requiring motorist to maintain ability to stop within assured clear distance ahead". American Law Reports--Annotated, 3rd Series. Vol. 75. The Lawyers Co-operative Publishing Company; Bancroft-Whitney; West Group Annotation Company. p. 327.
  • W. R. Habeeb (2010). "Liability for motor vehicle accident where vision of driver is obscured by smoke, dust,atmospheric condition, or unclean windshield". American Law Reports--Annotated, 2nd Series. Vol. 42. The Lawyers Co-operative Publishing Company; Bancroft-Whitney; West Group Annotation Company. p. 13.
  • Wade R. Habeeb (2009). "Liability or recovery in automobile negligence action as affected by driver's being blinded by lights other than those of a motor vehicle". American Law Reports--Annotated, 3rd Series. Vol. 64. The Lawyers Co-operative Publishing Company; Bancroft-Whitney; West Group Annotation Company. p. 760.
  • Wade R. Habeeb (c. 2009). "Liability or recovery in automobile negligence action as affected by driver's being blinded by lights of motor vehicle". American Law Reports--Annotated, 3rd Series. Vol. 64. The Lawyers Co-operative Publishing Company; Bancroft-Whitney; West Group Annotation Company. p. 551.
  • L. S. Tellier (2011). "Right and duty of motorist on through, favored, or arterial street or highway to proceed where lateral view at intersection is obstructed by physical obstacle". American Law Reports--Annotated, 2nd Series. Vol. 59. The Lawyers Co-operative Publishing Company; Bancroft-Whitney; West Group Annotation Company. p. 1202.
  • ""Assured clear distance" statute or rule as applied at hill or curve". American Law Reports--Annotated. Vol. 133. The Lawyers Co-operative Publishing Company; Bancroft-Whitney; West Group Annotation Company. p. 967.
  • "Application of "assured clear distance ahead" or "radius of lights" doctrine to accident involving pedestrian crossing the street or highway". American Law Reports--Annotated, 2nd Series. Vol. 31. The Lawyers Co-operative Publishing Company; Bancroft-Whitney; West Group Annotation Company. p. 1424.
  • "Driving automobile at speed which prevents stopping within range of vision as negligence". American Law Reports--Annotated, 2nd Series. Vol. 44, 58, 87, 97. The Lawyers Co-operative Publishing Company; Bancroft-Whitney; West Group Annotation Company. p. 1403;1493;900;546.
  • "Driver's failure to maintain proper distance from motor vehicle ahead". American Law Reports--Annotated, 2nd Series. Vol. 85. The Lawyers Co-operative Publishing Company; Bancroft-Whitney; West Group Annotation Company. p. 613.
  • "Motor vehicle operator's liability for accident occurring while driving with vision obscured by smoke or steam". American Law Reports--Annotated, 4th Series. Vol. 32. The Lawyers Co-operative Publishing Company; Bancroft-Whitney; West Group Annotation Company. p. 933.
  • "Duty and liability of vehicle driver blinded by glare of lights". American Law Reports--Annotated, 2nd Series. Vol. 22. The Lawyers Co-operative Publishing Company; Bancroft-Whitney; West Group Annotation Company. p. 292.
  • "Liability for killing or injuring, by motor vehicle, livestock or fowl on highway". American Law Reports--Annotated, 4th Series. Vol. 55. The Lawyers Co-operative Publishing Company; Bancroft-Whitney; West Group Annotation Company. p. 822.
  • R. J. H. (January 1937). "The Uniform Motor Vehicle Act in Virginia". Virginia Law Review. 23 (3). Virginia Law Review Association: 351–358. doi:10.2307/1067282.
  • D. M. Postlewaite (1935). "Negligence -- Doctrine of Assured Clear Distance Ahead -- Statute as Subjective Test". Law Journal of the Student Bar Association of the Ohio State University. 1 (3). Ohio State University. College of Law: 284–287. ISSN 0048-1572.
  • Thomas Stanton (July 1935). "Negligence and Contributory Negligence Per Se: The "Range of Vision" and "Blinding Lights" Rules in Automobile Accident Cases". California Law Review. 23 (5). California Law Review, Inc.: 498–506. doi:10.2307/3476106.
  • Myron L. Garon (Autumn 1952). "Recent Developments in California's Last Clear Chance Doctrine". California Law Review. 40 (3). California Law Review, Inc.: 404–411. doi:10.2307/3477930.
  • Herbert A. Bernhard (December 1956). "Negligence: Breach of Duty: Assured Clear Distance Ahead Doctrine". Michigan Law Review. 55 (2). Michigan Law Review Association: 299–301. doi:10.2307/1285419.
  • Winston R. Day (December 1969). "Assured Clear Distance Doctrine in Louisiana". Louisiana Law Review. 30 (1). Louisiana State University: 129–139.
  • Alfred A. Sniadowski; John De Mots; Charles S. Reddy; Frank E. Bright (1938). "Recent Decisions". Notre Dame Law Review. 13 (4). Notre Dame Law School.
  • Richard M. Nixon (October 1936). "Changing Rules of Liability in Automobile Accident Litigation". Law and Contemporary Problems. 3 (4). Duke University School of Law: 476–490. ISSN 0023-9186.

Other printed resources

Web resources