I don’t see how you can portion any blame on yourself in such an accident
Unless as I said earlier you stayed home or left 30secs later and you count that as blame which it isn’t ,
The Sierra should never have come out of the side road and T boned you end of,
If he/she had paid attention and followed the rules of the road you would have been going along on your merry way with no issues.
That's because you don't know the circumstances of the accident and why I didn't comment on yours. Accident causes are rarely as simple as they might seem and failing to realise that is often why they still occur. As I said before, blame is too strong a word but valuable in the cautionary sense to make us realise we can do more.
Here's what happened with exact details and location:
Winter and commuting home in darkness in the usual heavy London traffic, I was driving up Streatham Common North from Streatham High Road, following a slowish bus. As it was clear on the downhill side I was preparing for an overtake opportunity after the Valley Road junction on the left if one occurred. As such I was fairly close behind the bus and in line with its right side.
Unbeknown to me the Sierra driver was about to arrive at the Valley Road exit on the left to turn right down the hill of Streatham Common North. To the right of me and the bus and what the Sierra driver was facing was the pitch black common. My car was very dark brown.
What happened was that the Sierra driver saw the approaching bus and was planning to nip out just after it passed, not seeing my car behind with its headlights hidden since I was aligned to the right side of the bus and the car colour merged into the inky blackness of the common.
So he checked to his left to ensure the downhill he was to enter was empty and then accelerated fast out past the rear of the bus as it passed, straight into the side of my "invisible" car. Needless to say he was very severely shocked by the impact against something that apparently wasn't there and it took a while for me to get him out of that state.
So although he was to blame for the accident, I had played a part in two ways. The first that in being aligned as I was to the bus it made it impossible for him to see my headlights until the last moment when he had already taken the foot down plunge. Had I left a bigger gap from the bus he would have seen them. The second contribution I made was my very dark car against the black background of the common, not blameworthy but a major contribution all the same. There was a third minor factor noted afterwards, the critical street light opposite the Valley Road exit was out, Lambeth Council to blame.
Today this accident wouldn't happen. First I would be more careful to be seen in my current also dark car. Second, like so many of today's cars it's lighting has some wrapping, LED always on strips at the front sides and some rear light wrap around. Third, front corners sonar sensor plus intelligent camera and radar with automatic braking quicker than a human can operate, and fourth, the now commonplace high intensity street lighting.
But importantly as you see, I've headed that list with what I can do, taking responsibility for that. That open mind is my start point, I/we can always do more to prevent accidents in the first place. Primary safety, not having the accident, just needs thought.
Google map link to scene
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