Reconstruction (2)
55The next step is to estimate the pre-impact speed of the green Falcon. This, in my view, is a matter of complete conjecture. That conjecture is not limited solely to the Falcon's velocity but as to which lane it was in and how far back the vehicle was in the lane i.e. what was its run up distance to the point of impact.
56Ms Allison Louise Mansell was driving a Toyota Corolla registered number AC 06 RG. She was travelling east along Illaroo Road intending to turn right to go into Nowra. As she approached the intersection at the Highway the traffic light was amber and turned red and she stopped her vehicle. She was travelling in the right-hand lane. In chief, she said she believed that there was no car ahead of her, but she was unsure. She did remember cars in the left-hand lane. The first was a bone coloured 4WD, containing a family, and another car which came up behind it. A dark coloured car came up behind her. The lights turned green and she started to drive forward. This evidence was then given:
"Q. What did you notice about any of the cars that you've just described as you moved off?
A. The left-hand drive, the left-hand side vehicle turned left, I myself progressed forward and the car behind me progressed forward as well, and I don't know where the car on the left-hand side went after that.
Q. And the car behind you that progressed forward was the dark coloured car?
A. Yes.
Q. As you moved into the intersection did you make any observation of the cars beside you?
A. The car next - the car which was behind me moved over to the lane next to the bridge on the left-hand side and started to move on like basically on the side a bit as we started to make the turn.
Q. Did you complete the turn yourself?
A. I didn't - I started to complete the turn when things started to happen.
Q. What happened when you started to complete the turn?
A. I - as I was turning I was just on the bend, I heard an almighty crash and there was this dark shadow coming up behind me in the - on the - in my rear vision mirror. At that time it started to get - and then within seconds I was pushed up the road. I could feel a car coming beside me, a bone coloured car coming in beside me and I was moving all over the road. I was having trouble to keep my car on the road and then I heard this almighty, I could see that the bone car was moving over towards the bridge and I heard an almighty crash and I saw a flash of lightening, like a red flash and everything just went dark.
Q. The dark car that had moved from behind you to beside you as you were turning the corner for what distance did it travel beside you?
A. Not very long it was only a matter of seconds and it just disappeared.
Q. At the time that the dark car was beside you did you notice anything about its speed?
A. He was just travelling at a normal speed that you would travel round there he was not going fast because it was such a short distance you could not pick up much speed.
HIS HONOUR
Q. When you said he was beside you, on what side of your car was his?
A. He was on the passenger's side.
HIS HONOUR: On the left-hand side. Yes."
Ms Mansell's Toyota was not struck by any vehicle. Something like a shockwave may have propelled her car forward. She stopped her car on the left-hand lane of the bridge. Her position on the bridge is marked on the photogrammetric plan, which is exhibit 5. The inference to be drawn is that the dark car which pulled up behind her and after moving off started to overtake her on the left-hand side was the green Falcon. In cross-examination, Ms Mansell said the dark car may have been dark blue. The photographs make it very difficult to ascertain whether the green Falcon was in fact dark green or dark blue.
57Later in cross-examination, Ms Mansell admitted that she made a statement to the police on 24 September 2010, 12 days after the collision. She admitted that in the statement she said that "There were a few cars in front of me in my lane as well as cars in the left lane". If there were a "few cars" in front of Ms Mansell's, then there were at last two, if not more ahead of her. That means that the green Falcon was at least the fourth car back from the holding line.
58Another problem which arises from Ms Mansell's evidence is that the gouge mark and short tyre marks on each side of it (representing a point where, immediately after the collision, the white Fairmont mounted for a short time the rear of green Falcon, driving its undercarriage down onto the roadway) is in the right-hand lane rather than where one would expect it to be if it were overtaking Ms Mansell's on her left.
59Mrs Frederica Tannock was driving a white Ford Laser along Illaroo Road on the evening of the collision. She and her husband had been at the North Nowra Golf Club on Illaroo Road. She was motoring home. The lights were red at the intersection with the Highway. She was driving in the left-hand lane. When she pulled up there was one vehicle in front of hers, indicating that it would turn left. Mrs Tannock intended to turn right. She could remember headlights "coming through" but was unable to say how many cars were behind her. The vehicle in front of her was not a bone coloured 4WD, but a light coloured sedan. When the lights turned green, Mrs Tannock moved off after the car in front of her but had had to wait as that car made a left-hand turn. Two cars in the right-hand lane turned right. She then said:
"... As those first two cars went around the corner after the light went green and we had to wait out - the car in front of us to make that left-hand northbound turn, we were then able to follow as well but as we went onto the intersection a matter of maybe 6 foot that's when the white Ford Falcon came, the accused came in front, nearly missing us and well it looked like then we followed, so the other two cars onto the bridge.
CROWN PROSECUTOR
Q. So the white Ford came directly in front of your car?
A. Directly in front of our car.
Q. You're about 6 foot into the intersection at that point?
A. Yes about that, had we been a few seconds earlier it would have collected us for sure."
This evidence suggests that Ms Mansell had stopped at the holding line and that the green Falcon was second in the right-hand lane but that, of course, is inconsistent with what Ms Mansell told the police on 24 September 2010. Mrs Tannock's evidence suggests that it was impossible for the green Falcon to have been in the left or kerbside lane.
60Ms Amanda Sutton, the victim who suffered grievous bodily harm, made a statement to police on 3 May 2012, the second day of the trial. It was admitted into evidence by consent and she was not required for cross-examination. The statement is exhibit 11. The substance of the statement is this:
"About 6.50pm on Sunday 9th September 2010 I was at my friend Tim Ioannou's house which is only about 2 minutes drive from the collision scene.
We left his house to travel into Nowra to get Pizza. We turned left out of his street onto the Illaroo Road and got stopped at the traffic lights at the Princes Highway. I can't recall the lane our car was in but I'm reasonably certain it was the lane closest to the guttering.
We were stopping there for a short time, and I remember moving forward, but I don't recall seeing the lights go green. The next thing I remember is things going black and a loud bang.
I recall waking up in the water and taking my seatbelt off, before climbing out and getting to the surface. I remember getting to a rock and yelling for help. I remember someone touching me on my shoulder and then nothing else after that."
She was "reasonably certain" that the green Falcon was in the kerbside lane, which is inconsistent with the evidence of Mrs Tannock.
61Mr James Henry Fullard was driving a Toyota Prado south along the Princes Highway on the evening of the collision. When he reached the intersection of the Highway and Illaroo Road he stopped in obedience to an amber traffic light. He was in the right-hand of the two lanes for traffic heading south. On his right was the right turning lane and then the median strip. There was one small vehicle in front of his but there was no vehicle in the right turning lane. He saw two cars turn right out of Illaroo Road, the first car was a "little Toyota or something like that", white in colour, which could be a description of Ms Mansell's vehicle. It was followed by a "dark" coloured Falcon. He also saw a "normal sedan" turn left out of Illaroo Road. He saw a "dark coloured vehicle" approaching the intersection from the north on his right side. He saw it collide with the second of the two right turning vehicles, the Falcon. In chief, he was shown photographs, already in evidence, of the white Fairmont and said that that was the vehicle which collided with the Falcon, even though earlier he had described the accused's vehicle as "dark coloured'. In cross-examination he admitted that in a statement to the police made on 24 September 2010 he described the Falcon as "dark blue". Mr Fullard's evidence is consistent with that of Mrs Tannock but is not consistent with that of Ms Mansell in cross-examination or with that of Ms Sutton.
62Mr Arthur Timbery was also motoring south on the Highway on the evening of the collision. He was driving in the left-hand or kerbside lane, "beside the fish market". He stopped at the intersection with Illaroo Road in obedience to the traffic lights. His was the first vehicle in the left lane, so he had stopped at or near the holding line. He said that "there were about four cars [which] came down the hill from that direction [Illaroo Road] onto the bridge". In his next answer he said there were "three or four cars" turning right out of Illaroo Roads. He then gave this evidence:
"Q. And did you observe those cars as they came from Illaroo Road direction?
A. Yes I did.
Q. And did you notice anything about them in particular?
A. No they were just going in a steady flow.
Q. Your lights eventually turned to green?
A. Yes.
Q. And did you move forward?
A. Yes I was just about to take off I'd gone a couple of feet and then the car sped past me.
Q. And that was a white Falcon sedan?
A. Falcon sedan.
Q. And from what direction did he come?
A. It came from the northerly direction behind our cars and sped past me and tried to get into the lane in front of me.
Q. When it came in front of you what happened then?
A. It was just an horrific crash.
Q. And did you see what it crashed into?
A. It was a blue station wagon and there was another darker colour car in front of them and then the white station wagon which was up the front, I don't know - it was just another car in the right lane and it just happened so quick that basically I just seen the car coming past me and by the time I was about to think of what was going to happen, it just basically happened, it was just that fast. It smashed into the back line of the - I believe it was the station wagon."
In cross-examination Mr Timbery said that the first car to turn right was a small white Toyota that "actively got pushed along the bridge". He was then taken to a statement he made to the police on 17 September 2010, five days after the collision. He agreed that in the statement he said:
"There was only about three or four cars that came from Illaroo Road, I think that was a little grey car, a small white car and I believe there may have been another car but I can't remember what it was".
Mr Timbery's evidence about the number of cars turning right out of Illaroo Road is inconsistent with that of both Mrs Tannock and Mr Fullard.
63His evidence also raises another issue. His evidence is that the lights in front of him turned green and he started to move forward before the collision i.e. when the green Falcon was still turning right. Was the green Falcon "running an amber light"? That is also hinted at by an answer given by Ms Mansell in cross-examination:
"Q. Can I ask you this Ms Mansell you gave evidence initially that when you came to a stop at those set of traffic lights I think you said that you thought that you were up the front?
A. I was very confused on that point but I realised because I've been under so much stress that I may have been slightly incorrect. I realised as I approached the bridge there were cars in front of me and it's a very, very short span that we get and I believe I was at the very, very front of those lights but even though I did put differently in my statement I do admit that."
Her evidence is that the green light for those travelling east in Illaroo Road is only for a "very, very short span". If the green Falcon was at the end of the queue turning right, the lights about to change to, or changing, amber one might infer that it would be driven as quickly as possible through the intersection.
64Mr Tristan Robert Pantling was driving his Mitsubishi panel van north on the Princes Highway on the evening of the collision. His wife Shiner Jane Pantling was in the front passenger seat. He crossed the northbound Shoalhaven River bridge and stopped at the traffic lights governing the intersection of the Highway and Illaroo Road. He was in the right-hand of on two northbound lanes. His was the first vehicle in that lane, "at the front of the line". In cross-examination Mr Pantling gave this evidence:
"Q. Do you recall now how many cars you saw turning from that road onto the highway?
A. No but I'd say - I would say there was probably more than five.
Q. Did you see the five cars turn onto the highway before you saw the car that was rear-ended?
A. Yes, I believe the car that was rear-ended was either the last or second last round the corner. I would say yeah, last.
Q. Sorry, did you say, "I would say the last"?
A. Yeah, I would've said it would be the last only as I can't - like once the impact had happened my eyes were taken away from the rest of the road, so I followed - as the impact happened, my attention was drawn to the impact and the incident happening to my right as more to what was going on to the left-hand side or what was coming round, but nothing seemed to come round because I then had a green light and was able to go and there was nothing interrupting my northern approach on the Princes Highway.
Q. So as far as you could tell, is this right, there were five cars turning onto the highway--
A. Yeah, approximately--
Q. Let me finish. As far as you can tell, there were five cars turning onto the highway before the car that you saw rear ended turned onto the highway, is that fair?
A. Yes. Yes."
The only re-examination of Mr Pantling was on this issue:
"Q. My opponent put to you that there were five cars before the car rear ended that were turning out of Illaroo and you initially said approximately - and she stopped you and continued with her question?
A. Yes. That's right, it was approximately five, I didn't count but if I was to say it'd be give or more, yeah, I never counted the cars that went across the front of me, but there was a number - a good number of them."
65Ms Tegan Renee Collier was driving a green Nissan station wagon north along the Highway on the evening of the collision. She was travelling in the right of the two northbound lanes. She crossed the Shoalhaven River bridge and stopped at the Illaroo Road intersection in obedience to a right traffic light. She appears to have pulled up behind Mr Pantling's panel van - she stopped "a couple of metres back" from the holding line. On her left was a 4WD towing a horse float which both drew her attention and obscured her view of Illaroo Road. She was aware of traffic turning right out of Illaroo Road but her main attention was the 4WD and horse float upon which she and other occupants of her vehicle were commenting. She then gave this evidence:
"Q. Did you look at that traffic at any stage?
A. The traffic coming onto - turning onto the bridge, not until I noticed, I didn't really pay any attention to it until I noticed that it was a dark coloured car going through the intersection quite fast.
Q. And that car appeared to come from the Illaroo Road intersection?
A. I assumed it did because of the angle that it was turning onto the bridge, and they had the right of way so I couldn't imagine where else it would come from.
Q. Did you notice any other car at that time?
A. No. I only - when I saw that one turn on and then like a split second later there was a white car behind it. But I didn't see any traffic prior, turning onto the bridge prior to that dark car, I wasn't paying attention to it.
Q. And when you saw the dark car, when you first saw the dark car, where was the white car?
A. It was, it was behind it kind of turning on the same angle as if they were like one behind each other but very closely going into the left-hand lane of the bridge going south.
Q. Where did the white car come from, from your observation?
A. From the angle that it was I assumed, and because they had the traffic light right of way, I assumed it come from Illaroo Road, but that was just based on the angle that it was on and that they had the right of way of the traffic lights, but I didn't - prior to it actually being right behind the dark coloured car I didn't, I didn't really notice it, my - the reason I looked up because the dark was going so fast and I just assumed that they were -- because we had been sitting at the lights I just assumed that the dark car was trying to get through the lights, you know, on the orange or red, and that's why I noticed it because it was going quite fast, like not the, not the normal speed, and then, you know, I kind of looked at that, and then when we looked again there was a white car right behind it at the same angle, like turning onto the, onto the bridge at the intersection.
Q. And what was the next thing you saw after you saw the white car behind the dark car?
A. We were sitting there and I looked at it and then in a spilt second the dark car had gone over the side of the road, there's a fence there now but there wasn't a fence there at the time, and that had sailed across and then the next thing, the white car had hit the side of the bridge and was in flames."
In cross-examination Ms Collier admitted that she made a statement to the police on 30 September 2010 and confirmed that in that statement she had said that she saw a dark coloured car turn right from Illaroo Road to head into Nowra and that "[t]his car stood out because it seemed to be going very fast". She also said in that statement that the dark coloured car came from the left-hand lane of Illaroo Road.
66Of all the lay witnesses, Ms Collier is the only one who has stated that the green Flacon was travelling other than a car normally would when turning right out of Illaroo Road. It was the speed of the green Falcon which drew her attention, not either noise emitted by the white Fairmont as its advent. I have no reason to doubt Ms Collier's evidence and it is consistent with the "hints" I referred to in [63] above.
67Ms Leeza Jane Doohan was the proprietor of a business known as "Perfect Catch" situated on the northeastern side of the Shoalhaven River bridge. This business was that described by Mr Timbery as "the fish market". Normally the business closes at 6.30pm on Sundays but business was brisk and she did not close "until about 7" pm. She was standing outside of her shop next to her motor vehicle, talking with an employee, Estelle, and Boris, a neighbour. She was facing north. She heard a noise being emitted by a car. She turned to her left and saw that traffic from Illaroo Road "had the green light" and was travelling through the intersection. She then gave this evidence:
"Q. What happened then?
A. And then we seen a white car come through the intersection and knew straightaway that it wasn't going to make it clear through the Illaroo Road traffic. Then there was one bang pretty much instantly and then me and Boris ran into the road where it occurred.
Q. That bang, did you see what caused that bang?
A. There was a dark coloured car and a white car that came through the intersection had gone, hit the - from behind.
Q. So the dark coloured car that you saw hit by the white car?
A. Yep.
Q. Did you see that dark coloured car travelling prior to it being hit by the white car?
A. I did.
Q. At what point did you first see that dark coloured car travelling before it was hit by the white car?
A. As we were standing there talking, we were facing the Illaroo Road traffic and they were coming - it was coming down with the Illaroo Road traffic onto the bridge.
Q. Did you notice anything about the way in which that dark car that was hit from behind was travelling as it came through the intersection before it was hit by the white car?
A. I would say it was travelling normally. There was [sic] cars in front of it. There was [sic] cars behind and to the side.
Q. When you say, "I'd say", did you actually see it travelling?
A. I did."
She then said that the "dark car" was in the left-hand lane as it turned, which is consistent with the evidence of Ms Mansell and may be inconsistent with the evidence of Mrs Tannock but is inconsistent with the marks left on the road surface immediately after the impact.
68In cross-examination Ms Doohan said that the car park at the front of her shop can be entered by traffic heading south down the Highway. The area of the car park at the front of her shop is between 1.5 metres and 2.0 metres below the level of the street. She would not agree that it was dark but eventually agreed that the main lighting available at the time of the collision was artificial street lighting. She would not agree that, given that the place she was standing was below street level and given that the scene was artificially lit, she did not have a clear view of what was happening on the Highway. However I have difficulty in accepting that Ms Doohan did have a clear view of what was happening on the Highway. Ms Doohan agreed that it was the vehicle noise which she head that made her look towards Illaroo Road which raises as a possibility that such vehicle noise was being emitted by the green Falcon. However, she then said that she was unable to say whence the noise came. Ms Doohan's attention was then drawn to a statement she made to the police on 20 September 2010. In that statement she said:
" "I'm used to the normal traffic sounds out of the front of the shop, but one sounded like it was going much faster. The noise made me look because I was worried if it was going down Illaroo Road it might not be able to stop.""
Ms Doohan soon after conceded that the vehicle noise she heard could have been either from Illaroo Road or the Highway. Shortly after that this evidence was given:
"Q. The dark car that you've given some evidence about, you say that it was travelling in the lane that is closest to the gutter of Illaroo Road; is that correct?
A. Yes.
Q. Did you see how many cars entered the intersection onto the highway from Illaroo Road before the dark car?
A. I think there might have - there was only one or two. The dark car was pretty early in the pack.
Q. Are you able to give any further description of that dark car, other than that it was a dark car?
A. No.
Q. Are you able to say what colour it was, other than dark?
A. At the time I thought it might have been, like, a dark blue, dark green car, but I wasn't sure, that's why I just said dark."
The problem with the second answer given is that it can only speak from the time that Ms Doohan's attention was turned to the intersection and a number of other cars may have turned before the green Falcon attempted its turn.
69I draw the following conclusions from this lay evidence:
(a) on the balance of probabilities:
i. the green Falcon was immediately behind Ms Mansell's Toyota Corolla and remained behind it, turning in the right-hand lane in which lane the collision occurred with the white Fairmont;
ii. there were at least two, probably three and perhaps four cars in front of Ms Mansell's Toyota Corolla;
iii. no one attempted to turn right out of Illaroo Road after the green Falcon did;
(b) there are reasonable possibilities that:
i. the green Falcon was running at least an amber traffic light;
ii. the green Falcon was being driven "very fast".
In regard to that last statement, I ought to have drawn attention to the fact that the Crown adduced evidence from Ms Collier that she knew this intersection well as at 12 September 2010 and that she passed it every day on her way to work.
70There are a number of sources of the possible speed of a vehicle turning right out of Illaroo Road. The first is a police survey. On 2 May 2012, the first day of the trial, the officer-in-charge Sergeant Bentley asked Senior Constable Oliver Mitrevski, who was working with Senior Constable Barlow, to conduct some testing with a Lidar 460 device of traffic turning right out of Illaroo Road onto the Shoalhaven River bridge. Both senior constables were in plainclothes and travelled to the bridge in an unmarked police vehicle which was parked some distance away in parkland west of the bridge and south of Illaroo Road. Sergeant Bentley indicated to them a reference point (which could only be the gouge mark left by the green Falcon on the roadway) and asked them to perform speed checks at that point. However the speed checks were for traffic in the left-hand or kerbside lane (T307.35). Senior Constable Mitrevski took up a position north of the bridge, on the eastern side of the Highway in a position where he believed he could not be seen as vehicles were leaving Illaroo Road. Senior Constable Barlow sat on the footpath beside him recording on a pad the speeds of the vehicles that were being conveyed to him by Senior Constable Mitrevski. Senior Constable Mitrevski wielded the Lidar device, which was something like a TV remote control which he pointed at the number plate of each vehicle being checked. The Lidar provided the vehicle's speed which was then told to Senior Constable Barlow.
71I do not know how successful the Senior Constable's attempt was to disguise his presence. A policeman in plain clothes may not be as evident as a policeman in uniform, but he is unlikely to be in disguise e.g. T-shirt, shorts or jeans, and thongs or joggers. The results recorded seem to indicate that the motorists being surveyed were driving very cautiously. Furthermore, only the first car on each pulse of traffic was surveyed i.e. those stationary at the holding line, with little or no ability to enter the intersection at any speed. Twenty vehicles were surveyed over a period of 50 minutes. The highest speed recorded was 29 km/h. The lowest speed recorded was 21 km/h. The mean speed was 25 km/h and the median was 26 km/h.
72The next source of possible speeds in Mr Johnston's survey, done using a radar as distinct from the police's laser device. Mr Johnston's sample was 36 vehicles. According to Mr Johnston's second report his survey is "conservative in favour of a higher speed" because of his use of radar and because the radar gun was "less discriminatory than laser". I accept that Mr Johnston did a much better job than the police in seeking to hide his presence from motorists. He hid behind a solid safety barrier merely placing his radar gun above the barrier to take his reading, like a sniper firing out of a trench. I now juxtapose the results of the police survey and Mr Johnston's survey:
Police Johnston
Sample size 20 36
Lowest speed 21 km/h 20 km/h
Median speed 26 km/h 32 km/h
Highest speed 29 km/h 39 km/h
Mean 25 km/h 31 km/h