It appears to me impossible to do so. The case was one in which the Judge was not prepared to accept that either side described the collision accurately, but the Judge thought the respondent's version of events substantially more accurate than that of the defendant and his witnesses. There was, as the Judge pointed out, no truly independent evidence fixing the point of impact - a critical question - and the fixation of that point could only depend upon the trial Judge's impression gained from the stories told by the four witnesses. The appellant's argument referred to the Judge's failure precisely to fix the point of impact. It does not appear to me that His Honour can properly be criticised on that account. He did not believe it possible to fix the point exactly. It was also argued for the appellant, that there was no evidence to justify the findings of negligence against the defendant. That does not appear to me to be so. There was certainly evidence given by the plaintiff from which an inference of poor lookout on the part of the defendant might be drawn and, as I have mentioned, Mrs Chesterman's evidence was able to be relied on in support of the view that the car was not being driven as cautiously as was, in the circumstances, appropriate. Looking at the matter more broadly, once the Judge rejected the version of events put forward on behalf of the defendant, as it seems to me he was entitled to do, and reached the conclusion that the accident had happened close to where the respondent fixed it, it must have seemed inevitable that there should be a finding of negligence against the defendant. That is so because, on the defendant's own case, the motorcycle was not observed until very shortly before the collision, at which time the car was apparently still travelling at a substantial speed; one would have expected the car to be so driven that a motorcycle making a fairly orthodox turn, as the respondent's motorcycle was, on the findings, would not be endangered by the car's approach.