It's the winter, and the conditions are bad.
Driver A has reduced speed to deal with snow accumulation that doesn't look much like it has been plowed. Driver A is driving on a straight stretch of road and is maintaining their position in their lane when the vehicle spins out of control with no other vehicles around from the center lane and ends up in the far left lane (USA) sideways with the front end facing the center lane and the rear of the vehicle 6 inches away from the concrete divider.
Driver B is a relatively safe distance from driver A before the car spins out, but it unable to avoid the stopped vehicle and clips the front end causing significant damage. Driver B is a semi truck traveling in the center lane. This state has a mandate that the semi truck must remain in the far right lane unless passing (no vehicles around) or avoiding a hazard such as construction or an accident.
Where does the fault lie? Driver A, B, or no fault due to hazardous conditions of travel?
Driver A has reduced speed to deal with snow accumulation that doesn't look much like it has been plowed. Driver A is driving on a straight stretch of road and is maintaining their position in their lane when the vehicle spins out of control with no other vehicles around from the center lane and ends up in the far left lane (USA) sideways with the front end facing the center lane and the rear of the vehicle 6 inches away from the concrete divider.
Driver B is a relatively safe distance from driver A before the car spins out, but it unable to avoid the stopped vehicle and clips the front end causing significant damage. Driver B is a semi truck traveling in the center lane. This state has a mandate that the semi truck must remain in the far right lane unless passing (no vehicles around) or avoiding a hazard such as construction or an accident.
Where does the fault lie? Driver A, B, or no fault due to hazardous conditions of travel?
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