Wiki User
∙ 11y agoOf course you are. This is no different than "Am I At Fault for seeing a car coming and jumping in front of it from the sidewalk." Look before you leap.
Wiki User
∙ 11y agothe car making the left yields to the car making the right otherwise the car making the left can be sited for failure to yield to the right of way to oncoming traffic.
B is at fault. Drivers making a turn, must yield to oncoming traffic. B is at fault for making a left turn without yielding. There is no general rule that all turning traffic must yield, although some jurisdictions may have such a specialized rule.
it is the truck that terned in frount of you criminal justice student
Obviously, there was traffic coming and you failed to yield to it. You will be charged.
Well, you have the obligation to yield right of way, but if the other driver was cited then it's likely his fault. A copy of the accident report will clearly state which driver is at fault.
It depends on what you mean by 'ongoing'. If you are waiting to make a left, the traffic moving in the opposite direction is called the oncoming traffic. If you did not yield to the oncoming traffic, or did not wait for it to clear the intersection before you turned, then you are at fault for the accident. If you are waiting to make a left and a car moving the same direction as you are facing hits you, then the car that hit you is at fault IF you were stopped and/or signaling that you were turning left. When making a left turn from the left lane, cars on your side of the road are supposed to pass your car in the lane to the right of you; if you are making a left from the only lane, the cars behind you are supposed to stop and wait for you to make the turn.
Yes, the Whittier fault is a left-lateral strike-slip fault, meaning that the blocks on either side of the fault move horizontally past each other in a left-lateral direction.
When turning left, you must yield the right of way to oncoming traffic. There is no such thing as left of way, unless you are protected by a green left turn light. Always wait to see what the oncoming traffic is doing before turning left. Remember...there is no such thing as "left of way".
The police will have to decide on this one because it depends how close you were when car #2 made the U-turn. If it was far enough away then both of you would be at fault. Car #1 would be at fault for "undue care and attention" and Car #2 would be at fault for making an illegal u-turn. Car 2 is at fault from enroachment into the left lane. He has not only the obligation to yield to traffic in the lane with which he wants to merge, but also the responsibility to yield to oncoming traffic. In most states, he also can't change multiple lanes at a time. Car 2 is clearly at fault.
when your right kidney is failing you put a stint in the left because, well, i forget the rest but your mother is a whore
Victor was the creature's creator. He neglected the creature and left him to fend for himself, by not taking responsibility for his actions the murders are largely his fault as well as the monsters.
The San Andreas fault is a right-lateral strike-slip fault. This means that as you face the fault trace, the opposite side of the fault moves to the right.