I have asked for advice on how to prepare the case... the advice seems to be that regardless where I was the court is most likely to accept the right hand wheel track as a valid position. If that's true then I better prepare my defence this way.
It remains somewhat unclear what the term "clearly visible" means in court. I've assumed this means not obstructed in any way... is this wrong?
There is no way the prosecution could prove where I was as the sign is in a position that is not visible to the officer (the other side of a bridge).
As the sign is still not clearly visible from both the middle and right hand wheel track then these positions are also defensible.
At the moment I can clearly recognise that many of the opinions being offered are not legal opinions... but I can not clearly recognise which of the opinions are legal ones.
A lot of people also seem to be jumping in without reading the entire thread.
This whole thing is compicated by the fact that riders constantly move around on the road (between different positions in a lane). If riders are unable to agree on this basic fact then the court is likely to also be unconvinced... so better to work out how to clarify this before hand.
If you could clarify who is offering a legal opinion and who is not that would be useful.
Hardy wrote:No one cares where the best or correct riding position is.
All that matters is where you were in the lane and what you could see. So it will be your word against the word of the prosecution witnesses. Seems like you are trying to work out what your word should be, which means you are making it up as you go along.