A collision in a bend in the road.
The officer that arrived later decided to charge me with "turn not in safety" under 142(1).
My point is that 142(1) is not applicable as it is very specific about the turns and none of them is applicable to a bend in the road.
They may claim that my car protruded into the opposite line of traffic. However:
- The other sections of the HTA that mention lanes talk about "marked lanes" (141(2), 142(6)) "clearly marked lanes" (149(1), 154(1), 154.1(1), 154.2(1)), etc.
- Sections that deal with the absense of markings use the word "line" instead of "lane". E.g., 141(1)(a), 149(1), 150(1)(b)
So, yes, I've read the act.
I could not find any relevant case law that mentioned "lane" when one wasn't marked. In particular, all the cases I found on CanLII used "lane" when the same direction was implied.
In contrast, R. v. Smith 1996, R. v. Elias (D.J.) 2003, and others mention "centre line".