Page:The Public General Acts and Church Assembly Measure 1960.pdf/56

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1960
Road Traffic Act, 1960
Ch . 16
45
Twelfth Schedule - Conditions affecting classification of public service vehicles.
Thirteenth Schedule—Cases in which carrier's licence not required.
Fourteenth Schedule_Convictions, & c., relevant for purposes of sections 173 and 178.
Fifteenth Schedule - Transitional provisions relating to licences to drive heavy goods vehicles.
Sixteenth Schedule—Supplementary provisions in connection with proceedings for offences under section 221 .
Seventeenth Schedule—Amendments of other Acts.
Eighteenth Schedule—Repeals and revocations.
Nineteenth Schedule—Savings and transitional provisions.
Twentieth Schedule—Special provisions as to coming into operation of certain provisionsof this Act.
An Act to consolidate, with corrections and improvements made under the Consolidation of Enactments (Procedure) Act, 1949, certain enactments relating to road traffic.
[22nd March, 1960]

BE it enacted by the Queen's most Excellent Majesty, by and with the advice and consent of the Lords Spiritual and Temporal, and Commons, in this present Parliament assembled, and by the authority of the same, as follows:

Part I
General Provisions Relating to road Traffic

Offences connected with Driving of motor Vehicles

1. Causing death by reckless or dangerous driving.

(1) A person who causes the death of another person by the driving of a motor vehicle on a road recklessly, or at a speed or in a manner which is dangerous to the public, having regard to all the circumstances of the case, including the nature, condition and use of the road, and the amount of traffic which is actually at the time, or which might reasonably be expected to be, on the road, shall be liable on conviction on indictment to imprisonment for a term not exceeding five years.

(2) An offence against this section shall not be triable by quarter sessions; and nothing in the foregoing subsection shall be construed as empowering a court in Scotland, other than the High Court of Justiciary, to pass for any such offence a sentence of imprisonment for a term exceeding two years.

(3) Section twenty of the Coroners (Amendment) Act, 1926 (which makes special provision where the coroner is informed before the jury have given their verdict that some person has been charged with one of the offences specified in that section ) shall apply to an offence against this section as it applies to manslaughter.