| Magistrates Court. There is also an application for leave to appeal against sentence. The ground of appeal is that the conviction "was unsafe and unsatisfactory in all of the circumstances". The main point argued was that the evidence of the prosecution witnesses upon whom the magistrate relied (Mr Johnston, Mrs Johnston, Mr Mitchell and Mr Valentine) is inconsistent with the evidence of an expert witness (Mr Geoffrey MacDonald). It is common ground that on the morning of 25 July 1995 Mr and Mrs Johnston were travelling towards Rockhampton on the Yeppoon road in a white Rodeo which is a four-wheel drive vehicle. The appellant was driving a white Holden Statesman some distance behind the Johnstons' vehicle. The relevant area of road was a divided highway with two lanes available to traffic proceeding towards Rockhampton. Both vehicles overtook a semi-trailer, and moved into the right-hand lane to do so. The appellant elected to also overtake the Rodeo before the Rodeo had moved back again into the left lane. He was frustrated from doing so when the Rodeo moved back into the left lane at much the same time. Something of a duel, or at least of an attack using a vehicle as a weapon seems to have ensued. Different versions were given by the Johnstons on the one hand and the appellant on the other as to who was the attacker. The appellant claimed in his evidence that other cars were driving between the two relevant vehicles, that those cars passed the Rodeo on the left of the Rodeo after passing the semi-trailer prior to the appellant attempting to do so. That however had not been put to the Johnstons in cross-examination. The appellant further claimed that before attempting to pass on the left he had turned his lights on; that he had turned his left-hand indicator on for a distance of about fifty metres before moving across into the left-hand lane; and that when he was "almost parallel" to the side of the Rodeo, that vehicle "bore down upon me and forced me off the road". Many of those details were not suggested to Mr Johnston in cross-examination. What is common ground however is that there was an incident during which the Rodeo, having passed the semi-trailer, moved from the right-hand lane into the left-hand lane thereby frustrating the appellant's desire to pass the Rodeo on its left. It is common ground that the appellant then sounded his horn, and proceeded to overtake the Rodeo on its right. The appellant claims that he drew alongside the four-wheel drive, shook his fist at the driver, beeped his horn, shook his head at the driver, and that the other driver then drove into the side of his vehicle. It is common ground that the two vehicles came into contact whilst the appellant was overtaking the Rodeo and that they remained in contact over some distance, the Johnstons claiming that the appellant was trying to force the Rodeo off the road to the left, whilst the appellant claimed that Mr Johnston was trying to force the appellant off the road to the right. Unfortunately for the appellant, two independent witnesses, one a truck-driver in front of the incident and the other a truck-driver behind the incident generally confirm the Johnstons' version that the attacker was the appellant. They confirm that he drove his vehicle into the Johnstons' vehicle and that he crossed into the Johnstons' lane in order to do so. These additional witnesses, Mr Mitchell and Mr Valentine, saw the white Statesman swerve into the Rodeo several times. It is again common ground that whilst the two vehicles were in contact, considerable smoke came from a tyre, and inspection of the vehicles after the incident makes it plain that there was contact between the driving side front tyre of the Rodeo and the passenger side of the Statesman towards its rear. There are tyre marks along the rear half of the Statesman's panelwork and there is white paint on the Rodeo's tyre. There is however no other relevant panel damage to the sides of either vehicle. Upon feeling contact from the other vehicle, Mr Johnston stated that he had to "correct" his vehicle so that it would not go over the edge, and that the other car "continued to press, so that as I corrected the force, my front tyre started to rub on the side of the car and there was quite a bit of smoke. The car then swung away and swung in again." Mr Johnston thought that contact was made in all about five times. Mr Mitchell, whose vision was through his rear vision mirror, gave evidence that the rear third of the Statesman "rammed" four or five times into the Rodeo. He observed the vehicles "propping" but was not in a position to describe any collision between the vehicles. Mr Valentine, from some distance to the rear, described the appellant as coming into collision with the Rodeo on two or three occasions. On the prosecution case, after this encounter the appellant completed his overtaking of the Rodeo, moved into the left-hand lane in front of it, and braked sharply. There was then a collision between the Rodeo's bull-bar and part of the rear of the Statesman, and possibly more than one collision. | Hearing Date: 20 November 1996 some time later, suggested that there were at least two separate rear end impacts, and of course that opinion, if accepted, would be capable of casting doubt upon the single rear-end collision described by Mr and Mrs Johnston. Mr MacDonald also expressed the opinion that the damage to the appellant's vehicle was the result of "controlled contact" rather than smashes. It is not necessary to discuss the attenuated reasoning upon which this theory was developed, as the stipendiary magistrate was prepared to give the appellant the benefit of a doubt as to what really happened in the second incident, describing it as "some semblance of a doubt in my mind as to the nature and circumstances in which (the appellant's) vehicle suffered the rear-end damage". | JUDGMENT OF THE COURT |