Cyclist who collided with bus passenger awarded €15,000

Tracy Maher had sued Dublin Bus and Fingal County Council over cycle lane accident

A 38-year-old cyclist who collided with a bus passenger exiting a bus has been awarded €15,000 damages in the Circuit Civil Court.

In the court on Monday, Judge Karen Fergus said Tracy Maher was, on January 31st, 2014, cycling on a dedicated cycle lane on Swords Road in Co Dublin when the accident happened.

The judge said Ms Maher did not recall the bus overtaking her but had seen people waiting in the bus shelter.

The passenger had then stepped off the bus onto the footpath ahead of Ms Maher.

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In a reserved judgment, the judge told barrister Ivan Daly, counsel for Ms Maher, that his client had not had time to stop her bicycle.

She had swerved to try to avoid the passenger but had hit them and fallen off her bike.

Ms Maher, with an address at Fernwood Avenue, Tallaght, Co Dublin, said she suffered a fracture in her hand as a result of the incident and had needed to wear a cast for several weeks.

She sued Dublin Bus and Fingal County Council over the accident, claiming the cycle lane should have had a clear sign telling cyclists to yield at the bus stop.

Mr Daly said it was also Ms Maher’s case that the bus driver should have looked more carefully in his rear mirror before allowing the passenger to exit the bus.

Gerard O’Herlihy, solicitor for Dublin Bus, told the court the bus company denied liability and alleged that Fingal County Council had been negligent in its maintenance of the cycle lane, which did not have a clear direction for cyclists to yield.

Barrister Barney Quirke, for Fingal County Council, said the local authority denied it was liable for the incident and claimed there was a sign warning cyclists they had to yield to pedestrians.

Yield sign

The judge, who dismissed the claim against Fingal County Council, said the cycle lane was far from ideal and a yield sign on the ground was difficult to see.

However, she found Dublin Bus to be negligent, in that the driver had not seen Ms Maher.

“If the bus driver did not see Ms Maher, and it is manifestly clear that she was there, as evidenced by the CCTV footage, then the only conclusion that can be drawn is that he did not look in his mirror properly or at all before opening the doors,” the judge said.

The judge said Ms Maher should have been aware of the possibility of someone getting off the bus.

She awarded her €20,000 damages, but reduced the award to €15,000 on the grounds of Ms Maher’s contributory negligence.