
amypeth
Thank you for sharing your story with us. It is great that you are seeking a greater understanding of what happened.
You are always best to seek proper legal advice when dealing with a legal issue. You can check with a neighbouring Police Force to check for procedures. Many solicitors can verify what should and should not have happened in detail.
I believe that I am correct in suggesting that as there are corroborating witness statements, (yours and the witness), there is no need for an investigator, as there is no 'doubt' as to what occurred.
Whilst it would help to view the location perhaps from Google maps ... we can go over what you did and didn't 'do'.
Hindsight is always good to see what you did, what you might have done and what you can learn, to try to help it never happening again, or at least try no to!
When a child isn't thinking and runs into the road you are limited as to your options.
The first is the environment, whenever and where-ever you travel you can assess and anticipate to a degree what may happen or likely to happen. You mention a caravan so I assume for sake of discussion that this is a built up area of some kind, so kids and people are highly likely. When driving trying to keep fully focused looking for any slight change that maybe the first small and only clue as to a potential hazard maybe all that you get before a real danger threatens.
Managing that risk, (potential hazards) and concentrating carefully and so judging well all the time can help us to be ready for these such incidents.
By being 'prepared and alert' helps us to react that much more quickly and of course to be travelling at a speed, so that you can stop in the distance that you
know to be 'clear' (free from
ALL hazards). By doing this it can help you to ensure that you always select a 'safe speed' for the conditions. Although you are comforted by the fact that you were not 'speeding' all that tells you is that you were legal, not that you were necessarily going to fast or to slow, as it were.
I can understand that this can provide you with less worry legally but making sure that you always travel at a safe speed is crucial for good and safe driving. People can die from only approx 5mph or so, so there is no assumption that can be made, that 33mph is 'dangerous' in the same way that 30mph is somehow 'safe'. Please see
http://www.safespeed.org.uk/killspeed.htmlIt maybe that when you re-travel down this road at the same sort of time of day, that you will consider that a different speed is perhaps more appropriate. Sometimes a much slower speed is safer for short distances that present hidden dangers, or e.g. high population areas, high streets etc., etc.
As you didn't have enough time to stop in time, we can say (after the event in this case) that you
may have chosen a slower speed when recognising and now re-considering all the hazard possibilities. However sometimes with the best knowledge, preparation and ability possible, some events can still happen.
Sometimes acting to make an accident less severe is your last and only option, but you have to be aware and ready.
I would recommend that you go on a skid pan, as there are techniques (avoidance braking / cadence braking) that you can do which
might have been possible, and which may have helped you to avoid the child. You need to be trained for this and understand it.
Is your car fitted with ABS ? Is your car front or rear wheel drive ?
Modern cars have been carefully designed to try and ensure as much as possible that when people collide with vehicles, especially cars, they will slide, than 'collide', as this helps to reduce the more serious and fatal injuries.
I assume from what you have said, that you (perhaps) did not think about what might happen if someone appeared unexpectedly, and that you didn't consider, that you could not see all the pavements or house entrances ?
I hope that this helps a little. I hope that you are less shaken up now.