V8Druid
do it as well as you can,but learn to do it better
both of those scenarios are no longer clear cut though ...Insurance industry works in different ways with liabilities.
If its been rear ended, over loaded or not, the liability will most like be with the one that's driven into it.
Bit like just because you pull out infront of a speeding car doing 50 in a 30 the speed doesn't put liability on the toes of them.
running up someone's rear is no longer automatically your fault ...
ditto the 50/30 - had the vehicle you pull out in front of, been doing the correct speed, if it's assessed that, had they been, you would have executed a safe manoeuvre, it'd be their fault