This article is from page 18 of the 2010-01-26 edition of The Clare People. OCR mistakes are to be expected so download the original SWF or the rendered page 18 JPG
A FIFTEEN-year driving ban has been handed down to a driver whose jeep dragged a man along as it moved.
John Corry, a builder in his 50s, with an address at Tullycrine, Kilmi- hil, was convicted of dangerous driv- ing, arising out of an incident on Feb- ruary 4, 2009.
Oliver Haugh, a haulier, told Kul- rush District Court that he had done work for John Corry’s son Fergus and was owed €17,300. He said he could not contact Fergus and called to the home of John Corry. He said that John Corry pulled up with a jeep and trailer. He said Mr Corry had to move in off the road so that traffic could pass as the road was narrow. Mr Haugh said Mr Corry was in the jeep and his son Cyril was at the oy: 1e) rey as Lm
“I explained I had been trying to get in contact with Fergus. The next thing someone shouted *Go, Go’ and the jeep took off. I was between the jeep and the trailer. The jeep was moving. I grabbed on to the towbar of the trailer. My feet were being dragged on the ground,” he told the
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He said that the jeep continued to move along the road and he was pulled along. He eventually managed to get off.
‘He slowed down. I was losing my erip. It was a combination of losing my grip and throwing myself off,” he said. He said he sustained “a few scratches and scrapes” to his leg, while his clothing was torn in the incident.
Under cross-examination by de- fending solicitor John Callinan, Mr Haugh said that he had done work for Fergus Corry a year prior to this incident. He had been owed €60,000 initially, but some of this had been paid and the balance was €17,300. The court heard that this was eventu- ally paid off.
Mr Callinan asked Mr Haugh did he feel he was getting the run around and he said he did. “I gave Fergus all the chances. It came out on the grapevine that he was doing a runner and going to Australia, that he was going to Australia with the money. He had a digger. He had a ‘05 Land Cruiser. There was more than me owed money,’ said Mr Haugh.
Mr Callinan put it to him, “It was
you who got nasty and it was you who started to misbehave, rather than John Corry.’ The witness denied this. Mr Callinan asked him, “Could it be that you jumped on to the trailer to stop them pulling away as they pulled away?” Mr Haugh denied this. He said, “All I could do was hold on as best I could and bang on the back cover and shout ‘Stop’.” However, Mr Callinan said to Mr Haugh, “It didn’t happen the way you describe it.”
Another witness, Kieran Kelly said he had also called to Mr Corry’s house that evening. “I was trying to collect money as well. I was owed a lot of money as well,” he said.
He said he saw Mr Haugh caught between the jeep and trailer and said he heard shouting.
John Corry told the court that his son Fergus had operated a civil eng1- neering business and had employed Mr Haugh for about three years prior to the incident before the court. On that evening, he said that Mr Haugh “went to go for Cyril, my son. We drove off.”
He said that when he pulled off, Mr Haugh was “well behind my trailer.”
‘I drove very, very slowly,’ he said. Asked had he dragged Mr Haugh, he
replied, “It never happened.”
Mr Callinan submitted that there was a “complete conflict of evidence. There is insufficient evidence of dan- gerous driving before the court.”
However, Judge Joseph Mangan convicted Mr Corry. The court was told he had three previous convic- tions, the most recent of which was for a motoring offence in 2008. Mr Callinan said his client is a self-em- ployed builder who had been in good circumstances a number of years ago but had been hit by the recession.
He said that a driving ban would have a huge impact on him. “I don’t know what he would do if he was disqualified from driving. It would have a massive impact on him and his family. Some of the previous con- victions are ancient,’ he said.
Judge Mangan imposed a Six- month jail term and disqualified Mr Corry from driving for 15 years. He fixed a bond in the event of an appeal — his own surety of €3,000; €1,000 of which was to be lodged and an in- dependent surety of €3,000; €1,000 of which was to be lodged.