Stay in the curb lane right, and have the turn signal flashing. If anyone's walking, they have the right of way whether or not they are jaywalking.
100 feet
driver 2 Probably Driver 1, the driver making a right turn is usually considered to have the right of way.
when making a left turn, a person should turn on their left turn signal. They should look right, then left, and then make the turn.
when making a left turn, a person should turn on their left turn signal. They should look right, then left, and then make the turn.
give the indicatore
Entirely situation dependent. Need to know which vehicle had right-of-way in order to determine this.
Passing to the right of another vehicle is usually permitted when the vehicle being passed is making a left hand turn. If the turn is proper, the driver should be close to the center line of the road but not over. This, on a standard road, leaves sufficient distance for most vehicles to pass on the right.
the person making a right. If you are making a left hand turn, you never have the right of way. in this situation, you would turn right first and the person making a left hand turn (if already in the middle of the intersection) can turn because if they don't they are blocking traffic. If they are not in the intersection, they should not move at all.
100 feet
No. First, if you're making a left turn, you'd be in the right turn lane (if there's more than one turn lane) to give yourself as much space as possible, and you'd want to stay to the high side of that lane in order to prevent the trailer from offtracking into the other turn lane.
To tell you the truth, You both are at fault. If you go to court, usually they will tell you that it's the person that didn't have the right - of - way's fault.
Yes, at least in some states. I've seen signs that say, "Right turn in front of bus is illegal". It should say, "Right turn across front of bus is illegal".