Huxtable flagged down a passing lorry driver and attempted to hitch a ride home.
Ada Louise Huxtable, the dean of American architecture critics, died Monday at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New York.
The court heard Huxtable lost control of the car he was driving at Loxhore Cross, near Barnstaple in Devon, last June.
Exeter Crown Court heard that after the crash Jason Huxtable told a driver that dying Emma Kift, 21, had caused it.
Ms. Huxtable used the word "urbicide" to describe cities in the 1960s, blighted by decay, uncontrolled development, social maladies and pollution.
Construction worker Huxtable, 22, from Bratton Fleming, Devon admitted two counts of causing death by careless driving when over the prescribed limit.
Over a career that began in the 1950s, Ms. Huxtable produced a body of criticism as influential and widely read as any other architecture critic's.
Ms. Huxtable was the first winner of a Pulitzer Prize for criticism, in 1970, and was architecture critic of The Wall Street Journal since 1997.
She's perhaps best known as Claire Huxtable from TV's Cosby Show.
Ms. Huxtable's writing was known for being deeply informed but direct.
It was agreed Huxtable, who had been banned from driving three months earlier, should drive as he was considered "the most sober", taking Ms Kift's vehicle.
Ms. Huxtable is the Journal's architecture critic.
WSJ: The Empire State Building's Luster Returns | By Ada Louise Huxtable
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