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Briefcase on Criminal Law
Second Edition
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Fionda, Julia
Criminal Law – 2nd ed – (Cavendish briefcase series)
1 Criminal law – England 2 Criminal law – Wales
I Title II Bryant, Michael J
345.4'2
Table of Cases ix
Table of Statutes xxi
2 Voluntary Manslaughter
2.1 Provocation 7
2.2 Diminished responsibility 13
3 Involuntary Manslaughter
3.1 Unlawful act manslaughter 17
3.2 Manslaughter by gross negligence 21
3.3 Manslaughter by omission 23
6 Theft
6.1 Actus reus of theft 47
6.2 Mens rea of theft 58
v
BRIEFCASE on Criminal Law
8 Self-Defence
8.1 Force justified where necessary and reasonable 87
8.2 Force justified where proportionate 89
9 Mistake
9.1 Mistake of law 93
9.2 Mistake of fact 94
10 Mental Disorder
10.1 Insanity 97
10.2 Automatism 99
11 Intoxication
11.1 Involuntary intoxication 104
11.2 Voluntary intoxication 105
11.3 Drunken mistake 108
11.4 Intoxication causing mental abnormality 109
11.5 Dutch courage 109
13 Causation
13.1 Factual causation 125
13.2 Legal causation 125
13.3 Novus actus interveniens 127
13.4 Contemporaneity 130
vi
Contents
14 Complicity
14.1 General 133
14.2 Minimal conduct 134
14.3 Withdrawal of participation 138
15 Attempts
15.1 Mens rea of attempts 141
15.2 Actus reus of attempts 143
15.3 Abandonment 147
15.4 Impossible attempts at common law 147
15.5 Impossibility after the Criminal Attempts Act 1981 149
16 Conspiracy
16.1 Statutory conspiracy to commit a criminal offence 151
16.2 Common law conspiracy to corrupt public morals and
outrage public decency 153
16.3 Common law conspiracy to defraud 154
17 Incitement
17.1 Actus reus of incitement 157
17.2 Mens rea of incitement 159
17.3 Impossibility 160
18 Omissions
18.1 Special relationship 161
18.2 Assumption of responsibility 162
18.3 Duty assumed under a contract 163
18.4 A duty arising where D creates a dangerous situation 163
18.5 Statutory duties 163
18.6 The distinction between acts and omissions 164
19 Recklessness
19.1 Subjective recklessness 167
19.2 Objective recklessness 168
19.3 The Caldwell ‘lacuna’ 169
19.4 The application of Caldwell 170
Glossary 173
Index 191
vii
Table of Cases
ix
BRIEFCASE on Criminal Law
x
Table of Cases
xi
BRIEFCASE on Criminal Law
xii
Table of Cases
xiii
BRIEFCASE on Criminal Law
xiv
Table of Cases
xv
BRIEFCASE on Criminal Law
xvii
BRIEFCASE on Criminal Law
xviii
Table of Cases
xix
BRIEFCASE on Criminal Law
xx
Table of Statutes
xxi
BRIEFCASE on Criminal Law
xxii
1 Murder and Intention
1
BRIEFCASE on Criminal Law
2
Murder and Intention
Note
See Woollin (1998), below. Per Lord Steyn: ‘There was widespread and
severe criticism of the second part of the decision in Smith. In retrospect,
it is now clear the criminal law was set on a wrong course. By s 8 of the
Criminal Justice Act 1967, Parliament reversed the effect of Smith.’ See,
also, Frankland and Moore (1987), which held that holding (2) above was
in error.
3
BRIEFCASE on Criminal Law
Cunningham (1981) HL
D attacked V in a pub, hitting him repeatedly with a chair, which resulted
in V’s death.
Held D was guilty of murder. Intention to cause grievous bodily harm,
but not to cause death, is sufficient to establish the mens rea for murder. Per
Lord Hailsham LC: ‘... malice aforethought has never been limited to the
intention to kill or to endanger life.’ Per Lord Edmund-Davies (dissenting):
I find it strange passing that a person can be convicted of murder if death results
from, say, his intentional breaking of another’s arm, it no doubt constituting
‘really serious harm’. But I recognise the force of the contrary view that the
outcome of intentionally inflicting serious harm can be so unpredictable that
anyone prepared to act so wickedly has little ground for complaint if, where
death results, he is convicted and punished as severely as one who intended to
kill.
Note
The House of Lords would overrule its own test of ‘natural consequence’
in Hancock and Shankland, below.
4
Murder and Intention
Note
See the affirmation and modification of this model direction in Woollin
(1998), below.
Woollin (1998) HL
D lost his temper and threw his son aged three months on to a hard
surface, resulting in his fractured skull and death.
Held D was not guilty of murder. Per Lord Steyn: a foresight of
‘substantial risk’ will not constitute murder, because it ‘blur[s] the line
between intention and recklessness, and hence between murder and
manslaughter ... Lord Lane’s judgment in Nedrick [(1986), above] provided
valuable assistance to trial judges. The model direction is by now a tried
and tested formula. Trial judges ought to continue to use it, subject to [the
following] observations on matters of detail’: namely, the words ‘to find’
should replace Lord Lane’s words ‘to infer’ under (A) [referring to excerpt
5
BRIEFCASE on Criminal Law
provided in Nedrick (1986), above]; and the first sentence in (B) ‘does not
form part of the model direction’.
Walker and Hayles (1990) CA
W and H threw V from a third floor balcony. V was not killed.
Held W and H were guilty of attempted murder.
... once one departs from absolute certainty, there is bound to be a question of
degree. Reading Lord Scarman’s speech in Hancock and [reading] Nedrick, we
are not persuaded that it is only when death is a virtual certainty that the jury
can infer intention to kill. Providing the dividing line between intention and
recklessness is never blurred, and provided it is made clear ... that it is a
question for the jury to infer from the degree of probability in the particular case
whether the defendant intended to kill, we would not regard the use of the
words ‘very high degree of probability’ as a misdirection [per Lloyd LJ].
Note
Section 1 of the Homicide Act 1957 abolished what was commonly
referred to as constructive malice, or the murder felony rule;
constructing or imputing malice aforethought de jure where it did not
exist de facto, in circumstances where, typically, the defendant caused
death during the course of his carrying out a felony which involved
violence. Under the abolished rule, this would constitute murder,
despite the absence of an intention to kill or cause grievous bodily harm.
6
2 Voluntary Manslaughter
2.1 Provocation
Note
The reduction of murder to manslaughter by reason of provocation is
governed by s 3 of the the Homicide Act 1957. It entails, first, a subjective
determination of whether D was in fact provoked to lose self-control
(‘whether by things done or by things said or by both together’) and,
secondly, an objective determination of ‘whether the provocation was
enough to make a reasonable man do as [D] did’.
7
BRIEFCASE on Criminal Law
once in the stomach, causing his death. D initially told the police that she
wanted to kill him.
Held D was guilty of murder. To establish provocation, there must be a
‘sudden and temporary loss of self-control’ (per Devlin J in Duffy (1949)).
Per Beldam LJ, in cases involving a history of domestic violence, ‘... the
question for the jury is whether at the moment the fatal blow was struck,
the accused had been deprived for that moment of the self-control which
previously he or she had been able to exercise’.
Q D’s confessed desire to kill her husband aside, why are these facts not
sufficient to establish provocation?
Note
See Thornton (No 2) (1995), below, wherein the conviction in Thornton
(No 1) (1992) was referred to the Court of Appeal by the Secretary of State
for the Home Department pursuant to s 17 of the Criminal Appeal Act
1968, based primarily upon further medical evidence and its impact on
the defence of provocation.
Ahluwalia (1993) CA
D, subjected to 10 years of spousal violence and degradation, threw petrol
in her husband’s bedroom and set it alight, causing his death.
Held D was not guilty of murder; a retrial was ordered. Per Lord Taylor
CJ:
[1] Only Parliament, not the courts, could permit a provocation defence in
circumstances of a ‘slow-burn’ reaction [to long term spousal violence] rather
8
Voluntary Manslaughter
than by an immediate loss of control. [2] The subjective element in the defence
of provocation would not as a matter of law be negatived simply because of the
delayed reaction in such cases, provided that there was at the time of the killing
a ‘sudden and temporary loss of self-control’ caused by the alleged provocation.
However, the longer the delay and the stronger the evidence of deliberation on
the part of the defendant, the more likely it will be that the prosecution will
negative provocation. [3] No evidence was adduced at trial that D suffered from
a post-traumatic stress disorder or ‘battered woman syndrome’, so as to effect
the characteristics relevant to the reasonableness of D’s actions under the
second part of the provocation test [see 2.1.2, below].
Note
The Court of Appeal admitted evidence at the appeal level, quashing the
murder condition on the basis of D’s depressive condition. At retrial, her
plea of manslaughter by defence of diminished responsibility (see 2.2,
below) was accepted.
Note
This latter proposition was overruled by the House of Lords in Camplin,
below, as modified by the Homicide Act 1957 (see 2.1, above).
Brown (1972) CA
D accused his wife of adultery, resulting in a violent struggle between the
two. D claimed he blacked out shortly before cutting her throat with a
razor and causing her death.
Held D was guilty of murder. The manner of retaliation to the
provocation is relevant to determining the reasonableness of D’s actions.
9
BRIEFCASE on Criminal Law
10
Voluntary Manslaughter
Johnson (1989) CA
D and V were drinking at a nightclub. V’s girlfriend taunted D, who
proceeded to threaten both her and V himself. When D attempted to leave
the club, V poured beer over D and pinned him against the wall,
whereupon D was attacked by V’s girlfriend. D stabbed V, causing his
death.
Held D was guilty of manslaughter, not murder. The presence of prior
fault does not ipso facto vitiate provocation. Per Watkins LJ:
... whether or not there were elements in [D’s] conduct which justified the
conclusion that he had started the trouble and induced others, including [V], to
react in the way they did ... the defence of provocation should have been left to
the jury.
Clarke (1991) CA
V told her boyfriend, D, that she was having an abortion. D lost self-
control, hitting and then strangling V, the act perhaps killing her. D then
panicked and electrocuted V with live wires from a lamp.
Held D was guilty of murder. Provided that the conduct causing death
was part of one continuing assault, the jury should look at everything the
accused had done in considering whether a reasonable man would have
acted the same way. However, some factors (for example, disposing of the
body) may be too remote for consideration.
Q Since provocation is concerned with acts causing homicide, what
relevance is there to acts ex post facto the homicide?
Egan (1992) CA
D, said to be mentally unstable, was intoxicated when he forcibly entered
the bungalow of a 78 year old widow, severely assaulting and killing her.
Held D was guilty of murder. Following Gittens (1984), a jury should be
directed to disregard the effects of alcohol or drugs and determine if the
combined effect of any abnormalities of mind was substantially to impair
D’s responsibility.
Ahluwalia (1993) CA
See 2.1.1, above.
Q Should ‘battered woman syndrome’ be a relevant characteristic, akin
to an immutable characteristic (as in Newell, above), going to the
reasonableness of D’s actions?
Morhall (1995) HL
D was addicted to glue sniffing, and had killed V after he had nagged D
over a protracted period about his habit of glue sniffing.
Held D was guilty of manslaughter, not murder. The reasonable person
is, per Lord Goff:
11
BRIEFCASE on Criminal Law
12
Voluntary Manslaughter
Horrex (1999) CA
D, V and G were all vagrants living in Oxford. D had a strong emotional
attachment to G, and described her as a ‘mother figure’. D was also having
a sexual relationship with V. After V had attacked G, D became angry and
had a fight with V. V died and D was charged with murder. At trial, the
defence of provocation was left to the jury. D was convicted and appealed,
claiming that D’s feelings for G should have been considered by the jury
in applying the objective Camplin test for provocation.
Held The word ‘characteristic’ should not be applied to affectionate
feelings. Such emotions which commonly arise in close relationships could
not themselves amount to a characteristic for the purpose of the test under
s 3 of the Homicide Act 1957, as opposed to medical or other evidence,
which showed that D was distinguished from other ordinary members of
the community.
2.1.3 Proportionality
Rampharry (1999) PC
D accused his ex-wife of promiscuity, and alleged that she had thrust a
knife in his face. D alleged a struggle, then ‘pounded’ her with the knife.
She died of stabbing wounds to the chest.
Held D was guilty of murder. Regardless of whether provocation
actually occurred, D’s response cannot be disproportionate to the
provocation. Whether ‘the retaliation of the accused must be proportionate
to the provocative acts’ was to be considered in the context of ‘the reaction
to be expected of the ordinary person’ (per Sir Leggatt).
Q Are not most homicides ipso facto disproportionate to the
provocation?
13
BRIEFCASE on Criminal Law
or injury, and that the said abnormality substantially impaired his mental
responsibility for his acts in doing or being a party to a killing. (2) An
abnormality of the mind is to be defined widely, per Lord Parker CJ: ‘... a
state of mind so different from that of ordinary human beings that the
reasonable man would term it “abnormal” and covering all cognitive
aspects, from perception to rationality and “will power”.’
Note
Although manslaughter was substituted for murder, D was still
sentenced by Lord Parker CJ to imprisonment for life.
Tandy (1989) CA
D, an alcoholic, had drunk nearly a bottle of vodka when she strangled her
daughter.
Held D was guilty of murder. Alcoholism or drug addiction is relevant
to determining an abnormality of the mind only as a cause of diminished
responsibility, not an effect. Per Watkins LJ:
If the alcoholism has reached the level at which her brain had been injured by
the repeated insult from intoxicants so that there was gross impairment of her
judgment and emotional responses, then the defence of diminished
responsibility was available to her ... if her drinking was involuntary, then her
abnormality of the mind at the time of the act of strangulation was induced by
her condition of alcoholism.
Ahluwalia (1993) CA
See 2.1.1, above.
Hobson (1997) CA
D had killed her alcoholic partner after a long and abusive relationship,
and was convicted of murder. At trial, she pleaded self-defence, and the
defence of provocation was also left to the jury. She appealed against her
conviction on the grounds that she was suffering from ‘battered woman
syndrome’ at the time of the offence, and this gave rise to the defence of
14
Voluntary Manslaughter
15
3 Involuntary Manslaughter
Lamb (1967) CA
D, in jest, pointed a revolver at his best friend V, and pulled the trigger,
believing that it would not fire because no bullet was opposite the barrel.
As a revolver, the gun did fire, killing V.
Held D was not guilty of unlawful act manslaughter. (1) ‘... it is long
settled that it is not in point to consider whether an act is unlawful merely
from the angle of civil liabilities’ (per Sachs LJ). (2) For the act to be
unlawful, it must constitute at least a technical assault, which was not
established by the evidence. (3) Regarding criminal negligence, D might
properly be convicted if his belief that there was no danger in pulling the
trigger was formed in a criminally negligent way.
17
BRIEFCASE on Criminal Law
Jennings (1990) CA
D was restrained by his brother V from attacking E with a sheath knife,
which ended up entering V’s body and killing him.
Held D was not guilty of unlawful act manslaughter. It was not
established at trial that carrying a sheath knife for protection was an
unlawful act – a necessary prerequisite for this offence.
Q Would D be guilty of manslaughter by gross negligence (see Andrews
v DPP, above)?
Scarlett (1993) CA
D, a publican, ‘bundled’ a drunk customer towards the exit of the pub,
causing him to fall backwards down some steps to his death.
Held D was not guilty of unlawful act manslaughter. (1) The question
whether the appellant’s action amounted to an assault and was unlawful
and the question whether it was dangerous should have been considered
separately by the jury. (2) Per Beldam LJ, the jury ought not convict D
‘... unless they are satisfied that the degree of force used was plainly more
than was called for by the circumstances as he believed them to be, and,
provided he believed the circumstances called for the degree of force used,
he is not to be convicted, even if his belief is unreasonable’. (3) Per curiam,
the present law relating to unlawful act manslaughter is in urgent need of
reform.
18
Involuntary Manslaughter
Goodfellow (1986) CA
D wished to move from his council house but could not, so he set fire to it
as part of a scam. His wife, son and another woman died.
Held D was guilty of manslaughter by either unlawful act or
recklessness. Per Lord Lane CJ: (1) ‘What [Walter LJ in Dalby] was, we
believe, intending to say was that there must be no fresh intervening cause
between the act and the death.’ (2) D would be liable for reckless
manslaughter if D either was inadvertent as to the risk of injury to others
entailed in setting fire to the house, in circumstances where ‘it would have
been obvious that there was some risk’, or was aware of the risk, but
adverted to it nonetheless: ‘... in the circumstances of this case, if there was
risk of injury at all to the people upstairs, then it must follow that there
was a risk of death.’
Q Does holding (1) of Lord Lane CJ render the ‘directed at’ requirement
of Dalby, above, meaningless, or at least redundant?
Note
See, also, Pagett, 13.2.1, below.
19
BRIEFCASE on Criminal Law
20
Involuntary Manslaughter
Ball (1989) CA
D loaded a gun with two cartridges taken from his pocket, containing both
live and blank cartridges. D claimed to intend only to frighten V by using
a blank cartridge, but the gun fired and killed V.
Held D was guilty of unlawful act manslaughter. The reasonable man
cannot be endowed with D’s mistaken belief. Per Stuart-Smith LJ: ‘[Once it
is] established ... that the act was both unlawful and that he intended to
commit the assaults, the question whether the act is a dangerous one is to
be judged not by the appellant’s appreciation, but by that of the sober and
reasonable man, and it is impossible to impute into this appreciation the
mistaken belief of [D] that what he was doing was not dangerous, because
he thought he had a blank cartridge in the chamber. At that stage, [D’s]
intention, foresight or knowledge is irrelevant.’
Q In order to establish the intention to commit the assault, must not
some level of knowledge be imputed to the reasonable person,
including mistakes of fact?
Watson (1989) CA
D and E threw a brick through the window of V’s house and entered it,
confronting V, who was 87 years old and suffering from a severe heart
condition. After verbally abusing V, they left, and she died 90 minutes later
of a heart attack.
Held D was not guilty of manslaughter [on other grounds]. The
reasonable person in this case would be apprised of ‘the whole of the
burglarious intrusion’ (per Lord Lane CJ), including the observation that V
was very elderly and frail.
Q If the burglary was complete upon trespass into V’s house, does the
wider factual picture considered here contradict the test in Ball,
above?
21
BRIEFCASE on Criminal Law
Goodfellow (1986) CA
See 3.1.2, above.
Adomako (1994) HL
D, an anaesthetist, failed to observe during an eye operation that the tube
inserted in V’s mouth had become detached from the ventilator, causing V
to suffer a cardiac arrest and eventually die.
Held D was guilty of manslaughter by gross negligence, which is
established where D breached a duty of care towards V that caused V’s
death, and that amounted to gross negligence. ‘Gross negligence’ depends
(per Lord MacKay LC) ‘... on the seriousness of the breach of the duty
committed by the defendant, in all the circumstances in which he was
placed when it occurred and whether, having regard to the risk of death
involved, the conduct of the defendant was so bad in all the circumstances
as to amount, in the jury’s judgment, to a criminal act or omission’.
Q Is the test for gross negligence circular as it presently stands?
Note
The House of Lords overruled its previous decision in Seymour (1983),
thereby reducing the ambit of reckless manslaughter, as set out in Lawrence,
above, to criminal damage (Caldwell (1982)). See below, Chapter 19.
22
Involuntary Manslaughter
Bothwell (1999) CA
D struck V at 30 miles per hour, and dragged him for 60 feet without
stopping.
Held D was guilty of manslaughter. Per Beldam LJ: ‘... as regards the
more complex analysis of the word “reckless”, a jury is well able to
understand the ordinary English word reckless used in its ordinary sense.’
R v DPP ex p Jones (1996)
D, a landlord, failed to implement fire safety precautions required by the
local authority. A fire took place in the building, killing a tenant.
Held D is not guilty of manslaughter. Per Auld LJ, judges should not
apply ‘... Lord Mackay’s reasoning in Adomako [above] as if it were a
statutory formulation to be incanted to demonstrate its application ... the
necessarily imprecise Adomako test [is] ... whether there was a realistic
prospect of proving [that the defendant’s] breach of duty was so serious or
“gross” or so bad in all the circumstances as to amount... to a criminal act’.
23
BRIEFCASE on Criminal Law
24
4 Offences Against the Person and
Consent
4.1 Assault
25
BRIEFCASE on Criminal Law
26
Offences Against the Person and Consent
Little (1992)
An information alleged that: ‘L ... did unlawfully assault and batter J.’
Held L’s conviction was quashed for duplicity. The offence of assault is
separate from battery de jure, and both are statutory offences under s 39 of
the Criminal Justice Act 1988.
Ireland; Burstow (1997) HL
For facts, see 4.3.1, below.
Per Lord Steyn:
The proposition that a gesture may amount to an assault, but that words can
never suffice, is unrealistic and indefensible. A thing said is also a thing done.
There is no reason why something said should be incapable of causing an
apprehension of immediate personal violence.
Per Lord Hope:
... it is not true to say that mere words or gestures can never constitute an assault
... The words or gestures must be seen in their whole context … In my opinion,
silent telephone calls of this nature are just as capable as words or gestures, said
or made in the presence of the victim, of causing an apprehension of immediate
and unlawful violence.
Constanza (1997) CA
For a period of nearly two years, D ‘stalked’ V by following her home,
making silent telephone calls, sending over 800 letters, driving past her
home repeatedly and writing offensive words on her front door. V was
diagnosed as suffering from clinical depression and anxiety as a direct
result of D’s behaviour. V claimed that she thought D might attack her at
any time. D was convicted of assault occasioning actual bodily harm, but
appealed on the ground that his behaviour did not constitute an assault, as
V did not apprehend ‘immediate’ force.
Held The prosecution merely had to prove that D caused a fear of
violence at some time, either immediately or in the near future. The fact
that D lived near V (which made V think that something might happen at
any time) was sufficient evidence for the jury to find that she feared
immediate violence.
Note
‘Stalking’ in these cases resulted in convictions for assault occasioning
actual bodily harm under s 47 of the Offences Against the Person Act
1861. However, a new offence of harassment was created in the
Protection from Harassment Act 1997. Section 4 defines harassment as
causing ‘another to fear, on at least two occasions, that violence will be
used against him’. Had Ireland; Burstow and Constanza been charged with
this new offence, there would have been no need to prove an assault.
27
BRIEFCASE on Criminal Law
4.2 Battery
28
Offences Against the Person and Consent
K (1990) CA
D had placed acid in a hot air dryer to conceal it from his teachers. When
V next used the dryer, he suffered burns on his face.
Held D was guilty of assault occasioning bodily harm. D had ‘just as
truly assault[ed] the next user of the machine [V] as if [D] had himself
switched the machine on’ (per Parker LJ).
Lynsey (1995) CA
D spat in the face of a police officer who was arresting him. The spittle hit
the police officer on the bridge of his nose and went in his eyes. D was
charged with battery.
Held Despite the fact that D did not touch V, physical force was used
and this constituted a battery.
Note
Harm to V need not have been proven if the charge was simply battery.
Touching is not necessary, but the force must be physical.
Brown (1993) HL
Five men engaged in various homosexual sado-masochistic practises in
private, including genital torture and involving the infliction of various
injuries, none requiring medical treatment.
Held all five were guilty of assault occasioning actual bodily harm and
three also of unlawful wounding. (1) Absence of consent is not an element
of assault occasioning actual bodily harm or unlawful wounding.
(2) Consent is a defence to the infliction of bodily harm in the course of
some lawful activity, but ought not be extended to sado-masochistic
encounters.
Note
Lord Mustill, dissenting, held that ‘these consensual private acts are
[not] offences against the existing law of violence’, and Lord Slynn,
consenting, found no compelling reasons for creating criminal liability.
29
BRIEFCASE on Criminal Law
Chan-Fook (1994) CA
D subjected V to aggressive questioning about the theft of a ring, and then
dragged V to an upstairs room and locked him in. Fearing D’s return, V
escaped through a window, causing injury.
Held D was not guilty of assault occasioning actual bodily harm.
(1) ‘Actual bodily harm’ is capable of including psychiatric injury, but does
not include emotions, such as fear or panic, nor states of mind that are not
themselves evidence of some identifiable clinical condition. Apart from
expert evidence to this effect, no mention should be made to the jury
regarding psychiatric injury. Per Hobhouse LJ:
30
Offences Against the Person and Consent
The body of the victim includes all parts of the body, including his organs, his
nervous system and his brain. Bodily injury therefore may include injury to any
of those parts of the body responsible for his mental health and other faculties.
(2) Per curiam: the phrase ‘state of mind’ is unscientific, confusing and
should be avoided when considering whether psychiatric injury has been
caused.
Ireland; Burstow (1997) HL
D1 made repeated silent telephone calls to three victims. In some calls, he
resorted to heavy breathing. V suffered psychiatric illness as a result in all
three cases. D1 was convicted of s 47 of the Offences Against the Person
Act 1861. D2 stalked V for eight months, resulting in V’s severe depression.
D2 was convicted of s 20 of the Offences Against the Person Act 1861. Both
appealed on the ground that ‘bodily harm, under both s 20 and s 47 could
not include psychiatric illness’.
Held Per Lord Steyn:
In my view, the ruling in [Chan-Fook] was based on principled and cogent
reasoning and it marked a sound and essential clarification of the law. I would
hold that ‘bodily harm’ in ss 18, 20 and 47 must be interpreted so as to include
recognisable psychiatric illness.
Morris (1998) CA
D had ‘stalked’ V, causing her to suffer pains in her joints and abdomen,
sleeplessness, tension and fear of being alone. At D’s trial for assault
occasioning actual bodily harm, the judge refused an adjournment for the
prosecution to adduce psychiatric evidence of V’s symptoms, because he
thought her non-physical injuries could not amount to actual bodily harm.
Held In a case such as this, where V claimed to have suffered non-
physical injuries as a result of a non-physical assault, psychiatric evidence
as to whether the injuries may have been caused by D’s conduct must be
adduced before the case goes before the jury. The evidence must be sought,
notwithstanding that the injuries were not directly inflicted as they might
have been in the case of physical injuries.
Q Was it reasonable on these facts to expect her to jump out of the car?
Savage; Parmenter (1992) HL
When S intentionally threw beer at V, the glass left her hand and struck V,
causing a cut. P roughly handled his child, causing the breaking of arms
and legs.
Held S was not guilty of assault occasioning actual bodily harm; P was
guilty of same. The offence requires an actus reus of assault causing bodily
harm and the mens rea for common assault. Per Lord Ackner: ‘The
prosecution are not obliged to prove that the defendant intended to cause
some actual bodily harm or was reckless as to whether such harm would
be caused.’
Chan-Fook (1994) CA
See 4.3.1, above.
Wilson (1984) HL
After D, a motorist, nearly ran down V, D got out of his car and punched
V in the face.
Held D was guilty of assault occasioning actual bodily harm. An
infliction of grievous bodily harm contra to s 20 may be committed without
establishing first an assault, per Lord Roskill, citing Salisbury (1976):
... grievous bodily harm may be inflicted ... either where the accused has directly
and violently ‘inflicted’ it by assaulting the victim, or where the accused has
‘inflicted’ it by doing something, intentionally, which, though it is not itself a
direct application of force to the body of the victim, does directly result in force
being applied violently to the body of the victim, so that he suffers grievous
bodily harm.
32
Offences Against the Person and Consent
Gelder (1994) CA
D made persistent indecent telephone calls to V, causing psychiatric injury.
Held D was not guilty of assault causing grievous bodily harm with
intent, contra to s 18 of the Offences Against the Person Act 1861. The jury
was misdirected as to whether D intended the resulting injury.
Note
The Court of Appeal did not determine whether such psychiatric injury
could constitute grievous bodily harm.
Mandair (1994) HL
See 4.5.1, below.
Ireland; Burstow (1997) HL
See 4.3.1, above.
33
BRIEFCASE on Criminal Law
Note
Holding (1) was affirmed by Savage; Parmenter (4.3.2, above).
Morrison (1989) CA
D was seized by a police officer who stated she was arresting D, who then
dived through a window pane, dragging her through the glass, resulting
in serious facial cuts.
Held D was not guilty of a s 18 offence of unlawfully and maliciously
wounding a person with intent to resist the lawful apprehension of the
person.
Q Is this holding inconsistent with Savage; Parmenter (4.3.2, above) or
does ‘maliciously’ require foresight of actual consequences in
instances of resisting arrest?
4.7 Consent
35
BRIEFCASE on Criminal Law
sustains the injury is no defence to the person who inflicts the injury, if the
injury is of such a nature, or is inflicted under such circumstances, that its
infliction is injurious to the public as well as to the person injured.
Q How far has this public interest test been applied in the cases below?
Attorney General’s Reference (No 6 of 1980) (1981) CA
Two youths settled an argument by fighting on the street.
Held The youths may be liable for assault. Per Lord Lane CJ: (1) One
cannot consent to injuries sustained in a fight because ‘it was not in the
public interest that people should try to cause or should cause each other
actual bodily harm for no good reason’. (2) The holding in (1) does not
affect ‘the accepted legality of properly conducted games and sports,
lawful chastisement or correction, reasonable surgical interference,
dangerous exhibitions, etc. These apparent exceptions can be justified as
involving the exercise of a legal right ... or as needed in the public interest
in other cases’.
Billinghurst (1978) CC
During an off the ball incident at a rugby match, D punched V in the face,
fracturing his jaw. D was charged with s 20 of the Offences Against the
Person Act 1861. At the trial, evidence was adduced that players were
regularly punched in the course of a game. D argued in his defence that V
consented to the risk of some injury during a match.
Held The judge directed the jury that rugby was a game of physical
contact which necessarily involved the use of force. Players are deemed to
consent to force ‘of a kind which could reasonably be expected to happen
during a game’. This does not give a player a licence to use unlimited
force, and some incidents will inevitably cross the line of that to which a
player is deemed to consent. Force used outside the course of play may be
distinguished from that used during the course of play. D was convicted.
Jones (1986) CA
D and other schoolboys tossed two boys into the air, resulting in a
ruptured spleen for one and a broken arm for the other.
Held D was not guilty of assault causing grievous bodily harm, as D
ought to have been able to raise the defence of consent at trial.
Q Is this result not prima facie inconsistent with Attorney General’s
Reference (No 6 of 1980), above?
Boyea (1992) CA
D pinned down V on her bed and forced his fingers into her vagina.
Held D was guilty of indecent assault. Per Glidewell LJ: ‘... an assault
intended or which is likely to cause bodily harm, accompanied by
indecency, is an offence irrespective of consent, provided that the injury is
not “transient or trifling”.’
36
Offences Against the Person and Consent
Aitken (1992) CA
The defendants were RAF officers. At a party in the officers’ mess, some
horseplay ensued. They set fire to V, who was very drunk. V suffered
severe burns. The Ds were charged with s 20 of the Offences Against the
Person Act 1861, but claimed that their actions were normal horseplay and
that V consented.
Held D was not guilty of an offence of assault if he believed that V
consented to the activity. As V had taken part in other horseplay activities
during the evening, it was possible that his continued presence was an
acceptance by him that he consented to such an activity. D had genuinely
believed that V consented and, therefore, his conviction was quashed.
Slingsby (1995) QBD
During consensual sexual activity, D inserted his hand into V’s vagina and
rectum. The ring on D’s finger caused multiple cuts to V. V was unaware
of the seriousness of the injuries and later died from septicaemia. D was
charged with unlawful act manslaughter (the unlawful act in this case
being battery). D claimed that V had consented to the battery and it was
therefore not unlawful.
Held Per Judge J:
It would … be contrary to principle to treat as criminal, activity which would
not otherwise amount to assault, merely because in the course of the activity an
injury occurred.
Q If D had intended to cause the injury in this case, would the judge
have treated the consent issue differently?
Brown (1993) HL
See 4.2.1, above.
Brown v United Kingdom (1997) ECHR
D appealed against his conviction for assault occasioning actual bodily
harm on the grounds that the judgment breached Art 8 of the European
Convention on Human Rights. D claimed that the sexual acts to which the
charge applied had all taken place in private and were fully consensual.
Held The interference with D’s private life was justified as it was in
pursuance of a legitimate aim, namely, the protection of the physical and
moral health of the public.
37
BRIEFCASE on Criminal Law
Wilson (1996) CA
D branded his initials on his wife’s buttocks with a hot knife. He was
convicted of assault occasioning actual bodily harm. He appealed on the
grounds that she consented.
Held Per Russell LJ:
Mrs Wilson not only consented to that which the appellant did, she instigated
it. There was no aggressive intent on the part of the appellant ... We are firmly
of the opinion that it is not in the public interest that activities such as the
appellant’s in this appeal should amount to criminal behaviour. Consensual
activity between husband and wife, in the privacy of the matrimonial home, is
not, in our judgment, a proper matter for criminal investigation, let alone
criminal prosecution.
Richardson (1999) CA
D was a registered dental practitioner who was suspended from practice
by the General Dental Council. Whilst suspended, she continued to carry
out dentistry on patients, one of whom complained to the police. D was
convicted of assault occasioning actual bodily harm. She appealed on the
ground that the patients consented to the treatment, notwithstanding that
they did not know that D had been suspended.
Held Consent is only invalidated where there is fraud as to the identity
of the perpetrator or fraud as to the nature of the act consented to. In this
case, D had mislead patients as to her qualifications and not as to her
identity. Therefore, the consent of the patients was valid and provided a
defence.
38
5 Rape and Indecent Assault
5.1.1 Unlawful
R v R (1991) HL
D was convicted of attempting to rape his wife. He appealed on the
ground that a husband could not be liable for raping his wife in common
law.
Held Although there was clear precedent in common law that a
husband cannot be guilty of raping his wife, since sexual intercourse
between husband and wife was not unlawful, ‘... the common law is ...
capable of evolving in the light of changing social, economic and cultural
developments’ (per Lord Keith). In today’s society, marriage is a
partnership of equals and the common law proposition that, by marriage,
the wife gives her irrevocable consent to sexual intercourse with her
husband is ‘quite unacceptable’. The word ‘unlawful’ in s 1(1) of the
Sexual Offences Act 1956 can no longer rationally mean outside the bonds
of marriage. The use of the word ‘unlawful’ adds nothing to the definition
of rape and, therefore, there is nothing which prevents a husband being
liable for raping his wife.
Note
This judgment was effectively codified in s 142 of the Criminal Justice
and Public Order Act 1994, which drops the word ‘unlawful’ from the
definition of rape and refers merely to sexual intercourse without
consent.
39
BRIEFCASE on Criminal Law
vagina. D was charged with rape, but claimed that penile penetration of an
artificial vagina could not constitute rape.
Held Where the Criminal Justice and Public Order Act 1994 had
extended the definition to rape to include anal rape of a man, it also
included ‘vaginal’ rape of a man. D was therefore convicted.
40
Rape and Indecent Assault
41
BRIEFCASE on Criminal Law
Linekar (1995) CA
D agreed to pay £25 to have sexual intercourse with a prostitute. After
sexual intercourse had taken place, D made off without paying. V alleged
that she had been raped, claiming that she would not have consented to
the intercourse unless she had been paid in advance and D had worn a
condom. The jury were directed that such fraud on the part of D vitiated
V’s consent.
Held The only types of frauds which could vitiate consent were those
as to the nature of the act itself or as to the identity of the perpetrator. In
this case, fraud as to payment for the intercourse did not vitiate V’s
consent.
Elbekkay (1995) CA
V lived with her boyfriend and D was staying with them. V and D were
drunk. V claimed that, during the night, she was awakened by D getting
into her bed and touching her. She thought it was her boyfriend and D and
V had sexual intercourse. When V realised D was not her boyfriend, she
punched him. D was charged with rape, but claimed that V consented,
even when she knew who he was.
Held Where the consent of a woman is obtained by impersonating her
boyfriend, that consent is invalid. This rule no longer merely applies to
defendants who impersonated the woman’s husband.
Larter and Castleton (1995) CA
Both defendants were convicted of raping a 14 year old girl. The girl was
alleged to have been asleep at the time of the rape and claimed she knew
nothing of what happened. The defendants claimed that the judge should
have directed the jury that the prosecution had to prove that V either
physically resisted, or was not in a position to decide whether she
consented or not.
Held The essential element in the definition of rape is now the absence
of consent. The jury should be directed that absence of consent is to be
given its ordinary meaning; there is a difference between consent and
submission. Every consent involves a submission, but a mere submission
does not necessarily involve consent.
42
Rape and Indecent Assault
Held If D honestly believes that V was consenting, he lacks the mens rea
for rape. The belief does not have to be reasonable. ‘It seems to me to
follow as a matter of inexorable logic that there is no room either for a
“defence” of honest belief or mistake, or of a defence of honest and
reasonable belief or mistake’ (per Lord Hailsham). If D honestly believes
that V was consenting, the prosecution have failed to prove the required
mens rea of rape and, therefore, a conviction cannot follow. The presence or
absence of reasonable grounds for such a belief is irrelevant, unless the
jury consider that the belief is so unreasonable that it is not honestly held
by D.
See, also, 9.2.1, below.
Q Why were the convictions of the defendants upheld in this case and
what mechanism allowed the House of Lords to come to such a
decision?
Taylor (1985) CA
D was charged with rape. The issue was whether V consented to the sexual
intercourse. D admitted he had been drinking, but maintained that he
genuinely believed V was consenting.
Held It was not necessary to give a detailed direction on mistaken belief
in the victim’s consent in most cases. Unless there is an acute dispute in the
evidence, in most cases, the jury should take the view that if the victim’s
account of the events is honest, then there is no room for a mistaken belief
in his or her consent on the part of the defendant.
Note
See, also, Haughihan (1985).
43
BRIEFCASE on Criminal Law
44
Rape and Indecent Assault
Pratt (1984) CC
D was charged with indecent assault on two 13 year old boys. The two
boys had been fishing at night. D appeared wearing a stocking mask and
threatened them by pretending he had a gun. D forced the boys to almost
completely undress so as to reveal their private parts. As each boy
undressed, the other was forced to shine a torch on him. D did not touch
the boys and stood a short distance away. D claimed his only motive was
to search the boys for cannabis which he thought they had stolen from
him.
Held As well as proving the existence of a common law assault and
objective indecency as a question of fact, it is also necessary, for a charge of
indecent assault, for the prosecution to prove a mens rea in respect of the
indecency. If there is no indecent intention, then there cannot be an
indecent assault.
45
6 Theft
6.1.1 Appropriation
With consent?
Lawrence (1972) HL
A tourist, who spoke little English, arrived in London. He approached a
taxi driver (D) to take him to an address. On arrival, the tourist offered D
£1, but D took a further £6 from the tourist’s wallet. The correct fare was
10 s 6 d. D was convicted of theft of the £6 and appealed on the grounds
that the tourist had consented to him taking the money from the wallet
and, therefore, he could not have appropriated it.
Held For the purposes of s 1 of the Theft Act 1968, it was not necessary
for the prosecution to establish that the appropriation had taken place
without the owner’s consent. Belief or absence of belief that the owner
consented to the appropriation may be relevant to the issue of dishonesty,
but not to the issue of appropriation.
Dobson v General Accident Fire and Life Assurance Corp (1990) CA
The plaintiff had a home contents policy which covered him against theft.
When P advertised some jewellery for sale, it was bought by a rogue with
stolen building society cheques. P claimed under his insurance policy, but
the insurance company argued that his loss had not been caused by theft,
because the appropriation took place with P’s consent.
Held In order for there to be a theft, there must have been a dishonest
appropriation of the items by the purchaser. Following the authority of
Lawrence (above), the purchaser did assume the rights of the owner
dishonestly and with intention to permanently deprive P of them. The fact
that appropriation took place with P’s consent was irrelevant.
Morris (1983) HL
D took articles from a supermarket shelf and switched price labels with
those from lower priced goods. D was detected before he got to the
checkout. D was convicted of theft.
47
BRIEFCASE on Criminal Law
Held The true meaning of the word ‘appropriation’ in s 3(1) of the Theft
Act 1968 meant an adverse usurpation or interference with some (although
not all) of the rights of the owner, and could not be committed with the
express or implied consent of the owner. Therefore, the act of switching
labels, either alone or in conjunction with some other act, did constitute an
appropriation. Taking articles off the shelf in a self-service supermarket
did not, in itself, constitute an appropriation because this was not an act
which was adverse to the owner’s rights; it was an act for which the
shopper had implied authority. Furthermore, the act of switching the
labels was not, in itself, an appropriation, unless it was combined with
some other act which went beyond the implied authority of the owner,
such as attempting to pay the lower price at the checkout.
Skipp (1975) CA
D posed as a haulage contractor and agreed to deliver two loads of
oranges and onions from London to a customer in Leicester. Having
collected the goods, he made off with them and did not deliver them to the
customer. He had the intention to steal them from the outset.
Held An assumption of the rights of the owner did not necessarily take
place at the same time as an intent to permanently deprive the owner of it.
Although D intended to steal the goods from the outset, he did not
appropriate the goods until they were all loaded, and probably not until
they had been diverted from the route to the agreed destination. Until the
goods were diverted from this destination, D was acting with the authority
of the owner.
Meech (1974) CA
D was asked to cash a cheque for P and return the cash to P. D cashed the
cheque, but organised a fake robbery by his friends in order to steal the
money. D was convicted of theft.
Held The appropriation took place at the time the fake robbery took
place, or was at least arranged. Until that time, although D had the
intention to steal, he was acting with the authority of P.
Eddy v Niman (1981) QBD
D went into a supermarket intending to steal goods. He placed a number
of items in a trolley, but changed his mind about stealing them before he
reached the checkout. He abandoned the goods in the trolley and left the
shop. D was acquitted at trial for theft on the grounds that there had been
no appropriation.
Held The question to be asked about appropriation was: had the
defendant done some overt act inconsistent with the true owner’s rights?
Since D in this case had merely taken goods from the shelf and placed them
in a trolley provided by the store, he had not done any overt act inconsistent
with the rights of the owner. Therefore, D had been rightly acquitted.
48
Theft
Fritschy (1985) CA
D was convicted of theft of a quantity of Krugerrands. He dealt in coins for
a Dutch company. D bought 70 coins for $49,000, which were to be held in
Holland until they could be transferred to a Swiss bank. D told H to
remove the coins from the Dutch company, claiming he had doubts about
the company’s financial standing. D, in accordance with H’s wishes,
collected the money in England, but did not take it to H’s Swiss bank.
Held There was no evidence of any act by D in England which was not
expressly authorised by H. Therefore, there was no appropriation in
England.
Gomez (1992) HL
D was an assistant at an electrical shop. He was asked by B to supply
goods in exchange for two building society cheques, which D knew were
stolen. D obtained authority from the manager to supply the goods,
without telling him the cheques were stolen. D was convicted of theft. D
appealed on the grounds that there was no appropriation, as he acted with
the authority of the shop manager. The Court of Appeal allowed his
appeal, but the prosecution appealed to the House of Lords.
Held Lawrence was the appropriate authority on this issue of
appropriation, and the consent of the owner was irrelevant in deciding
whether an appropriation had taken place. Per Lord Keith:
While it was correct to say that appropriation included an act by way of adverse
interference with or usurpation of the owner’s rights, it did not necessarily
follow that no other act would amount to an appropriation and, in particular,
that no act expressly or impliedly authorised by the owner could do so ... The
decision in Morris was correct, but it was erroneous and unnecessary to indicate
that an act expressly or impliedly authorised by the owner could never amount
to an appropriation.
49
BRIEFCASE on Criminal Law
Where the thief came by property by stealing it, his later dealings with it
could not be an assumption of the rights of the owner amounting to an
appropriation, whether the theft took place in England or abroad.
Therefore, as the cars were stolen abroad where the appropriation took
place, D could not be tried for conspiracy to steal in England.
Mazo (1996) CA
D was a maid to V. D was convicted of theft after cashing cheques totalling
£37,000 made payable to her by her employer. V consented to the cheques
being cashed, but the Crown alleged that she lacked the mental capacity to
give valid consent. D appealed on the grounds that there could be no theft
if V was the donor of a gift, and that the jury had not been properly
directed on the issue V’s mental state.
Held A transaction might be theft, notwithstanding that it was done
with the owner’s consent, if that consent was induced by fraud, deception
or misrepresentation. Whilst it was necessary to consider the state of mind
of D and the circumstances of the transfer, it was also necessary to consider
whether V had a sufficient degree of understanding to make a valid gift.
The jury should have been directed to consider this; therefore, the appeal
was upheld.
Hopkins and Kendrick (1997) CA
D was convicted of conspiracy to steal. V was an old lady cared for by D.
D took control of V’s affairs when she was too frail to take care of them
herself. D took control of £127,500 of her assets and it was alleged that D
intended to steal this property. D’s behaviour included selling her stock at
a disadvantageous time and transferring the proceeds to D’s account,
refusing access to V by her friends, and changing V’s will, making D the
beneficiary. D claimed that, at all times, he had the express authority of V
and was acting in her interests. D appealed against conviction on the
grounds that the judge had not directed the jury properly on the issue of
V’s consent, and claimed that the consent of V negated any dishonesty on
D’s part.
Held There was clearly an appropriation in this case and it would be
contrary to the earlier case of Mazo to hold that the consent of V negates
dishonesty. The jury had rightly been directed to consider whether there
had been a dishonest appropriation and they concluded that there had
been. There was ample evidence in this case of both an appropriation and
V’s mental incapacity from which the jury might conclude that the
appropriation was dishonest.
Appropriation and control
Pitham and Hehl (1976) CA
M, knowing that his friend was in prison, decided to sell his furniture to
the two defendants. He took the defendants to the friend’s house and sold
50
Theft
51
BRIEFCASE on Criminal Law
Gallasso (1994) CA
D was a nurse in charge of a patient’s finances. She transferred money
from one of V’s accounts to another and was convicted of theft.
Held Per Lloyd LJ: ‘… in deciding whether, objectively, an action
amounts to an appropriation, you must not stop the camera too soon; you
are not confined to a single point of time; you may look to the
consequences.’ In this case, there was no appropriation because, looking at
the complete picture, the nurse did not assume the owner’s rights over the
money.
Governor of Pentonville Prison ex p Osman (1990) QBD
Osman applied for a writ of habeas corpus, having been detained in
custody to await his return to Hong Kong, where he was wanted on
charges of theft, fraud, bribery and other offences. It was alleged that he
had been bribed in Hong Kong, as chairman of a company (B), to make
loans to another company (C). This involved drawing on B’s bank account
in New York. He was committed by magistrates in England on the basis
that this amounted to theft of a debt owed by an American bank to its
customer, B. Osman claimed that English courts had no jurisdiction to hear
the theft case as, if any theft took place at all, it took place in New York,
where the bank withdrew the funds, and not in Hong Kong, where D
issued his instructions by telex. The court therefore had to consider where
the appropriation had taken place in order to decide whether the English
court had jurisdiction.
Held An appropriation is the adverse assumption of any of the owner’s
rights. This clearly includes the right of an owner of a debt to draw on the
bank account in question. D assumed this right by drawing funds from B’s
account and by dishonestly drawing a cheque on the account without
authorisation. Sending a telex instructing the bank to draw a cheque could
amount to an appropriation if done without authority. Therefore, theft had
been committed and took place in Hong Kong, where D telexed the
American bank with his instructions. The English court therefore had
jurisdiction.
Governor of Brixton Prison ex p Levin (1997) QBD
L brought habeas corpus proceedings, having been arrested for theft. L
had used a computer in Russia to gain unauthorised access to an American
bank and diverted funds in false accounts. The issue arose as to whether
the appropriation had taken place in America, where the accounts were
held on a computer, or in Russia, where L was typing instructions on a
keyboard.
Held The appropriation effectively took place in the USA. Per
Beldam LJ:
52
Theft
6.1.2 Property
Low v Blease (1973) QBD
D entered premises as a trespasser and made a telephone call. D was
convicted of burglary contrary to s 9(1)(b) of the Theft Act 1968, on the
basis that he had stolen electricity by using the telephone.
Held Electricity is not property for the purposes of theft.
Q What other offence in the Theft Act 1968 deals with the problem of
‘stealing’ electricity?
Oxford v Moss (1979) QBD
A student obtained a copy of an examination paper, read it and then
replaced it. He never intended to take the paper away or deprive the
university of it. He was convicted of theft of the confidential information
on the paper which was classed as intangible property.
Held Information held on a piece of paper could not amount to
intangible property according to the true interpretation of s 4 of the Theft
Act 1968.
Q Would the result of this case have been different if the student had
taken a photocopy of the paper?
Q If the information had been stored on a computer disk, could the
student be liable for an offence if he had read the paper but not
erased it or taken a print-out of it?
Q Is it ever an offence under the Theft Act 1968 to steal wild flowers or
wild animals?
Q Is it possible to ‘steal’ land and, if so, how?
Hilton (1997) CA
D was chairman of a charity. He was convicted of theft, having on a
number of occasions faxed instructions that sums of money from the
charity’s accounts be transferred to accounts of his own and of his
creditors. D appealed against conviction, claiming that the credit balance
on the charity’s account did not constitute property for the purposes of a
conviction for theft.
53
BRIEFCASE on Criminal Law
Held What was stolen in this case was the right of the charity as a
creditor to recover a debt from the bank. The credit balance is therefore a
debt or chose in action, which is property capable of being stolen. The
appeal was dismissed.
Kelly (1998) CA
D was convicted of the theft of approximately 35 human body parts from
the Royal College of Surgeons. D appealed on the ground that a human
corpse or parts of it were not property capable of being stolen.
Held The common law position that a human corpse was not property
capable of being stolen was accepted and endorsed. However, where that
corpse had been altered for the purpose of medical or scientific
examination, it became valuable and, therefore, became property capable
of being stolen. The conviction for theft was therefore upheld.
Obiter, per Rose LJ, the common law position on the possession of body
parts was subject to change in the future. Where body parts had not been
altered for medical examination, a future court may still decide that they
were property, for example, where they were required for use in an organ
transplant.
54
Theft
55
BRIEFCASE on Criminal Law
Goodwin (1996) CA
D used a Kenyan five shilling coin, which is the same size and weight as a
50 pence coin, in gaming machines in an amusement arcade. He was
convicted of going equipped for theft. D appealed on the grounds that,
after he had inserted a coin of the size, shape and weight of a 50 pence
coin, any coins which were then paid out by the machine no longer
belonged to the amusement arcade, but were the property of D. He
claimed that to hold that the coins belonged to the arcade after they had
left the machines was a contravention of s 18 of the Gaming Act 1845.
Held Appeal dismissed. D would have been trying to obtain property
belonging to the owners of the arcade in a way in which he knew he did
not have their consent, and in a way which was dishonest. Ownership of
the coins had not passed and, had the arcade owners been able to prove
that D used a Kenyan coin to obtain coins from the machines, they would
have been able to recover their money in a civil action. Section 18 of the
Gaming Act 1845 did not apply here, since there was never any gaming
contract or wager in these circumstances.
Property received under an obligation
Attorney General’s Reference (No 1 of 1985) (1985) CA
D was the manager of a public house. He was under an obligation to sell
only his employer’s beer and to pay all the profit into the employer’s
account. (The manager was salaried.) D sold other beer in the pub and
kept the profit for himself. He was charged with theft on the grounds that
the money he had received from customers for the beer belonged to the
employers under s 5(3) of the Theft Act 1968.
Held Whether or not D’s actions can constitute theft under s 5(3)
depends upon whether the money received from the customers of the sale
of the beer was received on account for the employers. The Court of
Appeal here felt that it was not. It was money received by D on his own
account for the private sale of his own beer. It may have been a breach of
contract, but the remedy for this must be found in civil law, not criminal
law.
Lewis v Lethbridge (1987) QBD
D obtained sponsorship for a friend who had entered the London
Marathon. He received £54 in sponsorship, which he did not hand over to
the charity. D was convicted of theft on the grounds that he was under an
obligation to hand the proceeds of sponsorship (if not the actual notes and
coins) to the charity.
Held The justices erred in finding that the debt owed by [D] could be
described as proceeds of the property received. According to s 5(3) of the
Theft Act 1968, the obligation is to deal with the property or its proceeds
56
Theft
57
BRIEFCASE on Criminal Law
the money. She was charged with theft, but the judge directed an acquittal.
The Attorney General referred the case to the Court of Appeal on a point
of law, namely, whether under s 5(4) of the Theft Act 1968, D’s actions were
capable of amounting to theft.
Held Although D had got property by another’s mistake under s 5(4),
she was not under an obligation to make restoration of the property. The
property here was a chose in action (her right to sue the bank for the debt
they owed her), but this chose in action was incapable of being restored to
her employers. She was, however, obliged to restore the value of the chose
in action, providing the transfer of funds was made under a fundamental
mistake.
58
Theft
Feeley (1973) CA
D worked in a betting shop as a manager. The employer issued a memo,
stating that borrowing from tills was to stop. Knowing this, D borrowed
£30 from the till and left an ‘IOU’ in its place. D was owed more than twice
this sum by his employers. D was convicted of theft.
Held The word ‘dishonesty’ in s 1(1) of the Theft Act 1968 can only
relate to D’s own state of mind, and it is a question of fact which juries
should decide. Judges should not attempt to define what ‘dishonesty’
means; jurors should apply the standards of ordinary decent people.
Ghosh (1982) CA
D was a surgeon acting as a locum tenens consultant at a hospital. He falsely
represented that he had himself carried out surgical operations, and that
money was due to him for the same, when the operations had, in fact, been
carried out under the NHS by somebody else. D was convicted of
obtaining property by deception.
Held In determining whether D was acting dishonestly, the jury had
first to consider whether, according to the standards of the ordinary
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reasonable person, what was done was dishonest. If it was, the jury must
then consider whether D himself must have realised that what he was
doing was dishonest by the standards of the ordinary reasonable person.
Roberts (1987) CA
In a burglary, two Renoir paintings worth £51,000 were stolen. A claim was
made against the insurers, and the loss adjuster offered a reward of 10% of
the value of the paintings for their return. Three months later, D phoned
the loss adjuster and told them that he could recover the paintings. D
handed the paintings over in exchange for £10,000. D was arrested and
charged with handling stolen goods.
Held The second part of the Ghosh test need only be put to the jury
where the defendant specifically raises the defence that he did not think he
was dishonest by his own standards.
(See, also, Hancock (1990) and Price (1990).)
Hyam (1997) CA
D was director of a company which owned the freeholds of a number of
properties. He owned another company trading under a different name,
which acted as the managing agents of the properties. His co-accused ran
a decorating company. Work was carried out to the properties and D told
the lessees that the work have been carried out by a number of firms and
that he required payment for it. The prosecution alleged that he had acted
dishonestly, because the work had, in fact, been done by D’s companies at
inflated prices. They further alleged that D had written the company
names only on the cheque stubs, but had made the cheques out to
acquaintances, who cashed them and returned the money to D. D denied
that he had acted dishonestly. The jury were directed on the question of
dishonesty as follows: that dishonesty had to be judged according to the
standards of the ordinary right-minded people and according to
prevailing standards. If a person realised that ordinary right-minded
people regarded what he had done as dishonest, the jury had to find him
dishonest. D argued this direction was inadequate.
Held It was desirable that judges use the exact words of Lord Lane in
Ghosh. In this case, although the exact words had not been used, the
essential ingredients of the Ghosh direction wee present, namely, the
objective element and whether D realised that reasonable and honest
people would consider him dishonest. Appeal dismissed.
Clarke (Victor) (1996) CA
D was a private investigator. He falsely claimed to be a former fraud squad
officer and a court bailiff and, as a result of this representation, was hired
by a group of fraud victims to investigate their case. He changed his plea
to guilty when the judge indicated to the jury that the offence was proved
if they found that he had made the false representations, and that he was
hired as a result of those representations. D appealed against conviction on
60
Theft
the ground that the judge had not directed the jury to consider whether he
had been acting dishonestly.
Held The judge’s indication in this case suggested that the actions of
telling lies to obtain employment, irrespective of whether or not D could
do the job properly or intended to do so, was obviously dishonest, and that
the first part of the Ghosh test did not need to be left before the jury. The
Court of Appeal disagreed and held that the jury had not been fully
directed to consider the entire Ghosh test of dishonesty. The conviction was
therefore quashed.
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Held The words in s 6 ‘to dispose of’ should not be defined too literally
as meaning to sell or get rid of. The proper question to be considered was
whether D intended to treat the doors as his own, regardless of the
council’s rights not to have them removed. In this case, D, in removing the
doors, had clearly intended to treat the doors as his own.
Fernandes (1996) CA
D was a solicitor who transferred money from a client’s account to R . The
money was to be invested in a moneylending firm, of which R was a
partner. The money disappeared. D knew the investment was unsafe and
was convicted of theft. On appeal, the question arose as to whether s 6(1)
could apply here.
Held The second limb of s 6(1) could apply in a case such as this, where
a person in possession of another’s property dealt with it in a way in
which they knew they were risking its loss. D, in this case, can be said to
have treated the money as his own to dispose of, regardless of the other’s
rights and, therefore, intended to permanently deprive the other of it.
62
7 Other Property Offences
7.1 Burglary
7.1.1 Enter
Collins (1973) CA
D climbed a ladder leaning against a house and looked in a bedroom
window. He saw P asleep, naked on a bed. D climbed down the ladder,
removed his clothes and climbed up again, stopping on the window sill. P,
thinking D was her boyfriend, invited him into the room and they had
sexual intercourse. P then discovered D was not her boyfriend. D was
convicted of burglary.
Held In order to be convicted of burglary, D had to have made a
substantial and effective entry as a trespasser before consent was given.
Brown (1985) CA
D was seen, having broken the window, with the top half of his body
inside the shop window, rummaging around inside the shop. His feet were
on the ground outside. D was convicted for burglary.
Held The word ‘enter’ in s 9 of the Theft Act 1968 meant ‘effective’
entry; it was not necessary for the entry to be complete or even substantial,
so long as the entry was effective for D to carry out the ulterior offence.
Ryan (1996) CA
In the early hours of the morning, D was found stuck in a downstairs
window of an occupied house. D’s head and arm were inside the window
and the rest of his body was outside the window. The window itself was
resting on his neck, trapping him. He claimed he was trying to retrieve his
baseball bat which his friend had put through the window. D was
convicted of burglary, but appealed on the grounds that his action did not
constitute an entry within the meaning of s 9 of the Theft Act 1968.
Held It was clear after Brown (above) that is was possible to enter a
building for the purposes of s 9, even where only part of the body was
actually inside the building. It is irrelevant that D, in this case, was
incapable of stealing anything because he was trapped by the neck
through the window.
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7.1.3 As a trespasser
Collins (1973) CA
Facts as in 7.1.1, above.
Held Per Edmund Davies LJ: ‘... a serious offence like burglary should
require mens rea in the fullest sense of the phrase; D should be liable for
burglary only if he knowingly trespasses or is reckless as to whether he
trespasses or not.’
Jones and Smith (1976) CA
D stole a television set from his father’s house, which he had general
permission to enter. He was convicted of burglary.
Held D was a trespasser if he entered premises knowing that or being
reckless whether he was entering in excess of any permission that had
been given to him to enter.
7.2 Robbery
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Other Property Offences
Clouden (1987) CA
D wrenched a woman’s bag down and out of her grasp, and ran off with
it. D was charged with robbery, but claimed that snatching a bag could not
amount to force.
Held Whether force had been used or not is a matter to be left to the
jury. In this case, the jury was entitled to conclude that pulling a bag down
amounted to force.
7.3 Blackmail
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7.3.2 Menaces
Thorne v Motor Trade Association (1937) HL
A trade union held a ‘Stop List’ on which they placed the names of
members who had infringed its rule against selling items at prices other
than list prices. The appellant had offered a discount on items and, under
the rules of the trade union, was demanded to pay a sum of money to
avoid his name being put on the Stop List. The appellant claimed this rule
was illegal, as it amounted to a demand with menaces.
Held Per Lord Wright: ‘I think the word “menace” is to be liberally
construed and not limited to threats of violence, but as including threats of
any action detrimental to or unpleasant to the person addressed. It may
also include a warning that in certain events such action is intended.’
Prima facie, this would include a threat to place a person on the Stop List in
this case, unless the trade union has a reasonable cause to do so, such as
the promotion of lawful business interests. The appeal was therefore
dismissed.
Lawrence and Pomroy (1971) CA
D had repaired the roof of V’s house for £195. V was not satisfied with the
work and paid £125, promising to pay the balance when the work was
finished. D told V that, unless he got the balance, ‘You will have to look
over your shoulder before you step out of doors’. V felt threatened by this.
Held It is not necessary for the judge to give the jury any explanation of
the word ‘menaces’. However, in exceptional cases, where, because of
special knowledge in special circumstances, what would be a menace to an
ordinary person is not a menace to the person to whom it is addressed or
vice versa, it is necessary to spell out the meaning of the word to the jury.
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Other Property Offences
Garwood (1987) CA
D accused V of burgling his house and told him he wanted something ‘to
make it quits’ for the alleged burglary. D also seized V by the shirt and
pushed him up against a wall. V paid D some money and was told not to
tell his parents or the police, otherwise D would ‘get’ him.
Held In most cases, it is not necessary to direct the jury on the meaning
of the word ‘menaces’. However, there are two exceptions – either where
the threat would affect a person of ordinary stability, but did not affect V,
or where the threat would not have affected a person of ordinary stability,
but did affect V and D was aware of the likely affect of his actions. In these
circumstances, the judge may direct the jury on the meaning of the word
‘menaces’.
Harry (1974) CC
D was the treasurer of a college rag committee. He sent letters to 115 local
shopkeepers, asking them to buy indemnity posters for £1.50 (the money
being donated to charity). The poster would protect the shopkeepers from
further rag activity. A few shopkeepers complained about the letter; the
local Board of Trade took the view that the letter was ill conceived, but did
not regard the matter as serious. D was charged with blackmail.
Held There was no menace in this case. In the common sense view, the
fact that there were so few complaints indicated that no menaces had been
proved. Per Petre J: ‘“Menaces” is a strong word. You may think that
menaces must be of a fairly strong nature to fall within the definition.’
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Held Section 21(1) of the Theft Act 1968 is concerned with the honest
belief of the individual D in each case. It does not matter what the
reasonable man or anyone else other than D would believe in those
circumstances. D’s honest belief is what matters in any case.
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70
Other Property Offences
car and entitled to sell it. The question was, did V rely on that false
representation in handing over the cheque?
Held Whether the false representation in any case is operative is a
question of fact to be determined by the jury. ‘The proper way of proving
these matters is through the mouth of the person to whom the false
representation is conveyed’ (per Lord Parker CJ). In this case, no such
inference could be drawn from V’s evidence.
King (1986) CA
D falsely claimed that he was a tree surgeon and told V that four trees in
her garden were dangerous and needed felling. D offered to fell them for
£470 cash. While V was withdrawing the cash, the police were informed
and D was arrested and charged under s 15 of the Theft Act 1968. D
claimed that V was not induced to part with the money as a result of the
deception, but as a result of the work that would have been done.
Held Whether the false representation was operative in causing the
obtaining of the property was an issue of fact to be decided by the jury. In
this case, there was ample evidence to suggest that, if the money had been
paid, it would have been as a result of the false representation made to V.
Lambie (1981) HL
D used a credit card in a shop to pay for goods, knowing that she was well
over her credit limit and that she had no authorisation to use it according
to the terms and conditions of use. D was convicted of an offence under
s 16(1)(a) of the Theft Act 1968. D appealed on the grounds that the shop
assistant had not relied on her false representation to accept the card in
payment for the goods.
Held D had made a false representation that she was authorised to
enter into contracts on behalf of the credit card company, binding the
company to honour the voucher signed by D. This false representation
induced the shop assistant to complete the transaction and to allow D to
take the goods away, because, had she known that D was acting
dishonestly and making a false representation regarding her authority to
use the card, she would not have completed the transaction. Although the
shop assistant did not expressly state this in evidence, it had to be implied.
Had the reverse been true, then the shop assistant would have been an
accomplice in D’s fraud.
Doukas (1978) CA
D was a hotel waiter. D was charged with going equipped to steal (s 25 of
the Theft Act 1968), having been found with a quantity of bottles of wine
of a type not sold by the hotel. D admitted that he sold the wine to hotel
customers for his own profit.
Held It had to be proved that D’s deception was operative on customers
who bought the wine. A hypothetical question has to be asked of the
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BRIEFCASE on Criminal Law
customers, namely, ‘why did you buy this wine?’ or ‘if you had been told
the truth, would you or would you not have bought the commodity?’. The
jury must decide the answer to this question, but there is no doubt that, in
this case, the hypothetical customer would answer that he would not buy
the wine if he knew of D’s deception. ‘Indeed, it would be a strange jury
that came to any other conclusion and a stranger guest who gave any other
answer’, because, if he was dissatisfied with the wine for any reason, he
would have no recourse to the hotel (per Lane LJ).
(See, also, Rashid (1977) where a similar principle was applied obiter,
although D was acquitted for other reasons.)
Rozeik (1996) CA
D was convicted of obtaining cheques by deception. The cheques were
obtained from finance companies and were obtained by D through
providing false information about equipment acquired by him under hire
purchase agreements. The transactions were authorised by managers at
the finance companies, who may have known that the representations
were false. The jury was directed to assume that the managers did know
that the representations were false and to ignore the managers in deciding
whether the companies had been deceived. D appealed on the ground that
the managers were not deceived and, therefore, the companies were not
deceived and there was no offence.
Held A company was fixed with the knowledge acquired by one of its
employees, only if the employee had authority to act in the transaction in
question. If the employee was a party to the fraud, then they were not
acting with the authority of the company. Knowledge of the fraud
acquired by the manager could not be attributed to the company. In this
case, if the managers were not proved (as opposed to assumed) to be
actual parties to the fraud, then their knowledge could be attributed to the
companies, with the result that the companies had not been deceived. The
appeal was therefore allowed.
Miller (1992) CA
D drove an unlicensed taxi between Heathrow and Gatwick airports. V
was a foreign traveller who was induced to ride in the taxi because
representations were made that it was properly licensed and that the
charges made would be reasonable. D , in fact, charged approximately 10
times the normal fare of a licensed taxi driver. V realised that D had been
lying, but felt under an obligation to pay the sum requested. D was
convicted of obtaining property by deception on the ground that his lies
had not caused V to part with his money.
Held It was necessary to look at the whole story to see whether the
deception was operative, and it was not appropriate to isolate the moment
when the money was handed over. There were various deceptions
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Other Property Offences
committed during the course of this story which caused V to hand over the
money, and it was irrelevant that, at the final moment, V suspected he was
being deceived.
Coady (1996) CA
D served himself with petrol at a self-service petrol station. He told the
assistant to charge the cost of the petrol to the account of his former
employer, which he no longer had authority to do. D was convicted of
obtaining property by deception, but appealed, claiming that the false
representation had been made after the obtaining of property and,
therefore, could not be said to have caused it.
Held The false representation must be made before the property is
obtained in order for it to have been operative. In this case, the
representation was made after the petrol had been obtained. It was not
correct to say that D had made a general representation that the petrol
would be paid for on arrival at the petrol forecourt.
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Graham (1996) CA
D was a solicitor who submitted a mortgage application containing false
statements. The transaction was never completed but, if it had been, the
advance would have been made by CHAPS. D was convicted of obtaining
property by deception. On appeal, the court was asked to consider
whether the alternative charges of theft or evasion of liability could have
been substituted.
Held If the reasoning in Preddy now precluded a charge of obtaining
property by deception, it most probably also precludes a charge of theft. If
it could be shown that the chose in action was appropriated at a time when
it belonged to another, a charge of theft could be brought. However, this is
unlikely in these circumstances, since the result of D’s dishonest actions is
to create a new chose in action. There might also be a problem in identifying
an appropriation. The court thought that a charge of evasion of liability, on
the grounds that D had secured remission of the liability of the lender’s
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Other Property Offences
bank to the lender, was unrealistic. D could have been charged, however,
with the alternative offence of false accounting. The previous Court of
Appeal case, Halai (1983), in which it was held that a mortgage advance
could not be described as a service, was no longer good law and should
not be followed.
Cooke (1997) CA
D had been convicted of mortgage fraud but, after Preddy, brought an
appeal claiming that his conviction could not be sustained. The Crown
claimed that charges of obtaining services (the mortgage advance) by
deception (s 1 of the Theft Act 1978) should be substituted.
Held In the light of negative comments made in Graham about the Halai
case, the charge of obtaining services by deception could be a substitute
charge in a mortgage fraud case. There was no reason to exclude the
advance of a mortgage by a financial institution, provided it met with the
essential criterion that a benefit be conferred, on the basis that it would be
paid for.
Naviede (1997) CA
This was another Preddy appeal in which the court was asked to consider
whether credit fraud could amount to obtaining services by deception.
This concerned the obtaining of credit facilities from two banks.
Held Although the decision in Halai, regarding whether a mortgage
advance could be a ‘service’, could not be taken to have intended to lay
down that no mortgage advance, no matter what terms might be attached
and no matter in what circumstances the advance was made, could
amount to a service. The court in Halai were obviously concentrating on
the specific circumstances of a private individual securing a mortgage
advance from a building society in order to purchase a home for their
private residence. In these circumstances, the mortgage advance would
not amount to a service, because a benefit would not be conferred.
Although this case involved revolving credit rather than a mortgage
advance, the same authorities applied. The decisions in Graham and Cooke
(see above) and Cumming-John (1997) were not per curiam.
Nathan (1997) CA
D, a solicitor, applied for a loan on behalf of his client (and co-accused),
giving false representations as to the purpose of the loan. The loan was
transferred by electronic transfer to D’s client account. D was charged with
obtaining property by deception. D appealed against conviction on the
ground that, after Preddy, the telegraphic transfer of money between bank
accounts cannot amount to such a charge. He also claimed that a charge of
obtaining services by deception could not be substituted, because the
provision of the banking facility was tendered to his client, and not to
himself.
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Held The argument of the Crown that, although a new chose in action
was created by the credit balance in the client account, it belonged to the
bank until it was transferred to the client on exchange, was untenable. It
belonged to both the solicitor and the bank, because the solicitor held it as
a trustee for the bank. The conviction was therefore considered unsafe and
quashed. There was nothing in s 1 of the Theft Act 1978 which stated that
the service had to be obtained for D himself. Therefore, a conviction under
s 1 was substituted.
Note
As a result of the difficulties highlighted by the Preddy judgment and the
subsequent appeals, a new offence has been created specifically to cover
this type of fraud. The new s 15A of the Theft Act 1968 (as created by the
Theft (Amendment) Act 1996) creates the offence of dishonestly
obtaining a money transfer for himself or another by deception. A
money transfer is explicitly aimed to cover the situation where a debit is
made to one account and a credit is made to another, the latter resulting
from the former.
was overdrawn. The bank was obliged to honour the cheques, but D
claimed he was not ‘allowed’ to borrow by way of overdraft.
Held A transaction completed using a cheque card was borrowing by
way of overdraft. The bank had complied with the request of the payee’s
bank for reimbursement. The overdraft was consensual, since D had
impliedly requested it and the bank, by honouring the cheques, had, albeit
reluctantly, agreed. The bank had therefore allowed D to borrow by way
of overdraft, and D’s conviction was upheld.
Callender (1992) CA
D was self-employed as an accountant. D falsely claimed that he was an
associate member of the Chartered Institute of Management Accountants
and a graduate of the Institute of Marketing. D was hired by B to prepare
his accounts. D was charged with obtaining a pecuniary advantage by
deception but claimed that he had not obtained an ‘office or employment’.
Held The phrase ‘office or employment’ in s 16(2)(c) was not confined
to the narrow limits of a contract of service, but was to be construed in a
wider sense as a matter of ordinary language. Therefore, the services given
by D did amount to obtaining a pecuniary advantage by deception.
Clarke (Victor) (1996) CA
See 6.2.2, above.
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BRIEFCASE on Criminal Law
accounts if they had known he was using a false name. D was convicted of
obtaining services by deception under s 1 of the Theft Act 1978.
Held Although there was no evidence that the banking services would
have been paid for, the judge held it would be ‘an affront to common
sense’ that the services would have been provided for free and that the
jury should assume that they would be paid for. This statement should
have been withdrawn from the jury, as the jury could not infer this with
any certainty.
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Other Property Offences
matter whether, in this case, D or the hotel owner was liable; the
indictment was worded correctly.
Andrews v Hedges (1981) CC
D was charged with an offence under s 2(1)(b) of the Theft Act 1978. His
creditors had supplied him with large quantities of meat on credit terms of
up to three weeks. D paid by cheque, but the cheques were not honoured
due to insufficient funds. It was alleged that this caused the creditors to
wait for payment.
Held There was no inducement to wait for payment where the parties
had traded together previously, where the credit terms had been allowed
and where payment by cheque was accepted in the ordinary course of
dealing between the parties. Section 2(1)(b) of the 1978 Act only applied
where the creditor was induced to accept a cheque instead of cash, and
only then did s 2(3) operate as a matter of law to treat the creditor as
having been induced to wait for payment.
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80
Other Property Offences
81
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7.9.2 Recklessness
Caldwell (1982) HL
See 19.2, below.
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Other Property Offences
the state of belief that ought to have existed. An honest belief is honestly
held, even if it stems from intoxication. (See, further, Chapter 11.)
Denton (1982) CA
D worked at a cotton mill. He set fire to some machinery and the mill was
damaged in the fire. D was charged with arson. He claimed that he
believed he had the owner’s consent, as he thought the owner had asked
him to set fire to the machinery in order to make a fraudulent insurance
claim.
Held Per Lord Lane CJ:
... one has to decide whether or not an offence is committed at the moment that
the acts are alleged to be committed. The fact that somebody may have had a
dishonest intent which, in the end, he was going to carry out, namely, a claim
from the insurance company, cannot turn what was not originally a crime into
a crime. There is not unlawfulness under the [Criminal Damage] Act 1971 in
burning a house. It does not become unlawful because there may be an inchoate
attempt to commit fraud contained in it; that is to say it does not become a crime
under the 1971 Act, whatever may be the situation outside the Act.
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occurred. D had suffered, at worst, a civil wrong, the remedy for which he
should have sought in the civil courts. Self-help, using force, was only to
be contemplated when there was no other reasonable alternative.
Therefore, D had no lawful excuse for causing criminal damage.
Blake v DPP (1993) QBD
D was a vicar, demonstrating against the use of military force by the allies
in Iraq and Kuwait. D used a marker pen to write a Biblical quotation on
a concrete pillar outside the Houses of Parliament. D was convicted of
criminal damage, but claimed he had a defence under s 5(2)(a) of the
Criminal Damage Act 1971, because he was carrying out the instructions
of God and, therefore, had consent to damage property, which meant he
had lawful authority to commit the damage.
Held A belief, however genuine, powerful or honestly held, that he had
the consent of God and therefore consent of the law of England to damage
property, did not afford D the excuse of lawful authority. Appeal
dismissed.
See, also, 9.2.2, below.
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Other Property Offences
Webster (1995) CA
D pushed a heavy piece of stone off of a railway bridge onto a passenger
train below. The stone landed on the rear bulkhead of a carriage and a
corner of the stone penetrated the roof. Passengers were not physically
injured, but were showered with debris from the roof of the carriage.
D was convicted of criminal damage under s 1(2) of the Criminal Damage
Act 1971. D appealed on the ground that the judge misdirected the jury in
relation to endangering lives.
Held If D had intended that the stone itself would crash through the
roof of the train and thereby endanger the lives of the passengers (or was
reckless whether it did), s 1(2) of the Criminal Damage Act 1971 would not
apply. However, if D intended (or was reckless) that the stone would
damage the roof so that debris from it would fall upon passengers, he was
guilty of an offence under s 1(2). Consequently, the judge had misdirected
the jury, who must have found that the former intention was present in
this case. However, since D must also have been reckless as to the danger
of debris falling from the roof onto passengers, D was guilty of an offence
under s 1(2), and the conviction was upheld.
85
8 Self-Defence
88
Self-Defence
Held D was guilty of rioting. There is no duty to retreat from the use of
force, but ‘one of the factors for [juries] to take into account is how easily
the self-defender could have got away from his attacker’ (per Curtis J).
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Note
Sedley J held in Armstrong-Braun, below, that ‘Owino (1995) ... reasserts
the law as previously understood and, to this end, reads Scarlett down’.
Therefore, Scarlett may be confined to its facts.
Owino (1995) CA
V was injured by her husband D, who alleged that V’s bruising was caused
only by reasonable force used in restraining her and in preventing her
from assaulting him.
Held D was guilty of assault causing bodily harm. Per Collins J:
... proportionality is not determined on the basis of what was objectively
reasonable. ... The jury have to decide whether a defendant honestly believed
that the circumstances were such as required him to use force to defend himself
from an attack or a threatened attack. In this respect, a defendant must be
judged in accordance with his honest belief, even though that belief may have
been mistaken. But the jury must then decide whether the force used was
reasonable in the circumstances as he believed them to be.
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Self-Defence
Armstrong-Braun (1998)
D, a county councillor, entered a construction site to preserve an
endangered animal’s habitat. D used a wooden stake to interfere with
construction machinery, and told worker V he was committing a crime. V
became angry and chased D, who struck him once with the stake on his
arm.
Held D was guilty of battery. D’s response was disproportionate and
unreasonable. Per Brooke LJ: ‘... the force used by the defendant accused of
battery in self-defence should be assessed in an objective sense as to
whether it was reasonably necessary in the circumstances, as the
defendant subjectively believed them to be.’ Per Sedley J: ‘... what is done
in answer to the perceived threat is to be judged by a judicial appraisal of
its reasonableness in all the circumstances which, by definition, include the
defendant’s honest belief as to the danger he is in.’
Q Does the above dictum of Sedley J import the gloss on subjectivity
impugned by Brooke LJ and Sedley J alike?
Culverhouse (1996) CA
D and V punched and choked each other during a fight, then D slashed V’s
forehead with a knife.
Held D was guilty of assault causing grievous bodily harm. Where
there is no evidence of circumstances giving rise to self-defence, there will
be no ‘... misdirection, because the judge omitted to direct the jury to
consider the appellant’s state of mind in the context of the reasonableness
or otherwise of the self-defence’ (per Kay J).
Speede and Baptiste (1996) CA
V was stabbed in the hand by D1 and D2, who then jumped out of a
window. They alleged that V had threatened them with a knife.
Held D1 and D2 were not guilty of affray. The trial judge will commit a
‘material misdirection’ where he fails to provide ‘a careful direction on the
possible significance of the subjective perception of each appellant as to
the risk to which he claimed to have been exposed’ (per Forbes J).
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96
10 Mental Disorder
10.1 Insanity
M’Naghten (1843)
D was charged with the murder of the Prime Minister’s Private Secretary.
He claimed he was insane and, in particular, that he had an obsession with
morbid delusions.
Held Per Lord Tindall CJ:
... to establish a defence on the ground of insanity, it must be clearly proved that,
at the time of the committing of the act, the party accused was labouring under
such a defect of reason, from a disease of the mind, as not to know the nature
and quality of the act he was doing, or, if he did know it, that he did not know
he was doing what was wrong.
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10.1.2 D did not know what he was doing or that his actions were
wrong
Windle (1952) CA
D killed his wife by giving her an overdose of aspirin. She had been
mentally ill for some time and often talked of committing suicide. D
claimed in his defence that he was insane, suffering from a form of
communicative insanity known as folie a deux, where, having been
constantly attending to a person of unsound mind for a long period of
time, D himself became mentally ill. D therefore claimed that he did not
know at the time that his actions were legally wrong.
Held D must not know that his actions were legally wrong. It is not
enough that he knew his actions were morally wrong. ‘Therefore, there is
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no doubt that, in the M’Naghten Rules, “wrong” means contrary to the law,
and not “wrong according to the opinion of one man”’ (per Lord Goddard
CJ).
Sodeman (1936) PC
D took V for a ride on his bike, strangled her, tied her hands behind her
back, stuffed some clothing into her mouth and left her for dead. V died
from suffocation. D had committed three other similar murders. At trial,
he pleaded the defence of insanity, and medical evidence was adduced to
suggest that D was suffering from irresistible impulses to do what he did.
Held The M’Naghten Rules made it clear that, where a man knew he
was doing wrong, but was forced to do the act by an ‘irresistible impulse’
produced by a disease of the mind, he could rely on the defence of insanity.
10.2 Automatism
Bratty v Attorney General for Northern Ireland (1961) HL
D killed a girl in his car by strangulation with her stocking. He claimed he
was suffering from psychomotor epilepsy at the time and did not know
what he was doing. D was convicted of murder when the trial judge
refused to leave the defence of insanity to the jury and the jury rejected the
defence of insanity.
Held If the defence of insanity is rejected by the jury, D is entitled to raise
the defence of automatism as an alternative. Proper evidence must be
adduced, however, to establish that D was acting under non-insane
automatism. ‘No act is punishable if it is done involuntarily, and an
involuntary act in this context means an act which is done by the muscles
without any control by the mind such as a spasm, a reflex action or a
convulsion; or an act done by a person who is not conscious of what he is
doing, such as an act done whilst suffering from concussion or done whilst
sleep walking’ (per Lord Denning). An act is not involuntary simply because
a person does not remember it, or because D could not control his impulse
to do it.
Broome v Perkins (1987) QBD
D was charged with driving without due care and attention. He had
driven his car five or six miles along a familiar route, erratically. D was a
diabetic, and claimed he was suffering hypoglycaemia at the time and
remembered nothing after the very start of his journey.
Held D should have been convicted. If, during some of the erratic
driving, D’s actions were voluntary and if, occasionally, D’s mind had
exercised some control over his limbs so that his actions were not
automatic, then he was not acting under automatism and was not entitled
to a defence.
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Bingham (1991) CA
D was charged with theft of a can of coke and some sandwiches from a
shop. D was a diabetic and claimed that, at the time of leaving the shop
without paying for the goods, he was suffering from hypoglycaemia and
was unaware of what he was doing. The trial judge had refused to leave
the defence of automatism to the jury.
Held Hypoglycaemia is not caused by the disease of diabetes but by the
treatment of it, in the form of too much insulin or not enough food to
counter-balance the insulin. In most cases, this would not give rise to the
defence of insanity, but might give rise to an acquittal on the basis that D
lacked mens rea and was acting under automatism.
Quick (1973) CA
D, a nurse, assaulted a patient. D claimed he could not remember doing so
because, being a diabetic, he had taken insulin but had not eaten sufficient
food and had drunk quantities of whisky and rum. D pleaded not guilty
on the ground of automatism. The trial judge ruled that he could only
plead the defence of insanity, so D changed his plea to guilty and
appealed.
Held D was suffering from a mental abnormality caused by
hypoglycaemia. This was not caused by the internal factor of his diabetes,
but by his use of insulin prescribed by his doctor. This was an external
factor and, therefore, caused a bodily disorder, not a disease of the mind,
and automatism was the appropriate defence. However, per Lawton LJ: ‘...
a self-induced incapacity will not excuse ... nor will one which could have
been reasonably foreseen as a result of either doing or omitting to do
something, for example, taking alcohol against medical advice after using
certain prescribed drugs or failing to have regular meals while taking
insulin.’ The appeal was allowed.
Bailey (1983) CA
D, a diabetic, went to visit his ex-girlfriend and her new partner, V. D took
insulin and a mixture of sugar and water, but ate nothing. He then
assaulted V. He told police he had hit V to teach him a lesson for
associating with his girlfriend. D pleaded not guilty to a charge of
wounding V, claiming that he acted in a state of automatism caused by
hypoglycaemia.
Held Self-induced automatism (unless caused by intoxication) could
provide a defence to a basic intent crime. The jury must decide whether
D’s conduct, in view of his knowledge of the likely results of his actions,
was sufficiently reckless. There was no conclusive presumption that it was
reckless conduct for a person to fail to take food after a dose of insulin.
Attorney General’s Reference (No 2 of 1992) (1992) CA
D was a lorry driver who was charged with two counts of causing death
by reckless driving. D had been driving for six hours when his lorry hit a
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stationary vehicle on the hard shoulder of the motorway and killed two
people. D claimed a defence of ‘driving without awareness’, D being in a
state of automatism at the time.
Held Automatism is only available as a defence where there is a total
loss of voluntary control. Impaired or reduced control was not sufficient to
afford a defence. In this case, D had still been in some control of the lorry
at the time as he was able to steer it and was partially aware of what was
going on on the road ahead.
Marison (1996) CA
D was a diabetic who had regularly had hypoglycaemic episodes,
including whilst driving his car, and these episodes caused him to lose
consciousness without warning. In the incident in question, D’s car veered
to the wrong side of the road and collided with another car, killing the
driver of that car. D was convicted of causing death by dangerous driving
after the judge ruled that D must have been aware of the risk of having a
hypoglycaemic episode whilst driving. D appealed on the ground that the
judge’s ruling was wrong.
Held Although D became an automaton at the time of the accident, he
could not use automatism as a defence. This was because, as a driver, he
was in a dangerously defective state due to his diabetes and had already
committed the offence of dangerous driving before the accident took place.
The hypoglycaemic episode was reasonably foreseeable and, therefore, the
judge’s ruling was correct.
T (1990) CC
D was arrested and charged with armed robbery together with two men.
On arrest, she was passive and indifferent, and could only recollect parts
of the preceding events. Later, when D was transferred to prison, it was
revealed that she had been raped three days before her arrest and a
psychiatrist diagnosed her as suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder
and in a dissociative state. Further, she was said to have committed the
offence during a psychogenic fugue and was not acting with a conscious
mind or will. D pleaded the defence of automatism, but the prosecution
contended that she had recalled some of the events surrounding the crime
and had exercised partial control over her actions in using a weapon.
Held This was the first case in which the ‘external’ event causing the
malfunction of the mind was a rape. However, such an incident would
have a severe effect on any young woman and, therefore, the rape would
suffice as the external triggering condition. The malfunction of the mind
here (due to post-traumatic stress disorder) was not a disease of the mind
and, although there was only partial loss of control throughout the
incident, D acted as if she were in a dream. Therefore, the defence of
automatism could rightly be put before the jury.
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11 Intoxication
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Majewski (1977) HL
During a fight at a pub, D attacked the landlord, two others and several
police officers. D was charged with assault occasioning actual bodily harm
and assaulting a police officer in the execution of his duty. D claimed that
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he had taken a quantity of drugs and alcohol during the previous 48 hours,
and he did not know what he was doing when he committed the assaults.
Held Intoxication could only be a defence to crimes of specific intent.
Specific intent meant ‘direct’ intent: ‘... the prosecution must, in general,
prove that the purpose for the commission of the act extends to the intent
expressed or implied in the definition of the crime’ (per Lord Russell).
Caldwell (1982) HL
D quarrelled with his employer, the owner of a hotel. D got drunk and set
fire to the hotel while it was occupied. D was charged with intentionally or
recklessly causing criminal damage (to which he pleaded guilty) and with
causing criminal damage with intent to or being reckless as to whether
lives are endangered. D pleaded the defence of intoxication.
Held Intoxication is only a defence to crimes which require proof of
intention (specific intent crimes). It is not a defence to crimes which can be
committed recklessly (basic intent crimes). The offence in s 1(2) of the
Criminal Damage Act 1971 is a basic intent crime. However, classification
into crimes of ‘specific’ and ‘basic’ intent is irrelevant where being reckless
as to whether a particular harmful consequence will result from one’s act
is a sufficient mens rea (per Lord Diplock).
Note
The prominent crimes of specific intent are: murder; wounding or
causing grievous bodily harm with intent (s 18 of the Offences Against
the Person Act 1861); theft; handling stolen goods; burglary; robbery;
attempted offences; and indecent assault (see Court, 5.2.1, above).
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Caldwell (1982) HL
Facts as in 19.2, below.
Held If the crime can be committed recklessly, then the intoxication
cannot be a defence. In order to prove recklessness in criminal damage
cases, the jury must consider two questions: (1) did D commit an act which
created an obvious risk?; and (2) when D committed the act, did he either
give no thought to the possibility of there being a risk or, having
recognised it, did he go on and take it? The objective element in the test
precludes intoxication from being a defence to basic intent crimes to which
Caldwell recklessness applies.
Q To which offences does Caldwell recklessness apply?
Fotheringham (1989) CA
D and his wife went out, leaving V, a 14 year old babysitter, to look after
their children. D’s wife told V to sleep in the matrimonial bed. When D
and his wife returned home, D got into his bed and had sexual intercourse
with V without her consent. D claimed that he was drunk and had
mistaken V for his wife. At D’s trial for rape, the judge told the jury to
disregard D’s voluntary intoxication in considering whether his belief that
V was a consenting woman (that is, his wife) was reasonable. D was
convicted and appealed.
Held D’s voluntary intoxication was no defence in any crime of basic
intent. Since rape is an offence where recklessness (at least as to the
consent of V) will suffice as a mens rea, it is clearly a basic intent offence. D
therefore could not use his voluntary intoxication in relation to the issue of
consent to claim that his belief was reasonable.
C (1992) CA
D, whilst drunk, inserted his fingers into a child’s vagina. He was charged
with indecent assault, but claimed that he could not remember the offence
because he was drunk. The judge told the jury to ignore this, as voluntary
intoxication was not a defence to a charge of indecent assault. D was
convicted, and appealed on the grounds that, after the decision in Court,
indecent assault is now a specific intent crime (see Chapter 5).
Held The decision in Court had been based on facts where the
indecency of D’s actions was ambiguous. The House of Lords in that case
stated that, where there was such ambiguity, the jury had to consider D’s
intention (that is, whether he intended to commit an indecent assault).
However, in this case, there was no ambiguity regarding the indecency of
the assault, so there was no requirement to consider D’s intention. In such
a case, the House of Lords in Court had not changed the position that
indecent assault is a crime of basic intent, and so voluntary intoxication is
no defence.
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109
12 Duress and Necessity
12.1 Duress
Lynch (1975) HL
The defendant was charged with the murder of a policeman in Northern
Ireland. D was charged as an accessory because, although he was not
directly involved with the shooting, he had driven the armed gunmen to
the scene of the crime and away again. D pleaded the defence of duress,
alleging that he had been ordered by M (a well known ruthless gunman in
the IRA) to take part in the crime. There was evidence that if D had not
obeyed M’s orders, D would have been shot.
Held Per Lord Morris: ‘... the decision of the threatened man whose
constancy is overborne so that he yields to the threat is a calculated
decision to do what he knows is wrong, and is therefore that of a man with
a “guilty mind”. But he is at the same time a man whose mind is less guilty
than is his who acts as he does, but under no such constraint.’
12.1.1 Threat
Lynch (1975) HL
Facts as in 12.1, above.
Held Per Lord Morris: ‘If someone is really threatened with death or
serious injury unless he does what he is told to do ... must the law not
remember that the instinct and perhaps the duty of self-preservation is
powerful and natural? I think it must.’ Per Lord Wilberforce: ‘... nobody
would dispute that the greater the degree of heinousness of the crime, the
greater and less resistible must be the degree of pressure.’
Howe and Bannister (1987) HL
Two defendants participated with others in torturing, kicking, punching
and sexually abusing a man. The man was then strangled to death by one
of the others. The defendants claimed they acted under duress at the
orders of and through fear of a man called Murry, who was known to be
violent and sadistic.
Held Per Lord Hailsham: ‘... some degree of proportionality between
the threat and the offence must, at least to some extent, be a prerequisite of
the defence ...’
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Valderrama-Vega (1985) CA
D imported a quantity of cocaine into London from Columbia. He claimed
he did so under duress from a Mafia-type organisation in Columbia, who
would have killed or seriously injured him or his family if he had not
carried out the smuggling. He was also under severe financial pressure
and had been threatened with disclosure of his homosexual inclinations.
Held Although a threat of serious injury or death is a necessary
prerequisite of the defence, it need not be the sole or only threat to D, and
the jury are entitled to look at the effect of all threats on D, as long as one
of them is a threat of death or serious injury.
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Hegarty (1994) CA
D was charged with robbery and he pleaded the defence of duress. D
claimed that some men had attacked him and threatened violence against
his family if he did not carry out the robberies. D sought to introduce
evidence at trial of his mental instability. D had a history of mental illness
and was described as ‘emotionally unstable’ and in a ‘grossly elevated
neurotic state’.
Held D’s emotionally unstable or grossly elevated neurotic state was
not a relevant characteristic to consider in the test for duress. The test of
whether D’s will was overborne is not purely subjective. The jury has also
to consider the response of a sober person of reasonable firmness ‘sharing
the characteristics of the defendant’. They could take into account the age,
sex and physical health of D, but not a personality disorder such as that
experienced by D in this case.
Bowen (1996) CA
D was charged with obtaining services by deception, but claimed he was
forced to do so by two men who had threatened to harm his family if he
did not carry out the offence. At trial, D pleaded duress on the basis that
he was abnormally suggestible and that a psychiatrist had testified that his
IQ was only 68. D was convicted, but appealed on the ground that the
judge had failed to direct the jury to consider D’s characteristics in
applying the objective test.
Held Per Stuart-Smith LJ:
(1) The mere fact that [D] is more pliable, vulnerable, timid or susceptible to
threats than a normal person could not be characteristics with which it is
legitimate to invest the reasonable/ordinary person for the purpose of
considering the objective test.
(2) [D] may be in a category of persons who the jury may think less able to
resist pressure than people not within that category. Obvious examples are
age … possibly sex … pregnancy, where there is added fear for the unborn
child … recognised mental illness or psychiatric condition, such as post
traumatic stress disorder leading to learned helplessness …
Where D wished to show that he was suffering from a mental illness,
mental impairment or other recognised psychiatric condition, which may
have made him more susceptible to threats, psychiatric evidence was
admissible. Where D wished to submit that he had a characteristic listed in
(2) above, then he had to make that clear to the judge, who could rule at
that stage whether medical evidence was admissible.
In this case, the fact that D was abnormally suggestible was irrelevant.
His low IQ, which fell short of mental impairment of defectiveness, was
not a characteristic which made people less courageous or able to
withstand threats and pressure. The judge therefore had directed the jury
sufficiently – they could only consider D’s age and sex.
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Flatt (1996) CA
D was charged with possession of drugs with intent. He pleaded the
defence of duress, claiming that he was addicted to crack cocaine and
owed his dealer £1,500. He claimed the dealer had told him to look after
some drugs for him or he would shoot D’s grandmother and girlfriend. D
was convicted and appealed, claiming that the judge should have directed
the jury to consider his drug addiction in applying the objective test.
Held Drug addiction was a self-induced condition and not a
characteristic. Furthermore, there was no evidence that the drug addiction
caused D to be less able to withstand threats or pressure. The appeal was
dismissed.
Emery (1993) CA
D was convicted of cruelty to her child, who died aged 11 months. D
claimed that, after years of violence towards her by the father of the child,
she had developed learned helplessness and was unable to withstand
pressure or threats from him.
Held The history of violence towards D caused her inability to
withstand the duress and, therefore, was relevant evidence. Evidence
could be allowed ‘to give an expert account of the causes of the condition
of dependent helplessness, the circumstances in which it might arise and
what level of abuse would be required to produce it’ (per Taylor LCJ).
Hurst (1995) CA
D was charged with an offence relating to the importing of cocaine. She
raised the defence of duress, and sought to call evidence from a
psychiatrist that her ability to withstand the duress had been affected by
her sexual abuse as a child.
Held The expert evidence she sought to adduce could not be viewed as
anything but mere speculation and was, therefore, rightly excluded.
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the consequences of not paying the money lenders was not sufficiently
proximate so that the threats were not operative.
Shepherd (1988) CA
D joined a gang of thieves. Their practice was to go into shops and, while
one distracted the shopkeeper, the others would steal items from the shop.
D claimed that, after the first offence, he wanted to give up, but he and his
family had been threatened with violence if he did not carry on.
Held The court recognised the exclusion from the defence laid down in
Sharp (see above), but were concerned with the breadth of the exclusion.
The defence is still a concession to human frailty and D may have been
faced with a choice between two evils. In some cases, there is no excuse.
Members of paramilitary groups, gangs of armed robbers or thieves must
be taken to anticipate what may happen to them if their nerve fails. The
jury must ask themselves whether D could be said to have taken the risk
of violence or threats simply by joining a gang, that is, did D appreciate the
nature of the gang and the attitudes of those in charge of it, and then
consider whether D had voluntarily submitted himself to threats.
Ali (1995) CA
D robbed a building society of £1,175, threatening cashiers with a gun. He
was charged with robbery. At his trial, he raised the defence of duress,
claiming that he had been addicted to heroin. He had agreed to sell heroin
on behalf of his violent dealer and hand the proceeds to him. He had, in
fact, used the heroin himself. The dealer threatened to shoot him and, on
the day before the robbery, had given D a gun and told him to commit a
robbery to get the money or he would be killed. D was too scared to go to
the police and so he carried out the robbery. The judge asked the jury to
consider whether D had voluntarily placed himself in a position where he
knew he would be open to being forced to commit crimes under threats
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from the dealer. D was convicted and appealed on the grounds that the
judge should have phrased the question in terms of him knowing that the
dealer would force him to commit armed robbery, as opposed to ‘a crime’.
Held If a defendant voluntarily participated in criminal offences with a
person whom he knows to be violent and likely to require him to perform
other criminal acts, he cannot rely on the defence of duress when the other
person does so. The judge’s direction had been clear. If D had had no
reason to anticipate violence, he could rely on the defence. However, if he
knew of a propensity to violence in those with whom he was working,
then he could not rely on duress.
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Gotts (1992) HL
D, aged 16, had been ordered by his father to kill his mother (who was
separated from the father). D claimed that, if he did not kill his mother, his
father had threatened to shoot him. D stabbed his mother in the street, but
was restrained by a passer-by from inflicting any further injuries and,
although seriously injured, the mother survived. D was convicted of
attempted murder.
Held The defence of duress is not available to the charge of attempted
murder. There is no justification in law or morality or logic to afford
defence to an attempted murderer and not to a murderer. Indeed, the
intent required for attempted murder is greater than that for murder, and
it is pure chance that D was charged with a murder which was attempted
and not actual.
12.2 Necessity
Dudley and Stevens (1884) QBD
Two defendants and a cabin boy were cast away at sea in an open boat,
1,600 miles from land. They drifted in the boat for 20 days. When they had
gone eight days without food and six days without water, and fearing that
they would all soon die, the defendants killed the cabin boy, whom they
judged as most likely to die first, and they ate his flesh and drank his blood
for four days. They were then rescued by a passing ship. The defendants
were convicted of murder, but they claimed killing the cabin boy was
necessary for their survival and that the cabin boy would have died
anyway.
Held Necessity was no defence. Per Lord Coleridge CJ: ‘... a man has no
right to declare temptation to be an excuse ... nor allow compassion for the
criminal to change or weaken in any manner the legal definition of the
crime.’ As tough as this decision was, necessity is no defence in English
law. However, the death penalty passed on both defendants at trial was
commuted to six months’ imprisonment.
O’Toole (1971) CA
D was an ambulance driver. Answering an emergency call, he drove in
excess of the speed limit (which did not apply to ambulances driving to an
emergency). D collided with a car and was convicted of dangerous
driving. D was disqualified from driving and appealed against sentence.
Held Necessity was no defence in this case. Per Sachs LJ: ‘... courts must
recognise that a balance must be maintained in the interest of the public
between the essential element of not unnecessarily impeding the
answering of calls of humanity in emergencies, and that of not involving
road users in unnecessary risks. Great care has to be applied in
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determining on which side of the line a case falls.’ The sentence was
reduced to an absolute discharge.
Woods v Richards (1977) QBD
D was a police driver. He answered an emergency call, but got stuck in a
queue, so he pulled over to the hard shoulder which he intended to use,
thinking it was clear. He collided with a broken-down vehicle there and
caused damage. D was convicted of driving without due care and
attention and was sentenced as any other driver would have been.
Held Necessity was no defence in this case. No authority supported the
contention that a special standard was to be adopted for police drivers,
and nothing in the wording of s 3 of the Road Traffic Act 1972 enabled an
exception to be made in the case of a police driver. Whether the defence of
necessity existed depended on the degree of emergency or alternative
danger to be averted. Natural sympathy with police drivers did not enable
the court to re-write the requirements of the offence.
Southwark LBC v Williams (1971) CA
The defendants, who were homeless, entered an empty house owned by
the local authority and squatted there. They were sued for trespass.
Held Per Lord Denning: ‘If homelessness were once admitted as a
defence to trespass, no one’s house could be safe. Necessity would open a
door which no man could shut. It would not only be those in extreme need
who would enter. There would be others who would imagine that they
were in need or would invent a need so as to gain entry.’ Per Edmund-
Davies LJ: ‘It appears that all the cases where a plea of necessity has
succeeded are cases which deal with an urgent situation of imminent
peril.’
Martin (1989) CA
Facts as 12.1.4, above.
Held Per Simon Brown J:
English law does, in extreme circumstances, recognise a defence of necessity.
Most commonly, this arises as duress, that is, pressure on the accused’s will
from the wrongful threats or violence of another. Equally, however, it can arise
from other objective dangers threatening the accused or others. Arising thus, it
is conveniently called ‘duress of circumstances’.
Willer (1986) CA
D was convicted of reckless driving. He had driven slowly on the
pavement in order to escape from a gang of youths, who intended to use
violence on him. D claimed the defence of necessity, but the trial judge
ruled that it was not available, so D changed his plea to guilty.
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letter of the law to prevent ‘a greater evil befalling himself’. This does not
apply where D commendably breaks the law in order to prevent another
from committing the ‘greater evil’. In order to plead the defence of duress
of circumstances, he should have ‘desisted from committing the crime as
soon as he reasonably [could]’ (per Kennedy LJ).
Although all cases on the defence of necessity had so far concerned
road traffic offences, there is no reason why, being closely related to the
defence of duress, the defence should not be available in relation to all
crimes, except murder and attempted murder.
Rogers (1998) QBD
D had an argument with his wife, who ran to a neighbour. D feared the
neighbour would attack him, although the neighbour had no history of
violence. D drove his car with excess alcohol and was stopped by the
police. D raised the defence of necessity and was acquitted. The
prosecution appealed, raising the question of whether the defence could
be pleaded where there was no direct threat of violence towards D.
Held This was another case where, at trial, the objective test laid down
in Graham (see 12.1.2, above) had not been applied. The magistrates in this
case had not asked whether it was reasonable for D to act in the way that
he did in those circumstances.
Per curiam, the difficulties which had arisen in cases where magistrates
had not applied the objective test could be attributed to the fact that the
parameters and requirements of this defence had not been set out clearly
in statutory form. Instead, they had had to plough through copious case
law. The magistrates in this case had not had the benefit of seeing the
judgment in Baker and Wilkins (below), which set out the law out clearly.
The court called for the codification of the defence as soon as possible.
Baker and Wilkins (1997) CA
B and W had had a relationship, during which they had a child. After their
separation, W was given access to the child for short visits. On one
occasion, W did not return the child, fearing that it had been abused. W
told B that he was going to run away with the child. D went to W’s house
and, on hearing the child crying, broke in through the door. D was charged
with criminal damage. D claimed the defence of necessity, in the light of
the refusal to return the child and the threat to run away with it. D was
denied the defence at trial, because there was no immediate risk of death
or serious injury.
Held The defence was not available as there was no risk of immediate
death or physical injury. The need to avoid serious psychological injury
was not accepted as a sufficient threat.
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Cairns (1999) CA
D was driving his car late at night when V climbed on the bonnet and laid
there with his face up against the windscreen. D was frightened, but
thought it was best to drive on. D claimed he had also been frightened by
friends of V who, in order to try and stop him from lying on the car,
followed D, shouting and gesturing. D drove on for a significant distance
before V fell off the car, and D drove over him. V fractured his spine and
was paralysed. D was charged with s 20 of the Offences Against the Person
Act 1861, but raised the defence of necessity. The judge directed the jury
that the defence was only available where D’s action was ‘actually
necessary to avoid the evil in question’. D was convicted and appealed.
Held The jury were to be concerned with D’s perception of the threat
which he faced, and to consider whether his actions were reasonable and
proportionate in the circumstances. They did not have to consider whether
the threat was real or actual. Therefore, the judge had wrongly directed the
jury.
124
13 Causation
125
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Cheshire (1991) CA
D shot V in the leg and stomach. Two months later, after the wound was
no longer life threatening, a rare complication developed through medical
mistreatment of the tube inserted in V’s throat, and V choked to death.
Held D was guilty of murder. (1) ‘Even though negligence in the
treatment of [V] was the immediate cause of his death, [exculpation
follows only if] ... they regard the contribution made by [D’s] acts as
insignificant’ (per Beldam LJ). (2) Where medical treatment seeks to repair
harm done by D’s acts, ‘it will only be in the most extraordinary and
unusual case that such treatment’ will amount to a novus actus interveniens.
Q Does the causation test today amount to a ‘but for’ test?
Attorney General’s Reference (No 3 of 1994) (1997) HL
See 1.1.1, above.
Kennedy (1998) CA
See 3.1.2, above.
Commissioners of Police for the Metropolis v Reeves (1999) HL
V was held in custody, attempting to hang himself twice. The same day as
a previous attempt, V hung and killed himself with his shirt through cell
bars, having been left unsupervised for a few minutes.
Held The defendant is contributorily negligent, having breached their
duty of care. (1) ‘... given the admitted breach of duty of care, the defence
of novus actus interveniens cannot assist the commissioner. The deceased’s
suicide was the precise event to which the duty was directed and, as an
actus, it was accordingly neither novus nor interveniens’ (per Lord Jauncey).
Accordingly, nor does a defence of volenti non fit injuria succeed. (2) V’s
‘voluntary choice was the cause of his loss ... To qualify as an autonomous
choice, the choice made must be free and unconstrained – that is,
voluntary, deliberate and informed. If the plaintiff is under a disability,
either through lack of mental capacity or lack or excess of age, the plaintiff
will lack autonomy and will not have made a free and unconstrained
choice’ (per Lord Hobhouse). (3) ‘The act of the deceased was accordingly
a substantial cause of his own demise and any damages recoverable by the
plaintiff should be reduced to reflect this [viz, 50/50]’ (per Lord Hoffman).
126
Causation
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the moving car was within the range of responses which might be expected
from a victim placed in his situation. The jury should bear in mind any
particular characteristic of the victim and the fact that, in the agony of the
moment, he might act without thought and deliberation.
128
Causation
cause,’ then death resulted from the wound, ‘albeit that some other cause
of death is also operating’. Only where ‘the original wounding is merely
the setting in which another cause operates’ does death not result from the
wound. ‘Only if the second cause is so overwhelming as to make the
original wound merely part of the history’ does a novus actus interveniens
arise.
Malcherek (1981) (CA)
D stabbed V, causing a critical abdominal wound. V was put on a life
support machine, which was subsequently switched off after doctors
decided that brain death had occurred, albeit without complying with
standard criteria for establishing brain death.
Held D was guilty of murder. Per Lord Lane CJ: the ‘discontinuance of
treatment’, such as mechanical life support, ‘does not break the chain of
causation between the initial injury and the death’. The evidence
established that the original wound was the ‘continuing, operating and
indeed substantial cause’ of V’s death, although ‘it need not be substantial
to render the assailant guilty’.
Q What if the discontinuance of treatment was ‘palpably wrong’, as in
Jordan, above?
Note
The court held, obiter, that it preferred the decision in Smith (above) to
that of Jordan (above), the latter being ‘a very exceptional case’.
Cheshire (1991) CA
See 13.2.1, above.
Q Is there a distinction between such negligent treatment and the
‘palpably wrong’ treatment in Jordan (above)?
Airedale NHS Trust v Bland (1993) HL
B existed in a persistent vegetative state (‘PVS’), requiring ventilation
nutrition and hydration by artificial means. B never consented to the
termination of such artificial means by the hospital, which would cause
death. The hospital sought a judicial reference as to liability.
Held It was not unlawful for doctors to withdraw life supporting
medical treatment, including artificial feeding through a nasogastric tube,
from a patient in a persistent vegetative state who had no prospect of any
recovery, notwithstanding that such discontinuance would cause the
patient’s death within a matter of weeks. Per Lord Goff, withdrawal of
treatment causing death:
... may be lawful, either because the doctor is giving effect to his patient’s wishes
by withholding the treatment or care, or even, in certain circumstances, in
129
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13.4 Contemporaneity
13.4.1 Contemporaneity applies to actions as a whole
Thabo Meli v R (1954) PC
D1 and D2 conspired to murder V, eventually striking V over the head.
Believing V dead, they rolled his body over a cliff, after which V died of
exposure while unconscious.
Held D1 and D2 were guilty of murder. Their actions were indivisible,
belonging to a single series of acts which culminated in V’s death and,
therefore, not requiring contemporaneity between actus reus and mens rea
at every moment of the chain of events resulting in the death of V.
Note
The principle of contemporaneity requires that the actus reus and mens
rea must coincide temporarily to incur criminal liability.
130
Causation
131
14 Complicity
14.1 General
133
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134
Complicity
135
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Millward (1994) CA
D sent an employee out in a tractor with a defective trailer, resulting in an
accident and the death of another motorist.
Held D was guilty of procuring the offence of causing death by reckless
driving. Per Scott Baker J: ‘[D] caused [the employee] to drive that vehicle
in that condition, just as Leak had caused Cogan to have sexual intercourse
with his wife.’ (See Cogan and Leak, above.)
Wan and Chan (1994) CA
W and C believed that V had stolen C’s valuable watch, and allegedly
arranged for V to be assaulted. V was badly beaten up.
Held W and C were not guilty of procuring the infliction of grievous
bodily harm. The attackers went beyond the scope of what W and C had
asked them to do, and the jury never considered whether W and C had
foreseen that the infliction of grievous bodily harm by the attackers was a
substantial risk, as per Chan Wing-Siu (above).
Powell and English (1997) HL
A, B and C went to purchase drugs from a dealer, V, at his house. V was
shot dead. The Crown could not prove which of the three men fired the
gun, but all three knew that someone (Powell) was armed.
D and E were assaulting a police officer with a wooden post, when E
(English) stabbed and killed the officer.
Held A and B were guilty of murder; D was not guilty of murder. Per
Lord Hutton: ‘[1] ... where two parties embark on a joint enterprise to
commit a crime, and one party foresees that, in the course of the enterprise,
the other party may carry out, with the requisite mens rea, an act
constituting another crime, the former is liable for that crime if committed
by the latter in the course of the enterprise. [2] ... it is sufficient to found a
conviction for murder for a secondary party to have realised that, in the
course of the joint enterprise, the primary party might kill with intent to
do so or with intent to cause grievous bodily harm.’ (3) If the jury
considered that E’s use of the knife was not foreseen by D, then D is not
guilty of murder. ‘As the unforeseen use of the knife would take the killing
outside the scope of the joint venture, the jury should also have been
directed ... that [D] should not be found guilty of manslaughter.’
Note
Per Lord Steyn (Lord Mustill concurring): ‘... the legislature [should]
undertake reform ... namely, that a killing should be classified as murder
if there is an intention to kill or an intention to cause really serious bodily
harm, coupled with awareness of the risk of death.’
136
Complicity
Reardon (1999) CA
D was in a bar with others, one of whom (M) shot two people. V1 died
instantly, but V2 did not. The bodies were dragged outside but, when M
realised that V2 was still alive, he asked D to lend him a knife. M then went
outside and fatally stabbed V2. D was charged with the murder of both
victims. D was convicted after the jury were directed that, if D handed
over the knife realising or contemplating that M would kill or cause really
serious injury, then D was responsible for the consequences and, if M had
killed two people, then D would be guilty of both murders. D appealed,
claiming that what M did with the knife was outside his contemplation
and, therefore, not part of any common purpose between D and M.
Held The test to be applied was whether when D handed the knife over
to M, he could reasonably foresee acts of the type that D did in fact carry
out. It was clear in this case that, whichever victim M stabbed first, the
fatal stabbing of at least V2 was contemplated by D when he handed over
the knife. D must have realised that, if V1 was found still breathing, M
would have fatally stabbed him too. Therefore, M’s act was one foreseen
by D, even if he did not intend the knife be used in that way.
Uddin (1999) CA
After a road rage incident, V got out of his car and was confronted by four
youths. The youths began attacking V. Later, two other youths joined the
group and a witness saw six youths attacking, some using billiard cues as
weapons. Eventually, the youths ran off. V died three days later from his
injuries, the most serious of which was a stab wound near the base of the
skull. D, one of the youths, was convicted of murder, but appealed,
claiming that he had not foreseen the use of a knife as a possibility in the
joint enterprise.
Held Where several persons join to attack a victim in circumstances
which show that they intend to inflict serious harm and, as a result of the
attack, V sustains fatal injury, they are jointly liable for murder; however,
if such injury, inflicted with that intent, is shown to have been caused
solely by the actions of one participant (of a type entirely different from
actions which the others foresaw as part of the attack), then only that
participant is guilty of murder.
In deciding whether actions are of such a different type, the use by that
party of a weapon is a significant factor. If the character of that weapon
(that is, its propensity to cause death) is different from any weapon used
or contemplated by the others, and if it is used with specific intent to kill,
the others are not responsible for the death, unless it is proved that they
foresaw the likelihood of such a weapon being used. If others in the joint
enterprise use a weapon which could be regarded as equally likely to
inflict a fatal injury, the mere fact that a different weapon is used is
immaterial.
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138
Complicity
139
15 Attempts
141
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Note
The Court of Appeal is not stating that recklessness will suffice as the
mental element for the attempted crime per se, but that intention is
required in relation to the attempted act, and recklessness will suffice as
to the surrounding circumstances.
142
Attempts
143
BRIEFCASE on Criminal Law
Held D’s act, in giving false particulars on the form, was merely
preparatory to obtaining hire purchase services because, if the hire
purchase company had responded favourably to the proposal, it still
remained for D to seek a hire purchase agreement with them. Also, D’s
acts could not be described as immediately, rather than remotely,
connected with the specific offence alleged to have been attempted.
Accordingly, there could be no conviction.
Boyle and Boyle (1987) CA
D was charged with attempted burglary. D damaged the door of a house
with a view to entering the premises as a trespasser, and with intent to
steal therein. D claimed that his acts were merely preparatory.
Held In deciding whether the act was more than merely preparatory to
the commission of an offence, the court was entitled to look back at the
common law and see the tests that were then applied. There was ample
evidence that D intended to enter the house to steal and so commit the
offence of burglary; in breaking down the door, he did a more than
preparatory act.
Rowley (1992) CA
D left notes in public places, offering incentives to boys, designed to lure
them for immoral purposes. The notes themselves were not indecent. D
was convicted of attempting to incite a child aged under 14 to commit an
act of gross indecency. D appealed.
Held The notes went no further than to seek to arrange a preliminary
meeting with the boys. No proposition or incitement to the offence
emanated from D. This act is not more than merely preparatory, even
assuming that the intention of D was to commit an act of gross indecency.
An attempted incitement may have taken place had D sent a letter to a boy,
which actually suggested committing an act of gross indecency, but where
the boy never actually received it. In that situation, D would have done all
he could towards inciting the boy.
Geddes (1996) CA
D was seen in the lavatory block of a school, carrying a rucksack. He had
no connection with the school and no right to be there. Later, D’s rucksack
was found near the lavatory block, containing a large kitchen knife, some
rope and a roll of masking tape. A cider can belonging to him was found
inside a lavatory cubicle. D was convicted of attempted false
imprisonment.
Held The line between acts which were merely preparatory and those
which might amount to an attempt was not clear or easy to recognise.
There was no rule of thumb test, but each case required an individual
exercise of judgment on the facts. The statutory test could accurately be
paraphrased as a test, per Lord Bingham LCJ: ‘... to ask whether the
144
Attempts
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BRIEFCASE on Criminal Law
the stewards decided not to stop the race and D was convicted of
attempted theft. D appealed on the ground that his acts were merely
preparatory.
Held D could not, at the stage of jumping on to the track, be said to be
in the process of committing theft, and had not committed acts which were
more than merely preparatory to the offence of theft. The actus reus of
attempt is satisfied ‘when the merely preparatory acts come to an end and
the defendant embarks upon the crime proper. When that is will depend,
of course, upon the facts in any particular case’ (per Lord Lane LCJ).
Q How does this differ from the common law tests in Eagleton and
Stonehouse (both at 15.2.1, above)?
Jones (1990) CA
D bought a shotgun, sawed off the end of the barrel and test fired it.
Several days later, D climbed into the back of F’s car and asked F to drive
to a secluded place. D then took the sawn off shotgun from his bag and
pointed it towards F. The safety catch of the gun was on. F grabbed the end
of the gun, threw it out of the window and escaped.
Held ‘More than merely preparatory’ could not mean that D had
necessarily committed the last act within his power towards the
commission of the offence. Although it was necessary to come close to
committing the substantive offence, there may be some acts left to perform
before the substantive offence is committed. In this case, although D had
still to remove the gun’s safety catch, put his finger on the trigger and pull
it, he had performed sufficient acts which were more than merely
preparatory and was, therefore, correctly convicted of attempted murder.
Campbell (1991) CA
D planned to rob a post office. He drove to the post office on a motorcycle,
walked towards the post office in his motorcycle helmet, carrying an
imitation gun and a threatening note, which he planned to hand over to
the cashier. D was arrested before he entered the post office, and was
convicted of attempted robbery.
Held The Gullefer test was approved as representing the true meaning
of the words in s 1 of the Criminal Attempts Act 1981, and previous
common law tests were irrelevant. In this case, D had not ‘embarked upon
the crime proper’, since his weapon was an imitation, he made no attempt
to remove it from his pocket, he was not wearing a disguise and he had not
entered the post office. His acts were merely preparatory and, therefore, he
was not guilty of attempted robbery.
146
Attempts
15.3 Abandonment
Haughton v Smith (1975) HL
A man was stopped in his van by the police on a motorway. The police
found stolen goods in the van. The man was taken to the police station, but
was later allowed to continue on his journey with two police officers in the
van and another following, to the service station where the goods were to
be handed over to D and some others. D was arrested and charged with
attempting to handle stolen goods.
Held If D changed his mind before committing any act which could
amount to an attempt, then he was clearly not guilty of attempting to
commit a crime, since there was no mens rea at the relevant time. If,
however, D changed his mind later, after committing an act which is not
merely preparatory, he was guilty of attempting to commit the offence. In
this situation, there was no defence of abandonment.
147
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148
Attempts
149
16 Conspiracy
Anderson (1986) HL
D agreed, for a fee, to supply diamond wire capable of cutting through
metal bars, in order to enable a prisoner to escape. D did not believe the
plan would succeed, and intended to go abroad after supplying the wire.
Held D was guilty of conspiracy to commit the offence. (1) Conspiracy
may be committed even without intending the agreement to be carried
out. (2) An intention to play some part in the agreed course of conduct
must be established. Per Lord Bridge: ‘Neither the fact that he intended to
play no further part in attempting to effect the escape, nor that he believed
the escape to be impossible would ... have afforded him any defence.’
151
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152
Conspiracy
16.1.2 Impossibility
Nock (1978) HL
D and co-defendants agreed to obtain cocaine from a quantity of powder
obtained from co-defendants. D was unaware that the powder contained
no cocaine; that is, it was impossible to produce cocaine.
Held D was not guilty of conspiracy to produce cocaine. Per Lord
Diplock:
... to agree to pursue a course of conduct, which, if carried out in accordance
with the intention of those agreeing to it, would not amount to or involve the
commission of any offence, would not have amounted to criminal conspiracy at
common law, nor does it now constitute an offence of conspiracy under s 1 of
the [Criminal Law Act 1977].
Note
Notwithstanding s 5(1) of the Criminal Attempts Act 1981, the common
law position remains true for conspiracy offences not covered by statute;
no liability is incurred for a conspiracy to commit the impossible.
Anderson (1986) HL
See 16.1.1, above.
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154
Conspiracy
155
17 Incitement
157
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Note
Radar alerting devices are now exempted from the need for such a
licence by the Wireless Telegraphy Apparatus (Receivers) (Exemption)
Regulations 1989.
Whitehouse (1977) CA
D urged his daughter to commit incest with him; she was legally
incapable, by her age, of being either a principal or accessory to incest.
Held D was not guilty of incitement for persuading his daughter to
commit an act which was not an offence. Per Scarman LJ: ‘... at common
law, the crime of incitement consists of inciting another person to commit
a crime ... An inciter is one who reaches and seeks to influence the mind of
another to the commission of a crime.’
Note
It is today an offence, under s 54 of the Criminal Law Act 1977, for a man
to incite a female under 16, whom he knows to be his granddaughter,
daughter or sister, to have sexual intercourse.
158
Incitement
Booth (1998) CA
A group of authors allegedly called upon readers to commit offences of
criminal damage and economic sabotage in the causes of
environmentalism and animal liberation.
Held The defendants were not guilty of incitement to commit criminal
damage and arson. The jury direction failed to spell out all the elements of
all alleged primary offences. Per Henry LJ: ‘... where ... a single count
charges a conspiracy to commit (or in [this] case, incite) more than one
offence, the Crown must probably prove that the conspiracy embraces all
the offences alleged in the particulars, or at least that it embraces the
offence which is the most serious of those alleged.’
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Mason (1998) CA
D1, D2 and V lived in the same house. D1 told her brother, D2, that she
wanted her lover, V, ‘out of my life. I want to get rid of him’. One night, D2
bludgeoned V with a hammer and stabbed him.
Held D1 was not guilty of inciting attempted murder, but was guilty of
inciting the infliction of grievous bodily harm. The ‘correct test’ for
determining the mens rea for incitement is not an objective test, but, per
Buxton LJ, ‘what [the defendant] subjectively herself intended to convey
by the use of those words’ alleged to be the incitement.
17.3 Impossibility
160
18 Omissions
161
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162
Omissions
163
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Held Per Phillimore LJ: ‘We think there is a clear distinction between an
act of omission and an act of commission likely to cause harm ... If I strike
a child in a manner likely to cause harm, it is right that, if the child dies, I
may be charged with manslaughter. If, however, I omit to do something,
with the result that it suffers injury to health, concluding in its death, we
think that a charge of manslaughter should not be an inevitable
consequence, even if the omission is deliberate.’
Mavji (1987) CA
D was the director of a company. He was charged VAT on gold that he
dealt in, but he did not account for the tax to Customs and Excise. D was
charged with the offence of cheating the public revenue.
Held The common law offence of cheating the public revenue consisted
of fraudulent conduct by which money was diverted from the Revenue
and the Revenue was deprived of money to which it was entitled. This
offence could be committed by omission as well as by the positive act of
deceit. D had a statutory duty to pay VAT arising from s 38(1) of the
Finance Act 1972, and failure to do so could amount to a criminal
omission.
164
Omissions
165
19 Recklessness
Stephenson (1979) CA
D crawled into a haystack to sleep. To keep warm, he lit a fire which
destroyed the haystack. D was known to be suffering from schizophrenia.
D was convicted of criminal damage.
Held The word ‘reckless’ required that D must actually have foreseen
the risk of damage resulting from his actions and, nevertheless, ran the
risk. D, through no fault of his own, was incapable of appreciating the risk
because of his mental condition. D was therefore entitled to be acquitted.
167
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168
Recklessness
flats because of the design of the building. D claimed there was no danger
to others, because there was no one else in the flat at the time he started the
fire.
Held The test to be applied in deciding whether D created an obvious
risk of damaging property and endangering lives is: ‘... is it proved that an
ordinary prudent bystander would have perceived an obvious risk that
property would be damaged and that life would thereby be endangered?
The ordinary prudent bystander is not deemed to be invested with expert
knowledge regarding the construction of the property, nor to have the
benefit of hindsight. The time at which his perception is material is the
time when the fore is started’ (per Tucker J).
Reid (1992) HL
D was driving in the inside lane of a dual carriageway. D tried to overtake
another car on its nearside, but there was a hut protruding into the road in
that lane. D’s car struck the hut and his passenger was killed.
Held Recklessness could not be restricted to a subjective test and
included failing to appreciate an obvious risk. However, it was not always
necessary to direct the jury precisely in the terms of Lord Diplock’s
specimen direction in Lawrence (above). Per Lord Ackner, Lord Diplock’s
dicta in Lawrence was ‘... no more than a cautionary instruction to the jury
... yet, before reaching any firm conclusion, they must have regard to any
explanation which accounts for [D’s] conduct. In short, they must have
regard to all the available evidence’.
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Reid (1992) HL
Facts as in 19.2, above.
Held Per Lord Goff:
I accept that, if D is addressing his mind to the possibility of risk and suffers
from a bona fide mistake as to a specific fact which, if true, would have excluded
the risk, he cannot be described as reckless, though he may be guilty of careless
driving.
Adomako (1994) HL
Facts as in 3.2.1, above.
Held Seymour was overruled by the House of Lords. Andrews v DPP
was the appropriate authority for the mens rea of manslaughter, which
required proof of gross negligence.
Pigg (1982) CA
D was convicted of attempted rape.
Held Per Lord Lane CJ:
It seems to us that, in the light of [the] decision in Caldwell, so far as rape is
concerned, a man is reckless if either he was indifferent and gave no thought to
the possibility that the woman might not be consenting in circumstances where,
if any thought had been given to the matter, it would have been obvious that
there was a risk that she was not, or that he was aware of the possibility that she
might not be consenting, but nevertheless persisted, regardless of whether she
consented or not.
170
Recklessness
171
Glossary
2 Voluntary Manslaughter
Ahluwalia ‘Battered woman syndrome’
Bedder Impotence
Brown Adultery
Byrne Abnormality of mind
Camplin 15 year old boy
Clarke Abortion
Doughty Baby’s persistent crying
Egan Intoxication
Hobson ‘Battered woman syndrome’
173
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3 Involuntary Manslaughter
Adomako Anaesthetist
Andrews v DPP Driver
Ball Loaded gun
Bateman Midwife
Bothwell Motorist
Cato Administering heroin
Church Series of acts
Dalby Supply of a scheduled drug
Dawson Petrol station robbery
Franklin Swimmer
Goodfellow House fire
Jennings Sheath knife
Kennedy Supply of heroin
Khan Sale of heroin
Lamb Revolver
174
Glossary
Lawrence Motorcyclist
Lowe Neglect of ill child
Newbury and Jones v DPP Railway bridge
R v DPP ex p Jones Fire safety precautions
Scarlett Publican
Senior Religious beliefs
Stone and Dobinson Neglect of relative
Watson Brick through window
175
BRIEFCASE on Criminal Law
Light Sword
Little Assault and battery
Logdon v DPP Replica gun
Lynsey Spittle
Mandair Acidic cleanser
Martin Theatre exits barred
Meade and Belt Threatening singing
Miller Marital rape
Morris Stalking
Morrison Dive through window
Mowatt Fight over money
Parmenter Physical child abuse
Purcell Hammer attack
Richardson Dentist
Roberts Escape from car
Savage Glass
Slingsby Injuries from sexual intercourse
Smith v Superintendent of
Woking Police Station Peeping Tom
Tuberville v Savage Conditional threat of force
Venna Assault of police officer
Wilson v Pringle Hostile touching
Wilson Branding buttocks
Wilson Gatekeeper threatened
Wilson Motorist assault
176
Glossary
6 Theft
AG’s Reference (No 1 of 1983) Overpaid salary in bank
AG’s Reference (No 1 of 1985) Sale of beer in pub
Atakpu Overseas car hire
Bonner Company property
Chan Man Sin v AG
for Hong Kong Forged cheques
Clarke (Victor) Private investigator
Coffey Holding property as ransom
Dobson v General Accident Insurance policy
Eddy v Niman Aborted theft
Feeley Betting shop manager
177
BRIEFCASE on Criminal Law
178
Glossary
179
BRIEFCASE on Criminal Law
180
Glossary
8 Self-Defence
AG for Northern Ireland’s
Reference (No 1 of 1975) Shooting by soldier
AG’s Reference (No 2 of 1983) Petrol bombs
Armstrong-Braun Protection of habitat
Beckford Police shooting
Bird Drinking glass
Clegg Shooting by soldier
Culverhouse Fight
Devlin v Armstrong Riot
181
BRIEFCASE on Criminal Law
Field Fight
Gay Assault on police
Julien Duty to retreat
Malnik v DPP Stolen cars
Owino Violent husband
Palmer Drug dealers
Shannon Stabbed with scissors
Speede and Baptiste Stabbing
9 Mistakes
Arrowsmith Incitement to disaffect
Blake v DPP Vicar
Financial Services Authority
v Scandex Capital
Management Illegal trade in the UK
Grant v Borg Overstaying visa
Hipperson v DPP Atomic Weapons Establishment
Morgan Gang rape of wife
Morrow, Geach and Thomas Anti-abortion demonstration
O’Grady Drunken mistake
Secretary of State for Trade
and Industry v Hart Auditor of two companies
Smith (DR) Tenant
Tolson Deserted by husband
Williams (Gladstone) Mistaken assault
10 Mental Disorder
AG’s Reference (No 2 of 1992) Loss of control whilst driving
Bailey Self-induced hypoglycaemia
Bingham Hypoglycaemia
182
Glossary
11 Intoxication
Allen Alcohol content of drink
Beard Intoxication and rape
Bowden Drunkenness and mens rea
C Indecent assault on a child
Caldwell Intoxication and recklessness
Fotheringham Sexual intercourse with babysitter
Gallagher Dutch courage
Groark Intoxication as a defence
Hardie Soporific drugs
Kellett Pit bull terrier
Kingston Involuntary intoxication
Majewski Intoxication and actual bodily harm
O’Connor Self-defence and intoxication
O’Grady Drunken mistake
Richardson Drunken horseplay
183
BRIEFCASE on Criminal Law
184
Glossary
13 Causation
Airedale NHS Trust v Bland Withdrawal of life support
Blaue Refusal of blood transfusion
Cheshire Medical mistreatment
Commissioners of Metropolitan
Police v Reeves Suicide in custody
Daley Stone throwing
Jordan Medical mistreatment
LeBrun Continuous act
Malcherek Life support machine
Michael Poisoning of child
Miller Mattress fire
Pagett Human shield
PD Suspected suicide
Smith Delayed medical treatment
Thabo Meli v R Series of acts
White Poisoning
Williams and Davis Hitchhiker
185
BRIEFCASE on Criminal Law
14 Complicity
AG’s Reference (No 1 of 1975) Laced drinks
Allan Presence at scene of crime
Becerra Burglary with knife
Bentley Shooting of police officer
Blakely and Sutton v DPP Laced drinks
Bourne Buggery with dog
Chan Wing-Siu Armed robbery
Clarkson and Carroll Witness of rape
Cogan and Leek Forced sexual intercourse with another
Howe Torture
Li Kidnap and shooting
Millward Defective tractor
Mitchell Fight in restaurant
Powell and English Drug dealer
Reardon Loan of knife
Uddin Road rage attack
Wan and Chan Arranged assault
Wilcox v Jeffery Concert by immigrant
15 Attempts
AG’s Reference (No 1 of 1992) Attempted rape
AG’s Reference (No 3 of 1992) Attempted arson
Anderton v Ryan Stolen video recorder
Boyle and Boyle Attempted burglary
Campbell Attempted robbery of post office
Eagleton Proximity
Geddes School premises
Gullefer Greyhound race
186
Glossary
16 Conspiracy
Anderson Supply of diamond wire
Ashton Conspiracy to murder
Jackson Perverting course of justice
Knuller v DPP Magazine advertisements
Moses and Ansbro Obtaining National Insurance numbers
Nock Fake cocaine
Scott v Metropolitan Police Copying cinema films
Shaw v DPP Ladies Directory
Siracusa Importing drugs
187
BRIEFCASE on Criminal Law
17 Incitement
Booth Animal liberation
Curr Family allowance books
Fitzmaurice Fictional robbery
Higgins Theft from employer
Invicta Plastics v Clare Sale of police radar device
James and Ashford Electricity meters
Marlow Book on growing cannabis
Mason Inciting attempted murder
Race Relations Board
v Applin Circular
Shaw Bogus invoices
Whitehouse Incest
18 Omissions
Airedale NHS Trust v Bland Withdrawing life support
Empress Car Co v National
Rivers Authority Diesel oil tank
Fagan v MPC Injury to police officer’s foot
Gibbins and Proctor Starvation of child
Instan Neglect of elderly aunt
Lowe Neglect of child
Mavji VAT fraud
Miller Mattress set on fire
Pitwood Gatekeeper
Shepherd Death in childbirth
Singh Landlord’s failure to repair
188
Glossary
19 Recklessness
Adomako Anaesthetist
Caldwell Fire in hotel
Cunningham Theft of gas meter
Elliott v C Fire in shed
K Acid in hand dryer
Lawrence Motorcycle collision with pedestrian
Parker Public telephone
Pigg Attempted rape
Reid Collision with hut
Sangha Fire in flat
Satnam and Kewal Rape
Seymour Lorry driver
Shimmen Martial arts expert
Spratt Air pistol
Stephenson Fire in haystack
189
Index
191
BRIEFCASE on Criminal Law
192
Index
193
BRIEFCASE on Criminal Law
194
Index
195
BRIEFCASE on Criminal Law
196
Index
197
BRIEFCASE on Criminal Law
198
Index
199