2009 21 SAcLJ 557 NathanielKhng ChenSiyuan)
2009 21 SAcLJ 557 NathanielKhng ChenSiyuan)
2009 21 SAcLJ 557 NathanielKhng ChenSiyuan)
Case Note
CHEN Siyuan
LLB (Hons) (National University of Singapore);
Lecturer of Law, Singapore Management University.
I. Introduction
1 Professor Michael Hor, for instance, described the doctrine of common intention
as “one of the most puzzling doctrines in criminal law today”: see Michael Hor,
“Common Intention and the Enterprise of Constructing Criminal Liability” (1999)
Sing JLS 494 at 494.
2 Cap 224, 1985 Rev Ed.
558 Singapore Academy of Law Journal (2009) 21 SAcLJ
liable for that act in the same manner as if the act were done by him
alone.
II. Facts
3 M Sornarajah, “Common Intention and Murder under the Penal Codes” (1995)
Sing JLS 29 at 32.
4 [2008] 3 SLR 447. The judgment referred to is the leading judgment of
V K Rajah JA. Although the other two judges who made up the Coram, Choo Han
Teck J and Woo Bih Li J, delivered separate judgments, they concurred with
Rajah JA’s views on s 34.
5 Cap 68, 1985 Rev Ed.
(2009) 21 SAcLJ Common Intention 559
with an electrical cord, and his feet bound by a belt. Another electrical
cord was found across the front of his neck. A bent knife was found
beneath his body, and a chopper was also found in the hall. In total, 18
external injuries (including stab wounds) were caused to D. The cause of
death was asphyxia due to strangulation; the stab wounds were not
acutely fatal. After the robbery, D’s cash-on-line (“COL”) card was used
to make multiple bank withdrawals and purchases.
7 On 12 December 1993, the trio carried out their plan. Too had
called D on the pretext of wanting to introduce a friend to him.
D agreed to meet them. Lee was extremely worried from the outset
about being arrested after the robbery, given that D was seemingly well
acquainted with Too. Lee even quarrelled with Too en route to D’s house,
but decided to carry on with the robbery nonetheless. Upon reaching
the house, Too and Lee chatted with D over drinks. What happened after
that was the subject of conflicting accounts.
8 Too said that when D chatted with Lee, he slipped into the
kitchen and found himself a knife. When he returned, Lee brandished
his knife. Too did likewise and they demanded information from D as to
where they could get money. They took D to the second storey and tied
him up in his room and ransacked the house. Before they left, Lee
stabbed D. The knife did not penetrate well so he used a cord to strangle
him. Lee only released his grip after D began frothing at the mouth. Too
and Lee continued searching for valuables and, at some point, Lee hit
D’s head. Too and Lee then left the house.
abdominal region twice, but the knife did not penetrate successfully. He
also rained a few blows on D. After that, Too and Lee led D upstairs to a
bedroom. They tied him up. Lee ransacked the house while Too
remained in the room. Lee eventually went downstairs, and on his way,
he saw Too covering D’s face with a pillow. Ng came into the house to
search for more valuables before the trio escaped.
10 After the robbery, D’s COL card was used to make multiple
bank withdrawals and purchases. At no point after leaving D’s house did
Lee ask Too what happened to D or discuss with him what they would
do if D freed himself.
6 Cap 224, 1985 Rev Ed; Lee Chez Kee v PP [2008] 3 SLR 447 at [34]–[40].
(2009) 21 SAcLJ Common Intention 561
37 … [The trial judge], however, did not yet find that [Lee] had
in fact inflicted the fatal strangulation … [Lee’s] evidence at trial that
he had merely observed Too placing the pillow on [D’s] face from a
distance while he was going downstairs was clearly inconsistent with
his prior evidence …
…
39 … the trial judge stated that, in his view, it was not necessary
to establish the identity of the person who actually strangled [D] as
the requirements of s 34 were satisfied …
40 … the trial judge also opined that even if one were to accept
that it was Too, and not [Lee], who was solely responsible for [D’s]
death, the rest of the evidence showed that Too’s conduct to this effect
was in furtherance of their common intention to rob [D] …
[emphasis in original]
(a) “Criminal act” refers to all the acts done by the persons
involved which cumulatively result in the criminal offence in
9
question. It does not only refer to the actual crime committed.
(b) Presence at the scene of the criminal act, whether the
situation is a single or twin crime situation, need not be strictly
insisted on – the key is participation, but participation in the
10
primary criminal act suffices for liability to fix.
(c) To infer common intention, it must be shown that the
criminal act was done pursuant to a pre-arranged plan,
although it is possible to form a common intention just before
the offence is committed. The circumstances that can lead to an
inference of a common intention are non-exhaustive and cover
11
both the antecedent and subsequent conduct of the parties.
(d) The secondary offender must subjectively know that
one in his party may likely commit the collateral offence in
furtherance of the common intention of carrying out the
12
primary offence.
A. A criminal act
15
by virtue of their common intention, and Barendra Kumar Ghosh v
Emperor (“Barendra Kumar”) which stated that a “criminal act” refers to
the “unity of criminal behaviour” that results in an outcome for which
16
an individual would be punished if he had done it alone.
16 The authors are of the opinion that the court rightly adopted
17
the established view. It is important to remember too that it is not
necessary for the conduct of each party to the criminal act to be the
same. The “criminal act” may consist of different acts, as would be the
case for a gang rape where one person rapes the victim while the others
keep watch, or housebreaking where some persons conduct the actual
burglary and others act as lookouts. As stated pithily in Barendra
18
Kumar:
It is impossible to conceive two individuals doing identically the same
act. Such a thing is impossible. Therefore to have any meaning, the
expression ‘criminal act done by several persons’ must contemplate an
act which can be divided into parts each part being executed by a
different person, the whole making up the criminal act which was the
common intention of all. To put it in another way the one criminal act
may be regarded as made up of a number of acts done by the
individual conspirators, the result of their individual acts being the
criminal act which was the common intention of them all.
18 The court then noted that past cases were divided on the issue
21
of what constitutes participation. Some cases have held that
participation can be active or passive, and where participation is passive,
15 W W Chitaley & VB Bakhale, The Indian Penal Code (XLV of 1860) vol 1 (The All
India Reporter Ltd, 3rd Ed, 1980) at p 160.
16 AIR 1925 PC 1 at 9.
17 See also Yeo, Morgan & Chan, Criminal Law in Malaysia and Singapore
(LexisNexis, 2007) at para 35.15.
18 Emperor v Barendra Kumar Ghose AIR 1924 Cal 257 at 312.
19 Lee Chez Kee v PP [2008] 3 SLR 447 at [138].
20 Lee Chez Kee v PP [2008] 3 SLR 447 at [138].
21 Lee Chez Kee v PP [2008] 3 SLR 447 at [139].
564 Singapore Academy of Law Journal (2009) 21 SAcLJ
22
mere presence suffices. Recent cases such as PP v Gerardine Andrew,
however, propagated the view that presence is the only possible
indication of participation rather than only being indicative of
participation.
19 After surveying the case law, the court held that presence at the
scene of the criminal act should not be insisted upon, regardless of
23
whether it is a single or “twin crime” situation. The key issue is whether
there was participation, not presence, and participation need not always
be established by way of physical presence; whether there was
participation should be a question of fact in each case as to whether the
accused person had participated to such a degree that he could be
24
deemed to be as blameworthy as the primary offender.
27
and 24 strokes of the cane for that charge. It can be safely assumed that
one of the major reasons as to why the planner did not face a similar
capital charge as the robbers was the fact that he was not present at the
scene of the robbery. Now that presence explicitly need not be
established for participation to be found, the requirement of
participation may be met in cases similar to that of the planner; thus,
the possibility of such travesties of justice occurring in the future may
be ameliorated.
29 One point which the court did not touch upon though is the
possibility of conflating same and/or similar intention with common
39
intention. Eminent Indian publicists have written:
Care must be taken not to confuse same or similar intention with
common intention; the partition which divides their bounds is often
very thin, nevertheless, the distinction is real and substantial and if
overlooked will result is miscarriage of justice. The plan need not be
elaborate, nor is a long interval of time required. It could arise and be
formed suddenly. But there must be pre-arrangement and
premeditated concert.
39 Justice Y V Chandrachud & V R Manohar, Ratanlal & Dhirajlal’s The Indian Penal
Code (Wadhwa and Company, 31st Ed, 2006) at p 134.
40 Yeo, Morgan & Chan, Criminal Law in Malaysia and Singapore (LexisNexis, 2007)
at para 35.21.
41 Lee Chez Kee v PP [2008] 3 SLR 447 at [162].
42 Lee Chez Kee v PP [2008] 3 SLR 447 at [175].
43 [1936] MLJ 53 at 56.
44 See also Yeo, Morgan & Chan, Criminal Law in Malaysia and Singapore
(LexisNexis, 2007) at para 35.26.
568 Singapore Academy of Law Journal (2009) 21 SAcLJ
45 [1936] MLJ 142 at 144, eg, where a “secondary party knew that the act was
imminently dangerous and would in all probability cause death”.
46 [1972–1974] SLR 73.
47 [1972–1974] SLR 73 at [25].
48 [1972–1974] SLR 73 at [25].
49 Lee Chez Kee v PP [2008] 3 SLR 447 at [175].
50 Whenever an act, which is criminal only by reason of its being done with a criminal
knowledge or intention, is done by several persons, each of the persons who joins
in the act with such knowledge or intention, is liable for the act in the same manner
as if the act were done by him alone with that knowledge or intention.
(2009) 21 SAcLJ Common Intention 569
51 52
(b) Sections 111 and 113 of the Penal Code, two
provisions concerning abetment, are otiose if Mimi Wong v PP
is correct. The existence of a common intention to commit a
primary offence is at least abetment by conspiracy or
intentional aiding. If the mens rea required to hold secondary
offenders liable for the collateral offence is either negligence or
recklessness, then this is also aptly covered by ss 111 and 113. If
the actus reus required is participation in the collateral offence,
then the abetment provisions will once again be satisfied since
participation in the collateral offence must be abetment of the
53
collateral offence.
51 When a act is abetted and a different one is done, the abettor is liable for the act
done, in the same manner, and to the same extent, as if he had directly abetted it:
provided the act done was a probable consequence of the abetment, and was
committed under the influence of the instigation, or with the aid or in pursuance
of the conspiracy which constituted the abetment.
52 When an act is abetted with the intention on the part of the abettor of causing a
particular effect, and an act for which the abettor is liable in consequence of the
abetment causes a different effect from that intended by the abettor, the abettor is
liable for the effect caused, in the same manner, and to the same extent, as if he had
abetted the act with the intention of the causing that effect, provided he knew that
the act abetted was likely to cause that effect.
53 Michael Hor, “Common Intention and the Enterprise of Constructing Criminal
Liability” (1999) Sing JLS 494 at 509.
54 Lee Chez Kee v PP [2008] 3 SLR 447 at [182]–[187].
55 Wherever the causing of a certain effect with a certain intention, or with a
knowledge of certain circumstances, is an offence, it is to be understood that if
more persons than one jointly cause that effect, every one of them who has that
intention, or that knowledge, commits that offence.
56 Lee Chez Kee v PP [2008] 3 SLR 447 at [189]–[190] and [213]–[215].
570 Singapore Academy of Law Journal (2009) 21 SAcLJ
57
either one or both of two Indian cases, The Queen v Gorachand
58 59
Gope and Ganesh Singh v Ram Raja.
(c) Before this expression was added, English and Indian
law differed on liability for common intention. Under the latter,
a person, even though not party to the evil intent of his
companions, could be held liable for murder. The present s 34
was enacted (in 1870) to incorporate into the Penal Code the
60
English law doctrine of common purpose.
(d) Common purpose, as it stood in 1870, was confronted
with various approaches: (i) objective foresight; (ii) subjective
knowledge; and (iii) actual intention to hold the secondary
offender liable in a twin crime situation. However, on a further
inspection of Lord Macaulay’s drafts, he clearly intended to
impute only a subjective knowledge test to the Indian Penal
Code for the doctrine of common purpose. Sections 111 and
113 should be read similarly to embody a subjective knowledge
61
approach.
(e) Although ss 34 and 35 are similarly worded, the
historical underpinnings of s 34 mean that the better reading
would be that s 35 applies to situations where there is no
common intention. The words “in furtherance of the common
intention of all” showed the intent of the Legislature to use s 34,
rather than s 35, to give expression to the doctrine of common
purpose in the Penal Code. Moreover, the predecessor to s 35 –
cl 3 of the (draft) Indian Penal Code – clearly supports the
argument that s 35 was intended to apply in the absence of a
62
common intention.
(f) Section 107(b) contemplates an abetment where the
principal and the abettor are not clearly defined; when this is
read with ss 111 and 113, a s 34 type of situation is seen.
Therefore, there would be no injustice in interpreting s 34 as
requiring no less than ss 111 and 113; both provisions give
63
effect to the doctrine of common purpose.
(g) The argument that s 34 should be reserved for intended
consequences and the abetment provisions for unintended
consequences is flatly contradicted by s 109 of the Penal Code.
Section 109 covers the situation where there must be the
37 The remaining issue for the court to address was when it can be
said that the collateral offence is in furtherance of the common
70
intention:
[I]f the mens rea required of the secondary offenders is not that of the
collateral offence, what is the additional mens rea that is required then,
apart from the mens rea to commit the criminal act constituting the
primary offence?
39 Ultimately, the court held that the mens rea required of the
secondary offender is that he must subjectively know that one in his
party may likely commit the criminal act constituting the collateral
offence in furtherance of the common intention of carrying out the
primary offence; there is no need to have known of the actual method of
76
execution in a murder situation. This approach would be consistent
77 78
with the UK and Australian approach, as well as the current judicial
79
interpretation of the common object provision in the Penal Code
80
(s 149).
71 Eg, Yeo, Morgan & Chan, Criminal Law in Malaysia and Singapore (LexisNexis,
2007) at para 35.38.
72 [1999] 2 SLR 57 at [57].
73 [1996] 2 SLR 150 at [46].
74 [1998] SGHC 286 at [119]–[121] and [132].
75 [1998] 1 SLR 286 at [35].
76 Lee Chez Kee v PP [2008] 3 SLR 447 at [236]–[253].
77 Eg, Regina v Powell [1999] 1 AC 1 at 27. The UK position was recently restated and
reaffirmed by the House of Lords in R v Rahman [2009] 1 AC 129.
78 Eg, Clayton v R (2006) 231 ALR 500.
79 PP v Fazely bin Rahmat [2003] 2 SLR 184.
80 If an offence is committed by any member of an unlawful assembly in prosecution
of the common object of that assembly, or such as the members of that assembly
knew to be likely to be committed in prosecution of that object, every person who,
at the time of committing of that offence is a member of the same assembly, is
guilty of that offence.
(2009) 21 SAcLJ Common Intention 573
VI. Conclusion
88
course, but Lee Chez Kee v PP has largely disambiguated the proper
interpretation of s 34 – an interpretation that arguably strikes the right
balance in ascertaining individual criminal responsibility in group
crimes.