Burglary - Having Entered, Remains Without Authority Flashcards
Section
Sec 231(1)(b) Crimes Act 1961
Penalty
10 years imprisonment
Ingredients
1) Having entered
2) Any building or ship
3) Remains in it without authority
4) With intent to commit an imprisonable offence in the building or ship
Having Entered
The word “having” changes the entry element from sec 231 (1)(a) as the accused must have already entered the building or ship before formulating the required intent to commit a crime.
Entered
Section 231 (1)(3) CA61
For the purposes of sec 231 and sec 232, entry is defined under section 231(3) as:
entrance into a building or ship is made as soon as any part of the body of the person making the entrance, or any part of any instrument used by that person, is within the building or ship;
and
b) everyone who gains entrance to a building or ship by any threat or artifice used for that purpose is to be treated as having entered without authority.
Building
Section 231 (2) CA61
Means any building or structure of any description, whether permanent or temporary; and includes any tent, caravan or houseboat; and also includes any enclosed yard or closed cave or closed tunnel.
Ship
Section 2 Crimes Act 1961
Means every description of every vessel used in navigation, however propelled; and includes any barge, lighter, dinghy, raft, or like vessel; and also includes any ship belonging to or used as a ship of the armed forces, of any country.
Remains In It Without Authority
The term “remains” suggests this form of offence may be committed in two ways.
No: 1 - Remains
The physical element of the offence is complete on the act of deliberately remaining in the building after the point where the accused should have left the building.
No: 2 - Remains
A continuing act of remaining in the building without authority, and the continuing act is accompanied by an intent to commit a crime within the building.
Without Authority
The act does not provide a clear definition of “authority”. In general terms, permission to enter onto (or remain within) the premises will be given by the occupier or person entitled to give consent.
R v Keen
The three questions formulated for without authority by the judge in R v Keen were:
1) What is the authority asserted?
2) What is the extent of that authority?
3) Was it exceeded?
R v Collins
There cannot be a conviction for entering a premises ‘as a trespasser’ unless the person entering does so knowing he is a trespasser and deliberately enters or is reckless whether or not he is entering the premises of another without the other party’s consent.
Intent
In a criminal law context there are two specific types of intention in an offence. Firstly there must be an intention to commit the act and secondly an intention to get a specific result
An Imprisonable Offence
S5 CPA11
Normal meaning - any offence punishable by life imprisonment or a term of imprisonment.