Consent - Legal Principle Flashcards
R v Donovan
Consent can be a defence to battery
R v Slingsby
Consent as a defence to unlawful act manslaughter
R v Tabassum
Consent given by V must be true consent
R v Olugboja
Mere submission is not consent
R v Golding
Serious harm cannot be consented to
R v Barnes
R v Billinghurst
Injury sustained in the course of sport by an action that is in the rules is consensual
R v Brown
People cannot consent to sado-masochistic injury
R v Jones
R v Aitken
Genuine but mistaken consent can lead to a defence
Wilson v Pringle
Implied Consent: Ordinary ‘jostlings’ of life are no battery
AG Reference [No.6 1980]
s.47 injuries cannot be consented to aside from certain exceptions
R v BM
Cannot consent to ABH/GBH Wounding (Body Modification)
R v Emmett
Consent cannot be a defence where injury is more than ‘transient or trifling’