Crimes against the Person: Homicide (Causation Requirements) Flashcards

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1
Q

In general, what are the causation requirements for homicide?

A

D’s conduct must be the 1. cause in fact; and 2. proximate cause of V’s death

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2
Q

When is D’s conduct the “cause in fact” of V’s death?

A

“but for test” - D’s conduct is the cause in fact of V’s death if the death would not have happened “but for” D’s conduct

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3
Q

When is D’s conduct the “proximate cause” of V’s death?

A

D’s conduct is the “proximate cause” of V’s death if the results is a “NATURAL AND FORESEEABLE CONSEQUENCE” of the conduct, even if D did not anticipate the PRECISE MANNER in which the result occurred.

NOTE –> superseding factors can break chain of proximate cause

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4
Q

What is the rule with regards to causation and an act that hastens an inevitable results?

A

An act that hastens an inevitable result is STILL the legal cause of that result

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5
Q

What is the rule with regards to causation and simultaneous acts of two or more persons?

A

Simultaneous acts of 2 or more persons MAY be independently sufficient causes of a single result

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6
Q

What is the rule with regards to a victim’s pre-existing weakness or fragility?

A

A victims pre-existing weakness or fragility does NOT break the chain of causation, EVEN if it was NOT foreseeable

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7
Q

What is the “year and a day rule” ?

A

Traditionally –> for D to be liable for homicide, death of victim must occur within 1 year and 1 day from infliction of injury

MODERN approach –> most states who have reviewed this rule have abolished it

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8
Q

What is the rule with regards to causation and intervening acts?

A

General rule –> an “intervening act” shields D from liability IF the act is OUTSIDE the foreseeable sphere of risk created byD

NOTE –> 3rd party’s negligent medical care and victim’s refusal of medical treatment ARE foreseeable, so D is still liable

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9
Q

What is the “born alive” rule?

A

Traditional rule –> infant had to be born alive to be victim of homicide

Some states –> have extended protection to unborn children as potential homicide victims

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