Diminished responsibility Flashcards
defense to reduce murder conviction to voluntary manslaughter
voluntary manslaughter definition
the crime of killing another person unlawfully in circumstances that do not amount to murder
Diminished responsibility intro
Partial defense to murder, reduces conviction to one of voluntary manslaughter (so not a mandatory life sentence BUT judge can still choose to give life)
Established in the Homicide Act 1957
The Conorers and Justice Act 2009 amended the 1957 act
Diminished responsibility Definition
s.2(1) of Homicide Act 1957 or s.52 of C&J Act 2009:
“A person who kills or is a party to a killing of another is not to be convicted of murder if he was suffering from an abnormality of mental functioning arising from a recognized medical condition which substantially impaired D’s ability to:
- understand his own conduct
- form rational judgement
- exercise self-control”
Elements of diminished responsibility
- abnormality of metal functioning
- arising from a recognized medical condition
- which substantially impairs D’s ability to understand his conduct, form rational judgement, exercise self-control
- abnormality of mental functioning
s.52(1)
‘a state of mind so different to that of an ordinary man beings that the reasonable man would term abnormal’
R V Byrne - D was a sexual psychopath, strangled young woman and mutilated her body = medical evidence showed he was unable to control hos perverted desires
- Recognized medical condition
s.52(1)a)
Any condition in the WHO International Classification of Diseases, must provide medical evidence
- battered spouse syndrome ( R V Hobson)
- autism (R V Conroy)
- paranoia (R V squelch
- Alcoholism/ ADS (R V Stewart)
- Substantially impairs D’s ability to
- understand his own conduct
- form rational judgement
- exercise control
D’s mental ability to do 1 or more of these 3 things must be substantially impaired
Byrne - substantial impairment is for the jury to decide
R V Lloyd - not meaning trivial or minimal
R V Golds - not for the judge to define what substantial impairment means (for jury)
provides an explanation for the conduct
Intoxication
intoxication alone cannot support the defense - R V Wood/ R V Dowds
pre-existing abnormality + intoxication at the time of killing can support the defense - R v Dietchmann
Alcohol dependency syndrome (ADS)
ADS = person cannot control their drinking
old law = R V Tandy, where D was unable to resist drinking, DR can be available
new law = R V stewart, sets out three stage test;
1) was D suffering from abnormality of the mind? (pointed out ADS doesn’t automatically mean you have AMF)
2) if yes, was the AMF caused by ADS?
3) if yes, was the D’s mental responsibility substantially impaired?
Burden of proof
s2(2) of Homicide Act 1957:
burden of proof the defendant to provide evidence