Homicide - Cases Flashcards

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1
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Murder - S1 Homicide Act 1957

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> Abolition of “constructive malice”.

  1. Where a person kills another in the course or furtherance of some other offence, the killing shall not amount to murder unless done with the same malice aforethought (express or implied) as is required for a killing to amount to murder when not done in the course or furtherance of another offence.
  2. For the purposes of the foregoing subsection, a killing done in the course or for the purpose of resisting an officer of justice, or of resisting or avoiding or preventing a lawful arrest, or of effecting or assisting an escape or rescue from legal custody, shall be treated as a killing in the course or furtherance of an offence.
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2
Q

Murder - S8 Criminal Justice Act 1967

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> Proof of criminal intent.

  • A court or jury, in determining whether a person has committed an offence,—
    (a) shall not be bound in law to infer that he intended or foresaw a result of his actions by reason only of its being a natural and probable consequence of those actions; but
    (b) shall decide whether he did intend or foresee that result by reference to all the evidence, drawing such inferences from the evidence as appear proper in the circumstances.
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3
Q

Murder - Law Reform (Year and a Day Rule Act) 1996

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> S.1:
-Abolishes year and a day rule.
S.2:
-If death occurs more than 3 years after the injury or the person has already been convicted of a different offence for the circumstances related to the death then proceedings may be instituted with permission of the AG

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4
Q

Murder - Cunningham

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> R v Cunningham [1982] AC 566, [1981] 3 W.L.R. 223.
Intention to cause GBH suffices as MR for murder.
D attacked V in pub wrongly believing that V had had sexual relations with his fiancé.
V died from injuries inflicted by D 7 days later.
Lord Hailsham LC:
-“Malice aforethought has never been limited to the intention to kill or to endanger life.”

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5
Q

Loss of Control - Coroners and Justice Act 2009, s54

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> S.54:

  1. Where a person (“D”) kills or is a party to the killing of another (“V” ), D is not to be convicted of murder if—
    (a) D’s acts and omissions in doing or being a party to the killing resulted from D’s loss of self-control,
    (b) the loss of self-control had a qualifying trigger, and
    (c) a person of D’s sex and age, with a normal degree of tolerance and in the circumstances of D, might have reacted in the same or in a similar way.
  2. For the purposes of subsection (1)(a), it does not matter whether or not the loss of control was sudden.
  3. In subsection (1)(c) the reference to “ the circumstances of D” is a reference to all of D’s circumstances other than those whose only relevance to D’s conduct is that they bear on D’s general capacity for tolerance or self-restraint.
  4. Subsection (1) does not apply if, in doing or being a party to the killing, D acted in a desire for revenge.
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6
Q

Loss of Control - Coroners and Justice Act 2009, s55

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> S. 55:

  1. This subsection applies if D’s loss of self-control was attributable to D’s fear of serious violence from V against D or another identified person.
  2. This subsection applies if D’s loss of self-control was attributable to a thing or things done or said (or both) which—
    (a) constituted circumstances of an extremely grave character, and
    (b) caused D to have a justifiable sense of being seriously wronged.
  3. This subsection applies if D’s loss of self-control was attributable to a combination of the matters mentioned in subsections (3) and (4).
  4. In determining whether a loss of self-control had a qualifying trigger—
    (a) D’s fear of serious violence is to be disregarded to the extent that it was caused by a thing which D incited to be done or said for the purpose of providing an excuse to use violence;
    (b) a sense of being seriously wronged by a thing done or said is not justifiable if D incited the thing to be done or said for the purpose of providing an excuse to use violence;
    (c) the fact that a thing done or said constituted sexual infidelity is to be disregarded.
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7
Q

Loss of Control - Clinton

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> R v Clinton [2012] EWCA Crim 2, [2012] Crim. L.R. 539.
Clinton’s wife Dawn admitted to him that she had been having an affair, he told his wife that was going to commit suicide and she replied that he didn’t have the ‘balls’ to do it.
He killed her by beating her head with a baton and strangling her
Trial judge did not allow evidence relating to sexual infidelity following s55(6)(c) of the Coroners and Justice Act 2009.
Appealed and ordered a retrial as the judge erred in her direction.
Lord Judge CJ:
-Sexual fidelity can be the context for a qualifying trigger but not as a trigger itself under the loss of control defence.
-If a qualifying trigger is present, evidence relating to sexual infidelity arises for consideration as part of the context in which to evaluate the trigger.

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8
Q

Loss of Control - Asmelash

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> R v Asmelash [2013] 1 Cr App R 33, [2013] Crim. L.R. 599.
Voluntary intoxication by the defendant do not form part of the circumstances relevant to the loss of control defence under s54(c) Coroners and Justice Act 2009.
D was insulted and taunted by V.
D was drunk when he stabbed the victim to death.
It was claimed that direction given by judge was wrong as it excluded evidence of intoxication.
The judge directed the jury that voluntary intoxication was not within the ‘circumstances’ in s54(c) Coroners and Justice Act.
CA - appeal dismissed, judge’s direction was correct.
Lord Judge CJ:
-Loss of control defence must be approached without reference to the defendant’s voluntary intoxication.
-Under the provocation defence judicial directions referred to a reasonably sober person, the new statute should apply similarly.
-Different considerations would arise if a defendant with a severe problem with alcohol or drugs was mercilessly taunted about the condition, to the extent that it constituted a qualifying trigger; the alcohol or drug problem would then form part of the circumstances for consideration.

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9
Q

Diminished Responsibility - S. 2 Homicide Act 1957

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> Homicide Act 1957 s.2 (amended by Coroners and Justice Act 2009 s.52):
1. A person (“D”) who kills or is a party to the killing of another is not to be convicted of murder if D was suffering from an abnormality of mental functioning which—
(a) arose from a recognised medical condition,
(b) substantially impaired D’s ability to do one or more of the things mentioned in subsection (1A), and
(c) provides an explanation for D’s acts and omissions in doing or being a party to the killing.
1A. Those things are—
(a) to understand the nature of D’s conduct;
(b) to form a rational judgment;
(c) to exercise self-control.
1B. For the purposes of subsection (1)(c), an abnormality of mental functioning provides an explanation for D’s conduct if it causes, or is a significant contributory factor in causing, D to carry out that conduct.

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10
Q

Diminished Responsibility - Dowds

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> R v Dowds [2012] EWCA Crim 281, [2012] Crim LR 612:
-Diminished responsibility does not apply to voluntary intoxication.
-D stabbed V 60 times.
-D claimed the partial defence of diminished responsibility against the charge for murder, on the basis that he was acutely drunk.
-CA held that D was rightly convicted for murder
because voluntary intoxication does not fall within the scope of “recognised medical condition” under s2(1) Homicide Act 1957 as amended by the Coroners and Justice Act 2009.
-S.2 Homicide Act was made with knowledge of the intoxication doctrine that voluntary drunkenness could not form a defence, so if Parliament had meant to overrule this then it would have been explicit.
-Use of ‘recognised medical condition’ was used to extend law to new developments in medicine and psychiatry, not to incorporate voluntary intoxication.

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11
Q

Diminished Responsibility - Golds

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> R v Golds [2016] UKSC 61:

  • Under s2(1)(b) Homicide Act, substantial means significant or important, not just more than trivial.
  • The issue arose as to the meaning of substantial under the s2(1)(b) Homicide Act.
  • Lords Hughes:
    1. ‘Substantial’ did not mean ‘having some substance’ or ‘anything more than merely trivial’ but rather required something ‘important or weighty’: [27].
    2. Ordinarily the judge should not have to define the term substantial in his direction to the jury, it should be taken by its ordinary meaning by the jury, but if the issue arises as to whether being more the merely trivial suffices, the judge should clarify that it does not: [43].
  • D stabbed him wife 22 times.
  • Used defence of diminished responsibility and 3 experts stated he was suffering from a recognised medical condition which “substantially impaired” his ability to understand the nature of his conduct, to form rational judgments, or exercise self-control.
  • Judge directed the jury that “substantially” was an everyday word and did not need defining.
  • Convicted of murder.
  • Appealed that this definition of substantially was a misdirection.
  • Held that a judge could refuse to provide an explanation for “substantially,” but if the jury requested a further explanation it should be defined as “beyond something which…did not really make any great difference”.
  • It was for the jury to decide whether the defendant’s condition substantially impaired his judgement and contributed to the act.
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12
Q

Infanticide - Infanticide Act 1938

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> Offence of infanticide:

  1. Where a woman by any wilful act or omission causes the death of her child being a child under the age of twelve months, but at the time of the act or omission the balance of her mind was disturbed by reason of her not having fully recovered from the effect of giving birth to the child or by reason of the effect of lactation consequent upon the birth of the child, then, the circumstances were such that but for this Act the offence would have amounted to murder [or manslaughter], she shall be guilty of felony, to wit of infanticide, and may for such offence be dealt with and punished as if she had been guilty of the offence of manslaughter of the child.
  2. Nothing in this Act shall affect the power of the jury upon an indictment for the murder of a child to return a verdict of manslaughter, or a verdict of guilty but insane.
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13
Q

Suicide Pact - Homicide Act

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> Homicide Act 1957, S.4:

  • Suicide pacts:
    1. It shall be manslaughter, and shall not be murder, for a person acting in pursuance of a suicide pact between him and another to kill the other or be a party to the other being killed by a third person.
    2. Where it is shown that a person charged with the murder of another killed the other or was a party to his being killed, it shall be for the defence to prove that the person charged was acting in pursuance of a suicide pact between him and the other.
    3. For the purposes of this section “suicide pact” means a common agreement between two or more persons having for its object the death of all of them, whether or not each is to take his own life, but nothing done by a person who enters into a suicide pact shall be treated as done by him in pursuance of the pact unless it is done while he has the settled intention of dying in pursuance of the pact.

> Cf s.2 of Suicide Act 1961

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14
Q

Suicide Pact cf Suicide Act 1961

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> Suicide Act 1961, S.2:

-Criminal liability for complicity in another’s suicide:

  1. A person (“D”) commits an offence if—
    (a) D does an act capable of encouraging or assisting the suicide or attempted suicide of another person, and
    (b) D’s act was intended to encourage or assist suicide or an attempt at suicide.

1A. The person referred to in subsection (1)(a) need not be a specific person (or class of persons) known to, or identified by, D.

1B. D may commit an offence under this section whether or not a suicide, or an attempt at suicide, occurs.

1C. An offence under this section is triable on indictment and a person convicted of such an offence is liable to imprisonment for a term not exceeding 14 years.

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15
Q

Constructive manslaughter - definition

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> Constructive manslaughter is a form of involuntary manslaughter in that an unlawful killing has taken place where the defendant lacks the mens rea of murder.

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16
Q

Constructive or ‘unlawful act’ manslaughter - Church

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> R v Church [1966] 1 QB 59, [1965] 2 W.L.R. 1220:

  • The principle in Meli applies to manslaughter – the MR needn’t exactly coincide with the act causing death if the act is part of a connected series of acts which at some point of time coincided with the MR.
  • To establish constructive/unlawful act manslaughter, the risk of harm must have been capable of being foreseen by sober and reasonable people.
  • D was knocked the victim unconscious during a fight.
  • D dumped her body in the river, thinking that she was already dead.
  • Medical examination showed that D died from drowning.
  • The judge directed the jury to consider the ‘whole course of conduct of the accused as one’.
  • CA upheld conviction for manslaughter.
  • Edmund Davies J:
    1. In light of Meli the direction was correct.
    2. Citing Glanville Williams: ‘If a killing by the first act would have been manslaughter, a later destruction of the supposed corpse should also be manslaughter.’
    3. An unlawful act causing the death of another cannot, simply because it is an unlawful act, render a manslaughter verdict inevitable, some additional element of mens rea is required.
    4. To establish manslaughter, ‘the unlawful act must be such as all sober and reasonable people would inevitably recognise must subject the other person to, at least, the risk of some harm resulting therefrom, albeit not serious harm’: p. 70.
17
Q

Constructive or ‘unlawful act’ manslaughter - Lamb

A

> R v Lamb [1967] 2 QB 981, [1967] 3 W.L.R. 888:

  • In constructive manslaughter, the unlawful act must constitute an offence on its own, thus its corresponding MR must be present.
  • A reasonable mistake can vitiate intent.
  • 2 friends were joking around and playing with a gun when D pulled the trigger and shot his friend.
  • Claimed it was an accident as he had not known that pulling the trigger rotated the cylinder thereby bringing one of the bullets into the firing position – 3 experts said this was a natural mistake for someone with no knowledge of guns.
  • Judge denied the defence of accident = “It is manslaughter if death results from an unlawful and dangerous act on the part of the accused. It is also manslaughter if death results from an extreme degree of carelessness, negligence, on the part of the accused”
  • Convicted of manslaughter, which D successfully appealed.
  • No mens rea, which is an essential factor in manslaughter.
  • Misdirection to say that an unlawful and a careless act overlap.
  • Intent for assault had not be proven.
  • Sacks LJ:
    1. Intent for assault had to be proven, the judge had misdirected the jury.
    2. In this case intent was not present due to D’s mistake, which the jury should have been directed to take into account.
18
Q

Constructive or ‘unlawful act’ manslaughter - Newbury & Jones

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> DPP v Newbury and Jones [1977] AC 500, [1977] Crim. L.R. 359:
-In constructive manslaughter, the test for whether the unlawful act would likely cause harm is objective.
-Ds, both 15, pushed a paving stone left by workmen on the parapet of a bridge which killed a railway guard
and were convicted of constructive manslaughter, which Ds appealed on the basis that they did not foresee the danger.
-HoL dismissed appeal as unnecessary to prove subjective foresight by Ds.
-Lord Salmon:
1. “The test is still the objective test. In judging whether the act was dangerous the test is not did the accused recognise that it was dangerous but would all sober and reasonable people recognise its danger.”
-In a later case R v Goodfellow, the court suggested that the unlawful act in this case was reckless criminal damage, so that Ds did have the mens rea for an unlawful act even if they did not foresee harm to another.
-Appealed on point of law: “Can a defendant be properly convicted of manslaughter, when his mind is not affected by drink or drugs, if he did not foresee that his act might cause harm to another?”
-An accused person was guilty of manslaughter if it was proved that he “intentionally did an act which was unlawful and dangerous and that that act inadvertently caused death” and,
-It was unnecessary to prove that the accused knew that the act was unlawful or dangerous – the test was still the objective test.

19
Q

Constructive or ‘unlawful act’ manslaughter - Dawson

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> R v Dawson (1985) 81 Cr App R 150, [1985] Crim LR 383:

  • In constructive manslaughter, physical harm must be foreseeable to a sober and reasonable person with the same knowledge as the defendant.
  • Ds robbed a petrol station with a replica gun and threatened a 60-year-old man V, who later died of a heart attack from the shock, Ds did not know of his heart condition.
  • Ds were convicted with constructive manslaughter.
  • The judge directed the jury that when considering whether all sober and reasonable people would realise that the unlawful act must inevitably create the risk of some harm that meant “all reasonable people who knew the facts that you know.”
  • Appeal successful & conviction quashed as judge had erred in his direction.
  • Watkins LJ:
    1. “The test [of whether an unlawful act is likely to cause harm] can only be undertaken upon the basis of the knowledge gained by a sober and reasonable man as though he were present at the scene and watched the unlawful act being performed … In other words he had the same knowledge of the man attempting to rob and no more.”
    2. The reasonable person would not have had knowledge of V’s weak heart and thus would not foresee his heart attack.
  • Although the test is mostly objective, it has a subjective element in relation to the knowledge of the defendant.
20
Q

Constructive or ‘unlawful act’ manslaughter - Watson

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> R v Watson [1989] 1 W.L.R. 684, [1989] Crim LR 733:

  • If D becomes aware of the vulnerability of the victim during his unlawful act, when determining whether a sober and reasonable person would find physical harm to be likely, the person has that knowledge.
  • D broke into the house of an 87-year-old, verbally abused him, and left without taking anything.
  • V had a serious heart condition and later died of a heart attack.
  • D was convicted of constructive manslaughter, the unlawful act was burglary
  • D appealed, one ground being that burglary is committed at the point of entry, at which time he did not know the age or physical condition of the occupier.
  • Appeal allowed but another another ground, it was rejected on the ground relevant here.
  • Lord Lane:
    1. The act of burglary does not end when D crosses the threshold of the premises.
    2. The jury were entitled to ascribe to the bystander the knowledge which the appellant gained during the whole of his stay in the house.
    2. A sober and reasonable person would have recognised V’s vulnerability at once.
21
Q

Gross Negligence Manslaughter - Adomako

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> R v Adomako [1995] 1 AC 171:

  • The test for gross negligence manslaughter is the same as the test for negligence in tort.
  • D, an anaesthetist, did not notice that a tube had been disconnected from the ventilator during an operation
  • V, the patient, suffered a cardiac arrest and died
  • D was convicted of gross negligence manslaughter
  • HoL dismissed appeal as D’s conduct amounted to gross negligence.
  • Lord Mackay:
    1. “The ordinary principles of the law of negligence apply to ascertain whether or not the defendant has been in breach of duty of care towards the victim who has died. If such breach of duty is established the next question is whether that breach of duty caused the death of the victim. If so the jury must go on to consider whether that breach of duty should be characterised as gross negligence and therefore as a crime”.
    2. “The essence of the matter, which is supremely a jury question, is whether, having regard to the risk of death involved, the conduct of the defendant was so bad in all circumstances as to amount in their judgement to a criminal act or omission.”