Homicide-Related offences Flashcards
Infanticide
178
Infanticide
(1) Where a woman causes the death of any child of hers under the age of 10 years in a manner that amounts to culpable homicide, and where at the time of the offence the balance of her mind was disturbed, by reason of her not having fully recovered from the effect of
- giving birth to that or any other child
- lactation
- any disorder consequent upon childbirth or lactation
to such an extent that she should not be held fully responsible, she is guilty of infanticide, and not of murder or manslaughter, and is liable to imprisonment for a term not exceeding 3 years.
In charges of infanticide, it is for the jury to decide
on the mother’s state of mind.
Sections 151, 152 and 153 concern the duty to….
provide those things and conditions necessary to sustain life and protect from injury. Death resulting from failure to meet the legal duty to provide the necessities of life and or protection form injury can amount to homicide.
Duty to provide the necessaries and protect from injury
151
Duty to provide the necessaries and protect from injury
(1) Every one who has actual care or charge of a person who is a vulnerable adult and who is unable to provide himself or herself with necessaries is under a legal duty—
(a) to provide that person with necessaries; and
(b) to take reasonable steps to protect that person from injury
Duty of parent or guardian to provide necessaries and protect from injury
152
Duty of parent or guardian to provide necessaries and protect from injury
(1) Every one who is a parent, or is a person in place of a parent, who has actual care or charge of a child under the age of 18 years is under a legal duty—
(a) to provide that child with necessaries; and
(b) to take reasonable steps to protect that child from injury
Duty of employers to provide necessaries
153
Duty of employers to provide necessaries
(1) Every one who as employer has contracted to provide necessary food, clothing, or lodging for any servant or apprentice under the age of 16 years is under a legal duty to provide the same, and is criminally responsible for omitting without lawful excuse to perform such duty if the death of that servant or apprentice is caused, or if his life is endangered or his health permanently injured, by such omission
Vulnerable adult
Means “a person unable, by reason of detention, age, sickness, mental impairment, or any other cause, to withdraw himself or herself from the care or charge of another person”.
Whether an adult is vulnerable is a matter for
objective determination and should not depend on that person’s subjective perception.
Necessaries
There is no authority on what is meant by the concept of “necessaries” and may be regarded as a “somewhat broader concept” than “necessaries of life”.
Under 151, s152 and s153 what does injury encompass?
“injury” encompasses not only bodily harm directly caused by other persons but also harm arising from human activities and non-human sources.
Abandoning child under 6
154
Abandoning child under 6
Every one is liable to imprisonment for a term not exceeding 7 years who unlawfully abandons or exposes any child under the age of 6 years.
Sections 155 and 156, respectively, deal with the duties of people who
are doing dangerous acts or who are in charge of dangerous things.
Duty of persons doing dangerous acts
155
Duty of persons doing dangerous acts
Every one who undertakes (except in case of necessity) to administer surgical or medical treatment, or to do any other lawful act the doing of which is or may be dangerous to life, is under a legal duty to have and to use reasonable knowledge, skill, and care in doing any such act, and is criminally responsible for the consequences of omitting without lawful excuse to discharge that duty.
Duty of persons in charge of dangerous things
156
Duty of persons in charge of dangerous things
Every one who has in his charge or under his control anything whatever, whether animate or inanimate, or who erects, makes, operates, or maintains anything whatever, which, in the absence of precaution or care, may endanger human life is under a legal duty to take reasonable precautions against and to use reasonable care to avoid such danger, and is criminally responsible for the consequences of omitting without lawful excuse to discharge that duty.
Duty to avoid omissions dangerous to life
157
Duty to avoid omissions dangerous to life
Every one who undertakes to do any act the omission to do which is or may be dangerous to life is under a legal duty to do that act, and is criminally responsible for the consequences of omitting without lawful excuse to discharge that duty