Homicide-Related Offences Flashcards
Infanticide
S178(1) CA61
Where a woman……
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, or by reason of the effect of lactation, or by reason of 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.
Of note
In charges of infanticide, it is for the jury to decide on the mother’s state of mind.
Causing death that might have been prevented
S165 CA61
and
Causing injury the treatment of which causes death
S166 CA61
S165 CA61
Every one who by any act or omission causes the death of another person kills that person, although death from that cause might have been prevented by resorting to proper means.
S166 CA61
Every one who causes to another person any bodily injury, in itself of a dangerous nature, from which death results, kills that person, although the immediate cause of death be treatment, proper or improper, applied in good faith.
R v Blaue
Preventable death - related to S165
and example - summarise
Those who use violence must take their victims as they find them.
Example
The victim [a Jehovah’s witness] had been stabbed but refused to accept a blood transfusion on the ground that to do so would be contrary to her religious belief; despite a warning that she would die, she persisted in her refusal and in fact died on the following day. The cause of death was bleeding into the pleural cavity caused by the stabbing. An appeal against a conviction of manslaughter, on the ground that her refusal to have a blood transfusion was unreasonable and broke the chain of causation between the stabbing and her death, was dismissed.
The Court commented; “…It does not lie in the mouth of the assailant to say that his victim’s religious beliefs, which inhibited her from accepting certain kinds of treatment, were unreasonable. The question for decision is what caused her death. The answer is a stab wound. The fact that the victim refused to stop this end coming about did not break the causal connection between the act and death.”
Liability depends on the mens rea not on the victim’s subsequent actions.
Aiding and Abetting Suicide
S179 CA61
Everyone is liable…..
and example
Every one is liable to imprisonment for a term not exceeding 14 years who—
(a) Incites, counsels, or procures any person to commit suicide, if that person commits or attempts to commit suicide in consequence thereof; or
(b) Aids or abets any person in the commission of suicide.
Example
A person giving a tetraplegic an overdose of sleeping pills on the latter person’s request.
Suicide Pact
S180(1) CA61
(1) Killing another person
Every one who…..
and example - summarise
(1) Every one who in pursuance of a suicide pact kills any other person is guilty of manslaughter and not of murder, and is liable accordingly.
Example
If Person A and Person B enter a suicide pact, and Person A shoots Person B, killing Person B, before shooting themselves, but Person A lives, then Person A would be guilty of manslaughter, and not murder.
Suicide Pact
S180(2) CA61
(2) - Where one person dies
Where 2 or more persons enter…..
and example - summarise
(2) Where 2 or more persons enter into a suicide pact, and in pursuance of it one or more of them kills himself, any survivor is guilty of being a party to a death under a suicide pact contrary to this subsection and is liable to imprisonment for a term not exceeding 5 years; but he shall not be convicted of an offence against section 179 of this Act.
Example
If Person A and Person B both self administer a high dosage of morphine and Person A dies as a result of their own actions, but Person B survives the overdose. Person B would be guilty of being a party to a death under a suicide pact and is liable to imprisonment for a term not exceeding 5 years.
Person B cannot be convicted of an offence under s. 179 of the Crimes Act (Aiding and Abetting Suicide).
Suicide Pact
S180(3) CA61
(3) Definition
For the purposes of this section the term suicide pact means……..
(3)……..a common agreement between 2 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.
Concealing dead body of child
S181 CA61
Everyone is liable….
Every one is liable to imprisonment for a term not exceeding 2 years who disposes of the dead body of any child in any manner with intent to conceal the fact of its birth, whether the child died before, or during, or after birth.
Of note
While the term “child” is not defined, the provision is evidently intended to refer to a child of comparatively recent birth.
The body must be dead when disposed of, although it is not necessary that the body should be found and identified.
If the child is alive when disposed of and subsequently dies, it may be murder or manslaughter or, in the case of the mother, infanticide.
The requirement that the act of disposal must be done with the intent of concealing the fact of birth may be satisfied even though the birth was known to some people but not others. Thus it will be enough that the intent was to conceal the birth from a particular individual.