Key Cases Flashcards

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1
Q

Benham v UK (1966) 22 EHRR 293

A
  • Benham tried by Magistrates court for fine
  • Not represented by a lawyer - he was eligible for one
  • No fair trial
  • Court ruled that his right to a fair trial had been violated
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2
Q

Knuller v DPP [1973] AC 435

A
  • D was director of a company which published magazines
  • They contained homosexual practices
  • Was sentenced for conspiracy to corrupt public morals
  • Appeal was dismissed and conviction upheld
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3
Q

R v Ireland, Burstow [1998] AC 147

A
  1. D and Victim were in a short romantic relationship and broke up
  2. D harassed V leading to psychiatric injury
  3. S.18/20/47 of OAPA 1861 - bodily harm
  4. HoL ruled that it sufficed as bodily harm
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4
Q

Chan Fook - ruling

A

CA ruled ABH could embrace psychiatric injury but implied that the criteria to be recognised as such is that the injury; “must not be so trivial as to be wholly insignificant

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5
Q

R v Chan Fook (1994) 1 WLR 689

A
  • Mr Chan accused the Victim of stealing his fiancé’s ring and hit him multiple times and then locked in in the second floor bedroom
  • V sustained serious physical injuries but the prosecution focused on the psychiatric damage
  • D convicted under S.47 of OAPA
  • CA ruled ABH could be recognised as psychiatric harm
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6
Q

R v R [1992] 1 AC 599

A
  • Wife moved out in 1889 with her son, separated not divorced
  • Husband broke into house and attempted to rape her
  • Court convicted him on attempted rape S.1 of SOA
  • Appealed that marriage gave irrevocable consent but was dismissed and conviction upheld
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7
Q

AG’s Reference (No.2 of 1999) [2000] 3 All ER 182

A
  • Southall train crash, experienced driver however safety devices were turned off
  • Going too fast to stop at red light, 7 people died
  • Prosecuted on 7 counts of manslaughter
  • Guilty mind can be proved by criminality of conduct
  • “Evidence of a state of mind is not a prerequisite (condition) to a conviction for manslaughter by gross negligence”
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8
Q

Adomako 4 stage Test

A
  1. Duty of care owed to the deceased
  2. It was breached by the accused (D)
  3. The breach resulted in death
  4. The breach can be characterised as gross negligence and therefore a crime
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9
Q

Brown [1994] 1 AC 212

A
  • Group of gay men engaged in sado-masochistic activities and were convicted under s.47 and s.20 OAPA
  • Appealed on the defence of consent, however HoL dismissed appeal and upheld conviction as consent is not a defence to s.20/47 OAPA
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10
Q

Brown [1994] 1 AC 212

A
  • Group of gay men engaged in sado-masochistic activities and were convicted under s.47 and s.20 OAPA
  • Appealed on the defence of consent, however HoL dismissed appeal and upheld conviction as consent is not a defence to s.20/47 OAPA
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11
Q

R v Wilson [1996] 3 WLR

A
  • Branded initials on wife with her consent
  • Sought medical treatment for infection, doctor reported to the police
  • Court held that consent was valid and that consensual activity between partners in matrimonial home is not matter for courts
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12
Q

Misra; Srivastava [2005] 1 Cr App Rep 328

A
  • A post operative patient developed an infection which was left untreated
  • The infection built up and led to Toxic Shock Syndrome, the patient died
  • Both doctors convicted of gross negligence manslaughter using the Adomako test
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13
Q

R v Roberts [1971] EWCA Crim 4

A
  • Young woman accepted a life from D, who tried to assault her in the car
  • She jumped out the car and suffered a concussion along with some cuts and bruises
  • D was convicted of Actual Bodily Harm under S.47 of OAPA and appeal was dismissed
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14
Q

R v Williams [1992] Crim LR 198

A
  • D picked up hitchhiker who then jumped out of the car and hit his head and died
  • Prosecution alleged that D was robbing him and thus his actions led to manslaughter
  • Jury convicted and defendant appealed, conviction was quashed as there was no evidence of a lack of threat
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15
Q

R v Broughton [2020]

A

Watched V take drugs and under the influence of them and did not summon any help, eventually leading to her death
Convicted of death by way of gross negligence manslaughter

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16
Q

R v Wallace [2018]

A
  • D three acid over bf
  • V sought euthanasia
17
Q

Thabo Meli [1954]

A
  • Defendant argued 2 stages & AR/MR didn’t coincide
  • Privy council held that both acts were part of overall plan to murder, MR at any point renders them guilty
18
Q

Thabo Meli [1954]

A
  • Defendant argued 2 stages & AR/MR didn’t coincide
  • Privy council held that both acts were part of overall plan to murder, MR at any point renders them guilty
19
Q

Key cases for Loss of Control defence

A
  • Alhuwalia [1992]
  • Humphrey’s [1995]
  • Thornton [1996]
20
Q

R v Asmelash [2013] 1 Cr App R 33

A

Problems: loss of control and voluntary intoxication

21
Q

Collins v Wilcock [1984] 3 All ER 374

A

The fudamental principle, pain and incontestable, is that every persons body is inviolate

22
Q

Key cases for assault

A

Constanza [1997] 2 Cr App Rep 492
Logdon v DPP [1976] Crim LR 121
Ireland [1997] 4 All ER 225