Loss of Control Flashcards
Homicide Act
Defined Provocation, replaced by Coroners & Justice Act
s.56 Coroners and Justice Act
Abolished Provocation
s.54 Coroners and Justice Act
Sets out circumstances in which defence applies to Murder
s.55 Coroners and Justice Act
Defines more fully the qualifying triggers
R v Jewell
Defined LoC as “The loss of ability to act in accordance with considered Judgement or Loss of normal powers of reasoning”
s.54(2) Coroners and Justice Act
LoC need not be sudden
s.54 Circumstances
- D fears serious violence
- Certain things said or done that amount to circumstances of an extremely grave charecter to cause d to have justifiable sense of being seriously wronged
- A combination of the two
D fears serious violence
a. When D acts in order to thwart an anticipated attack
b. D overreacts to a percived imminent threat
R v Pearson 1992
2 brothers jointly charged for murder of their father - who abused younger brother for 8years.
CoA allowed appeal as Jury should have been able to consider fathers words and action to younger brother as povoking older brother
R v Ward
V attacked D’s brother, he killed him with a pickaxe.
Jury accepted D’s defence of LoC due to fear of serious violence against brother
R v Zebedee
D claimed LoC after he killed 97year old father, who was suffering alzheimers and was incontinent and repeatedly soiled himself
Court held this did not amount to circusmtances of extremely grave character.
Convicted of Murder
R v Clinton
D killed his wife after trial seperation upon discovering she was having an affair. He was clincially depressed, intoxicated and sucididal.
Claimed Loc over:
- She told him in graphic detail in which she had sexual relations with 5 men
- Laughed and taunted him over sucide websites
- she had told him she no longer wanted children
Trial Court held that defence not available as infidently is not a QT.
CoA quashed conviction and ordered retrial as defnce should have been put to jury
- held infidentily can be taken into account for things said or done
s.54(1)(c) Factors
- Age and Sex
- Ordinary level of tolerance and self-restraint
- In the Circumstances of D would they have acted in same way
R v Camplin
D was 15yr old boy that killed 50yr old who had been sexually absuing him.
Trial judge ordered jury to hold him to standard of adult man
HoL stated that he should be held to the standard of a reasonable 15yr old boy
R v Rejamanski
D was verteran suffering from PTSD and was provoked by V.
D lost temper - killing V
CoA held PTSD could be considered but was no sufficent in this case