Must Knows Week 1 Flashcards
Define Dishonestly
Act/omission done without belief in consent or authority, express or implied, from a person entitled to give it for that act/omission
Define Without claim of right
No belief in proprietary or possessory right.
Can have mistaken belief which would be a defence
Define unlawful
Without lawful justification or excuse
Define consent
Concious and voluntary agreement
R v Cox: Consent must be full, voluntary, free and informed… freely and voluntarily given by a person in a position to form a rational judgment
What is Mens rea
Guilty mind/knowledge
Define intent and cite relevant case law
Intent includes intent to do the act and intent for a specific result
R v Collister - Circumstantial evidence from which an offenders intent may be inferred can include:
- the offenders actions/words before, during and after the event
- the surrounding circumstances
- the nature of the act itself
Define recklessness and cite relevant case law
Defendant deliberately ran a risk and that risk was unreasonable given the circumstances.
Cameron v R - recklessness established if the Defendant recognised a real possibility that:
-his/her actions would bring around the proscribed result and/or
- that the proscribed circumstances existed
and having regard to that risk those actions were unreasonable
Define knowledge/knowing
Correctly believing
Conspiracy summary definition (include mens rea & actus reus)
Agreement between two or more people to commit an offence.
M: intent to agree and intent in a shared course of conduct to a full offence
A: the agreement
Attempts summary definition (include men’s rea and actus reas)
With intent to commit an offence does or omits an act for the purpose of accomplishing his/her object
Mens rea: intent to commit offence
Actus reus: act/omission to achieve that end. This act must be sufficently proximit to the offence
Explain R v Harpur
(Attempts case law) Independent acts that in isolation are preparatory, viewed collectively can amount to an attempt
Explain R v Ring
Still an attempt even if physically impossible (No ring in the pocket)
Define what makes someone party to an offence
If they commit, aid, abet, incite, counsel or procure another.
Or form common intention and the outcome was a probable consequence of their common purpose.
Summarize accessory after the fact (include mens rea and actus reus)
Knowing any person to be a party to an offence, receives/comforts/assists them or Tampers with/suppresses evidence to evade/escape arrest or conviction.
Mens rea: knowing (correctly believing) they are party to an offence and intent to act tonhelp them get off
Actus reus: act to help
Knowing case law
R v Crooks: Knowledge means belief having no real doubt