Part II - Theft & Theory Flashcards
Introduction to property offences - in what way do property offences harm victims?
> Common to distinguish property offences from offences against the person but shouldn’t forget that property offences can cause great emotional distress to V.
Further, ownership & enjoyment of property are by some as an essential aspect of the expression & realisation of human personality (Waldron, Dan-Cohen).
John Gardner and Stephen Shute discuss why it would be wrong to dismiss property offences as being trivial wrongs & why property rights matter to individuals in society:
-“Importance of property lies basically in the valuable things we can do with that property that we cannot so easily do without it.”
-“Its use-value”.
-“It times of scarcity or merely local or discriminate abundance the question is always live: could this thing be better used by someone else?”
-So up to a point, people are left free to hold property they don’t use. The sub-optimal use of a particular thing is justified.
-“In the long history of property rights the point has been located in different places by different regimes.”
-Attach symbolic importance to acquisition and holding of property.
-Sentimental value.
-“People regard themselves autonomous human beings, their own choice of property…has an ever more important place in their self-expression.”
-Result = ‘consumerism’.
-Consumerism effects the moral change and people regard property as meaning more, as carrying more significance, than just the significance imported by its use-value.
-“So on top of its basic use-value, much more of what people hold now has what we might call identification-value.”
-“I have an interest in this property which is basically derivative of the public interest in my having such an interest.”
Introduction to property offences - society’s system of property rights
> Although protection of property through the criminal law may appear a natural part of any liberal democracy it raises some complex issues:
- What kinds of property should be protected by the criminal law?
- It’s significant that property offences are concerned with the fair & effective transfer, control, and creation of property interests, but are not concerned with the fairness of the distribution of property that results (Melissaris).
- There’s a fine line to be drawn in the law on property offences between what is a civil wrong and what is a crime.
- Criminal law isn’t the only way that society may tackle the problem of wrongful interference with property rights.
- How should we structure criminal offences?
Introduction to property offences - Although protection of property through the criminal law may appear a natural part of any liberal democracy it raises some complex issues - What kinds of property should be protected by the criminal law?
> Lacey, Wells & Quick: “criminal law defends not property at large, but certain kinds of - highly unevenly distributed - property. It thereby defends not only property, but the power of certain interests and the authority of the social order.”
From a different perspective others claim that the present law’s understanding of property is out of touch with modern commercial practice in inadequately protecting ‘new property’, such as commercially valuable information or pension rights.
Introduction to property offences - Although protection of property through the criminal law may appear a natural part of any liberal democracy it raises some complex issues - It’s significant that property offences are concerned with the fair & effective transfer, control, and creation of property interests, but are not concerned with the fairness of the distribution of property that results (Melissaris).
> Marxist view: by ensuring ‘fair’ transfers, but not fair distribution, the law on property offences reinforces and perpetuates the inequalities within society.
J.G. Murphy: Law protecting preventing taking works harshly on the destitute who have nothing, but protects the interests of those who are well provided for.
Hence Proudhon famously declared that property was theft.
We could alter the purposes of property offences from ensuring those have can keep what they have to instead requiring those who have to give to those who have not.
Introduction to property offences - Although protection of property through the criminal law may appear a natural part of any liberal democracy it raises some complex issues - There’s a fine line to be drawn in the law on property offences between what is a civil wrong and what is a crime.
> Should temporary taking be regarded as theft or a matter for civil remedies.
Should remedy be to sue for failure to return money or complete job if paid upfront?
Introduction to property offences - Although protection of property through the criminal law may appear a natural part of any liberal democracy it raises some complex issues - Criminal law isn’t the only way that society may tackle the problem of wrongful interference with property rights.
> Society’s resources could be better spent trying to improve the designs of property to make them hard to steal, rather than into prosecution of thieves.
Introduction to property offences - Although protection of property through the criminal law may appear a natural part of any liberal democracy it raises some complex issues - How should we structure criminal offences?
> Should we distinguish between the value of the property taken or by the means by which the property was acquired?
Introduction to property offences - Structure of property offences
> Currently, OAP are broadly structured according to level of harm to V. Method used is largely immaterial.
However, property offences focus on method used by D to acquire the property.
Should we see blackmail, theft, robbery, burglary, fraud as separate offences or more/less serious forms of the same wrong.
Property offences also seek to protect particular kinds of property seen as particularly vulnerable to abuse, e.g. computers & cars.
Introduction to property offences - the civil law-criminal interface
> At heart of property offences is definition of a property right and inevitably criminal lawyers look to civil law for answers.
Need for criminal law to interact with civil law causes tension.
In Hinks, HoL held transaction which constituted a gift in civil law could be regarded as theft in criminal law.
Sarah Green: just because civil & criminal law disagree doesn’t mean criminal law is wrong.
Issues reflect different aims, e.g. civil law focuses on certainty of ownership whereas for criminal lawyers the prevention of dishonest conduct is more important.
However, to ignore civil law completely would cause all sorts of problems because if property offences aren’t protecting property then what are they protecting? Hinks.
Simester & Sullivan see protection of property rights as key to theft. So strong opponents of Hinks decision.
Introduction to property offences - Andrew Simester & Bob Sullivan describe what they regard as essence of theft
> ‘The Nature and Rationale of Property Offences’:
- They regard the essence of theft is to protect property interests so they are strong opponents of Hinks decision.
- Theft is concerned directly & primarily with protecting the legal structure of proprietary entitlements.
- Violations of the ownership, control, or possession of property need not always set back the interests of an agent whose rights have been contravened.
- Sometimes a loss of property may have devastating consequences for the nature and quality of an agent’s life. Yet the accretion of property may have no beneficent effect on the quality of life or moral standing of an agent.
Introduction to property offences - Theft - the statistics
> Our society has effectively licensed certain forms of conduct which technically fall within the definition of property offence, but which are treated as non-criminal.
E.g. shoplifting & white-collar crime.
Sutherland defines ‘white-collar crime’ as ‘crime committed by a person of respectability and high social status in the course of his occupation.’
Some suggest the explanation for lack of prosecution for white-collar crime is the fine line in the business world that has to be drawn between criminal activity & sharp business practices.
Hadden: the line between acceptable & unacceptable business practices can be said to be in a state of flux.
Introduction to property offences - What is property?
> How do we decide what is regarded as property and what isn’t?
Some cannot because of antisocial consequences, and others because it is not effectively possible to restrict or control access to the,.
Moral, practical, & legal arguments can mean for purposes of law some things aren’t property.
So can change over time.
Reich, ‘new property’, e.g. pension entitlements & environmental interests.
Bodies & body parts are undergoing a transition from not being regarded as property to being regarded as such.
The Debate over Gomez - intro
> HoL: an appropriation involved an act of interference with one of the rights of an owner, and that could amount to appropriation even if it was consented to or authorised by V.
Highly controversial decision.
The Debate over Gomez - for
> Simon Gardner, ‘Appropriation in Theft: The Last Word?’ 1993:
- Essentially followed Lawrence.
- Is the decision desirable from first principles?
- Quality of dishonest conduct isn’t necessarily altered by V’s consent.
- V could consent to taking, but does so in a state of low-level, non-specific confusion.
- If theft were negatived by consent then cases where there’s deception that’s not clear and so unable to convicted under s. 15 or s. 5(4) for want of true mistake, then wouldn’t constitute an offence.
- By their Lordship’s decision in Gomez, however, theft does occur in such cases.
- Consent is a problematic concept as even if it simply meant saying ‘yes’, difficulties would remain.
- So requisite of non-consent would make administration of theft difficult.
The Debate over Gomez - against
- Decision means that virtually every offence of obtaining property by deception contrary to s. 15 of TA 1968 is theft.
- FA 2006 has abolished s. 15 offence so argument less relevant but now there’s significant overlap between fraud & theft. - Following Gomez an act can amount to an appropriation which isn’t ‘manifestly theftuous’ to use a phrase of George Fletcher’s.
- Giles & Uglow: An act which appears objectively innocent can become theft if accompanied by necessary MR.
- Theft could become ‘mind crime’. Melissaris accepts that appropriation is essentially a mental attitude which is harmful, but not harmful enough to warrant being criminal until it is manifested in an act. - Lord Lowry in his dissenting judgment in Gomez placed much weight on view that the decision of the majority isn’t in line with the view of the Criminal Law Revision Committee, whose report formed the basis of TA 1968.