Property Offences Flashcards
What is the Legal definition of theft?
the dishonest appropriation of property belonging to another, with the intent to permanently deprive
What are the steps for theft?
1 - the defendant must “appropriate” the property, meaning they have used it as their own (Morris)
2 - the defendant must have appropriated ‘property’ which count as money, land, belongings or other things of value (s4)
3 - the property taken must ‘belong to another’ when it is taken, meaning it must be in that persons possession (s5)
4 - the defendant must have the intention to permanently deprive the victim of their property (s6) which means they intend to carry out the right of an owner (Lavender)
5 - the taking of the property must be dishonest (s2)
What are the maybe cases for step 1 of theft?
Morris - Only one of the rights needs to be assumed
Lawrence - there can be appropriation with consent
Hinks - appropriation can take place even if it seems that the property has been gifted to the defendant
Pitham - putting the property for sale = appropriation
What are the maybe cases for step 2 of theft?
Velumyl - taking money but returning the exact coins/notes counts as property
4(3) - foraged items only become property if the defendant intends to make money out of them
Oxford - confidential information isn’t property
Kelly - a corpse is only property if something special has been done to the corpse which gives it value
Welsh - body parts and fluid = property
Marshall - tickets = property
What are the maybe cases for step 3 of theft?
5(1) - property need not be taken from its owner directly, just whoever is in possession at the time
AG ref - if you are overpaid, the excess belongs to your payer until it is returned
Turner - you can take your own property from someone who is currently in possession (not paying for car wash)
Webster - duplicate property belongs to the sender
Kelly - a thief is ‘in possession’ of what they have stolen
Davidge - money given to another still belongs to the giver if the money is not spent how they instruct it to be
Woodman - if property is abandoned then no one is in the possession of it as it belongs to no one
Woodman - property can belong to someone even if they do not know it is theirs
What are the maybe cases for step 4 of theft?
s6(1) - borrowing someone’s property and using it without permission = intent to permanently deprive
J and others - returning broken property = intent to permanently deprive
Easom - no intention to permanently deprive if the defendant only looks through someone’s items and doesn’t steal anything
Lavender - taking property and moving it count as intention to permanently deprive, even if it is still on the victims land
Ransom principle - asking the victim to pay for their property to be returned is an intent to permanently deprive
What are the maybe cases for step 5 of theft?
s2(1) - taking property is not dishonest if you either:
- wrongly think you have legal power of the property
- believe that the other person wouldn’t mind
- find an item and think the owner cannot be found
Small - a ‘genuine’ belief is taken over a reasonable belief, meaning stupid people are helped by this case
Ghosh test - used when none of the above exceptions are present, the test shows:
- would the defendant be regarded as dishonest by the standard of reasonable and honest people?
- and did the defendant realise this?
What is the legal definition of robbery?
when the defendant has used or threatened force in order to carry out a theft (Theft Act s8 1968)
What are the steps for robbery?
1 - there must be a completed theft (Waters) meaning they must have appropriated property (s3) by treating it as their own in one way (Morris.) The property must also have been appropriated (s4) and it must also belong to another at the time it is taken, meaning it must be in someone’s ‘possession and control’ (s5)
2 - the taking of the property must be dishonest (s2) and the defendant must have a intention to permanently deprive (s6)
3 - the defendant must use or threaten to use force (s8) it is up to the jury to decide whether the force has been used or threatened (Dawson)
4 - the threat/use of force must happen immediately before or at the time of stealing (s8)
5 - there is a connection between the use/threat of force and the stealing (s8)
6 - the defendant must intend to use/threaten force
What are the relevant cases for step 1 of robbery?
any relevant cases for the AR section of theft
What are the relevant cases for step 2 of robbery?
any relevant cases for the MR section of theft
What are the relevant cases for step 3 of robbery?
Dawson - even a gentle nudge can count as force
Clouden - force does not need to directly be applied to the victim
P v DPP - there must be direct contact with the victim
B&R v DPP - the victim does not need to fear the threat for the threat to exist in a legal sense
Bentham - it doesn’t matter if the threat was never real
Corcoran - it doesn’t matter if the force used by the defendant is only temporary
What are the relevant cases for step 4 of robbery?
Hale - the defendant can apply force after the theft
Lockley - force can be used after in order to escape
threatening future force does not count
What are the relevant cases for step 5 of robbery?
There are none!
What are the relevant cases for step 6 of robbery?
Mohan - intended to bring about the prohibited consequence of using/threatening force