Unlawful act manslaughter Flashcards

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1
Q

Franklin 1883

A
  • A civil wrong is not enough to give rise to an unlawful act but instead should lead to gross negligence manslaughter
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2
Q

Andrews v DPP 1937

A
  • HOL said that UAM should not be based merely on a lawful act done with a degree of carelessness which parliament makes criminal
  • For example driving without due care and attention
  • If this lawful act was grossly conducted it would give rise to GNM
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3
Q

R v Lamb 1967

A
  • Case used for ‘D must commit an unlawful act’
  • Lamb was fooling around with a revolver and pulled the trigger accidentally killing friend
  • Did not intend to kill or cause GBH
  • He was guilty of possession of a firearm but it was not the possession that caused the death
  • Was convicted but appealed claiming he did not fit an assault because the friends was not under any fear
  • Conviction quashed
  • Today, he could be done for GNM as he had a duty of care to friend
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4
Q

R v Church 1966

A
  • Defines objectively dangerous as ‘ such that all sober and reasonable people would realise was likely to cause SOME, albeit not serious harm’
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5
Q

How high is the threshold for UAM and what controversial cases does it involve?

A
  • Rather law threshold

- Includes one punch killers

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6
Q

R v Newbury 1977

A
  • Two 15 year old boys pushed paving slab of bridge over railway killing train guard
  • Appealed to challenge the objective test set out in church but HOL disagreed so conviction upheld
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7
Q

R v JF and NE 2015

A
  • Case reiterated that the test in Church should be followed
  • However there was unclear hints in the judgement made that the law may be a little harsh and therefore could be reformed in the future
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8
Q

Alan Jewitt

A
  • On punch killer in Norwich
  • Punched guy down prince of wales street
  • Pleaded self-defence
  • Jury accepted plea so found not guilty
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9
Q

Philip Ward

A
  • Doorman pushed a man down prince of wales street Norwich who died
  • Claimed self-defence
  • Cleared of manslaughter
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10
Q

R v Gill 2014

A
  • D had Asperger syndrome and killed man with one punch
  • Given 4 years jail which was unduly lenient
  • Mother said it was a joke however the law has to be based on blameworthiness
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11
Q

R v Dawson 1985

A
  • Masked men in petrol station with a replica firearm
  • Man then suffered fatal heart attack
  • It was decided that ‘ all sober and reasonable people’ meant all sober and reasonable person who knew the facts that the jury knew
  • COA quashed conviction as it should be the knowledge of the person committing the crime and no more
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12
Q

R v Bristow 2013

A
  • V run vehicle repair on his farm
  • Was burgled and when V intervened they crushed him with a vehicle
  • They were convicted of UAM but argued the burglary was not sufficiently dangerous as it did not carry the risk of SOME harm
  • COA said intervention by 3rd party was foreseeable and therefore upheld conviction
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13
Q

R v Mitchel 1983

A
  • Concerned whether the unlawful act had to be aimed at the V
  • Altercation at a post office where D punched a man who fell into an old woman who died
  • Convicted of UAM but appealed saying he could only be guilty if he directed the unlawful act at the V
  • COA upheld conviction ‘ Criminality of the doer is precisely the same no matter who dies ‘
  • Case of transferred malice
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14
Q

R v Goodfellow 1986

A
  • D was in dispute with neighbours and to speed up getting rehoused he set fire to his lounge which accidentally killed 3 occupants
  • Unlawful act was not directed at the V’s but still counted as in Mitchel
  • Again transferred malice
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15
Q

What are some controversies relating to UAM?

A
  • Fair labelling

- Liability and sentencing could depend on bad luck such as one punch killers

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16
Q

R v Coleman 1992

A
  • V’s shouted racial abuse at D so D punched each men once
  • 1 man fractured skull and died
  • COA reduced sentence from 2 years to 12 months
17
Q

R v Gratton 2001

A
  • D and V had been drinking and he thought V had been flirting with his GF
  • D punched V 2/3 times who fell on rock and died
  • Got 9 months, appealed but upheld by COA
18
Q

R v Furby 2005

A
  • Decided sentence has to reflect harm caused and blameworthiness of an act
  • COA said that if there was aggravating circumstances (more than 1 punch for example) sentence could go up to 4 years
  • Provides a deterrent message
19
Q

A-G Reference No.60 2009

A
  • 2 men attacked a man outside Tesco metro in Norwich
  • It was said ‘the true level of his culpability is that specific attention must now be paid to the consequences of his crime’
20
Q

When did the law commission publish a report and what did it say?

A
  • 1996
  • They favoured the subjective approach and thought UAM was unprincipled. The recommended the abolition of UAM in its present form
21
Q

When did the government respond to the law commission of 1996 and what did they say?

A
  • 2000
  • Government said it might be viewed as morally unacceptable to just charge assault for cases where someone has died
  • They said ‘intentional and reckless behaviour resulting in death should attract the appropriate charge and anyone embarking in this illegality should face the consequences.
22
Q

What did the law commission say when they amended their proposals in 2006?

A
  • That the MR should include ‘where death was caused by a criminal act intended to cause injury’
  • OR ‘where the offender was aware that the criminal act involved a serious risk of causing injury