Criminal Law - Defences Flashcards

1
Q

What is the legal test for INVOLUNTARY intoxication?

A

Legal Question: Did D form the mens rea of murder, even if he was involuntarily intoxicated?

R v Kingston: Despite being drugged, he still formed the necessary MR to harm the child.

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1
Q

What is the legal test for VOLUNTARY intoxication?

A
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2
Q

What is the legal test for CONSENT?

A

You can only consent to basic assault or battery?

You cannot consent to harm greater than that (i.e. ABH or above), other than certain exceptions:
- medical treatment
- sports (whatever is in reasonably within the rules of the game, even really serious harm through tackles in football)
- horseplay (physical play, can even include consent to GBH in some older cases)
- cosmetic (e.g. tattoos but not things like extreme body modifications - R v BM)
- sexual Gratification (R v Brown failed, but consider R v Wilson where the old man carved his initials into the wife’s bottom with a knife at her request).

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3
Q

What is the legal test for SELF-DEFENCE?

A
  1. D honestly believed that the use of force was necessary;
  2. The level of force was objectively reasonable in the circumstances, as D believed them to be.
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4
Q

Can “mistake” ever be a legal defence?

A

Mistake will not often save D from criminal liability, as reckless is quite a low bar.
Similarly, being ignorant of the fact that X action is illegal is not a defence.

Mistake can sometimes exculpate D, for example in theft, e.g. D mistakenly took someone else’s umbrella from the doctor’s office but later return it and found his own.

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