Criminal Law 1 - core principles Flashcards

1
Q

What 4 types of actus reus are there?

A
  • Conduct (e.g. fraud)
  • Result: action must lead to specified consequences e.g. murder
  • Circumstances (e.g theft)
  • Omissions
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2
Q

What cases are there on factual causation?

A
  • poisoned mother’s drink, found dead of an unrelated heart attack - no murder (but attempted murder)
  • threw terminally ill child downstairs - accelerated death is still murder
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3
Q

What is required for legal causation?

A
  • substantial cause (more than de minimis)
  • harm caused by culpable act
  • need not be the only cause
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4
Q

legal causation - What is the case on “ harm caused by culpable act”

A

driving horse an cart without holding reigns - couldn’t have stopped anyway, negligence in not holding the reins was not therefore what caused the death

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5
Q

legal causation - What is the case on “need not be the only cause”

A

railway track layers hit by train. Foreman had sent signaller up the track but he didn’t go far enough and train driver wasn’t looking. Had actus if negligence was a main or substantial cause of accident even if the accident could have been avoided.

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6
Q

For determining legal causation, when will the acts of third parties act as a NAI? (remember this is criminal)

A

Where they are:

  • free,
  • deliberate and
  • informed
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7
Q

What cases are there for acts of third parties breaking the chain of causation?

A

used pregnant girlfriend as a shield whilst shooting at the police, police shot the woman - police actions were not free, deliberate and informed.

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8
Q

What cases are there for medical negligence breaking the chain of causation?

A
  • soldier stabbed, dropped twice on way, received medical treatment that was harmful and died - didn’t break the chain.
  • shot and developed respiratory issues, tracheotomy scars blocked his windpipe and he died after original wounds had healed - didn’t break the chain
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9
Q

For determining legal causation, when will medical negligence act as an NAI? (remember this is criminal)

A

Only if the second cause is so overwhelming as to make the original wound merely part of the history

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10
Q

In fright and flight cases, for determining legal causation, when will the acts of victim be an NAI? (remember this is criminal)

A
  • Vs action not ‘so daft’ that could not be foreseen
  • Must be some proportionality between gravity of the threat and the action of the deceased in seeking to escape from it

(Jumping out of cars)

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11
Q

What are the cases, for determining legal causation when considering the acts of victim.

A
  • unwanted sexual advances jumped out of car “so daft”?
  • jumped out of car at knifepoint - reasonably foreseeable that some harm, albeit not serious, was likely to result from threat and was conduct of V proportionate to that threat?
  • religious beliefs so no blood transfusion - not an NAI
  • attack resulted in a cut finger, refused amputation, died of infection - not an NAI
  • slashed V, V opened wounds and died - not an NAI
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12
Q

For determining legal causation, if a victim refuses medical treatment, will this act as an NAI?

A

No - Ds must take victims as they find them, in mind and body

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13
Q

For determining legal causation, when will natural events act as an NAI? (remember this is criminal)

A

If they are extraordinary and not reasonably foreseeable

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14
Q

When will a victim’s suicide NOT break the chain of causation?

A

Not if
- cause was original wound

  • reasonably foreseeable (e.g. pianist lost fingers)
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15
Q

When will a victim’s suicide break the chain of causation?

A
  • injuries have healed
  • voluntary and informed decision - e.g. handed heroin syringe to V who then injected himself.
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16
Q

What is the general rule regarding omissions and criminal liability? What must be proven to rebut this?

A

D can’t be criminally liable for a failure to act
1. Crime is capable of being committed by an omission
2. D was under a legal duty to act
3. D breached that duty
4. Breach caused the actus reus of offence to occur
5. Should the offence so require, D had required mens rea

17
Q

When will D be under a legal duty to act (for omissions)?

A
  • Statute
  • Public office
  • Contractual
  • Special relationship (e.g. doctors & patients, parents and children, spouses)
  • Voluntary assumption
  • D creates a dangerous situation
18
Q

Omissions & crim liability - What are examples of special relationship?

A
  • wife died from broken bones and H failed to get assistance
  • Father allowed daughter Nelly to starve to death
  • refusal to separate conjoined twins
19
Q

Omissions & crim liability - What are examples of voluntary assumption?

A
  • defacto wife of Nelly also allowed Nelly to starve
  • Elderly aunt with gangrene gave money to niece, niece didn’t get food for aunt or summon medical help - manslaughter
  • couple tried to make elderly anorexic sister eat but gave up & didn’t seek help
  • drug user on the doorstep, mum asked them to take him in, they didn’t he died.
20
Q

Omissions & crim liability - What are examples of contractual duty?

A

level-crossing gatekeeper failed to close gate

21
Q

Omissions & crim liability - What are examples of public duty?

A
  • policeman ignored man being kicked to death
22
Q

Omissions & crim liability - What are examples of creating the dangerous situation?

A
  • squatter fell asleep after accidently setting fire to mattress, noticed, got up a slept somewhere else and went back to sleep - Arson
  • giving a drug user a syringe, they injected and OD, didn’t call for help.
23
Q

What are the 5 types of mens rea?

A
  • Intention: direct (wholly subjective) or indirect/oblique
  • Recklessness: somebody takes an unjustifiable risk, aware of the danger that the prohibited harm may occur
  • Knowledge and belief
  • Negligence
  • dishonesty
24
Q

What is oblique intention?

A
  • Consequence is virtual certainty
  • bomb in cargo plane to blow up plane
25
Q

What is mens rea of Recklessness?

A

Didn’t intend harm but:
- Knows of risk
and
- in circumstances known to D
- objectively unreasonable to take that risk.

26
Q

What is the principle of coincidence of AR and MR?

A

D must have the relevant mens rea for offence at precise moment when D commits the actus reus

27
Q

What are the continuing act cases when considering whether AR and MR coincided?

A
  • drove on to policeman’s foot by accident but then didn’t move
  • hit over head with intention to kill, rolled him off cliff, he died of exposure
  • hit wife, tried to drag her home, dropped her by accident killing her
28
Q

What is the principle of transferred malice?

A
  • D’s mens rea is transferred from the intended harm to the actual harm
  • Both offences must have the same mens rea!

Stone thrown at one person and hits another ✅
Stone thrown at person smashes window ❌

29
Q

What is the principle of mistake?

A

Where D makes a mistake, effect on criminal liability will depend on type of mistake
- Ignorance of the law won’t prevent criminal liability but
- if meas rea is not fulfilled, can escape criminal liability

30
Q

What case shows the principle of mistake?

A

Ripping out Stereo wires - Unaware fixture belonged to LL

31
Q

What 2 principles can help interpretation of the requirement for coincidence between AR and MR?

A
  • Continuing Act Theory: if they form MR for offence at some point during committing AR (police foot)
  • One Transaction Principle: court sometimes categories actions of accused as series of acts (chuck off cliff)
32
Q
A
33
Q

Omission and actus reus- What is the rule where D creates a dangerous situation?

A

If person
- accidentally creates risk,
- becomes aware of it.
- duty to take reasonable steps to counteract the damage created

(Drugs to 16 yr old and squatter causes fire)