Criminal Law - The Actus Reus Flashcards

1
Q

Elements of Liability

A

Conduct

  • All offences have a conduct element (act or omission that makes them liable)
  • To be liable for an omission there must have been a duty to act and the defendant must have breached that duty
  • Duty to act can be imposed by statute, a special relationship, voluntary assumption of duty of care, contract and if defendant created a dangerous situation and is aware of it
  • Possession of a thing (e.g. weapon) can be sufficient conduct as well as placing oneself in a situation

Circumstances

  • The facts that must exist for a defendant to be liable
  • E.g. for criminal damage the person must have damaged property belonging to another (cannot cause criminal damage to their own property unless co-owned)

Outcome

  • Applies to result crimes only (e.g. for murder death must be the outcome)

Causation

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2
Q

Causation

A

Two different tests

  • Factual causation
  • Legal causation

Cumulative and both must be satisfied

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3
Q

Factual Causation

A
  • Often referred to as the ‘but for’ test (e.g. would victim have died but for conduct of defendant)
  • If there is more than one cause or even if defendant’s action slightly accelerated the result there is sufficient causation
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4
Q

Legal Causation

A

Two parts to the test, conduct must have been both the substantial and operative cause

Substantial: action must be substantial (more than minimal, slight or ‘trifling’)

Operative: no break in chain of causation from defendant’s conduct to the outcome

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5
Q

Break in chain of causation

A

Act of victim

  • Will rarely break the chain of causation
  • Will if their act is so daft as to be unforeseeable

Act of third parties

  • Can break chain of causation if their act is free, deliberation and informed
  • Medical treatment: only where treatment is so bad and so independent of original injury will it break chain of causation (only the most serious instances of malpractice)
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6
Q

No break in chain of causation

A
  • Pre-existing medical condition
  • Victim’s religious beliefs

Will not break the chain of causation

‘Thin skull’ rule - must take your victim as you find them

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