burglary Flashcards

1
Q

how many ways are there to commit burglary under s9(1) of the theft act

A

2

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2
Q

can both forms of burglary be committed during the same incident

A

yes

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3
Q

when is a person guilty of burglary under s9(1)a

A

if he enters any building/part of a building as a trespasser with intent to

  • steal
  • inflict gbh
  • do unlawful damage to building/anything in it
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4
Q

does d need to commit any of the ulterior offences in s9(1)a to be guilty

A

no but must intend to commit at least one of them when entering

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5
Q

when is a person guilty of burglary under s9(1)b

A

if having entered any part of a building as a trespasser

  • he steals
  • he inflicts gbh on any person in the building
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6
Q

must d commit one of ulterior offences for s9(1)b

A

yes but need not intend to when entering

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7
Q

what are the common actus reus elements that must be proved by the prosecution

A
  • entry
  • of any building/part of a building
  • as a trespasser
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8
Q

what did RYAN hold

A

entry is a question of fact for the magistrates/jury to decide in each case

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9
Q

RYAN

A

there was evidence on which the jury could find that d had entered

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10
Q

what did STEVENS v GOURLEY hold that a building must be

A

a structure of considerable size and intended to be fairly permanent

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11
Q

under s9(4) of the theft act where else may burglary be committed

A

an inhabited vehicle/vessel, even when there is no one present at the time

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12
Q

which two conflicting cases are there on whether a large storage container is a building

A

B AND S V LEATHLEY

NORFOLK CONSTABULARY V SEEKINGS AND GOULD

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13
Q

B AND S V LEATHLEY

A

container was a building- it had been resting on railway sleepers rather than wheels, in same place, for over 2 years

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14
Q

NORFOLK CONSTABULARY V SEEKINGS AND GOULD

A

the fact that the lorry trailer had wheels meant that it lacked the degree of permanence required for a building. it could still be operated as a vehicle

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15
Q

what does the fact that d may enter part of a building mean

A

even if d has permission to enter one part of a building , entering another part of the building can be enough for burglary

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16
Q

what is whether d has entered part of a building a question of

A

fact for the magistrates/jury to decide in each case

17
Q

WALKINGTON

A

d had entered part of a building as a trespasser with the intention of stealing. only staff were permitted to go in this area

18
Q

what does it mean that d must be a trespasser

A

d voluntarily enters without the permission of the occupier

19
Q

is d a trespasser where he gains entry through fraud

A

there is no genuine permission to enter and d is a trespasser

20
Q

what must d also commit to be guilty of s9(1)b

A

the actus reus of theft and inflict GBH

21
Q

what must d have to satisfy the mens rea of burglary

A

mens rea both in respect of trespassing and the ulterior offence

22
Q

COLLINS

A

for s9(1)a and s9(1)b d must know/be reckless as to whether he is trespassing

23
Q

when may d still be a trespasser if he has permission to enter a building

A

if he knowingly or recklessly goes beyond that permission when he enters the building

24
Q

JONES AND SMITH

A

D1 had a general permission to enter his fathers house, but he had knowingly exceeded the permission by entering the house in the middle of the night with the intent to steal

25
Q

what is the mens rea for s9(1)a

A

intent to steal, inflict GBH or do unlawful damage

26
Q

will conditional intent prevent d from being guilty of burglary

A

no, even if it turns out there is nothing in the building worth stealing AG REF NO 1 AND 2 OF 1979

27
Q

what is the mens rea for s9(1)b

A

that of the ulterior offences

d must either have mr of theft/intend/be reckless as to some harm depending on which ulterior offence is relevant