WS 2 Flashcards

1
Q

R v Ireland [1997]

A

Assault can be done through just words, or even silent telephone calls, as long as there is the anticipation of immediate danger.

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2
Q

DPP v K

A
  • D placed acid from a science lesson into a hand drier in the toilets
  • Another pupil used it, acid squirted in his face causing permanent scars
  • For battery, application of force need not be directly applied
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3
Q

R v Miller [1954]

A
  • Ruled that actual bodily harm is any hurt or injury interfering with V’s health or comfort
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4
Q

R v Chan-Fook [1994]

A
  • Confirmed that Actual Bodily Harm can include psychiatric injury, but needs to be a recognisable clinical condition
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5
Q

R v Savage; R v Parmenter [1991]

A

For s47 of OAPA, mens rea is intention or recklessness as to the assault only
s20 and s18 intention or recklessness as to some harm

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6
Q

JJC v Eisenhower [1984]

A
  • D shot V with air gun, causing internal bleeding

- Found not guilty of wounding under s 20 of the OAPA, as did not break both layers of skin

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7
Q

DPP v Smith [1961]

A
  • Defined GBH as really serious harm
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8
Q

R v Brown and Stratton [1997]

A
  • Found that a number of lesser injuries could amount to ‘really serious harm’ and therefore, GBH
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9
Q

R v Tabassum [2000]

A
  • D claimed to be a doctor conducting breast cancer survey

- Ruled that for valid consent, V needs to know the nature and quality of the act

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10
Q

R v Konzani [2005]

A
  • D had sex with 3 women without informing them that he had HIV
  • Ruled that the consent given was undermined as it was not ‘true and informed’
  • D charged with GBH
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11
Q

R v Barnes [2005]

A
  • Amateur footballer suffered a broken leg
  • D found not guilty as the act - despite being a foul - did not go beyond the conduct of the sport as to reach a criminal threshold.
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12
Q

R v Brown [1993]

A
  • Group of sadomasochistic homosexuals found guilty of ABH and GBH for sexual purposes
  • HoL found that such activities were not within the public interest or would promote public health
  • Defence of consent not available for indulging in violence for sexual purposes
  • ‘cult of violence’
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13
Q

R v Williams [1984]

A
  • D, who was mistaken of the facts, punched someone who was chasing a robber
  • D is judged on the facts as he honestly believed them to be
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14
Q

R v O’Grady [1987]

A

A mistake arising from voluntary intoxication could not be relied on in a defence - reasonable force

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15
Q

R v Secretary of State for Justice [2016]

A
  • CPS decided not to prosecute a householder who restrained an intruder causing permanent damage
  • Intruder argued that the householder defender was incompatible with Article 2 of the ECHR - right to life
  • Denied as still has to be reasonable in the circumstances
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16
Q

Wilson v Pringle [1987]

A

Implied consent: Court held that the ordinary jostling of everyday life is not battery

17
Q

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A

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18
Q

R v Olugboja [1982]

A
  • V submitted to D raping her as she had already been raped and seen her friend been raped
  • Submission through fear is not consent.
19
Q

R v Wilson [1996]

A
  • D who branded his initials on his wife’s buttocks at her request
  • Found that the wife’s consent was valid
  • As was close to tattooing and not in the public interest as in R v Brown
20
Q

R v Jones [1987]

A
  • Appellants were schoolboys who tossed two schoolmates in the air, causing serious injury
  • Convictions squashed on basis for a an honest belief in consent
  • horseplay
21
Q

R v Burstow [1997]

A
  • D harrassed V, silent phone calls etc.
  • V suffered serious depressive illness
  • Applying dicta in Chan-Fook, was ruled that this could amount to GBH
22
Q

A-G’s Reference (No 6 of 1980)

A
  • Cannot consent to the infliction of ABH or worse
23
Q

R v Clegg [1995]

A
  • The force used in self-defence must be objectively reasonable
24
Q

R v Martin [2002]

A
  • D, who suffered from paranoid personality disorder argued this should be taken into account in his assessment of ‘reasonable force’
  • Court found that psychiatric disorders are not admissible
25
Q

R v BM [2018]

A
  • D charged under s18 of the OAPA after, with the victims consent, removing part of his ear, nipple and forking his tongue
  • Court ruled that this was distinct from tattooing due to the level of harm, and no person could consent to such irreversible injuries