WS 4 Flashcards

1
Q

R v Poulton [1832]

A
  • Mother strangled her newborn baby
  • Was ruled that a baby must be wholly expelled from the mother’s body, be alive, and have an existence independent of the mother to be considered born
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2
Q

Attorney-General’s Reference (No 3 of 1994)

A

If subsequently born alive, an unborn baby can be a victim of homicide

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3
Q

Malcherek and Steel [1981]

A
  • Both D’s attacked their V, ended up brain-dead as a result of wounding
  • Doctors shut off life support
  • Was not an intervening even as injuries were still an operating and substantial cause of death
  • Also that the death of the brain = death of the body
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4
Q

R v White [1910]

A
  • D put poison in his mother’s drink in attempt to poison her
  • Mother took a few sips, had a heart attack
  • But-for test: D was not liable for murder as the poison was not the cause of death
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5
Q

R v Lloyd [1967]

A

Legal causation: for the impairment to be ‘substantial’, it must be ‘more than trivial’

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6
Q

R v Watson [2018]

A
  • Ds threw a brick in 87-year-old’s house, verbally abused him
  • Later died of a heart-attack
  • Ruled that same tests of causation apply to non-physical causes of death
    Take your victim as you find them
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7
Q

R v Wallace [2018]

A
  • D threw sulphuric acid on her partner, resulting in such extreme damage that he applied, and was granted euthanasia
  • Ruled that voluntary euthanasia does not break chain of causation as long as euthanasia falls within range of reasonable responses from V
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8
Q

R v Jordan [1956]

A
  • D stabbed V, who was hospitalised.
  • V’s wound had largely healed and died after Doctors gave him antibiotics which he was allergic to twice
  • Found that the medical treatment was ‘palpably wrong’ and the initial wound no longer an operating and substantial cause
  • No causation
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9
Q

R v Smith [1991]

A
  • V died after being stabbed at an army medical centre and bad treatment
  • Would was still an operating and substantial cause
  • Therefore, death a result of the wound
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10
Q

R v Cheshire [1991]

A
  • V died after complications arising from a tracheotomy
  • D’s conviction upheld, court made it clear that poor medical treatment could only be viewed as intervening when:

‘it was so independent of D’s acts, and itself so potent in causing death, that the jury regard the contribution made by D’s acts as insignificant’

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11
Q

R v McKechnie [1992]

A
  • When V dies as a result of a pre-existing condition which could not be treated due to D’s actions
  • D is liable as the decision not to operate was not so independent of the act of the accused that it could be regarded as the cause of death
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12
Q

R v Bleue [1975]

A
  • D stabbed V, a Jehovah’s witness who refused a blood transfusion which would have saved her life
  • Take your victim as you find them: not an intervening event
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13
Q

Dietschmann [2003]

A

An alcoholic D can still rely on the defence of diminished responsibility if D was intoxicated, as long as the jury finds that the act was a result D’s alcohol dependency rather than his intoxication alone.

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14
Q

R v Golds [2016]

A

Diminished Responsibility: Substantial impairment means ‘important or weighty impairment’.

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15
Q

R v Clinton [2012]

A

Whilst sexual infidelity itself is not enough for a qualifying trigger, it can be used to provide context for other factors.

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16
Q

A-G for Jersey v Holley [2005].

A

Ruled that a ‘similar reaction of a person of D’s sex and age’ is to be based off circumstances rather than characteristics. Formed basis for amended law

17
Q

R v Camplin [1978]

A

Ruled that a 15-year-old boy should be judged according to the standard of self-control expected of a 15-year-old boy, rather than that expected of an adult.

18
Q

R v Baillie [1995]

A

Loss of self-control will not apply where D acted in a considered desire for revenge.
This is likely to be relevant to honour killings.

19
Q

Dalloway [1847]

A

Legal causation requires that the harm must result from a culpable act

20
Q

Pagett [1963]

A

The act of a third party will generally break the causation unless the action was foreseeable.