Actus Reus

Omissions and Causation
Actus Reus- an Introduction
• Actus Reus is the physical
  part of a crime.
• It can be an act.
• It can be a failure to act
  (an Omission).
• It can be a state of affairs
  case- Larsonneur.
• It usually has to be
  voluntary with D
  conscious of his actions-
  Hill V Baxter.
Omissions- Introduction
• This is a failure to act. It usually won’t
  make D guilty of an offence. It means
  that if I stood there and watched
  someone died I wouldn’t be guilty of an
  offence.
• There are however some exceptions to
  this rule…
The Duties
• Statutory Duty- A duty imposed by a statute. Road
  Traffic Act- Failure to provide a specimen of breath.
• Contractual Duty- A duty arising because of a
  contractual agreement. Pitwood.
• Relationship Duty- A duty arising because of a
  relationship. Gibbons and Proctor.
• Voluntary Duty- A duty someone has taken
  voluntarily. Stone and Dobinson.
• A duty because of official Position- Where a certain
  job or position creates the duty. Dytham.
• A duty because a dangerous set of events has been
  set in motion- Where D has set some dangerous
  events in motion and omits to act upon it. Miller
Further Duties
• Khan and Khan says there
  could be more than those
  six duties.
• Duty of Doctors- If it is
  within the patients best
  interest, the Doctor can
  withdraw feed from a
  patient. Airedale NHS
  Trust V Bland.
• Euthanasia is unlawful.
Good about Omissions
• It is fair that the Police have a duty to
  protect the public.
• It is good that parents have a duty of care
  over their children.
• It is fair that those who set a dangerous
  chain of events in motion are expected to
  take reasonable steps to solve it.
• It is fair that those who undertake duties
  voluntary are expected to live up to what
  they agree to do.
Bad about Omissions
• Khan and Khan says there could be more than
  six duties. It does not specify what they are and
  for what they apply. Someone could be omitting
  and not even know it.
• Duties from a statute can be applied to lots of
  different scenarios, too many for anyone to
  know.
• Too many statutes impose duties. It is
  impossible for someone to know them all.
• Duty of Doctor’s is a difficult subject. Nothing
  defines the line between best interest and
  euthanasia.
Causation- Introduction
• Causation tests whether someone should
  be blamed for an offence or not. There are
  two tests to answer this question.
• The first test is Factual Causation. This
  asks if D committed the Actus Reus or not.
  “But for D’s actions, would V be in that
  situation”.
• The second test is Legal Causation. This
  tests whether it is fair to blame D or not.
  Has D made more than a minimal
  contribution to the consequence.
Causation- The Tests
• Factual- “But for D’s actions would V be in
  situation?”. This means that if D hadn’t
  done what he apparently did, would V still
  be in the consequence? Pagett.
• Legal- The legal test tests whether it is fair
  to blame D or not. This tests whether D
  made more than a minimal contribution
  and is it fair to blame D from this
  contribution. Marchant and Muntz.
Causation- A few Points
• More than one act can contribute to the
  consequence. The rule is that D’s act
  should be more than minimal.
• D’s actions don’t have to be the main
  cause or a substantial cause, it just has
  to be more than minimal. There should
  be more than a slight trifling link
  between D’s act and the outcome.
  Kimsey.
Causation- The Thin Skull Rule
• D takes V as he finds him.
• If V has some other
  condition that D is
  unaware of, and D
  commits the Actus Reus
  and the unknown
  condition is made worse as
  a result, D will still be
  liable. Blaue.
Causation- Chain of Causation
• There is a chain between what D did and
  the result on V.
• This chain can be broken by the act of a
  third party. This could be medical.
• It can be broken by V’s own acts.
• It can be broken by an unpredictable
  natural event.
• To break the chain it must be very separate
  from D’s original act.
• If D’s act causes a likely response from a
  third party he is still likely to be guilty.
  Pagett.
Causation- Medical Treatment
• Medical treatment is unlikely to break
  the chain of causation unless it is so
  potent and so separate from D’s act it
  renders the act as insignificant.
• Smith and Cheshire show poor medical
  treatment with D still being guilty. This
  is usually the way it goes.
• Jordan showed D being guilty. This is
  rare and unusual.
Causation- Fright or Flight Rule
• If V tries to escape and dies as a result of
  the escape or during the escape, or even
  becomes more injured, it is likely D will
  still be guilty. Roberts. Corbett.
• If V’s actions are reasonably foreseeable it
  is likely D will still be guilty. Marjoram.
• The chain will be broken if D does
  something so daft or unexpected that no
  reasonable person could foresee it.
  Williams.
Causation- V’s Self Neglect
• If V mistreats or neglects his injuries it
  will not break the chain of causation.
  Holland. Blaue. Dear.
• D must accept that V could be irrational,
  stupid, religious, afraid of hospital or
  refuses treatment. D will still be guilty.
Causation- The Good
• It is fair that it tests that D actually did
  it and if it is fair to blame D for it.
• It is fair that D gets convicted if thin
  skull rule appropriate, as it was his
  actions that caused it.
• It’s fair that unpredictable natural
  events break the chain of causation.
Causation- The Bad
• It is unfair that if V refuses treatment D is
  still responsible.
• It is unfair that if bad medical treatment
  kills V, D could still be liable.
• It is unfair that V not taking care of
  himself doesn’t break the chain.
• It isn’t fair that if D’s act isn’t the main
  cause he may still be guilty.
• What defines a “slight or trifling link?” or
  “minimal contribution?”

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IT coursework powerpoint

  • 2. Actus Reus- an Introduction • Actus Reus is the physical part of a crime. • It can be an act. • It can be a failure to act (an Omission). • It can be a state of affairs case- Larsonneur. • It usually has to be voluntary with D conscious of his actions- Hill V Baxter.
  • 3. Omissions- Introduction • This is a failure to act. It usually won’t make D guilty of an offence. It means that if I stood there and watched someone died I wouldn’t be guilty of an offence. • There are however some exceptions to this rule…
  • 4. The Duties • Statutory Duty- A duty imposed by a statute. Road Traffic Act- Failure to provide a specimen of breath. • Contractual Duty- A duty arising because of a contractual agreement. Pitwood. • Relationship Duty- A duty arising because of a relationship. Gibbons and Proctor. • Voluntary Duty- A duty someone has taken voluntarily. Stone and Dobinson. • A duty because of official Position- Where a certain job or position creates the duty. Dytham. • A duty because a dangerous set of events has been set in motion- Where D has set some dangerous events in motion and omits to act upon it. Miller
  • 5. Further Duties • Khan and Khan says there could be more than those six duties. • Duty of Doctors- If it is within the patients best interest, the Doctor can withdraw feed from a patient. Airedale NHS Trust V Bland. • Euthanasia is unlawful.
  • 6. Good about Omissions • It is fair that the Police have a duty to protect the public. • It is good that parents have a duty of care over their children. • It is fair that those who set a dangerous chain of events in motion are expected to take reasonable steps to solve it. • It is fair that those who undertake duties voluntary are expected to live up to what they agree to do.
  • 7. Bad about Omissions • Khan and Khan says there could be more than six duties. It does not specify what they are and for what they apply. Someone could be omitting and not even know it. • Duties from a statute can be applied to lots of different scenarios, too many for anyone to know. • Too many statutes impose duties. It is impossible for someone to know them all. • Duty of Doctor’s is a difficult subject. Nothing defines the line between best interest and euthanasia.
  • 8. Causation- Introduction • Causation tests whether someone should be blamed for an offence or not. There are two tests to answer this question. • The first test is Factual Causation. This asks if D committed the Actus Reus or not. “But for D’s actions, would V be in that situation”. • The second test is Legal Causation. This tests whether it is fair to blame D or not. Has D made more than a minimal contribution to the consequence.
  • 9. Causation- The Tests • Factual- “But for D’s actions would V be in situation?”. This means that if D hadn’t done what he apparently did, would V still be in the consequence? Pagett. • Legal- The legal test tests whether it is fair to blame D or not. This tests whether D made more than a minimal contribution and is it fair to blame D from this contribution. Marchant and Muntz.
  • 10. Causation- A few Points • More than one act can contribute to the consequence. The rule is that D’s act should be more than minimal. • D’s actions don’t have to be the main cause or a substantial cause, it just has to be more than minimal. There should be more than a slight trifling link between D’s act and the outcome. Kimsey.
  • 11. Causation- The Thin Skull Rule • D takes V as he finds him. • If V has some other condition that D is unaware of, and D commits the Actus Reus and the unknown condition is made worse as a result, D will still be liable. Blaue.
  • 12. Causation- Chain of Causation • There is a chain between what D did and the result on V. • This chain can be broken by the act of a third party. This could be medical. • It can be broken by V’s own acts. • It can be broken by an unpredictable natural event. • To break the chain it must be very separate from D’s original act. • If D’s act causes a likely response from a third party he is still likely to be guilty. Pagett.
  • 13. Causation- Medical Treatment • Medical treatment is unlikely to break the chain of causation unless it is so potent and so separate from D’s act it renders the act as insignificant. • Smith and Cheshire show poor medical treatment with D still being guilty. This is usually the way it goes. • Jordan showed D being guilty. This is rare and unusual.
  • 14. Causation- Fright or Flight Rule • If V tries to escape and dies as a result of the escape or during the escape, or even becomes more injured, it is likely D will still be guilty. Roberts. Corbett. • If V’s actions are reasonably foreseeable it is likely D will still be guilty. Marjoram. • The chain will be broken if D does something so daft or unexpected that no reasonable person could foresee it. Williams.
  • 15. Causation- V’s Self Neglect • If V mistreats or neglects his injuries it will not break the chain of causation. Holland. Blaue. Dear. • D must accept that V could be irrational, stupid, religious, afraid of hospital or refuses treatment. D will still be guilty.
  • 16. Causation- The Good • It is fair that it tests that D actually did it and if it is fair to blame D for it. • It is fair that D gets convicted if thin skull rule appropriate, as it was his actions that caused it. • It’s fair that unpredictable natural events break the chain of causation.
  • 17. Causation- The Bad • It is unfair that if V refuses treatment D is still responsible. • It is unfair that if bad medical treatment kills V, D could still be liable. • It is unfair that V not taking care of himself doesn’t break the chain. • It isn’t fair that if D’s act isn’t the main cause he may still be guilty. • What defines a “slight or trifling link?” or “minimal contribution?”