HKSAR v Li Kwok Cheung George: 5 Jun 2014

Hong Kong Court of Final Appeal The court considered the wording of a Hong Kong money laundering ordinance.
Held: Ribeiro and Fok PJJ said in their joint judgment with which the other members of the Court of Final Appeal agreed, saying: ‘It is one thing to criminalise dealing with funds where the dealer knows or has reasonable grounds to believe that they are the proceeds of crime, it is quite a different matter to stigmatise as a money launderer, a lender dealing with its own ‘clean’ funds because of what the borrower does or intends to do with them.’

Judges:

Mr Justice Ribeiro PJ, Mr Justice Tang PJ,, Mr Justice Fok PJ, Mr Justice Bokhary NPJ,, Lord Collins of Mapesbury NPJ

Citations:

[2014] HKCFA 48, [2014] 4 HKC 101

Links:

HKLII, Hklii, Hklii Summary

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedGH, Regina v SC 22-Apr-2015
Appeal against conviction for entering into an arrangement for the retention of criminal funds. The defendant said that at the time of the arrangement there were not yet any criminal funds in existence. A had set up websites intending to con . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Crime, International

Updated: 04 May 2022; Ref: scu.565398

Regina v Smith: 1959

The court considered a situation where one admission was made at 10.00 pm one night under a threat or inducement, and a second statement was made the next morning before a different investigator and after the usual caution was given. The issue was whether the second statement was still under the influence of the threat or inducement of the first.
Held: Even the most gentle threats or slight inducements will taint a confession, thoughh ‘The court thinks that the principle to be deduced from the cases is really this: that if the threat or promise under which the first statement was made still persists when the second statement is made, then it is inadmissible. Only if the time-limit between the two statements, the circumstances existing at the time and the caution are such that it can be said that the original threat or inducement has been dissipated can the second statement be admitted as a voluntary statement.
This court, however, is of the clear opinion that the second statement was admissible. No doubt, the opening reference to what it was said he had said to the regimental sergeant-major put the appellant in a difficulty. No doubt it was introduced by Sergeant Ellis in the hope that thereby he might get a continued confession; but it is quite clear that the effect of any original inducement or threat under which the first statement was made had been dissipated. Quite apart from the fact that the caution was given and given twice, some nine hours had elapsed and the whole circumstances had changed. The parade had ended. The rest of the company had gone to bed. The effect of the threat or the inducement was spent. On those grounds this court has come to the conclusion that the oral and written statements made to Sergeant Ellis were clearly admissible.’
The test for causation of a death at common law is that it is a ‘substantial or significant cause’

Judges:

Lord Parker CJ

Citations:

(1959) 43 Cr App R 121, [1959] 2 WLR 623, [1959] 2 QB 35, [1959] 2 All ER 193

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Criminal Evidence, Police, Crime

Updated: 04 May 2022; Ref: scu.553626

Rex v Shephard: CA 1919

The term ‘person’ where it appeared in s.4 of the 1861 Act was held to include an unborn child provided it was subsequently born alive. Soliciting a woman to kill her unborn child after it is born constitutes incitement.

Citations:

[1919] 2 KB 125

Statutes:

Offences Against the Person Act 1861 4

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Crime

Updated: 04 May 2022; Ref: scu.553625

Regina v Silver: CCC 1955

Judge Maude ruled that it was not an offence for landlords and their agents to let flats to prostitutes at what were described as exorbitant rents and by the learned Judge as ‘prostitute rents’ knowing that they would be used for the purpose
of prostitution.

Judges:

Maude J

Citations:

[1955] 40 Cr App R 32

Cited by:

CitedShaw v Director of Public Prosecutions HL 4-May-1961
Offence of Conspiracy to corrupt public morals
The defendant appealed against his convictions for conspiracy to corrupt public morals, and for living from the earnings of prostitution. He said that first was not an offence known to common law. After it became unlawful for a prostitute to ply her . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Crime

Updated: 04 May 2022; Ref: scu.544929

Calvert v Mayes: CCA 1954

The defendant said that he was not living in part from the earnings of prostitutes. He let out properties used by the tenants for the sale of sexual services to American Servicemen, and also took payments direct from those servicemen.
Held: His argument was rejected. Sellers J referred to the accused as ‘trading in prostitution’.

Judges:

Sellers J

Citations:

[1954] 1 QB 342

Cited by:

CitedShaw v Director of Public Prosecutions HL 4-May-1961
Offence of Conspiracy to corrupt public morals
The defendant appealed against his convictions for conspiracy to corrupt public morals, and for living from the earnings of prostitution. He said that first was not an offence known to common law. After it became unlawful for a prostitute to ply her . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Crime

Updated: 04 May 2022; Ref: scu.544930

Rex v Lesbini: 1914

The test of provocation in a murder allegation, is not whether the occurrence is sufficient to deprive the particular individual in question of his self-control, having regard to his nature and idiosyncrasies, but whether it would suffice to deprive a reasonable man in his situation of self-control.

Citations:

(1914) 11 Cr App R 11, [1914] 3 KB 1116

Citing:

ApprovedRex v Kirkham 1837
In order to reduce Killing of a person to the crime of manslaughter, there must not only be sufficient provocation, but the jury must be satisfied that the fatal blow was given in consequence of that provocation. If A. had formed a deliberate design . .
CitedRegina v Welsh 1869
The judge directed the jury as to provocation saying that in order to reduce the crime to manslaughter, there should have been serious provocation, ‘something which might naturally cause an ordinary and reasonably minded man to lose his self-control . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Crime

Updated: 04 May 2022; Ref: scu.543772

Regina v Thomas: CCA 1957

The defendant appealed against his conviction under the 1898 Act after he agreed with a woman whom he knew to be a convicted prostitute that she should have the use of a room between the hours of 9 pm and 2 am at a charge of andpound;3 per night. The learned judge Pilcher had directed the jury: ‘if there is evidence that the accused has let a room or a flat at a grossly inflated rent to a prostitute for the express purpose of allowing her to ply her immoral trade, then it is for the jury to determine, on the facts of each particular case, whether the accused is in fact knowingly living wholly or in part on the earnings of prostitution.’
Held: The direction was approved, and the appeal rejected.

Citations:

[1956] 41 Cr App R 117

Crime

Updated: 04 May 2022; Ref: scu.544928

Musa v Le Maitre: QBD 1987

The defendant appealed by case stated against his conviction under the 1956 Act saying that no evidence had been brought that the videos on which the conviction was based were infringing copies.
Held: As to items from the US, no evidence had been brought. It was required, and the appeal succeeded. However where the country of first publication was covered by section 13 of the 1956 Act, it was enough to show that first publication. Furthermore expert evidence could be employed to establish that the copies were infringing. Evidence from the copyright holder himself was not necessarily required.
Stephen Brown LJ said: ‘I can see no practical difficulty to prevent a prosecutor from inviting a defendant to make an admission of fact as to first publication. An obstructive attitude might result in substantial costs. In any event it is unlikely to require the evidence of the actual maker or the holder of the copyright.’

Judges:

Stephen Brown LJ

Citations:

[1987] FSR 212

Statutes:

Magistrates’ Courts Act 1980 101, Copyright Act 1956 13 18 21 49, Copyright (International Conventions) Order 1979

Crime, Intellectual Property

Updated: 04 May 2022; Ref: scu.543467

Walters v Lunt and another: 1951

The respondents had been charged under section 33(1) of the 1916 Act with receiving from a child aged seven years, certain articles knowing them to have been stolen.
Held: A child under eight years was deemed in law to be incapable of committing a crime: it followed that at the time of receipt by the respondents the articles had not been stolen and that the charge had not been proved.

Citations:

[1951] 2 All ER 645

Statutes:

Larceny Act 1916 33(1)

Cited by:

CitedRegina v Cogan and Another CACD 9-Jun-1975
The defendants appealed againts their convictions for rape and against sentence. The victims was the second defendant’s wide.
Held: Applying Morgan, the first defendant’s belief that the victim was consenting was an answer to the charge. His . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Crime

Updated: 04 May 2022; Ref: scu.544332

Regina v Newton and Stungo: 1958

Ashworth J gave a direction at trial: ‘The law about the use of instruments to procure miscarriage is this: such use of an instrument is unlawful unless the use is made in good faith for the purpose of preserving the life or health of the woman. When I say health I mean not only her physical health but also her mental. But although I have said that ‘it is unlawful unless’ I must emphasise and add that a burden of proving that it was not used in good faith is on the Crown.’

Judges:

Ashworth J

Citations:

[1958] Crim LR 469

Cited by:

CitedGreater Glasgow Health Board v Doogan and Another SC 17-Dec-2014
Roman Catholic Midwives, working as Labour Ward Co-ordinators had objected to being involved in an administrative capacity in abortions being conducted by the appellants. The Outer House had said they were not entitled to opt out, but the Inner . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Crime

Updated: 04 May 2022; Ref: scu.541520

Pharmaceutical Society of Great Britain v Storkwain: 1985

Farquharson J said: ‘It is perfectly obvious that pharmacists are in a position to put illicit drugs and perhaps other medicines on the market. Happily this rarely happens but it does from time to time. It can therefore be readily understood that Parliament would find it necessary to impose a heavier liability on those who are in such a position, and make them more strictly accountable for any breaches of the Act.’

Judges:

Farquharson, Tudor Price JJ

Citations:

[1985] 3 All ER 4

Cited by:

Appeal fromPharmaceutical Society of Great Britain v Storkwain HL 19-Jun-1986
The defendant pharmacist had filled a prescription, but unknown to him the prescription was forged.
Held: The offence of sale of medicine contrary to the Act was one of strict liability, and was made out.
Lord Goff of Chieveley (with whom . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Crime, Health Professions

Updated: 04 May 2022; Ref: scu.542921

Rex v Cook: 1640

The intent to resist unlawful apprehension is treated as a state of mind constituting ‘that lighter degree of malice which is necessary to the crime of manslaughter’ rather than murder.

Citations:

(1640) Cro Car 537

Cited by:

CitedThe Queen v Howe 1958
High Court of Australia – Criminal Law – Murder – Conviction – Quashed on appeal to Supreme Court – New trial ordered – Appeal to High Court by Crown – Special leave – Questions of law affecting law of homicide – Importance – Self-defence – . .
MentionedRegina v Clegg HL 25-Jan-1995
The defendant was a soldier on patrol in Northern Ireland. He was convicted of the murder of the passenger and attempted murder of the driver of a stolen car. He said he had fired in self defence. The Court of Appeal had rejected his appeal saying . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Crime

Updated: 04 May 2022; Ref: scu.539752

Regina v Middleton: 1873

The accused had a savings bank account which held 11 shillings to his credit. He applied to withdraw 10 shillings but the bank clerk made a mistake and entered 8 pounds 16 shillings and 10 pence in the Accused’s deposit book, and stamped it. The Accused took the money, having formed an intent to permanently deprive the Post Master of the money.
Held: Where a person was paid by mistake, here by a Post Office clerk, a sum in excess of that properly payable, the person who accepted the overpayment with knowledge of the excess was guilty of theft.

Citations:

[1873] LR 2 CCR 38

Crime

Updated: 04 May 2022; Ref: scu.539758

The Queen v Howe: 1958

High Court of Australia – Criminal Law – Murder – Conviction – Quashed on appeal to Supreme Court – New trial ordered – Appeal to High Court by Crown – Special leave – Questions of law affecting law of homicide – Importance – Self-defence – Excessive use of violence by defendant – Effect – Murder or manslaughter – Miscarriage of justice – Absence – Direction to jury – Special leave rescinded.

Judges:

Dixon CJ, McTiernan, Fullagar, Taylor and Menzies JJ

Citations:

(1958) 100 CLR 448, 32 ALJR 212, [1958] ALR 753, [1958] HCA 38

Citing:

CitedRex v Cook 1640
The intent to resist unlawful apprehension is treated as a state of mind constituting ‘that lighter degree of malice which is necessary to the crime of manslaughter’ rather than murder. . .

Cited by:

CitedRegina v Clegg HL 25-Jan-1995
The defendant was a soldier on patrol in Northern Ireland. He was convicted of the murder of the passenger and attempted murder of the driver of a stolen car. He said he had fired in self defence. The Court of Appeal had rejected his appeal saying . .
Not FollowedPalmer v The Queen PC 23-Nov-1970
It is a defence in criminal law to a charge of assault if the defendant had an honest belief that he was going to be attacked and reacted with proportionate force: ‘If there has been an attack so that defence is reasonably necessary, it should be . .
Not FollowedRegina v McInnes CACD 1971
Edmund Davies LJ said: ‘But where self-defence fails on the ground that force used went clearly beyond that which was reasonable in the light of the circumstances as they reasonably appeared to the accused, is it the law that the inevitable result . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Crime, Commonwealth

Updated: 04 May 2022; Ref: scu.539751

Regina v McInnes: CACD 1971

Edmund Davies LJ said: ‘But where self-defence fails on the ground that force used went clearly beyond that which was reasonable in the light of the circumstances as they reasonably appeared to the accused, is it the law that the inevitable result must be that he can be convicted of manslaughter only, and not of murder? It seems that in Australia that question is answered in the affirmative . . but not, we think, in this country. On the contrary, if a plea of self-defence fails for the reason stated, it affords the accused no protection at all.’

Judges:

Edmund Davies LJ, Lawton, Forbes JJ

Citations:

[1971] 1 WLR 1600

Citing:

Not FollowedThe Queen v Howe 1958
High Court of Australia – Criminal Law – Murder – Conviction – Quashed on appeal to Supreme Court – New trial ordered – Appeal to High Court by Crown – Special leave – Questions of law affecting law of homicide – Importance – Self-defence – . .

Cited by:

CitedRegina v Clegg HL 25-Jan-1995
The defendant was a soldier on patrol in Northern Ireland. He was convicted of the murder of the passenger and attempted murder of the driver of a stolen car. He said he had fired in self defence. The Court of Appeal had rejected his appeal saying . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Crime

Updated: 04 May 2022; Ref: scu.539754

Regina v Clowes (No 2): 1994

The court considered appeals from from criminal convictions including theft in the course of which it was necessary to consider whether the defendants were trustees of monies passed to their company for the purpose of investment in a particular fund.
Held: Watkins LJ stated that ‘the fact that a transaction contemplates the mingling of funds is . . not necessarily fatal to a trust’, he accepted that the effect of the authorities is that ‘a requirement to keep monies separate is normally an indicator that they are impressed with a trust and . . the absence of such a requirement, if there are no other indicators of a trust, normally negatives it’. He drew attention to the ‘unwillingness by the courts to construe a relationship of trust in commercial transactions, and, second that it is unusual for there to be a trust of funds where the transaction in question does not require segregation of such funds.’
To ascertain whether there had been a dishonest intention, the defendant is to be judged according to whether the defendant was acting dishonestly by the standards of ordinary and decent people (the objective element) and if so whether he himself must have realised that what he was doing was by those standards dishonest (the subjective element).

Judges:

Watkins LJ

Citations:

[1994] 2 All ER 316

Citing:

See AlsoRegina v Clowes CCC 1992
. .

Cited by:

CitedWilliams v Central Bank of Nigeria QBD 24-Jan-2012
The claimant asserted involvement by the defendant bank in a fraud perpetrated against him. Jurisdiction had already been admitted for one trust , and now the claimant sought to add two further claims.
Held: ‘None of the gateways to English . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Crime, Trusts

Updated: 04 May 2022; Ref: scu.537033

Kent County Council v Brockman: 1996

The question of whether or not a defendant has done all that he can ‘reasonably be expected’ to do to comply with a planning enforcement notice is a matter for the tribunal of fact whether it be the magistrates or the jury.

Citations:

(1996) 1 PLR 1

Cited by:

CitedWood, Regina v CACD 25-May-2001
The appellant was a gipsy. He had bought land and occupied it with his family but without planning permission. He now appealed against a conviction for failing to comply with an enforcement notice. He appealed saying that he had not been allowed to . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Planning, Crime

Updated: 04 May 2022; Ref: scu.536025

Naish v Gore: QBD 1971

The justices had come to the conclusion that reasonable precautions had been taken by the shopkeeper, and therefore that the defence in section 24 was made out.
Held: Lord Widgery CJ said: ‘Accordingly, it seems to me that the proper disposal of this case is to observe that the justices with some evidence of reasonable precautions and due diligence before them were satisfied that that was sufficient to satisfy the terms of sec. 24. In the end, if the justices properly directed themselves as to the law and appreciated the onus that rests on the respondent, the question of whether the precautions taken were all reasonable precautions is a matter for them and, on the facts of this case, I am not disposed to say that they reached other than the conclusion which was open to them.’
Lord Widgery contrasted the case before him with cases where no precautions had been taken, for example to test whether a watch said to be waterproof was in fact water resistant or whether the odometer had been altered in a case where there was no examination of the motorcar whatever. He observed that the trader had taken a certain amount of trouble to satisfy himself and said: ‘I for my part find it quite impossible to lay down as any general proposition in these cases that a motor dealer selling a secondhand car must wait for the log book and must check with the previous owner. To do so may be a very wise and proper precaution in appropriate cases, but I am not disposed to rule as a general principle that that must be so.’

Judges:

Lord Widgery CJ

Citations:

[1971] 3 All ER 737

Statutes:

Trade Descriptions Act 1968 1(1)(b) 824

Cited by:

CitedEnfield London Borough Council v Argos Ltd Admn 24-Jun-2008
The defendant company had been accused of selling a bladed article to a youth making a test purchase. The prosecutor now appealed by way of case stated raising the question as to whether a reasonable precaution taken after a test case conducted by . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Crime, Consumer

Updated: 04 May 2022; Ref: scu.526097

Arquita v Minister for Immigration and Multi-cultural Affairs: 22 Dec 2000

Federal Court of Australia – MIGRATION – refugees – application for protection visa – whether serious reasons for considering commission of serious non-political crime outside country of refuge – application of Art 1F(b) of Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees – meaning of ‘serious reasons for considering’.

Judges:

Weinberg J

Citations:

[2000] FCA 1889, 106 FCR 46

Links:

Austlii

Cited by:

CitedAl-Sirri v Secretary of State for The Home Department SC 21-Nov-2012
The appellants had been refused refugee status on the ground that they were suspected of having been guilty of terrorist acts. They said that the definition of terrorism applied within the UK was wider than that in the Convention which contained the . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Commonwealth, Crime, Immigration

Updated: 04 May 2022; Ref: scu.470875

Regina v Robertson: CACD 1968

The evidence suggested that the defendant had a complete understanding of the legal proceedings in which he was involved but, also that, through mental illness, he had suffered delusions which may have effected his ability ‘properly’ to conduct his defence, acting otherwise than in his own best interests. There had been a finding of disability before arraignment, and he now submitted that he should have been tried.
Held: He was fit to plead. The fact that a defendant through delusion might not act in his own best interests does not make him unfit to plead: ‘On the evidence here [he] appears to have had a complete understanding of the legal proceedings and all that is involved and, although he suffers from delusions which at any moment might interfere with a proper action on his part, that is not a matter which should deprive him of his right of being tried.’
The test on Pritchard had ‘been confirmed and followed over and over again’ as appropriate to the general issue of fitness to be tried.

Judges:

Lord Parker CJ

Citations:

(1968) 52 Cr App R 690, [1968] 3 All ER 557, [1968] 1 WLR 1767

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

ConfirmedRex v Pritchard 21-Mar-1836
A person, deaf and dumb, was to be tried for a capital felony the Judge ordered a Jury to be impanneled, to try whether he was mute by the visitation of God, the jury found that he was so. The jury were then sworn to try whether he was able to . .

Cited by:

CitedTaitt v The State PC 8-Nov-2012
(Trinidad and Tobago) The defendant sought leave to appeal against his conviction for murder, with the death penalty mandatory sentence. He was of severely low intelligence.
Held: The appeal against conviction would not be allowed. Settled law . .
CitedJohn M, Regina v CACD 14-Nov-2003
The trial judge had directed the jury, determining fitness to plead, with an extended formulation of the test, including the appellant’s ability to give evidence, if he wished, in his own defence. This facility had been described to mean that ‘the . .
CitedJohn M, Regina v CACD 14-Nov-2003
The trial judge had directed the jury, determining fitness to plead, with an extended formulation of the test, including the appellant’s ability to give evidence, if he wished, in his own defence. This facility had been described to mean that ‘the . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Crime

Updated: 04 May 2022; Ref: scu.465695

Salisbury’s case: 1553

Citations:

(1553) 1 Plowden 97

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedGnango, Regina v CACD 26-Jul-2010
The defendant appealed against his conviction for murder. He had engaged in a street battle using guns. A bullet from an opponent killed an innocent passer by. The court was asked whether the principles of joint venture and transferred malice could . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Crime

Updated: 04 May 2022; Ref: scu.467183

Regina v Belfon: 1976

A defendant incapable of forming a full intent should not be convicted of a crime requiring a specific intent. It is not foresight but intention which constitutes the mental element in murder.

Judges:

Wien J

Citations:

[1976] 1 WLR 741

Crime

Updated: 04 May 2022; Ref: scu.467712

Mansell and Herbert’s case: 1555

During an attack by force on a house by a group of men who intended to take goods from the house, a woman was killed by a stone thrown by one of the group at another person.
Held: By a majority, they were all guilty of murder: ‘if two fight by appointment beforehand to do so, and an indifferent stranger come to part them, and be killed by one of them, it is murder in him who killed; and some said in both, but the others would not agree to this.’

Citations:

(1555) 2 Dyer 128b, (1555) 73 ER 279

Cited by:

CitedGnango, Regina v CACD 26-Jul-2010
The defendant appealed against his conviction for murder. He had engaged in a street battle using guns. A bullet from an opponent killed an innocent passer by. The court was asked whether the principles of joint venture and transferred malice could . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Crime

Updated: 04 May 2022; Ref: scu.467182

Regina v Pannell: CACD 1982

The defendant had been found in possession of the disassembled parts for three prohibited automatic firearms.
Held: The appeal failed despite the fact that the ability of the carbines to fire automatically required an operation of some delicacy achieved only by an expert in re-assembling the parts.

Citations:

[1983] 76 Cr App R 53, [1982] Crim LR 752

Statutes:

Firearms Act 1968 5

Cited by:

AppliedRegina v Clarke CACD 1985
A sub-machine gun was found. It was incomplete, without trigger, pivot pin or magazine, but had been designed for fully-automatic fire only. It could be operated by use of a piece of string tied across the ‘sear’ (the catch keeping the hammer at . .
CitedBewley v Regina CACD 6-Jul-2012
The defendant appealed against his conviction for possession of a firearm. The crown had been able to make it discharge a pellet only by taking elaborate preparatory steps. ‘There being no dispute but that the starting pistol was a lethal-barrelled . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Crime

Updated: 04 May 2022; Ref: scu.462421

Director of Public Prosecutions v Dunn: QBD 1 Nov 2000

The prosecutor appealed after dismissal of the charges against the defendant as duplicitous. A neighbour couple had accused him of harassment against either or both of them. The magistrates accepted the plea on the basis that there were no two actions alleged against both or either of the couple.
Held: The appeal succeeded. The use of the singular expression in section 1 was to be read to include the plural. It was quit epossible that though only one complainant might have been present on any occasion, the behaviour had nevertheless been aimed at both. It was not always necessary to have a separate charge of harassment in respect of each complainant where a course of conduct comprised of incidents involving more than one individual as the victim. The court decided that it would be appropriate to include more than one complainant in a prosecution where the complainants were members of a ‘close knit definable group’ and the conduct complained of was clearly aimed at all of them on each occasion, even though only one of them might have been present on each such occasion.

Judges:

Bell J

Citations:

Times 01-Nov-2000

Statutes:

Protection from Harassment Act 1997 1 2

Torts – Other, Crime

Updated: 04 May 2022; Ref: scu.452428

Phillips v Brown: QBD 20 Jun 1980

DONALDSON LJ: Mr. Phillips appeals by case stated against his conviction and a fine of andpound;5 imposed by Mr Loy, the Leeds Stipendiary Magistrates, in September 1978 for failure to comply with a School Attendance Order. It is not the conviction or the fine which irks Mr. Phillips. His irritation, and perhaps even anger, is based upon his belief that the local education authority has exceeded its powers under the Education Act 1944.

The facts can be stated relatively briefly, but it is necessary to refer to the correspondence which is exhibited to the case.

Mr. Phillips and Mrs. Reah, who was also charged and convicted, are the parents of Oak, who was born on or about 24th June 1971. At the relevant time Oak was thus of compulsory school age.

In October 1976 the local education authority (to whom I shall hereafter refer to as the ‘L.E.A.’), became aware that Oak was not attending any school. They wrote to the parents who replied by letter dated 11th October 1976 as follows: ‘Oak Reah receives efficient, full time education (from Mrs. R.H. Reah and Mr. J.D. Phillips) which is suitable to his age, aptitude, and ability: he receives this education otherwise than by regular attendance at school: he has already received this education since (and inclusive of) his 5th birthday: such education falls in accordance with current Educational Law.’

The authority then served a School Attendance Notice on the parents, which they ignored. However, when the matter came before the Leeds Magistrates Court on 6th April 1977, no evidence was offered and the complaint was dismissed.

This was the end of the first round in the contest. The second round, with which we are primarily concerned, opened less than two months later. Oak was still not attending any school and on 14th June 1977 the L.E.A. wrote to the parents as follows:
‘As your son, Oak, is now of compulsory school age, the Education Authority is required to satisfy itself that he is being educated in accordance with his age, ability and aptitude.

‘I must therefore request that you submit to the Education Authority details of the educational programme which Oak is now following, together with any relevant information which may assist the Authority in satisfying itself that the education being provided is appropriate in the circumstances.’
A copy of this letter has been forwarded to your Solicitor . . ‘ Somewhat surprisingly the reply came from solicitors, Victor D. Zermansky and Co., and was in the following terms: ‘We can do no more than reiterate what we have said previously. Your powers under the Education Act 1944 only come into operation if ‘it appears . . that the parents of any child . . are failing to perform their duty.’

‘In this case there has been nothing to give any such appearance. Our clients are conscious of their duty expressed in Section 36 of the Education Act 1944 to educate their child in accordance with that Section and confirm that they are so educating him.’
There followed a lull in hostilities and then on 24th January 1978 the L.E.A. wrote to the parents: ‘It would appear that you, being the parents of the above-named child have failed to cause your child to receive full-time education, suitable to his age, ability and aptitude, either by regular attendance at school or otherwise.

‘I therefore serve this notice upon you that you are required under section 37 of the 1944 Education Act to satisfy my authority by the 8th February 1978, that your child, Oak Reah, is receiving efficient full-time education suitable to his age, ability and aptitude either by regular attendance at school or otherwise.’

Reply came there none and on 22nd February 1978 the L.E.A. again wrote to the parents and said that the authority noted their failure to satisfy the authority about the child’s education and continued: ‘The Authority therefore propose to serve upon you, under the provisions of section 37(2) of the Education Act, 1944, a School Attendance Order which will require you to cause the child to become a registered pupil at a particular school to be named in the Order. If you fail to comply with the Order, you will be guilty of an offence, and it will be the duty of the Authority to take proceedings against you.’
They later went on to deal with the rights of the parents to express view about the school concerned.

The School Attendance Order itself was dated 3rd April 1978 and required the parents to cause Oak to forthwith become a registered pupil of a named school in the Leeds area. The parents did not comply with this order.

At the hearing before Mr. Loy, the Senior Education Welfare Officer of the L.E.A. gave evidence that Oak was not a registered pupil at a Leeds school and that no information had been forthcoming from the parents regarding the child’s curriculum, timetable, subjects to be studied and whether these were appropriate to his age, ability and aptitude. She said that, from these facts, it appeared to the L.E.A. that the parents were failing to perform their duty under section 36 of the Education Act, 1944, and that accordingly, a section 37(1) notice had been served upon them. This was the letter dated 24th January 1978. The parents gave no evidence concerning Oak’s education, but took the point that before an L.E.A. could issue a notice under section 37(1) of the Act, something positive must have come to its notice as a result of which it could and did appear to the L.E.A. that there was a failure by the parents in their duty under section 36 of the Act. The parents contended that there was no evidence of any such matter. It followed that it could not appear to the L.E.A. that the parents were failings in their duty, the section 37(1) notice was invalid and so was the School Attendance Order based upon that notice.

The learned Magistrate’s conclusions were set out in paragraph 6 of the case as follows: ‘I was of the opinion: (a) That at the time the letter dated 14th June, 1977 was written the child was not attending school and the Local Authority had no information regarding his teaching. (b) That the letter written by the Local Education Authority dated 14th June 1977 was a perfectly proper request for information and one that they were entitled to make. (c) That the words ‘if it appears to a Local Education Authority’ in Section 37(1) of the Education Act 1944 make the respondents the judges on the question of whether or not there has been a failure on the part of the parents to perform their duties under the Education Act, and that the court cannot enquire into its judgment. (d) That in any event the failure to send the child to any school and to give any, or any satisfactory, information about the child’s schooling when asked by the respondents was sufficient evidence of ‘failure’ to make it their duty to serve notice under Section 37(1) of the Education Act 1944 asking for details of the child’s education. (e) Being satisfied that the respondents had carried out the statutory procedure and requirements of Section 37 of the Act, that the School Attendance Order had been served properly upon the appellants, that the appellants had failed to comply with the requirements of such order and no evidence being adduced before me by, or on behalf of either appellant to prove that the child was receiving efficient full-time education at school or otherwise, I found the summons proved against both defendants and fined them each the sum of andpound;5.00.’

Two questions are referred to this Court, namely the interpretation of the words ‘if it appears’ in section 37(1) of the Education Act 1944, and whether the respondent’s judgment was a matter about which the Court could enquire and if so whether there was sufficient evidence before the Court, or any evidence upon which it could be established that it did appear to the Local Education Authority.

Mr. Phillips has argued this case with conspicuous skill. In general terms he has two complaints. The first is that an L.E.A. exceeds its powers if it asks parents to prove that they are discharging their duty to ensure that their children are properly educated, unless it has some reason to doubt that this is the case. The second is that the learned Magistrate has held that the L.E.A. is the sole judge of whether it appears to it that parents have failed to discharge this duty, whereas Mr. Phillips contends that the Courts have at least a supervisory jurisdiction.

The starting point for Mr. Phillips’s argument is that the Education Act 1944 has placed the duty of securing that children are properly educated fairly and squarely upon the parents. This I accept. The duty is imposed by and expressed in section 36 of the Act, which provides that: ‘It shall be the duty of the parent of every child of compulsory school age to cause him to receive efficient full-time education suitable to his age, ability, and aptitude, either by regular attendance at school or otherwise.’

Mr. Phillips says that no similar general duty is imposed upon L.E.A.S. This also I accept. However, it is not correct to conclude, and Mr. Phillips did not suggest, that L.E.A.s were not concerned with whether parents discharge this duty. In the circumstance prescribed by section 37(1) of the Education Act 1944, it is their duty ‘to serve upon the parent a notice requiring him, within such time as may be specified in the notice not being less than fourteen days from the service thereof, to satisfy the authority that the child is receiving efficient full-time education suitable to his age, ability, and aptitude either by regular attendance at school or otherwise’. The prescribed circumstance is that ‘it appears to a local education authority that the parent of any child of compulsory school age in their area is failing to perform the duty imposed on him by the last foregoing section’.
Mr. Phillips submits that unless and until something comes to the notice of a local authority which causes it to conclude that prima facie particular parents are in breach of their duty under section 36 of the Education Act 1944 it is neither bound nor entitled to make inquiries of those parents. He claims than an L.E.A. is in the same position as a policeman and says that policeman do not go from house to house inquiring whether a burglary has been committed. Similarly L.E.A.s should not oppress parents by inquiring whether there has been a breach of section 36. In Mr. Phillips’s submission the L.E.A. in this case is seeking to invert section 37(1) and to treat it as if it authorised and required the making of inquiries of parents before and in order that the L.E.A. may consider whether it appears that there has been a breach of section 36.

Whilst I acknowledge the force of this argument, it seems to me that where an authority has a duty to take action in particular circumstances, it also has a duty to be alert in order to detect the possibility that those circumstances exist.

It needs to know what children of school age live in its area in order that it may perform its statutory duty to provide sufficient schools (section 8 of the Education Act 1944) and to ascertain what children require special educational treatment (section 34). It knows which of these children attend its own schools. It follows that an L.E.A. will or should know that certain children in its area are in a different category — namely being educated at other schools, being educated otherwise than by attendance at school or not being educated properly or even at all. Unless the L.E.A. knows into which sub-category a particular child falls, it is put on inquiry.

What should it do? I do not accept that it should do nothing. This would rightly be criticised as an attempt to because like an ostrich — to put its head in the sand in order that it should not learn of anything which might place upon it the burden of discharging its duty to consider making and, in appropriate cases, to make School Attendance Orders. The most obvious step to take is to ask the parents for information. Of course such a request is not the same as a notice under section 37(1) of the Education Act 1944 and the parents will be under no duty to comply. However it would be sensible for them to do so. If parents give no information or adopt the course adopted by Mr. Phillips of merely stating that they are discharging their duty without giving any details of how they are doing so, the L.E.A. will have to consider and decide whether it ‘appears’ to it that the parents are in breach of section 36. In this context there is no reason why it should necessarily accept the parents’ view — opinions differ on what has to be done in discharge of the duty — and if the parents refuse to answer, it could very easily conclude that prima facie the parents were in breath of their duty.

If the L.E.A., having considered the matter, is in a state of mind which can be described by saying that it appears to them that the parents are in breach of their obligation under section 36 of the Education Act 1944 it has no alternative but to serve notice on the parents under section 37(1) requiring the parents to satisfy them within a specified period, not being less than fourteen days, that the child is receiving efficient full-time education suitable to his age, ability and aptitude either by regular attendance at school or otherwise.

What happens next is set out very clearly in section 37(2) in these terms: ‘If, after such a notice has been served upon a parent by a local education authority, the parent fails to satisfy the authority in accordance with the requirements of the notice that the child to whom the notice relates is receiving efficient full-time education suitable to his age, ability, and aptitude, then, if in the opinion of the authority it is expedient that he should attend school, the authority shall serve upon the parent an order in the prescribed form (hereinafter referred to as a ‘school attendance order’) requiring him to cause the child to become a registered pupil at a school named in the order’. ‘Expedient’ in this context means ‘advantageous, fit, proper or suitable to the circumstances of the case’ (see the Shorter Oxford English Dictionary).

If the parents fail to comply with the School Attendance Order, they commit an offence unless they prove that they are causing the child to receive efficient full-time education suitable to his age, ability and aptitude otherwise than at school. This is a matter which falls to be proved to the satisfaction of the magistrates to whom complaint is made that an offence has been committed.

Life would have been much easier for all concerned, including Mr. Phillips, if he had seen fit to place evidence before the Magistrate designed to prove this point, but he did not do so. Instead he sought to argue that the School Attendance Order itself should not have been made because it did not in fact appear to the L.E.A. that he and Mrs. Reah were it breach of their section 36 duty and accordingly the L.E.A. had not been entitled to issue the order. Alternatively, he would like to have contended that the L.E.A. could not have formed the opinion that it was expedient that Oak should attend school. The learned Magistrate held that it was not open to him to consider such an argument. Here I think that he erred.

In The Secretary of State for Employment v. ASLEF (No. 2) [1972] 2 Q B 455, [1972] 2 All ER 949 the Court of Appeal was concerned with a statute which authorised the making of an application to the Court ‘if it appears to the Secretary of State . .’ The Court held that this did not put the Minister’s decision beyond challenge. It was open to a respondent to the application to seek to show that the Minister had not acted bona fide or that he must have misdirected himself in law. Similarly, in the case of proceedings brought for non-compliance with a School Attendance Order, in my judgment it is open to the defendant parent to place evidence before the Court designed to show that it could not have appeared to a reasonable L.E.A., correctly directing itself as to what matters were relevant, that the parent was in breach of his section 36 duty or, as the case may be, that it was expedient that the child should attend school and that the making of the School Attendance Order was therefore unauthorised and a nullity. But Courts should not readily accede to such an argument in the absence of evidence that in fact the parents are discharging their section 36 duty and, if this is once proved, the defendant would in any event be entitled to be acquitted and the Court may make an order under section 37(6) of the Education Act 1944 that the School Attendance Order shall cease to be in force. In the circumstances parents would be well advised to concentrate upon the defence which is available to them under section 37(5) rather than to take on the very much heavier burden of seeking to attack the School Attendance Order in limine.

On the facts of this case the learned Magistrate should have applied his mind to the question of whether it could properly have appeared to the L.E.A. that the parents were in breach of their section 36 duty and whether it could properly have been of opinion that it was expedient that Oak should attend school and I answer the questions set out in the case stated accordingly. The conviction will be set aside and the matter remitted to the learned Magistrate for further consideration should the L.E.A. wish him to do so. However, if we were correctly informed by Mr. Phillips that Oak is no longer in his care and custody, it may be that the L.E.A. will think that no further action is called for in relation to this particular School Attendance Order.

Mr. Phillips also contended that he was in effect entitled to plead autrefois acquit on the basis of his acquittal of the complaint based upon the earlier School Attendance Order. Here he is wrong. The offence alleged in the second proceedings was a different offence, namely non-compliance with the second order. All that can be said is that if, which may or may not have been the case, no evidence was offered in support of the first complaint because the L.E.A. was satisfied that the parents were discharging their section 36 duty at that time, the Magistrate, in the absence of some explanation, might wonder why the positions was different at the time of the issue of the second School Attendance Order.

Finally, I should mention that Mr. Phillips expressed concern lest, if the Magistrate’s view of the law was right, it would be open to an L.E.A. to persecute a parent by issuing a series of School Attendance Orders at short intervals, making complaints that the orders were not complied with and on each occasion requiring the parent to prove that he was discharging his section 36 duty. There is no evidence whatsoever that this has happened in this case or in any other case. But Mr. Phillips need have no fear. Apart altogether from the power of the Magistrates Court to order that a particular School Attendance Order shall cease to be in force pursuant to section 37(6), the Divisional Court, in an appropriate case, has the necessary power and would have no hesitation in restraining such conduct by an L.E.A. by means of judicial review.
WOOLF J: I agree.
:
Conviction set aside, case remitted to the Magistrates.

Judges:

Donaldson LJ, Woolf J

Citations:

Unreported, 20 June 1980, 424/78

Statutes:

Education Act 1944 36 37(2)

Citing:

CitedSecretary of State for Employment v ASLEF (No 2) CA 1972
Railway employees had been instructed by their unions to ‘work to rule’ and more specifically to ban overtime, Sunday and rest day working. ‘Working to rule’ meant giving an unreasonably literal construction to certain requirements of the railway . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Education, Crime

Updated: 04 May 2022; Ref: scu.452396

CASE XXII 1 H 7, 27 Sanctuary By All The Judges of England: 1220

Sanctuary at conmion law does not lie for treason ; it lay for other offences. At this day all sanctuaries are abolshed by a statute made 1 Jac. 1, cap. 21. Nee veniam lesso numine casus habet.

Citations:

[1220] EngR 26, (1220-1623) Jenk 166, (1220) 145 ER 108 (B)

Links:

Commonlii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Ecclesiastical, Crime

Updated: 04 May 2022; Ref: scu.460938

British Basic Slag Limited v Registrar of Restrictive Trading Agreements: CA 1963

The court considered the meaning of section 6 of the 1956 Act. It was argued that the trial Judge had erred in holding that an arrangement within the meaning of the expression exists when, by communications between the parties, ‘each has intentionally aroused in the other an expectation that he will act in a certain way’. It was submitted that the expression also required ‘that there must be mutuality in the acceptance of rights and obligations’.
Held:
Willmer LJ said: ‘I think it is highly significant that Parliament did not see fit to include any definition of ‘arrangement.’ I infer from this that it was intended that the word should be construed in its ordinary or popular sense. Though it may not be easy to put into words, everybody knows what is meant by an arrangement between two or more parties. If the arrangement is intended to be enforceable by legal proceedings, as in the case where it is made for good consideration, it may no doubt properly be described as an agreement. But the Act of 1956 clearly contemplates that there may be arrangements which are not enforceable by legal proceedings, but which create only moral obligations or obligations binding in honour. This seems to me to be entirely consistent with the dictum of Upjohn J. to which I have already referred. Nor do I consider that there is any inconsistency between that and the view expressed by the judge in the present case. For when each of two or more parties intentionally arouses in the others an expectation that he will act in a certain way, it seems to me that he incurs at least a moral obligation to do so. An arrangement as so defined is therefore something ‘whereby the parties to it accept mutual rights and obligations.”
Diplock LJ said that there were many ways in which arrangements might be made: ‘it is sufficient to constitute an arrangement between A and B, if (1) A makes a representation as to his future conduct with the expectation and intention that such conduct on his part will operate as an inducement to B to act in a particular way, (2) such representation is communicated to B, who has knowledge that A so expected and intended, and (3) such representation or A’s conduct in fulfilment of it operates as an inducement, whether among other inducements or not, to B to act in that particular way.’ and
‘Arrangement is not a term about; under section 6(3) of the Act. I agree with my Lords that it bears the meaning of that an ordinary educated man would ascribe to it. It involves a meeting of minds because under s.6(1) it has to be an arrangement ‘between two or more persons’ and, since it must be an arrangement ‘under which restrictions are accepted by two or more parties’, it involves mutuality and that each party, assuming he is a reasonable and conscientious man, would regard himself as being in some degree under a duty whether moral or legal to conduct himself in a particular way or not to conduct himself in a particular way as the case may be, at any rate so long as the other party or parties conducted themselves in the way contemplated by the arrangement.’

Judges:

Wilmer, Diplock LJJ

Citations:

[1963] 1 WLR 727, [1963] 2 All ER 807

Statutes:

Restrictive Trade Practices Act 1956 6

Cited by:

CitedFitzpatrick and Others v The Commissioner of Police of The Metropolis QBD 11-Jan-2012
The claimants, two solicitors and their employer firm sought damages alleging trespass and malicious procurement by police officers in obtaining and executing search warrants against the firm in 2007 when they were investigating suspected offences . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Crime, Commercial

Updated: 04 May 2022; Ref: scu.450420

Regina v Fisher: CCCR 1865

A person who plugged up the feed pipe of a steam engine thus rendering it temporarily useless was guilty of damaging the engine notwithstanding that no actual damage was done to the engine and that the plug could have been removed without damage being done to the machine.

Judges:

Pollock CB

Citations:

(1865) 1 LRCCR 7

Crime

Updated: 04 May 2022; Ref: scu.448318

King v Lees: 1948

A passenger who urinated in a taxi cab ‘injured’ it, notwithstanding that the taxi could have been readily restored to its original condition with no residual effect. The essence of the Court’s decision was that the taxi was injured because it was temporarily rendered unusable.

Citations:

(1948) 65 TLR 21

Crime

Updated: 04 May 2022; Ref: scu.448319

Burden v Rigler: KBD 1911

A meeting held on the highway is not for that reason alone necessarily to be regarded as an unlawful meeting. Lawfulness depends on the facts and circumstances in each case, and in particular whether an obstruction is caused. Such a meeting may be lawful within section 1 of the 1906 Act.

Citations:

[1911] 1 KB 337, (1911) 80 LJKB 100, (1911) 103 LT 758, (1911) 75 JP 36, (1911) 27 TLR 140, (1911) 9 LGR 71

Statutes:

Public Meetings Act 1906 1

Cited by:

CitedJones and Lloyd v Director of Public Prosecutions Admn 23-Jan-1997
The appellants had been peacefully protesting at Stonehenge. They were among others who refused to leave when ordered to do so under an order made by the police officer in charge declaring it to be a trespassory assembly under the 1986 Act. They . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Crime

Updated: 04 May 2022; Ref: scu.443751

Regina v Lennox-Wright: 1973

Citations:

(1973) CLR 529

Cited by:

CitedRegina v Kettering Magistrates’ Court ex parte MRB Insurance Brokers Limited Admn 4-Apr-2000
A statement of an APR in the sale of a financial services product remained a price indication, and, if it was miscalculated, that was a misleading price indication, and criminal, despite provisions in the Consumer Credit legislation. What was given . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Crime

Updated: 02 May 2022; Ref: scu.430074

P V Narashimo Rao v State: 17 Apr 1998

(Supreme Court of India) Members of Parliament were protected by privilege from prosecution for bribery in respect of voting in parliamentary proceedings.

Citations:

[1998] INSC 229

Links:

LII of India

Cited by:

CitedChaytor and Others, Regina v SC 1-Dec-2010
The defendants faced trial on charges of false accounting in connection in different ways with their expenses claims whilst serving as members of the House of Commons. They appealed against rejection of their assertion that the court had no . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Commonwealth, Constitutional, Crime

Updated: 02 May 2022; Ref: scu.427746

Public Prosecutor v Yuvaraj: PC 1970

Diplock L said: ‘Corruption in the public service is a grave social event which is difficult to detect, for those who take part in it will be at pains to cover their tracks.’ and ‘In criminal proceedings, by an exception to the general rule founded upon considerations of public policy. If the consequence of a finding that a particular fact is proved will be the conviction of the defendant the degree of probability must be so high as to exclude any reasonable doubt that that fact exists. Generally speaking, no onus lies upon a defendant in criminal proceedings to prove or disprove any fact: it is sufficient for his acquittal if any of the facts which, if they existed, would constitute the offence with which he is charged, are ‘not proved.’ But exceptionally, as in the present case, an enactment creating an offence expressly provides that if other facts are proved, a particular fact, the existence of which is a necessary factual ingredient of the offence, shall be presumed or deemed to exist.’ . . ‘unless the contrary is proved.’ In such a case the consequence of finding that that particular fact is ‘disproved’ will be an acquittal, whereas the absence of such a finding will have the consequence of a conviction.’

Judges:

Diplock L

Citations:

[1970] AC 913, [1970] 2 WLR 226

Cited by:

CitedWebster v Regina CACD 1-Dec-2010
The defendant appealed against his conviction under the 1889 Act for making a corrupt gift to a local government officer. He said that the 1916 Act placed an unfair burden on him to prove that the gift was not corruptly given.
Held: The appeal . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Crime, Commonwealth

Updated: 02 May 2022; Ref: scu.426855

Regina v Greenaway: CC 25 Jun 1992

(Central Criminal Court) The defendant Member of Parliament had faced charges of accepting bribes in return for advancing the interests of a commercial company.
Held: The charges were dismissed on the request of the prosecution after a separate trial in which the persons accused of having bribed him had been acquitted. Buckley J had earlier ruled that an MP could be charged with the common law offence of bribery.
It had been common ground that in general, members of Parliament are subject to the criminal law and that it would be ‘unacceptable’ for a member of Parliament to be immune from prosecution in the courts of law when there was prima facie evidence of corruption. Without it being suggested that he was questioning or impeaching words spoken in Parliament, he adopted the observations of Lord Salmon that: ‘To my mind equality before the law is one of the pillars of freedom. To say that immunity from criminal proceedings against . . any member of Parliament who accepts the bribe, stems from the Bill of Rights is possibly a serious mistake . . (the Bill of Rights) is a charter for freedom of speech in the House. It is not a charter for corruption . . the crime of corruption is complete when the bribe is offered or given or solicited and taken.’

Judges:

Buckley J

Citations:

Unreported, 25 June 1992

Cited by:

CitedRegina v Morley; Regina v Chaytor; Regina v Devine; Regina v Lord Hanningfield CC 11-Jun-2010
(Southwark Crown Court) The defendants faced charges of false accounting in connection with expense claims as members of parliament, three of the House of Commons and one of the Lords. Each claimed that the matter was covered by Parliamentary . .
CitedChaytor and Others, Regina v CACD 30-Jul-2010
The defendants had been members of the Houses of Commons and of Lords. They faced charges of dishonesty in respect of their expenses claims. They now appealed a finding that they were not subject to the exclusive jurisdiction of Parliament under . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Crime, Constitutional

Updated: 02 May 2022; Ref: scu.418270

The Queen v Bowles: 1653

An indictment for perjury must shew that the subject matter of the oath was material to the cause in which the perjury was committed.

Citations:

[1653] EngR 1985, (1653) Cro Eliz 428, (1653) 78 ER 668 (B)

Links:

Commonlii

Crime

Updated: 02 May 2022; Ref: scu.414292

Regina v Rider: CACD 1986

The defendant had obtained a divorce by forging her husband’s signature on the acknowledgment of service and elsewhere, and then swore an affidavit identifying the signature. The only evidence against her on the charge of perjury was her husband’s refutation of the signatures.
Held: The judge had failed to direct the jury as to section 13 and the need to provide corroboration of the falsity of the statement unless its falsity was admitted. The misdirecion was material but the court applied the proviso to maintain the conviction.

Citations:

[1986] 83 CAR 207

Statutes:

Perjury Act 1911 1 13

Cited by:

CitedRegina v Cooper CACD 5-May-2010
The defendant appealed his conviction for perjury. On being accused of using a mobile phone when driving, he claimed to have been using a hands free system. Evidence later showed that his kit had been fitted only after the date of the alleged . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Crime

Updated: 02 May 2022; Ref: scu.409990

Regina v Hussain, S: CACD 28 Jan 2010

The defendant appealed against conviction for possession of controlled substances with intent to supply. He said that he had imported the substances (Class C controlled drugs and counterfeit medecines) but had intended to supply them overseas only.
Held: The appeal succeeded. The offence was committed only where the supply was within the jurisdiction. If the intention might have been to supply customers outside the jurisdiction, no offence such as those charged could be committed.

Judges:

Lord Justice Laws, Mr Justice Beatson and Mr Justice Blake

Links:

Times

Statutes:

Misuse of Drugs Act 1971 4(1) 5(3)

Citing:

CitedSeymour v The Queen PC 5-Nov-2007
(Bermuda) The appellant was arrested after going to hospital complaining that a bag of heroin he had swallowed had burst. He had been intending to leave the country for Miami where the drug would be sold. He appealed against his conviction for . .
CitedRegina v Maginnis HL 5-Mar-1987
M was stopped by the police. They found cannabis in his car. He said he was looking after it for a friend. He was accused of intending to supply it.
Held: ‘The word ‘supply’ in its ordinary natural meaning conveys the idea of furnishing or . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Crime

Updated: 02 May 2022; Ref: scu.408565

Regina v Hutchins: CACD 1988

The defendant was at a party where he took a range of drugs. He was accused of attacking one girl, and then imprisoning another with a neighbour. He appealed against his convictions for unlawful imprisonment and kidnapping.
Held: The appeal was dismissed. For the crime of unlawful imprisonment, mens rea is required even though it is an offence of basic intent, though it can be committed intentionally or being reckless as to the victim’s consent.

Citations:

[1988] Crim LR 379

Citing:

CitedRegina v Rahman CACD 1985
False imprisonment is a common law offence, defined as consisting in ‘the unlawful and intentional or reckless restraint of a victim’s freedom of movement from a particular place. In other words it is unlawful detention which stops the victim moving . .

Cited by:

CitedCraik, Chief Constable of Northumbria Police, Regina (on The Application of) v Newcastle Upon Tyne Magistrates’ Court Admn 30-Apr-2010
The claimant a retired Chief Constable sought judicial review of a decision to commit him for trial on a charge of unlawful imprisonment. The suspect and now prosecutor had been arrested and held in custody, but without the necessary timely review . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Crime

Updated: 02 May 2022; Ref: scu.408852

Regina v Benguit: CACD 2002

Citations:

[2005] EWCA Crim 1953

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedBell, Regina v CACD 19-Jan-2010
The defendant appealed against his conviction, saying that it had taken place only at the prosecution’s third attempt, the two earlier trials reaching no majority verdict. He said that the third trial was an abuse.
Held: There had been no . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Crime

Updated: 02 May 2022; Ref: scu.393012

Regina v Grimes: CACD 1968

Judge Kilner Brown confirmed the existence of the crime of attempting to pervert the course of justice: ‘Certain actions such as cheating or behaving obscenely may not be offences in a private connotation, but once the public is involved, either by agreement with one of its number or more diversely, the law regards such conduct as criminal. Perversion of the course of justice is per se an offence against the public weal. It is recognised as an unlawful act for the purpose of framing a charge of conspiracy to pervert the course of justice and I am of the opinion, whichever way one approaches it, that common law does, and has for many years, recognised an act to pervert the course of justice, or an attempt so to do, as an unlawful act in itself. In my view this count charges an offence which is contrary to the common law and I reject the submission to quash this count.’ Nothing in Sections 4 or 5 of the Criminal Law Act 1967 had the effect of implying that the offence no longer existed.

Judges:

Judge Kilner Brown

Citations:

[1968] 3 All ER 179

Statutes:

Criminal Law Act 1967 4 5

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

ConfirmedRegina v Panayiotou and Another CACD 1973
Interfering with potential witnesses, so as to prevent or dissuade them from testifying are acts which amount to perverting the course of Justice. . .
CitedRegina v Cotter and Others CACD 10-May-2002
The defendants appealed against convictions for conspiracy to pervert the course of justice. They said that the fact that an investigation followed a false allegation was insufficient to found a complaint, and that the extent of the crime was so . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Crime

Updated: 02 May 2022; Ref: scu.383657

Elvan Rose v The Queen: PC 1961

Lord Tucker said: ‘A man may know what he is doing and intend to do it and yet suffer from such abnormality of mind as substantially impairs his mental responsibility’.

Judges:

Lord Tucker

Citations:

[1961] AC 49

Cited by:

CitedRegina v Khan CACD 27-Jul-2009
On his trial for murder the defendant produced unchallenged expert evidence that at the time of the offence, his mental responsibility for the killing was substantially impaired by his mental illness. He said that in these circumstances the charge . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Crime, Commonwealth

Updated: 02 May 2022; Ref: scu.372332

Rex -v William Sawyer: 1815

(Old Bailey) The defendant was a British subject. He murdered another British subject, Harriet Gaskett, in Lisbon. He was found guilty of murder. The point was taken that, as the offence had been committed abroad, the indictment was not framed in a way to make it triable under a statute of King Henry VIII, namely, 33 Hen. VIII. c.23. It was heard by a court comprising the three Chief Justices of the Courts of Common Law and nine puisne judges. The decision of the court was shortly expressed in the first of the reports as follows: ‘The judges held that this offence was triable here, though committed in a foreign kingdom, the prisoner and the deceased being both subjects of this realm at the time it was committed. The judges were also of opinion that the stating Harriet Gaskett to be in the king’s peace at the time, sufficiently imported that she was the king’s subject when the offence was committed, and that the statement in the indictment that this was against the king’s peace sufficiently imputed that the prisoner was also at the time a subject of this realm.’
Held: Lord Ellenborough CJ observed that the King’s subjects were protected even if out of the realm of England. The following exchange then took place: ‘[COUNSEL FOR THE DEFENDANT]: The offender must be a person amenable to the laws of this country. That nowhere appears by this indictment, which certainly states him to be ‘late of London’, but that merely shows that he had been a resident in this country at one time; but he might be foreigner notwithstanding that. LORD ELLENBOROUGH: ‘Against the peace of the King’ applies to the offender: it relates to his capacity to commit the crime.’
A British subject is indictable under the 33 Hen VI11 c. 23 for the murder of another British subject, though the murder was committed within the dominion of a foreign state. Stating in the indictment that the person murdered was at the time in the king’s peace, is sufficient to shew that he was a British subject. The conclusion in the indictment that the offence was against the king’s peace, shews sufficiently that the prisoner was a British subject. For a common law felony, committed abroad, but made triable here under the 33 Hen. VIII c 23, the indictment need not conclude contra formam statuti

Judges:

Ellenborough CJ, Chambre J and Wood B

Citations:

[1815] EngR 431, (1815) Russ and Ry 294, (1815) 168 ER 810

Links:

Commonlii

Cited by:

See AlsoRex v William Sawyer 7-Apr-1815
Under the stat. 33 Hen. 8, c. 23, a British subject was triable in this country for the murder of another British subject, committed on land within the territory of a foreign independent kingdom. In such a case, the indictment sufficiently shewed . .
CitedRegina v Adebolajo and Another CACD 3-Dec-2014
The defendants had been convicted of the brutal and public murder of Fusilier Lee Rigby in London, and sentenced to whole life term for Adebolajo and 45 years for Adebowale. They now sought leave to appeal against conviction and sentence.
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Crime

Updated: 02 May 2022; Ref: scu.336241

Rex v William Sawyer: 7 Apr 1815

Under the stat. 33 Hen. 8, c. 23, a British subject was triable in this country for the murder of another British subject, committed on land within the territory of a foreign independent kingdom. In such a case, the indictment sufficiently shewed the parties to be British subjects, by stating, in the usual manner, that the deceased was in the peace of the king, and concluding against the peace of the king. Such an indictment need not conclude contra formam statuti

Citations:

[1815] EngR 615, (1815) 2 Car and K 101, (1815) 175 ER 41

Links:

Commonlii

Citing:

See AlsoRex -v William Sawyer 1815
(Old Bailey) The defendant was a British subject. He murdered another British subject, Harriet Gaskett, in Lisbon. He was found guilty of murder. The point was taken that, as the offence had been committed abroad, the indictment was not framed in a . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Crime

Updated: 02 May 2022; Ref: scu.336425

Rex v James Egerton: 1819

Fear of loss of character and service, upon a charge of sodomitical practices is sufficent to constitute robbery, though the party has no fear of being taken into custody, or of punishmeat.

Citations:

[1819] EngR 106, (1819) Russ and Ry 375, (1819) 168 ER 852

Links:

Commonlii

Crime

Updated: 02 May 2022; Ref: scu.331309

Rex v Capewell And Pegg: 1831

A count in an indictment for night poaching stated, that the prisoners were in a field called A., for the purpose of then and there taking game : Held, that the prisoners could not be convicted on that count, unless the jury were satisfied that the prisoners had an intention of taking game in that particular field

Citations:

[1831] EngR 186, (1831-1833) 5 Car and P 549, (1831) 172 ER 1094

Links:

Commonlii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Crime

Updated: 02 May 2022; Ref: scu.320064

Regina v Young And Webber: 22 Sep 1838

When, upon a previous arrangement, and after there has been time for the blood to cool, two persons meet with deadly weapons, and one of them is killed, the party who occasions the death is guilty of murder, and the seconds also are equally guilty, and with respect to others shewn to be present, the question is, did they give their aid and assistance by their countenance and encouragement of the principals in the contest? Mere presence will not be sufficien, but if they sustain the principals either by advice or assitance, or go to the ground for the purpose of encouraging and forwarding the unlawful conflict, although they do not say or do anything, yet if they are present, assisting and encouraging by their presence at the moment when the fatal shot is fired, they are, in law, guilty of the crime of murder.

Judges:

Vaughan J, Alderson B

Citations:

[1838] EngR 876, (1838) 8 Car and P 644, (1838) 173 ER 655

Links:

Commonlii

Cited by:

CitedGnango, Regina v SC 14-Dec-2011
The prosecutor appealed against a successful appeal by the defendant against his conviction for murder. He and an opponent had engaged in a street battle using guns. His opponent had shot an innocent passer by. The court was now asked as to whether . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Crime

Updated: 02 May 2022; Ref: scu.312882

Regina v M’Phane, Popham, and Donoghue: 17 Jun 1841

Where three persons were indicted jointly for cutting and wounding, and the third of them did not come up to the spot until after one of the first two had got away, and then kicked the prosecutor while he was on the ground struggling with the other, it was held, that the two, who jointly assaulted the prosecutor and wounded him at first, might be found guilty either of the felony or of an assault only, but that the third prisoner must under the circumstances be acquitted altogether.

Citations:

[1841] EngR 840, (1841) Car and M 212, (1841) 174 ER 476

Links:

Commonlii

Crime

Updated: 02 May 2022; Ref: scu.309018

Regina v Wells: 1 Mar 1858

A carrier, who, receiving money to procure goods obtained and duly delivered the goods, but fraudulently retained the money, convlcted of larceny under the 4th section of the Frauds by Trustees Act, 20 and 21 Vict c. 54

Citations:

[1858] EngR 422 (A), (1858) 1 F and F 109

Links:

Commonlii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Crime

Updated: 02 May 2022; Ref: scu.288893

Regina v Kohn: 1864

On an indictment against a foreigner, who was ship’s carpenter on board a foreign merchant ship, for conspiring in this country, with the foreign owner and master, to destroy or cast away the vessel, with intent to prejudice the owners of goods on board, or the insurers of the ship or cargo (the counts charging an intent to defraud), it being admtted that the prisoner was party to the scutthg the ship on the high seas, the jury were directed to consider whether the prisoner was a party in this country to a previous plan or conspiracy to destroy the ship, not limited to its destination on the high seas, the principal offence not being triable in this country ; and quaere, as to a conspracy so limited

Citations:

[1864] EngR 54, (1864) 4 F and F 68, (1864) 176 ER 470

Links:

Commonlii

Crime, Transport

Updated: 02 May 2022; Ref: scu.281768

Regina v Robertson: 1968

The court considered the definition of whether a defendant was fit to stand trial. The defendant had been found under a disability before arraignment, but now said that he should have been tried. There was medical evidence that his ‘delusional thinking might cause him to use his challenges wrongly or unwisely and that his ‘delusional thinking’, from which he suffers, might cause him to act otherwise than in his own best interest; in other words unwisely, and so on.’ The defendant argued that ‘On the evidence here [he] appears to have had a complete understanding of the legal proceedings and all that is involved and, although he suffers from delusions which at any moment might interfere with a proper action on his part, that is not a matter which should deprive him of his right of being tried.’
Held: The disability finding was set aside.

Judges:

Lord Parker

Citations:

[1968] 52 Cr App R 690

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedMoyle v Regina CACD 18-Dec-2008
The defendant appealed from his conviction for murder. He said that he had not been fit to plead at the time of the trial. A medical report had said that whilst his responsibility was impaired, it had not been substantially so. The report warned of . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Crime

Updated: 02 May 2022; Ref: scu.279856

Norton v Knowles: 1969

The court made the distinction between a mistaken belief as to the facts and a mistaken belief as to the law, pointing out that the latter ‘is, of course, not relevant or available as a ‘defence”.

Citations:

[1969] 1 QB 572

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedRegina v Phekoo CACD 1981
The defendant was charged with doing acts calculated to interfere with the peace and comfort of residential occupiers so as to cause them to give up their occupation contrary to section 1(3)(a) of the 1977 Act. The defendant contended that he did . .
CitedWest Wiltshire District Council v Snelgrove and Snelgrove Admn 17-Mar-1997
The council appealed against the acquittal of the defendants of offences under the 1977 Act. The occupiers were there under an informal temporary tenancy. The owners wished to move back in. The tenants had not left on the day appointed and on the . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Crime

Updated: 02 May 2022; Ref: scu.277723

Jogee and Ruddock v The Queen: PC 18 Feb 2016

(Jamaica) The Court considered the notion of ‘parasitic accessory liability.’

Judges:

Lord Neuberger, President, Lady Hale, Deputy President, Lord Hughes, Lord Toulson, Lord Thomas

Citations:

[2016] UKPC 7, [2016] 2 WLR 681

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

See AlsoJogee and Ruddock (Jamaica) v The Queen SC 18-Feb-2016
Joint Enterprise Murder
(and in Privy Council) The two defendants appealed against their convictions (one in Jamaica) for murder, under the law of joint enterprise. Each had been an accessory when their accomplice killed a victim with a knife. The judge in Jogee had . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Crime

Updated: 02 May 2022; Ref: scu.563146

Jogee and Ruddock (Jamaica) v The Queen: SC 18 Feb 2016

Joint Enterprise Murder

(and in Privy Council) The two defendants appealed against their convictions (one in Jamaica) for murder, under the law of joint enterprise. Each had been an accessory when their accomplice killed a victim with a knife. The judge in Jogee had directed the jury that he would be guilty of murder as an accessory if he had participated in the attack on the victim and realised that his co-defendant might stab the victim with intent to cause him really serious harm. In Ruddock, the direction was that the prosecution had to prove that the defendant and co-defendant had shared a common intention, and that that common intention included a situation where the defendant knew that there was a real possibility that his co-defendant might ‘have a particular intention and with that knowledge, nevertheless, went on to take part’ in the offence.
Held: The appeals succeeded. The law required to be corrected. Liability as an accessory required both conduct mental elements. The conduct was that the accessory had assisted or encouraged the commission of the principal offence. The mental element was an intention to assist or encourage the commission of that crime. Foresight alone that the principal might commit the offence charged was not an intent to assist, and it was not the inevitable yardstick of a common purpose.

Judges:

Lord Neuberger, President, Lady Hale, Deputy President, Lord Hughes, Lord Toulson, Lord Thomas

Citations:

[2016] 2 WLR 681, UKSC 2015/0015, [2016] UKSC 8, [2016] WLR(D) 84, [2016] UKPC 7

Links:

SC, SC Summary, SC Video, Bailii, WLRD

Statutes:

Accessories and Abettors Act 1861 8

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

CitedRahman and Others, Regina v HL 2-Jul-2008
The defendants appealed against their convictions for murder. None had themselves inflicted any violence, but were convicted as part of a joint enterprise. They said they had not known that the principal carried a knife. They said that the evidence . .
Appeal fromJogee, Regina v CACD 11-Jul-2013
The appellant (Jogee) had been convicted of murder, having been present at a murder and having been found to have anticipated and encouraged violence. He appealed against his conviction under the rules of joint enterprise. . .
CitedRegina v Powell (Anthony) and Another; Regina v English HL 30-Oct-1997
When the court looked at the issue of foreseeability of murder in an allegation of joint enterprise, there was no requirement to show intent by the secondary party. The forseeability of the risk of the principal committing the offence from the point . .
CitedRegina v Coney QBD 18-Mar-1882
A public prize-fight was unlawful. Spectators were tried at Berkshire County Quarter Sessions with common assault. The Chairman of Quarter Sessions directed the jury to convict the spectators of common assault on the basis that having stayed to . .
CitedRex v Collison 16-Mar-1831
Two men went out by night with carts to steal apples. They were detected by the landowner’s watchman. One of the thieves attacked him with a bludgeon which he was carrying and caused the man severe injury. The second thief was tried for assault and . .
CitedMacklin, Murphy, And Others’ Case 1838
If several persons act together with a common intent, every act done by each of them in furtherance of that intent is done by all. If a deadly weapon be used an intention to kill is to be inferred – not so from a blow with a fist. From continued . .
CitedRegina v Luck And Others 1862
More than nine men, of whom seven were armed with guns, being out at night in pursuit of game, were met, as they passed through a field, from one wood to another, by a party of gamekeepers, without fire-arms, but who at once assaulted them with . .
CitedRegina v Turner And Another 1864
When two or more, one of whom has received the provocation of a blow, are charged with murder, and one of them has received a provocation (as a blow) which would reduce homicide to manslaughter, and it cannot be proved which of them inflicted the . .
CitedRegina v Skeet and Others 1866
Poachers were stopped by a gamekeeper, who was shot by one of them. Pollock CB explained the law as it affected accessories: ‘ . . the doctrine of constructive homicide . . does not apply where the only evidence is that the parties were engaged in . .
CitedJohnson v Youden KBD 1950
For a charge of aiding and abetting, the defendant must be shown to have been aware of the essential elements of his acts which constituted the complete crime. However, that may be inferred if a defendant shuts his eyes to the obvious.
Lord . .
CitedNational Coal Board v Gamble QBD 1958
M drove a lorry used for carrying coal from the NCB quarries to power station. H was employed by the NCB to operate a weighbridge, providing tickets to drivers as to the weight on board, and aa a delivery note. On this occasion, the lorry was . .
CitedRegina v Spraggett CCA 1960
Three men had been involved in the burglary of a sub-post office. Two of them went into the building while the third waited outside. During the burglary the owner of the shop came on the scene and was knocked down. The third man was also convicted . .
CitedDirector of Public Prosecutions for Northern Ireland v Maxwell CCA 1978
The defendant was a member of a terrorist organisation, the Ulster Volunteer Force (‘UVF’). Under UVF instructions he took part in what he knew was a planned military mission, by guiding a car containing three or four other men on a cross country . .
CitedAttorney-General v Able and Others QBD 28-Apr-1983
The Attorney General sought a declaration as to whether it would be the crime of aiding and abetting or counselling and procuring suicide, to distribute a booklet published by the respondent which described various effective ways of committing . .
CitedGillick v West Norfolk and Wisbech Area Health Authority and Department of Health and Social Security HL 17-Oct-1985
Lawfulness of Contraceptive advice for Girls
The claimant had young daughters. She challenged advice given to doctors by the second respondent allowing them to give contraceptive advice to girls under 16, and the right of the first defendant to act upon that advice. She objected that the . .
CitedRegina v Smith (Wesley) 1963
A group of men set upon a man in a bar and he was stabbed to death.The court considered the law of joint offences. The trial judge had directed the jury: ‘Manslaughter is unlawful killing without an intent to kill or do grievous bodily harm. Anybody . .
CitedRegina v Betty 1963
If two men attack another without any intention to cause death or grievous bodily harm, and during the course of the attack one man forms an intention to kill the victim, and strikes the fatal blow with that intention, he may be convicted of murder . .
CitedDavies v Director of Public Prosecutions HL 1954
Half a dozen youths engaged in a fist fight with another group, but one of their number suddenly produced a knife and stabbed one of their opponents to death. One of the prosecution witnesses was a youth named Lawson. He gave evidence of an oral . .
CitedChan Wing-Siu v The Queen PC 21-Jun-1984
The appellant and co-accused were charged with murder. They said they had gone to meet the deceased to collect a debt, but had been attacked with a knife by the deceased. Two of the three had knives and knew of the other knife.
Held: All were . .
CitedRegina v Calhaem 1985
Once encouragement or assistance is proved to have been given, the prosecution does not have to go so far as to prove as against an accessory, that it had had a positive effect on the principle offenders conduct or on the outcome . .
CitedRegina v Slack 1989
For a person to be guilty of murder as an accessory it had to be proved that he lent himself to a criminal enterprise involving the infliction of serious injury or death or that he had an express or tacit understanding with the principal that such . .
CitedRegina v Hyde, Sussex, Collins CACD 1990
Lord Lane CJ restated the principle underlying the responsibility of a secondary partner in a joint enterprise: ‘If B realises (without agreeing to such conduct being used) that A may kill or intentionally inflict serious injury, but nevertheless . .
CitedRegina v Wakely 1990
Lord Lane CJ referred to the use of a pick axe handle in a burglary, ‘Foreseeability that the pick axe handle might be used as a weapon of violence was practically indistinguishable from tacit agreement that the weapon should be used for that . .
CitedHui Chi-ming v The Queen PC 5-Aug-1991
(Hong Kong) The defendant was charged with aiding and abetting a murder. A, carrying a length of water pipe and accompanied by the defendant and four other youths, seized a man and A hit him with the pipe, causing injuries from which he died. No . .

Cited by:

See AlsoJogee and Ruddock v The Queen PC 18-Feb-2016
(Jamaica) The Court considered the notion of ‘parasitic accessory liability.’ . .
CitedPatel v Mirza SC 20-Jul-2016
The claimant advanced funds to the respondent for him to invest in a bank of which the claimant had insider knowledge. In fact the defendant did not invest the funds, the knowledge was incorrect. The defendant however did not return the sums . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Crime

Leading Case

Updated: 02 May 2022; Ref: scu.560169

Rex v Pearson: 1835

The prisoner was indicted for the murder of his wife. It was proved, that, in a fit of drunkenness, he had beaten her in a cruel manner with a rake-shank, and that she died of the wounds and bruises which she received. His only defence was that he was drunk.
Held: Park J said: ‘Voluntary drunkenness is no excuse for crime. If a party be made drunk by stratagem, or the fraud of another, he is not responsible. So, drunkenness may be taken into consideration to explain the probability of a party’s intention in the case of violence committed on sudden provocation . . If a party be made drunk by stratagem, or the fraud of another, he is not responsible’.

Judges:

Park J

Citations:

(1835) 2 Lew CC 144

Cited by:

No longer good lawRegina v Kingston HL 22-Jul-1994
Involuntary Intoxication not a General Defence
The prosecutor appealed an acquittal on appeal of the defendant for sexual assault, saying that he had not had the necessary intent because of intoxication through drink and drugs. He said that a co-defendant had secretly administered drugs to him. . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Crime

Updated: 01 May 2022; Ref: scu.272892

Regina v Mills: CACD 1968

Geoffrey Lane LJ considered what was meant by ‘a bribe’: ‘Realising what we say is obiter nevertheless we feel it right to say that in our judgment it is enough that the recipient takes the gift knowing that it is intended as a bribe. By accepting it as a bribe and intending to keep it he enters into a bargain, despite the fact that he may make to himself a mental reservation to the effect that he is not going to carry out his side of the bargain. The bargain remains a corrupt bargain, even though he may not be intending to carry out his intended corrupt act.’

Judges:

Geoffrey Lane LJ

Citations:

[1968] 68 Cr App Rep 154

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedGrobbelaar v News Group Newspapers Ltd and Another CA 18-Jan-2001
The claimant had been awarded andpound;85,000 damages in defamation after the defendant had wrongly accused him of cheating at football. The newspaper sought to appeal saying that the verdict was perverse and the defence of qualified privilege . .
MentionedGrobbelaar v News Group Newspapers Ltd and Another HL 24-Oct-2002
The claimant appealed against a decision of the Court of Appeal quashing the judgement in his favour for damages for defamation.
Held: The Court of Appeal was not able to quash a jury verdict as perverse, and the appeal succeeded. An appellate . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Crime

Updated: 01 May 2022; Ref: scu.272789

Cardle v Mulrainey: HCJ 1992

The defendant drank lager into which a third party had put amphetamine. He then tried to start vehicles belonging to others with the intention of taking them away. He also took some property from one of the vehicles. The sheriff acquitted him. The procurator fiscal appealed and the sheriff stated a case, in the course of which he found that: ‘The respondent was aware of his actions in the early hours of 29 March 1991. He was aware that these actions were wrong, in so far as they comprised the conduct of the respondent found to be criminal herein. The respondent’s ability to reason the consequences of his actions to himself was affected by his ingestion of the drug amphetamine. He was unable to take account of the fact that they were criminal in character by reason of his ingestion of amphetamine. The respondent was unable to refrain from these criminal actions by reason of his ingestion of the drug amphetamine.’ He applied Kidd.
Held: The procurator’s appeal succeded.
Lord Hope LCJ said: ‘Where, as in the present case, the accused knew what he was doing and was aware of the nature and quality of his acts and that what he was doing was wrong, he cannot be said to be suffering from some total alienation of reason in regard to the crime with which he is charged which the defence requires. The sheriff found in finding 16 that the respondent’s ability to reason the consequences of his actions to himself was affected by his ingestion of the drug. The finding narrates that he was unable to take account in his actions of the fact that they were criminal in character and to refrain from them. But this inability to exert self control, which the sheriff has described as an inability to complete the reasoning process, must be distinguished from the essential requirement that there should be a total alienation of the accused’s mental faculties of reasoning and of understanding what he is doing. As in the case of provocation, which provides another example of a stimulus resulting in a loss of self control at the time of the act, this may mitigate the offence but it cannot be held to justify an acquittal on the ground that there is an absence of mens rea. . . It is clear therefore that not every weakness or aberration of the mind will amount to insanity. So it is in the case of the defence with which the decision in Ross was concerned. Not every weakness or aberration induced by the external factor will provide the defence. Hence the insistence in Ross on a total alienation of reason in relation to the crime charged. This is necessary in order to distinguish the condition from other conditions which may be regarded at best as merely mitigating the offence. What will amount to a total alienation of reason, or as was said in Ross, 1991 S.L.T. 564, 572A, a total loss of control of the accused’s actions in regard to the crime with which he is charged, must be a question of fact in each case. But so far as the present case is concerned the sheriff has made express findings in regard to several of the crimes with which the respondent was charged that he intended to do what he did. There are findings that he intended to start the motor vehicles, steal them and drive them away. In the light of these findings the sheriff’s conclusion that the respondent’s ability to reason the consequences of his actions to himself was affected by his ingestion of the drug and that he was unable to refrain from them was relevant at best only to mitigation. He should have held that the respondent’s reason in relation to the crimes charged was not totally alienated and that he did not have a proper basis for the defence.’

Judges:

Lord Hope LCJ

Citations:

1992 SLT 1152

Jurisdiction:

Scotland

Citing:

ExplainedHM Advocate v Cunningham 1963
. .
CitedHM Advocate v Kidd 1960
The court set out the conditions for finding insanity in criminal law. . .
CitedBrennan v HM Advocate HCJ 12-May-1977
The defendant appealed against his conviction for murder after his special defence of insanity was rejected. The trial judge, in charging the jury withdrew the special defence from their consideration and directed them that the evidence of the . .

Cited by:

CitedRegina v Kingston HL 22-Jul-1994
Involuntary Intoxication not a General Defence
The prosecutor appealed an acquittal on appeal of the defendant for sexual assault, saying that he had not had the necessary intent because of intoxication through drink and drugs. He said that a co-defendant had secretly administered drugs to him. . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Crime

Updated: 01 May 2022; Ref: scu.272896

JBH and JH (minors) v O’Connell: QBD 1981

The defendants were boys of 13 and 11. They broke into a school, stole various items and ‘used 12 tubes of duplicating ink to redecorate the school’. They offered no evidence and submitted that there was no case to answer as the prosecution had not rebutted the presumption that they did not know that they were doing was wrong. The magistrates convicted them on the ground that ordinary boys of their ages would have known that they were doing wrong.
Held: The appeals succeeded. The magistrates could not assume that the defendants had the understanding of ordinary boys of their ages. The prosecution should have adduced evidence of this. However, Forbes J discussed the law of doli incapax: ‘in these days of universal education from the age of 5 it seems ridiculous that evidence of some mischievous discretion should be required if a case of malicious damage is committed as it was in this case.’

Judges:

Forbes J

Citations:

[1981] Crim LR 632

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedRegina v T CACD 16-Apr-2008
The twelve year old defendant had pleaded guilty to several allegations of sexual assault. The judge had ruled that it was not open to him to plead doli incapax. He appealed saying that only the presumption of doli incapax had been abolished, and . .
CitedJTB, Regina v HL 29-Apr-2009
The defendant appealed against his convictions for sexual assaults. He was aged twelve at the time of the offences, but had been prevented from arguing that he had not known that what he was doing was wrong. The House was asked whether the effect of . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Crime, Children

Updated: 01 May 2022; Ref: scu.269705

Regina v Hess; Regina v Nguyen: 1990

The protection of children from the evils of intercourse is multi-faceted and so obvious as not to require formal demonstration.

Judges:

McLachlin J

Citations:

[1990] 2 SCR 906

Cited by:

CitedRegina v G (Secretary of State for the Home Department intervening) HL 18-Jun-2008
The defendant was fifteen. He was convicted of statutory rape of a 13 year old girl, believing her to be 15. He appealed saying that as an offence of strict liability he had been denied a right to a fair trial, and also that the offence charged was . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Crime

Updated: 01 May 2022; Ref: scu.270008

A v Director of Public Prosecutions: QBD 1992

The defendant, aged 11, appealed against his conviction of an offence under the Public Order Act 1986, on evidence that he had thrown bricks at a police vehicle. He had then fled the scene.
Held: The conviction was quashed. The fact that the defendant had run away might have indicated no more than that he thought that he had been naughty rather than done something that was seriously wrong. The presumption of doli incapax was not disapplied, but, Bingham LJ said: ‘children have the benefit of the presumption which in this case and some others seems to me to lead to results inconsistent with common sense.’

Judges:

Bingham LJ

Citations:

[1992] Crim LR 34

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedRegina v T CACD 16-Apr-2008
The twelve year old defendant had pleaded guilty to several allegations of sexual assault. The judge had ruled that it was not open to him to plead doli incapax. He appealed saying that only the presumption of doli incapax had been abolished, and . .
CitedJTB, Regina v HL 29-Apr-2009
The defendant appealed against his convictions for sexual assaults. He was aged twelve at the time of the offences, but had been prevented from arguing that he had not known that what he was doing was wrong. The House was asked whether the effect of . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Crime, Children

Updated: 01 May 2022; Ref: scu.269706

Regina v Hodgson, Regina v Pollin: CACD 8 Apr 2008

The defendants had been accused of attempted murder. Negotiations led to an agreed lesser charge of inflicting grievous bodily harm, but the charge was misstated by not including the allegation of intent. They now appealed.
Held: The appeal failed. ‘It might well be that, at least in some offences, it was desirable practice to state the mental element in the indictment. But if the mental element was not stated expressly, it might be implicit from the statement of offence and the particulars that were given.’ The test was whether there was a sufficient indication of the charge.

Judges:

Lord Phillips of Worth Matravers, Lord Chief Justice, Mr Justice Wilkie and Mr Justice Openshaw

Citations:

Times 30-Apr-2008

Statutes:

Offences Against the Person ACt 1861 18

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Crime

Updated: 01 May 2022; Ref: scu.269704

Rex v Sandbach, ex parte Williams: KBD 1935

The Court rejected the view that a person could not be bound over to be of good behaviour when there was no reason to apprehend a breach of the peace. As in the case of binding over to keep the peace, there had to be some reason to believe that there might be a repetition of the conduct complained of before an order to be of good behaviour could be made.

Citations:

[1935] 2 KB 192

Cited by:

CitedHashman and Harrup v The United Kingdom ECHR 25-Nov-1999
The defendants had been required to enter into a recognisance to be of good behaviour after disrupting a hunt by blowing of a hunting horn. They were found to have unlawfully caused danger to the dogs. Though there had been no breach of the peace, . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Crime, Magistrates

Updated: 01 May 2022; Ref: scu.261940

Regina v Horton: 1871

The defendant was convicted of bigamy.
Held: Whilst there is a presumption that he knew of the circumstamnces creating the offence, that presumprion was not conclusive.

Citations:

(1871) 11 Cox CC 670

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedRegina v Morgan HL 30-Apr-1975
The defendants appealed against their convictions for rape, denying mens rea and asserting a belief (even if mistaken) that the victim had consented.
Held: For a defence of mistake to succeed, the mistake must have been honestly made and need . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Crime

Updated: 01 May 2022; Ref: scu.258676

Regina v Hendy-Freegard: CACD 23 May 2007

The defendant against appealed his conviction for kidnapping. He had fraudulently taken control of his victims’ lives and fleeced them. He was said to have kidnapped them, originally by persuading them to get into his car and then driving off. He had variously pretended to work for MI5 and others. The prosecution said that kidnapping did not necessarily require a false imprisonment.
Held: The appeal succeeded. The Crown had failed to show as required that the complainant had been deprived of her liberty. The cases of Wellard and Cort appeared to be in conflict, but Cort should be seen as an unjustified departure from established principle.

Judges:

Lord Phillips of Worth Matravers LCJ, Burton J, Stanley Burnton J

Citations:

Times 30-May-2007

Citing:

CitedRegina v Cort CACD 7-Jul-2003
The defendant appealed a conviction for kidnapping, saying the victims’ absence of consent was not fundamental. Driving his car, he had stopped at bus stops, inviting women to get in saying falsely that the bus had been cancelled. He had with him . .
CitedRegina v Wellard CACD 1978
The defendant had induced a girl to accompany him about 100 yards to his car and to get into the back of it, by pretending to be a police officer searching for drugs and saying that he would escort her to her home. Before he could drive away, her . .
CitedRegina v D HL 1984
D was convicted for kidnapping his 5-year old daughter, a ward of court, who was in the care and control of her mother. The CA held that there was no such offence as the kidnapping of a child under 14, that it could not be committed by a parent, and . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Crime

Updated: 01 May 2022; Ref: scu.253653

Regina v Williams: 1893

A boy below the age at which he could be properly indicted for rape could not be convicted, on the same facts, for an attempt.

Judges:

Lord Colridge CJ

Citations:

[1893] 1 QB 320

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedHaughton v Smith, On Appeal From Regina v Smith (Roger) HL 21-Nov-1973
The defendant appealed against his conviction for attempting to handle stolen goods. They were to be delivered to him in a van, but the meat was intercepted and recovered by the police. The defendant argued that he should not be convicted of . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Crime

Updated: 01 May 2022; Ref: scu.254558

Regina v M’Pherson: 1857

The accused was charged with breaking and entering a dwelling house and stealing certain goods therein. At the time of the breaking and entering the goods were not in the house. He was acquitted of the felony but convicted of breaking and entering and attempting to steal the prosecutor’s goods.
Held: The appeal succeeded.
Cockburn CJ said: ‘Here the prisoner had the intention to steal before he went into the house ; but when he got there the goods specified in the indictment were not there ; how then could he attempt to steal those goods? There can be no attempt asportare unless there is something asportare.’ and ‘The word attempt clearly conveys with it the idea, that if the attempt had succeeded the offence charged would have been committed, and therefore the prisoner might have been convicted if the things mentioned in the indictment or any of them had been there ; but attempting to commit a felony is clearly distinguishable from intending to commit it. An attempt must be to do that which, if successful, would amount to the felony charged ; but here the attempt never could have succeeded, as the things which the indictment charges the prisoner with stealing had already been removed-stolen by somebody else.’
Baron Bramwell said: ‘The argument that a man putting his hand into an empty pocket might be convicted of attempting to steal, appeared to me at first plausible; but suppose a man, believing a block of wood to be a man who was his deadly enemy, struck it a blow intending to murder, could he be convicted of attempting to murder the man he took it to be?’

Judges:

Cockburn CJ, Baron Bramwell

Citations:

(1857) Dears and BCC 197, [1857] EngR 33, (1857) Dears and B 197, (1857) 169 ER 975

Links:

Commonlii

Cited by:

CitedHaughton v Smith, On Appeal From Regina v Smith (Roger) HL 21-Nov-1973
The defendant appealed against his conviction for attempting to handle stolen goods. They were to be delivered to him in a van, but the meat was intercepted and recovered by the police. The defendant argued that he should not be convicted of . .
CitedRothschild v Associated Newspapers Ltd QBD 10-Feb-2012
The claimant said that an article published by the defendant was defamatory. He said that the article implied that in his business associations he had put others at risk to their reputations.
Held: The action failed. The words were indeed . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Crime

Updated: 01 May 2022; Ref: scu.254552

Regina v Murphy: CMAC 1965

(Courts-Martial Appeal Court of Northern Ireland) The court has a discretion to exclude the evidence of an agent provocateur.

Citations:

[1965] NI 138

Cited by:

CitedRegina v Sang HL 25-Jul-1979
The defendant appealed against an unsuccessful application to exclude evidence where it was claimed there had been incitement by an agent provocateur.
Held: The appeal failed. There is no defence of entrapment in English law. All evidence . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Crime, Armed Forces, Northern Ireland

Updated: 01 May 2022; Ref: scu.250472

Vincent and Another v Regina: CACD 26 Jan 2007

The defendants appealed their conviction for what was a planned murder of an established criminal. They complained that their trial should have been severed from another defendant who had made statements implicating them, but then failed to give evidence and be available for cross examination.
Held: The cases were not exceptional so as to require separate trial, and nor was the use made of document admissible against a co-accused improper. Leave to appeal was refused.

Citations:

[2007] EWCA Crim 3

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

CitedRegina v Windass CACD 1989
The defendant had been cross-examined by reference to a diary found in the possession of his girl friend which was inadmissible against him. He was repeatedly asked what the writer meant by her entries. He appealed his conviction.
Held: The . .
CitedRegina v Gray, Evans CACD 20-Feb-1998
Any practice of cross examining a defendant on statements which were admissible against co-defendants but not as against him must stop. . .
CitedRegina v Clarke, Hewins CACD 15-Feb-1999
A witness had the interviews of a co-defendant (as well as letters of which she was neither the writer nor the recipient) put into her hands for day after day so that the assertion could be made time without number that the assertions in those . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Crime

Updated: 01 May 2022; Ref: scu.248245

Regina v Ashman: 1858

The defendant was charged with shooting with intent. The judge directed the jury: ‘You must be satisfied that the prisoner had an intent to do grievous bodily harm. It is not necessary that such harm should have been actually done, or that it should be either permanent or dangerous, if it be such as seriously to interfere with comfort or health, it is sufficient.’

Judges:

Willes J

Citations:

[1858] 1 F and F 88, [1858] EngR 88 (C)

Links:

Commonlii

Cited by:

CitedFook, Regina v CACD 22-Oct-1993
The defendant appealed his conviction for assault. He had suspected a lodger of theft, and was accused of having assaulted him while interrogating him about it. He locked the complainant in his room, but he then fell whilst escaping through a first . .
CitedGolding, Regina v CACD 8-May-2014
The defendant appealed against his conviction on a guilty plea, of inflicting grievous bodily harm under section 20. He suffered genital herpes, but had unprotected sex and acknowledged acting recklessly. He said that the prosecution had failed to . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Crime

Updated: 01 May 2022; Ref: scu.245859

Seekings v Clarke: 1961

Lord Parker CJ said: ‘It is perfectly clear that anything which substantially prevents the public from having free access over the whole of the highway which is not purely temporary in nature is an unlawful obstruction’.

Judges:

Lord Parker CJ

Citations:

(1961) 59 LGR 268

Cited by:

CitedMear and others v Cambridgeshire County Council ChD 20-Oct-2006
The claimants sought a declaration that a path over neighbouring land was a public vehicular highway as recorded by the respondents, and not a footpath as asserted by the owners, and that gates over the path infringed the public rights. The council . .
CitedSmith, Regina (on the Application of) v The Land Registry (Peterborough Office) Admn 13-Feb-2009
The applicant sought judicial review of the cancellation of his application for first registration of land by adverse possession. The application had been rejected because a public right of way existed through it, and the claimant had not shown the . .
AppliedTorbay Borough Council v Cross QBD 1995
The highway was 15 metres wide and pedestrianised. Shop owners displayed goods outside their shops, projecting no more than five percent of the total width of the road. The magistrates acquitted them of obstruction.
Held: The appeal was . .
CitedHerrick and Another v Kidner and Another Admn 17-Feb-2010
Psychological Obstruction to Public Footpath
A public footpath crossed the appellants’ land. They constructed a gateway across it which they now accepted had been a significant obstruction of the right of way. The local authority served a notice requiring its removal, including the stone . .
CitedSmith, Regina (on The Application of) v Land Registry (Peterborough Office) and Another CA 10-Mar-2010
The appellant had lived in a caravan on the verge of a byway and had been here for more than twelve years. He appealed against rejection of his request for possessory title. He said that there was no support in law for the maxim that adverse . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Land, Crime

Updated: 01 May 2022; Ref: scu.245554

Meachen, Regina v: CACD 20 Oct 2006

The appellant appealed his conviction for anal rape. He said the incident had been consensual. He had administered a date rape drug. He said again that this had been consensual. The prosecution alleged that the injuries left were inconsistent with the manner of penetration suggested by the defendant. The judge had ruled that consent was no defence where a serious injury resulted.
Held: It could not in the circumstances be correct to hold as a matter of law that consent was no defence either to the charge under s. 20 or the charge of indecent assault, absent the necessary mens rea for these offences. The fact that serious injury had in fact occurred, or was objectively likely, did not mean that there was no defence at the time the ruling was given, even though there was ample evidence on which the jury could have concluded that the appellant had the necessary intention to cause injury. The pleas were therefore made on a ruling which was incorrect and the convictions on two of the three counts were quashed.

Judges:

Thoma LJ, Bobbs J, Recorder of Newcastle

Citations:

[2006] EWCA Crim 2414

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

CitedRegina v Emmett CACD 18-Jun-1999
The defendant appealed against conviction after being involved in sexual activity which he said was not intended to cause harm, and were said to be consensual, but clearly did risk harm. On the first occasion he tied a plastic bag over the head of . .
CitedRex v Donovan CCA 1934
The defendant was convicted of indecent assault and common assault after caning a 17 year old female complainant for the purposes of sexual gratification. The complainant suffered actual bodily harm, though the defendant was not charged with an . .
CitedAttorney-General’s Reference (No 6 of 1980) CACD 1981
The court considered a reference on a point of law as to whether consent could be a defence to a charge of assault arising out of a fight in a public place to which the other party consented.
Held: Lord Lane CJ said: ‘It is not in the public . .
CitedRegina v Court HL 1989
When considering whether an action constituted an indecent assault, the jury was to be asked whether ‘right-minded persons would consider the conduct indecent or not.’
Lord Ackner: ‘It was common ground before your Lordships, and indeed it is . .
CitedRegina v Savage; Director of Public Prosecutions v Parmenter HL 7-Nov-1991
The first defendant had been convicted of wounding. She had intended to throw beer over her victim, but her glass slipped from her hand, and cut the victim. The second defendant threw his three year old child in the air and caught him, not realising . .
CitedRegina v Boyea CACD 28-Jan-1992
The defendant was accused of having, with or without the consent of his victim, caused her physical damage by inserting his hand in her vagina and twisting it.
Held: ‘the extent of the violence inflicted . . went far beyond the risk of minor . .
CitedRegina v Barnes CACD 21-Dec-2004
The defendant appealed against a conviction for inflicting grievous bodily harm, after causing a serious leg injury in a football match when tackling another player.
Held: There was surprisingly little authority on when it was appropriate to . .
CitedRegina v Brown (Anthony); Regina v Lucas; etc HL 11-Mar-1993
The appellants had been convicted of assault, after having engaged in consensual acts of sado-masochism in which they inflicted varying degreees of physical self harm. They had pleaded guilty after a ruling that the prosecution had not needed to . .
CitedRegina v Dica CACD 5-May-2004
Reckless HIV transmission – Grievous Bodily Harm
The defendant appealed against his conviction for inflicting grievous bodily harm. He had HIV/Aids, and was found to have transmitted the disease by intercourse when the victims were not informed of his condition. It was not suggested that any rape . .
CitedRegina v Slingsby Crwn 1995
The defendant penetrated the complainant’s vagina and rectum with his hand; she suffered cuts caused by a signet ring worn by the defendant; septicaemia developed and she died. The defendant was charged with manslaughter. The judge was asked to make . .
CitedRegina v Wilson CACD 5-Mar-1996
The appellant was convicted of an offence under s.47. He had, with his wife’s consent, branded his initials onto her buttocks with a hot knife.
Held: Consensual activity within a marriage was capable of being a matter for criminal prosecution. . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Crime

Updated: 01 May 2022; Ref: scu.245412

Heffernan, Regina v: CACD 15 Aug 2006

The defendant appealed his conviction on assorted offences saying that the identification evidence was wrongly founded on an admission of a previous conviction for burglary.

Citations:

[2006] EWCA Crim 2033

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Crime

Updated: 01 May 2022; Ref: scu.244683

Regina v Abdullahi: CACD 24 Jul 2006

The defendant appealed his conviction for causing a child to watch a sexual act for the purposes of sexual gratification. He said there was no evidence of an intention to obtain immediate gratification.
Held: The Act made no mention of the timing of the intended gratification. It was plain that that was the intention. The appeal failed.

Judges:

Sir Igor Judge President, Gray, McCombie JJ

Citations:

Times 24-Aug-2006

Statutes:

Sexual Offences Act 2003 1291)

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Crime

Updated: 01 May 2022; Ref: scu.244692

Flockhart v Robinson: 1950

A challenge was made to the organising of a procession. Its route was determined by Mr Flockhart as he went along.
Held: For the purposes of section 3(4) of the 1936 Act, a procession ‘is a body of persons moving along a route’ and that, by choosing the route which the group then followed, Mr Flockhart was organising a prohibited procession.
Lord Goddard CJ said: ‘A procession is not a mere body of persons: it is a body of persons moving along a route. Therefore the person who organizes the route is the person who organizes the procession. That is how I approach this case. It seems to me clear that, at any rate from the time when these people reached Piccadilly Circus, the defendant was organizing the route for the procession to follow, and that they followed it.
. . He was organizing the procession because, although he did not organize the body of people, he organized the route. There is no other way of organizing a procession, because a procession is something which proceeds. By indicating or planning the route a person is in my opinion organizing a procession.’

Judges:

Lord Goddard CJ

Citations:

[1950] 2 KB 498

Statutes:

Public Order Act 1936 3(4)

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedKay v The Commissioner of Police of the Metropolis Admn 27-Jun-2006
For many years and in many large cities, once a month, cyclists had gathered en masse to cycle through the city in a ‘Critical Mass’ demonstration. There was no central organisation. Clarification was sought as to whether the consent of the police . .
CitedKay v Commissioner of the Police of the Metropolis HL 26-Nov-2008
The claimant had been involved in a monthly cycle ride through central London which had continued for many years. The ride took place without any central organisation and without any route being pre-planned. They objected to being required to apply . .
CitedPowlesland v Director of Public Prosecutions Admn 9-Dec-2013
The defendant apealed against his conviction for having taken part in a public procession, a a Critical Mass Cycle Ride, knowingly in breach of conditions attached to it by the Police. The defendant had argued that the ride was not a procession.
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Criminal Practice, Crime

Updated: 01 May 2022; Ref: scu.242883

Zezev and Yarimaka v Governor of HM Prison Brixton and another: CACD 2002

Wright J said: ‘But if an individual, by misusing or bypassing any relevant password, places in the files of the computer a bogus e-mail by pretending that the password holder is the author when he is not, then such an addition to such data is plainly unauthorised, as defined in section 17(8); intent to modify the contents of the computer as defined in section 3(2) is self-evident and, by so doing, the reliability of the data in the computer is impaired within the meaning of section 3(2)(c).’

Judges:

Lord Chief Justice Lord Woolf, Wright J

Citations:

[2002] 2 Cr App R 33

Statutes:

Computer Misuse Act 1990 3(2)

Cited by:

CitedDirector of Public Prosecutions v Lennon Admn 11-May-2006
The DPP appealed against dismissal of a charge under the 1990 Act. The defendant had been involved in a campaign of mail-bombing the complainant’s computer systems with over a half million mails, causing a denial of service. The question was whether . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Crime

Updated: 01 May 2022; Ref: scu.242426

Regina v Dodd: CACD 10 Jun 1971

Medical evidence available at the time of the trial of the defendant for murder had been against diminished responsibility but there was said to be fresh evidence in favour of it now available for the appeal.
Held: ‘In the view of this Court, cases must be rare indeed when the defence have chosen to run at the trial as their only defence the defence of accident or provocation, or a combination of the two, and when that defence has failed can consult and call a psychiatrist, or a psychiatrist seeing the appellant for the first time many months after the event, with a view to getting a retrial to run a defence of diminished responsibility. It may well be that if subsequent evidence of diminished responsibility was really overwhelming, the Court might well fell moved to substitute a verdict of manslaughter, or to order a new trial.’

Judges:

Fenton Atkinson LJ, Stephenson LJ and Lawton J

Citations:

Unreported, 10 June 1971

Statutes:

Criminal Appeal Act 1968 23, Homicide Act 1957 2

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedRegina v Weekes CACD 18-Feb-1999
The defendant appealed against his conviction for murder saying that at the time of the offence he suffered a paranoid psychotic illness which would have substantially impaired his mental responsibility for his acts. He was not regarded as insane as . .
ApprovedRegina v Melville CACD 1976
The defendant appealed his conviction for murder saying that evidence later obtained suggested that he was suffering diminished responsibility at the time of the offence.
Held: The evidence was not admitted. It was not sufficiently strong to . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Crime

Updated: 01 May 2022; Ref: scu.241717

Regina v O’Hadhmaill: CACD 1996

The defendants appealed conviction for conspiracy to cause explosions. During an IRA ceasefire, they had made bombs intending them to be used only if the ceasefire failed.
Held: The convictions were proper.

Citations:

[1996] Crim LR 509

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedSaik, Regina v HL 3-May-2006
The defendant appealed aganst his conviction for conspiracy to engage in moneylaundering. At trial he pleaded guilty subject to a qualification that he had not known that the money was the proceeds of crime, though he may have suspected that it . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Crime

Updated: 01 May 2022; Ref: scu.241541

G v Director of Public Prosecutions: CACD 1997

The court considered with respect to evidence given by video interview, the need to recognise the importance of whether passages might possibly have been influenced by others.

Citations:

(1997) 2 Cr App R 78

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedRegina v K (Evidence: Child video interview) CACD 10-Mar-2006
The defendant appealed admission into evidence against him of a video recording of if the child complainant.
Held: The admissibility of such a recording as evidence of indecent assault rested primarily on whether a jury could be sure that the . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Crime

Updated: 01 May 2022; Ref: scu.240398

Regina v Altham: CACD 24 Jan 2006

The defendant appealed his conviction for the possession of cannabis. He said that it was necessary for him to use the drug to alleviate the pain he suffered following an accident. He said that the refusal to allow that defence infringed his article 3 rights.
Held: He was not entitled to raise the plea of necessity in defence. The state had done nothing to subject him to inhuman ordegrading treatment. The defendant has subsequently been prescribed treatment which satisfied the need he had.

Judges:

Scott Baker LJ, Ramsey J, griffith Willams QC J

Citations:

Times 01-Feb-2006

Crime

Updated: 01 May 2022; Ref: scu.240084

Regina v Smith: CACD 1997

The court described the offence of affray: ‘It typically involves a group of people who may well be shouting, struggling, threatening, waving weapons, throwing objects, exchanging and threatening blows and so on.’

Judges:

Lord Bingham of Cornhill CJ

Citations:

[1997] 1 Cr App R 14

Statutes:

Public Order Act 1986 3(1)

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedI v Director of Public Prosecutions etc HL 8-Mar-2001
A group of youths carried petrol bombs in public, anticipating a confrontation with another group. They did not brandish them or actually threaten anybody. On dispersal by the police the bombs were dropped. On being charged with affray it was held . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Crime

Updated: 01 May 2022; Ref: scu.237689