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Regina v Merriman: CACD 1973

Although the criminal division of the Court of Appeal is not so strictly bound by its own previous decisions as is the civil division, its liberty to depart from precedent which it is convinced was erroneous is restricted to cases where the departure is in favour of the accused. This would not be the case in the instant appeal. As to the issue of duplicity: ‘The rule against duplicity . . had always been applied in a practical, rather than a strictly analytical, way for the purpose of determining what constituted one offence. Where a number of acts of a similar nature committed by one or more defendants were connected with one another, in the time and place of their commission or by their common purpose, in such a way that they could fairly be regarded as forming part of the same transaction or criminal enterprise, it was the practice as early as the eighteenth century to charge them in a single count of indictment. ‘ (Lord Diplock)
References: [1973] AC 584
Judges: Lord Diplock
Jurisdiction: England and Wales
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Last Update: 22 September 2020; Ref: scu.182384 br>

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