Brown v Procurator Fiscal, Falkirk: HCJ 8 Mar 2002

The defendant appealed against his conviction for driving with excess alcohol. He complained that the machine used to take his sample of breath did not conform to the necessary type. It had been manufactured by an independent company. Though not approved it was identical to the approved machine. He was convicted on the basis that approval was of a type of a machine, not of a machine.

Judges:

Lord Cameron of Lochbroom and Lord Hamilton and Lord Morison

Citations:

[2002] ScotHC 25

Links:

Bailii

Statutes:

Road Traffic Act 1988 5(1)(a)

Jurisdiction:

Scotland

Citing:

CitedChief Constable of Northumbria v Brown 1986
The defendant had been convicted of driving with excess alcohol. He challenged the use of a machine for the breath test which was not an Intoximeter.
Held: The charge was valid. . .

Cited by:

CitedGrant v Director of Public Prosecutions Admn 22-Jan-2003
The appellant had been convicted of failing to give a breath test, and of driving with excess alcohol. He had falsely claimed that he had had a drink in the five minutes before being asked to take the test, and said the officer should not have . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Crime, Road Traffic

Updated: 06 June 2022; Ref: scu.170500

The Attorney General for the Cayman Islands v Roberts: PC 21 Mar 2002

(Cayman Islands) The Attorney General appealed against the overturning of a conviction of the defendant for the supply of drugs. A substance had been found under a stone in the defendant’s yard, which had been certified to contain cocaine hydrochloride. The defendant challenged the assertion that this proved the case. Notice of the intention to produce the certificate had not been given as required by the statute.
Held: Where a defendant is professionally represented, any objection to the form of evidence must be taken at the trial. The wording of the Act was that such evidence was ‘not receivable’ in evidence. This was distinguishable from saying it could not be admitted, and the certificate was admissible despite the failure to give proper notice. The certificate did not say that the substance found was a controlled drug, but the word ‘cocaine’ had been found to be a generic name, including the various forms and derivatives. The appeal was allowed, and the case returned to the Appeal court for the remaining appeal issues to be considered.

Judges:

Lord Bingham of Cornhill Lord Steyn Lord Hope of Craighead Lord Hutton Lord Rodger of Earlsferry

Citations:

Appeal No 53 0f 2001, [2002] UKPC 18

Links:

PC, PC, PC, The Attorney General f’ target=’_n’>PC, Bailii, PC

Statutes:

Misuse of Drugs Law, Law 13 of 1973 (revised 1995) (Cayman Islands) 4(1)(k)

Jurisdiction:

Commonwealth

Citing:

CitedRegina v Banks 1972
. .
CitedRegina v Greensmith CACD 1983
The word ‘cocaine’ when used in Part I of Schedule 2 to the Misuse of Drugs Act 1971 is used in the generic sense so that it includes the specific forms, derivatives or preparations of it which come within the wording of paragraphs 2 to 5 of Part I . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Crime

Updated: 05 June 2022; Ref: scu.168109

Regina v Rennie Gilbert: PC 21 Mar 2002

(Grenada) The defendant had successfully appealed a conviction for attempted rape. He said that he had been convicted on the uncorroborated evidence of the complainant, and that the judge should have given an appropriate warning to the jury. The crown appealed.
Held: English law now gave a discretion to the judge as to the need for such a warning, and its strength and context. It had in the past been predicated on a supposed tendency of women complainants to lie. Turnbull warnings were directed at the reliability of an identification, and not to the veracity of a complainant. In this case the warning might not have been needed, and the crown’s appeal was allowed.

Judges:

Lord Steyn Lord Hobhouse of Woodborough Lord Millett Lord Scott of Foscote Sir Philip Otton

Citations:

Appeal No 10 of 2001, [2002] UKPC 17, [2002] 2 AC 531

Links:

PC, Bailii, PC

Jurisdiction:

Commonwealth

Citing:

CitedRegina v Henry 1968
. .
CitedJames v The Queen PC 1970
. .

Cited by:

CitedAG for the Sovereign Base Areas of Akrotiri and Dhekelia v Steinhoff PC 19-Jul-2005
(Akrotiri and Dhekelia) The defendant had appealed convictions for rape and attempted rape. He had criticised the arrangements for protecting the complainant when giving evidence, which had not complied with the 1999 Act. His appeal succeeded in . .
CitedRegina v Coutts HL 19-Jul-2006
The defendant was convicted of murder. Evidence during the trial suggested a possibility of manslaughter, but neither the defence nor prosecution proposed the alternate verdict. The defendant now appealed saying that the judge had an independent . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Crime

Updated: 05 June 2022; Ref: scu.168108

Regina v Hussain, Regina v Bhatti, Regina v Bhatti: CACD 16 Jan 2002

It was possible to have an indictment which alleged a conspiracy to commit either one of two alternative offences. A conspiracy could clearly be to commit more than one offence. The phrase in the section ‘offence or offences’ should not be construed exclusively conjunctively. It is the agreement which is at the heart of a conspiracy charge.

Judges:

Lord Justice May, Mr Justice Goldring and Mr Justice Gross

Citations:

Times 31-Jan-2002, [2002] EWCA Crim 6, [2002] 2 Cr App R 26

Links:

Bailii

Statutes:

Criminal Law Act 1977 1(1)

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

CitedRegina v Siracusa 1989
. .

Cited by:

CitedSuchedina v Regina; similar CACD 27-Oct-2006
Four defendants appealed convictions in money laundering cases. The first defendant operated a money exchange through which substantial volumes of cash were moved, but claimed that he believed the money to have been honestly acquired.
Held: . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Crime

Updated: 05 June 2022; Ref: scu.167521

Regina v Hughes: CACD 18 Dec 2001

Appeal against conviction for murder.
Held: The appeal failed: ‘the evidence we have heard raised no doubt in our minds, and we do not consider that it might reasonably have affected the decision of the trial jury to convict if it had been given at trial.’

Judges:

Mance LJ, Penry-Davey, Leveson JJ

Citations:

[2001] EWCA Crim 2808

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Crime

Updated: 05 June 2022; Ref: scu.167409

Regina v Clive Louden Carass: CACD 19 Dec 2001

When a defendant was accused of an offence under the section, and wished to raise a defence under sub-section 4, the duty of proof placed on him by the sub-section amounted to a duty to bring sufficient evidence to raise the defence, and the section did not transfer the burden from the prosecution.
Held: To justify a transfer of the burden of proof, it had to be shown that this was required, and a persuasive burden rather than an evidential burden was not justified. There was no sufficient threat to society which required a higher burden. The words should be read to require the defendant to adduce sufficient evidence.

Judges:

Lord Justice Waller, Mr Justice Rougier and Mr Justice Stanley Burnton

Citations:

Times 21-Jan-2002, Gazette 27-Feb-2002, [2001] EWCA Crim 2845, [2002] 1 WLR 1214, [2002] 2 Cr App R 4

Links:

Bailii

Statutes:

Insolvency Act 1986 206 (1)(a)

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

CitedRegina v Director of Public Prosecutions, ex parte Kebilene and others HL 28-Oct-1999
(Orse Kebeline) The DPP’s appeal succeeded. A decision by the DPP to authorise a prosecution could not be judicially reviewed unless dishonesty, bad faith, or some other exceptional circumstance could be shown. A suggestion that the offence for . .
CitedRegina v Lambert HL 5-Jul-2001
Restraint on Interference with Burden of Proof
The defendant had been convicted for possessing drugs found on him in a bag when he was arrested. He denied knowing of them. He was convicted having failed to prove, on a balance of probabilities, that he had not known of the drugs. The case was . .

Cited by:

DistinguishedRegina v Daniel CACD 22-Mar-2002
The defendant appealed a conviction for hiding assets from her receiver following her bankruptcy. He said that recent case law suggested that the burden of establishing the defence under section 352 was evidential only.
Held: The conviction . .
CitedNorwood v Director of Public Prosecutions Admn 3-Jul-2003
The appellant a BNP member had displayed a large poster in his bedroom window saying ‘Islam out of Britain’. He was convicted of an aggravated attempt to cause alarm or distress. The offence was established on proof of several matters, unless the . .
Wrongly DecidedSheldrake v Director of Public Prosecutions; Attorney General’s Reference No 4 of 2002 HL 14-Oct-2004
Appeals were brought complaining as to the apparent reversal of the burden of proof in road traffic cases and in cases under the Terrorism Acts. Was a legal or an evidential burden placed on a defendant?
Held: Lord Bingham of Cornhill said: . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Crime, Insolvency, Evidence

Updated: 05 June 2022; Ref: scu.167393

Regina v West London Youth Court, Ex Parte M and Others: QBD 7 Jul 1999

Several youths were carrying around unlit petrol bombs in a public place, but there were no members of the public about, nor any rival gang with whom there might have been a clash. They were properly convicted of affray, despite this absence of anybody to perceive a threat.

Citations:

Times 07-Jul-1999

Statutes:

Public Order Act 1986 3(1)

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Crime

Updated: 05 June 2022; Ref: scu.88704

Regina v Director of Public Prosecutions: QBD 20 Feb 2001

Where a person was put in fear of violence but the violence was directed elsewhere, that could still found an allegation, but the complainant would have to give direct evidence that she had been put in fear, and it would still have to be shown that the defendant could have expected to cause fear. The court had to look at each set of circumstances and the Act. Parliament could not legislate for each set of circumstances.

Citations:

Times 20-Feb-2001

Statutes:

Protection from Harassment Act 1997

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Crime

Updated: 05 June 2022; Ref: scu.88437

Regina v Colchester Justices Ex Parte Abbott: QBD 13 Mar 2001

When calculating the value of damage for the purpose of deciding whether an allegation of criminal damage could be referred to the Crown Court, the damage was the replacement value and not the consequential losses. An activist was accused of damaging genetically engineered crops. The replacement value was andpound;750, but the consequential losses amounted to over andpound;5000. It was triable only at the Magistrates Court.

Citations:

Times 13-Mar-2001, Gazette 12-Apr-2001

Statutes:

Criminal Damage Act 1971, Magistrates Courts Act 1980 22

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Magistrates, Crime

Updated: 05 June 2022; Ref: scu.88416

Jones, Regina v: CCNI 10 Sep 2010

‘This ruling determines an application by the Defendant that I should recuse myself as trial judge. The application is based on my knowledge of the following information relating to the history of this prosecution:
(a) The earlier judgment of the Court of Appeal[1]
(b) A subsequent retrial of the Defendant, which was aborted and had no outcome in consequence.’

Judges:

Mccloskey J

Citations:

[2010] NICC 39

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

Northern Ireland

Crime

Updated: 04 June 2022; Ref: scu.430626

Rekvenyi v Hungary: ECHR 20 May 1999

Hudoc Grand Chamber – No violation of Art. 10; No violation of Art. 11; No violation of Art. 14+10; No violation of Art. 14+11 Reports of Judgments and Decisions 1999-III
The level of precision required of domestic legislation depends to a considerable degree on the content of the instrument in question, the field it is designed to cover and the number and status of those to whom it is addressed: ‘whilst certainty is highly desirable, it may bring in its train excessive rigidity and the law must be able to keep pace with changing circumstances. Accordingly, many laws are inevitably couched in terms which, to a greater or lesser extent, are vague and whose interpretation and application are questions of practice.’
Lawfulness ‘implies qualitative requirements in the domestic law such as foreseeability and, generally, an absence of arbitrariness’.

Citations:

[1999] ECHR 31, 25390/94

Links:

Worldlii, Bailii, Bailii, Bailii

Statutes:

European Convention on Human Rights

Jurisdiction:

Human Rights

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, . .
CitedBeghal v Director of Public Prosecutions SC 22-Jul-2015
Questions on Entry must be answered
B was questioned at an airport under Schedule 7 to the 2000 Act, and required to answer questions asked by appropriate officers for the purpose set out. She refused to answer and was convicted of that refusal , contrary to paragraph 18 of that . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Human Rights, Crime

Updated: 04 June 2022; Ref: scu.165713

Her Majesty’s Advocate v Montgomery and Coulter: HCJ 14 Sep 1999

Judges:

Lord Justice General and Lord Johnston and Lord Eassie

Citations:

[1999] ScotHC 219

Links:

Bailii, Bailii

Statutes:

Criminal Procedure (Scotland) Act 1995 74(1)

Jurisdiction:

Scotland

Cited by:

Appeal fromMontgomery and Coulter v Her Majesty’s Advocate PC 19-Oct-2000
The test of whether a defendant’s common law right to a fair trial had been damaged by pre-trial publicity was similar to the test under the Convention, and also where there was any plea of oppression. The substantial difference is that no balancing . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Crime

Updated: 04 June 2022; Ref: scu.164514

Paton v Procurator Fiscal, Alloa; Paton v Ritchie: HCJ 24 Nov 1999

Judges:

Lord Justice General and Lord Dawson and Lord Sutherland

Citations:

[1999] ScotHC 246, 2000 SCCR 151, 2000 JC 271, 2000 SLT 239, 1999 GWD 39-1886

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

Scotland

Cited by:

CitedCadder v Her Majesty’s Advocate SC 26-Oct-2010
Statement without lawyer access was inadmissible
The accused complained that he had been convicted for assault and breach of the peace on the basis of a statement made by him during an interview with the police where, under the 1995 Act, he had been denied access to a lawyer.
Held: The . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Crime

Updated: 04 June 2022; Ref: scu.164541

Criminal proceedings against X: ECJ 12 Dec 1996

(Judgment) Criminal proceedings may not be brought in respect of conduct not clearly defined as culpable.

Citations:

C-74/95, [1996] ECR I-6609, [1996] EUECJ C-74/95

Links:

Bailii

Cited by:

CitedRegina v Bristol Magistrates Court and others ex parte Junttan Oy HL 23-Oct-2003
The improper use of machinery had resulted in the death of an employee, and the applicant was prosecuted under the 1974 Act, but complained that the prosecution should have been under the Regulations. The directive required member states to apply . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

European, Crime

Updated: 03 June 2022; Ref: scu.161540

Regina v Benjafield, Leal, Rezvi and Milford: CACD 21 Dec 2000

Lord Woolf MR said that where the original proceedings are brought by a public authority, an appeal is part of those proceedings to which section 22(4) applies: ‘In our judgment, where the original proceedings are brought by, or at the instigation of, a public authority, as is the case with a prosecution, an appeal by the defendant is part of the proceedings to which section 22(4) applies. There cannot be a different position on an appeal from that of the trial so far as the issue of retrospectivity of the Human Rights Act 1998 is concerned. Any other construction would mean that in criminal cases the Court of Appeal could not give the required protection to the individual (who would clearly be a victim of any unlawful act) so that there would be a need for an otherwise unnecessary but time-consuming and expensive trip to Strasbourg. In addition, otherwise section 7(1)(b) will apply where the appeal is by a public authority, but not when the appeal is made by the defendant.’

Judges:

Lord Woolf MR, Judge LJ, Collins J

Citations:

[2000] EWCA Crim 86

Links:

Bailii

Statutes:

European Convention on Human Rights, Criminal Justice Act 1988, Drug Trafficking Act 1994

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

Appeal fromRegina v Benjafield, Regina v Leal, Regina v Rezvi, Regina v Milford HL 24-Jan-2002
Statutory provisions which reversed the burden of proof in cases involving drug smuggling and other repeat offenders, allowing confiscation orders to be made were not necessarily in contravention of the article 6 right. However the question of . .
CitedRegina v Kansal (2) HL 29-Nov-2001
The prosecutor had lead and relied at trial on evidence obtained by compulsory questioning under the 1986 Act.
Held: In doing so the prosecutor was acting to give effect to section 433.
The decision in Lambert to disallow retrospective . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Crime, Natural Justice, Human Rights

Updated: 31 May 2022; Ref: scu.158736

Gunning, Regina v: CACD 20 Feb 2018

Renewed application for an extension of time, 179 days, in which to apply for leave to appeal against conviction, and a renewed application for leave to appeal against sentence, both following refusal by the single judge.

Judges:

McCombe LJ, Spencer, Phillips JJ

Citations:

[2018] EWCA Crim 677

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Crime, Criminal Sentencing

Updated: 30 May 2022; Ref: scu.609725

Conway v The Secretary of State for Justice: CA 18 Jan 2018

Application for leave to appeal from refusal of declaration of incompatibility of section 2(1) of the 1961 Act with the claimant’s Article 8 human rights. The case concerns the issue of the provision of assistance to a person with a terminal degenerative disease who wishes to commit suicide, so as to be able to exercise control over the time of his death as the disease reaches its final stage.
Held: Permission was given.

Judges:

Sir Ernest Ryder SPT, Underhill LJ

Citations:

[2017] EWCA Civ 16

Links:

Bailii, Judiciary

Statutes:

Suicide Act 1961 2(1), European Convention on Human Rights 8, Human Rights Act 1998 4(2)

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

At AdmnConway, Regina (on The Application of) v The Secretary of State for Justice Admn 5-Oct-2017
The court was asked as to the issue of provision of assistance to a person with a serious wasting disease who wishes to commit suicide, so as to be able to exercise control over the time of his death as the disease reaches its final stages. . .

Cited by:

Leave to AppealConway, Regina (on The Application of) v The Secretary of State for Justice and Others CA 27-Jun-2018
Appeal from rejection of claim that section 2(1) of the 1961 infringed the claimant’s human rights. . .
Leave to AppealConway, Regina (on The Application of) v Secretary of State for Justice SC 27-Nov-2018
Application for leave to appeal after refusal of order allowing withdrawal of his treatment leading to his death within an hour. He wished to argue as to the difference between letting someone die and taking active steps to bring about their death . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Crime, Human Rights

Updated: 29 May 2022; Ref: scu.602950

Conway, Regina (on The Application of) v The Secretary of State for Justice and Others: CA 27 Jun 2018

Appeal from rejection of claim that section 2(1) of the 1961 infringed the claimant’s human rights.

Citations:

[2018] EWCA Civ 1431, [2018] WLR(D) 402

Links:

Bailii, WLRD

Statutes:

Suicide Act 1961 2(1)

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

At AdmnConway, Regina (on The Application of) v The Secretary of State for Justice Admn 5-Oct-2017
The court was asked as to the issue of provision of assistance to a person with a serious wasting disease who wishes to commit suicide, so as to be able to exercise control over the time of his death as the disease reaches its final stages. . .
Leave to AppealConway v The Secretary of State for Justice CA 18-Jan-2018
Application for leave to appeal from refusal of declaration of incompatibility of section 2(1) of the 1961 Act with the claimant’s Article 8 human rights. The case concerns the issue of the provision of assistance to a person with a terminal . .

Cited by:

At CAConway, Regina (on The Application of) v Secretary of State for Justice SC 27-Nov-2018
Application for leave to appeal after refusal of order allowing withdrawal of his treatment leading to his death within an hour. He wished to argue as to the difference between letting someone die and taking active steps to bring about their death . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Human Rights, Crime

Updated: 29 May 2022; Ref: scu.618925

Attorney General’s Reference No 6 of 1980: CACD 7 May 1981

There had been a fight, not in the course of properly conducted sport.
Held: Where two people fight in those circumstances intending or causing actual bodily harm, it is no defence for a person charged that the other consented, whether the fight is held in public or in private. Lord Lane CJ explained that it was not in the public interest that people should cause each other actual bodily harm for no good reason: ‘We think it can be taken as a starting point that it is an essential element of an assault that the act is done contrary to the will and without the consent of the victim; and it is doubtless for this reason that it lies on the prosecution to negative consent . . But the cases show that the courts will make an exception to this principle where the public interest requires . . Bearing in mind the various cases and the views of the textbook writers cited to us, and starting with the proposition that ordinarily an act consented to will not constitute an assault, the question is: at what point does the public interest require the court to hold otherwise? In answering that question the diversity of view expressed in the previous decisions such as [Coney and Donovan] make some selection and a partly new approach necessary. Accordingly, we have not followed the dicta which would make an act (even if consensual), an assault if it occurred in public, on the grounds that it constituted a breach of the peace, and was therefore itself unlawful. There dicta reflect the conditions of the times when they were uttered . .
The answer to the question, in our judgment, is that it is not in the public interest that people should try to cause, or should cause, each other actual bodily harm for no good reason. . . So in our judgment, it is immaterial whether the act occurs in private or in public; it is an assault if actual bodily harm is intended and/or caused. This means that most fights will be unlawful regardless of consent.
Nothing which we have said is intended to cast doubt upon the accepted legality of properly conducted games or sports, lawful chastisement or correction, reasonable surgical interference, dangerous exhibitions etc. These apparent exceptions can be justified as involving the exercise of a legal right, in the case of chastisement or correction, or as needed in the public interest, in other cases.’

Judges:

Lord Lane CJ

Citations:

[1981] EWCA Crim 1, [1981] QB 715

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedBM, Regina v CACD 22-Mar-2018
The defendant appealed from a preliminary ruling that his body modification services were not in law capable of being consented to and therefore amounted to an assault.
Held: The appeal failed: ‘we can see no good reason why body modification . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Crime

Updated: 29 May 2022; Ref: scu.247939

M Najib and Sons Ltd v Crown Prosecution Service: CACD 26 Apr 2018

The company appealed against its conviction under the 2010 Regulation for failing to provide the required assistance for the taking of samples by an inspector. The company admitted the facts but said that the cost of compliance was too high, and unfairly distributed.
Held:

Judges:

Leggatt LJ, McGowan DBE J, Sir Peter Openshaw

Citations:

[2018] EWCA Crim 909, [2018] WLR(D) 258

Links:

Bailii, WLRD

Statutes:

Transmissible Spongiform Encephalopathies (England) Regulations 2010

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

CitedRegina v Chalkley, Jeffries CACD 19-Dec-1997
The 1995 Act will not permit the Court of Appeal to allow an appeal where a conviction was safe but there was a substantial procedural unfairness. In order to understand the role of pre-1 January 1996 jurisprudence in applying what is now the . .

Cited by:

See AlsoNajib and Sons Ltd v Crown Prosecution Service CACD 3-Jul-2018
The defendant applied for its costs. It had been convicted for a breach of the Regulations, but the Inspector had not had the power to make the request it had denied.
Held: ‘The present case is one in which the prosecution failed as a matter . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Crime, Animals

Updated: 28 May 2022; Ref: scu.609502

Smith, Regina v: CACD 26 Jul 2007

There had been admissions of pleas of guilty to robbery and the production of a firearm with intent to commit robbery, in the case of a co-accused who was alleged jointly to be involved. The court considered the admissibility of a co-defendant’s plea of guilty.

Citations:

[2007] EWCA Crim 2105

Links:

Bailii

Statutes:

Criminal Justice Act 2003 74

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedGirma and Others, Regina v (Rev 1) CACD 15-May-2009
The court asked whether the conviction of a co-defendant was correctly admitted as evidence against her co-accused, and if not what was the effect on the fairness of the trial.
Held: The plea of the co-defendant should not have been admitted. . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Crime

Updated: 28 May 2022; Ref: scu.259780

Hilal Al-Jedda: SIAC 18 Jul 2014

lSIAC Deprivation of Citizenship : Preliminary Issue

Judges:

Flaux J, Ward UTJ, Sir Stewart Eldon

Citations:

[2014] UKSIAC SC – 66 – 2008

Links:

Bailii

Statutes:

British Nationality Act 1981

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

See AlsoAl-Jedda, Regina (on the Application of) v Secretary of State for Defence Admn 12-Aug-2005
The claimant was born an Iraqi, but had been granted British Nationality. He was later detained in Iraq suspected of membership of a terrorist group. No charges were brought, and he complained that his article 5 rights were infringed. The defendant . .
At HLAl-Jedda, Regina (on the Application of) v Secretary of State for Defence (JUSTICE intervening) HL 12-Dec-2007
The appellant who had dual Iraqi and British nationality complained of his detention by British troops in Iraq. He was not charged with any offence, but was detained on the ground that his internment is necessary for imperative reasons of security . .
See AlsoAl-Jedda v Secretary of State for Defence CA 29-Mar-2006
The applicant had dual Iraqi and British nationality. He was detained by British Forces in Iraq under suspicion of terrorism, and interned.
Held: His appeal failed. The UN resolution took priority over the European Convention on Human Rights . .
At SIAC (1)Al-Jedda v Secretary of State for the Home Department SIAC 23-May-2008
The appellant had been granted british citizenship. He now appealed against a an order under section 40(2) of the 1981 Act depriving him of his British citizenship on the ground that the respondent was satisfied that deprivation was conducive to the . .
At SIAC (2)Al-Jedda v Secretary of State for the Home Department SIAC 22-Oct-2008
The Court was asked whether or not the procedural protections afforded by Article 6(1) ECHRR as identified by the House of Lords in Secretary of State for the Home Department v MB [2007] UKHL 46 [2008] 1 AC 440 apply to the Appellant’s appeal . .
At ECHR (1)Al-Jedda v The United Kingdom ECHR 2-Mar-2009
The claimant, an Iraqi and British national complained of his arrest and internment on suspicion of terrorist involvement. . .
At QBDAl-Jedda v Secretary of State for Defence QBD 5-Mar-2009
The claimant, an Iraqi/British national complained of his detention in Iraq by the defendant without any due process. . .
At CAAl-Jedda v Secretary of State for The Home Department CA 29-Mar-2012
The appellant had been deprived of his British Citizenship by an order of the respondent under the 1981 Act. That had meant that he was unable to return to the UK. He now appealed against refusal of his challenge to the order. . .
At SIACAl-Jedda v Secretary of State for The Home Department (Deprivation of Citizenship Directions – Oral Ruling ) SIAC 7-Feb-2014
Order . .
At SIACHilal Al-Jedda v Secretary of State for The Home Department SIAC 26-Nov-2010
Deprivation of Citizenship – Substantive – Dismissed . .
At ECHR (2)Al-Jedda v United Kingdom ECHR 7-Jul-2011
Grand Chamber – The international measure relied on by the respondent state had to be interpreted in a manner that minimised the extent to which arbitrary detention was sanctioned or required.
The court described its role in settling awards of . .
At SIACAl-Jedda v Secretary of State for the Home Department SIAC 7-Apr-2009
The appellant challenged an order made under the 1981 Act revoking his British citizenship, saying that it infringed his article 8 rights to family life. . .
At CAAl-Jedda v Secretary of State for The Home Department CA 12-Mar-2010
The claimant appealed against a decision withdrawing his British citizenship, saying that this would leave him stateless. . .
See AlsoAl-Jedda v Secretary of State for Defence CA 8-Jul-2010
Al Jedda, who had both Iraqi and British nationality, sought damages for unlawful imprisonment by reason of his detention by British forces in a military detention centre in Iraq. . .
At SCSecretary of State for The Home Department v Al-Jedda SC 9-Oct-2013
The claimant had obtained British citizenship, but had had it removed by the appellant by an order under the 1981 Act after he came to be suspected of terrorist involvement. He had appealed against the order, eventually succeeding on the basis that . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Immigration, Crime

Updated: 26 May 2022; Ref: scu.536373

Director of Public Prosecutions v Bignall: Admn 16 May 1997

The defendant police officers had obtained information from the Police National Computer, but had used it for improper purposes.
Held: The prosecution should have taken place under the 1990 Act as unauthorised access, and had not been used under the 1984 Act.

Judges:

Lord Justice Pill And Mr Justice Astill

Citations:

[1997] EWHC Admin 476, [1998] 1 Cr App R 1 DC

Links:

Bailii

Statutes:

Computer Misuse Act 1990, Data Protection Act 1984

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

CitedScott v Metropolitan Police Commissioner; Regina v Scott HL 20-Nov-1974
The defendant had been accused of conspiracy to produce pirate copies of films obtained by purchasing copies from cinema owners without the knowledge or consent of the copyright owners.
Held: To establish a conspiracy to defraud, it was not . .
CitedRegina v Brown (Gregory) HL 9-Feb-1996
The issue was whether ‘data’ within the Data Protection Act 1984 was limited to data in computer-readable form.
Held: The offence of the ‘use’ of protected data required something beyond inspection on a computer screen including printout. . .

Cited by:

Not followedRegina v Bow Street Magistrates ex parte Government of the United States of America; In re Allison HL 2-Sep-1999
A person within an organisation who was authorised to access some data on a computer system at a particular level, could exceed his authority by accessing data at a level outside that authority. The unauthorised access offence under the 1990 Act was . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Crime

Updated: 26 May 2022; Ref: scu.137421

Royal Mail Group Ltd v Allen and Another: Admn 3 Feb 2012

The defendant had been convicted on his plea of guilty to offences under section 83(1). As a postman he had diverted postal packets given to him for delivery. The judge later became concerned at the correctness of the plea which required the defendant to be a person ‘engaged in the business of a postal operator’ and set aside the conviction.
Held: Examining the legislative history and context the offence was clearly one to be faced by an individual. The appeal succeeded, and the convictions were restored.

Judges:

Moses LJ, Irwin J

Citations:

[2012] EWHC 554 (Admin)

Links:

Bailii

Statutes:

Postal Services Act 2000 83(1)

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Crime

Updated: 23 May 2022; Ref: scu.459546

Cornelius, Regina v: CACD 14 Mar 2012

The defendant appealed against his conviction for fraud under the 2006 Act, saying that the judge had wrongly failed to give a Ghosh direction. As a solicitor he had organised a scheme for buying properties, obtaining finance by the nomination of third parties as fronts. He said that though he was acting in breach of different professional protocols, the sums were fully secured and had been repaid without additional risk to the lender, and he had not acted dishonestly.
Held: A special court was held to consider whether a Ghosh direction was appropriate.

Judges:

Hughes P QBD

Citations:

[2012] EWCA Crim 500

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

CitedMidland Bank Plc v Cox McQueen (A Firm) CA 26-Jan-1999
Solicitors were instructed by the bank to obtain the signature of a client and of his wife to a motgage. The deed was signed by the husband and a woman pretending to be the wife.
Held: The court said that it was asked whether the bank intended . .
CitedBarclays Bank Plc v Weeks Legg and Dean (a Firm); Barclays Bank Plc v Lougher and Others; Barclays Bank Plc v Hopkin John and Co CA 21-May-1998
The defendant solicitors had each acted for banks in completing charges over property. They had given the standard agreed form of undertaking to secure a good and marketable title, and the banks now alleged that they were in breach because . .

Cited by:

CitedIvey v Genting Casinos (UK) Ltd (T/A Crockfords) SC 25-Oct-2017
The claimant gambler sought payment of his winnings. The casino said that he had operated a system called edge-sorting to achieve the winnings, and that this was a form of cheating so as to excuse their payment. The system exploited tiny variances . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Crime

Updated: 23 May 2022; Ref: scu.452139

The Freedom and Justice Party and Others, Regina (on The Application of) v Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs and Another: Admn 5 Aug 2016

The court was asked whether members of special missions visiting the United Kingdom with the approval of the First Defendant (‘the FCO’) enjoy personal inviolability and/or immunity from criminal process pursuant to a rule of customary international law to which effect is given by the common law.

Judges:

Lloyd Jones LJ, Jay J

Citations:

[2016] EWHC 2010 (Admin)

Links:

Bailii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Crime, International

Updated: 23 May 2022; Ref: scu.568008

John 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 defendant must be able (a) to understand the questions he is asked in the witness box, (b) to apply his mind to answering them, and (c) to convey intelligibly to the jury the answers which he wishes to give. It is not necessary that his answers should be plausible or believable or reliable… Nor is it necessary that the defendant should be able to remember all or any of the matters which give rise to the charge against him…’
Held: The judge’s direction ws approved. The court considered the authorities on the test for whether a defendant was fit to plead. The court summarised the questions to be asked: ‘Does the defendant understand the charges that have been made against him? Is he able to decide whether to plead guilty or not? Is he able to exercise his right to challenge the jurors? Is he able intelligently to convey to his lawyers the case which he wishes them to advance on his behalf, and the matters which he wishes to put forward in his defence? Is he able to follow the proceedings when they come to court? And is he able, if he wishes, to give evidence on his own behalf? ‘

Judges:

Keene LJ, Roderick Evans, J Cooke J

Citations:

[2003] EWCA Crim 3452, [2004] MHLR 86

Links:

Bailii

Statutes:

Criminal Procedure (Insanity) Act 1964 4(5)

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Citing:

ExplainedRex 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 . .
CitedRegina v Berry CACD 1978
Although a person was highly abnormal, it did not mean that he was incapable of doing those things set out in Pritchard as the requirements to be fit to be tried. Lord Lane CJ set aside a finding that the defendant was unfit to stand trial, saying: . .
CitedRegina 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 . .
CitedRegina 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 . .

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 . .
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 . .
CitedOrr, Regina v CACD 7-Jul-2016
The court considered whether the trial court had correctly identified the test for fitness to plead.
Held: The appeal was allowed: ‘Once the issue of fitness to plead has been raised it must be determined. In this case, the judge explicitly . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Crime, Health

Updated: 23 May 2022; Ref: scu.279859

M and Others, Regina v: CACD 7 Feb 2007

The defendants appealed a ruling by the recorder that electronic storage devices were ‘articles’ within s57. S58 dealt with documents, and section 57 with articles.
Held: Hooper LJ said: ‘There is no practical difference between a book which a person can read (perhaps with help) and a CD which can be read by inserting it into a computer. To submit that the CD is not an article because it can only be read with a computer seems to us farfetched. ‘ However, if that were the case it was submitted that section 58 would be redundant. Parliament could not allow section 58 to be sidestepped by allowing a prosecutor to treat a docment as an article. The appeal was allowed.

Judges:

Hooper LJ

Citations:

[2007] EWCA Crim 218

Links:

Bailii

Statutes:

Terrorism Act 2000 57 58

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedRowe v Regina CACD 15-Mar-2007
The defendant had been convicted of possessing articles for terrorist purposes, namely a notebook with notes setting out how to construct a mortar bomb in his handwriting. There was also a coded list of potential targets.
Held: The decision in . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Crime

Updated: 23 May 2022; Ref: scu.248848

Regina v Fitzgerald: CACD 5 Mar 2003

The defendant appealed his conviction under section 5(2). He had been found with a false passport. He was charged under 5(1), and offered a plea to a charge under 5(2), but the judge refused to add a count. The jury declined to convict and substituted the 5(2) conviction after the trial.
Held: A section 5(1) charge impliedly included an offence under 5(2), but where the evidence might support either charge, courts would be better advised to add them as alternate counts.

Judges:

Lord Justice Pill Mr Justice Stanley Burton His Honour Judge Fawcus

Citations:

[2003] EWCA Crim 576, Times 17-Mar-2003

Links:

Bailii

Statutes:

Forgery and Counterfeiting Act 1981 5(1) 5(2)

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Crime

Updated: 23 May 2022; Ref: scu.179551

Cuns, Regina (on The Application of) v Hammersmith Magistrates’ Court: Admn 4 Mar 2016

Application for permission to apply for judicial review, heard as a rolled-up hearing with considerable speed in circumstances where the disqualification of the claimant from driving after a conviction in relation to a drink drive offence meant that he wanted an interim suspension of the disqualification. The defendant claimed to have a phobia of needles, and said this was a proper reason for refusing to give a sample of blood.
Held: Refused.

Judges:

Ouseley J

Citations:

[2016] EWHC 748 (Admin)

Links:

Bailii

Statutes:

Road Traffic Act 1988 7(6)

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Crime, Road Traffic

Updated: 22 May 2022; Ref: scu.567931

The Secretary of State for The Home Department v EB: Admn 29 Jul 2016

The claimant had been released on licence after conviction for an offence under the 2000 Act. He was subject to a terrorism prevention and investigation measure for a year, but now appealed against a rejection of his request for a variation of the conditions.

Judges:

Mitting J

Citations:

[2016] EWHC 1970 (Admin)

Links:

Bailii

Statutes:

Terrorism Act 2000, Prevention of Terrorism Act 2005, Terrorism Prevention and Investigation Measures Act 2011

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Crime

Updated: 22 May 2022; Ref: scu.567872

Planned Parenthood of Southeastern Pennsylvania v Casey: 29 Jun 1992

(Supreme Court of the USA) The Court discussed the grounds upon which it would depart from precedent and why it would not overrule its equally controversial decision on abortion in Roe v. Wade.
Held: ‘no judicial system could do society’s work if it eyed each issue afresh in every case that raised it . . . Indeed, the very concept of the rule of law underlying our own Constitution requires such continuity over time that a respect for precedent is, by definition, indispensable.’

Judges:

Justices O’Connor, Kennedy and Souter J.J

Citations:

(1992) 505 U.S. 833

Links:

LII

Jurisdiction:

United States

Cited by:

CitedLewis, Taylor and Mcleod, Brown, Taylor and Shaw v the Attorney General of Jamaica and Another PC 12-Sep-2000
(Jamaica) When the Privy Council considered a petition for mercy by a person sentenced to death, it could not revisit the decision, but could look only at the procedural fairness of the system. The system should allow properly for representations, . .
CitedRegina v Kansal (2) HL 29-Nov-2001
The prosecutor had lead and relied at trial on evidence obtained by compulsory questioning under the 1986 Act.
Held: In doing so the prosecutor was acting to give effect to section 433.
The decision in Lambert to disallow retrospective . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Crime, Constitutional

Updated: 20 May 2022; Ref: scu.622605

Cox v Army Council: PC 1963

The provisions of the English Army Act, are to be applied ‘in diverse circumstances wherever the armed forces of the Crown happen to be, in developed or undeveloped countries, as conquerors or guests, and their purpose is . . Disciplinary.’ Criminal law applies only in respect of acts committed or omissions made within England. Viscount Simons said: ‘apart from those exceptional cases in which specific provision is made in regard to acts committed abroad, the whole body of the criminal law of England deals only with acts committed in England.’ and ‘with rare exceptions the whole body of our criminal law is ‘domestic’ in the sense that it is made for the order and good government of this country and is applicable only to acts done on English soil.’

Judges:

Viscount Simonds, Lord Reid

Citations:

[1963] AC 48, (1962) 46 Cr App R 258

Cited by:

CitedPurdy, Regina (on the Application of) v Director of Public Prosecutions HL 30-Jul-2009
Need for Certainty in Scope of Offence
The appellant suffered a severe chronic illness and anticipated that she might want to go to Switzerland to commit suicide. She would need her husband to accompany her, and sought an order requiring the respondent to provide clear guidelines on the . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Crime, Armed Forces, Commonwealth

Updated: 20 May 2022; Ref: scu.373404

Regina v James Langmead: CCCR 1864

The defendant was indicted and tried at Devon Quarter Sessions on two counts, the first count for stealing and the second count for feloniously receiving a number of sheep, the property of Mr. Glanfield, a neighbouring farmer of the Parish of Belstone, some twenty two miles distance from Exeter. Mr. Glanfield had last seen the sheep on Belstone common about a fortnight before Christmas. On 22nd December Mr. William Smith, a cattle dealer, received a letter from the defendant offering to sell him some sheep. The letter informed Mr. Smith that the defendant would be at Little St. John’s Cross at the King William Inn about a mile away from Exeter. On the evening of 23rd December Mr. Smith met the defendant at the Inn and the defendant sold him a number of sheep, including those belonging to Mr. Glanfield. At the close of the evidence for the prosecution, the defendant’s counsel submitted to the Court that there was not sufficient evidence to go to the jury. This submission was not accepted and the jury found the defendant guilty of feloniously receiving the sheep knowing them to be stolen. Following upon that verdicts counsel objected that there was no evidence before the Court to support the second count, and that the jury should have been directed that they could not find him guilty because, so he contended: ‘The evidence proved no more than recent possession by the prisoner after the loss, unaccounted for, and that, although a presumption of guilt might legally be inferred from recent possession, unaccounted for, alone, if the offence of which the jury found the prisoner guilty had been theft, yet that guilt could not be inferred from recent possession, unaccounted for, alone, in considering whether the prisoner was guilty of feloniously receiving the sheep knowing them to have been stolen.’
There was sufficient evidence to support the verdict but at the request of the defendant’s counsel they granted a case on the following question: ‘Whether, upon the whole case, the jury should have been directed that they could not lawfully find the prisoner guilty upon the second count.’ In his submissions to the Court the defendant’s counsel contended that the evidence established that it would have been impossible for either the defendant or his sons to have stolen the sheep and therefore the prisoner should have been acquitted, for recent possession is evidence of stealing only and not of receiving.
Held: This submission was rejected.
Bollock CB said: ‘We are all satisfied that the Chairman could not have withdrawn this case from the consideration of the jury or have directed them that there was no evidence that the prisoner had received the sheep knowing them to have been stolen. Speaking for myself, I may add, that in my opinion, the distinction taken by Mr. Carter between a charge of stealing and one of receiving, with reference to the effect of evidence of recent possession, is not the law of England. If no other person is involved in the transaction forming the subject of the enquiry, and the whole of the case against the prisoner is that he was found in possession of the stolen property, the evidence would, no doubt, point to a case of stealing rather than a case of receiving; but in every case, except, indeed, where the possession is so recent that it is impossible for anyone else to have committed the theft, it becomes a mere question for the jury whether the person found in possession of the stolen property stole it himself or received it from someone else’
Martin B agreed.
Byles J said: ‘If the question was whether the verdict was right, there would be much force in many of Mr. Carter’s observations; but the point we have to decide is whether there was any evidence to go to the jury.’
Blackburn J. in his judgment rejected the submission made by Mr Carter observing: ‘I do not agree . . that recent possession is not as vehement evidence of receiving as of stealing. When it has been shown that the property has been stolen, and has been found recently after its loss in the possession of the prisoner, he is called upon to account for having it, and, on his failing to do so, the jury may very well infer that his possession was dishonest, and that he was either the thief or the receiver according to the circumstances.’
Mellor J concurring, said: ‘It is clear, that, whatever was the mode in which the jury in this case arrived at their verdict, there was evidence from which they might safely have drawn either conclusion.’
In the course of giving their judgments a number of the judges expressed their opinions as to how the jury might have reached their verdict. Pollock C.B., said: ‘If, as I have said, there is no other evidence, the jury will probably consider with reason that the prisoner stole the property; but, if there is other evidence which is consistent either with his having stolen the property, or with his having received it from someone else, it will be for the jury to say which appears to them to be the more probable solution.’
He then observed that although there was some evidence that the accused had stolen the sheep, yet the inference that he had sent his sons to drive the sheep to St. John’s Cross, having received them from someone who had stolen them, appeared to him to be the more cogent, adding: ‘however this may have been, we are all of the opinion that there was evidence to go to the jury’.
Martin B commented: ‘In cases of this nature it often happens that some of the jurors feel doubts, and think they ought not to convict the prisoner of stealing unless someone has actually seen him taking the property, and so they concur in convicting him of receiving, supposing that that is the more lenient view.’
Byles J stated that in his opinion there were three ways which he described, in which the accused might have received the sheep with guilty knowledge. Blackburn J, in analysing the facts, also expressed the view that it was more probable that the sheep had been stolen previously by some other person and driven to some place near Exeter, where they were picked up by the boys. He added: ‘I andpound; that were so, the inference would be irresistible that the person from whom the boys received them was the actual thief. Then, that being so, the father was, no doubt, an accessory before the fact, and there was, therefore, evidence for the jury on which they might convict him of receiving.’
In speculating as to how the jury might have arrived at their verdict, the judges were in no manner suggesting that a judge, in his summing-up, should direct the jury that, where a person is charged with theft and in the alternative with receiving, and the evidence (or the sole evidence) connecting him with the offence is the recent possession of the stolen property, then if the only reasonable inference is that he must have either stolen the property or received it knowing it to be stolen, they should ask themselves which is the more probable offence and convict accordingly. There is no reflection of such a rule in English authorities and Langmead has not been cited in any English judgments for such a proposition. Their Lordships are firmly of the opinion that not only was such a direction quite uncalled for In this case for the reasons already given but that such a direction is wrong in law. It detracts, or may be thought to detract, from the obligation of the jury to be satisfied beyond reasonable doubt that the accused is guilty of the particular offence, before they enter such a verdict.

Judges:

Bollock CB, Mellor J, Blackburn J, Byles J, Martin B

Citations:

[1864] EngR 47, (1864) Le and Ca 427, (1864) 169 ER 1459

Links:

Commonlii

Jurisdiction:

England and Wales

Cited by:

CitedAttorney General of Hong Kong v Yip Kai Foon PC 7-Dec-1987
High Court of Hong Kong – The prosecutor appealed against a quashing of a conviction on a charge of handling stolen goods. The defendant had been charged with robbery with handling as an alternative provided under statute.
Held: Where there . .
Lists of cited by and citing cases may be incomplete.

Crime

Updated: 20 May 2022; Ref: scu.281761

Regina v Chisam: CCA 1963

A defendant’s belief founding a plea of self defence must be both honest and reasonable. A sufficient justification was established if the accused genuinely believed on reasonable grounds that a relative or friend was in imminent danger of injury, even though that belief was based on an honest mistake of fact.

Judges:

Lord Parker CJ

Citations:

(1963) 47 Cr App R 130

Citing:

CitedRegina v Weston 1879
. .

Cited by:

RejectedBeckford v The Queen PC 15-Jun-1987
(Jamaica) Self defence permits a defendant to use such force as is reasonable in the circumstances as he honestly believed them to be. ‘If then a genuine belief, albeit without reasonable grounds, is a defence to rape because it negatives the . .
CitedAshley and Another v Sussex Police CA 27-Jul-2006
The deceased was shot by police officers raiding his flat in 1998. The claimants sought damages for his estate. They had succeeded in claiming damages for false imprisonment, but now appealed dismissal of their claim for damages for assault and . .
CitedRegina v Fennell CACD 1971
A father was accused of assaulting a police constable in order to release his son from custody. He pleaded self defence, saying that he had believed the arrest unlawful.
Held: The defence failed. A defendant seeking to justify an assault, . .
CitedDirector of Public Prosecutions v Armstrong-Braun Admn 5-Oct-1998
A building site was subject to a requirement to move great crested newts before work could proceed. The defendant, a local councillor interfered to prevent a digger destroying the land until the newts had been moved. He appealed his conviction for . .
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: 19 May 2022; Ref: scu.219152