Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Criminal Law - Causation
- What is the minimal causal contribution required of D?
- Has to be causally linked
- Dalloway
Anmerkungen:
- D was driving a horse cart but lost control of the reins, child ran out in front, not causally linked because even if D had been holding the reins the child would have still been injured (but for test)
- White
Anmerkungen:
- D tried to poison mother, she dies however there is no evidence that she touched the drink containing the poison, no causal link but still attempt
- Does not have to be the sole or main cause
- Smith
Anmerkungen:
- D stabbed a soldier who was taken for the medical treatment which was negligent. However at the time of the victims death D's actions were still a 'substantial and operating cause'
- Hennigan
Anmerkungen:
- Proposed that the contribution had to be at least 1/5th. This was rejected and contribution was required to be more than 'de minimis'
- Benge
Anmerkungen:
- More than one party can make a contribution. Foreman didn't do enough to keep his men safe by reading timetable wrong. Train driver was also not concentrating.
- Pre-existing life limiting conditions
- Dyson
Anmerkungen:
-
Dyson
[1908] 2 KB 454:“the proper question to have been submitted to the jury was
whether the prisoner accelerated
the child’s death by the injuries which he inflicted” (Lord Alverston
CJ at 457)
- Pain killing drugs for terminally ill
Anmerkungen:
-
The use of pain-killing drugs to treat
the terminally ill may as a side effect accelerate death: the Doctrine of
Double Effect (“perhaps best
characterised as a covert recognition, in causation doctrine, of some sort of
defence based on clinical medical necessity”
(Ashworth & Horder,
Principles, at 107)
- Alridge article
- Omissions
- No general duty exists, even that of easy rescue
- Specific duties do arise at common law
- Contract
- Pittwood
Anmerkungen:
- Level crossing gate keeper went off and forgot to shut the gate and a vehicle crossing was struck by the train. Guilty of manslaughter. Contract creates a duty.
- Relationship
- Stone & Dobinson
- Gibbins & Proctor
Anmerkungen:
- Gibbins neglected one of the children, let them die, father stood by and allowed this to happen. Their relationship as parents created a duty
- Instan
- Medical Treatment
- Adomako
Anmerkungen:
-
Anaesthetist
who didn’t notice his patient’s air supply had become disconnected
- Airedale NHS Trust v Bland
Anmerkungen:
- Bland kept on life support and then decision taken to remove it. Considered an omission rather than a positive act
- Creation of dangerous situations
- Miller
Anmerkungen:
- Fell asleep with a cigarette, woke up to a fire, made no attempt to put it out and just went to sleep elsewhere
- Use Miller to understand
- Fagan v MPC
Anmerkungen:
-
Defendant parks his car on the
policeman’s foot, accidentally. Police man screams, Fagan loiters. Divisional
Court say he’s guilty of assault because he sits in the car enjoying the
situation. Argued that it was an act then said it was an omission. According to
Miller it’s omission by creation of dangerous situation
- Evans
Anmerkungen:
-
Women who live together, all
three are heroin addicts. Carly became ill after taking heroin that Evans gave
her, mother and Evans did not want to call for help so they put her to bed and
she died. Both were convicted of manslaughter on the basis of the mother’s
relationship and Evans contributed to the situation which made it life
threatening
- Novus Actus Interveniens
- Medical Intervention
- Smith
Anmerkungen:
-
D stabs a soldier, he is then
taken to a medical tent for treatment, on the way he is dropped and in the tent
he is given negligent treatment. Soldier dies, defendant wanted to blame the
treatment but the courts said that by the time he died D’s cause was still
‘operating’ and ‘substantial’.
- Cheshire
Anmerkungen:
-
Cheshire shoots D, D gets taken
into hospital and operated on, several weeks
later his wounds were healing and no longer life threatening, however, he continued to have breathing difficulty and died from complications arising from
the tracheotomy. D’s conviction upheld.
- Jordan
Anmerkungen:
- D had stabbed the victim who
was in hospital having almost recovered when he was given an antibiotic he was intolerant to. The treatment was stopped. However it was then resumed and
resulted in D’s death. This action was ‘palpably wrong’ and relegated Jordan’s contribution to the history.
- Refusal of medical treatment
- Blaue
- Holland
Anmerkungen:
- The defendant was involved in a fight in which he inflicted a deep cut on the victim's finger. The victim failed to take care of the wound or get medical assistance and the wound became infected. Eventually gangrene set in and the victim was advised to have his arm amputated. The victim refused and died.
- Victim injured whilst escaping
- Roberts
Anmerkungen:
-
Victim accepted a lift from the defendant; he tried to make
sexual advances towards her. She jumped out of the car. Where the victim's actions were a natural result of the defendant's
actions it matters not whether the defendant could foresee the result. Only
where the victim’s actions were so “daft” or unexpected that no reasonable man
could have expected it would there be a break in the chain of causation.
- Williams
Anmerkungen:
- Hitch hiker jumped out of car because he thought he was being robbed. Not enough evidence of such a threat. No conviction upheld.
- Reasonable foreseeability
- Voluntary act of a victim
- Kennedy (No 2)
Anmerkungen:
-
“When is it appropriate to find someone guilty of manslaughter where that person has been involved in the supply of a class A drug which is then freely and voluntarily self-administered by the person to whom it was supplied, and the administration of the drug then
causes his death?”
“The answer to the certified question is: in the case of a fully-informed and responsible adult, never.”
- Dhaliwal
Anmerkungen:
- Husband drove wife to suicide, not persecuted.
If considered in tandem with Kennedy No 2, the suicide would have been a voluntary move. It's like handing heroine to someone. You can hand someone a gun but is it fair for you to be responsible for what they do with it?
- Limitations
- Pagett
Anmerkungen:
-
“a reasonable act performed for the purpose of self preservation, being of course itself an act caused by the accused’s own act, does not operate as a novus
actus interveniens” (Lord Goff at 298)
So if you caused the need for self defence you can do one