Criminal Law Lecture 6 Homicide Murder
Criminal Law Lecture 6 Homicide Murder
Criminal Law Lecture 6 Homicide Murder
CRIMINAL LAW
Lecture 6
HOMICIDE:
Murder
• murder,
• ‘voluntary’ manslaughter (produced only by conviction after success
of a partial defence of loss of control or of diminished responsibility
to a charge of murder), and
• involuntary manslaughter (constructive, reckless and gross
negligence).
‘Murder is when a man of sound memory and of the age of discretion, unlawfully
killeth within any county of the realm any reasonable creature in rerum natura
under the King’s peace, with malice aforethought, either expressed by the party
or implied by law, [so that the wounded party shall die of the wound or hurt,
within a year and a day of the same]. (Sir Edward Coke, Institutes of the Laws of
England, 1797)
It is a result crime in that the outcome is death. The conduct is killing, or causing
death. The actus reus includes: a) unlawfully, b) killing, c) uder the Queen’s
Peace, d) a human being and e) who was born alive. Thus, we see here
conduct, result and also circumstances (e.g., under the Queen’s Peace).
UNLAWFUL
KILLING
Death is established upon irreversible death of the brain stem (Malcherek, Steel
1981) 2 All ER 422 CA (Crim Div)
‘Malice aforethought’ is the formal name for the mens rea of murder. The key
term here is intention and there are two intentions that suffice as MR for murder:
Definition of Intention:
On (ii), ‘implied malice’, see Cunningham [1982] AC 566; [1981] 2 All ER 863
(HL).
This second element is highly controversial as some argue that for this most
serious of offences, the fault (or mental state) should correspond directly to the
harm done. What we have here is a form of constructive liability whereby D is
held responsible for the consequences that flow from her or his act whether that
is or is not what they intended.
4. Intention
Intention is subject to the meaning given in Woollin – namely what was D’s
purpose or direct intention or, alternatively, what did D foresee as a virtual
certainty?
While we may agree that murder is the most serious of crimes, what
distinguishes different degrees of seriousness? To return to our earlier example,
to what extent does the law distinguish contract and mercy killing? Attention
focuses on the MR here, but the law provides little guidance as to any distinction
in seriousness.
Woollin is a primary case (though, if one intends to cause gbh, one need not
have foresight of a ‘virtual certainty’ of death). In this way, it is easier to be
convicted for murder based on intent to cause gbh than based on oblique intent
to cause death. Beyond distinguishing oblique intent, Woollin does not offer
much help. Some think that the law here is over-inclusive in some situations and
under-inclusive in others. It is over-inclusive in that it sees the doctors in Re A
(Children) as possessing mens rea for murder. It is under-inclusive in that it does
not see cases of indiscriminate malice, where, for example, someone plants a
bomb and gives a warning as cases of murder. In these latter sorts of situations,
it is held, one foresees a risk of death or serious injury, but not as a ‘virtual
certainty’.
The law, as we have seen, distinguish two kinds of intention. These are referred
to as ‘direct’ and ‘indirect’ (or ‘oblique’) intention. You should know, though, that
in practice the cases neither use these terms nor distinguish formally between
‘two kinds’ of intention.
• ‘Indirect’ intention = what may be inferred from the fact that the defendant
knew that it was a virtual certainty that a circumstance or consequence
would occur, if they went ahead with what it was their aim or purpose
(their direct intent) to do.
7. Indirect Intention
Indirect intention, as we have seen from our study of mens rea and of case law
leading up to Woollin, has two aspects: foresight and virtual certainty.
BUT INSTEAD
• Second, there is the question about how likely or certain the foreseen
side-effect or consequence must be in order to count as being intended.
- English law now seems clear that something, if it was not D’s aim
or purpose, must have been seen by her or him as virtually certain
to occur if it is to count as intended.
• Yet, in Matthews and Alleyne (2003), the court held that Woollin laid down
only a rule about evidence of intention.
• When students arrive at Harvard Law School each autumn, the first thing
they read is a selection from Karl Llewellyn’s The Bramble Bush. In it
Llewellyn proposes an answer to how a precedent-based legal system can
change. He suggests that, like the bramble bush, which grows irregularly
in different directions, the law does the same. Popular decisions may
come to be interpreted and applied more and more broadly over time.
Unpopular ones, on the other hand, may be applied rarely and restrictively
– perhaps confined to the specific facts of the case.
One recent case that vividly raised this issue was Attorney General’s Reference
(No. 3 of 1994).
• Given that intent to cause GBH is sufficient mens rea for murder, that D
intended to cause GBH to V and that, by accident, he caused the death of
W (the child), why should the conviction be manslaughter?
• The HL held that, as the child was as yet unborn at time of stabbing, an
element of the actus reus for murder (that V be born) is missing.
The Draft Criminal Code prepared by the Law Commission, clause 18(1)(a),
proposes the following language: a person acts knowingly, ‘with respect to a
circumstance only when she or he is aware that it exists or will exist but also
when she or he avoids taking steps that might confirm his belief that it exists or
will exist.’
Does this alleviate some of the burden of establishing ‘malice’ or intention? What
do you think? Could it enable us to analyse some difficult cases without relying
on ‘oblique intention’?
8. Reform
‘My lords, murder is widely thought to be the gravest of crimes. One could
expect a developed system to embody a law of murder clear enough to yield an
unequivocal result on a given set of fact, a result which conforms with apparent
justice and has a sound intellectual base. This is not so in England, where the
law of homicide is permeated by anomaly, fiction, misnomer and obsolete
reasoning.’ (Lord Mustill, A-G’s Reference (No. 3 of 1994) [1997] 3 All ER 936)
The Law Commission recently proposed a reform of the law of homicide in its
Report on Murder, Manslaughter and Infanticide, 2006. Earlier the Law
Commission released A New Homicide Act for England and Wales?, 2005.
Second-degree murder, on the other hand, would be wider than present murder.
Not only would it, in (1), cover intent to do GBH, but, in (2), cases that are
currently classified as involuntary manslaughter, and in (3), ones that are
currently classified as voluntary manslaughter.
9. Sentencing
The Criminal Justice Act 2003 requires the judge to determine the minimum term
with respect to one of three starting points:
Further Reading:
Ashworth, A. (2007) ‘Principles, Pragmatism and the Law Commission:
Recommendations on Homicide Law Reform’, Crim LR 333.
Goff of Chievely, Lord (1988) ‘The Mental Element in Murder’ 104 LQR 30.
Horder, J. (2008) ‘The Changing Face of the Law of Homicide’ in Horder, ed.,
Homicide Law in Comparative Perspective (2008).
Horder, J. (2006) ‘Transferred Malice and the Remoteness of Unexpected
Outcomes from Intentions’ Crim LR 383.
Norrie, A. (1999) ‘After Woollin’ Crim LR 532.
Norrie, A. (2006) ‘Between Orthodox Subjectivism and Moral Contextualism’
Crim LR 486.
Pedain, A. (2003) ‘Intention and the Terrorist Example’ Crim LR 579.
Price, D. (1997) ‘Euthanasia, Pain Relief and Double Effect’ 17 LS 323.
Rogers (2006) ‘The LC’s Proposed Restructuring of Homicide’ 70 J Crim L 223.
Tadros, V. (2006) ‘The Homicide Ladder’ 69 MLR 601.
Taylor (2007) ‘The Nature of the Partial Defences and the Coherence of (Second
Degree) Murder’ Crim LR 345.
Williams, G. (1987) ‘Oblique Intention’ 46 CLJ 417.