R v Cunningham

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R v Cunningham
Gas meter 03.jpg
Court Court of Appeal
Full case nameRegina v. Roy Cunningham
Decided20 and 27 May 1957
Citation(s)[1957] 3 WLR 76; 2 QB 396, 41 Crim. App. 155
Case history
Prior action(s)Conviction at Leeds Crown Court (Assizes)
Court membership
Judge(s) sittingByrne J, Slade J, Barry J [1]
Keywords
  • Novus actus interveniens
  • causation

Regina v. Cunningham (1957) is an English Court of Appeal ruling that clarified that indirect, not reasonably foreseeable consequences to a totally distinct, reprehensible, even "wicked" activity would not be considered "malicious" where that is set out as the mens rea for a particular offence. [2] The level of mens rea, by statute, specifically needed to accompany "administration", which it was common ground that negligent release would amount to, of noxious gases.

Contents

The precedent value of the case has been applied to broadly analogous situations and rules where an enhanced mens rea is required for a particular class of offence to be proven. [3] [1]

Facts

The defendant removed a gas meter to steal the money inside. This was the unlawful, reprehensible activity for which a distinct charge and conviction applied. Gas then thus gradually leaked and partially asphyxiated a neighbour. He was charged with violating section 23 of the Offences against the Person Act 1861 that criminalized the unlawful and malicious administration of a noxious substance to another person.

Trial judge understanding of law

The trial judge explained the word "maliciously" to mean general wickedness, and because of that as to stealing the money from the gas meter the mens rea for the crime was present.

Objective foreseeability implied by maliciously

The appellate judges quashed the conviction because "maliciously" was to be read to mean that the result was a reasonably foreseeable consequence of the defendant's actions.

The panel gave vague, generic advice to judges as to the correct jury instructions to set down such as the proper standard (test) of probabilities (if any). Other cases give greater insight as to relevance of oblique, sufficiently proven, intentions and examples of motives which would be considered malicious for particular crimes having that specified mens rea. [4]

Among these is R v Faulkner (1877) by which the mens rea for larceny must not be conflated with that for arson.

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<i>R v Faulkner</i>

R v. Faulkner (1877) is a key reported appeal the Court for Crown Cases Reserved: holding that the mens rea for committing one criminal act does not necessarily transfer to all possible, potentially in other ways criminal, consequences of that act.

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Non-fatal offences against the person, under English law, are generally taken to mean offences which take the form of an attack directed at another person, that do not result in the death of any person. Such offences where death occurs are considered homicide, whilst sexual offences are generally considered separately, since they differ substantially from other offences against the person in theoretical basis and composition. Non-fatal offences against the person mainly derive from the Offences against the Person Act 1861, although no definition of assault or battery is given there.

<i>R v Savage</i>

R v Savage; R v Parmenter [1991] were conjoined final domestic appeals in English criminal law confirming that the mens rea of malicious wounding or the heavily twinned statutory offence of inflicting grievous bodily harm will in all but very exceptional cases include that for the lesser offence of assault occasioning actual bodily harm. Both sections of the Offences against the Person Act 1861 only require damage to have resulted from a violent or otherwise malicious act of the defendant. An appellate court may use its statutory power under a 1968 Act to substitute a charge with an appropriate lesser charge.

References

  1. 1 2 Index Card – case preview Incorporated Council of Law Reporting
  2. Bonnie, R.J. et al. Criminal Law, Second Edition. Foundation Press, New York, NY: 2004, p. 181
  3. Considered in R v Spratt [1990]; Dictum of Byrne J applied in R v Morrison (1988); Considered in W (A Minor) v Dolbey (1983); R v Cunningham [1957]; Considered in R v G [2003]; Considered in R v G; Considered in R v Parmenter (Philip) [1992] 1 AC 699
  4. Bonnie, p. 181