Translated in
« an act does not make a person guilty, unless the mind is guilty or
blameworthy is the base of the actus reus and mens rea doctrine. « Mens rea »
or « guilty mind » is the most difficult to prove of the components
of the criminal liability because ‘guilty‘ , or ‘blameworthy’ can have
different meanings dependant on the offence. An act can be completed but no
liability
falls
on the defendant if he can disprove mens rea by a good defence or reasonable
mistake.
The
difficulty of proving mens rea resides in the fact that you have to draw conclusions
from what the defendant did or said before, during and after the event.
Mens rea is there to
show that the defendant is « doubly guilty » : first, of committing
the actus reus and secondly, of having at the appropriate state of mind, e.g.
mens rea. Mental state is a part of the definition of the offences and there must be coincidence between the
actus reus and the mens rea.
In the course of this
essay we will discuss the meanings of mens rea in the different offences then
see how the law deals with the problems posed by the definitions, and finally
the limits and critics we can address this notion.
Homicide is the
generic name for the offences that have for result the termination of the
victim’s life and which is part of the offence. There are two main homicide
offences: murder and manslaughter. Homicide can only be performed on a
person. Mens rea in homicide is the intention to kill or cause grievous
bodily harm.
Murder and
manslaughter have the same actus reus, the difference is the state of mind of
the defendant. The classic definition of murder has been given by Sir Edward
Coke and states that it is when « A man of sound memory [ … ] unlawfully
killeth within any country of the realm any reasonable creature in rerum natura
under the King’s peace, with malice aforethought »
‘Malice aforethought’
is when a person intends to cause death or do grievous bodily harm. Which means
that an intention to case serious bodily harm should only suffice as the mens
rea for murder where the defendant has also recognised that death is a real
risk of his actions. The use of the ratio of Hyam, a subjective test, developed
in Hyam v DDP facilitates the proof of the fact that the defendant’s state
of mind is appropriate to the offence he committed.
In that case, D who
was the lover of J, became suspicious of his relationship with B. She went to
B's house, poured petrol through the letter-box, and lit it, causing a serious
fire. B's two daughters died in the fire, and D was charged with murder. Her
defence was that she intended only to frighten B and had not intended to kill
anyone. She was convicted of murder.
Lord Hailsham LC said
it was sufficient for murder that D knew there was ‘a serious risk of death or
grievous bodily harm’ and went on to commit the acts with the intention of
exposing a potential victim to such a risk and all agreed that foresight was as
good as intention.
Some particular
points arise from here. What happens when a death occurs, and the defendant
does not have the appropriate mens rea? Or when the cause of the death can be
inferred to special circumstances?
Manslaughter can be
used to reduce charges in murder in case the defendant does not have the mens
rea required for murder. Manslaughter can be defined as « The crime of killing
a person without intention to do so. There is actually no mens rea in the
death itself, but the underlying action was intentional. There are two types of
manslaughter. Voluntary manslaughter is a murder conviction that has been
downgraded in accordance with special circumstances; loss of self-control,
diminished responsibility by reason of abnormality of mind, or pursuance of a suicide
pact.
Prosecution often
uses recklessness or knowledge as a means of proving the particular mindset of
the defendant. Recklessness can be defined as the « deliberate taking of
an unjustifiable risk. In Caldwell an objective test is used, on the basis
of the subjective one used in Cunningham to
prove that the defendant acted recklessly by taking an unjustifiable risk and
by foreseeing some harmful consequences and nonetheless doing it.
The notion of
concurrence that belongs to the defence of mistakes in homicide has been
criticised by authors and judges. There are two types of concurrence: temporal
concurrence where the mens rea and the actus rea occur at the same; and
motivational concurrence, where the mens rea motivates the actus reus.
The defendant’s
mental state should definitely concur with the harm addressed by the definition
of the defence. This should have been applied to Saunders and Archer and
Pembliton. In Saunders and Archer, case where A, intending to kill his wife
gives her a poisoned apple, and she, being ignorant of it, gives it to a child against
whom A never meant any harm, and the child eats it and dies, it will be ruled as murder against the
child even though, if applying the concurrence, he would have been charged with
attempted murder of his wife.
In
Pembliton, the defendant should probably have been charged with some form of
assault and battery or an attempt to commit grievous bodily harm as opposed to
criminal damage.
There
has been some critics about the Ghosh test, especially by K. Campbell who in
his book accuses the test of confusing the state of mind, mens rea, and the
defendant’s standards of honesty.
Another remark we can
make is the necessity or not for the belief to be a reasonable one especially
in the domain of sexual offences. For example the Director of Prosecution v
Morgan case of a rape where the defendants believed they had the consent of the
victim. The jury stated that the belief should be an honest and reasonable one.
The definition of the rape offence is ‘having sexual intercourse with a woman
with intent to do so without her consent or with indifference as to whether or
not she consented.’ The defense presented that it could not be committed if
that essential mens rea were absent.
Accordingly, if an
accused believed that the woman had consented, whether or not that belief was
based on reasonable ground, he could not be found guilty of rape. This is a
critic of the need for the belief to be based on reasonable grounds or not.
In
theft, mens rea is the fact that the defendant « appropriated the property
dishonestly and did so with intent to permanently deprive the owner of his
property.» Subsection 2 states that the view of gain is « immaterial
which means that if the defendant steals something but does not take it for himself
he is still guilty of theft. In fraud, false representation is part of the
mens
rea required.
The main issue is
that proving dishonesty is really difficult. The Theft Act 1968 and the Fraud
Act 2006 and its sections 1 and 2 deal with actus reus and mens rea in theft.
In fraud, ‘dishonesty ‘ is part of the definition.
But proving
dishonesty is hard. That’s when the twofold Ghosh test is used. We can
also point the fact that there is an overlap between ‘dishonesty’ as a state of
mind that requires proof of the defendant’s state of mind, and as a concept
describing the wrong done as in moral evaluation which is perpetrated by
case-law. Ghosh is a case of obtaining by deception, contrary to section 15 of
the 1968 Theft Act. The first part of the test is ‘whether what was done was dishonest
according to the ordinary standards of reasonable and honest people? If not,
then the defendant is not guilty. If yes, however, then we have to ask
ourselves ‘did the defendant realize that reasonable and honest people regard
what he did as dishonest?’
According to the
section 2 of the Fraud Act 2006, mens rea is satisfied by proof that he knew
the representation was or might be false: s2(2), and that he acted dishonestly:
s2(1)(a), with intent to cause gain or loss: s2(1)(b). There is no onus on the
prosecution but they have to introduce some evidence. In Mandrey and
Wooster street sellers selling perfume for 25p were saying « you can
go down the road and buy it for 2 guineas in the big stores » which
results in false representation. The police checked on certain stores but it
was proved in cross-examination that they didn’t go to Selfridges but the judge
stated that the prosecution had to only present some evidence of the falsity of
the representation. In Peters, case of conspiracy to defraud, the High Court rejected
considering dishonesty as a separate element of the offence and stated that
dishonesty has to be defined as ‘an aspect of the use of dishonest means’.
There has been some
critics about the Ghosh test, especially by K. Campbell who in his book accuses
the test of confusing the state of mind, mens rea, and the defendant’s
standards of honesty. We can also ask ourselves about the definition of
knowledge and to what extent it should be incorporated in the burden of proof
of the prosecution, in fraud.
Mens rea in burglary
is the intention of the defendant to commit one of the ulterior offences
required for s s.9(1)(a) burglary; and for a s.9(1)(b), the mens rea of the
ulterior offence must be proved. He enters as a trespasser a building or part
of it with the intention of being such, and who has the knowledge of being a
trespasser with views to steal anything in the building. It must be present at
the entry in the first case and only at the time of the commission of the
ulterior offence in the second case. The defendant must know that he is
entering as a trespasser.
You have to prove the
entry into the building and the view to steal anything. Gain is immaterial, as
in theft. But what if the defendant’s intention is conditional? We can
ourselves as well if there really is a need for the offence of burglary at all.
The main bases to the decisions in burglary cases are the Theft Act 1968 and Criminal
Damage Act 1971. R v Collins is the leading case in proving burglary. In R
v Walkington, the defendant was accused of burglary, entering the counter are
in a store, opening the till and finding it empty. We can wonder whether the
counter area can be naned as ‘part of a building’ and whether the accused
entered it as trespasser, with obvious intent to steal’therein’.In that case,
it is implied that the managers had prohibited customers from entering the
counter area, and that the accused knew of the prohibition. He got charged of
burglary contrary to section9(1)(a) and (2) if the Theft Act 1968 because he
trespassed with intent to steal therein.
In Attorney General’s
References the defendant entered a grocer’s house, with intent to steal,
only if he found something worth taking. The judge decided that it was no
defence to show that he did not intent to steal anything specific. The issue of
conditional intent can be perceived as a red herring as the defendant can be
convicted then of attempted burglary. But why having a burglary offence when we
could charge with either the ulterior offence committed; or of an attempt to
commit the ulterior offence.
Not to mention the
limits to mens rea such as mental illness, intoxication or automatisms. Is it
fair to assimilate intention with foresight of the consequences of an act,
unlawful may it be?
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