new intervening act
A break in the chain of causation arises where there is a new intervening act or ‘novus actus interveniens’.
Novus actus interveniens is a term that is
used in the context of causation. It means 'a new intervening act'.
The word 'new' is used in the
sense that it was not the accused's act - so the original perpetrator may not
be responsible.
A chain of causation is sometimes referred to when the defendant
triggers a series of events involving others who may also contribute to the
harm or injury of the victim. The question then arises whether the
original perpetrator should be responsible for the eventual outcome.
A break in the chain of causation means that when this occurs the courts
interpret this to mean that the accused’s conduct was not the cause of the harm
or injury. This is unusual but when it does occur it will result in the
accused being acquitted. A break in the chain of causation arises where there is a new
intervening act or ‘novus actus
interveniens’.
In these circumstances it may not be
appropriate to find the defendant responsible for the eventual outcome as
others have played an important part in bringing this about. The law may
still want to blame the accused for the way in which he or she did act but the
law will also want to hold responsible the others, for the part they
played, if they were the main contributor to the outcome.
There are two cases which probably best
illustrate the principles of causation. These are the cases of R v Jordan (1956) and R v Smith (1959).
In R v Jordan
(1956) the defendant stabbed the victim who was admitted to
hospital where he died 8 days later. In hospital the victim had been given
anti-biotics to which he was allergic and he had also been given large amounts
of intraveneous liquid. At the time of his death the stab wounds were starting
to heal.
In the Court of Appeal it was stated that the
direct and immediate cause of
death was pneumonia. Two doctors expressed the opinion that death had not been
caused by the stab wound, which was mainly healed at the time of the death, but
by the medical treatment the victim received. The court held that the defendant
was not liable for the death.
In R v Smith
the defendant had been involved in a fight with another soldier at their army
barracks. During the fight the defendant stabbed the other soldier twice
with his bayonet, medics were called and took the injured man to the medical
station. On the way there the man was dropped two times and on arrival at the
medical centre he did not receive the appropriate treatment and the medical
officer did not diagnose the seriousness of his injuries and that his lung had
been punctured in the attack. The soldier died and the defendant was convicted
of murder. He appealed claiming that if the victim had received the
appropriate medical treatment he would have survived. The conviction was upheld
as the stab wound was the
"operating and substantial cause" of death.
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