Provocation in English law
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Provocation in English law
In English law, provocation is a mitigatory defence alleging a total loss of control as a response to another's provocative conduct sufficient to convert what would otherwise have been murder into manslaughter. It does not apply to any other offence. It will be abolished by the Coroners and Justice Billhttp://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk_politics/7762405.stm
The principlesUnder section 3 of the Homicide Act 1957:
The initial burden is on the defence to raise sufficient evidence of provocation. As a matter of law, the judge will then decide whether to leave the defence to the jury. This does not change the burden of proof which, as in all criminal cases, is on the prosecution to prove the actus reus and mens rea of the offence charged, i.e. murder. The Act changed the common law which had provided that provocation must be more than words alone and had to be form of violence by the victim to the accused. This was subject to two exceptions:
The Act provided that provocation can be by anything done or said without it having to be an illegal act and the provoker and the deceased can be a third parties (see Davies (1975) QB 691). If the accused was provoked, who provoked him is irrelevant. The factual limbThis is a subjective test and a pure question of fact, i.e. the evidence must show that the defendant actually lost his self-control. In R v Duffy (1949) 1 AER 932, Devlin J. said that
Under normal circumstances, the response to the provocation will be almost immediate retaliation. If there is a "cooling-off" period, the court will find that the accused should have regained control, making all subsequent actions intentional and therefore murder. In R v Ibrams & Gregory (1981) 74 Cr. App. R. 154 the defendants had been terrorised and bullied by the deceased over a period of time so devised a plan to attack him. There was no evidence of a sudden and temporary loss of self-control as required by Duffy. Even the period of time to fetch a weapon should be sufficient to cool off. In R v Thornton (1992) 1 AER 306 a woman suffering from "battered woman syndrome" went to the kitchen, took and sharpened a carving knife, and returned to stab her husband. The appeal referred to s3 which requires the jury to have regard to "everything both said and done according to the effect which in their opinion it would have on a reasonable man". The appellant argued that instead of considering the final provocation, the jury should have considered the events over the years leading up to the killing. Beldam LJ. rejected this, saying:
But in R v Thornton (No 2) (1996) 2 AER 1023 after considering new medical evidence, a retrial was ordered and the defendant was convicted of manslaughter on the ground of diminished responsibility. Similarly, in R v Ahluwaliah (1992) 4 AER 889 a retrial was ordered. The defendant had poured petrol over her husband and set it alight, causing burns from which he died. When the defence of diminished responsibility on the ground of "battered woman syndrome" was put, she was convicted of manslaughter. In R v Humphreys (1995) 4 AER 1008, the defendant finally lost self-control after years of abuse and stabbed her partner. She pleaded that the final words had been the straw that broke the camel's back. The conviction for murder was held unsafe because the accused's psychiatric condition stemming from the abuse should have been attributed to the reasonable person when the jury considered the application of the objective test. The reasonable person testIf the jury is satisfied that the defendant was provoked, the test is whether a reasonable person would have acted as the defendant did - an objective test. It was held in Camplin (1978) AC 705 (HL) that the accused's age and sex can be attributed to the reasonable man when the jury consider the defendant's power of self-control. Further, that ANY characteristic of the accused can be included which the jury consider may affect the gravity of the provocation. Therefore the reasonable person should be endowed with the particular characteristics of the accused. In a number of leading cases, Morhall (1995) 3 AER 659 (HL), and Luc Thiet Thuan v R (1997) AC 131 (PC) it was held that the judge should direct the jury to consider whether an ordinary person with ordinary powers of self-control would have reacted to the provocation as the defendant did and that no allowance should be given for any characteristics that might have made him or her more volatile than the ordinary person. These decisions acknowledged, however, that, in addition to age and sex, characteristics which affected the gravity of the provocation to the defendant should be taken into account. In R v Smith (2000) 4 AER 289 the defendant was charged with murder and relied on the defence of provocation, alleging that he had been suffering from serious clinical depression and had been so provoked by the deceased as to lose his self-control. Lord Hoffman held that the test was whether the jury thought that the,
Furthermore, the House held, by a majority, that no distinction should be drawn, when attributing characteristics for the purposes of the objective part of the test imposed by s3 Homicide Act, between their relevance to the gravity of the provocation to a reasonable man and his reaction to it. Account could be taken of a relevant characteristic in relation to the accused?s power of self-control, whether or not the characteristic was the object of the provocation. But in AG for Jersey v Holley'' (2005) 3 AER 371 the Privy Council regarded Smith as wrongly decided, interpreting the Act as setting a purely objective standard. Thus, although the accused's characteristics were to be taken into account when assessing the gravity of the provocation, the standard of self-control to be expected was invariable except for the accused's age and sex. The defendant and the deceased both suffered from chronic alcoholism and had a violent and abusive relationship. The evidence was that the deceased was drunk and taunted him by telling him that she had had sex with another man. The defendant then struck the deceased with an axe which was an accident of availability. Psychiatric evidence was that his consumption of alcohol was involuntary and that he suffered from a number of other psychiatric conditions which, independently of the effects of the alcohol, might have caused the loss of self-control and induced him to kill. Lord Nicholls said:
In ''R v Faqir Mohammed'' (2005) EWCA Crim 1880 a devout Muslim returning from the mosque caught a young man leaving his daughter's bedroom window. He immediately killed his daughter by repeatedly stabbing her with a knife. Following the death of his wife five years earlier he suffered from depression, and there was credible evidence that he had a violent temperament and had repeatedly been violent towards his daughters and his wife. Despite the fact that a Privy Council ratio decidendi is only persuasive authority, the Court of Appeal applied it and reinstated the law before Smith. Scott Baker LJ. said:
In ''R v James'' (2006) EWCA Crim 14 the court again considered the relationship between the Privy Council decision in Holley and Smith. In his commentary on Holley, Ashworth (2005) said:
Viewing this situation as exceptional, Phillips CJ. accepted that the Privy Council decision had indeed overruled the House of Lords, recognising the error that the Lords had made in their earlier interpretation of the law. Rather than follow the strict rules of precedent and send the issue back to the Lords for clarification, the Court of Appeal accepted the de facto situation and recognised Holley as the binding precedent. Self-induced provocationThe Privy Council held in Edwards v R (1973) AC 648 that a blackmailer could not rely on the predictable results of his demands for money when his victim attacked him (a policy decision to prevent a criminal from relying on his own wrongdoing as the cause of the subsequent death). In R v Johnson (1989) 2 AER 839, the defendant had become involved in an escalating argument with the deceased and his female companion. When the victim threatened the defendant with a beer glass, the defendant fatally stabbed him with a knife. The judge held that the threatening situation had been self-induced. The Court of Appeal held that section 3 of the Homicide Act 1957 provides that anything can amount to provocation, and there is no reason to exclude responsive actions provoked by the defendant. A conviction of manslaughter was substituted. SentencingThe Sentencing Guidelines Council http://www.sentencing-guidelines.gov.uk/ has issued a "final guideline" in respect of manslaughter by reason of provocation which is classed as a serious offence by section 224 of the Criminal Justice Act 2003. The guideline confirms that a conviction must almost always result in a custodial sentence and that the degree and extent of the provocation must be balanced against the offender's response when determining the appropriate sentence. The more the evidence demonstrates an unpremeditated quality to events, the more the sentence may be mitigated. In this, exposure to long-term abuse has an equivocal quality because the immediate "straw" only assumes significance given the context and the response may have greater qualities of revenge. However, factual scenarios involving attacks made in a family context, attempts to conceal evidence (including concealment of the body), etc. will aggravate the sentence. References
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