1 / 13

Duress of Circumstances

Duress of Circumstances. When is this defence available?. Task. Read pg 183-185 14.6-14.6.2 Explain how duress can arise. Duress. How does Duress Arise? Threats must be:. Threats Circumstances. Serious- Death or serious injury Against ; Self, - Valderrama Vega Friends, Family - Martin

Download Presentation

Duress of Circumstances

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Duress of Circumstances When is this defence available?

  2. Task • Read pg 183-185 14.6-14.6.2 • Explain how duress can arise

  3. Duress • How does Duress Arise? • Threats must be: • Threats • Circumstances • Serious- Death or serious injury • Against ; Self, - Valderrama Vega • Friends, Family - Martin • possible extend to anyone- Conway

  4. Availability of Defence • How do the courts decide if Duress is available as a defence? • Test Laid down in Graham • Subjective test • Objective Test When the D is compelled to do an act as he did because he reasonably believed he had good cause to fear serious injury or death If so would a sober person of reasonable firmness sharing the same characteristics as D have responded in the same way

  5. Graham 1982 • D a homosexual who lived with his wife and another homosexual man, K. K was violent and bullied D. After both had been drinking heavily, K put a flex around the wife's neck and told D to pull the other end. D did this for about 1 min. Wife died. D claimed he only held flex because of his fear of K. Convicted of murder • Why? • What happened in Martin? • Does this change the tests laid down in Graham?

  6. No safe avenue of escape • If D is threatened to perform an act but there is an opportunity to escape then Duress will not be available as a defence. • What happened in Gill 1963 pg 186 • Is police protection enough to negate defence of duress? Hudson and Taylor

  7. Imminence of Threat • How close to the crime must the threat be? • The threat must be effective at the moment the crime is committed. Hudson V Taylor • But does not mean threats have to be able to be carried out immediately. Abdul- Hussain 1999 • Threat must be to make D commit a specific crime. Cole 1994 • Pg187-188

  8. No Duress when? • Intoxication – If D becomes voluntary intoxicated and mistakenly believes he is being threatened, no Duress • If intoxication not relevant to Duress can use the defence • Self Induced Duress. When can duress be a defence if you voluntarily join an organised gang? • Read Sharp Shepherd and Hasan pg 190.

  9. What is D of C? • Where a D may be forced to act because of surrounding circumstances. • What happened in Willer (1986) • In this case the CA held that the jury should have considered whether the D drove under duress.

  10. Avoiding threat or Serious Injury • Duress of circumstances can be available if it can be shown objectively that the D was acting to avoid a threat of death or serious injury. (Conway 1988). • What happened in Martin (1989)? • What 2 stage test was put forward in Martin (1989)

  11. Pommell (1995) • By this case it became clear that duress of circumstances could be used as a defence to all cases except murder. What happened in Pommell?

  12. Summary • Duress is a defence based on fact D has been effectively forced to commit the crime • Defence to all crimes but Murder, Attempted murder or possibly Treason. • Originally thought defence for 2nd D in Lynch but then decided not in Howe- Explain why • Duress carried out by threats to self or family can be friend or stranger depends on circumstances Martin, Conway, • Threat must be of death or serious injury- others taken into account with these Valderrama-Vega • 2 Stage test Subjective test Was D compelled to act as he did because he reasonably Graham

  13. Create a brainstorm on the problems with the law of duress? • Group Work: Idiot’s Guide to Necessity!

More Related