Mr review 6 ignorance of law 6


Common Law Defence of Intoxication



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Common Law Defence of Intoxication

DPP v Beard HoL 1920 p 839 [if specific intent essential element of crime, voluntary drunkenness rendering A incapable, should be considered to determine if he had necessary intent of crime]


Note: Beer is no longer good law

Reason: Lord Birkenhead LC



  • Classic authorities: voluntary drunkenness more of an aggravation than a defence

  • Except in cases where insanity is pleaded, principle is: where a specific intent is an essential element in the offence, evidence of the state of drunkenness rendering the accused incapable of forming such an intent should be taken into consideration in order to determine whether he had in fact formed the necessary intent of the crime

    • If he was so drunk, he could not have formed intent = not convicted

    • State of drunkenness may be incompatible with actual crime charged

  • Condition of drunkenness reduces murder to manslaughter

  • Conclusions:

    • 1. Law takes no note of cause of insanity, SO: Insanity, whether produced by drunkenness or otherwise, is a defence to crime charged. If insanity supervenes, as result of alcoholic excess, furnishes complete answer to criminal defence of insanity.

    • 2. The evidence of drunkenness which renders the accused incapable of forming specific intent should be taken into consideration with other facts to determine if he had intent

      • Note: No longer the law. Capacity refers to whether drink rendered person CAPABLE of committing the Act. MR traditionally focuses on whether the A KNEW.

    • 3. Evidence of drunkenness failing short of proved incapacity, and his mind was affected by drink so he more readily gave way to violent passion does not rebut intention

Intoxication and Specific Intent


  • Specific intent: should have ulterior element, some other

Bernard v The Queen SCC 1988 p 853 [Has imported objective Reasonable Person Test when you use defence of intoxication]


  • 2-2-3 split. Law is unsettled until the next case comes along.

  • This is a crime of general intent, should be acquitted, but now SCC Is deciding Bernard.

  • In Intoxication you will be judged by standard of ordinary non-drunk person.

Facts: A charged with sexual assault causing bodily harm. Issue left to TJ was question of consent. A said he forced C to have sex because he was drunk and when he realized what he was doing he got off. SCC asked to reconsider decision in Leary v The Queen holding that offence of rape was an offence of general intent for which voluntary intoxication was no defence.

Issue:


Decision:

Reason: (McIntyre J + Beetz)



  • Distinction is not artificial

    • General Intent: intent relates solely to the performance of the act in question with no further ulterior intent or purpose

    • Specific Intent: involves performance of AR, coupled with intent going beyond mere performance ie. Striking with intent to kill

  • Drunkenness is not a true defence. But where the accused is so affected he lacks the capacity to form specific intent, it may apply

  • No application to crimes of general intent

  • Criticisms of defence of drunkenness: 1) distinction btw general/specific is artificial 2) illogical to apply to some & not all crimes/depends on policy decision made by judge

    • 1) Reject first ground of criticisms

    • 2) No apologies for policy  society condemns those who, by voluntary consumption of alcohol, render themselves incapable of self-control so that they commit act so violence causing injury to their neighbours

  • Defence of drunkenness accords with crim law theory

  • Not sustainable that defence of drunkenness be extended to all criminal charges

  • CJ has expressed view that evidence of self-induced intoxicant should be relevant consideration in determining MR of ANY offence

    • Effect: more drunk person is, more extended his opportunity for successful defence against conviction for those offences caused by such drinking, regardless of the intent required for those offences

    • Court in Leary approved majewski approach  Leary should not be overruled

      • Crown still must prove MR. State of mind may be proved in two ways in general intent crimes

      • 1) ToF can infer MR from AR: a person is presumed to have intended the natural and probable consequences of his actions

      • 2) where accused was so intoxicated as to raise doubt to voluntary nature of conduct, Crown can meet evidentiary obligation by proving the fact of self-induced intoxication by drugs or alcohol

      • Metaphysically impossible for person to be so drunk as to be incapable of forming minimal intent to apply force

        • HENCE, second method only used in EXTREME SELF-INTOXICATION,

Reasons: Wilson J (+ LHD)

  • Sexual assault causing bodily harm is offence of general intent requiring only minimal intent to apply force

  • Not necessary to resort to self-induced intoxication as substituted form of MR

  • Concerns as to whether imposition on that basis would survive charter challenge

  • Rule in Leary be preserved and applied

  • Sexual Assault = crime of violence. First an assault, then nature of sex objectively viewed

  • Evidence shows: There was intentional and voluntary application of force

  • He had the wits to hide bloodied towel/pillowcase from police = NOT Extreme intoxication, verging on insanity or automatism capable of negating inference that minimal intent apply

  • Less confident about proposition that : self-induced intoxication may substitute for mental element required to be present at time of offence  although this court has clearly adopted that proposition (majewski)

TH: If Wilson J's approach represents the law, which of the following statements is (MOST) true: An intoxicated person charged with murder can raise intoxication to reduce culpability to manslaughter OR to get a full acquittal.

  • THERE will be some cases where we override policy concerns, and if they are so intoxicated to the extreme, that renders them involuntary, they can get off

Reasons: Dickson CJC

  • Only issue: should evidence of self-induced intoxication be considered by the ToF, in determining whether the prosecution has proved BYD the MR required to constitute the offence?

  • Yes. It should be considered.

  • Does not make sense to allow this offence for certain offences and not for others. It is legal fiction

  • If the law is to be altered in the name of policy, that is surely a task for parliament rather than courts

  • It abandons basic MR principles that it is a required precondition for every crime

  • Furthermore even if policy is valid, there is no evidence that the artificiality of the specific intent req. is actually required for social protection

TH: In Bernard, Justice Dickson rejects the notion that the specific/general distinction is required as a policy matter. The main reason for this is

  • He is not convinced that in most cases of drunkenness will actually deprive an accused of the required MR

  • “An unrestrained application of MR would not open a gaping hole in the criminal law contrary to social protection”

TH: Where a person is charged with a specific intent offence, evidence that the accused was intoxicated, accepted by the trier of fact: Can be used to show a lack of MR, leading to an acquittal or guilt on a reduced charge, depending on what the accused is charged with.

Summary on Bernard


  • Two judges say: the Beard rule should be preserved: intoxication only relevant to specific intent offences

  • Three judges say intoxication relevant to all crimes

  • Two judges say intoxication normally only relevant to specific intent; but in “extreme cases of intoxication, relevant to all





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