Abstract
The essay considers fictions in four areas of criminal law. The area of jury nullification fits most easily into a narrative of fictions as a mechanism for gentle amelioration of undesirable laws (in particular, undesirable penalties). The value of fictions in this narrative depends upon acceptance of the reactivity of the jury as the finger on the contemporary moral pulse. The construction of facts as a bargaining process is easier to accept in the civil field, but can also operate successfully in the criminal law, in which to fail altogether to recognise the possibility of fact construction would be to commit to a worse fiction. The essay contrasts these two against two other uses of fiction in criminal law which ought to be treated with greater scepticism. One is the use of forfeiture deriving its justification from the medieval fiction to the effect that the thing is guilty. This is impossible to justify and the recent growth of forfeiture is to be regretted. Finally, by way of contrast, the essay looks at the use of deeming provisions in criminal proscriptions. Whatever their value elsewhere, they ought not to be countenanced in substantive criminal law.
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- 1.
Doli incapax, as to which see the saga from C. v. D.P.P. [1996] A.C. 1, via Crime and Disorder Act 1998s 34, to R. v. J.T.B. [2009] UKHL 20, [2010] 1 A.C. 1310.
- 2.
The fiction of consent as the basis of the marital rape immunity was only finally laid to rest in R. v. R. [1992] 1 A.C. 599, [1991] 4 All E.R. 481.
- 3.
“[T]hose infelicitous legal fictions a court of human rights can well do without.” Al-Skeini v United Kingdom (55721/07) European Court of Human Rights (Grand Chamber) (2011) 53 E.H.R.R. 18; 30 B.H.R.C. 561.
- 4.
Zupančič (1983), p. 21.
- 5.
Sturdy v. Jackaway (71 U.S. 174, 1869) and Sparkes, this volume, Chap. 13.
- 6.
Lon Fuller (1967), introduction.
- 7.
Because of Contempt of Court Act 1981 s.8. See also the critique by Lord Steyn, dissenting in R v. Connor, R v. Mirza [2004] UKHL 2.
- 8.
The authority usually cited is R v. Penn (1670) 6 How.St. Trials 951. More modern examples are R v Ponting (Central Criminal Court, 1985, and see Ponting 1987) and R v Randle &. Pottle (1991, Alliott J.) acquittals said to have been “ … quite as much welcomed as resented by the public, which over many centuries has adhered tenaciously to its historic choice that decisions on the guilt of defendants charged with serious crime should rest with a jury of lay people, randomly selected, and not with professional judges.” R v. Wang [2005] UKHL 9 para 16, citing famous passages from Devlin 1956, pp. 160, 162. Compare R. v Smith (Patrick) R. v Mercieca [2005] UKHL 12; [2005] 2 Cr. App. R. 10.
- 9.
D.P.P. v Stonehouse [1978] A.C. 55; R v. Wang [2005] UKHL 9, [2005] 1 All E.R. 782.
- 10.
- 11.
- 12.
And see Clarkson and Cunningham 2008.
- 13.
See Radzinowicz 1948, pp. 268 and 333–337. Langbein 1983 at 37–43.
- 14.
And see Kesselring 2003, Appendix 2 pp. 46, 78, 212–214 (benefit of the belly), 46–48, 57, 62, 63, (benefit of clergy).
- 15.
This list is by no means exhaustive. A range of decisions at the border of murder and (both voluntary and involuntary) manslaughter could be considered in the same light, as could valuations of property so as to avoid grand larceny.
- 16.
Langbein 2003.
- 17.
- 18.
25 Edw.III, c.4.
- 19.
4 Henry VIII. c. 2.
- 20.
Blackstone IV Commentaries 360.
- 21.
18 Eliz.I c.7.
- 22.
.Blackstone IV Commentaries 362.
- 23.
3&4 W. & M. c. 9, 4&5 W. & M. c. 24.
- 24.
6 Anne, c. 9.
- 25.
7&8 Geo VI c 28.
- 26.
4&5 Vic c.22.
- 27.
- 28.
Oldham 1985.
- 29.
Sentence of Death (Expectant Mothers) Act 1931.
- 30.
M’Naghten Rules (1843) 10 C & F 200. A striking example is R v Eric Brown (Essex Assizes, 1943, The Times, November 5, 1943) (the ‘Rayleigh bath chair murder’). The defendant killed his father with an anti-tank mine during an air-raid, hoping that the outcome would be mistaken for injuries caused by bombing. He gave a confession that presented his actions as a response to his father’s abusive attitude both to him and to his mother. The jury nonetheless held him to be insane within the M’Naghten Rules. I have been unable to trace the direction to the jury. The verdict can be read as a statement by the jury that taking the lives of people with disabilities does not “count”.
- 31.
The Homicide Act 1957 differentiated capital from non-capital murders. The Murder (Abolition of Death Penalty) Act 1965 ended capital punishment for murder in the U.K.
- 32.
Gowers 1953 p. 77 and Appendix 3 table 8, p. 311.
- 33.
The Commission received some unspecific anecdotal evidence of cases where the rules are ignored (Gowers at page 82).
- 34.
Ruth Ellis (R v Ellis [2003] EWCA Crim 3556), Derek Bentley (R v Bentley (Deceased) [1998] EWCA Crim 2516, [2001] 1 Cr. App. R. 21) and Guenther Podola (R v. Podola (1959) 43 Cr. App. Rep. 220) are examples. Podola shot a police officer. Bentley was complicit in killing one.
- 35.
R v. Podola (1959) 43 Cr App Rep 220.
- 36.
Gowers 1953.
- 37.
Homicide Act 1957 s. 2.
- 38.
Homicide Act 1957 s. 5. Murder of police and prison officers, murder in the course of theft, murder by shooting or explosion (but see Brown, above footnote 30) remained capital.
- 39.
White 1985.
- 40.
- 41.
The reference is to Blackstone IV Commentaries 239, 359 et seq (my footnote).
- 42.
Langbein 1987, p. 37.
- 43.
Radzinowicz 1999.
- 44.
- 45.
Thompson 1975, pp. 258–269.
- 46.
- 47.
- 48.
Thompson also has many defenders—e.g. Cole 2001.
- 49.
Sweeney J. in R. v. Vicky Pryce (2013). “Vicky Pryce faces retrial after jury ‘fails to grasp basics’”, The Guardian, 20 February 2013.
- 50.
And see Roberts 2011.
- 51.
- 52.
Smith 2005.
- 53.
E.g. R. v. Wise [1979] R.T.R. 57: “If a judge enters into a blatant plea-bargain, his fitness to sit as a judge on the criminal law Bench is called into question.” (Lord Widgery C.J. at 59C–D); R. v. Grice(1978) 66 Cr. App. R. 167 “We find it quite astonishing that any recorder should characterise what he is doing as ‘plea bargaining.’ But even more so when it clearly was ‘plea bargaining’” (Roskill L.J. at 308).
- 54.
- 55.
R. v. Turner [1970] 2 Q.B. 321.
- 56.
- 57.
Auld 2001, pp. 434–444.
- 58.
Ib.
- 59.
And see Ashworth 2010, p. 172. Sentencing Advisory Panel (Now Council) Reduction in Sentence for a Guilty Plea: Definitive Guideline (2007).
- 60.
Criminal Justice and Public Order Act 1994 s. 48, Criminal Justice Act 2003 s. 144.
- 61.
Sentencing Guidelines Council on the Reduction in Sentence for Guilty Plea (December 2004).
- 62.
R. v. Goodyear [2005] EWCA Crim 888.
- 63.
Attorney General’s Reference (No. 1 of 2004)[2004] 1 W.L.R. 2111, R v Simpson[2004] Q.B. 118.
- 64.
Auld 2001, above footnote 57, paras 55–80.
- 65.
Goodyear at para 46.
- 66.
Criminal Justice and Public Order Act 1994s.48.
- 67.
Below, pp. 376–378.
- 68.
- 69.
Bennett and Feldman (1981).
- 70.
R. v. BAE Systems Plc [2010] EW Misc 16.
- 71.
Companies Act 1985 s. 221.
- 72.
Under EU Directive 2004/18/EC Article 45.
- 73.
R. v. Innospec Plc [2010] EW Misc 7 (EWCC); [2010] Lloyd’s Rep. F.C. 462, [2010] Crim. LR 665.
- 74.
Para 7.
- 75.
Para 26.
- 76.
And see para 47.
- 77.
Crime and Courts Act 2013 s. 45.
- 78.
Luna 1997.
- 79.
Finkelstein 1973 at 257.
- 80.
Berman 1999.
- 81.
1 Blackstone, Commentaries, 300.
- 82.
U.S. v Sixty Pipes of Brandy (1825) 23 U.S. (10 Wheat) 421; R v Forty-Nine Casks of Brandy (1836), 3 Hag. Adm. 257, 166 E.R. 401 (H.C. Adm.)
- 83.
United States v Ursery (1996) 518 U.S. 267; 116 S. Ct. 2135.
- 84.
Powers of Criminal Courts (Sentencing) Act 2000 s. 143.
- 85.
Proceeds of Crime Act 2002 s. 294 et sEq.
- 86.
Terrorism Act 2000 s. 23 and 23A.
- 87.
‘[T]he imagination of the mind to do wrong, without an act done, is not punishable in our law.’ Hales v Petit (1562) 1.Plow. 253, 259, 75 E.R. 387, 397; Hitchler 1934, p. 97; 4 Blackstone, Commentaries 21 (‘[A]s no temporal tribunal can search the heart, or fathom the intentions of the mind, otherwise than as they are demonstrated by outward actions, it therefore cannot punish for what it cannot know.’); Perkins 1939, p. 907, all cited in Goldstein 1959, fn. 1. Even the Terrorism Act 2000 s 5 requires ‘preparation’. See, e.g., A.P. Simester et al. 2010 and Chan and Simester 2011.
- 88.
‘Compassing the sovereign’s death’ in treason does not just mean thinking about it. See, e.g., Barrell 2000.
- 89.
Which is what would be required respectively for incitement or conspiracy or the general law on criminal liability for omissions.
- 90.
Terrorism Act 2006 s 3: compare Criminal Attempts Act 1981 s 1.
- 91.
Practice Statement (Judicial Precedent) [1966] 1 W.L.R. 1234.
- 92.
Lobban, supra ch 10 citing Edward Wynne, Eunomus: or Dialogues concerning the Law and Constitution of England (Dublin: James Moore 1791), pp. 70–71.
- 93.
An imaginary number is a number that can be written as a real number multiplied by the imaginary unit i, which is defined by its property i2 = − 1.
- 94.
Taff Vale Railway Co. v. Jenkins [1913] A.C. 1, Barnett v. Cohen [1921] 2 K.B. 461.
- 95.
Criminal Law Revision Committee 1966.
- 96.
It had to be considered by the House of Lords in DPP v Turner [1974] A.C. 357, DPP v Ray [1974] A.C. 370, MPC v Charles [1977] A.C. 177 and R v Lambie [1982] A.C. 449.
- 97.
R v Royle [1971] 1 W.L.R. 1764 per Edmund-Davies L.J.
- 98.
Criminal Law Revision Committee (1977).
- 99.
Theft Act 1978.
- 100.
R v Preddy [1996] A.C. 815, [1996] 2 Cr. App. R. 524.
- 101.
Law Commission 1996.
- 102.
Theft Act 1968 Section 15A.
- 103.
Introduced after Law Commission 2002.
- 104.
First in the Criminal Justice Act 1988, now the Proceeds of Crime Act 2002 s. 76.
- 105.
R. v. Smith (David Cadman) [2001] UKHL 61; [2002] 1 All E.R. 366.
- 106.
Para 20.
- 107.
R. v. Dimsey [2001] UKHL 46; [2002] 1 A.C. 509; R. v. Allen [2001] UKHL 45; [2002] 1 A.C. 509.
- 108.
On appeal from Shakeel Ahmad, Syed Mubarak Ahmed v. R. [2012] EWCA Crim 391.
- 109.
S.340(6).
- 110.
And see Mumford and Alldridge 2005, making a series of points ignored in R. v. K [2007] EWCA Crim 491; [2007] 1 W.L.R. 2262; [2008] S.T.C. 1270; R. v. Anwoir [2008] EWCA Crim 1354; [2009] 1 W.L.R. 980 and R. v. William et al. [2013] EWCA Crim 1262.
- 111.
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Conclusion
Conclusion
The jury equity cases will be popular with people with whom the jury is popular. They are the closest to the Maine/Fuller idea of the constructive fiction. The plea bargaining cases are more problematic. They involve not so much fictions but fact creations. As such they do represent, in criminal law, something of a threat, because the requirements of transparent and open justice should imply that decisions by prosecutors as to the facts of a case and a proposed determination should coincide as closely as possible, so far as it is possible to establish, to the history. Forfeiture is based no less on superstition now than it was in the eighteenth century. Save where there is a clear and sufficient justification, it should be abolished. That justification can never arise from the thing itself. Deeming provisions ought never to be permitted in that part of criminal law that is intended to provide a guide to conduct.
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Alldridge, P. (2015). Some Uses of Legal Fictions in Criminal Law. In: Del Mar, M., Twining, W. (eds) Legal Fictions in Theory and Practice. Law and Philosophy Library, vol 110. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-09232-4_17
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