Criminal Law - DPP v. Beard
Criminal Law - DPP v. Beard
Criminal Law - DPP v. Beard
law
CASE COMMENT ON
BY:Pragalbh Bhardwaj
2012/BBA/034
Table of Contents
Facts:.........................................................................................................................................3
Issues framed by the court:......................................................................................................4
Issues overlooked by the court:...............................................................................................4
Decision of the court:...............................................................................................................5
Whether the case was a departure from earlier precedents:................................................8
Analysis of the case:...............................................................................................................10
Facts:
The appellant or the accused, Arthur Beard, whilst intoxicated raped young, 13 year old, Ivy
Wood and in the process of doing so, he put his hand over her mouth and his thumb on her
throat to stop her from screaming. As a result of that, she died of suffocation. There was
evidence that he had been drinking. It was a case of death caused during rape. The sole
defence was a plea of drunkenness. Beard's position at trial was that he was only guilty of
manslaughter as his self-induced intoxication rendered him incapable of knowing that what he
was doing was likely to inflict serious injury. The case eventually found its way to Britain's
House of Lords.
as a whole the summing up did not amount to a misdirection. It was therefore held by the
court that the conviction of murder should be restored. Decision of the Court of Criminal
Appeal reversed.
In the present the case, the death resulted from two acts the rape and the act of violence
causing suffocation, these acts cannot be regarded separately and independently of each other.
When the case moved to the House of Lords, Lord Birkenhead, who was the
judge in the case of DPP v. Beard, set out the three propositions which have
been so frequently referred to in cases involving intoxication and criminal
behaviour:
1. The first proposition as in this regard, as laid down by Lord Birkenhead, is
that any form of insanity, whether produced by inebriation or otherwise, is a
defence to the crime charged. The distinction between the defences of
insanity in the true sense caused by excessive drinking and the defence of
drunkenness which produces a condition such that the drunken man's mind
becomes incapable of forming a specific intention, has been preserved
throughout the cases.
The insane person cannot be convicted of a crime but, upon a verdict of
insanity, is ordered to be detained. In these cases, the cause of the insanity
is of no importance.
If, as the result of alcoholic excess, actual disorder of the mind in fact
supervenes, it renders as complete an answer to a criminal charge as
insanity induced by any other cause whatever that maybe.
2. According to the second proposition laid down by Lord Birkenhead, in
order to determine whether or not the person had the intent, evidence of
drunkenness which furnishes the person who has been accused incapable of
forming the specific intent essential to establish the crime should be taken
into consideration with the other facts proved.
In Beards case, Lord Birkenhead stated that there was a distinction between the defence of
insanity in its true sense caused by excessive drinking and the defence of drunkenness
which produces a condition such that a drunken mans mind becomes incapable of forming a
specific intention. Beards case also marked another step in the process of formalization of
the law on intoxicated offending. This step entailed the explication of the relationship
between intoxication and criminal fault via the elaboration of the meaning of the term
specific intent.
In Beards case, the court stated that, where a specific intent is an essential element in the
offence, evidence of a state of drunkenness rendering the accused incapable of forming such
an intention should be taken into consideration in determining whether he or she had in fact
formed intent.
The Beard approach to intoxication, fault, and specific intent was adopted in subsequent
appellate judgments, including by the House of Lords in DPP v. Majewski.4
The judges in the case said that it was only necessary to prove that the violent act causing
death was done in furtherance of the crime of rape; their decision was that drunkenness
could be no defence unless it could be established that Beard at the time of committing the
rape was so inebriated that he was incapable of forming the intent to commit it.