02CR - Conduct
02CR - Conduct
02CR - Conduct
To qualify as conduct of which the criminal law will take cognizance, the conduct must be (1)
that of a human being, which was (2) voluntary. It may be (3) an act of commission or an
omission. If the conduct results in an unlawful consequence rather than consisting in an
unlawful circumstance, there must be (4) a causal connection between the initial voluntary
conduct and the unlawful consequence. Finally, the conduct, whether in the form of
circumstance or consequence, must be (5) unlawful.
The prosecution must prove beyond reasonable doubt that the accused perpetrated the
requisite unlawful conduct.
For criminal liability the actus reus and mens rea must exist at precisely the same time
(Contemporaneity rule); there cannot be a disjunction between the two.
Conduct
“The law is not concerned with punishing persons with guilty minds unless such persons commit
an act of a criminal nature”
Criminal law does not punish mere evil thoughts, and liability will only arise where the accused
has carried out an “act” or has failed to act where there was a legal duty (omission).
Every crime is defined in terms of human conduct, and to constitute a punishable crime the
physical manifestation of the evil mind must take the form of the conduct that matches the
description in the definition.
There must be a physical manifestation of an evil thought or intention for it to be punishable;
it does not have to be an overt manifestation: uttering words (incitement); agreement
(conspiracy) and combined with the fault element (dolus or culpa) it can be sufficient for
criminal liability.
Slight overt manifestations of evil thoughts are sufficient to constitute a crime in the cases of
incitement and conspiracy.
Although it is only human conduct which can be punished, there can be liability if a person
acted through the agency of animals or objects. It must be proved the person acted through
the animal or object then he/she will be charged as though he/she committed a crime (R v
Eustace 1948).
POSITIVE CONDUCT
There are several definitions that are offered for the human act:
Involving a bodily movement in certain circumstances that brings about certain consequences
1
A muscular contraction that results from an operation of the will
A bodily movement whether voluntary or involuntary.
These definitions are unsatisfactory as they do not distinguish between circumstance and
consequence crimes, do not include omissions and do not account for conspiracy or utterance
of words.
While acting positively in our law can attract liability, so can failing to act
Omissions attract liability exceptionally because the general rule is that it is prima facie lawful
to fail to act, and omissions are only unlawful when there is a legal duty to act.
(There are two components of unlawfulness: legal duty and grounds of justification)
It is not only in the case of omissions that a legal duty arises, but also in the case of
commissions/positive acts where there must be a legal duty in order for it to constitute
unlawfulness.
The difference is, in the case of acts, we presume there is a legal duty to act while in the case
of omissions the legal duty only arises from crystallized manifestations developed through the
common law and the boni mores.
There is a laissez-faire, non-intervention philosophy in our law that persons should not
interfere with others, even if an interference would benefit another and the law does not
impose an obligation on us to act in favour of someone if that act involves a risk for ourselves
(autonomous individuals are responsible for their own well-being)
In some countries there is a general duty to assist others but in South Africa it is prima facie
lawful not to assist someone even if they are in need.
Example: A child in a shallow pool is drowning a passerby does not have a legal duty to
act.
However, there are exceptions to the general rule that omissions are not prima facie wrongful
which are derived from the ultimate test of unlawfulness: the legal convictions of the
community (boni mores) test, which is now informed by the values of the Constitution
(Carmichele v Minister of Safety and Security).
Therefore, something is lawful unless it is deemed otherwise according to the dictates of the
legal convictions of the community.
It is possible that a situation triggers more than one of these instances but in these situations a
legal duty will be recognized by the courts.
The list is not closed or fixed because our courts could recognize additional legal duties as
informed by the Constitution, however the moral duty is taken more seriously now under the
Bill of Rights and the values of the Constitution; in fact it is unlikely that the courts would not
recognize a legal duty.
2
unlawfulness, one is not concerned, in any given case of omission, with the customary
“negligence” of the bonus paterfamilias, but with the question whether, all facts considered,
there was a legal duty to act reasonably.”
“When all circumstances are considered, I think that the duty of the policemen to assist the
plaintiff, was a legal duty, and that, because it was an omission which took place in the course
of duty of the policemen, the defendant is liable…”
OMISSION
Omission is the failure to act positively
General rule: omissions are not prima facie wrongful unless there was a legal duty to act
positively in the circumstances.
Liability for omissions arises from a legal duty to act and the instances in which such legal
duty has been noted and exceptions to the general rule are:
Previously, prior conduct was the only situation in which a legal duty to act could arise but this
changed in Silva’s Fishing v Maweza and Regal v African Superslate wherein it was hinted there
were other instances giving rise to a legal duty:
3
boat or both. The duty to rescue is not special or subject to peculiarly restricted rules. It is
simply a duty to act reasonably and such a duty may arise out of the circumstances of the
case. It will be for the court to decide in each case whether the circumstances are such as
to give rise to a legal duty.”
Wynberg Regional Court in 2001: held a dog owner guilty of attempted murder for failing to
ensure his dogs did not attack human beings.
Examples:
A parent has a special relationship to protect his/her child, so if the parent is aware there is no
fence around the swimming pool and allows the child to play by or swim in the pool without
supervision and the child drowns, the parent is liable.
A policeman is under a legal duty to protect citizens from being assaulted by others (including
other policemen – Ewels)
Gaoler under legal duty to protect prisoners from being assaulted (Mtati)
A policeman has a legal duty to obtain medical attention fro a sick or injured detainee
(Skosana).
NOTE: The legal perception of police as protectors of society has received slight set back in
Kadir where the AD took the restrictive view that police were not responsible for assisting
citizens in civil matters and the primary duty is to maintain law and order and prevent, detect
and investigate crime.
Conversely, since Carmichele v Minister of Safety and Security the Constitutional Court held
the police owe a duty derived from the Constitution to protect the public in general and
women and children specifically, from violent crime. This links to a common-law protective
relationship between the police and public as founded on a Constitutional duty.
4
CASE: R v Chenjere 1960, FC
Facts: The accused had been convicted of the murder of a child and appealed against the
conviction.
Court held: (As an obiter): To cause death by inaction may be criminal if there is a positive
duty to preserve the life of the person in question. The duty arises where the potential
victim is helpless through infancy, senility or illness and the potential killer stands, either
naturally or through the deliberate acceptance of responsibility, in a protective relationship
to the victim. There was no natural relationship between the appellant and the deceased, but I
think that, by taking the mother and a child of that age (2-3) from the protection of the
natural guardian, husband and father, with the apparent intention of forming a new ‘family’
relationship of a permanent or at least prolonged nature, the appellant had deliberately
assumed a protective relationship towards both of them…”
5
The conviction of an attempt to defeat or obstruct the administration of justice was upheld,
due to his omission in that instance.
(5) Statute
Liability also arises if there is a statutory duty to act:
Police Act
Domestic Violence Act
Child Care Act / Children’s Act
Financial Intelligence Centre Act (FICA)
National Road Traffic Act
Inquests Act
Occupational Health and Safety Act
The Constitution, which is now implicit in determining legal duty and the legal convictions of
the community
The legal duty to protect persons form violence has been acknowledged in three subsequent
cases:
Minister Safety and Security v van Duivenboden – concept of “accountability” promotes
protection of fundamental rights
Minsiter Safety and Security v Van Eeden – freedom from violence was protected by the
Constitution and this freedom required the State to protect individuals, especially women,
from violence.
Minister Safety and Security v Hamilton – there is a need to protect a person’s right to bodily
integrity and security of person and this protective duty rests on the State
BUT NOTE: Since the legal convictions of the community is now informed by the Constitution
there does not need to be a specific category of legal duty because it is now implicit in the
boni mores test that the Constitution and Bill of Rights be taken into account.
6
This is not a closed list however, and if a particular set of facts does not fit within one of the
above instances then the legal convictions of the community must be applied to determine a
legal duty to act and hence liability for an omission.
The way around this is to take the view recommended by de Wet and Swanepoel, Visser and
Vorster and Burchell: it is not enough that a mere prohibited situation exists.
The accused must have either done something to bring the state of affairs about or failed to do
something to terminate the situation within a reasonable time, or prior conduct on his/her part
which created the situation.