Tuberville V Savage
Tuberville V Savage
Tuberville V Savage
Facts
A man placed his hand on his sword and told another, “If it
were not assize-time, I would not take such language.” The
justices of assize were in town.
Issue
Held
The Court held that an assault requires both (1) the intention
and (2) the act of assault. Even an act of, for example, striking a
man, without an intention to assault, does not constitute an
assault. Accordingly, the Court held that the facts did not give
rise as the man merely stipulated that he would have the
intention to assault if it were not assize-time. It was, indeed,
assize-time and the man’s declaration expressly stipulated that
he would not and did not intend to commit an assault. Thus,
there could have been no assault as there were no intention
nor act of assault, nor imminent threat thereof.
R v Halliday (1889) 61 LT 701, CCR H threatened his wife W
with violence and frightened her to such an extent that she
jumped from a bedroom window to escape his threats and
injured herself quite seriously: the Court for Crown Cases
Reserved upheld H’s conviction for maliciously inflicting
grievous bodily harm. W’s action was a foreseeable result of H’s
unlawful act, and he could therefore be regarded as having
caused her injuries. There was no suggestion that as W’s
husband H had any right to use violence against her
TRESPASS TO THE PERSON LECTURE
ASSAULT
It was said in R v Meade and Belt (1823) 1 Lew CC 184, that ‘no
words or singing are equivalent to an assault’. However, the
House of Lords have more recently stated that an assault can
be committed by the Court of Appeal in R v Constanza [1997]
Crim LR 576.
BATTERY
FALSE IMPRISONMENT
This tort protects a person from restraint and does not give a
person absolute freedom of movement. Thus, if there is a
reasonable escape route there will be no false imprisonment.
See:
However, Lord Griffiths did state in the latter case: ‘If a person
is unaware that he has been falsely imprisoned and has
suffered no harm, he can normally expect to recover no more
than nominal damages …’.
Can an omission to release a person constitute false
imprisonment? Not according to the House of Lords, at least
where a person has consented to some degree of constraint on
their movement. See:
DEFENCES
CONSENT
LAWFUL ARREST
SELF DEFENCE
NECESSITY
Lord Goff went on to say that the present case was concerned
with action taken to preserve the life, health or well-being of
another who is unable to consent to it. The basic
requirements, applicable in these cases of necessity, were
“not only (1) must there be a necessity to act when it is not
practicable to communicate with the assisted person, but also
(2) the action taken must be such as a reasonable person
would in all circCASES ON NON-FATAL OFFENCES
she was told that it was in fact a replica. The court held that the
victim had
The defendant placed his hand on his sword hilt and told the
victim, “If
intended to rape her and as the car was moving, she opened
the door and jumped
saying or doing.
harm.
The Court of Appeal held that the issue before the Court was
whether it was
that the defendant lived near the victim and she thought that
something could
happen at any time. The judge was entitled to leave to the jury
the question
to find that she did. The Court rejected the defence submission
that a person
that the assault relied on was that constituted by the last letter.
The defendant blocked the exit doors of a theatre, put out the
lights in a
passageway, and shouted ‘Fire!’ as the theatre-goers were
leaving the
Roskill stated:
harm.”
R v Mowatt [1968] 1 QB 421.
stated:
does import upon the part of the person who unlawfully inflicts
the wound or
other grievous bodily harm an awareness that his act may have
the consequence of
causing some physical harm to some other person… It is quite
unnecessary that
the accused should have foreseen that his unlawful act might
cause physical harm
way which would have been acceptable with an older child, but
not with one so
Lords held that he could not be liable under s20 as he had not
foreseen the risk
of any harm. It was not necessary under s20 that he foresee the
grievous bodily
reduced to s47.
his face and chest. The Court of Appeal held that in order to
establish the
Held:
Read v Coker
Court of Common Pleas
Citations: (1853) 13 Common Bench Reports 850; 138 ER 1437.
Facts
The claimant came to the defendant’s workshop to discuss a
business dispute involving some of the goods in the workshop.
He refused to leave when asked. The defendant and his
employees surrounded the claimant and threatened to break
his neck if he did not leave. Fearing violence, the claimant left.
The claimant later returned to seize goods from the
defendant’s workshop. The defendant called the police, who
arrested the claimant.
The claimant later sued the defendant for assault and false
imprisonment. The defendant argued that he had authority for
his acts, relying on certain statutes which existed at the time.
However, at the time he acted he was not aware that those
statutes existed. The defendant also argued that his words
were not an assault, since the wording was conditional: the
claimant could avoid the threat by doing as the defendant
demanded and leaving.
Issue(s)
1. Was the defendant’s threat to break the claimant’s neck
an assault?
2. Could the defendant rely on defences contained in a
statute he was unaware of?
Decision
The Court of Common Pleas held in favour of the claimant. The
threat was an assault. The defendant was entitled to rely on the
statutes notwithstanding he did not knew of them.
Facts
Issues
Held
On this basis, it was held that Fagan’s crime was not the refusal
to move the car but that having driven on to the foot of the
officer and decided not to cease the act, he had established a
continual act of battery. This meant that actus reus and mens
rea were present and as such, an assault was committed.
Fagan’s conviction was upheld.
Facts
Issue
(1) Whether the man’s words alone, without any physical
action against the victim, could constitute an assault and (2)
whether there was an apprehended fear of immediate and
unlawful violence in order to constitute an assault
under Offences Against a Person Act 1861 s. 47.
Held
Held:
His conviction was upheld. Silence can amount to an assault
and psychiatric injury can amount to bodily harm.
Lord Steyn
"It is to assault in the form of an act causing the victim to
fear an immediate application of force to her that I must
turn. Counsel argued that as a matter of law an assault can
never be committed by words alone and therefore it
cannot be committed by silence. The premise depends on
the slenderest authority, namely, an observation by
Holroyd J. to a jury that "no words or singing are
equivalent to an assault": Meade's and Belt's case 1 (1823)
1 Lew. C.C. 184. The proposition that a gesture may
amount to an assault, but that words can never suffice, is
unrealistic and indefensible. A thing said is also a thing
done. There is no reason why something said should be
incapable of causing an apprehension of immediate
personal violence, e.g. a man accosting a woman in a dark
alley saying "come with me or I will stab you." I would,
therefore, reject the proposition that an assault can never
be committed by words."
"The proposition that the Victorian legislator when enacting
sections 18, 20 and 47 of the Act 1861, would not have had in
mind psychiatric illness is no doubt correct. Psychiatry was in its
infancy in 1861. But the subjective intention of the draftsman is
immaterial. The only relevant enquiry is as to the sense of the
words in the context in which they are used. Moreover the Act
of 1861 is a statute of the "always speaking" type: the statute
must be interpreted in the light of the best current scientific
appreciation of the link between the body and psychiatric
injury. For these reasons I would, therefore, reject the
challenge to the correctness of Chan-Fook [1994] 1 W.L.R. 689.
In my view the ruling in that case was based on principled and
cogent reasoning and it marked a sound and essential
clarification of the law. I would hold that "bodily harm" in
sections 18, 20 and 47 must be interpreted so as to include
recognizable psychiatric illness
Facts
Jim Smith (S) was ordered by a police constable to stop his car
which contained stolen goods, however S accelerated instead.
The police constable jumped onto the car, but fell off and was
killed by another oncoming car after S violently swerved the
car. S was convicted of murder and appealed to the Court of
Criminal Appeal.
Issue
Held
Facts
The defendant, Mr Miller, had been the husband of the victim
who, at the time of the alleged offence, had left the respondent
and filed a petition for divorce on grounds of adultery. During
this period, the defendant met with the victim and had
intercourse with her against her will. This caused the victim to
suffer significant mental distress. The defendant was charged
with both rape and, in the alternative, assault occasioning
actual bodily harm under section 47 OAPA. An appeal was
brought on the basis that the defendant had no case to answer;
a husband could not rape his wife, as a wife impliedly
consented to intercourse for the duration of the marriage.
Issues
Held