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Melbourne University Law Students Society

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Title: Melbourne University Law Students Society


1
Melbourne University Law Students
Society Student Tutorial Service Criminal Law
and Procedure 730-368 Freya Dinshaw
Sponsoring Partners Clayton Utz Mallesons
Stephen Jaques Leo Cussen Institute
2
DISCLAIMER These tutorials and the notes are
designed to assist students in their learning.
The tutorials and the notes are not a substitute
for the course material, nor should they be
relied upon as representative of the subject
matter of the course. Neither the Melbourne
University Law Students Society nor the student
tutor of these tutorials will take responsibility
for any consequences flowing from the use of the
material provided in the tutorials or in the
notes.
3
Tutorials Schedule
  • Email f.dinshaw_at_unimelb.edu.au

4
Assault
  • Plan for today
  • Actual Physical Force
  • Statutory crimes ss 16-18, 24 Crimes Act
  • CL crime applying actual physical force
  • Causing one to apprehend force
  • Statutory s 31 Crimes Act
  • CL crime causing another to apprehend physical
    force
  • Defences
  • Common intercourse, consent, lawful excuse
  • Supporting offences
  • Stalking (S 21A CA), Endangerment (ss 22, 23)
  • Hypothetical

5
Actual Physical Force
  • Statutory crimes
  • Section 16
  • Causing serious injury intentionally (Level 3)
  • Section 17
  • Causing serious injury recklessly (Level 4)
  • Section 18
  • Causing injury intentionally or recklessly
  • Intentional Level 5, Reckless Level 6
  • Section 24
  • Negligently causing serious injury (Level 6)

6
Actual Physical Force
  • Result injury
  • Section 15
  • Includes unconsciousness, hysteria, pain and any
    substantial impairment of bodily function
  • Serious injury includes a combination of injuries
  • Causation
  • Relevant conduct must have caused the injury
    (same as for homicide)

7
Actual Physical Force
  • Common law assault
  • Where A intentionally/recklessly applies actual
    physical force to another persons body
  • 1st of two arms of CL assault (s 320 CA). Max
    penalty 5 years
  • In practise tried as a summary offence Summary
    Offences Act 1966, s 23 (max penalty 3 months)
  • Elements
  • Actus Reus Actual bodily contact
  • Must be voluntary
  • Can be through another instrument (Fagan)
  • Result Unwanted contact
  • Mens Rea Intention, recklessness?
  • Fagan Must be intentional a mere omission to
    act cannot amount to an assault. Question over
    recklessness.
  • Temporal Coincidence (Fagan)
  • Absence of any defence

8
Causing apprehension of force
  • Common law assault
  • Where A intentionally/recklessly causes another
    to apprehend the application of physical force to
    their body
  • 2nd of two arms (s 320 CA or SO Act s 23)
  • Elements
  • Actus Reus The threat of bodily contact or
    prohibited harm
  • Question is mere words or conditional
    threats enough? (Knight)
  • Result V actually apprehends immediate contact
  • Zanker v Vartzokas immediate can mean in near
    future in certain circumstances
  • Knight - Could be over phone
  • Mens Rea Intention, recklessness, negligence
  • Awareness of possibility?
  • Temporal Coincidence
  • Absence of any defence

9
Causing apprehension of force
  • Section 31 Crimes Act
  • Level 6 imprisonment
  • (1) A person who-
  • assaults or threatens to assault another person
    with intent to commit an indictable offence OR
  • assaults or threatens to assault, resists or
    intentionally obstructs- (i) a member of the
    police force in the due execution of dutyOR
  • assaults or threatens to assault a person with
    intent to resist or prevent the lawful
    apprehension or detention of a person-
  • is guilty of an indictable offence.
  • (2) In sub-section (1), assault means the
    direct or indirect application of force by a
    person to the body of, or to clothing or
    equipment worn by, another person where the
    application of force is-
  • without lawful excuse and
  • with intent to inflict or being reckless as to
    the infliction of bodily injury, pain,
    discomfort, damage, insult or deprivation of
    liberty-
  • and results in the infliction of any such
    consequence (whether or not the consequence
    inflicted is the consequence intended or
    foreseen).
  • Different to CL because penalty could be higher,
    and need intent to inflict injury/serious injury
    not just battery

10
Defences
  • Common intercourse
  • Commonplace intentional but non-hostile acts
    such as patting another on the shoulder to
    attract attention or pushing between others to
    alight from a crowded bus do not amount to
    common assault since the victim has given their
    implied consent to the touching (Boughey)
  • Lawful excuse
  • Self-defence
  • Law of arrest (defence if arresting someone)
  • Other excuses medical procedures, sport,
    tattoing, earpiercing (Brown)

11
Defences
  • Is consent a defence?
  • R v Brown
  • Vs consent will negate the assault offence if
    the injury arises from a foreseeable incident in
    a lawful activity in which the V is a consenting
    participant
  • Consent is a defence to the infliction of bodily
    harm in the course of some lawful activities.
    (Lord Templeton)
  • However V cannot consent to infliction of injury
    beyond a certain degree of seriousness
  • Maybe only unlawful if intent to kill or cause
    GBH (Minor)
  • No assault if no hostile intent consent of V
    (Pallante v Stadiums)

12
Supporting Offences
  • Stalking (s 21A Crimes Act)
  • Almost strict liability no requirement that A
    is aware of the harm caused to V
  • Actus reus defined in s 21A(2)
  • Mens rea (s 21A(2))
  • intention to cause physical or mental harm OR
  • intention of arousing apprehension or fear in the
    victim for his/her own safety or that of any
    other person AND
  • the course of conduct engaged in actually did
    have that result
  • (3) Offender also has intentionif that offender
    knows, or in all the particular circumstances
    that offender ought to have understood, that
    engaging in a course of conduct of that kind
    would be likely to cause such harm or arouse such
    apprehension or fear, and it actually did have
    that result

13
Supporting Offences
  • Endangerment (ss 22 and 23 Crimes Act)
  • No requirement that victim knows what is
    happening based on actual danger created
  • Question as to what level of awareness needed?
  • S 22 Conduct endangering life
  • S 23 Conduct endangering persons (serious injury)

14
Hypothetical
  • Based on R v Abdool-Rasool
  • As five children attended Maribyrong Secondary
    College. Her oldest daughter, Rafif, did not
    return home from school four days before the
    offence took place. A was worried and made
    inquiries of the school and the police about
    Rafifs whereabouts but was not told that Rafif
    had been placed in a refuge.
  • A became increasingly distressed and on Monday 5
    August 2008 met with the deputy principal of the
    school (Ms C) in her office. She brought her son
    with her., and carried a handbag and a plastic
    bag. An interpreter was called, despite As
    reasonable command of English.
  • A demanded to know where Rafif was, but Ms C
    regarded this as confidential information and
    said that she did not know. A became distraught,
    began to speak a mixture of languages and began
    slapping her own face, waving her arms and
    pulling her hair. She pulled a can of petrol out
    of the plastic bag she was carrying and poured
    petrol over herself. There was a cigarette
    lighter on the top of the bag which she had
    placed by her side. Ms C testified that A said
    I am going to burn the school, I am going to
    burn you. Some petrol splashed onto the carpet,
    wall and desk, and onto the clothing of Ms C and
    the interpreter.
  • The ambulance was called and the paramedic
    testified that A repeated her threat saying Ill
    kill myself and you and burn the school down.
    The paramedic wrestled the petrol away from A,
    screwed the cap onto it and threw it out the
    window. A was arrested.
  • What crimes has A committed?
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