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THE DEMISE OF “PARASITIC ACCESSORIAL LIABILITY”: SUBSTANTIVE JUDICIAL LAW REFORM, NOT COMMON LAW HOUSEKEEPING
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 25 November 2016
Abstract
In Jogee and Ruddock, the Supreme Court/Privy Council decided that the law on secondary liability took a “wrong turn” in 1984 in the Privy Council's decision in Chan Wing-Siu. Chan Wing-Siu's contemplation/foresight-based fault element for secondary liability was alleged by the Supreme Court/Privy Council to have bucked a legal trend towards requiring that the secondary party intended to encourage or assist every one of the principal's offences. This article presents an alternative history of secondary liability that explains a wider selection of cases from 1553–1984 than were considered in Jogee and Ruddock. On this alternative account, Chan Wing-Siu was simply a more explicit and intellectually honest decision than its predecessors. If this alternative view of history is accepted, the Supreme Court/Privy Council's claim to be merely “correcting” (rather than substantively reforming) the law of secondary liability should be rejected. Doing so would make more critical a question that was side-stepped in Jogee and Ruddock, namely whether this reform should have been undertaken by the judiciary, rather than the legislature.
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References
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84 E.g. R. v Doddridge (1860) 8 Cox. C.C. 335.
85 R. v Scotton (1844) 5 Q.B. 493.
86 R. v Macklin and Murphy (1838) 2 Lewin 225 (recognised as the genesis of PAL in Assisting and Encouraging Crime (Law Com. C.P. No. 131, 1993), para. 1.13).
87 Ibid., at p. 226.
88 R. v Howell (1839) 9 Car. & P. 437, 448, emphasis added.
89 Ibid., at p. 450, emphasis added.
90 See e.g. R. v Bowen (1841) Car. & M. 149 (the jury indicated that the secondary party intended to encourage the collateral crime, but were not told this was a necessary ingredient of liability); R. v Harvey and Caylor (1843) 1 Cox. C.C. 21; R. v Cooper (1846) Q.B. 533.
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125 Ibid., at pp. 202–03.
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127 Smith, “Criminal Law”, p. 294.
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129 Ibid., at p. 81.
130 Ibid.
131 E.g. R. v Hyde (1672) 1 Hale P.C. 537.
132 See similarly R. v Short (1932) 23 Cr. App. R. 170.
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138 Ibid., at p. 155.
139 Ibid., at pp. 155–56.
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149 R. v Grant (1954) 38 Cr. App. R. 107.
150 Cf. Smith, Complicity, p. 217.
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156 R. v Betty (1963) 48 Cr. App. R. 6.
157 Cf. Jogee and Ruddock [2016] UKSC 8; [2016] UKPC 7; [2016] 2 W.L.R. 681, at [30].
158 R. v Smith [1963] 1 W.L.R. 1200.
159 Ibid., at pp. 1205–06, emphasis added.
160 See R. v Rahman [2008] UKHL 45; [2009] 1 A.C. 129, at [13].
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165 Ibid., at pp. 118–19.
166 Jogee and Ruddock [2016] UKSC 8; [2016] UKPC 7; [2016] 2 W.L.R. 681, at [64].
167 Cf. Wilson and Ormerod, “Joint Enterprise Reform”, p. 8 (arguing that Anderson and Morris involved establishing “from an objective point of view, [what the secondary party] was signing up to”).
168 Anderson and Morris, [1966] 2 Q.B. 110, 120, emphasis added.
169 Criminal Justice Act 1967, s. 8.
170 Criminal Law Act 1967, s. 1.
171 R. v Lovesay [1970] 1 Q.B. 352.
172 Ibid., at p. 356.
173 Ibid. See further R. v Dunbar [1988] Crim. L.R. 693. Cf. Smith, Complicity, p. 219.
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177 J.C. Smith [1976] Crim. L.R. 570, 571.
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180 R. v Penfold (1980) 71 Cr. App. R. 4.
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187 Jogee and Ruddock [2016] UKSC 8; [2016] UKPC 7; [2016] 2 W.L.R. 681, at [44]. See also at [67].
188 See the discussion in ibid., at para. [43].
189 Ibid., at para. [44].
190 Ibid., at para. [87].
191 Ibid., at para. [67].
192 The Australian case of R. v Miller (1980) 1 A. Crim. R. 165 was also cited, but is irrelevant: the parties’ common purpose was lawful.
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194 Jogee and Ruddock [2016] UKSC 8; [2016] UKPC 7; [2016] 2 W.L.R. 681, at [62].
195 Ibid., at para. [74].
196 Ibid., at para. [79].
197 Chan Wing-Siu [1985] A.C. 168, 175.
198 Ibid., at 170–71.
199 Jogee and Ruddock [2016] UKSC 8; [2016] UKPC 7; [2016] 2 W.L.R. 681, at [65]–[66]. Cf. Krebs, B., “ Mens Rea in Joint Enterprise: A Role for Endorsement?” (2015) 74 C.L.J. 480, 493–95CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
200 Chan Wing-Siu [1985] A.C. 168, 175.
201 Powell and English [1999] 1 A.C. 1 (seen by Smith as a “valuable clarification”: [1998] Crim. L.R. 48, 49).
202 Ibid., at pp. 10–11.
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208 E.g. R. v Smith [1988] Crim. L.R. 616.
209 Ward (1987) 85 Cr. App. R. 71; R. v Slack [1989] Q.B. 775 (though the court's analysis is clouded by talk of “conditional intention”); R. v Hyde [1991] 1 Q.B. 134. See further Virgo, G.J., “Accessory to Murder – Foresight or Intention?” (1990) 49 C.L.J. 6CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
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212 Smith, Complicity, p. 220. See similarly Assisting and Encouraging Crime (Law Com. C.P. No. 131, 1993), para. 2.113; Giles, “Joint Enterprise”, pp. 385–86.
213 See further Wilson and Ormerod, “Joint Enterprise Reform”, at 26, citing the departures from Hyam v DPP [1975] A.C. 55 (on murder) and R. v Caldwell [1982] A.C. 341 (on recklessness) as examples of previous judicially created injustices being resolved by the courts. Yet, Hyam was a decision on far thinner doctrinal ice than Chan Wing-Siu and stood for a far shorter time, and Caldwell straightforwardly misinterpreted Parliament's intention.
214 See Supreme Court Practice Direction 3.1.3; Practice Statement (Judicial Precedent) [1966] 1 W.L.R. 1234.
215 Jogee and Ruddock [2016] UKSC 8; [2016] UKPC 7; [2016] 2 W.L.R. 681, at [85].
216 See C v DPP [1996] 1 A.C. 1; F. Stark, “R. v Howe (1987)” in P. Handler, H. Mares and I. Williams (eds.), Landmark Cases in Criminal Law (Oxford, forthcoming).
217 Jogee and Ruddock [2016] UKSC 8; [2016] UKPC 7; [2016] 2 W.L.R. 681, at [3].
218 See most recently Participating in Crime (Law Com. No. 305, 2007) paras. 3.123–3.162.
219 The Government has not responded positively to prompts to reform the law: see Krebs, “Endorsement”, p. 482.
220 Jogee and Ruddock [2016] UKSC 8; [2016] UKPC 7; [2016] 2 W.L.R. 681, at [81]–[86].
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