Summary CRW2601 ALL chapter Notes. MUST READ.
Study Unit 1 (CRW2601) – Introductory Topics 1.5 Criminal Liability 1.5.1 General For a person to be convicted, the following requirements must be satisfied: 1. Their conduct must be recognised in our law as a crime a. Principle of Legality b. Not regarded as an element of a crime 1.5.2 The 4 elements of criminal liability 1. Act or conduct 2. Compliance with the definitional elements of the crime 3. Unlawfulness 4. Culpability Act or Conduct (By conduct we mean and act or omission) Was there conduct on the part of X (the accused)? Usually ‘the requirement of an act”. Conduct can only lead to liability if it is voluntary. X must be capable of subjecting his movements to his will or intellect. Therefore the movements of a sleepwalker are NOT considered to be acts. An omission can only lead to liability if the law imposed a duty on X to act positively and X failed to do so. Compliance with the definitional elements of the crime Definitional elements of the crime means: the concise definition of the type of conduct and the circumstances in which they must take place in order to constitute and offence. E.g. definitional elements of robbery are: “the violent removal and appropriation of movable property corporeal property belonging to another”. X’s conduct must comply with or correspond to the definitional elements. Unlawfulness Just because it complies with the definitional elements does NOT mean it is a crime. E.g. parent hitting child or policeman knocking down a robber are not assault (even if they correspond with the definitional elements of assault). Must be seen in reference to the law in its entirety. Instances when a seeming unlawful act is actually are called grounds of justification (e.g. selfdefence). Culpability There must be grounds on which X can be blamed for his conduct. Shift here from the actual act to the accused’s personal abilities and knowledge (or lack thereof). Culpability requirement comprises 2 questions (sub-requirements): 1. Criminal Capacity a. Ability to appreciate the wrongfulness of his act (distinguish between right and wrong) b. Ability to act in accordance with such appreciation 2. Intent a. X’s act must be intentional or negligent 1.5.3 Sequence of investigation into presence of elements Investigation into the presence of the 4 requirements of criminal liability must be done in a specific order. E.g. was it voluntary? If not
Geschreven voor
- Instelling
- University of South Africa
- Vak
- CRW2601 - General Principles Of Criminal Law
Documentinformatie
- Geüpload op
- 26 november 2021
- Aantal pagina's
- 48
- Geschreven in
- 2021/2022
- Type
- SAMENVATTING
Onderwerpen
-
crw2601 all chapter notes must read
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