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United Kingdom House of Lords Decisions


You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom House of Lords Decisions >> R v Savage [1991] UKHL 15 (07 November 1991)
URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKHL/1991/15.html
Cite as: [1991] 94 Cr App R 193, [1992] 4 All ER 698, [1992] AC 699, [1992] 1 AC 699, [1991] UKHL 15, [1991] 94 Cr App Rep 193

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JISCBAILII_CASE_CRIME

    Parliamentary Archives,
    HL/PO/JU/18/251

    Regina v. Savage (Appellant) (On Appeal from the Court of

    Appeal (Criminal Division))

    JUDGMENT

    Die Jovis 7° Novembris 1991

    Upon Report from the Appellate Committee to whom was
    referred the Cause Regina against Savage, That the Committee
    had heard Counsel as well on Tuesday the 2nd as on Wednesday
    the 3rd and Thursday the 4th days of July last, upon the
    Petition and Appeal of Susan Savage of 33 Bamburgh Parade,
    Spennymoor, County Durham, praying that the matter of the
    Order set forth in the Schedule thereto, namely an Order of
    Her Majesty's Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) of the 28th
    day of November 1990, might be reviewed before Her Majesty the
    Queen in Her Court of Parliament and that the said Order might
    be reversed, varied or altered or that the Petitioner might
    have such other relief in the premises as to Her Majesty the
    Queen in Her Court of Parliament might seem meet; as upon the
    case of the Director of Public Prosecutions (on behalf of Her
    Majesty) lodged in answer to the said Appeal; and due
    consideration had this day of what was offered on either side
    in this Cause:

    It is Ordered and Adjudged, by the Lords Spiritual and
    Temporal in the Court of Parliament of Her Majesty the Queen
    assembled, That the said Order of Her Majesty's Court of
    Appeal (Criminal Division) of the 28th day of November 1990
    complained of in the said Appeal be, and the same is hereby,
    Affirmed and that the said Petition and Appeal be, and the
    same is hereby, dismissed this House.

    Cler: Parliamentor:

    Judgment: 7 November 1991

    HOUSE OF LORDS

    REGINA

    v.

    SAVAGE
    (APPELLANT)

    (ON APPEAL FROM THE COURT OF APPEAL (CRIMINAL

    DIVISION))

    DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC PROSECUTIONS
    (APPELLANT)

    v.

    PARMENTER
    (RESPONDENT)

    (ON APPEAL FROM THE COURT OF APPEAL (CRIMINAL

    DIVISION))

    Lord Keith of Kinkel
    Lord Brandon of Oakbrook
    Lord Ackner
    Lord Jauncey of Tullichettle
    Lord Lowry


    LORD KEITH OF KINKEL

    My Lords,

    I have had the opportunity of considering in draft the
    speech to be delivered by my noble and learned friend, Lord
    Ackner. I agree with it, and for the reasons he gives would
    dismiss the appeal in Savage's case and allow that in Parmenter's
    case to the extent which he proposes.

    LORD BRANDON OF OAKBROOK

    My Lords,

    For the reasons given in the speech of my noble and learned
    friend. Lord Ackner, I would dismiss the appeal in Savage's case
    and allow the appeal in Parmenter's case but only to the extent
    indicated by him.


    LORD ACKNER

    My Lords,

    These two appeals have been heard together, because they
    each raise the issue of the mental element which the prosecution
    have to establish in relation to offences under two sections of the
    Offences Against the Person Act 1861 24 & 25 Vict. c. 100 (the
    "Act") viz. section 20, unlawfully and maliciously wounding or
    inflicting grievous bodily harm and section 47, assault occasioning
    actual bodily harm.

    Reg. v. Savage;

    The facts and the decision of the Court of Appeal

    On 3 October 1989 in the Crown Court at Durham the
    appellant, Mrs. Savage was indicted and convicted on a single
    count of unlawful wounding contrary to section 20 of the Act, the
    particulars of the offence being that on 31 March 1989 she
    unlawfully and maliciously wounded Miss Beal. She was ordered to
    undertake 120 hours of community service. The victim, Miss Beal,
    was a former girlfriend of Mrs. Savage's husband. There had been
    some bad feeling between these two young women, although they
    had never previously met. On the evening of 31 March 1989 they
    were both in the same public house, but not together. Mrs.
    Savage pushed her way through to the table where Miss Beal was
    sitting with some friends. She had in her hand a pint glass which
    was nearly full of beer. Having said "Nice to meet you darling",
    she then threw the contents of the glass over Miss Beal.
    Unfortunately, not only was Miss Beal soaked by the beer, but,
    contrary to Mrs. Savage's evidence, she must have let go of the
    glass, since it broke and a piece of it cut Miss Beal's wrist. The
    Jury, by their verdict, concluded either that the appellant had
    deliberately thrown not only the beer but also the glass at Miss
    Beal or, alternatively, that while deliberately throwing the beer
    over Miss Beal, the glass had accidentally slipped from her grasp
    and it, or a piece of it, had struck Miss Beal's wrist, but with no
    intention that the glass should hit or cut Miss Beal.

    The material words of section 20 read as follows:

    "20. Whosoever shall unlawfully and maliciously wound or
    inflict any grievous bodily harm upon any other person . . ."

    In the course of his summing up the recorder said:

    "It is alleged that on 31 March Mrs. Savage unlawfully and
    maliciously wounded Tracey Beal. What does this mean?
    First of all it means that you must find Susan Savage did
    some unlawful action, unlawful in the sense that it was not
    in self-defence and it was not a mere accident; malicious in
    the sense that it was deliberate and aimed against Tracey
    Beal and that as a result of that unlawful, deliberate act
    aimed against Tracey Beal, Tracey suffered the wound . . .
    She went up to her . . . and threw deliberately the contents
    of a pint glass at her. That is an assault, that is an
    unlawful action aimed deliberately against Tracey Beal.

    - 2 -

    Mrs. Savage admits it ... If you were sure that in
    throwing the liquid from the glass she let go of the glass
    unintentionally, but in doing this unlawful act she let go of
    the glass and it struck Miss Beal, then that is a
    consequence of her unlawful act. If a wound resulted from
    it then that is unlawful wounding."

    In the Court of Appeal reference was made to Reg. v.
    Mowatt
    [1968] 1 QB 421 and to the following statement in the
    judgment of Diplock L.J., giving the judgment of the court at p.
    426C:

    "In the offence under section 20, and in the alternative
    verdict which may be given on a charge under section 18,
    for neither of which is any specific intent required, the
    word 'maliciously' 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. That
    is what is meant by 'the particular kind of harm' in the
    citation from Professor Kenny. It is quite unnecessary that
    the accused should have foreseen that his unlawful act
    might cause physical harm of the gravity described in the
    section, i.e., a wound or serious physical injury. It is
    enough that he should have foreseen that some physical
    harm to some person, albeit of a minor character, might
    result.

    "In many cases in instructing a jury upon a charge under
    section 20, or upon the alternative verdict which may be
    given under that section when the accused is charged under
    section 18, it may be unnecessary to refer specifically to
    the word 'maliciously'."

    The Court of Appeal observed that despite doubts which had
    been expressed about the above statement of the law, it was
    binding on the court and that the test imported by the words
    "maliciously" is a subjective and not an objective one. In the
    opinion of the Court of Appeal, it accordingly followed that the
    recorder was wrong to direct the jury that "malicious" meant
    deliberate and aimed at Tracey Beal with the result that a wound
    occurred. The recorder omitted to direct the jury that they had
    to find that Mrs. Savage foresaw that some physical harm would
    follow as a result of what she did. The question as to whether
    she foresaw that her act was likely to cause some harm, other
    than wetting Miss Beal with the beer, was a question they should
    have been asked to consider. In view of this misdirection, the
    Court of Appeal quashed the verdict and then went on to consider
    whether they should substitute another verdict. The powers of the
    Court of Appeal so to do are contained in section 3 of the
    Criminal Appeal Act 1968 which reads as follows:

    (1) This section applies on an appeal against conviction,
    where the appellant has been convicted of an offence and
    the jury could on the indictment have found him guilty of
    some other offence, and on the finding of the jury it
    appears to the Court of Appeal that the jury must have
    been satisfied of facts which proved him guilty of the other
    offence.

    - 3 -

    "(2) The court may, instead of allowing or dismissing the
    appeal, substitute for the verdict found by the jury a
    verdict of guilty of the other offence, and pass such
    sentence in substitution for the sentence passed at the trial
    as may be authorised by law for the other offence, not
    being a sentence of greater severity."

    It was, of course, common ground that Mrs. Savage was
    guilty of common assault. But in Reg. v. Mearns [1991] 1 Q.B. 82
    the Court of Appeal had concluded that as a result of the coming
    into force of the Criminal Justice Act 1988 sections 39 and 40,
    common assault is no longer a possible alternative verdict on a
    trial on indictment for a more serious offence unless, originally or
    by way of amendment, a specific count alleging common assault is
    added to the indictment. There was no such count in the
    indictment.

    The court then considered the offence under section 47,
    which is an indictable offence. The material words of this section
    are as follows:

    "47. Whosoever shall be convicted upon an Indictment of
    any assault occasioning actual bodily harm shall be liable . .

    Could the jury have found Mrs. Savage guilty of that
    offence?

    Section 6(3) of the Criminal Law Act 1967 provides:

    "Where, on a person's trial on indictment for any offence
    except treason or murder, the jury find him not guilty of
    the offence specifically charged in the indictment, but the
    allegations in the indictment amount to or include (expressly
    or by implication) an allegation of another offence falling
    within the jurisdiction of the court of trial, the jury may
    find him guilty of that other offence or of an offence of
    which he could be found guilty on an indictment specifically
    charging that other offence."

    This raised two questions for the court:

    1. Did the allegation of wounding import or include an
      allegation of assault? In the view of the Court of Appeal
      (Note) [1990] 2 W.L.R. 418, 421E 'in the ordinary way,
      unless there are some quite extraordinary facts, it inevitably
      does'.

    2. Did that assault, albeit unintentional, occasion actual bodily
      harm? The jury might have concluded that Mrs. Savage
      accidentally let go of her glass, but the glass shattered on
      the table or that in the action of throwing she, while still
      holding it, broke it on the table and then a piece of the
      broken glass cut Miss Seal. However in neither case had it
      been suggested that as a matter of causation, the assault
      did not occasion the actual bodily harm, albeit
      unintentionally. Nevertheless, counsel for Mrs. Savage
      invited the court to decide that some element of
      recklessness had to be established for the offence of assault

    - 4 -

    occasioning actual bodily harm to be proved. The Court of
    Appeal rejected this invitation in the following terms [1991]
    2 W.L.R. 418, 421-422:


    "That submission, in our view, seeks to relate the concept
    of recklessness to the wrong element of the offence. The
    mens rea required is that which is a necessary element in
    the assault. In this case, the assault was the intentional
    throwing of the beer over Tracey. Thus, there was no need
    to consider recklessness. The remaining question is, did the
    assault occasion the actual bodily harm which Tracey
    undoubtedly suffered? This is a question of causation, in
    relation to which recklessness is irrelevant. The test is
    objective - was the cut on Tracey Seal's wrist a natural
    consequence of the appellant's deliberate action in throwing
    the beer? In our view the answer to this question could
    only be 'Yes'."

    The certified questions

    The Court of Appeal, accordingly, substituted a verdict of
    guilty of assault occasioning actual bodily harm, contrary to
    section 47 of the Act. On 28 November 1990 the Court of Appeal
    gave leave to appeal, certifying the following points of law to be
    of general public importance:

    "(1) Whether a verdict of guilty of assault occasioning
    actual bodily harm is a permissible alternative verdict on a
    count alleging unlawful wounding contrary to section 20 of
    the Offences Against the Persons Act 1861.

    "(2) Whether a verdict of guilty of assault occasioning
    actual bodily harm can be returned upon proof of an assault
    and of the fact that actual bodily harm was occasioned by
    the assault.

    "(3) If it is proved that an assault has been committed
    and that actual bodily harm has resulted from that assault,
    whether a verdict of assault occasioning actual bodily harm
    may be returned in the absence of proof that the defendant
    intended to cause some actual bodily harm or was reckless
    as to whether such harm would be caused.

    It is perhaps convenient at this stage to observe that in
    order for Mrs. Savage to succeed in relation to the first certified
    question your Lordships must conclude that the decision of this
    House in Reg. v. Wilson (Clarence) [1984] 1 A.C. 242 was wrong.
    As regards the second certified question, that the intent required
    in section 47 relates not only to the assault, but also to the
    consequences of the assault this clearly overlaps with the third
    certified question.

    Reg. v. Parmenter

    The facts and the decision of the Court of Appeal;

    Paul Parmenter was born on 8 February 1988. Between that
    date and 11 May 1988 his father, the appellant, Philip Mark
    Parmenter caused his baby son to suffer injuries to the boney

    - 5 -

    structures of the legs and right forearm. He was indicted on
    eight counts, six represented three-paired alternatives, laid under
    section 18 and 20 of the Act, the seventh count alleged a separate
    offence under section 20, and the eighth count to which he
    pleaded guilty from the outset, alleged cruelty to a person under
    the age of 16. The only issue before the jury was whether Mr.
    Parmenter had acted with the relevant intent, his case being that
    he did not realise that the way he handled the child would cause
    injury. At the conclusion of the trial in February 1989 at the
    Chelmsford Crown Court, Mr. Parmenter was acquitted of the
    three section 18 offences and convicted of all four section 20
    offences.

    On the crucial issue of intent, the trial judge directed the
    jury as follows:

    "... Let me tell you what "maliciously" means. First of
    all, let me tell you what it does not mean. If you and I
    meet in the corridor outside and we were discussing the
    word maliciously, one I rather expect would say, and I
    expect you would too, it means something like spiteful,
    something like that. That does not apply in the framework
    of this section of the Act of Parliament. Let me tell you
    what maliciously means, because in the circumstances of
    this case it is very important indeed. It is quite
    unnecessary that the accused should have foreseen that his
    unlawful act might cause physical harm of the type
    described in the section - and here comes the important
    part - it is enough that he should have foreseen that some
    physical harm to some person, albeit of a minor character,
    might result. Two of you are writing it down, I see. I say
    it again, like a shipping forecast; it is enough that he should
    have foreseen that some physical harm to some person,
    albeit of a minor character might result. That is what you
    have to consider. So, members of the jury, the questions
    that you have to ask yourselves on counts four, five and six
    only arise if he is not guilty on counts one, two and three,
    and they are these. Are we sure that he inflicted grievous
    bodily harm of the nature described in the Indictment? If
    the answer to the question is yes then: are we sure that he
    should have foreseen that some physical harm, albeit of a
    minor character, might result? If the answer to that
    question is yes, he is guilty. If the answer to that question
    is no, he is not guilty".

    This direction was founded on Reg. v. Mowatt, [1968] 1 Q.B.
    421 and in particular the following passage in the judgment at pp.
    425-426:

    "No doubt upon these facts the jury should be instructed
    that they must be satisfied before convicting the accused
    that he was aware that physical harm to some human being
    was a possible consequence of his unlawful act in wrenching
    off the gas meter. In the words of the court, 'maliciously
    in a statutory crime postulates foresight of consequence',
    and upon this proposition we do not wish to cast any doubt.
    But the court in that case also expressed approval obiter of
    a more general statement by Professor Kenny [Kenny's
    Outline of Criminal Law, 18th ed. (1962), p. 202] which runs
    as follows:

    - 6 -

    'in any statutory definition of a crime, "malice" must
    be taken not in the old yague sense of wickedness in
    general, but as requiring either (1) an actual intention
    to do the particular kind of harm that in fact was
    done, or (2) recklessness as to whether such harm
    should occur or not (i.e. the accused has foreseen
    that the particular kind of harm might be done, and
    yet has gone on to take the risk of it). It is neither
    limited to, nor does it indeed require, any ill will
    towards the person injured'.

    "This generalisation is not in our view, appropriate to the
    specific alternative statutory offences described in sections
    18 and 20 of the Offences against the Person Act, 1861,
    and section 5 of the Prevention of Offences Act, 1851, and
    if used in that form in the summing-up is liable to bemuse
    the jury. In section 18 the word 'maliciously' adds nothing.
    The intent expressly required by that section is more
    specific than such element of foresight of consequences as
    is implicit in the word 'maliciously' and in directing a jury
    about an offence under this section the word 'maliciously' is
    best ignored.

    "In the offence under section 20, and in the alternative
    verdict which may be given on a charge under section 18,
    for neither of which is any specific intent required, the
    word 'maliciously' 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. That
    is what is meant by 'the particular kind of harm' in the
    citation from Professor Kenny. It is quite unnecessary that
    the accused should have foreseen that his unlawful act
    might cause physical harm of the gravity described in the
    section, i.e., a wound or serious physical injury. It is
    enough that he should have foreseen that some physical
    harm to some person, albeit of a minor character, might
    result".

    It will be recalled that the final paragraph of the above
    quotation is that to which the Court of Appeal made specific
    reference in the Savage case.

    The Court of Appeal then observed that at first sight it
    appeared that the direction given by the trial judge was quite
    unexceptionable, containing as it did a verbatim quotation from
    Mowatt. However, on closer inspection it was apparent that he
    had inadvertently imparted a fundamental change to the principle
    laid down in Mowatt. The Court of Appeal [1991] 2 W.L.R. 408,
    411-412, said:

    "It seems to us clear, when the judgment in Mowatt is read
    as a whole, that the court was stating two propositions, one
    positive and one negative. The positive proposition was that
    to found a conviction under section 20 it must be proved
    that the defendant actually foresaw that physical harm to
    some other person would be the consequence of his act.
    This is subject to a negative qualification, that the

    - 7 -

    defendant need not actually have foreseen that the harm
    would be as grave as that which in the event occurred.

    "If one now returns to the summing up in the present case
    we find the judge posing the crucial question as follows:-

    'Are we sure that he inflicted grievous bodily harm of
    the nature described in the Indictment? If the
    answer to the question is yes, then: are we sure that
    he should have foreseen that some physical harm,
    albeit of a minor character, might result? If the
    answer to that question is yes, he is guilty. If the
    answer to that question is no, he is not guilty'.

    "In the judgment in Mowatt the words '. . . should have
    foreseen . . .' were, we believe, intended to bear the same
    meaning as 'did foresee' or simply 'foresaw'. Read out of
    context, however, the ordinary meaning of the words 'should
    have' is 'ought to have'. By reading the passage to the
    jurors in isolation from its context the judge thus
    inadvertently created a real risk that the jurors would
    believe that they were being directed to ask themselves, not
    whether the appellant actually foresaw that his acts would
    cause injury, but whether he ought to have foreseen it.
    Indeed we would be prepared to go further and say that this
    is the natural understanding of the passage which we have
    just quoted. At any rate, whether we are right in this or
    not there was an ambiguity which went to the heart of the
    case, for while there was a possibility that the jury might
    feel doubt about whether the appellant actually intended to
    injure the child, there seems on the evidence to have been
    little room for question that, judged objectively, he 'should
    have' realised that what he did would lead to injury."

    The Court of Appeal accordingly quashed the convictions on
    the four counts under section 20 (the trial judge had in fact fallen
    into the same error as that made by the judge in Reg. v.
    Grimshaw
    [1984] Crim. L.R. 108. The Court then had to consider
    whether they could and should substitute for the convictions which
    they had quashed, alternative verdicts of guilty under section 47 of
    the Act.

    They then discovered that a curious situation had emerged,
    namely, that two different divisions of the Court of Appeal,
    (Criminal Division) had, contemporaneously but unwittingly,
    delivered judgments on the necessary intent in section 47, but had
    unfortunately reached opposite conclusions. The case of Savage
    was one of those cases and the other is Reg. v. Spratt [1990] 1
    W.L.R. 1073.

    Reg. v. Spratt

    The facts and the decision of the Court of Appeal;

    A young girl was struck twice whilst playing in the
    forecourt of a block of flats by two airgun pellets, which had been
    fired from a window by the appellant. He admitted to the police
    that he had fired a few shots out of the window, not in order to
    hit anyone, but to see how far the pellets would go. He was duly

    - 8 -

    charged with an offence under section 47 of the Act to which he
    pleaded guilty. The basis of that plea, as was explained to the
    trial judge, was that the appellant accepted that he had been
    reckless, and that his recklessness took the shape of a failure to
    give any thought to the possibility of a risk. However, it was
    contended on his behalf that if he had known there were children
    in the area, he would not have fired the shots. The judge imposed
    a sentence of 30 months' imprisonment, against which the
    appellant appealed. When the matter came before the full court,
    the Court itself raised the question whether, if the facts asserted
    on the appellant's behalf were true, he had in law committed the
    offence to which he had pleaded guilty. Subsequently leave was
    given to pursue an appeal against conviction. On the appeal it
    was argued for the Crown that the appellant ought objectively to
    have appreciated that there was a risk, and that this was enough
    to establish an offence under section 47, albeit that in the light of
    the decision of the Court of Appeal in Reg. v. Cunningham [1957]
    2 Q.B. 396, to which further reference will be made hereafter,
    this would not be sufficient for the purpose of section 20. The
    court, having considered a number of subsequent cases, including in
    particular three decisions of your Lordships' House, namely, Reg.
    v. Caldwell
    [1982] AC 341, Reg. v. Lawrence [1982] A.C. 510 and
    Reg. v. Seymour (Edward) [1983] 2 A.C. 493 concluded that the
    "subjective type of recklessness" furnished the test for sections 20
    and 47 alike and that this had been decided by the Court of
    Appeal in Reg. v. Venna [1976] QB 421, also a case to which
    further reference will be made hereafter.

    In Reg. v. Spratt McCowan L.J. giving the judgment of the
    Court said, at pp. 1082-1083:

    "Finally, Mr. Arlidge argues that while Reg. v. Venna [1976]
    Q.B. 421 says that Cunningham recklessness will amount to
    guilt under section 47, it does not say that nothing else will
    do. In other words, it is now possible to add on failure to
    give thought to the possibility of risk as also qualifying for
    guilt. We do not accept that interpretation of the decision
    in Reg. v. Venna. Moreover, we are not attracted by what
    would be the consequence of accepting Mr. Arlidge's
    argument, namely that responsibility for the offence of
    assault occasioning actual bodily harm (in respect of which
    Parliament used neither the word 'maliciously' nor
    'recklessly') would be wider than for the offence of unlawful
    wounding (in respect of which Parliament used the word
    'maliciously')."

    In relation to these two decisions, Savage and Spratt, the
    Court of Appeal in the Parmenter case [1991] 2 W.L.R. 408
    concluded that in one respect they were in harmony. Where the
    defendant neither intends nor adverts to the possibility that there
    will be any physical contact at all, then the offence under section
    47 would not be made out. That is because there would have
    been no assault, let alone an assault occasioning actual bodily
    harm. Further there was no conflict where the defendant does
    advert to the possibility of harm, albeit not necessarily of the kind
    which actually happened. In such a case there clearly would be an
    assault. However, the two decisions were in conflict as to
    whether an intent is required in relation to the consequences of
    the assault. The Court of Appeal having decided to prefer the

    - 9 -

    decision in the Spratt case, asked themselves whether there was
    implicit in the section 20 verdicts (given in the light of a
    direction in terms of "objective intent") a finding that the
    appellant subjectively intended or recognised the risk of physical
    harm. Understandably they concluded that the answer must be in
    the negative. Accordingly the court allowed the appeal, declining
    to substitute any other verdict on those counts where the
    convictions were quashed. The court concluded by observing, at p.
    417 that the authorities on the intent required in sections 20 and
    47:

    ". . . can no longer live together, and that the reason lies
    in a collision between two ideas, logically and morally
    sustainable in themselves, but mutually inconsistent, about
    whether the unforeseen consequences of a wrongful act
    should be punished according to the intent (Reg. v.
    Cunningham
    [1957] 2 Q.B. 396) or the consequences (Reg. v.
    Mowatt [1968] 1 QB 421.")

    On 6 November 1990 the Court of Appeal granted leave to
    appeal to your Lordships' House and certified the following points
    of law to be of general public importance:

    "l.(a) Whether in order to establish an offence under
    Section 20 of the Offences against the Person Act 1861
    ("the Act") the prosecution must prove that the defendant
    actually foresaw that his act would cause the particular kind
    of harm which was in fact caused, or whether it is
    sufficient to prove that (objectively) he ought so to have
    foreseen.

    "(b) The like question in relation to section 47 of the Act.

    "2.(a) For the purposes of the answer to Question l.(a),
    whether the particular kind of harm to be foreseen may be
    any physical harm, or harm of (i) the nature, or (ii) the
    degree, or (iii) the nature and the degree of the harm which
    actually occurred.

    "(b) The like question in relation to section 47 of the
    Act."

    It will be observed that some of the certified questions in
    Parmenter overlap with those in Savage.

    My Lords, I will now seek to deal with the issues raised by
    these appeals seriatim.

    I Is a verdict of guilty of assault occasioning actual bodily
    harm a permissible alternative verdict on a count alleging unlawful
    wounding contrary to section 20 of the Act.

    The single count in the case of Savage was in common
    form. It read as follows:

    STATEMENT OF OFFENCE

    UNLAWFUL WOUNDING, CONTRARY TO SECTION 20 OF THE
    OFFENCES AGAINST THE PERSON ACT 1861.

    - 10 -

    PARTICULARS OF OFFENCE

    SUSAN SAVAGE on 31st day of March 1989
    unlawfully and maliciously wounded Tracey Beale.

    The Indictment Rules 1971 Rule 5 provides:

    "5(1) Subject only to the provisions of Rule 6 of these
    Rules, every indictment shall contain, and shall be sufficient
    if it contains, a statement of the specific offence of which
    the accused person is charged, describing the offence
    shortly, together with such particulars as may be necessary
    for giving reasonable information as to the nature of the
    charge."

    Brief though the particulars of the offence were, the
    indictment can in no way be said to be defective. Clearly, if an
    accused considers that he is entitled to further particulars of the
    offence with which he is charged, he can seek those from the
    prosecution and if unreasonably refused, he can obtain an order
    from the court.

    In Reg. v. Wilson [1984] A.C. 247 the defendant was tried
    on an indictment containing a single count alleging an offence of
    contravening section 20 of the Act, the particulars being that he
    "maliciously inflicted grievous bodily harm on L." (the second limb
    of section 20). The jury were directed that, if they were not
    satisfied that the harm inflicted was grievous bodily harm but
    were satisfied that it was actual bodily harm, they could convict
    of the alternative offence of assault occasioning actual bodily
    harm contrary to section 47 of the Act. The jury having
    convicted the defendant on this lesser offence, he appealed against
    his conviction to the Court of Appeal (Criminal Division). Being
    bound by its decision in Reg. v. Springfield (1969) 53 Cr. App. R.
    608, it held that the alternative verdict was not open to the jury,
    allowed the appeal and quashed the conviction. The appeal by the
    Crown to your Lordships' House was allowed and the conviction
    restored, your Lordships holding that the allegations in the charge
    under section 20 of the Act, at least, impliedly included
    allegations of assault occasioning actual bodily harm which
    constituted "another offence" within the ambit of section 6(3) of
    the Criminal Law Act 1967, the terms of which I have set out
    earlier in this speech.

    Since Mr. Goldsack Q.C. on behalf of Mrs. Savage sought to
    persuade your Lordships that the decision in Springfield was
    correct and should never have been overruled by your Lordships, it
    is necessary to set out at some length the reasoning of Lord
    Roskill, with whose speech Lord Eraser of Tullybelton, Lord Elwyn-
    Jones, Lord Edmund-Davies and Lord Brightman all agreed.

    What had to be determined was the true construction of the
    following words in section 6(3) set out above - "... the
    allegations in the indictment amount to or include (expressly or by
    implication) an allegation of another offence . . .". The starting
    point was accepted to be the historical background to the
    legislation. This had been correctly stated in Reg. v. Lillis [1972]
    2 Q.B. 236, a five-judge Court of Appeal (Criminal Division), in a
    judgment delivered by Lawton L.J. who described the purposes and
    effect of section 6(3) at p. 240 as follows:

    - 11 -

    "Before the passing of the Criminal Law Act 1967 the law
    applicable to the kind of problem which presented itself to
    the trial judge in this case was partly to be found in the
    common law and partly in a number of statutes. At
    common law on an indictment charging felony the accused
    could be convicted of a less aggravated felony of which the
    ingredients were included in the felony charged and similarly
    as regards misdemeanours: but except under statute a
    conviction for a misdemeanour was not allowed on a charge
    of felony. The object of section 6(3) of the Criminal Law
    Act 1967 was to provide a general rule continuing and
    combining the rules of common law and the provisions of
    most of the statutes which enabled alternative verdicts to
    be returned in specific cases or types of cases."

    In dealing with the position prior to the Act of 1967 Lord
    Roskill observed [1984] A.C. 247, 256:

    "My Lords, there can be no doubt that before 1967 the view
    was widely held that at common law upon a charge under
    section 20, a defendant might be convicted of at least
    common assault: see Archbold Criminal Pleading Evidence
    and Practice
    36th ed. (1966), para. 575."

    Having set out the statement in that paragraph Lord Roskill
    continued, at p. 256G:

    "It will be within the recollection of those of your Lordships
    who have in the past sat, either as recorders or chairmen of
    quarter sessions, that this statement in Archbold accurately
    stated the practice, at least before 1967. If this be right,
    it is not easy to see why in principle such a defendant
    should not equally, at common law, be liable to conviction
    under section 47. The current edition of Archbold, 41st ed.
    (1982) at para. 20-145 states that upon an indictment under
    section 20 either for unlawful wounding or for inflicting
    grievous bodily harm, the defendant may be convicted of
    common assault. Thus, long after 1967, the same view was
    expressed as I have already quoted from the 36th edition,
    published in 1966. These two passages justify the statement
    by Mr. Hill Q.C. for the prosecution, in opening these
    appeals, that both before and after 1967 the view was
    widely held that assault, whether common assault or assault
    occasioning actual bodily harm, was available at common
    law as an alternative charge to inflicting grievous bodily
    harm contrary to section 20 in the event of an acquittal
    upon that latter charge."

    Lord Roskiil then considered the crucial passage in the
    judgment of Sachs L.J. in the Springfield case 53 Cr.App.R. 608,
    610-611 which reads as follows:

    "The question accordingly arises as follows. Where an
    indictment thus charges a major offence without setting out
    any particulars of the matters relied upon, what is the
    correct test for ascertaining whether it contains allegations
    which expressly or impliedly include an allegation of a lesser
    offence? The test is to see whether it is a necessary step

    - 12 -

    towards establishing the major offence to prove the
    commission of the lesser offence: in other words, is the
    lesser offence an essential ingredient of the major one?"

    In commenting on this passage, Lord Roskill observed, at p.
    258:

    "First, the words 'major offences' and 'lesser offences'
    nowhere appear in the subsection. Secondly, the subsection
    says nothing about it being 'a necessary step' towards
    establishing the 'major offence' to prove the commission of
    the lesser offence, so that the so-called lesser offence has
    to be an 'essential ingredient' of the major offence.
    Neither the adjective 'necessary' nor the adverb 'necessarily'
    appear anywhere in the subsection."

    It had been submitted by Mr. Hill that what the Court of
    Appeal had done in Springfield was to hold that the expressions
    'amount to1 and 'include' in section 6(3) were synonymous but they
    are alternatives and must in fact be meant to apply to different
    concepts. The necessary step test can apply to the expression
    'amount to' but it did not fit with the word 'include'. As to this,
    Lord Roskill said, at pp. 258-259:

    "There is, in my view, a clear antithesis in the subsection
    between 'amount to1 and 'include'; the word 'or' which joins
    those two words is clearly disjunctive and must not be
    ignored. If either limb of the phrase is satisfied then the
    stated consequences can follow . . .In the present case, the
    issue to my mind is not whether the allegations in the
    section 20 charge, expressly or impliedly, amount to an
    allegation of a section 47 charge, for they plainly do not.
    The issue is whether they either expressly or impliedly
    include such an allegation. The answer to that question
    must depend upon what is expressly or impliedly included in
    a charge of 'inflicting any grievous bodily harm.' . . . What,
    then, are the allegations expressly or impliedly included in a
    charge of 'inflicting grievous bodily harm' Plainly that
    allegation must so far as physical injuries are concerned, at
    least impliedly if not indeed expressly, include the infliction
    of 'actual bodily harm' because infliction of the more
    serious injuries must include the infliction of the less serious
    injuries. But does the allegation of 'inflicting' include an
    allegation of 'assault'?"

    Having reviewed the relevant authorities Lord Roskill was
    content to accept that there can be an infliction of grievous
    bodily harm contrary to section 20 without an assault being
    committed. For example, grievous bodily harm could be inflicted
    by creating panic. Another example provided to your Lordships in
    the course of the argument in the current appeals was interfering
    with the braking mechanism of a car, so as to cause the driver to
    be involved in an accident and thus suffer injuries. These are
    somewhat far-fetched examples. The allegation of inflicting
    grievous bodily harm or for that matter wounding, as was observed
    by Glidewell L.J. (at p. 421), giving the judgment of the court in
    the Savage case [1991] 2 W.L.R. 418, inevitably imports or includes
    an allegation of assault, unless there are some quite extraordinary
    facts.


    - 13 -

    The critical question remained - do the allegations in a
    section 20 charge "include either expressly or by implication"
    allegations of assault occasioning actual bodily harm. As to this,
    Lord Roskill concluded (p. 261) as follows:

    "If 'inflicting' can, as the cases show, include 'inflicting by
    assault' then even though such a charge may not necessarily
    do so I do not for myself see why on a fair reading of
    section 6(3) these allegations do not at least impliedly
    include 'inflicting by assault'. That is sufficient for present
    purposes though I also regard it as also a possible view that
    those former allegations expressly include the other
    allegations.

    I respectfully agree with this reasoning and accordingly
    reject the submission that Wilson was wrongly decided. I would
    therefore answer the first of the certified questions in the Savage
    case in the affirmative. A verdict of guilty of assault occasioning
    actual bodily harm is a permissible alternative verdict on a count
    alleging unlawful wounding contrary to section 20 of the Offences
    Against the Persons Act 1861.

    II Can a verdict of assault occasioning actual bodily harm be
    returned upon proof of an assault together with proof of the fact
    that actual bodily harm was occasioned by the assault, or must the
    prosecution also prove that the defendant intended to cause some
    actual bodily harm or was reckless as to whether such harm would
    be caused
    ?

    Your Lordships are concerned with the mental element of a
    particular kind of assault, an assault "occasioning actual bodily
    harm". It is common ground that the mental element of assault is
    an intention to cause the victim to apprehend immediate and
    unlawful violence or recklessness whether such apprehension be
    caused (see Venna [1976] QB 421.) It is of course common
    ground that Mrs. Savage committed an assault upon Miss Beal
    when she threw the contents of her glass of beer over her. It is
    also common ground that however the glass came to be broken and
    Miss Beal's wrist thereby cut, it was, on the finding of the jury,
    Mrs. Savage's handling of the glass which caused Miss Beal "actual
    bodily harm". Was the offence thus established or is there a
    further mental state that has to be established in relation to the
    bodily harm element of the offence? Clearly the section, by its
    terms, expressly imposes no such a requirement. Does it do so
    by necessary implication? It neither uses the word "intentionally"
    or "maliciously". The words "occasioning actual bodily harm" are
    descriptive of the word "assault", by reference to a particular kind
    of consequence.

    In neither Savage, nor Spratt, nor in Parmenter, was the
    court's attention invited to the decision of the Court of Appeal in
    Reg. v. Roberts (1972) 56 Cr. App. R. 95. This is perhaps
    explicable on the basis that this case is not referred to in the
    index to the current (43rd) (1988) edition of Archbold, Criminal
    Pleading, Evidence and Practice.
    The relevant text, at paragraph
    20-117 states:

    "The mens rea required [for actual bodily harm] is that
    required for common assault"

    - 14 -

    without any authority being provided for this proposition.

    It is in fact Roberts' case which provides authority for this
    proposition. Roberts was tried on an indictment which alleged
    that he indecently assaulted a young woman. He was acquitted on
    that charge, but convicted of assault occasioning actual bodily
    harm to her. The girl's complaint was that while travelling in the
    defendant's car he sought to make advances towards her and then
    tried to take her coat off. This was the last straw, and although
    the car was travelling at some speed, she jumped out and
    sustained injuries. The defendant denied he had touched the girl.
    He had had an argument with her and in the course of that
    argument she suddenly opened the door and jumped out. In his
    direction to the jury the chairman of Quarter Sessions stated "If
    you are satisfied that he tried to pull off her coat and as a result
    she jumped out of the moving car then your verdict is guilty".

    It was contended on behalf of the appellant that this
    direction was wrong since the chairman had failed to tell the jury
    that they must be satisfied that the appellant foresaw that she
    might jump out of the car as a result of his touching her, before
    they could convict. The court rejected that submission. The test,
    said the court, at p. 102:

    "Was it [the action of the victim which resulted in actual
    bodily harm] the natural result of what the alleged assailant
    said and did, in the sense that it was something that could
    reasonably have been foreseen as the consequence of what
    he was saying or doing? As it was put in one of the old
    cases, it had got to be shown to be his act, and if of
    course the victim does something so "daft" in the words of
    the appellant in this case, or so unexpected, not that this
    particular assailant did not actually foresee it but that no
    reasonable man could be expected to foresee it, then it is
    only in a very remote and unreal sense a consequence of his
    assault, it is really occasioned by a voluntary act on the
    part of the victim which could not reasonably be foreseen
    and which breaks the chain of causation between the assault
    and the harm or injury".

    Accordingly no fault was found (p.103) in the following direction
    of the chairman to the jury:

    "If you accept the evidence of the girl in preference to that
    of the man, that means that there was an assault
    occasioning actual bodily harm, that means that she did
    jump out as a direct result of what he was threatening her
    with, and what he was doing to her, holding her coat,
    telling her that he had beaten up girls who had refused his
    advances, and that means that through his acts he was in
    law and in fact responsible for the injuries which were
    caused to her by her decision, if it can be called that, to
    get away from his violence, his threats, by jumping out of
    the car."

    Thus once the assault was established, the only remaining
    question was whether the victim's conduct was the natural
    consequence of that assault. The words "occasioning" raised solely
    a question of causation, an objective question which does not
    involve enquiring into the accused's state of mind.

    - 15 -

    In Reg. v. Spratt [1990] 1 W.L.R. 1073 McCowan L.J. said, at p.
    1082:

    "However, the history of the interpretation of the Act of
    1861 shows that, whether or not the word "maliciously"
    appears in the section in question, the courts have
    consistently held that the mens rea of every type of offence
    against the person covers both actual intent and
    recklessness, in the sense of taking the risk of harm ensuing
    with foresight that it might happen."

    The Lord Justice then quotes a number of authorities for
    that proposition. The first is Reg. v. Ward (1871) L.R. 1 C.C.R.
    356, but that was a case where the prisoner was charged with
    wounding with intent (section 18) and convicted of malicious
    wounding (section 20); next, Reg. v. Bradshaw (1878) 14 Cox C.C.
    83, but that was a case where the accused was charged with
    manslaughter, which has nothing to do with a section 47 case.
    Then Reg. v. Cunningham [1957] Q.B. 396, is quoted, a case under
    section 23 of the Act concerned with unlawfully and maliciously
    administering, etc., a noxious thing which endangers life. And
    finally Reg. v. Venna [1976] QB 421 in which there was no issue
    as to whether in a section 47 case, recklessness had to extend to
    actual bodily harm. Thus, none of the cases cited were concerned
    with the mental element required in section 47 cases.
    Nevertheless, the Court of Appeal in Parmenter [1991] 2 W.L.R.
    408 preferred the decision in Spratt's case [1990] 1 W.L.R. 1073 to
    that of Savage (Note) [1991] 2 W.L.R. 418 because the former was
    "founded on a line of authority leading directly to the conclusion
    there expressed (p. 415F)."

    My Lords, in my respectful view, the Court of Appeal in
    Parmenter were wrong in preferring the decision in Spratt's case.
    The decision in Roberts' case 56 Cr.App.R. 95 was correct. The
    verdict of assault occasioning actual bodily harm may be returned
    upon proof of an assault together with proof of the fact that
    actual bodily harm was occasioned by the assault. The prosecution
    are not obliged to prove that the defendant intended to cause
    some actual bodily harm or was reckless as to whether such harm
    would be caused.

    III In order to establish an offence under section 20 of the
    Act, must the prosecution prove that the defendant actually
    foresaw that his act would cause harm, or is it is sufficient to
    prove that he ought so to have foreseen?

    Although your Lordships' attention has been invited to a
    plethora of decided cases, the issue is a narrow one. Is the
    decision of the Court of Criminal Appeal in Reg. v. Cunningham
    [1957] 2 Q.B. 396 still good law, subject only to a gloss placed
    upon it by the Court of Appeal Criminal Division in Reg. v.
    Mowatt
    [1968] 1 QB 421, or does the later decision of your
    Lordships' House in Reg. v. Caldwell [1982] AC 341 provide the
    answer to this question?

    These three decisions require detailed consideration.
    Reg. v. Cunningham

    - 16 -

    As previously stated this case concerned a charge brought
    under section 23 of the Act, which makes it an offence
    "unlawfully and maliciously" to administer etc., to any person any
    poison or other noxious thing so as to endanger life or inflict
    grievous bodily harm. Cunningham, in stealing a gas meter and its
    contents from the cellar of a house fractured a gas pipe, causing
    coal gas to escape. This percolated through the cellar wall to the
    adjoining house, entered a bedroom with the result that Mrs. Wade,
    who was asleep, inhaled a considerable quantity of the gas, with
    the result that her life was endangered. Cunningham's conviction
    was quashed because of the misdirection by the trial judge as to
    the meaning of "maliciously" in section 23 of the Act.

    Byrne J., in a reserved judgment given on behalf of the
    court accepted as accurate the following statement of the law as
    set out by Professor C. 5. Kenny in the 1st edition of his Outlines
    of Criminal Law
    published in 1902:

    "In any statutory definition of a crime, malice must be
    taken not in the old vague sense of wickedness in general
    but as requiring either (1) An actual intention to do the
    particular kind of harm that in fact was done; or (2)
    recklessness as to whether such harm should occur or not
    (i.e. the accused has foreseen that the particular kind of
    harm might be done and yet has gone on to take the risk of
    it). It is neither limited to nor does it indeed require any
    ill will towards the person injured."

    The court held that the jury should have been left to decide
    whether, even if the appellant did not intend the injury to Mrs.
    Wade, he foresaw that the removal of the gas meter might cause
    injury to someone but nevertheless removed it.

    Reg. v. Caldwell

    Mr. Sedley Q.C. has not invited your Lordships to reconsider
    the majority decision of your Lordships' House. He chose a much
    less ambitious task. He submits that Reg. v. Cunningham cannot
    be bad law, since it is inconceivable that your Lordships' House, in
    its majority judgment, would have steered such a careful path
    around it. Your Lordships having power to overrule it, would, so
    he submits, have felt obliged to do so in order to avoid creating a
    false double standard of "recklessness". He further submits that it
    is significant that Lord Diplock, whose speech represented the
    views of the majority of your Lordships, nowhere suggests that his
    own judgment in the case of Mowatt, [1968] 1 QB 421 which
    clarified or modified Cunningham, was of doubtful validity.

    In the light of these submissions it is necessary to deal in
    some detail with the Caldwell decision [1982] AC 341.

    The case was principally concerned with the meaning of the
    word "reckless" in a statute enacted less than 10 years before the
    decision of your Lordships' House. Caldwell was indicted upon two
    counts of arson under section 1(1) and (2) respectively, of the
    Criminal Damage Act 1971. That section reads as follows:

    "(1) A person who without lawful excuse destroys or
    damages any property belonging to another intending to

    - 17 -

    destroy or damage any such property or being reckless as to
    whether any such property would be destroyed or damaged
    shall be guilty of an offence. (2) A person who without
    lawful excuse destroys or damages any property, whether
    belonging to himself or another - (a) intending to destroy or
    damage any property or being reckless as to whether any
    property would be destroyed or damaged; and (b) intending
    by the destruction or damage to endanger the life of
    another or being reckless as to whether the life of another
    would be thereby endangered; shall be guilty of an offence.
    (3) An offence committed under this section by destroying
    or damaging property by fire shall be charged as arson."

    Count 1 contained the charge of the more serious offence
    under section 1(2), which required intent to endanger the life of
    another or recklessness as to whether the life of another would be
    endangered. To this count Cunningham pleaded not guilty. He
    relied upon his self-induced drunkenness as a defence, on the
    ground that the offence under subsection (2) was one of "specific
    intent" in the sense in which that expression was used in speeches
    in your Lordships' House in Reg. v. Majewski [1977] AC 443.
    Count 2 contained the lesser offence under section 1(1) to which
    he pleaded guilty.

    The recorder directed the jury that self-induced drunkenness
    was not a defence to count 1, and the jury convicted him on this
    count. The Recorder sentenced him to three years' imprisonment
    on count 1 but passed no sentence on count 2, the lesser offence,
    to which he had pleaded guilty. On appeal, the Court of Appeal
    held that her direction to the jury as to the effect of self-induced
    drunkenness on the charge in count 1 was wrong. They set aside
    the conviction on that count; but left the sentence of three years'
    imprisonment unchanged as they considered it to be an appropriate
    sentence on count 2.

    The question of law certified for the opinion of Your
    Lordships' House was:

    "Whether evidence of self-induced intoxication can be
    relevant to the following questions - (a) Whether the
    defendant intended to endanger the life of another; and (b)
    Whether the defendant was reckless as to whether the life
    of another would be endangered, within the meaning of
    section l(2)(b) of the Criminal Damage Act 1971."

    Your Lordships (Lord Diplock, Lord Keith of Kinkel and Lord
    Roskill) dismissed the appeal holding, that if a charge under
    section 1(2) of the Act was so framed as to charge the defendant
    only with the intent to endanger life, evidence of self-induced
    drunkenness could be relevant as a defence, but (Lord Wilberforce
    and Lord Edmund-Davies dissenting) not when the charge included
    a reference to being reckless as to whether life would be
    endangered.

    At the outset of his speech (p. 350) Lord Diplock drew
    attention to the fact that the certified question recognised that
    under section l(2)(b) there are two alternative states of mind as
    respects endangering the life of another, and that the existence of
    either of them on the part of the accused is sufficient to

    - 18 -

    constitute the mens rea needed to convert the lesser offence under
    section 1(1) into the graver offence under section 1(2). One
    intention is that a particular thing should happen in consequence of
    the actus reus, viz. that the life of another person should be
    endangered and the other intention is recklessness as to whether
    that particular thing should happen or not. His Lordship then
    continued:

    "My Lords, the Criminal Damage Act 1971 replaced almost
    in their entirety the many and detailed provisions of the
    Malicious Damage Act 1861. Its purpose, as stated in its
    long title, was to revise the law of England and Wales as to
    offences of damage to property. As the brevity of the Act
    suggests, it must have been hoped that it would also
    simplify the law.

    "In the Act of 1861, the word consistently used to describe
    the mens rea that was a necessary element in the
    multifarious offences that the Act created was 'maliciously'
    - a technical expression, not readily intelligible to juries,
    which became the subject of considerable judicial exegesis.
    This culminated in a judgment of the Court of Criminal
    Appeal in Reg. v. Cunningham [1957] 2 Q.B. 396, 399 which
    approved, as an accurate statement of the law, what had
    been said by Professor Kenny in the first edition of his
    Outlines of Criminal Law published in 1902:


    "In any statutory definition of a crime, malice must
    be taken ... as requiring either (1) an actual
    intention to do the particular kind of harm that in
    fact was done; or (2) recklessness as to whether such
    harm should occur or not (i.e., the accused has
    foreseen that the particular kind of harm might be
    done and yet has gone on to take the risk of it).'

    "My Lords, in this passage Professor Kenny was engaged in
    defining for the benefit of students the meaning of 'malice'
    as a term of art in criminal law. To do so he used
    ordinary English words in their popular meaning. Among the
    words he used was 'recklessness', the noun derived from the
    adjective 'reckless,' of which the popular or dictionary
    meaning is: careless, regardless, or heedless, of the possible
    harmful consequences of one's acts. It presupposes that if
    thought were given to the matter by the doer before the
    act was done, it would have been apparent to him that
    there was a real risk of its having the relevant harmful
    consequences; but, granted this, recklessness covers a whole
    range of states of mind from failing to give any thought at
    all to whether or not there is any risk of those harmful
    consequences, to recognising the existence of the risk and
    nevertheless deciding to ignore it. Conscious of this
    imprecision in the popular meaning of recklessness as
    descriptive of a state of mind, Professor Kenny, in the
    passage quoted, was, as it seems to me, at pains to indicate
    by the words in brackets the particular species within the
    genus reckless states of mind that consituted 'malice' in
    criminal law. This parenthetical restriction on the natural
    meaning of recklessness was necessary to an explanation of
    the meaning of the adverb 'maliciously' when used as a

    - 19 -

    term of art in the description of an offence under the
    Malicious Damage Act 1861 (which was the matter in point
    in Reg. v. Cunningham [1957] 2 Q.B. 396); but it was not
    directed to and consequently has no bearing or the meaning
    of the adjective 'reckless' in section 1 of the Criminal
    Damage Act 1971. To use it for that purpose can, in my
    view, only be misleading."

    The distinction which his Lordship was drawing between the
    meaning of the adverb "maliciously" when used as a term of art in
    the description of an offence under the Act of 1861 and that of
    the adjective "reckless" in section 1 of the Act of 1971 was
    reemphasised by him in the following passage, at pp. 351G-352E:

    "My Lords, the restricted meaning that the Court of Appeal
    in Reg. v. Cunningham had placed upon the adverb
    'maliciously' in the Malicious Damage Act 1861 in cases
    where the prosecution did not rely upon an actual intention
    of the accused to cause the damage that was in fact done,
    called for a meticulous analysis by the jury of the thoughts
    that passed through the mind of the accused at or before
    the time he did the act that caused the damage, in order to
    see on which side of a narrow dividing line they fell. If it
    had crossed his mind that there was a risk that someone's
    property might be damaged but, because his mind was
    affected by rage or excitement or confused by drink, he did
    not appreciate the seriousness of the risk or trusted that
    good luck would prevent its happening, this state of mind
    would amount to malice in the restricted meaning placed
    upon that term by the Court of Appeal; whereas if, for any
    of these reasons, he did not even trouble to give his mind
    to the question whether there was any risk of damaging the
    property, this state of mind would not suffice to make him
    guilty of an offence under the Malicious Damage Act 1861.

    "Neither state of mind seems to me to be less blameworthy
    than the other; but if the difference between the two
    constituted the distinction between what does and what does
    not in legal theory amount to a guilty state of mind for the
    purposes of a statutory offence of damage to property, it
    would not be a practicable distinction for use in a trial by
    jury. The only person who knows what the accused's mental
    processes were is the accused himself - and probably not
    even he can recall them accurately when the rage or
    excitement under which he acted has passed, or he has
    sobered up if he were under the influence of drink at the
    relevant time. If the accused gives evidence that because
    of his rage, excitement or drunkenness the risk of particular
    harmful consequences of his acts simply did not occur to
    him, a jury would find it heard to be satisfied beyond
    reasonable doubt that his true mental process was not that,
    but was the slightly different mental process required if one
    applies the restricted meaning of 'being reckless as to
    whether' something would happen, adopted by the Court of
    Appeal in Reg. v. Cunningham.

    "My Lords, I can see no reason why Parliament when it
    decided to revise the law as to offences of damage to
    property should go out of its way to perpetuate fine and

    - 20 -

    impracticable distinctions such as these, between one mental
    state and another. One would think that the sooner they

    were got rid of, the better."


    Lord Diplock then reviewed decisions which had been made
    under section 1(1) of the new Act in which the prosecution's case
    was based upon the accused's having been "reckless as to whether
    . . . property would be destroyed or damaged". Reg. v.
    Stephenson
    [1979] QB 695 was the last of such cases in which the
    Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) itself reviewed a number of
    cases, mainly in the field of civil law, which cases did not disclose
    a uniform judicial use of the terms. Lord Diplock concluded that
    the court had made the assumption that although Parliament in
    replacing the Act of 1861 by the Act of 1971 had discarded the
    word "maliciously" as descriptive of the mens rea of the offences
    of which the actus reus is damaging property, in favour of the
    more explicit phrase "intending to destroy or damage any such
    property or being reckless as to whether any such property would
    be destroyed", it nevertheless intended the words to be interpreted
    in precisely the same sense as that in which the single adverb
    "maliciously" had been construed by Professor Kenny in the passage
    that received the subsequent approval of the Court of Appeal in
    the Cunningham case. His Lordship then continued, at p. 353:

    "My Lords, I see no warrant for making any such assumption
    in an Act whose declared purpose is to revise the then
    existing law as to offences of damage to property, not to
    perpetuate it. 'Reckless' as used in the new statutory
    definition of the mens rea of these offences is an ordinary
    English word. It had not by 1971 become a term of legal
    art with some more limited esoteric meaning than that
    which it bore in ordinary speech - a meaning which surely
    includes not only deciding to ignore a risk of harmful
    consequences resulting from one's acts that one has
    recognised as existing, but also failing to give any thought
    to whether or not there is any such risk in circumstances
    where, if any thought were given to the matter, it would be
    obvious that there was.

    "If one is attaching labels, the latter state of mind is
    neither more nor less 'subjective' than the first. But the
    label solves nothing. It is a statement of the obvious; mens
    rea is, by definition, a state of mind of the accused himself
    at the time he did the physical act that constitutes the
    actus reus of the offence; it cannot be the mental state of
    some non-existent, hypothetical person.

    "Nevertheless, to decide whether someone has been 'reckless'
    as to whether harmful consequences of a particular kind will
    result from his act, as distinguished from his actually
    intending such harmful consequences to follow, does call for
    some consideration of how the mind of the ordinary prudent
    individual would have reacted to a similar situation. If
    there were nothing in the circumstances that ought to have
    drawn the attention of an ordinary prudent individual to the
    possibility of that kind of harmful consequence, the accused
    would not be described as 'reckless' in the natural meaning
    of that word for failing to address his mind to the
    possibility; nor, if the risk of the harmful consequences was

    - 21 -

    so slight that the ordinary prudent individual upon due
    consideration of the risk would not be deterred from
    treating it as negligible, could the accused be described as
    'reckless' in its ordinary sense if, having considered the risk,
    he decided to ignore it. (In this connection the gravity of
    the possible harmful consequences would be an important
    factor. To endanger life must be one of the most grave.)
    So to this extent, even if one ascribes to 'reckless' only the
    restricted meaning, adopted by the Court of Appeal in Reg.
    v. Stephenson
    [1979] QB 695 and Reg. v. Briggs (Note)
    [1977] W.L.R. 605, of foreseeing that a particular kind of
    harm might happen and yet going on to take the risk of it,
    it involves a test that would be described in part as
    'objective' in current legal jargon. Questions of criminal
    liability are seldom solved by simply asking whether the test
    is subjective or objective."

    His Lordship then considered what should be the proper
    direction to the jury where a person charged with an offence
    under section 1(1) of the Criminal Damage Act 1971 is alleged to
    have been "reckless" as to whether any such property would be
    destroyed or damaged. He concluded that the jury should be
    directed that such a person is reckless within the meaning of
    section 1(1) if:

    1. He does an act which in fact creates an obvious risk that
      property will be destroyed or damaged; and

    2. When he does this act he either has not given any thought
      to the possibility of there being any such risk or has recognised
      that there was some risk involved and has nonetheless gone on to
      do it.

    In his dissenting speech with which Lord Wilberforce
    concurred, Lord Edmund-Davies said, at p. 357: "In time, what was
    originally the common coinage of speech acquires a different value
    in the pocket of the lawyer than when in the layman's purse." He
    concluded that the draftsman of the 1971 Act had in mind the
    Law Commission's definition of recklessness to be found in their
    working paper No. 31, Codification of the Criminal Law, General
    Principles, The Mental Element in Crime issued in June 1971 and
    in "the much respected decision of Reg. v. Cunningham". Thus in
    his view, unlike negligence, which has to be judged objectively,
    recklessness involves foresight of consequences, combined with an
    objective judgment of the reasonableness of the risk taken.
    Accordingly if a defendant says of a particular risk "It never
    crossed my mind" a jury could not on those words alone properly
    convict him of recklessness simply because they considered that
    the risk ought to have crossed his mind, though his words might
    well lead to a finding of negligence.

    A few weeks after hearing the argument in Caldwell, your
    Lordships in Reg. v. Lawrence [1982] A.C. 510 had to consider the
    word "recklessly" in sections 1 and 2 of the Road Traffic Act 1972
    as amended. Judgment in that appeal was in fact given on the
    same day as judgment in the Caldwell case. It was a unanimous
    decision of the House, the leading speech again being given by
    Lord Diplock. I need not trouble your Lordships with the facts of
    that case. Lord Diplock in referring to Caldwell said that the

    - 22 -

    conclusion reached by the majority of your Lordships was that the
    adjective "reckless" when used in a criminal statute, i.e. the
    Criminal Damage Act 1971, had not acquired a special meaning as
    a term of legal art, but bore its popular or dictionary meaning of
    careless, regardless or heedless of the possible harmful
    consequences of one's acts. The same must be true of the
    adverbial derivative "recklessly" when used in relation to driving a
    motor vehicle. As to the mens rea of the offence, he said this,
    at p. 526:

    "I turn now to the mens rea. My task is greatly simplified
    by what has already been said about the concept of
    recklessness in criminal law in Reg. v. Caldwell [1982] A.C.
    341. Warning was there given against adopting the
    simplistic approach of treating all problems of criminal
    liability as soluble by classifying the test of liability as
    being either 'subjective' or 'objective'. Recklessness on the
    part of the doer of an act does presuppose that there is
    something in the circumstances that would have drawn the
    attention of an ordinary prudent individual to the possibility
    that his act was capable of causing the kind of serious
    harmful consequences that the section which creates the
    offence was intended to prevent, and that the risk of those
    harmful consequences occurring was not so slight that an
    ordinary prudent individual would feel justified in treating
    them as negligible. It is only when this is so that the doer
    of the act is acting 'recklessly' if before doing the act, he
    either fails to give any thought to the possibility of there
    being any such risk or, having recognised that there was
    such risk, he nevertheless goes on to do it.

    "In my view, an appropriate instruction to the jury on what
    is meant by driving recklessly would be that they must be
    satisfied of two things:

    "First, that the defendant was in fact driving the vehicle in
    such a manner as to create an obvious and serious risk of
    causing physical injury to some other person who might
    happen to be using the road or of doing substantial damage
    to property; and

    Second, that in driving in that manner the defendant did so
    without having given any thought to the possibility of there
    being any such risk or, having recognised that there was
    some risk involved, had nonetheless gone on to take it."

    Some two years later in Reg. v. Seymour [1983] 2 A.C. 493
    your Lordships' House again considered the Caldwell decision, as
    followed in the Lawrence decision, in a case in which a defendant
    was convicted of manslaughter when driving a lorry. An appeal
    was made to the Court of Appeal upon the ground that the trial
    judge had misdirected the jury in that where manslaughter was
    charged, and the charge arose out of the reckless driving on the
    highway, the direction propounded in Lawrence which he applied
    was inadequate, and that in such circumstances the jury should be
    directed that the prosecution must prove that the defendant
    recognised that some risk was involved and had nevertheless
    proceeded to take the risk. The appeal was dismissed by the
    Court of Appeal and by your Lordships.

    - 23 -

    Before returning to the submission made by Mr. Sedley, to
    which I have referred above, I think it is now convenient to go
    back in time to the decisions of the Court of Appeal in Reg. v.
    Mowatt
    [1968] 1 QB 421, to which reference has already been
    made. The facts of that case were simple. On 30 September
    1966 in the early hours of the morning the defendant and a
    companion stopped a third man in the street and asked him
    whether there was a pub anywhere nearby. The defendant's
    companion then snatched a £5 note from the third man's breast-
    pocket and ran off. The third man chased him without success
    and returned to the defendant, grasping him by the lapels and
    demanding to know where his companion had gone. The defendant
    then struck the third man, knocking him down. Two police
    officers saw the defendant sit astride the third man and strike him
    repeated blows in the face, pull him to his feet and strike him
    again, knocking him down and rendering him almost unconscious.
    The defendant admitted inflicting the first blow but claimed it was
    self-defence. He was tried on an indictment which included a
    count for wounding with intent to do grievous bodily harm contrary
    to section 18 of the Offences Against the Persons Act 1861. In
    summing up on this count the trial judge told the jury they were
    entitled to return a verdict of unlawful wounding under section 20
    of the Act. However in his summing up, while explaining the
    meaning of the word 'unlawfully' so far as it was relevant to the
    defence of self-defence, he gave no direction as to the meaning of
    "maliciously".

    The importance of this case is that the Court of Appeal
    considered the case of Cunningham and although modifying or
    explaining an important feature of that decision, in no way queried
    its validity. The judgment of the Court of Appeal to which I have
    already made references was, as previously stated, given by
    Diplock L.J. It is of course one of Mr. Sedley's points, that
    although Mowatt was not referred to in Caldwell, it was most
    unlikely that its existence was overlooked, particularly by Lord
    Diplock. At p. 425 Diplock L.J. observed that "unlawfully and
    maliciously" was a fashionable phrase of parliamentary draftsmen
    in 1861. It ran as a theme, with minor variations, through the
    Malicious Damage Act 1861, and the Offences Against the Persons
    Act passed in that year. He then referred to the "very special"
    facts in Cunningham and observed:

    "No doubt upon these facts the jury should be instructed
    that they must be satisfied before convicting the accused
    that he was aware that physical harm to some human-being
    was a possible consequence of his unlawful act in wrenching
    off the gas meter. In the words of the court 'maliciously
    in a statutory crime postulates foresight of consequence' and
    upon this proposition we do not wish to cast any doubt".
    (Emphasis added).

    Subsequently he added, at p. 426:

    "In the offence under section 20, and in the alternative
    verdict which may be given on a charge under section 18,
    for neither of which is any specific intent required, the
    word 'maliciously' 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

    - 24 -

    of causing some physical harm to some other person. That
    is what is meant by 'the particular kind of harm' in the
    citation from Professor Kenny. It is quite unnecessary that
    the accused should have foreseen that his unlawful act
    might cause physical harm of the gravity described in the
    section, i.e. a wound or serious physical injury. It is enough
    that he should have foreseen that some physical harm to
    some person, albeit of a minor character, might result."
    (Emphasis added).

    Mr. Sedley submitted that in Caldwell's case your Lordships'
    House could have followed either of two possible paths to its
    conclusion as to the meaning of "recklessly" in the 1971 Act.
    These were:

    1. To hold that Cunningham (and Mowatt) were wrongly decided
      and to introduce a single test, wherever recklessness was an
      issue; or

    2. To accept that Cunningham, (subject to the Mowatt "gloss"
      to which no reference was made), correctly states the law
      in relation to the Offences Against the Persons Act 1861,
      because the word "maliciously" in that statute was a term
      of legal art which imported into the concept of recklessness
      a special restricted meaning, thus distinguishing it from
      "reckless" or "recklessly" in modern "revising" statutes then
      before the House, where those words bore their then popular
      or dictionary meaning.

    I agree with Mr. Sedley that manifestly it was the latter course
    which the House followed. Therefore in order to establish an
    offence under section 20 the prosecution must prove either the
    defendant intended or that he actually foresaw that his act would
    cause harm.

    IV In order to establish an offence under section 20 is it
    sufficient to prove that the defendant intended or foresaw the risk
    of some physical harm or must he intend or foresee either
    wounding or grievous bodily harm
    ?

    It is convenient to set out once again the relevant part of
    the judgment of Diplock L.J., in Reg. v. Mowatt [1968] 1 Q.B.
    421, 426. Having considered Professor Kenny's statement, which I
    have quoted above, he then said:

    "In the offence under section 20 ... for . . . which no
    specific intent is required, the word 'maliciously' does
    import ... an awareness that his act may have the
    consequence of causing some physical harm to some other
    person. That is what is meant by the 'particular kind of
    harm' in the citation from Professor Kenny. It is quite
    unnecessary that the accused should have foreseen that his
    unlawful act might cause physical harm of the gravity
    described in the section, i.e. a wound or serious physical
    injury. It is enough that he should have foreseen that some
    physical harm to some person, albeit of a minor character
    might result."
    (Emphasis added).

    - 25 -

    Mr. Sedley submits that this statement of the law is wrong.
    He contends that properly construed, the section requires foresight
    of a wounding or grievous bodily harm. He drew your Lordships'
    attention to criticisms of the Mowatt decision made by Professor
    Glanville-Williams and by Professor J. C. Smith in their text books
    and in articles or commentaries. They argue that a person should
    not be criminally liable for consequences of his conduct unless he
    foresaw a consequence failing into the same legal category as that
    set out in the indictment.

    Such a general principle runs contrary to the decision in
    Robert's case 56 Cr.App.R. 95 which I have already stated to be,
    in my opinion, correct. The contention is apparently based on the
    proposition that as the actus reus of a section 20 offence is the
    wounding or the infliction of grievous bodily harm, the mens rea
    must consist of foreseeing such wounding or grievous bodily harm.
    But there is no such hard and fast principle. To take but two
    examples, the actus reus of murder is the killing of the victim,
    but foresight of grievous bodily harm is sufficient and indeed, such
    bodily harm, need not be such as to be dangerous to life. Again,
    in the case of manslaughter, death is frequently the unforeseen
    consequence of the violence used.

    The argument that as section 20 and section 47 have both
    the same penalty, this somehow supports the proposition that the
    foreseen consequences must coincide with the harm actually done,
    overlooks the oft repeated statement that this is the irrational
    result of this piece-meal legislation. The Act "is a rag-bag of
    offences brought together from a wide variety of sources with no
    attempt, as the draftsman frankly acknowledged, to introduce
    consistency as to substance or as to form." (Professor Smith in
    his commentary on Parmenter [1991] C.L.R. p. 43).

    If section 20 was to be limited to cases where the accused
    does not desire but does foresee wounding or grievous bodily harm,
    it would have a very limited scope. The mens rea in a section 20
    crime is comprised in the word "maliciously". As was pointed out
    by Lord Lane C.J., giving the judgment of the Court of Appeal in
    Reg. v. Sullivan on 27 October 1980 (unreported save in [1981]
    C.L.R. 46) the "particular kind of harm" in the citation from
    Professor Kenny was directed to "harm to the person" as opposed
    to "harm to property". Thus it was not concerned with the degree
    of the harm foreseen. It is accordingly in my judgment wrong to
    look upon the decision in Mowatt [1968] 1 QB 421 as being in
    any way inconsistent with the decision in Cunningham [1957] 2
    Q.B. 396.

    My Lords, I am satisfied that the decision in Mowatt was
    correct and that it is quite unnecessary that the accused should
    either have intended or have foreseen that his unlawful act might
    cause physical harm of the gravity described in section 20, i.e. a
    wound or serious physical injury. It is enough that he should have
    foreseen that some physical harm to some person, albeit of a
    minor character, might result.

    In the result I would dismiss the appeal in Savage's case but
    allow the appeal in Parmenter's case, but only to the extent of
    substituting, in accordance with the provisions of section 3(2) of
    the Criminal Appeal Act 1968, verdicts of guilty of assault

    - 26 -

    occasioning actual bodily harm contrary to section 47 of the Act
    for the four section 20 offences, of which he was convicted.

    LORD JAUNCEY OF TULLICHETTLE

    My Lords,

    I have had the opportunity of considering in draft the
    speech to be delivered by my noble and learned friend, Lord
    Ackner. I agree with it, and for the reasons which he gives I,
    too, would dismiss the appeal in Savage's case and allow that in
    Parmenter's case to the extent which he proposes.

    LORD LOWRY

    My Lords,

    I have had the opportunity of considering in draft the
    speech to be delivered by my noble and learned friend, Lord
    Ackner. I agree with it, and for the reasons which he gives I,
    too, would dismiss the appeal in Savage's case and allow that in
    Parmenter's case to the extent which he proposes.

    - 27 -


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