| Causation,
Drugs, and Manslaughter, Pages 99-102, 240
Kennedy v. R [2005] EWCA Crim 685
(“Kennedy (2)”)
K had prepared a heroin mixture for V in a syringe which
he then gave to V. V injected himself with the heroin and
subsequently died. K was convicted of manslaughter, a conviction
upheld by the Court of Appeal (see [1999] Crim LR 65; S&S2
p. 101). However, following uncertainty in the subsequent
case law, the case was referred back to the Court by the Criminal
Cases Review Commission under section 9(1) of the Criminal
Appeal Act 1995.
At issue was whether K had caused V’s death by an unlawful
act. The main difficulty was that, although K’s conduct
was unlawful (being the supply of a controlled substance),
and had played a part in the events leading to V’s death,
prima facie there was an intervening act by another, V himself,
who had self-administered the injection. The intervention
by V was free, deliberate, and informed; as such, it seemed
to be a novus actus, absolving K of causal responsibility
for the homicide. There was also the problem that V’s
act of self-injection was not unlawful, which ruled out the
alternative possibility of convicting K on the basis of his
aiding or abetting V.
Previous Court of Appeal authority was unclear. In the more-or-less
similar cases of Dalby [1982] 1 All ER 916, Dias [2002]
2 Cr App R 41, and Richards [2002] EWCA Crim 3175 the defendant’s
conviction was quashed; in Rogers [2003] 1 WLR 1374 and Finlay [2003]
EWCA Crim 3868 the convictions were upheld. Now, in upholding
the defendant’s conviction, the Court of Appeal in Kennedy has
clarified the law. There are two key steps to the Court’s
decision.
Finding the unlawful act causing death,
and restricting the scope of Empress
Ruling (a): the relevant unlawful act that causes death is
the administration (or the causing to be administered) of
a noxious substance, contrary to section 23 of the Offences
Against the Person Act 1861.
Clearly, the administration of the heroin caused death, and
it was a noxious substance, so this ruling seems unproblematic.
It does not involve the Court in the rather more problematic
claim that K’s unlawful act of supplying the heroin
was itself a direct cause of death, notwithstanding the free,
deliberate, and informed intervening act by V.
In particular, the Court of Appeal did not adopt the test
of causation set out by Lord Hoffman in Environment Agency
v. Empress Car Company Ltd [1999] 2 AC 22 (HL): whether the
intervening act (by V) was an “ordinary” occurrence,
which would not be a novus actus, or something “extraordinary”
[S&S2 pp. 99-101.] Notwithstanding that this test had
previously been adopted in Finlay, the Court in Kennedy (2)
emphasises that the decision in Empress is not, and was
not intended by Lord Hoffman to be, of general application.
The decision should be understood as a matter of specific
statutory interpretation, concerning the responsibility for
acts of third parties imposed by section 85(1) of the Water
Resources Act 1991 [cf. para 38].
The approach in Empress is, therefore, contextual and may
be restricted as such. Although Buxton LJ purported to apply
that same approach to section 23 in Finlay, his doing so was
described in Kennedy (2) as “an unnecessary sophistication”
[para 23]. At least in the context of manslaughter, causation
must be established on general principles.
Joint principals, and acting in concert
Ruling (b): It is open for a jury to find that K is a joint
principal in the administration of the heroin. It is not enough
to show that K is a secondary party to that act (say, because
K encouraged V to self-inject), since self-injection is not
a crime. K must be a co-principal, responsible directly for
the actus reus of section 23. [See paras 28(v)-30.]
K may be a principal, of course, where he causes V’s
act and V is not a free, deliberate, and informed intervener.
But that analysis was not available here. Instead, the Court
in Kennedy (2) identified an alternative route by which K
may be responsible as a principal: if V and K are acting in
concert. According to the Court,
“if a defendant is acting in concert with the deceased,
what the deceased does in concert with the defendant will
not break the chain of causation, even though the general
principles as to causation have to be applied.... If Kennedy
either caused the deceased to administer the drug or was
acting jointly with the deceased in administering the drug,
Kennedy would be acting in concert with the deceased and
there would be no breach in the chain of causation.”
[Paras 42-3.]
The idea here seems to be that where K’s and V’s
actions are intimately bound together, it is artificial to
divide up what in reality is a joint operation, a single “combined”
transaction for which both are responsible [para 53]. Thus
K, too, may be held responsible for V’s actions. As
such, K becomes personally responsible—as a principal—for
causing the administration of a noxious substance to V, an
offence under section 23, and in turn for manslaughter.
The scope of action in concert
The good news is that Empress is, rightly, confined to its
statutory context and not of general application. But we now
have a new rule of causation, which is said to be of general
application. When does one act in concert with another? It
would seem that the key features of Kennedy are (i) that
K was present throughout the events; (ii) that K’s own
contribution was immediately and intimately connected to V’s
conduct; and (iii) that K’s contribution was pursuant
to a shared understanding that encompassed V’s subsequent
conduct.
Even so, the distinctions in play are vanishingly fine. So
fine, indeed, that one cannot be sure of their application
to future cases. In Dalby, for example, D supplied V with
Diconal tablets. Each then injected himself with solutions
of the drug. Yet D’s appeal against conviction of manslaughter
was successful. The difference was apparently that Dalby merely
supplied the tablets, whereas Kennedy prepared the syringe
and handed it to V for immediate injection. But in Dalby,
everything that followed was part of a mutual project, and
the tablets were supplied for that very purpose. Were they
not, in the language of Kennedy (2) [para 53], “working
as a team”? The reality is that, with the exception
of Rogers—where D played a direct role in the administration
of the heroin, by applying a tourniquet while V performed
the self-injection—these are all cases where the defendant
has simply given V the tools for V deliberately to harm himself.
Had V not died, the urge to find the defendant guilty of an
offence against section 23 would not have been compelling.
The law governing responsibility for mutual projects is properly
the domain of secondary liability, and the existing confusion
in our complicity doctrines is hardly helped by adding a new
rule of principal liability which is itself hopelessly vague.
In essence, the new rule is simply a device for evading the
technical difficulty about applying complicity liability principles
to the specific context of self-harm by the principal. But
general principles should not be created to deal with specific
problems. Inevitably, they have wider ramifications, something
evidenced by the failure of the Court properly to answer the
question, posed by the Criminal Cases Review Commission, of
why preparing a syringe to assist another’s suicide
would not be murder [paras 46-9]. Clearly, on this new general
principle, it would. One hopes that, in future, this extension
of ordinary complicity principles will be restricted to manslaughter
cases such as Kennedy where, because self-injection is
not an offence, the principles of secondary liability are
displaced.
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