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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> BM, R v [2018] EWCA Crim 560 (22 March 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2018/560.html Cite as: [2018] WLR(D) 187, [2018] 2 Cr App R 1, [2018] LLR 514, [2018] Crim LR 847, [2018] EWCA Crim 560, [2018] 3 WLR 883, [2019] QB 1 |
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ON APPEAL FROM CROWN COURT AT WOLVERHAMPTON
HHJ Nawaz
T20177055
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD CHIEF JUSTICE OF ENGLAND AND WALES
THE HON MR JUSTICE NICOL
and
THE HON MR JUSTICE WILLIAM DAVIS
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REGINA |
Respondent |
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- and - |
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BM |
Appellant |
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Michael Anning (instructed by Stevens Solicitors) for the Appellant
Hearing dates: 21 February 2018
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Crown Copyright ©
The Lord Burnett of Maldon:
The Preparatory Hearing
The Background Facts
"Our promise to you … is to look after you before, during and after your procedure. We promise that the environment of your treatment is clean and sterile to a high standard. All that we ask is that you continue with our hard work and take care of your modification when you leave the studio. We will educate you the best we can on how to do this before you leave the studio."
The customer then signed a declaration to the effect that he was aware that the process involved risk, that he has chosen to have the procedure done of his own free will and finally that he will not hold the "artist responsible in anyway for any problems or medical conditions that may arise" from the procedure.
The Law
"… that although a prosecutor had to prove absence of consent in order to secure a conviction for mere assault it was not in the public interest that a person should wound or cause actual bodily harm to another for no good reason and, in the absence of such a reason, the victim's consent afforded no defence to a charge under Section 20 or 47 of the Act 1861."
The satisfaction of sado-masochistic desires did not constitute such a good reason.
"We think it can be taken as a starting point that it is an essential element of an assault that the act is done contrary to the will and without the consent of the victim; and it is doubtless for this reason that it lies on the prosecution to negative consent. … But the cases show that the courts will make an exception to this principle where the public interest requires. … Bearing in mind the various cases and the views of the textbook writers cited to us, and starting with the proposition that ordinarily an act consented to will not constitute an assault, the question is: at what point does the public interest require the court to hold otherwise? In answering that question the diversity of view expressed in the previous decisions such as [Coney and Donovan] make some selection and a partly new approach necessary. Accordingly, we have not followed the dicta which would make an act (even if consensual), an assault if it occurred in public, on the grounds that it constituted a breach of the peace, and was therefore itself unlawful. There dicta reflect the conditions of the times when they were uttered …
The answer to the question, in our judgment, is that it is not in the public interest that people should try to cause, or should cause, each other actual bodily harm for no good reason. ... So in our judgment, it is immaterial whether the act occurs in private or in public; it is an assault if actual bodily harm is intended and/or caused. This means that most fights will be unlawful regardless of consent.
Nothing which we have said is intended to cast doubt upon the accepted legality of properly conducted games or sports, lawful chastisement or correction, reasonable surgical interference, dangerous exhibitions etc. These apparent exceptions can be justified as involving the exercise of a legal right, in the case of chastisement or correction, or as needed in the public interest, in other cases."
"…surgical operations, sports, the chastisement of children, jostling in a crowd, but all subject to a reasonable degree of force being used, tattooing and ear-piercing. … None of these situations, in most cases pragmatically accepted, either covers or is analogous to the facts of the present case." (277D)
"… in some cases, such as ear-piercing and perhaps tattooing, one is driven to think that they are assumed to be lawful only because no-one would ever be minded to suggest otherwise. Certainly, ear-piercing would seem to be a form of actual bodily harm, that is in the nature of a medical operation, but which does not enjoy the exemption for lawful medical treatment because it is neither done for medical purposes nor performed by a medical practitioner."
"on the basis that the convictions on charges which seem to me so inapposite cannot be upheld unless the language of the statute or the logic of the decided cases positively so demand."
"Many of the acts done by surgeons would be very serious crimes if done by anyone else, and yet the surgeons incur no liability. Actual consent, or the substitute for consent deemed by the law to exist where an emergency creates a need for action, is an essential element in this immunity; but it cannot be a direct explanation for it, since much of the bodily invasion involved in surgery lies well above any point at which consent could even arguably be regarded as furnishing a defence. Why is this so? The answer must in my opinion be that proper medical treatment, for which actual or deemed consent is a prerequisite, is in a category of its own."
"It has been acknowledged throughout the present proceedings that the appellants' activities were performed by a pre-arranged ritual, which at the same time enhanced their excitement and minimised the risk that the infliction of injury would go too far. Of course things might go wrong and really serious injury or death might ensue. If this happened, those responsible would be punished according to the ordinary law, in the same way as those who kill or injure in the course of more ordinary sexual activities are regularly punished."
"If a line has to be drawn, as I think it must, to be workable, it cannot be allowed to fluctuate within particular charges and in the interest of legal certainty it has to be accepted that consent can be given to acts which are said to constitute actual bodily harm and wounding. Grievous bodily harm I accept to be different by analogy with an extension of the old cases on maiming. Accordingly, I accept that other than for cases of grievous bodily harm or death consent can be a defence. This in no way means that the acts done are approved of or encouraged. It means no more than that the acts do not constitute an assault within the meaning of these two specific sections of the Offences against the Person Act 1861."
The Submissions of the Parties
Discussion