New Zealand Law/Criminal/SelfDefence
Appearance
Requirements
[edit | edit source]- Use of force or the threat of force in the defence of self or another.
- Force that defendant believes in the circumstances to be reasonable.
- Elements of the offence must require force.
- The prosecution must first prove prima facie case involving mens rea.
Cases
[edit | edit source]R v Tavete
[edit | edit source]- Held
- Judge must put defence to jury which is capable of being supported by evidence, even if for tactical reasons defence did not.
R v Ranger
[edit | edit source]- Facts
- During argument with boyfriend, defendant stabbed and killed him.
- Defence claimed provocation.
- Defence did not raise self-defence although there was evidence that defendant believed boyfriend was going for gun and would shoot her and son.
- Held
- If the accused really believed in threat, then it would be going too far to say that a jury could not entertain a reasonable doubt as to whether a pre-emptive strike with a knife was reasonable force in the circumstances.
- It is sometimes tactically difficult for the defence to run 2 defences. It is, therefore, the responsibility of the trial judge to place before the jury any defence capable of being supported by the evidence.
R v Wang
[edit | edit source]- Facts
- Husband passed out, D stabbed him 4 times.
- Husband had threatened to kill her and family, and was also blackmailing sister.
- On appeal, defendant said judge should have put self-defence to jury.
- Held
- Impossible for jury to find that force reasonable in the circumstances, however a pre-emptive strike not always unreasonable.
R v Savage
[edit | edit source]- Facts
- Savage was a patched gang member. He and others got into a fight with O’Leary. Savage stabbed O’Leary and fled.
- Evidence was that O’Leary had been causing trouble all day.
- Savage claimed self-defence or provocation.
- Held
- When a knife is used, the accused must be under real threat, not merely think that there might be some future danger.
- Whether a person should retreat from a fight depends on what is reasonable in the circumstances.
- It is a misdirection to say either that (i) provocation must occur immediately before killing or (ii) that the def’s action must be proportionate to the provocation.
R v Thomas
[edit | edit source]- Facts
- Police trying to arrest suspect.
- Intoxicated defendant thought police were using excessive force, physically intervened.
- Held
- Mistaken belief (that force used by police is unlawful) must be honest, need not be reasonable.
- Mistake of fact.
- Self defence available in defence of stranger.
- Not confined to defence against unlawful assault.
R v Kneale
[edit | edit source]- Facts
- Defendant left daughter with ex-wife to go fishing. On return, K and ex had fight. K assaulted wife.
- Claimed self-defence - protecting daughter from wife.
- Held
- Judge wrong not to direct jury on self-defence but the threshold for psychological injury is high (fear, panic or grief is not enough).
- Misdirection made no difference. There was not enough evidence of threat, after all, he left daughter with ex-wife hours earlier to go fishing.
R v Howard
[edit | edit source]- Held
- Self defence is not confined to situations involving threats of death or serious bodily harm.
- The fact that there is another motivation, eg spite or anger, does not rule out self-defence. In Howard’s case, also had fear of future assault.
- Force that is reasonable may not be proportionate (eg if accused has no real choice).
R v Bridger
[edit | edit source]- Held
- It will often be necessary to assess whether defendant acting in self-defence by what accused did in response.
- Court declined to opine about whether the circumstances - as the defendant believes them to be - must be based on a sane belief.
- Trial judge may withdraw a defence from jury if it is impossible for a reasonable jury to regard accused’s reaction as reasonable. Withdrawal of a defence is not a denial of the right to trial by jury.