100% satisfaction guarantee Immediately available after payment Both online and in PDF No strings attached 4.2 TrustPilot
logo-home
Judgments

The Theft Problem ( Gomez, Hinks, Ghosh, Briggs, Shute )

Rating
-
Sold
1
Pages
5
Uploaded on
28-01-2021
Written in
2019/2020

Comprehensive table unpacking 'the theft problem,' utilising judgements in relevant landmark cases and dissecting obiter dicta by judges involved. This Essay Addresses - Contradictions between civil and criminal law - Does theft target the right thing - Differences between Hinks and Gomez - Coverage of the case of Briggs and Ghosh - Obiter Dicta from Lord Hutton, Lord Hobhouse, Lord Steyn - Interference with rights - Overlap between theft and fraud - How the overlap may help prosecutors - Potential human rights violations - The theft problem is a common essay question within advanced criminal law exams

Show more Read less
Institution
Module









Whoops! We can’t load your doc right now. Try again or contact support.

Written for

Institution
Study
Module

Document information

Uploaded on
January 28, 2021
Number of pages
5
Written in
2019/2020
Type
Judgments

Subjects

Content preview

Cases & Debate Sparked Lords Opinions Problems of Theft

 Gomez (1993) – D was the assistant Hinks (2001) Is theft targeting the right thing?
manager of an electrical goods  Lord Hutton &  The argument is whether the elements
shop. He convinced his manager to Lord Hobhouse of theft, as currently interpreted, are
allow a customer to buy items using dissenting fairly & coherently targeting their
unique cheques that D new were  Hutton: Not intended mischief.
stolen & therefore worthless. The dishonest as it was  What mischief is theft supposed to
manager consented to the sale and a valid gift, under target? – the most obvious answer is
D was charged with theft. a valid gift you can theft is designed to protect property
 Crown Court: guilty: theft suppose they rights. This is not sufficient on its own,
 Court of Appeal: appeal allowed. consented. You and mere interference with property
Following the case of Morris, the cannot rights are not sufficient justification for
consent of V undermines the understand criminalisation. Eg: where V lends D her
element of appropriation. appropriation car and D gains possession and so
 House of Lords: appeal allowed, neutrally it has to interferes with V’s property rights –
reaffiriming D’s liability and be considered there is nothing wrongful here.
following Lawrence. Where D tricks alongside Interference with rights sufficient?
V, appropriation will be found dishonesty.  There must be something beyond
whenever there is an assumption of  Dishonest before simple interference with property
ownership rights by D, regardless of the appropriation, rights. At one time, this difference
V’s consent. but at the time of would have been non-consensual
the gift transfer interference. However following Gomez,
Debate Caused there was no an appropriation can be found even
 Debate broke out: the irrelevance dishonesty under where V consents.
of V’s consent created a substantial s.2.  This has resulted in the theft offence
overlap with offences obtaining being much broader in its application,
property by deception. (referred to  Hobhouse: it is potentially applying to minor acts of
fraud by false representation just as likely that preparation that outwardly suggest little
today.) the civil law is wrongdoing, such as touching an item in
 Gomez, for better or worse, wrong as the the supermarket with the requisite
confirms as long as D assumes a criminal law is. mens rea. (Shute, 2002)
right of ownership over V’s Criminal law
property, there will be an should be Contradiction between Civil and Criminal
appropriation and V’s consent or subservient to civil Law
non-consent is irrelevant. law because they  Most controversial point relates to
are crimes about cases where theft has been found even
Hinks (2001) – property meaning though there has been no breach of civil
 D befriended V who was described they need a law and no property rights have been
by the court as naïve, trusting and conception of infringed. (Example: Hinks.) – where D
of limited intelligence. Over a 6- what is property. took advantage of a vulnerable person
month period, she took V to his (which we get although the gifts from V were valid in
building society almost every day from civil law.) civil law.
and was given £300, eventually  To understand if  Cases like Hinks are central to our
totalling over £60,000. D was property exists, identification and understanding of the
charged with theft. we need these mischief on theft, suggesting the
 Court of Appeal – conviction pre-existing offence is targeting dishonest
upheld. property rights. appropriation more generally, and not,
 HOL – appeal dismissed. Although Property crime as had generally been assumed, being
the transfer of money may not have can only exist if structured by civil property rules.
amounted to a civil wrong, this does property rights  Shute – suggested the decision in Hinks

, not preclude it being an exist beforehand is right because, even though in a given
appropriation and a theft. which they do (in case no property right has been
the civil law.) the infringed, greater property rights are
Why was the gift considered existence of the protected.
indefeasible? fraud law (enacted  Shute states: even without breaching a
 The defendant accompanying Mr in 2006) makes recognised proprietary right the
Dolphin to his building society Hobhouse’s criminalised act may nonetheless have
where he made the withdrawals argument stronger had the tendency to undermine
does raise the question of whether as we have now property rights:
some coercion was going on, conceptualised  By either attacking the interests they
making the gifts voidable for actual fraud more protect, or indirectly by weakening an
undue influence. closely. established system of property rights
 The prosecution contended that Mr and so threatening the public good and
Dolphin lacked the capacity to make  Lord Steyn that that system represents.
the gifts, thus making them void. (supports ruling) – If this is correct….
argued the  If this is right and there is a need to
Differences between Hinks and Gomez: purposes of civil protect an established system of
 Hinks involved a full and valid and criminal law property rights using the law of crime,
transfer of property in civil law. are somewhat then perhaps the way forward would be
 In the case of Mazo, it was accepted different. In to say:
by the COA to be ‘common ground theory the two  That any theft conviction results in the
that the receiver of a valid gift inter systems would title to the property becoming voidable
vivos could not be subject of a work in perfect because at least then there is a link
conviction of theft. harmony but in a between vitiation in the civil law and
 This argument supported by the practical world theft in the criminal law.
apparent absurdity of D being this cannot always  This view suggests that the civil tests of
potentially liable for theft and yet, be achieved. The vitiation need to be changed because
as a matter of civil law, remaining HOL recognised the principles underpinning it are
the owner of the property stolen. this inconsistency, inadequate in protecting property
 This argument was rejected and but rejected it as a rights.
overruled in Hinks. reason to find no  The court in Hinks determined there is a
 In Hinks, theft is not being used to appropriation. need to protect proprietary rights with
protect ownership rights, but is Lord Steyn stating tension between civil
punishing D for gaining valid  Lord Steyn: and criminal being an insufficient reason
ownership. Theft is now targeting ongoing dishonest to depart from the current law of
dishonesty or exploitation more state of mind, Gomez and Lawrence.
generally. alongside specific
appropriations. Implication of the case of Briggs
Ghosh (1982) – (eg V giving D the  In Briggs – the Court of Appeal held that
 D, who was working as a surgeon, money.) this appropriation within the meaning of s.3
claimed fees for carrying out certain dishonesty can be required a physical act of appropriation
operations where this was not connected to by the defendant.
appropriate. D was charge with these  There would not be such an act where
obtaining property by deception (an appropriations as the defendant’s fraudulent deception
offence where D must act it is ongoing. Does merely caused the victim to transfer his
dishonestly. become theft. property to the defendant but without
 Crown Court: guilty of section 15 the defendant physically taking it.
offence.  Hutton – more  This approach achieved support from
 COA: conviction upheld. D acts general dishonesty late Professor Sir John Smith who
dishonestly where (a) D’s conduct is and various acts of argued that the victim’s voluntary act
dishonest according to the honest would break the chain of causation so
$9.61
Get access to the full document:

100% satisfaction guarantee
Immediately available after payment
Both online and in PDF
No strings attached

Get to know the seller

Seller avatar
rachelgrantlawandcriminology The University of Sheffield
Follow You need to be logged in order to follow users or courses
Sold
6
Member since
4 year
Number of followers
6
Documents
2
Last sold
1 year ago
First Class Law and Criminology Notes

Simple, concise, high quality exam notes that will save you months of time. Content: - Bullet pointed question and answer exam notes that will give you all information needed to confidently answer legal problem questions. - Essays to give examples of high quality structure, content and arguments

4.0

1 reviews

5
0
4
1
3
0
2
0
1
0

Recently viewed by you

Why students choose Stuvia

Created by fellow students, verified by reviews

Quality you can trust: written by students who passed their exams and reviewed by others who've used these revision notes.

Didn't get what you expected? Choose another document

No problem! You can straightaway pick a different document that better suits what you're after.

Pay as you like, start learning straight away

No subscription, no commitments. Pay the way you're used to via credit card and download your PDF document instantly.

Student with book image

“Bought, downloaded, and smashed it. It really can be that simple.”

Alisha Student

Frequently asked questions