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Summary Step by step guide on non-fatal offences for A-level Law

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I have created a summary document of non-fatal offences. It creates a step by step guide on how to answer problem questions, whilst laying out the lay in the best way to get a full understanding, without an overload of information.

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Non-fatal offences


Context
Topics discussed:

Criminal liability
Assault
Battery
Actual Bodily Harm
Grevious Bodily Harm (s20 and s18)




Information
Work through each topic step by step - each topic has been structured cronilogically to provide guidance on how to
answer a question and the elements to discuss, in the best order
Use cases (written in red) to support the law e.g. the case of R v White illustrates the ‘but for test’, by which the
defendant can only be guilty if the consequence would not have happened but for his act.

, Criminal Liability
Actus Reus + Mens Rea = Offence - Defence = Criminal Liability

Requirements for criminal liability:

Actus Reus
Causation
Mens rea


Actus Reus

Physical element - guilty act of the defendant

Must be a voluntary act Hill v Baxter

May be caused due to: Failure to act

Contract requires them to act R v Pitwood
Public position requires to act R v Dytham
Fails to minimise harmful consequences of act R v Miller
Assumes a duty and accepts responsibility R v Stone & Dobinson
Duty due to a relationship R v Gibbins & Proctor


Causation

Both must be proven:

Factual causation - Defendant can only be guilty if the consequences would not have happened ‘but for’ his act R v White

Legal causation - Defendant’s actions must be a ‘more than slight or trifling link’ R v Kimsey

Additional considerations:

Novus Actus Interveniens (intervening act) - this can break the chain of causation = no causation

Act of a third party R v Jordan (medical treatment ‘so palpably wrong’)
Victims own acts R v Williams
Natural but unpredictable event


Mens Rea

Guilty mind element - Defendant is guilty if he intends to perform a criminal act

Direct intent - Defendant had the ‘aim desire and purpose’ R v Mohan
Oblique/indirect intent - Virtually certain consequence of defendants act, he is aware of this consequence R v Woolin

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Uploaded on
February 23, 2026
Number of pages
7
Written in
2025/2026
Type
SUMMARY

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