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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Tucker, R v [2016] EWCA Crim 13 (13 January 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2016/13.html Cite as: [2016] EWCA Crim 13 |
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CRIMINAL DIVISION
The Strand London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE HADDON-CAVE
and
MR JUSTICE GARNHAM
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R E G I N A | ||
- v - | ||
IAN EDWARD TUCKER |
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Wordwave International Ltd trading as DTI
165 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2DY
Telephone No: 020 7404 1400; Fax No 020 7404 1424
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Mr J Edwards appeared on behalf of the Crown
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Crown Copyright ©
Wednesday 13th January 2016
LORD JUSTICE TREACY:
(1) A cricket bat can only constitute an offensive weapon if carried with an intent to injure: section 1(4) of the 1953 Act and R v Simpson (1984) 78 Cr App R 115. We accept that proposition, since a cricket bat is not an article made or adapted for causing injury to the person.
(2) The purpose of the 1953 Act is to prohibit the carrying of weapons or otherwise innocuous articles being carried as weapons; the Act is concerned with having an offensive weapon, not with offensively using weapons for which offences against public order and offences against the person exist.
Reference was made to R v Jura (1954) 38 Cr App R 53. That was a case where the appellant lawfully obtained an air rifle at a shooting gallery for the purpose of shooting at a target. Whilst there, he turned on a woman companion and shot her in the hip. His conviction under the 1953 Act was quashed.
It was held that the Act was intended to apply to persons who, with no excuse whatever, set out with offensive weapons. The appellant had a reasonable excuse for carrying the weapon and his subsequent unlawful use of it did not bring him within the ambit of the Act.
Mr Bruce relied on this decision for the proposition that the offensive use of an otherwise lawfully held article cannot necessarily convert that article into an offensive weapon.
(3) He submitted that in the case of an article which can only constitute an offensive weapon if possessed with an intent to injure, the carrier of the object must be proved to have formed the necessary intent before an occasion to use actual violence has arisen.
Mr Bruce referred to Ohlson v Hylton [1975] 1 WLR 724. This is the well-known decision involving a carpenter on his way home with the tools of his trade who became involved in a dispute with another man while boarding a tube train. The defendant immediately took from his briefcase a hammer and deliberately struck the other man with it on the head. The conviction under the 1953 Act was quashed.
Reliance was placed on the observation of Lord Widgery CJ at page 728F:
"In the absence of authority I would hold that an offence under section 1 is not committed where a person arms himself with a weapon for instant attack upon his victim. It seems to me that the section is concerned only with a man who, possessed of a weapon, forms the necessary intent before an occasion to use actual violence has arisen. In other words, it is not the actual use of the weapon with which the section is concerned, but the carrying of the weapon with intent to use it if occasion arises."
Reference was also made to C v DPP [2002] Crim LR 322, a case where a dog owner used a lead to attack police officers whilst out walking her dog. This decision was described as "borderline" by Professor John Smith in his commentary.
We note that Elias J (as he then was) commented that the nexus between the formation of the intention and the use of the article was a matter of fact and degree, bearing in mind the gap between forming an intention and carrying it out, and the context in which the events took place.
(4) Thus, argued Mr Bruce, since the Crown's case was that the appellant came from his house with the bat and promptly engaged in violence with it, his carrying of the bat was part and parcel of a single transaction and it would be highly artificial to posit a point in time at which the appellant had the bat with him with an intent to injure prior to his offensive use of it. In short, he submitted that this was an ordinary article used on the spur of the moment. It should not be regarded as an offensive weapon if the intent to use it could not sensibly be separated from the violent use made of it.
"The terms of section 1(1) of the Prevention of Crime Act 1953 are apt to cover the case of a person who goes out with an offensive weapon without lawful authority or reasonable excuse and also the person who deliberately selects an article, such as the stone in Harrison v Thornton [1996] Crim LR 388, with the intention of using it as a weapon without such authority or excuse. But, if an article (already possessed lawfully and for good reason) is used offensively to cause injury, such use does not necessarily prove the intent which the Crown must establish in respect of articles which are not offensive per se. Each case must depend on its own facts."
Those observations were approved in Ohlson v Hylton.