Criminal Law - Fairfax - Common Law Attack Sheet - 3
Criminal Law - Fairfax - Common Law Attack Sheet - 3
Criminal Law - Fairfax - Common Law Attack Sheet - 3
(b) Different law mistake is a defense (cannot be guilty of burglary if one breaks
and enters but does not know acts committing therein constitute a felony)
(i) Can still be charged with breaking and entering and could still be
charged with the felony committed therein just not burglary
(ii) Reasonable Reliance
(a) Reasonably rely on statements by an official
(iii) Fair Notice
(a) When statute prohibits passive conduct, mistake of law is a defense if
person had no knowledge or reason to know of the duty
IV. CAUSATION
A. Must prove 2 kinds of causation
1. But for Causation (Cause in Fact)
a. But for test: Prohibited result would not have occurred but for actors conduct
b. Substantial Factor test: Two or more independent actors commit separate acts, each
of which is sufficient to bring about prohibited result
(i) Acceleration of result is sufficient for causation
(ii) Aggravation and contribution are not sufficient
(iii) Oxendine v. State
2. Proximate Causation (Legal Cause)
a. Generally arises when intervening force exists
(i) Act of God
(ii) Act of independent third party
(iii) Act or omission by victim that assists in bringing about harm
b. Analysis: If the intervening force is foreseeable and it would not be against public
policy/fairness, proximate cause is established.
c. For an intervening force to break the chain of causation, it must be set in motion after
Ds act, be unforeseen by D at time of his act, be the sole major cause of the result and
be independent of Ds original act.
d. Kibbe v. Henderson
V. HOMICIDE
A. Types of Homicide:
1. First Degree
(i) Premeditated and deliberate
(a) Definitions depend on jurisdiction
a. Shrader (twinkling of an eye)
b. Guthrie (some period of consideration, twinkling not enough)
c. Morin (time of consideration must be enough for person to take a
second look/think twice about what he is doing)
(b) Circumstantial evidence that points to premeditation/deliberation:
a. Provocation by victim, conduct and statements by D, threats made
by D, previous ill-will or difficulty between parties, brutal manner of
killing, nature / # of wounds, dealing of lethal blows after D is helpless.
(ii) Includes murder in the course of or attempt of a serious felony
2. Second Degree
(i) Malice aforethought
(a) Knowledgeable and purposeful killing
(b) Intent to cause grievous bodily harm
(c) Unintentional killing with depraved mind/abandoned heart/extreme
recklessness
(i) Conscious disregard of substantial/unjustifiable risk
(d) Intent to commit some felonies
3. Voluntary Manslaughter
(i) Intentional heat of passion killing
(a) Adequate provocation
(1) The conduct was within a custom that was not inconsistent with the
purpose of the law
(2) It did not cause the type of harm that the law sought to prevent
(3) The legislature could not reasonably be regarded as foreseeing this
type of act when they defined the crime.
VIII. INCHOATE OFFENSES:
1. Attempt:
A. Mens rea: Dual intent offense
a. Intent to perform the actus reus or perpetration
(i) Ex: intent to pull the trigger
b. Specific Intent to commit the target offense
(i) Ex: intent to kill
c. Attempted murder: must have the intent to kill
(i) See People v. Gentry (man lighting girlfriend on fire)
(ii) Therefore, you cannot have an attempted unintentional killing like
attempted depraved heart murder or attempted felony-murder (Bruce v. State)
(iii) Attempted statutory rape: because mistake of age is immaterial in
proving statutory rape, it is also immaterial when proving attempted
statutory rape (Simmons v. State)
B. Actus reus: Mere preparation is not enough must have perpetration.
a. To distinguish between mere preparation and attempt use these tests:
(i) Physical proximity: How physically close D is to accomplishing offense
(ii) Dangerous proximity: How close D is to success (nearness of danger and
greatness of harm)
(iii) Indispensable element test
(iv) Probable desistance test
(v) Abnormal step approach
(vi) Res ipsa loquitor/ unequivocality approach: when actor's conduct is
no longer equivocal or uncertain
C. Punishment:
a. Attempts can be punished at the same grade as the target offense. But
usually it is punished with half the jail time as the underlying offense.
D. Defenses:
a. Factual impossibility
(i) Defendant set out to do something or cause a particular result that
would have constituted a crime, but because of factors of which he was
unaware, there is NO CHANCE he will succeed in committing offense:
(ii) This is NOT a defense: D still is morally blameworthy and has intent
b. Pure legal impossibility
(i) D mistakenly believes his actions constitute a crime, but they do not
(ii) This IS a defense to attempt.
c. Hybrid impossibility
(i) Defendant sets out to do something or cause result believing that
it would constitute a crime. However, because the defendant
misunderstands the surrounding circumstances, his conduct, if
completed, would not actually constitute a crime. But if the
circumstances WERE as he believed them to be, his intended conduct
WOULD have constituted a crime.
(ii) This defense is usually seen when there is a factual mistake, but
mistake is primarily related to the legal status of the attendant
circumstances.
(iii)This is basically the same thing as factual impossibility. Therefore, it is NOT
a defense.
E. Abandonment: IS NOT A DEFENSE
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