Shubtill v Director of Public Prosecutions: Difference between revisions

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{{cn}}<center>In the Court of Appeal <br><br>
{{cn}}<center>In the Court of Appeal <br><br>
<big>{{citet|Shubtill|Director of Public Prosecutions|2022|JCLR|46}}</big></center> <br><br>
<big>{{citet|Shubtill|Director of Public Prosecutions|2022|JCLR|46}}</big></center> <br><br>
{{quote|{{smallcaps|Appeal}} against the conviction of [[Ernest Shubtill]], the appellant, for the assault with an edible weapon of [[Violet Elizabeth Botts]]. The appellant was convicted on 17 October 2022, at the London & Middx Assizes.}}
{{quote|{{smallcaps|Appeal}} against the conviction of [[Ernest Shubtill]], the appellant, for the assault with an edible weapon of [[Violet Elizabeth Botts]]. The appellant was convicted on 17 October 2022, at the London & Middx Assizes.}}


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==== Assault ====
==== Assault ====
A person commits an assault if he performs an act (which does not, for this purpose, include a mere omission to act) by which he [[Intention|intentionally]] or [[Reckless|recklessly]] causes another person to apprehend immediate unlawful violence.
A person commits an assault if he performs an act (which does not, for this purpose, include a mere omission to act) by which he intentionally or recklessly causes another person to apprehend immediate unlawful violence.


==== Weapon ====
==== Weapon ====
If that assault is conducted by means of apparatus other than by the defendant’s own person or clothing reasonably covering it, it will be conducted with a “weapon”.
If that assault is conducted by means of aparatus other than by the defendant’s own person or closing covering it, there will be a weapon.


==== Edible ====
==== Edible ====
If that weapon takes the form of consumable biomass, whether liquid or solid or, as in this case, something in between, it may prima facie be treated as “edible”. It need not edible by, nor palatable to, the victim.<ref>See ''R v Hemlsley'', in which aggravated battery by broccoli was held to constitute assault with an edible weapon notwithstanding the complainant’s allergy to certain varieties of wild cabbage, including broccoli.</ref>  
If that weapon takes the form of consumable biomass, whether liquid or solid or, as in this case, something in between, it may prima facie be treated as edible. It need not edible by, nor palatable to, the victim.<ref>See ''R v Hemlsley'', in which aggravated battery by broccoli was held to consistute assault with an edible weapon notwithstanding the complainant’s allergy to certain varieties of wild cabbage, including broccoli.</ref>  


==== Violence ====
==== Violence ====
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=== The Appeal ===
=== The Appeal ===
The appellant is adamant that anger formed no part of his motivation for acting on  
The appellant is adamant that anger formed no part of his motivation for acting. His counsel advances a justification for his actions based not on defence of person or property, maintenance of public order, but ''implied licence''. The argument runs like this:
 
Throughout the episode, the complainants struck a tone of ''righteousness''. There is little doubt that is so: indeed, it carried on and was evident in a good portion of their evidence in the lower court. Now a preparedness to ''righteously'' pour soup on monuments of national importance with which one is aggrieved can be generalised to the view that “one may pour soup on, or glue things to, things one finds irritating”: that, indeed, one may do this without the owner’s consent; indeed even notwithstanding a valid and binding contract with the owner, in the form of a ticket containing terms of entry, agreeing ''not'' to do such a thing. The appellants’ behaviour belied a conviction that such behaviour is acceptable and appropriate.
 
Now, to Gallery patrons, a person who pours soup over a celebrated painting, glues herself to the floor and then embarks upon a monologue of loud, self-righteous non-sequiturs is, on any reasonable account, irritating. And, if she has done a decent job with the glue, stuck. The appellant was a patron of the gallery. His evidence, and we are hard pressed to gainsay it, is that he was irritated by the complainants. So he took their lead. The appellant’s proposition is that, having loudly announced their stance, the complainants are not well positioned to object should someone else follow it. What is soup for a goose is soup for a gander, so to speak. By their own actions, the complainants licensed those who found them irritating to cover them in soup.
 
Is such a license grounds for justification? Does it displace the unlawfulness ingredient of the offence with which the appellant was charged? Mr Baxter-Morley contended that it did, citing as authority the famous case of {{casenote|Board of Inland Revenue|Haddock}}: “it would be a nice thing if in the heart of the commercial capital of the world a man could not convey a negotiable instrument down the street without being arrested.” It would be similarly nice, in Mr Baxter Morley’s submission, if in the heart of the very same commercial capital of the world, a man could not e3xercise an implied licence in public without being arrested.
 
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{{sa}}
{{sa}}
*[[Ernest Shubtill]]
*[[Albert Haddock]]
{{ref}}