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Lecture notes

Lecture notes on Theft in Criminal Law

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Lecture notes of 6 pages for the course Criminal Law at University of the West of England (Theft)

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  • July 27, 2021
  • 6
  • 2019/2020
  • Lecture notes
  • Jane rees
  • Theft in criminal law
All documents for this subject (10)
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luciegreen47
Definition:


 Section 1 of the Theft Act 1968 defines ‘theft’
 ‘A person is guilty of theft if he dishonestly appropriates property belonging to
another with the intention of permanently depriving the other of it’
 Elements of the offence:
 Dishonestly (S2)
 Appropriation (S3)
 Property (S4)
 Belonging to another (S5)
 Permanently deprive (S6)
 The AR is S3, 4 and 5
 The MR is S2 and S6

Appropriation:


 Set out in S3(1)
 ‘Any assumption by a person of the right of an owner amounts to an
appropriation, and this includes, where he has come by the property (innocently or
not) without stealing it, any later assumption of a right to it by keeping or dealing with
it as owner.’
 Morris [1984]
 ‘It is enough for the prosecution if they have proved...the assumption of any of
the rights of the owner of the goods in question’ (Lord Roskill)
 Academics have since criticised the ease of finding appropriation
 Leigh anecdote
 If X kicks my camel, he surely does not appropriate it. The notion of
assumption must surely involve a taking unto oneself or denial of the owners
right or title to a thing for the benefit of another’
 Appropriation can take place even with the consent of the owner
 Lawrence v MPC [1972]
 Student and taxi driver
 Language barrier
 The passenger couldn’t understand how much so he showed him his wallet
and gestured to take how much he owed
 He took more than he owed
 He argued that he consented to it so it wasn’t theft
 The judge said that it was and that appropriation could take place with
consent
 Gomez [1993]
 Convinced boss to sell items to friends
 Cheques were worthless
 Said he consented to the sale but again, consent doesn’t mean their wasn’t
an appropriation
 Rader [1992]
 Stated the same as above cases

Receipt of a Gift as Appropriation:


 This can amount to appropriation
 R v Mazo [1997]

,  Maid was given things including 37k of of cheques by employer
 Employer was not in the correct mental state to give money
 Wasn’t found to be appropriation
 Hopkins and Kendrick [1997]
 Women in a care home, not of mental capacity
 Found there was an appropriation even if it was given to her
 Change in law in the same year
 Hinks [2000]
 Gift can be appropriation
 A lot of disagreements between judges
 Women received a lot of money and gifts from a man who wasn’t of mental
capacity
 3:2 majority on the HL judgment that it was an appropriation even if it was a
gift
 The dissenting judgment stated it was immoral not illegal
 In CL even after the money is transferred it can be an offence however in civil law it
wouldn’t be considered after the money has been transferred
 Bona fide purchasers is an exception (S3(2))
 If you don’t know it is stolen when you buy/use it it cannot be appropriation
 Wheeler [1991]
 Stall holder sold something that was stolen (watch) but purchaser didn’t know
it was stolen so is wasn’t theft
 Adams [1993]
 Same point with motorcycle parts

Property:


 S4(1) provides that ‘property includes money and all other property, real or personal,
including things in action and other intangible property’
 Chan Man-sin v Attorney General of Hong Kong [1988]
 This was a case of banks and a theft of debt
 This was a theft of a thing in action
 Other intangible property is also part of property and can include things like quota’s
 AG of Hong Kong v Chan Nai Keung [1987]
 In this case textile quotas were sold at a gross undervalue
 This was classed as intangible property

Exceptions to Property:


 Confidential information
 Oxford v Moss [1979] was a case where stealing exam papers and returning
them wasn’t considered property so it couldn’t be theft
 Electricity
 Low v Blease [1975] was a case where they took electricity but this wasn’t
considered theft
 Dealt with in S13 of Theft Act
 Body parts
 Sharpe [1857] stated that a corpse isn’t property
 R v Kelly [1999] was a case where a student stole body parts from a college
of surgeons for art purposes and this was considered theft as they had
acquired the status of ‘property’ when being used for educational/exhibition
purposes

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