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R v Quayle [2005] 1 WLR 3642

Country:
United Kingdom
  • Defendants either grew and used cannabis so as to alleviate severe pain/sleeplessness or gave it to others who said that they needed it to alleviate pain.

  • They were all convicted, in some cases after the judge refused to allow defence of necessity, and some after the judge had given a different definition to the standard one.

  • Either way, CA said that there was no defence of necessity since for the defence to work there had to be fear of death or serious physical injury - not just pain.

LJ Mance

  • Said that different principles applied to necessity depending on the area concerned.

    • In R v Z Lord Bingham said the law was merely concerned with a potential excuse.

    • In Re Conjoined Twins LJ Walker said that it was about choosing the lesser of two evils.

  • LJ Mance says Bingham’s confined definition is a good one. For necessity to apply, there had to be extraneous circumstances capable of scrutiny by judge & jury (i.e. there has to be an “outside” influence - it would not be “necessity where Defendant drove when disqualified to stop her herself committing suicide).

    • For example, in Rodger [1998] 1 Cr. App. R. 143, Defendant (a prison warder) allowed X (a prisoner) to escape since X was having suicidal thoughts, necessity was NOT allowed, since the danger was not external and could not be objectively assessed, but instead was internal and therefore subjective.

    • As Bingham said in R v Z there had to be a “just and well grounded fear” of death or serious injury for duress of circumstances/necessity to apply. 

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