[go: up one dir, main page]

Jump to content

DPP v Morgan

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

DPP v Morgan
Wolverhampton, where the defendants were drinking prior to the gang rape of Morgan's wife.
CourtHouse of Lords
Full case name DPP v Morgan, DPP v McDonald, DPP v McLarty, DPP v Parker
Citations
  • [1975] UKHL 3
  • [1976] AC 182
  • [1975] 2 WLR 913
  • [1975] 2 All ER 347
  • 61 Cr App R 136
  • [1975] Crim LR 717
TranscriptBAILII
Court membership
Judges sitting
Keywords
Rape, mistaken belief

DPP v Morgan [1975] UKHL 3 was a decision of the House of Lords which decided that an honest belief by a man that a woman with whom he was engaged with sexual intercourse was consenting was a defence to rape, irrespective of whether that belief was based on reasonable grounds. This case was superseded by the Sexual Offences Act 2003 which came into force on 1 May 2004.

Case history

[edit]

William Anthony Morgan was a thirty-seven-year-old non-commissioned officer in the RAF. On the night of 15 August 1973 he was drinking in Wolverhampton with three junior colleagues. He invited the three of them to his house, ostensibly in order to have sexual intercourse with his wife, Daphne. The friends later claimed that Morgan told them that his wife was "kinky", and would feign protest (Morgan himself denied this). At the time the wife was sleeping separately from her husband, and was sleeping with her 11-year-old son in his bed when the defendants came into the house. The four men forcibly overcame the wife's resistance, dragged her from her son's bed, and each one had forcible intercourse without her consent whilst the others held her. She initially screamed for her son and his older brother to call the police, but in her evidence, she said the men clamped her nose and mouth with their hands to choke her until she submitted. After the attack, Morgan himself had sexual intercourse with his wife. She then went directly to Cosford hospital where she reported to staff that she had been raped.[1]

The men were charged with rape, and Morgan was charged with aiding and abetting the others to commit rape. He was not charged with rape because at the time it was believed that a husband had an absolute defence in law by virtue of being married to the victim.[2][3]

Trial

[edit]

At trial the three men pleaded that they had honestly believed that Mrs Morgan had consented to sexual intercourse.

They were tried at Stafford Crown Court at a trial presided over by Mr Justice Kenneth Jones.

The trial judge directed the jury that the defendants would not be guilty of rape if they honestly believed that the woman was consenting and that belief in consent was reasonably held. On 24 January 1974 the jury convicted all four and they appealed.

House of Lords

[edit]

The House of Lords held that an honest but mistaken belief that the victim was consenting would provide a complete defence; the basis for that belief did not need to be objectively reasonable so long as the jury were satisfied that the defendant honestly believed it.[4]

While the defendants won their legal argument, their convictions were nonetheless upheld. The judges found that no reasonable jury would have ever acquitted the defendants even had they been correctly directed by the trial judge as to the law, and so applying "the proviso" they upheld the convictions.

Criticism

[edit]

Notwithstanding the conviction of the defendants, the decision has attracted widespread criticism. Dolly Alexander has pointed out that in most other areas of English criminal law, mistaken belief must be held on a reasonable basis to found a defence.[5] The feminist legal scholar Jennifer Temkin[6] famously referred to the decision in DPP v Morgan as a "rapist's charter".[7]

Subsequent developments

[edit]

In 2004 the law was changed pursuant to the Sexual Offences Act 2003 such that belief on the part of the defendant that the victim consented must be "reasonable".[8]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "MENS REA IN RAPE : AN ANALYSIS OF "REG. V. MORGAN" AND SECTIONS 375 AND 79 OF THE INDIAN PENAL CODE".
  2. ^ "Sexual Offences". ANU College of Law. Archived from the original on 8 February 2012. Retrieved 2 November 2011.
  3. ^ In 1991 it was decided that being married to the victim was no defence to rape under English law (R v R [1991] UKHL 12), but that case was decided 17 years after DPP v Morgan.
  4. ^ Power, Helen. "Sexual offences, strict liability and mistaken belief: B v DPP in the House of Lords". Web Journal of Current Legal Issues. Archived from the original on 14 April 2012. Retrieved 2 November 2011.
  5. ^ Alexander, Dolly. "Twenty Years of Morgan: A Criticism of the Subjectivist View of Mens Rea and Rape in Great Britain". Pace International Law Review. 7 (1): 207–246. Retrieved 3 September 2017.[permanent dead link]
  6. ^ "Professor Jennifer Temkin". The City Law School. Retrieved 16 September 2015.
  7. ^ Sara Hinchliffe. "Rape Law Reform in Britain". Archived from the original on 27 August 2003. Retrieved 16 September 2015.
  8. ^ "Sexual Offences Act 2003, section 1(1)(c)". HMSO. Retrieved 17 November 2019.