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Elements of Crime

Elements of Crime


                  	

This post was originally based on old criminal laws, which have now been revised under the new criminal laws, the 2023 Bhartiya Nyaya Sanhita (BNS), 2023 Bhartiya Nagrik Suraksha adhiniyam (BNSS), and 2023 Bhartiya Sakshya Adhiniyam (BSA). The new amendments in criminal laws mark a transformative shift in the Indian legal landscape, addressing emerging challenges and ensuring greater protection of rights. These changes include the introduction of more stringent provisions for cybercrimes, sexual offences, and crimes against vulnerable groups. In response, the law notes have been thoroughly revised to incorporate these updates, providing readers with detailed analyses and practical implications of the new laws. The updated notes aim to equip students and professionals with the knowledge to explore the evolving legal framework effectively.

Elements of Crime

To establish criminal liability, it is necessary to understand the elements of a crime. Crimes can be broken down into elements, which the prosecution must prove beyond a reasonable doubt. Criminal elements are set forth in criminal statutes or cases in jurisdictions that allow common-law crimes.

Fundamental Elements of Crime:

There are four elements which go to constitute a crime, these are:-

Human Being-

According to the first element, the wrongful act must be committed by a ‘human being’. Any non-living thing or animals are not considered in the ‘person/human being’ category. Whereas in ancient times, when the idea of the retributive theory largely dominated criminal law, punishments were inflicted on animals also for the injury caused by them. For instance, a pig was burnt in Paris for having devoured a child and a horse was killed for kicking a man.

Under the Indian Penal Code 1860, if an animal causes an injury, we do not hold the animal liable; rather, the owner is held liable for such injury. So, the first element of a crime is a ‘human being’, who must be under the legal obligation to act in a particular manner and should be a fit subject for awarding appropriate punishment.

Section 11 of the Indian Penal Code, now section 2(26) of Bhartiya Nyaya Sanhita, provides that the word ‘person’ includes a company or association or body of persons, whether incorporated or not. The word ‘person’ includes artificial or juridical persons.

Mens Rea

The second essential element of a crime is mens rea, or evil intent, or guilty mind, or a guilty or wrongful purpose; criminal intent; guilty knowledge, and willfulness.

There is a well-known maxim in this regard, i.e. “actus non facit reum nisi mens sit rea” which means that the guilty intention and guilty act together constitute a crime. It comes from the maxim that no person can be punished in a proceeding of a criminal nature unless it can be shown that he had a guilty mind. A fundamental principle of Criminal Law is that a crime consists of both a mental and a physical element. Mens rea, a person's awareness of the fact that his or her conduct is criminal, is the mental element and actus reus, the act itself, is the physical element.

The concept of mens rea developed in England during the latter part of the common-law era (about 1600) when judges observed that an act alone could not establish criminal liability unless it was accompanied by a guilty state of mind. The degree of mens rea required for a particular common-law crime varied. Murder, for example, required a malicious state of mind, whereas Larceny required a felonious state of mind.

Nowadays, almost every crime, mens rea plays a significant role in establishing criminal liability. Sometimes, a statute creates criminal liability for committing or omitting a particular act without designating a mens rea. These are called Strict Liability statutes. If such a statute is construed to omit criminal intent purposely, a person who commits the crime may be guilty even though he or she did not know that his or her act was criminal and had no thought of committing a crime. All required under such statutes is that the act itself is voluntary since involuntary acts are not criminal.

Elements of mens rea


Motive and intention are vital aspects in the field of law and justice. They are associated with a suspect to prove or disprove a particular case or crime. A wrong motive with guilty intention is necessary to establish criminal liability.

-Motive

Motive refers to the reason a crime was committed. It is often the background of the suspect in committing the alleged crime. As a background, motive comes before intent. Unlike intent, motive can be determined, but its existence doesn’t precisely prove guilt. It can be refuted by evidence or an alibi on a suspected person’s part (often referred to as “a person of interest” in criminal jargon). The motive is an initial factor but not a conclusive determinant to link a person to a crime.

Essential ingredients of motive:-

i. The ulterior object is called the motive.

ii. The motive may be good or bad.

iii. Motive refers to the reason a crime was committed.

iv. Motive, as a psychological term, is also known as the drive.

v. It is a general rule that a man’s motive is irrelevant in determining criminal liability.

vi. Criminal law is not concerned with good motives.

Sometimes, the motive is relevant in exceptional civil liability cases, such as defamation, malicious prosecution, cheque dishonour, etc.

Why Motive Matters

The motive is an indirect way to prove that something was done intentionally or knowingly. For instance, a defendant in an assault case may claim that he punched the victim by accident and thus did not have the necessary intent for an assault. Suppose the prosecution can demonstrate that the defendant and victim had been arguing shortly before the alleged assault. In that case, that motive can serve as circumstantial evidence that a defendant did intend to punch the victim. Alternatively, defendants can use the prosecution's lack of evidence of a motive as a "reasonable doubt" to avoid criminal liability.

To be specific, a scenario of intent in criminal law often involves the prosecutor in a court of law filing a charge of a crime against a suspect with absolute motive and intent. Since the intent is the final goal of the motive, it needs to be proven in order to prove that the suspect committed the crime. Compared to motive, the intent has more legal standing and weight in a court of law and is a requirement to make a case along with the means and opportunity.

-Intention

The intention is the supposed action or purpose of the crime. It is the result of the motive and has a higher level of culpability since a harmful action was committed. The intent is characterised as a deliberate action and conscious effort to break the law and commit the offence. Intent resides in the field of law, which is defined as the planning and longing to perform an act. It is present in both criminal law and tort law.

In finer terms, intention describes an individual's will or plan. So, when an action is performed intentionally, it implies the willingness or aim of a person to do so and not an accident or mistake, where he/she is completely aware of the consequences of the act. That is why intention is the primary element that affixes culpability.

No matter whether the act is committed with good intent or bad, if a person does something purposefully and consciously which is prohibited by the law, it will amount to criminal liability.

Motive v. Intention

Intention is the basic element for making a person liable for a crime, and it is commonly contrasted with motive. Though we often use the two terms interchangeably, they are different in the eyes of the law. While intention means the purpose of doing something, motive determines the reason for committing an act.

The primary difference between intention and motive is that intention specifically indicates the mental state of the accused, i.e. what is going on in his mind at the time of the commission of a crime. In contrast, motive implies motivation, i.e. what drives a person to do or refrain from doing something.

The key difference between motive and intention:


While intention determines whether the accused committed the crime purposely or accidentally, motive answers the question of why the accused committed the crime. Simply put, motive impels intention, so the latter arises out of the former.

In every criminal case, the defendant's intention is foremost because guilt or innocence can only be proved with it. On the other hand, motive does not play a significant role in determining guilt or innocence.

-Knowledge

In criminal law, knowledge is one of the degrees of mens rea that constitute part of a crime. For example, in English law, the offence of knowingly being a passenger in a vehicle taken without consent (TWOC) requires that the prosecution prove not only that the defendant was a passenger in a vehicle and that the driver took it without consent but also that the defendant knew that it was taken without consent.

Under the principle of ignorantia juris non excusat, ignorance of or mistake about the law is no defence. The mens rea of knowledge refers to knowledge about certain facts.

It is "a positive belief that a state of affairs exists."

This term applies if a person is aware that his or her actions will have certain results but does not seem to care. For example, if a person violently lashes out at someone, inflicting harm may not be her primary goal. However, if she was aware that harm would be a predictable result of her actions, then she is guilty of having criminal knowledge.

There are three types of knowledge: