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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Criminal Division) Decisions >> Gedminintaite, R. v [2008] EWCA Crim 814 (15 February 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Crim/2008/814.html Cite as: (2008) 172 JP 413, [2008] EWCA Crim 814 |
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CRIMINAL DIVISION
The Strand London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
MR JUSTICE HEDLEY
and
HIS HONOUR JUDGE HALL
(Sitting as a Judge of the Court of Appeal, Criminal Division)
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R E G I N A | ||
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EDITA GEDMININTAITE | ||
JOSEPH KENRICK COLLIER |
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Wordwave International Ltd (a Merrill Communications Company)
190 Fleet Street, London EC4
Telephone 020-7421 4040
(Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
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Crown Copyright ©
LORD JUSTICE KEENE: I will ask His Honour Judge Hall to give the judgment of the court.
HIS HONOUR JUDGE HALL:
"(3) For the purposes of this Act a dog shall be regarded as dangerously out of control on any occasion on which there are grounds for reasonable apprehension that it will injure any person, whether or not it actually does so ...."
"Accordingly, we come to the conclusion that the terms of the statute in section 3(1) do have to be read in the way that we indicated at the start of this judgment. In other words, when one encounters the words in section 3(1) -- 'dangerously out of control' -- one applies the meaning which is set out in section 10(3) and that means, in effect, that if a dog is in a public place, if the person accused is shown to be the owner of the dog, if the dog is dangerously out of control in the sense that the dog is shown to be acting in a way that gives grounds for reasonable apprehension that it would injure anyone, liability follows. Of course, if injury does result then, on the face of it, there must have been, immediately before the injury resulted, grounds for reasonable apprehension that injury would occur."
Popplewell J slightly dissented from that approach. He said:
"It seems to me that in order to impose some logic in this case the proper way to approach these cases is to take the view that if there is a bite without a reasonable apprehension immediately before that, the use of the word 'any occasion' is sufficient to impose a liability because there are grounds thereafter for reasonable apprehension that it will injury some other person."
Auld LJ commented:
"Depending on the circumstances, the time for apprehension, even by the notional reasonable bystander, may be so minimal as for practical purposes to be non-existent. The notion of reasonable apprehension of injury before it occurs in such circumstances, is artificial and the court should strain against adding that unhappy element to an already difficult statutory formulation. It seems to me that Kennedy LJ in that passage was unnecessarily focusing on the injury as if it were a necessary culmination and demonstration of anterior reasonable apprehension of injury. In my view there is no need for such an approach. The act of a dog causing injury, a bite or otherwise, is itself capable of being conduct giving grounds for reasonable apprehension of injury."
"My conclusion is that the directions to the jury should include a direction that in law the occasion on which the boy was bitten was an occasion on which there arose grounds for reasonable apprehension that the dog would injure a person, and that in consequence the dog was to be regarded, immediately it administered the bite, as being dangerously out of control. "