Talk:Offences Against the Person Act 1861
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Untitled
What categories does this belong in? Josh Parris#: 12:04, 19 December 2005 (UTC)
- I was going to put it into Criminal law when it is finished since its only significance is as a listing of the offences on a single page to support separate pages describing the substantive offences. It is possible that it also has some historical significance if we reimport some of the repealed offences and enlarge upon their contemporary relevance to the Victorians. David91 15:12, 19 December 2005 (UTC)
Help please
I think I have correctly identified which sections are still in force and which are repealed but I am without all my reference books of old so can someone please consult Halsbury to verify my attributions. I have moved the text of the abortion provision into the UK abortion page but hesitated to transfer the bigamy provision because that would put it on the polygamy page. Anyway, I am now bored with this task and leave it to all of you to finish it off. The repealed sections are all at Offences Against The Person Act 1861 (repealed) David91 05:51, 20 December 2005 (UTC)
- Sections that have been repealed/changed/added may, however, not correspond in the UK and in Ireland, the other successor state to the then United Kingdom. Do we need another article on "Offences Against the Person Act 1861 (Republic of Ireland)" to reflect the divergence after 1922? It is still a "big" act in Ireland (and our favourite hot potato) because it is the current abortion legislation.--Dub8lad1 00:57, 12 May 2007 (UTC)
Spelling
Why does an article about a British Law contain American spellings in the text, i.e. "misdemeanor"? Is the suggestion that those the wrote the document in Victorian Britain used American-English? Or (more plausibly) has this text been deliberately mangled from it's original form into illiterate Americanese?! Clearly, Americans would be pretty quick to leap on any Brit correcting any of the "English" on articles pertaining to America; therefore it's reasonable to demand the same treatment of British articles. More to the point, it's a fraud to quote a text and change the spelling. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 87.112.89.214 (talk) 23:25, 7 July 2008 (UTC)
Hi: No, the old English spelling was adopted by America. It is us Brits that have changed the spelling!
Offences Against The Person Act 1861
Ron Barker (talk) 13:56, 16 July 2011 (UTC)
Homosexual offences
I have moved the following material to this page because it is outside of the scope of this article:
Buggery between heterosexuals ceased to be an offence in 1994. The age of consent to homosexual buggery and to certain other homosexual acts was reduced by the Sexual Offences (Amendment) Act 2000 from 18 to 16 years in England and Wales. Almost all sexual offences are today contained in the Sexual Offences Act 2003. —Preceding unsigned comment added by James500 (talk • contribs) 16:06, 11 November 2008 (UTC)
Sexual offences
The Sexual Offences section needs to be reviewed as much of it has been superseded by the Sexual Offences Act 2003.
Malcolm.boura (talk) 19:59, 3 December 2008 (UTC)
This is explained in the section relating to sexual offences. Details of repeals and the replacement of provisions by other Acts (chiefly the 1956 Act) are given if you look closely. This article is suppossed to be a description of the 1861 Act, not the present law on sexual offences. It would help me if you could tell me what you think is wrong with the section. James500 (talk) 20:17, 3 December 2008 (UTC)
Child stealing
Just watched a repeat of an old Upstairs, Downstairs episode where Mrs Bridges was charged under the Offences against young persons act 1861 - so it seems they got the year right, having come here to check if this was accurate. I assume it's under the 'Child stealing' section as in the article. Probably too trivial to mention in the article proper however.--Tuzapicabit (talk) 03:54, 18 January 2009 (UTC)
Note
This Act was adopted in New Zealand in 1866, according to Abortion in New Zealand. James500 (talk) 00:39, 5 February 2009 (UTC)
Note
List of repeals and amendments in the Republic of Ireland [1] James500 (talk) 15:23, 6 February 2009 (UTC)
Cut from section 4
I have cut the following passage as it is plainly wrong.
- Abdullah el-Faisal, a radical Muslim cleric who preached in the UK until imprisoned for stirring up hatred, was in 2003 the first person convicted under this Act in more than a century.[1][2]
Firstly, annual convictions for all offences under the Offences against the Person Act 1861 have been very high ever since the thing was passed, as it still contains the main offences of non-fatal violence. For statistics, for example, see report number 218 of the Law Commission which was published in 1992, and consultation paper number 122 (gives the number of cases under ss 18, 20 and 47 tried on indictment in 1988 as 17,167), both available as a pdfs from BAILII.
Secondly, if this claim is supossed, despite its literal meaning, to refer specifically to convictions under section 4 of that Act (the offence of soliciting to murder), there was a conviction in R v Shephard [1919] 2 KB 125, 14 Cr App R 26, CCA, and that is only 84 years, not more than a century. That case is mentioned in the 1999 edition of Archold. I don't have time to go on a trawl through statistics but the suggestion that there have been no convictions under section 4 for long periods of time is not believable.
A claim like this should be sourced from statistics from the Home Office, published in a command paper, or perhaps Hansard, not the Jamaica Observer or a book that is only marginally related to the subject, as they are not reliable sources. [I forgot to sign this post. James500 (talk) 15:37, 11 September 2011 (UTC)]
I have had a look at the official statistics for 1999 and 2000. When I looked at the "small print" at the end on page 256 of the PDF, I found that unfortunately they are not collecting separate statistics for section 4, but are instead grouping soliciting to murder together with conspiracy to murder (Criminal Law Act 1977, s 1), making threats to kill (section 16 of the 1861 Act) and certain cases of assisting an offender (Criminal Law Act 1967, s 4) under the misleading heading of "threat or conspiracy to murder", which makes it impossible to determine how many people were convicted under section 4 and might be the reason why these claims are being made. James500 (talk) 15:30, 11 September 2011 (UTC)
And see this conviction reported by the BBC on 21 December 2001. That is over a year earlier and the article does not suggest that this is an unusual occurrance. James500 (talk) 22:27, 11 September 2011 (UTC)
- That was alot of information to digest. But I actually still think reference to Faisal may be warranted, as he is specifically mentioned by the Joint Committee on Human Rights as "worth noting" in the context of Section 59 of the Terrorism Act 2000 and similar restrictions on speech:
- Joint Committee on Human Rights, Parliament of the United Kingdom (2005). Counter-Terrorism Policy And Human Rights: Terrorism Bill and related matters: Oral and Written Evidence. Counter-Terrorism Policy And Human Rights: Terrorism Bill and related matters. Vol. 2. The Stationery Office. p. 114.
References
- ^ Cummings, Mark, "el-Faisal wants to sell his story to the media, family confirms," Jamaica Observer, 10 June 2007, accessed 9 January 2010
- ^ Radical Islam rising: Muslim extremism in the West, pp. 70-71, Quintan Wiktorowicz, Rowman & Littlefield, 2005, ISBN 0742536416, 9780742536418, accessed 8 January 2010
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Requested move 21 March 2018
It has been proposed in this section that Offences Against the Person Act 1861 be renamed and moved to Offences against the Person Act 1861. A bot will list this discussion on the requested moves current discussions subpage within an hour of this tag being placed. The discussion may be closed 7 days after being opened, if consensus has been reached (see the closing instructions). Please base arguments on article title policy, and keep discussion succinct and civil. Please use {{subst:requested move}} . Do not use {{requested move/dated}} directly. |
Offences Against the Person Act 1861 → Offences against the Person Act 1861 – This page was moved in January on the assumption that the citation of Acts of Parliament that have a statutory short tile is a matter of stylistic choice. Unfortunately that is not correct. The Short Titles Act 1896 says that this statute *must* be cited for legal purposes as "The Offences against the Person Act 1861", and not by any other short title, because no other short title is authorised. What the Short Titles Act 1896 says about the citation of this statute is not a stylistic suggestion that anyone has a choice about following. The instruction to use that particular short title is a completely obligatory command from the Queen in Parliament (the technical name for the legislature) that has the full force of law. What the Short Titles Act 1896 says *is* THE LAW. You do not have a choice about whether you want to follow it; with laws like this one, you never do have a choice. That is the nature of laws. The Short Titles Act 1896 is not a 'style guide', as a certain editor has claimed, it is THE LAW. James500 (talk) 04:28, 21 March 2018 (UTC)
The editor responsible for the move in January has tried to argue that because certain non-statutory sources are in the habit of capitalising the word "against" when they mention this Act, we can do the same. Unfortunately, that argument will not wash because of the doctrine of Parliamentary sovereignty and the enrolled Bill rule. Under the doctrine of Parliamentary sovereignty, a proposition of law contained in an Act of Parliament can never be wrong. If an Act of Parliament says that the law is such and such, that statement is always correct, because the doctrine of parliamentary sovereignty says it is always correct. It is not possible to reject or question the authority of an Act of Parliament, and it is not possible to use a non-statutory source in order to do that. If there is a contradiction between what an Act of Parliament says the law is on the one hand, and what a non-statutory source says the law is on the other hand, then the Act of Parliament is always right, and the non-statutory source is always wrong. The fact that the non-statutory source happens to have been published by a government department is irrelevant, because the executive branch of government does not have the authority or legal power to amend or suspend the operation of an Act of Parliament. The bottom line is that the Short Titles Act 1896 creates a statutory rule of law about how the Act of 1861 is correctly cited for legal purposes. The fact that certain non-statutory commentary, that is not part of any Act of Parliament, on the website legislation.gov.uk happens to capitalise the word "against" cannot change the law about the correct citation of the Act of 1861 created by the Short Titles Act 1896, because the department who created that website simply do not have the legal power to amend the Short Titles Act 1896, or any other Act of Parliament. In particular, the page headings, and the other commentary generally, on that website are not part of any Act of Parliament, and do not have the force of law in the way that the Short Titles Act 1896 does, or in any other way for that matter. The non-statutory material on that website cannot legally release you from having to do what the Short Titles Act 1896 says you legally have to do. Now, let me explain what might happen if someone was to capitalise the word "against" when citing the Act of 1861 in a legal document. Suppose that an indictment is preferred for an offence under the Act of 1861, and that indictment refers to the Act as "the Offences Against the Person Act 1861" (with the word "against" capitalised). In such a case, the judge on appeal might decide that the indictment is defective because the indictment does not cite the Act of 1861 in the way that the Short Titles Act 1896 says that the Act of 1861 *must* be cited for legal purposes. (Ie he might decide the citation is not legally valid). This would result in the defendant being automatically acquitted. And the defendant can't be re-tried with a corrected indictment because of the double jeopardy rule. Oops! This level of judicial obstructivism can and has actually happened in the courts. Huge numbers of defendants have been acquitted because of technical errors in indictments. An extreme example is that during the nineteenth century it was apparently possible to be acquitted of murder because the indictment failed to specify the financial value of the murder weapon, or failed to allege that the accused had been "inspired by the Devil", or failed to say a lot of other silly nonsense! (Bear in mind the Act of 1896 was around at a time when the rules regarding indictments etc were harsher than today under the Indictments Act 1916 and Indictment Rules 1971 etc, and we have to write that history). So it is very important that Wikipedia articles about Acts of Parliament follow the exact wording of those Acts to the letter. Because if we don't do that, we are giving readers misleading information that might have real world consequences for those readers if they act on what we told them, such as the hypothetical defective indictment described above. Similar problems with medical topics led to WP:MEDRS, and I am starting to think that a guideline on WP:PARLIAMENTARYSOVEREIGNTYRS is urgently needed to stop this kind of WP:RANDYish nonsense. I also wish to point out that there is no common law power to invent a new short title for an Act of Parliament. Short titles are a purely statutory invention, devised by Parliament in the 1840s. If a short title is not authorised by an Act of Parliament, it cannot legally be used for legal purposes. And the name being proposed by the other editor is not authorised by any Act of Parliament. Because the Short Titles Act 1896 simply does not say what that editor would like it to say. James500 (talk) 04:28, 21 March 2018 (UTC)
- This is a contested technical request (permalink). -- AlexTW 05:01, 21 March 2018 (UTC)
- I have added a second signature line to the request so that this large block of text does not take over WP:RM. I would suggest that User:James500 make it explicit that although there is a discussion of the law here, he does not intend his comments as legal threats. Dekimasuよ! 05:41, 21 March 2018 (UTC)
- @User:Dekimasu: Although there is a discussion of the law here, my comments are not legal threats. I hope that satisfies you. James500 (talk) 05:55, 21 March 2018 (UTC)
- Oppose. The rationale above completely misses the point. The correct article title is the one that satisfies the article title policy. The legally correct name is just another official name, and the legislation cited is not binding on Wikipedia. Andrewa (talk) 05:30, 28 March 2018 (UTC)
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