| Manslaughter:
duty of care, Pages 72-78, 368-370
R v. Wacker [2002]
EWCA Crim 1944, [2003] Q.B. 1207, [2003] 2 WLR 374,
[2003] 1 Cr App R 2
Many will remember the horrific event of 18 June 2000,
following the interception by Customs and Excise officers
in Dover of a lorry entering the United Kingdom. Upon
opening the lorry’s container, the officers discovered
60 Chinese illegal immigrants. 58 of them were dead.
The cause of death was suffocation. Just prior to boarding
the ferry at Zeebrugge, the driver had closed the one
vent through which air was supplied into the container,
apparently in order to reduce the likelihood of detection.
That this would occur had been explained to the would-be
immigrants. Unfortunately, the vent was not reopened
during the crossing and, by the time the container was
opened by officials in Dover, it was too late. The air
had run out.
The Dutch driver, Perry Wacker, was convicted of conspiracy
to facilitate the entry of illegal immigrants, and of
58 counts of manslaughter. He appealed against the manslaughter
convictions, which were predicated on gross negligence,
on the ground that no duty of care was owed by him to
the victims. The was said by D’s counsel to be
for two reasons: first, because D’s conduct occurred
as part of a shared illegal enterprise, and so the principle
of ex turpi causa non oritur actio applied; secondly,
because the relevant causative conduct was an omission
(failure to reopen the vent) rather than an act, so
that the relevant time at which any duty might arise
could not be specified.
The second argument can be dealt with quite quickly.
Normally there would be no concern about the omission,
since one could still trace causation from D’s
original positive act of closing the vent. But that
act was not grossly negligent. Instead, the Court of
Appeal reasoned that there was a duty to re-open the
vent and, moreover,
“it was a continuing duty, which continued
until air was allowed into the container. At the moment
when the duty first arose, the defendant was outside
the jurisdiction in Holland. However the duty continued
once the ferry had sailed and it is quite clear on
the evidence that if the vent had been opened at that
stage, the deaths would not have resulted. Thus we
can see no difficulty in this regard.” [para.
40.]
Although the Court does not specify the source of that
duty, it can be grounded either in the Miller doctrine
[[1983] 2 AC 161; S&S2, p. 78] or in the dependent
nature of the relationship between the victims and their
driver.
The more important argument concerns the duty of care.
In Adomako [1995] 1 AC 171, 187 the Lord Chancellor,
Lord Mackay of Clashfern, stated:
“in my opinion the ordinary principles of the
law of negligence apply to ascertain whether or not
the defendant has been in breach of a duty of care
towards the victim who has died. If such breach of
duty is established the next question is whether that
breach of duty caused the death of the victim. If
so, the jury must go on to consider whether that breach
of duty should be characterised as gross negligence
and therefore as a crime.” [Quoted in Wacker at
para. 11.]
One of the “ordinary principles” of tortious
negligence is that of ex turpi causa. The operation
of this principle would generally prevent any duty of
care from arising between joint participants in the
execution of a criminal enterprise. At trial, the prosecution
and judge accepted, on the basis of Adomako, that ex
turpi causa also forms part of the criminal law of negligence.
The trial judge ruled, however, that the failure to
reopen the air vent was “incidental” to
the criminal enterprise jointly undertaken (i.e. the
agreement to enter illegally). It was not directly criminal,
or the very essence of the victims’ criminality,
but was one of the details of implementation for which
D, rather than the victims, was responsible.
Quite rightly, the Court of Appeal rejected this approach.
Instead, the Court ruled that the ex turpi causa principle
is not part of the criminal law. The criminal and civil
laws serve different functions. In civil law, the dispute
is between D and V. Where ex turpi causa applies, public
policy may disentitle V from recovering against D; but
it does not prevent the state from penalising D.
That is quite a different matter, since transferring
assets to V is no longer a consideration. V’s
failure to recover is for reasons that concern V. It
is not because D has done no wrong. And so the criminal
law may be applied to hold D responsible for the harm
he does V, notwithstanding V’s own participation.
(Adomako itself does not require otherwise, since
the case did not concern the ex turpi causa exception.)
Indeed, this proposition is implicit already in criminal-law
decisions such as Brown [1994] 1 AC 212 [S&S2 pp.
610, 618-622], where V’s consent was ruled to
be no defence to charges of assault occasioning actual
bodily harm, notwithstanding that it may foreclose tort
liability.
In summary, Wacker raises a number of useful points
about the duty of care in manslaughter by gross negligence.
Where death is caused by a positive act, the general
rule remains that one owes a duty of care to those others
who lie within the reasonably foreseeable range of persons
who may be harmed by one’s conduct; where it is
caused by an omission, something extra has to be shown—a
specific duty of care, arising from an assumption of
responsibility for V’s welfare or from some other
source such as the scenario in Miller. Either way, however,
the supplementary tortious principles of ex turpi causa and
(presumably) volenti non fit injuria, which would defeat
any civil claim by V for reasons personal to V, are
not part of the criminal law.
Notice that the ruling is a negative one: that ex turpi
causa does not negate a duty of care. Its negation
does not establish, positively, that any duty of care
exists. Clearly, on the facts of Wacker, the relationship
of dependence between immigrants and driver, and the
fact that Wacker himself had closed the vent, justified
a finding that the driver owed a duty of care in the
first place. Such findings may be unlikely to arise
where two or more individuals, on a basis of equality
rather than dependence, enter into a joint and dangerous
criminal enterprise—say, a planned bank raid.
The court may well find that the respective bank robbers
owe no duty of care to each other. So, if robber E is
injured in the course of the raid it does not follow
that his partner in crime F will be criminally responsible
for the death of E even if she could have saved him
by driving to a hospital rather than fleeing.
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