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Criminal Law Consolidation Acts 1861

The Criminal Law Consolidation Acts 1861 (24 & 25 Vict. cc. 94 – 100) were acts of the Parliament of the United Kingdom. They consolidated provisions from a large number of earlier statutes which were then repealed. Their purpose was to simplify the criminal law. There were six consolidation Acts and a further Act which effected consequential repeals.

They are essentially revised versions of an earlier set of consolidation Acts, commonly known as Peel's Acts, incorporating subsequent statutes.

They were drafted by Charles Sprengel Greaves.

List of acts edit

Of these statutes, the Criminal Statutes Repeal Act, the Larceny Act and the Coinage Offences Act have been repealed in England and Wales. The majority of the provisions of Accessories and Abettors Act, the Malicious Damage Act and the Forgery Act have been repealed and the last two have been practically superseded by codification Acts. However, the bulk of the Offences Against the Person Act remains in force.

Interpretation edit

Internal evidence of meaning by comparison of enactments

In his commentary on these Acts,[1] their draftsman said:

If any question should arise in which any comparison may be instituted between different sections of any one or several of these Acts, it must be carefully borne in mind in what manner these Acts were framed. None of them was re-written; on the contrary, each contains enactments taken from different Acts passed at different times and with different views, and frequently varying from each other in phraseology, and ... these enactments, for the most part, stand in these Acts with little or no variation in their phraseology, and, consequently, their differences in that respect will be found generally to remain in these Acts. It follows, therefore, from hence, that any argument as to a difference in the intention of the legislature, which may be drawn from a difference in the terms of one clause from those in another, will be entitled to no weight in the construction of such clauses; for that argument can only apply with force where an Act is framed from beginning to end with one and the same view, and with the intention of making it thoroughly consistent throughout.

This passage was cited and approved by Lord Steyn in R v. Burstow, R v. Ireland [1998] 1 Cr App Rep 177, [1997] 3 WLR 534, [1998] AC 147, [1997] UKHL 34, [1997] 4 All ER 225, (24 July 1997) (this case related to the significance of the appearance of "cause" and "inflict" respectively in sections 18 and 20 of the Offences against the Person Act 1861).

Common features edit

Short titles

None of these Acts was originally provided with a short title. The short titles were conferred by the Short Titles Act 1896.

Passage through Parliament edit

  • Hansard (House of Lords), 17 April 1860, vol.157, col. 1873 (nomination of select committee)
  • Hansard (House of Lords), 7 May 1860, vol.158, col. 747 (report of select committee)
  • Hansard (House of Lords), 10 May 1860, vol.158, col. 999 - 1001 (committee)

Derivative legislation edit

The Canadian criminal law consolidation Acts of 1869 were based on the criminal law consolidation Acts 1861, and taken almost textually from them.[2]

The Tasmanian Acts 27 Vict. Nos. 5 - 10 were framed from the Imperial Acts 24 & 25 Vict c 94 and cc 96 - 100.[3]

References edit

  1. ^ Greaves. The Criminal Law Consolidation and Amendment Acts, 2nd edition, 1862, pp. 3-4
  2. ^ Henri Elzéar Taschereau. The Criminal Law Consolidation and Amendment Acts of 1869, 32 - 33 Vict, for the Dominion of Canada. Volume I. Printed by the Lovell Printing and Publishing Company. Montreal. 1874. Pages iii and iv.
  3. ^ Charles A W Rocher. The Tasmanian Criminal Law Consolidation and Amendment Acts of the 27th Victoria. J Walch & Sons. Hobart Town and Launceston. Tasmania. Simpkin, Marshall & Co. London. 1864. Page x.

criminal, consolidation, acts, 1861, vict, were, acts, parliament, united, kingdom, they, consolidated, provisions, from, large, number, earlier, statutes, which, were, then, repealed, their, purpose, simplify, criminal, there, were, consolidation, acts, furth. The Criminal Law Consolidation Acts 1861 24 amp 25 Vict cc 94 100 were acts of the Parliament of the United Kingdom They consolidated provisions from a large number of earlier statutes which were then repealed Their purpose was to simplify the criminal law There were six consolidation Acts and a further Act which effected consequential repeals They are essentially revised versions of an earlier set of consolidation Acts commonly known as Peel s Acts incorporating subsequent statutes They were drafted by Charles Sprengel Greaves Contents 1 List of acts 2 Interpretation 3 Common features 4 Passage through Parliament 5 Derivative legislation 6 ReferencesList of acts editAccessories and Abettors Act 1861 c 94 Criminal Statutes Repeal Act 1861 c 95 Larceny Act 1861 c 96 Malicious Damage Act 1861 c 97 Forgery Act 1861 c 98 Coinage Offences Act 1861 c 99 Offences Against the Person Act 1861 c 100Of these statutes the Criminal Statutes Repeal Act the Larceny Act and the Coinage Offences Act have been repealed in England and Wales The majority of the provisions of Accessories and Abettors Act the Malicious Damage Act and the Forgery Act have been repealed and the last two have been practically superseded by codification Acts However the bulk of the Offences Against the Person Act remains in force Interpretation editInternal evidence of meaning by comparison of enactmentsIn his commentary on these Acts 1 their draftsman said If any question should arise in which any comparison may be instituted between different sections of any one or several of these Acts it must be carefully borne in mind in what manner these Acts were framed None of them was re written on the contrary each contains enactments taken from different Acts passed at different times and with different views and frequently varying from each other in phraseology and these enactments for the most part stand in these Acts with little or no variation in their phraseology and consequently their differences in that respect will be found generally to remain in these Acts It follows therefore from hence that any argument as to a difference in the intention of the legislature which may be drawn from a difference in the terms of one clause from those in another will be entitled to no weight in the construction of such clauses for that argument can only apply with force where an Act is framed from beginning to end with one and the same view and with the intention of making it thoroughly consistent throughout This passage was cited and approved by Lord Steyn in R v Burstow R v Ireland 1998 1 Cr App Rep 177 1997 3 WLR 534 1998 AC 147 1997 UKHL 34 1997 4 All ER 225 24 July 1997 this case related to the significance of the appearance of cause and inflict respectively in sections 18 and 20 of the Offences against the Person Act 1861 Common features editShort titlesNone of these Acts was originally provided with a short title The short titles were conferred by the Short Titles Act 1896 Passage through Parliament editHansard House of Lords 17 April 1860 vol 157 col 1873 nomination of select committee Hansard House of Lords 7 May 1860 vol 158 col 747 report of select committee Hansard House of Lords 10 May 1860 vol 158 col 999 1001 committee Derivative legislation editThe Canadian criminal law consolidation Acts of 1869 were based on the criminal law consolidation Acts 1861 and taken almost textually from them 2 The Tasmanian Acts 27 Vict Nos 5 10 were framed from the Imperial Acts 24 amp 25 Vict c 94 and cc 96 100 3 References editCharles Sprengel Greaves The Criminal Law Consolidation and Amendment Acts Second Edition V R Stevens Sons Haynes H Sweet and W Maxwell London 1862 1 James Edward Davis The Criminal Law Consolidation Statutes of the 24 amp 25 of Victoria Chapters 94 to 100 Edited with Notes Critical and Explanatory Butterworths 1861 Digitized copy from Google Books T W Saunders and Edward W Cox The Criminal Law Consolidation Acts 1861 First Edition John Crockford London 1861 2 Second Edition 1862 3 John Frederick Archbold The Consolidated Criminal Statutes of England and Ireland Simpkin Marshall amp Co London Hodges amp Smith Dublin Bell amp Bradfute Edinburgh 1861 Google Books James Bigg Criminal Law Consolidation The Public General Acts consolidating the Criminal Law of England and Ireland Second Edition Waterlow and Sons Vacher and Sons P S King Westminster 1868 Google Books Greaves The Criminal Law Consolidation and Amendment Acts 2nd edition 1862 pp 3 4 Henri Elzear Taschereau The Criminal Law Consolidation and Amendment Acts of 1869 32 33 Vict for the Dominion of Canada Volume I Printed by the Lovell Printing and Publishing Company Montreal 1874 Pages iii and iv Charles A W Rocher The Tasmanian Criminal Law Consolidation and Amendment Acts of the 27th Victoria J Walch amp Sons Hobart Town and Launceston Tasmania Simpkin Marshall amp Co London 1864 Page x Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Criminal Law Consolidation Acts 1861 amp oldid 1187819763, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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