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Pathological vs non-pathological incapacity: are the differences in requirements and consequences justified?

This paper covers the criminal law defences of pathological incapacity and non-pathological incapacity in South African law which are used by defendants in criminal cases to refute the element of capacity that is necessary for the court to hold the accused criminally liable. Each defence has its own...

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Main Author: Mazhude, Mandifadza Kurirai
Other Authors: Omar, Jameelah
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Private Law 2022
Subjects:
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access_status_str Open Access
author Mazhude, Mandifadza Kurirai
author2 Omar, Jameelah
author_browse Mazhude, Mandifadza Kurirai
Omar, Jameelah
author_facet Omar, Jameelah
Mazhude, Mandifadza Kurirai
author_sort Mazhude, Mandifadza Kurirai
collection Thesis
description This paper covers the criminal law defences of pathological incapacity and non-pathological incapacity in South African law which are used by defendants in criminal cases to refute the element of capacity that is necessary for the court to hold the accused criminally liable. Each defence has its own set of requirements and the result of successfully raising each defence also differs. The aim of this paper is to compare these different requirements and resultant punishments to determine whether those differences are justified in order to ascertain whether it is necessary to have these different requirements or whether it would be more reasonable to have a single set of requirements applying to both considering that both defences give the accused the potential to avoid being held fully accountable for their criminal conduct. Previous work has, primarily, focused on whether the defences in general are justifiable rather than looking at whether the specific contents of the defences, particularly the requirements necessary to raise the defences, are justifiable. To address this gap, this paper shall explore and compare the requirements and principles adopted when these defences are raised, particularly where the burden of proof lies; whether expert evidence is required or not; the tests for each defence; the subjective versus objective approach to capacity and, ultimately, the consequences of a successful defence in either situation. A comparison between the South African formulation of these defences and the Canadian version of these defences is used to discover elements of the Canadian defences that may improve the South African formulations. These comparisons show that there is justification in having different requirements, however, there is room for a consolidation of some of the requirements and consequences to streamline and lend credibility to the defences.
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id oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/35868
institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:34:58.505Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2022
publishDateRange 2022
publishDateSort 2022
publisher Department of Private Law
publisherStr Department of Private Law
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/35868 Pathological vs non-pathological incapacity: are the differences in requirements and consequences justified? Mazhude, Mandifadza Kurirai Omar, Jameelah private law This paper covers the criminal law defences of pathological incapacity and non-pathological incapacity in South African law which are used by defendants in criminal cases to refute the element of capacity that is necessary for the court to hold the accused criminally liable. Each defence has its own set of requirements and the result of successfully raising each defence also differs. The aim of this paper is to compare these different requirements and resultant punishments to determine whether those differences are justified in order to ascertain whether it is necessary to have these different requirements or whether it would be more reasonable to have a single set of requirements applying to both considering that both defences give the accused the potential to avoid being held fully accountable for their criminal conduct. Previous work has, primarily, focused on whether the defences in general are justifiable rather than looking at whether the specific contents of the defences, particularly the requirements necessary to raise the defences, are justifiable. To address this gap, this paper shall explore and compare the requirements and principles adopted when these defences are raised, particularly where the burden of proof lies; whether expert evidence is required or not; the tests for each defence; the subjective versus objective approach to capacity and, ultimately, the consequences of a successful defence in either situation. A comparison between the South African formulation of these defences and the Canadian version of these defences is used to discover elements of the Canadian defences that may improve the South African formulations. These comparisons show that there is justification in having different requirements, however, there is room for a consolidation of some of the requirements and consequences to streamline and lend credibility to the defences. 2022-03-01T16:15:39Z 2022-03-01T16:15:39Z 2021 2022-03-01T16:15:05Z Master Thesis Masters LLM http://hdl.handle.net/11427/35868 eng application/pdf Department of Private Law Faculty of Law
spellingShingle private law
Mazhude, Mandifadza Kurirai
Pathological vs non-pathological incapacity: are the differences in requirements and consequences justified?
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Pathological vs non-pathological incapacity: are the differences in requirements and consequences justified?
title_full Pathological vs non-pathological incapacity: are the differences in requirements and consequences justified?
title_fullStr Pathological vs non-pathological incapacity: are the differences in requirements and consequences justified?
title_full_unstemmed Pathological vs non-pathological incapacity: are the differences in requirements and consequences justified?
title_short Pathological vs non-pathological incapacity: are the differences in requirements and consequences justified?
title_sort pathological vs non pathological incapacity are the differences in requirements and consequences justified
topic private law
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/35868
work_keys_str_mv AT mazhudemandifadzakurirai pathologicalvsnonpathologicalincapacityarethedifferencesinrequirementsandconsequencesjustified