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IN THE SUPREME COURT OF NAURU
Criminal Appeal No 11 of 1976
LANGI TULOK HARRIS
v.
THE REPUBLIC
22nd October,
1976.
Offensive
behaviour - section 5 of the Police Offences Ordinance 1967 - behaviour
offensive to a reasonable
person.
Offensive
behaviour - husband's conduct towards wife - marital relationship affords no
defence.
Appeal against conviction
for offensive behaviour in a dwelling house contrary of section 5 of the Police
Offences Ordinance 1967.
The appellant went home drunk, swore at his wife,
insulted her and caused a commotion in the
house.
Held:
Behaviour is offensive for the purposes of section 5 if it would offend a
reasonable, and a not unduly sensitive, person. The fact
that the behaviour is
directed towards the accused person's wife affords no defence; a wife is not to
be expected to tolerate abuse
and insults which other reasonable persons would
not tolerate.
K. Aroi for the
appellant.
D. Gioura for the
respondent.
Thompson
CJ.:
Offensive behaviour means
behaviour which causes offence and which is such that a reasonable person would
be offended by it. It is
not enough that a particularly sensitive person was
offended unless the intent to offend that person is proved. When that intent
is
not proved, the conduct must be such that a reasonable person would be offended
by it.
In this case, on the
appellant's own admission, he went home drunk and there pushed and swore at his
wife; she was so offended that
she called the police. Would a reasonable person
have been offended? Mr. Aroi has submitted, in effect, that a reasonable wife
should
not be offended and that such conduct is part and parcel of the normal
incidents of matrimonial
life.
Possibly at some times in
the past the rights of wives in relation to their husbands have been so limited
that reasonable Dives were
expected to tolerate such conduct. In these more
civilised times that is no longer the case. A man has no more right to go home
drunk
and swear at his wife and insult her, than he has to swear at persons he
meets in the street on the way home. Of course, if there
is a two-sided quarrel,
other considerations may arise. But that is not the case
here.
Mr. Aroi has fleetingly
referred to possible absence of intent resulting from drunkenness. Drunkenness
affords no excuse for what
was clearly deliberate conduct. I refer to section 28
of the Criminal Code of Queensland (adopted) and to the position at common
law
as confirmed recently by the House of Lords in
Majewski's
case.
Accordingly, as the facts
proved constituted the offence charged, the appeal is dismissed.
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URL: http://www.paclii.org/nr/cases/NRSC/1976/5.html