Chapter 19, page 442
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED KINGDOM
R v Renard
Molly Renard is an animal lover with a particular  fondness for foxes. At a meeting of an animal welfare group, of which she is an  active member, Molly heard that a local farmer, Mr Oak, had been complaining  that the ban on hunting with hounds had led to his land being overrun with  foxes. It was rumoured that Mr Oak had purchased some traps which he planned to  set on his land in order to reduce the number of foxes. Molly was appalled to  hear this and immediately planned to go onto Mr Oak’s land to disable the  traps. She purchased some bolt cutters and set off in the early hours of the  morning to the wooded area of Mr Oak’s farm where she believed that the traps  had been set. After some investigation, Molly discovered that Mr Oak was using  cage traps which were baited with meat. This meant that the foxes were lured  into a cage which then closed shut behind them. Molly assumed that the captured  foxes were shot the following day by Mr Oak or his gamekeeper. Molly used the  bolt cutters to open two of the traps which contained foxes. She then used them  to disable the remaining three traps so that they would not spring shut when a  fox went into them. As she was leaving Mr Oak’s land, Molly was spotted by the  police and she was charged with criminal damage to the traps contrary to s 1(1)  of the Criminal Damage Act 1971.
At her trial, Molly sought to rely on lawful  excuse under s 5(2)(b) of the Criminal Damage Act 1971 on the basis that her  actions were undertaken in order to protect property, namely the foxes. The  trial judge directed the jury that Molly could not rely on s 5(2)(b) because  the foxes were not in immediate need of protection as they were not actually  due to be shot but were being relocated to a different area of Britain where  there was a dwindling fox population. Molly appealed against her conviction on  the basis that the trial judge had erred in law as s 5(3) of the Criminal  Damage Act 1971 stipulated that lawful excuse should be based upon the  subjective beliefs of the defendant even if these beliefs were mistaken. The  Court of Appeal rejected this argument and ruled that R v Hunt (1978) 66 Cr App  R 105 and R v Hill and Hall (1989) 89 Cr App R 74 had clearly established that it  was appropriate to make an objective evaluation of the defendant’s beliefs in  order to determine whether a lawful excuse under s 5(2)(b) was established. Furthermore,  the Court of Appeal held that even if this had not been the case, Molly was not  able to rely upon lawful excuse based upon the protection of property as a fox  was a wild animal thus was not within the meaning of property as defined by s 10(1)  of the Criminal Damage Act 1971. Molly appeals to the Supreme Court on the  following grounds:
- The foxes were property for the purposes of s 10(1) of the Criminal Damage Act 1971 as setting traps to catch the animals meant that they were ‘in the process of being reduced to possession’.
- Taken in conjunction, s 5(2)(b) and s 5(3) of the Criminal Damage Act 1971 establish a purely subjective test that permits no objective evaluation of the reasonableness or accuracy of the defendant’s beliefs and that case law that introduced an objective element was wrongly decided.
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