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Chapter 2 - The minimum age of
criminal responsibility in other jurisdictions
_____________________________________________
Introduction
2.1 In endeavouring to determine whether or not
change is necessary to Hong Kong’s existing minimum age of responsibility,
it is clearly relevant to examine the approach adopted in other jurisdictions.
Our consultation paper set out the comparative position not only in common law
jurisdictions with which Hong Kong traditionally has links, but also in
non-common law jurisdictions such as Mainland China, Taiwan and Japan with which
Hong Kong has cultural similarities or a geographical nexus. One of the
purposes of this chapter, therefore, is to outline the laws on the minimum age
of criminal responsibility in these jurisdictions, not necessarily as conclusive
indicators which Hong Kong must follow, but rather as an objective yardstick
which Hong Kong may wish to consider, having taken account of Hong Kong’s
particular circumstances.
Guidance from the United
Nations
2.2 In considering the appropriate age at which a
person in Hong Kong should be held criminally responsible for his or her
conduct, a significant determining factor is the view adopted by the United
Nations (the UN) on the issue of the age of criminal responsibility. This is
embodied in the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child (the
Convention) which was extended to Hong Kong in 1994. The Convention is silent
as to what should be the appropriate minimum age, save for the provision in
Article 1 of the Convention that a child is a person below the age of 18 unless
the age of majority is attained earlier under the domestic law as applicable to
the child. Under Article 40 of the Convention, states parties are required to
give recognition to the rights of every child who has allegedly acted contrary
to the penal law of the land, and to take account of his
age:
“States parties recognize the
right of every child alleged as, accused of, or recognized as having infringed
the penal law to be treated in a manner consistent with the promotion of the
child’s sense of dignity and worth, which reinforces the child’s
respect for the human rights and fundamental freedoms of others and which takes
into account the child’s age and the desirability of promoting the
child’s reintegration and the child’s assuming a constructive role
in society.”
Article 40(3) refers to the
age of criminal
responsibility:
“States parties shall
seek to promote the establishment of laws, procedures, authorities and
institutions specifically applicable to children alleged as, accused of, or
recognized as having infringed the penal law, and, in
particular:
(a) the establishment of a
minimum age below which children shall be presumed not to have the capacity to
infringe the penal law;
(b) whenever
appropriate and desirable, measures for dealing with such children without
resorting to judicial proceedings, providing that human rights and legal
safeguards are fully
respected.”
Under Article 40(4) of
the Convention, it is further provided
that:
“A variety of dispositions, such
as care, guidance and supervision orders; counselling; probation; foster care;
education and vocational training programmes and other alternatives to
institutional care shall be available to ensure that children are dealt with in
a manner appropriate to their well-being and proportionate both to their
circumstances and the
offence.”
2.3 The United Nations
Standard Minimum Rules for the Administration of Juvenile Justice (the Beijing
Rules) were adopted by the UN General Assembly in 1985. They are not binding in
international law, but states are invited to adopt them. Article 4 provides
that:
“In those legal systems
recognising the concept of the age of criminal responsibility for juveniles, the
beginning of that age shall not be fixed at too low an age level, bearing in
mind the fact of emotional, mental and intellectual
maturity.”
While neither the Beijing
Rules nor the Convention purport to fix a minimum age of criminal responsibility
of universal application, the Committee on the Rights of the Child of the United
Nations has criticised jurisdictions which it believes adopt too low an age.
Subsequent to a hearing on the position of Hong Kong on matters involving the
interests of children, the UN Committee called for a review of the
relevant Hong Kong legislation with a view to raising the age of criminal
responsibility in the light of the principles and provisions of the
Convention.
2.4 As we noted in chapter one of
this report, a similar call for Hong Kong to raise her existing minimum age of
criminal responsibility was recently made by the Human Rights Committee of the
United Nations. In paragraph 17 of its “Concluding Observations”
published in November 1999, the Committee stated
that:
“The Committee is concerned that
the age of criminal responsibility is 7 years and takes note of the statement
made by the Delegation that the Law Reform Commission is currently conducting a
review of this matter.
The age of
criminal responsibility should be raised so as to ensure the rights of children
under article 24.”
Europe
2.5 In a written answer to the House of Lords in
the United Kingdom on 27 February 1995, Baroness Chalker of Wallasey provided
details of the age of criminal responsibility adopted in each of the member
states of the Council of
Europe:[21]
Council of
Europe
Countries and Age of Criminal
ResponsibilityTerritoriesCyprus 7Ireland 7Liechtenstein 7Switzerland 7Scotland
(UK) 8Northern Ireland
(UK) 8Malta 9England
and Wales
(UK) 10Greece 12Netherlands 12San
Marino 12Turkey 12France 13Austria 14Bulgaria 14Germany 14Hungary 14Italy 14Latvia 14Lithuania 14Romania 14Slovenia 14Czech
Republic 15Denmark 15Estonia 15Finland 15Iceland 15Norway 15Slovakia 15Sweden 15Andorra 16Poland 16Portugal 16Spain 16Belgium 18Luxembourg 182.6 It
is significant to note that of the 36 jurisdictions shown on the list only four
(Cyprus,
Ireland,[22]
Liechtenstein and Switzerland) still maintain seven years as the minimum age of
criminal responsibility. This triggered the following comment from Mr Humfrey
Malins during the debate in the House of Commons on the Crime and Disorder Bill
1998:“What about the age of criminal
responsibility? I did some research and discovered that, as at three years ago,
the age of criminal responsibility varied enormously in the 38 countries in the
Council of Europe. Most of them have an age of criminal responsibility much
higher than ours; in only five countries is it as young as ours or younger. The
average age was 12 years seven months; in this country it is 10. That ought
perhaps to be looked at on another
day.”[23]
2.7 The simple age at which a child bears
full criminal responsibility does not necessarily tell the full story, however.
It is equally relevant to consider whether or not there exists in a given
jurisdiction a provision similar to Hong Kong’s rebuttable presumption of
doli incapax. France, Germany and Spain, for example, appear to adopt
such a provision:“... in France a
child under 13 cannot be prosecuted, while for children aged 13-18 a presumption
of incapacity applies which is rebuttable by the prosecution on evidence in each
individual case. Similarly, in Germany a child aged under 14 cannot be
prosecuted, while for children aged between 14 and 18, responsibility is linked
with the maturity of the child on trial. The Spanish penal code states that
children under 16 are exempt from criminal liability, while young people aged
16-18 must have their criminal responsibility alleviated by reason of their
age.”[24] 2.8 A
legitimate concern aroused by proposals to raise the minimum age of criminal
responsibility would be that it would allow deviant behaviour of those below the
minimum age of criminal responsibility to go unchecked. A number of European
jurisdictions have adopted measures designed to ensure care and control of these
children:“In most other European
countries, children under 14 who commit offences do not appear before the
criminal courts, but are dealt with by family courts concerned with the need for
compulsory measures of
care.”[25]For
example, in France, although a child below the age of 13 cannot be held
criminally responsible, a child aged ten or above can be brought to a civil
court in relation to certain offences for a detention order to be made.
2.9 In a recent judgement of the European
Court of Human Rights, the Court observed
that:“... at the present time, there
is not yet a commonly accepted minimum age for the imposition of criminal
responsibility in Europe. While most of the Contracting States have adopted an
age-limit which is higher than that in force in England and Wales, other States,
such as Cyprus, Ireland, Liechtenstein and Switzerland, attribute criminal
responsibility from a younger
age.”[26]
North
America
United States of
America
2.10 In the United States of America, the age of
criminal responsibility varies between states. A written reply submitted to the
Parliament of the United Kingdom on 27 February 1995 provided a summary of the
position in the United States:“In
most of the United States of America the age of criminal responsibility is 18.
In eight states the age is 16; these are Georgia, Illinois, Louisiana,
Massachusetts, Michigan, Missouri, South Carolina and Texas. In Connecticut,
New York and South Carolina the age of criminal responsibility is
15.All US states have provision for
juveniles to be tried as adults in a criminal court. Certain serious offences,
such as murder, are statutorily excluded from the jurisdiction of the juvenile
courts. In all states except Nebraska and New York, a juvenile court may waive
jurisdiction over a case and transfer it to a criminal
court.”[27]The
lowest age adopted in any of the US states is reportedly ten
years.[28]
Canada
2.11 In Canada, the age of criminal responsibility
has recently been raised from the established common law rule of seven to 12
years of age. The rebuttable presumption of doli incapax has ceased to
operate in Canada. Section 13 of the Canadian Criminal Code provides
that:
“No person shall be convicted of
an offence in respect of an act or omission on his part while that person was
under the age of twelve years.”
While
no child under 12 years of age may be held criminally responsible, a child below
this age whilst involved in criminal activity may be subject to provincial child
welfare legislation. Children aged between 12 and 14 years of age are not dealt
with by ordinary criminal courts, but are instead brought before a youth court,
where special procedures are adopted at the hearing which make allowance for
their relative young age. Those between 14 and 18 years of age are, under
normal circumstances, tried in youth courts. Where serious indictable offences
are involved, however, they would be transferred to ordinary criminal courts for
trial should the arrangements be considered appropriate under all the
circumstances of the case, including the interests of both the community and the
young defendants.
Australasia
Australia
2.12 In most Australian states other than Tasmania,
the minimum age of criminal responsibility is ten years of age. In Tasmania,
the corresponding age is seven years. In some of the Australian states, there
are legislative provisions similar to the rebuttable presumption of doli
incapax giving exemption from criminal responsibility for children aged
between the minimum age and a certain higher age unless it is proved that, at
the time of the offence, the child knew that he or she ought not to do the act
or make the omission constituting the offence. The following is an outline of
the various ages of criminal responsibility in some of the Australian
states.2.13 In the Commonwealth, under the
Crimes Act 1914, it is provided that a child under ten years of age cannot be
liable for an offence against a law of the
Commonwealth.2.14 In the Northern Territory,
section 38 of the Criminal Code provides
that:“(1) A person under the
age of 10 years is excused from criminal responsibility for an act, omission or
event.(2) A person under the age of 14
years is excused from criminal responsibility for an act, omission or event
unless it is proved that at the time of doing the act, making the omission or
causing the event he had capacity to know that he ought not to do the act, make
the omission or cause the
event.”2.15 In New South
Wales, section 5 of the Children (Criminal Proceedings) Act 1987 provides that:
“It shall be conclusively presumed
that no child who is under the age of 10 years can be guilty of an
offence.”2.16 In Queensland,
similar provisions are made for persons of immature age under section 29 of the
Criminal Code Act 1899:“(1) A person
under the age of 10 years is not criminally responsible for any act or
omission.(2) A person under the age of
14 years is not criminally responsible for an act or omission, unless it is
proved that at the time of doing the act or making the omission the person had
capacity to know that the person ought not to do the act or make the
omission.”2.17 Section 5 of the
Young Offenders Act 1993 in South Australia provides as follows:
“
A person under the age of 10 years
cannot commit an
offence.”
2.18 Section 18 of the
Criminal Code Act 1924 in Tasmania provides as
follows:“(1) No act or omission done
or made by a person under 7 years of age is an
offence.(2) No act or omission done or
made by a person under 14 years of age is an offence unless it be proved that he
had sufficient capacity to know that the act or omission was one which he ought
not to do or make.”2.19 In Western
Australia, under section 29 of the Criminal
Code:“A person under the age of 10
years is not criminally responsible for an act or omission. A person under the
age of 14 is not criminally responsible for an act or omission, unless it is
proved that at the time of doing the act or making the omission he had capacity
to know that he ought not to do the act or make the
omission.”
New
Zealand
2.20 In New Zealand, both the minimum age of
criminal responsibility and the rebuttable presumption of doli incapax
are governed by statute. Sections 21 and 22 of the New Zealand Crimes Act 1961
provide as follows:
“21(1) No person
shall be convicted of an offence by reason of an act done or omitted by him when
under the age of 10 years.
22(1) No
person shall be convicted of an offence by reason of any act done or omitted by
him when of the age of 10 but under the age of 14 years, unless he knew either
that the act or omission was wrong or that it was contrary to
law.”
Asia
Mainland
China
2.21 In Mainland China, a child who has not
attained the age of 14 is exempt from criminal responsibility. Under Article
17, Chapter 2 of the Criminal Law of the People’s Republic of China, a
person who has attained the age of 16 shall be criminally responsible for the
crime committed. For a person who has attained the age of 14 but is below the
age of 16 years and has committed the crime of intentional killing of another,
intentional injuring of another causing serious injury or death, rape, robbery,
drug trafficking, arson, explosion or poisoning, he or she shall be criminally
responsible for committing any of these offences. However, a person who has
attained the age of 14 but is below the age of 18 shall be given a lesser
punishment or a mitigated punishment for the crime committed. It is further
provided under the same Article that where a person is not criminally punished
because he has not reached 16 years of age, the head of his family or guardian
will be ordered to subject the person to discipline. Shelter and rehabilitation
will be provided by the government on a need basis.
Taiwan
2.22 In Taiwan, Article 18 of the Criminal Law
provides that a child who has not attained the age of 14 years will not be
punished for his act. An order will instead be made under Article 86 for him or
her to be sent to a rehabilitation centre where rehabilitating education will be
provided. A person over 14 but below the age of 18 years is criminally
responsible for the crime committed, but will receive a reduced sentence.
Singapore
2.23 Under the
Singapore Children and Young Persons Act 1993, a child is defined as a person
who is below the age of 14 years. A juvenile is defined as a person aged
between seven and 16 years of age while a young person is a person aged between
14 and 16 years of age. In Singapore, provisions are made in respect of the
criminal responsibility of a child up to the age of 12 years of age. Sections
82 and 83 of the Singapore Penal Code respectively provide
that:“82 Nothing is an offence which
is done by a child under 7 years of
age.83 Nothing is an offence which is
done by a child above 7 years of age and under 12, who has not attained
sufficient maturity of understanding to judge of the nature and consequence of
his conduct on that occasion.”
2.24 Under section 2 of the Singapore
Criminal Procedure Code:“... the
youthful offender is defined as including any child convicted of any offence
punishable by fine or imprisonment who in the absence of legal proof to the
contrary is above the age of seven and under the age of 16 years in the opinion
of the court before which the child is
convicted.”[29]
A youthful offender in Singapore would
thus include those who fall within the definitions of a child, a juvenile and a
young person. Under section 235 of the Singapore Criminal Procedure Code, the
criminal court is given a discretion to deal with a youthful offender in
accordance with the Children and Young Persons Act 1993. This legislation has
the effect of allowing youthful offenders to be tried and dealt with in juvenile
courts where their interests will be taken into consideration in sentencing.
Powers of sentencing include the making of care and supervision orders in
respect of these offenders.
Malaysia
2.25 In Malaysia, the age of criminal
responsibility is defined in sections 82 and 83 of the Malaysia Penal
Code:“(82) Nothing is an offence
which is done by a child under ten years of
age.(83) Nothing is an offence which is
done by a child above ten years of age and under twelve, who has not attained
sufficient maturity of understanding to judge of the nature and consequence of
his conduct on that occasion.”In this
respect, the legal position in Malaysia is similar to that in Singapore, save
that “the floor age is ten instead of seven
years”
.[30]
Under section 293 of the Malaysian Criminal Procedure Code, the criminal court
is given a discretion to deal with a youthful offender under the Juvenile Courts
Act 1947, thus giving a similar flexibility to that provided by the Children and
Young Persons Act in Singapore.
India
2.26 In India, section 82 of the Indian Penal Code
provides that “Nothing is an offence which is done by a child under
seven years of age.” A child under
seven years of age is thus exempt from any criminal responsibility. For a child
above seven and under 12 years of age, section 83 of the Penal Code provides
that:
“Nothing is an offence which is
done by a child above seven years of age and under twelve, who has not attained
sufficient maturity of understanding to judge of the nature and consequences of
his conduct on that occasion.”
Japan
2.27 In Japan, the age of criminal responsibility
is 16. Offenders aged between 16 and 20 are generally dealt with in family
courts where the sentences imposed are relatively lenient compared with those
imposed on adult offenders for similar charges, and would include counselling,
monitoring at home or detention at a juvenile institution. The recent unlawful
killing in Japan of a 16 year old boy, Takakazu Take, by a 16 year old boy has
provoked demands for the lowering of the age at which a person can be
charged.
Africa
South
Africa
2.28 The minimum age of criminal responsibility in
South Africa is seven years of age. A child below the age of seven years is
irrebuttably presumed to lack criminal capacity, while a child between the ages
of seven and 14 years is “deemed to lack criminal responsibility unless
the State proves that the person in question can distinguish between right and
wrong and knew the wrongfulness of the offence at the time of its
commission”
.[31]
Unlike the position in Hong Kong, the burden of proof imposed on the prosecution
in seeking to rebut the presumption is proof on a balance of probabilities,
rather than proof beyond reasonable doubt.
Oceania and the Pacific
islands
Fiji
2.29 In Fiji, similar presumptions of doli
incapax are adopted in respect of the law governing the age of criminal
responsibility of children and young persons, albeit the ages set for the
irrebuttable and rebuttable presumptions are different from those adopted in
Hong Kong. Section 14 of the Fiji Penal Code (Cap. 17) provides as
follows:
“1. A person under the age of
ten years is not criminally responsible for any act or
omission.
2. A person under the age of
twelve years is not criminally responsible for an act or omission, unless it is
proved that at the time of doing the act or making the omission he had capacity
to know that he ought not to do the act or make the
omission.
3. A male person under the age
of twelve years is presumed to be incapable of having carnal
knowledge.”
2.30 Section 29 of the
Juvenile Act (Cap. 56) further provides
that:
“1. It shall be conclusively
presumed that no child under the age of ten years can be guilty of any
offence.
2. A person of or over the age
of ten and under the age of twelve years is not criminally responsible for an
act or omission, unless it is proved that at the time of doing the act or making
the omission he had capacity to know that he ought not do the act or make the
omission.
3. A male person under the age
of twelve years is presumed to be incapable of having carnal
knowledge.”
Other overseas
jurisdictions
2.31 To give a more complete picture of the range
of ages at which criminal responsibility is fixed in other overseas
jurisdictions, the following list shows the minimum age of criminal
responsibility in a number of jurisdictions which have not been examined in the
preceding
paragraphs:
Jurisdiction
Age of Criminal
Responsibility
Belize 7
Ghana 7
Malawi 7
Nigeria 7
Papua
New
Guinea 7
Bermuda 8
Cayman
Islands 8
Gibraltar 8
Kenya 8
Sri
Lanka 8
Western
Samoa 8
Zambia 8
Guyana 10
Kiribati 10
Vanuatu 10
Jamaica 12
Uganda 12
Mauritius 14
Macau 16
2.32 In
addition, a comprehensive list showing the age of criminal responsibility in all
the jurisdictions referred to in this consultation paper is provided in Annex
2.
International
trends
2.33 It is clear
from the material contained in this chapter that there is considerable disparity
among different jurisdictions as to the minimum ages adopted for imposing
criminal responsibility. There is no doubt that Hong Kong’s minimum age
is at the low end, with minimum ages ranging internationally from seven to 16
years. Hong Kong is not alone in adopting seven as the minimum age, however.
That age is followed in such varied jurisdictions as Singapore, Switzerland and
South Africa. What is perhaps of more significance is that where change has
taken place, the trend appears to have been towards a raising of the minimum
age.[32]
This has prompted the observation
that:“There has been a trend
internationally towards raising the age in recent years - for example, in Canada
from seven to 12 and in Israel from nine to 12. In a report of January 1995,
the UN Committee on the Rights of the Child recommended that ‘serious
consideration be given to raising the age of criminal responsibility throughout
the areas of the United
Kingdom’.”[33]
2.34 Australia, too, has changed its laws
in this area and has abandoned the common law rule of seven years as the minimum
age of criminal responsibility. With the exception of Tasmania (which still
retains seven years as the minimum age), most of the Australian states and
territories have now adopted ten years as the minimum age of criminal
responsibility. New South Wales, South Australia, Queensland, Western
Australia, Victoria and the Northern Territory have all now adopted ten years of
age as the minimum age of criminal responsibility. Similarly, in Africa, the
Children’s Statute 1996 in Uganda raised the minimum age from seven to 12,
while proposals have been made in both Ghana and South Africa to raise the
minimum age from the present seven years of
age.[34]
Under the Children Bill 1999, Ireland has likewise proposed to raise the minimum
age of criminal responsibility from the present age of seven years to 12
years.2.35 The international trend towards a
raising of the minimum age of criminal responsibility must be viewed with some
caution, however. Equally, while the practice in other jurisdictions is of
relevance, it cannot be regarded as presenting a conclusive case for change,
particularly in an area of the law which even more than most reflects the
cultural and social values of the particular jurisdiction.
[21]
Hansard, HL Deb, vol 564, col WA 82, 27 February 1995. The order of the list
has been changed for our purposes from an alphabetical list to one arranged
according to age.
[22]
The Children Bill 1999 proposes to raise the minimum age of criminal
responsibility in Ireland from the present age of seven years to 12
years.
[23]
House of Commons
Standing Committee B (pt 10)
<http://www.parliament.the-stationery-o...798/cmstand/b/st980430/am/80430s10.htm>
(23 June
1998).[24]
P Cavadino,
“Goodbye Doli, Must We Leave You?” (1997) Vol 9, No 2, Child and
Family Law Quarterly 165, at
170.[25]
P Cavadino,
“Children Who Kill: a European Perspective” (1996) September 13 New
Law Journal, at 1325.
[26]
V v the United Kingdom (European Court of Human Rights, Application No.
24888/94), at page
17.[27]
Hansard, HL Deb, vol 564, col WA 82, 27 February
1995.[28]
C McClain, “Problems relating to age and criminal capacity” in J
Soth-Nielsen (ed) South African Juvenile Justice: Law Practice and Policy,
quoted in South African Law Commission, Juvenile Justice (1997),
Issue Paper 9, at paragraph
3.10.[29]
Tan Yock Lin, Criminal Procedure (Butterworths Asia, 1997) at paragraph
4 XXI
2.[30]
Cited above, Criminal Procedure, at paragraph 4 XXI
2.[31]
South African Law Commission, Juvenile Justice (1997), Issue Paper 9, at
paragraph
3.5.[32] It
was, however, reported in the Hong Kong Standard on 11 March 2000
(“Macau may lower criminal age as youth violence flares”) that the
Macau SAR Government is considering lowering the age of criminal responsibility
in Macau (at present 16 years) to deal with a surge in juvenile
crime.[33]
Cited above, “Goodbye Doli, Must We Leave You?”, at
170.[34]
Report by the Ghana National Commission on Children (1996), Part VII,
article 1, referred to in South African Law Commission, Juvenile Justice,
above, at 3.11.