挑衅过失杀人作为部分正当理由和部分借口

Ian P. Farrell, Mitchell N. Berman
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引用次数: 10

摘要

对挑衅的部分辩护规定,一个人在法律上适当的挑衅引起的激情下杀人是过失杀人罪,而不是谋杀罪。这种辩护可以追溯到12世纪,并以某种形式存在于美国几乎每一个州和其他普通法管辖区。但是,长期的历史和广泛的应用并没有对这一学说的基本原理产生一致意见。相反,寻找连贯和令人满意的基本原理仍然是刑法理论家的主要职业之一。占主导地位的学术观点认为,挑衅是最好的解释和辩护,作为一个部分的借口,理由是,杀手的愤怒的情绪状态损害了他的能力,使他的行为符合理性和法律的要求,从而使他对自己的行为基本上不应受到指责。相比之下,少数学者在没有充分论证支持的情况下坚持认为,挑衅最好被理解为部分正当理由,理由是挑起的杀戮比非挑起的杀戮更不违法,其他条件相同。最近,其他评论员认为,减少挑衅既不是部分借口,也不是部分理由。针对这些常见的立场,我们认为部分辩解和部分正当是挑衅过失杀人的必要和充分条件。在我们看来,故意杀人应该受到惩罚,并被标记为过失杀人,而不是谋杀,只有当,由于挑衅,这种特殊的杀人比标准的故意杀人的错误程度要小得多,并且,由于行为人部分缺乏控制,他犯下的行为仍然被认为是错误的,应该受到较少的指责。在阐述和辩护我们的解释时,我们反驳了经常被重复但很少受到挑战的命题,即辩护和借口,即使是部分形式,也是相互排斥的,部分辩护的概念本身就是不连贯的。我们还提出了谋杀和过失杀人的量刑范围应该如何相关的含义。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Provocation Manslaughter as Partial Justification and Partial Excuse
The partial defense of provocation provides that a person who kills in the heat of passion brought on by legally adequate provocation is guilty of manslaughter rather than murder. The defense traces back to the twelfth century and exists today, in some form, in almost every U.S. state and other common law jurisdictions. But long history and wide application have not produced agreement on the rationale for the doctrine. To the contrary, the search for a coherent and satisfying rationale remains among the main occupations of criminal law theorists.The dominant scholarly view holds that provocation is best explained and defended as a partial excuse on the grounds that the killer’s inflamed emotional state so compromised his ability to conform his conduct to the demands of reason and law as to render him substantially less blameworthy for his conduct. In contrast,a small minority of scholars have maintained, without significant argumentative support, that provocation is best understood as a partial justification on the ground that the provoked killing is less wrongful than is an unprovoked killing, ceteris paribus. Recently, other commentators have argued that provocation mitigation is neither partial excuse nor partial justification.Against all of these familiar positions, we argue that partial excuse and partial justification are necessary and sufficient conditions for provocation manslaughter. In our view, an intentional killing deserves to be punished and labeled as manslaughter rather than murder only when, because of provocation, this particular killing is significantly less wrongful than the standard intentional killing and when, because of the actor’s partial lack of control, he is less blameworthy for committing an act that remains all-things-considered wrongful. In elaborating and defending our account, we rebut the oft-repeated but rarely challenged propositions that justification and excuse, even in partial forms, are mutually exclusive, and that the very notion of partial justification is incoherent. We also draw forth implications for how the sentencing ranges for murder and manslaughter should be related.
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