Daniel Bansal and Tracy Elliott
In this paper, we invite the Law Commission to include the current legal framework in relation to consent to bodily harm as a project in its 14th Programme. Although the Law Commission recommended reform of the common law defence of consent in 1994 (CP 134) and 1995 (CP 139), since the publication of those papers, the law has continued to favour the general rule that consent is not a defence to the causing of bodily injury unless it falls within a recognised lawful activity, per Brown [1994] 1 AC 212 (HL). This category-based approach has resulted in the inconsistent and unprincipled development of legal doctrine. For example, bodily harm caused during cosmetic genital surgery, piercing for decorative purposes, and contact sports have been recognised as lawful, but female genital mutilation, non-surgical body modification, and BDSM activities causing injury are not. Such examples highlight the incoherence of current doctrine and its failure adequately to balance personal autonomy with the criminal law’s paternalistic role in limiting the approbation of the law for significant violence. The law lacks clarity and has arguably failed to keep pace with changing public attitudes to body modification, ‘horseplay’, and BDSM activities. Parliamentary reform is long overdue.
Our proposal argues that the intentional causing of any injury to another person, other than disabling serious injury, should not be criminal if the other person consented to injury of the type caused. Once this threshold of harm is exceeded, it is argued that ‘consent’ is not really what is at issue, but whether it is in the public interest to permit the causing of such injury to another. In such cases, consent is a necessary but not sufficient requirement for the conduct to be lawful - the key factor is whether the conduct is in the public interest. We, therefore, argue that a statutory public interest defence, which specifies the circumstances in which consent or public utility will be regarded as justifying the causing of harm, would better reflect the reality of this defence and bring much-needed clarity to the law.