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R. v. Dudley and Stephens

R v Dudley and Stephens
Mignonette.jpg
Sketch of the Mignonette by Tom Dudley
Court High Court of Justice (Queen's Bench Division)
Full case name Her Majesty The Queen v. Tom Dudley and Edwin Stephens
Decided 1884
Citation(s) (1884) 14 QBD 273 DC
Case history
Subsequent action(s) none
Case opinions
The Lord Coleridge, Lord Chief Justice
Court membership
Judge(s) sitting

The Lord Coleridge, Lord Chief Justice
Mr Justice Grove
Mr Justice Denman
Baron Pollock

Baron Huddleston

The Lord Coleridge, Lord Chief Justice
Mr Justice Grove
Mr Justice Denman
Baron Pollock

R v Dudley and Stephens (1884) 14 QBD 273 DC is a leading English criminal case which established a precedent throughout the common law world that necessity is not a defence to a charge of murder. It concerned survival cannibalism following a shipwreck and its purported justification on the basis of a Custom of the Sea. It marked the culmination of a long history of attempts by the law, in the face of public opinion sympathetic to castaways, to outlaw the custom and it became something of a cause célèbre in Victorian Britain.

Dudley and Stephens were shipwrecked along with two other men. When one of them, the cabin boy Richard Parker, fell into a coma, Dudley and Stephens decided to kill him for food. After a highly publicized trial they were convicted of murder and sentenced to death with a recommendation for clemency; the sentence was commuted to six months in prison.

The English yacht Mignonette was a 19.43 net tonnage, 52-foot (16 m) cruiser built in 1867. It was an inshore boat, not made for long voyages. In 1883, she was purchased as a leisure vessel by Australian lawyer John Henry Want. The yacht could only reasonably be transported to Australia by sailing, but she was a small vessel and the prospect of a 15,000-mile (24,000-km) voyage hampered Want's initial attempts to find a suitable crew. She finally set sail for Sydney from Southampton on 19 May 1884 with a crew of four: Tom Dudley, the captain; Edwin Stephens; Edmund Brooks; and Richard Parker, the cabin boy. Parker was 17 years old, orphaned, and an inexperienced seaman.


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