Journal Name:
- Annales de la Faculté de Droit d’Istanbul
Author Name | University of Author | Faculty of Author |
---|---|---|
Abstract (2. Language):
In modern criminal law, the act forms the basis of the crime (Koca &
Üzülmez, 2010, p. 124). But there should be a mental connection between
the act and the offender who commits the act. In other words, without a
mental connection, a behavior would not have the characteristic of an act
and consequently it would not constitute a crime (Özgenç, 2010, p. 213;
Koca & Üzülmez, 2010, p. 178). This mental connection between the
offender and the act emerges either as intention or negligence.
The intention is a form of committing the injustice and occurrence
of a crime depends on the existence of intention. Intention is committing
the elements of crime in the legal definition willingly and purposely. If
the offender does not know the objective elements in the definition of
the crime, he would not act intentionally.
In criminal law, if the offender’s conception and the fact do not
comply with each other, it is called a mistake (Önder, 1992, p. 325). The
mistake might stem from the fact that a person does not know the fact
at all or it might also arise out of the fact that he knows it defectively or
wrongly. In this regard, two kinds of mistake, not knowing the fact or
knowing it wrongly, are two distinct forms (Gropp, 2005, § 13, n. 4; Dönmezer
& Erman, II, 1999, n. 1039). However, the offender conceives the
fact wrongly in both of these cases. It should be examined that whether
the wrong conception of the offender affects his punishability? In other words, will the incongruity between the offender’s will and the fact be
valued in the criminal law? We should answer this question in the following
way: The consequences of the offender’s wrong conception might be
different; the wrong conception might eliminate the offender’s intention,
it might be of importance for his culpability (reproachability) or it might
not be of importance for the criminal liability ( Jescheck & Weigend,
1996, p. 306; Heinrich, II, 2005, n. 1064). Thus, it cannot be generalized
that the mistake would eliminate the criminal liability by all means, or it
would be completely ineffective in punishment. It should be evaluated
according to the content of the offender’s mistake. But criminal law has
to take into consideration the case of mistake which affects the offender’s
will and has to demystify the mistake’s effect on the offender’s liability.
The subject of the offender’s conception might be related to anything
belonging to the external world, it might also be related to a fact
belonging to the normative world. If anything belonging to the external
world is conceived differently than what it is, it is called mistake in perception,
if a reality related to the normative world is evaluated differently
than what it is, it is called mistake in evaluation (Toroslu, 2005, p. 217;
Heinrich, II, 2005, n. 1066–1067). Perceiving or knowing the presences
belonging to the external world wrongly is a matter related to the person’s
intention; and such a mistake eliminates the intention. Since the
intention is knowing the objective elements in the crime’s legal definition
(typicality) (TPC1 art. 21/1), this mistake is generally called as mistake of
element or mistake of typicality. On the other hand, the mistake in evaluation
belonging to the normative world is a mistake related to the person’s
comprehension and thus it is relevant to culpability. Consequently this
mistake type is characterized as the mistake of injustice (TPC art. 30/4)
or mistake of prohibition. Thus, it is possible to divide the mistake into
two categories, namely the mistake affecting the culpability and the mistake
eliminating the intention in respect to their consequences (Özgenç, 2010,
p. 393; Artuk/Gökcen/Yenidünya, 2007, p. 683; Koca & Üzülmez, 2010,
p. 254).In the article 30 of TPC, titled “mistake”, the mistake eliminating
the intention and the mistake eliminating the culpability are regulated
together. In the this article consisting of four paragraphs mistake of objective
elements, mistake of aggravating and mitigating factors, mistake
of objective conditions of the reasons mitigating or eliminating the culpability
and the reasons of justification and mistake of prohibition (mistake
of injustice) take place respectively.
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