Document Type
Article
Publication Date
1984
Abstract
Criminal liability for an omission is imposed in two distinct situations. First, such liability is often imposed explicitly in offense definitions that punish a failure to perform certain conduct. For example, it is an offense to fail to file a tax return. Second, it is also common for a general provision, apart from an offense definition, to create omission liability for an offense defined in commission terms. Parents, for example, are generally given the legal duty to care for their children. A parent may be held liable for criminal homicide, then, where death results from a failure to perform this duty, even though the homicide offense is defined in terms of commission. Section I gives examples of the first basis for omission liability; section II discusses the second.
Keywords
criminal liability, omission liability
Publication Title
New York Law School Law Review
Repository Citation
Robinson, Paul H., "Criminal Liability for Omissions: A Brief Summary and Critique of the Law in the United States" (1984). All Faculty Scholarship. 628.
https://scholarship.law.upenn.edu/faculty_scholarship/628
Included in
Criminal Law Commons, Ethics and Political Philosophy Commons, Jurisprudence Commons, Public Law and Legal Theory Commons
Publication Citation
29 N. Y. L. Sch. L. Rev. 101 (1984)