Animus nocendi
In jurisprudence, animus nocendi is the subjective state of mind of the perpetrator of a crime, with reference to the exact knowledge of illegal content of their behaviour, and of its possible consequences.
In most modern legal systems, the animus nocendi is required as an essential condition to give a penal condemnation.
The animus nocendi is usually demonstrated by the verified presence of these elements:
- knowledge of a law that prohibited the discussed action or conduct ;
- knowledge of the most likely consequences of the perpetrator's action;
- precise intention of breaking the law or of causing the verified effects of the action.
The animus nocendi is often absent in people with mental illness, and in front of such people, a psychiatric expertise is usually required to verify the eventual animus. Minors too are in many systems considered little capable of a correct knowledge about the meaning or the consequences of their actions, and this is the reason for the common reduction of the passive capability of punishment they usually can receive.
A particular case of animus nocendi is the voluntas necandi, describing the animus nocendi of a person who willfully kills another human being. Establishment of voluntas necandi is necessary to prove murder or voluntary manslaughter as opposed to involuntary manslaughter.