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No:97/0676/E
IN
THE SUPREME COURT OF JUDICATURE
COURT
OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON
APPEAL FROM THE QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
(Mr.
Justice Kennedy)
Royal
Courts of Justice
Strand,
London, WC2A 2LL
Thursday,
2nd April 1998
B
e f o r e :
LORD
JUSTICE HIRST
LORD
JUSTICE MAY
and
SIR
BRIAN NEILL
-
- - - - - - -
(1)
SURESH BHAGWANI RAJA SHAH
(2)
NAVIN BHAGWANJI SHAH
Appellants
-v-
STANDARD
CHARTERED BANK
Respondent
-
- - - - - - -
(Handed
Down Transcript of Smith Bernal Reporting Limited,
180,
Fleet Street, London, EC4A 2HD.
Telephone
No: 0171-424 4040.
Shorthand
Writers to the Court)
-
- - - - - - -
MR.
D. BROWNE Q.C. and MISS A. PAGE
(instructed by Messrs. Peter Carter-Ruck) appeared for the Appellants/Plaintiffs.
MR.
R. RAMPTON QC and MR. P. MOLONEY
(instructed by Messrs. Herbert Smith) appeared for the Respondent/Defendant.
-
- - - - - - -
J
U D G M E N T
(As
approved by the Court)
Crown
Copyright
HIRST
L.J.
Introduction
This
is an appeal by the plaintiffs Suresh Bhagwanji Raja Shah and Navin Bhagwanji
Shah against the order of Ian Kennedy J. dated 20 December 1996 in favour of
the defendant Standard Chartered Bank.
The
plaintiffs' claim is for damages for libel and slander, contained in several
publications.
By
their two summonses, both of which were unsuccessful, the plaintiffs sought the
following orders:-
1.
A determination under RSC Order 82 rule 3A that the words complained of were
not capable of the meanings pleaded in and then sought to be justified by the
defence.
2.
The striking out under Order 18 rule 19 of the particulars of justification
pleaded in the defence.
The
application to strike out, which of course only arises if the appeal fails on
the first issue, raises not only points of principle, but also a number of
detailed questions relating to the individual particulars of justification.
Consequently
the two summons fall to be determined entirely separately.
During
the course of the hearing before us it became clear that the pleadings as
presented to the judge, and as they stood at the outset of the appeal, were in
several respects unsatisfactory. As a result, leave to make very substantial
amendments to the statement of claim was sought by Mr. Desmond Browne QC on
behalf of the plaintiffs, and these in turn led to an application for leave to
make substantial amendments of the defence by Mr. Richard Rampton QC. In this
judgment I deal in the first instance with the pleadings in their final form,
as presented for leave to amend, so that the issues presently determined in
these judgments are not identical to those considered by the judge.
The
Background
The
plaintiffs, who are brothers, were respectively the Chairman and Deputy
Chairman of Mount Banking Corporation (Mount) until 3 October 1992 when the
bank was wound up by order of the Court. The defendants (SCB) is a bank
incorporated in England by Royal Charter.
In
1991/92 SCB was the victim of a major fraud said to have been committed upon it
by a large number of Indian brokers, other people in the financial sector, and
two of its employees. This fraud came to light in May 1992 and amongst those
suspected of involvement in the fraud was a Mr. Bhupen Dalal (BD).
Shortly
thereafter in a number of communications to the Bank of England SCB made a
number of allegations against Mount, inter alia (according to the plaintiffs'
case) that they had illegally laundered the proceeds of BD's fraud on SCB
through Mount.
Thereafter
in July 1992 the bank made an emergency application for the appointment of
provisional liquidators for Mount which came ex-parte before Millett J. on 3
October 1992, and led to his making the order sought. This application was
supported by an affidavit of Mr. David Green, the Deputy Head of the Banking
Supervision Division of the Bank of England, in which these allegations formed
a substantial part; indeed the judge said when making his order that the only
really serious allegation in Mr. Green's affidavit was one of money laundering.
Subsequently
the Bank of England ruled that the plaintiffs were not fit and proper persons
to be engaged in the direction of a bank, but the allegation of money
laundering did not form part of the material ultimately relied upon, as is
shown by the findings of the Banking Appeal Tribunal on 13 October 1993, and
the judgment on appeal from that tribunal of Vinelott J. on 29 July 1994, in
which he stated:-
"I
should mention at the outset that no evidence of complicity in money laundering
has ever been discovered and this matter does not form one of the charges later
brought against the Shahs. The incident is only relevant in as much as it was
the trigger which later led to intervention by the Bank".
The
Defamations Complained of
The
original cause of action in slander were based on identical words allegedly
spoken to Bank of England representatives at two separate meetings in July
1992 by Mr. Harwood, a private investigator whom the plaintiffs allege, and SCB
deny, was acting on behalf of SCB as their agent, and by Mr. Reed an employee
of SCB. This original slander, as alleged in the statement of claim, is as
follows:-
"In
the early months of 1992, Suresh Shah knowingly helped Bhupen Dalal, one of
those charged in India in connection with the securities market scandal to
launder the substantial proceeds of this fraud via Dubai, through Mount and
then back to India. The Shahs may not be Mount's beneficial owners, but acting
as a front for Dalal. $150 million of funds from Bhupen Dalal has been
laundered by Mount Banking Corporation. Suresh has arranged for the purchase
of $70 million of India Development Bonds and $80 million of Non-Resident
Deposits on Dalal's behalf. The funds for the purchase were routed through ANZ
Dubai."
This
form of words stems from an account of the conversation given by Mr. Green in
his affidavit, though he was not present.
In
their defence SCB admit the occurrence of both meetings, but deny that the
words or words to the like effect were spoken on the respective occasions.
The
two conversations were recorded in writing by Bank of England officials in two
notes for record, and by two further or alternative pleas the plaintiffs put
forward two additional causes of action in slander based on the version of the
two conversations as contained in those two notes for record, in effect
translating the relevant parts of the notes from oratio obliqua to oratio
recta, as follows:
The
Harwood Slander
"I
am a private investigator with considerable experience in finance-related
investigations. My client this time is Standard Chartered Bank and I am
currently undertaking am investigation into Mount Banking Corporation related
to the recent Indian Government security scandal in which Standard Chartered
have been affected and have incurred losses of £200 million plus....
Mount Banking Corporation is linked with that scandal ..... The funds [meaning
thereby the funds realised from that scandal] are likely to have been remitted
via Dubai, a known stop-off point for funds washed from India. Bank of
America, one of Mount Banking Corporation's agent banks in India, was also used
in the transaction chain .... The corporate route of the funds to Mount
Banking Corporation could have been direct from Snow India, or via a UK company
called CIFCO (UK) Ltd., to whom Mount Banking Corporation are bankers .....
There is a correlation between Mount Banking Corporation's increases in capital
and previous financial scandals in India... Have Mount Banking Corporation's
activities come to the Bank of England's attention before now?
[I
should note in parenthesis that objection is taken by Mr. Rampton to two
phrases ("Mount Banking is linked with the scandal", and "one of Mount Banking
Corporation's agents banks in India") on the ground that they must have been
interpolations by the Bank of England rather than words spoken by Mr. Harwood,
but I regard that as a small matter to be resolved at the trial and not at
this stage.]
The
Reed Slander
"I
have decided to approach you following the meeting you had with Mr. Harwood,
one of Standard Chartered's private investigators .... Standard Chartered has
two investigations running in parallel into the recent Indian government
securities scandal ... I will go through the main points which our
investigation has raised.
(i) Suresh
Shah, Chairman of Mount Banking Corporation, is the banking frontman for
Bhupendra Dalal, the key individual in the scandal and under arrest in India
for his part in it. I have been informed of the link between Shah and Dalal by
my contact at India's Central Bureau of Investigation.
(ii) I
subsequently received further information from a journalist in India which
indicated that Dalal had managed to channel US$150 million of the proceeds from
the scam to ANZ in Dubai (or possibly Bank of America but I think Bank of
America may not have a branch in Dubai) with further sums going on to
Switzerland. From Dubai Shah purchased for Dalal US$70 million of Indian
Development Bonds and US$80 million of Non Resident deposits, both of which can
provide anonymity to holders. Shah then took the IDB's back to India for Dalal.
(iii) I
have not as yet been able to establish a direct link between Dalal and Shah
nor whether Shah acted bona fide in the aforementioned transactions; the
evidence I have received on the matter so far has been purely circumstantial.
Shah is likely to be aware that his associations with Dalal re being
scrutinised by the Indian authorities, but not necessarily by Standard
Chartered Bank The Central Bureau of Investigation promised to show me the
path of the funds about a month ago but has not done so yet .....
(iv) Our
investigation has suggested that the other key associates of Dalal are Mr.
Kalyanapuram Sampath, a lawyer, Dalal's main man in the UK responsible for
setting up companies for him. He appears to be a director of CIFCO (UK) Ltd.
which has an account with Mount Banking Corporation ........
(v) There
is a correlation between Mount Banking Corporation's increases in capital and
the Shahs' losses in Kenya .....
I
have not yet got round to speaking to the UK police, but will be speaking to
the City of London Fraud Squad (John Todd) and the Serious Fraud Office once
the required information arrives from the Central Bureau of Investigation. I
want to establish the precise movement of the funds [meaning thereby the
proceeds of the fraud], where they ended up and when. Mount Banking
Corporation is not a bank at all and simply a vehicle through which Dalal
launders funds ... Here is a copy of a summary of points our investigation has
produced. There are other documents you can see but not take copies of. SCB's
loss in the scandal was to the order of £150 million, though part of this
has already been provided for .... I feel that the funds can be recovered by
tracing them, or obtaining an attachment to property order from the Indian
courts and applying it to the property of those accused, or by the accused
agreeing to return funds to reduce their sentences."
The
first two causes of action in libel are based on passages quoted from those
same notes for record, it being the plaintiff's case that the re-publication
in writing within the Bank of England of the contents of the two alleged
conversations was the natural and probable consequence of the original
publication of the two slanders. The full texts of these two notes for record
are as follows with the words complained of underlined:-
The
Harwood Libel
"MOUNT
BANKING CORPORATION LTD. (MBC) - ALLEGED LINK WITH INDIAN STOCK MARKET SCANDAL
1 At
his request, Joe Harwood, a private investigator from Harwood & Co. came in
to the Bank on 15 July to talk to Chris Sparkes (CJCS) about an investigation
into MBC he was currently undertaking for a leading city institution;
JJ was also present. CECS explained the confidentiality constraints of the
Banking Act and his own absence of detailed knowledge of MBC. Thus, any
comments should be taken as general and not specific to MBC. Harwood
recognised this and stressed (and it was accepted that he was speaking in
confidence.
2
(i) Harwood opened by saying that he had considerable experience in
finance-related investigations
having previously carried out investigations for where he knew
reasonably well.
(ii)
Harwood's client this time, however, was Standard Chartered and the
investigation related to the recent Indian Government securities scandal in
which it had been affected
(along with ANZ Grindlay's Citibank and Bank of America)
and
had incurred significant losses (£200 million plus according to Harwood).
(iii)
Harwood
said that these funds were likely to have been remitted via Dubai (which is
apparently a known stop off point for funds washed from India) and that Bank of
America (who we knew to be one of MBC's agent banks in India) was also used in
the transaction chain.
(iv)
The ultimate remitter of the funds was alleged to be an Indian company called
Snow India Ltd (see attached organogram)
but was now independent.
The
corporate route of the funds to MBC could have been direct, from Snow India,
or via a UK company called CIFCO (UK) Ltd (to whom MBC are alleged to be
bankers).
Harwood gave the names of the latter as T B Ruia, P B Ruia,
Dalal and Dalal
(The FT of 7 July listed some of those facing
charges of which two are named Dalal - the others do not tie up with Harwood's
list).
3
(i) Harwood also suggested there was a correlation between MBC's increases in
capital
(which he presumably obtained from public sources)
and
previous financial scandals in India.
CJCS said that there were numerous reasons why banks should inject capital and
that the Bank was not always in a position to know the source of such funds but
we would nevertheless look into the matter. CECS went on to say that the only
information we could impart at this stage, was that MBC's main shareholders had
excessive East African links h ave owned a Coca Cola bottling plant in Kenya
and that one of the Shah's spent a short time in jail there.
(ii)
Harwood asked how frequently Bank ´inspectors' visited MBC. Talking of
our supervision in general, CJCS said that it varied because there was a range
of tasks that would need to be undertaken as part of the regular ongoing system
of supervision.
(iii)
Finally, Harwood wondered whether MBC's activities had come to the Bank's
attention earlier. CJCS simply noted that allegations against ethnic banks in
particular, had come to the Bank in recent times partly because of their
different business practices.
4.
CJCS concluded the meeting by saying that we would take the matter away and
discuss it with colleagues. Harwood said that he would do the same with a view
to coming into the Bank again with the aforementioned documentation. He gave
his address and telephone number as
Action
Points
5.
(i) CJCS to confirm with of that Harwood is kosher. (See
CJCS's min of 17.7.92 - copy attached)
(ii)
JRC and Group 9 to liaise with DMS and Group 4 o/a Standard Chartered.
(iii)
JJ to check names and companies mentioned, against I & R and recent MBC
returns/papers etc.
The
Reed Libel
"MOUNT
BANKING CORPORATION LTD. (MBC) - INDIAN GOVERNMENT SECURITIES SCANDAL
1
Derek
Reed - Standard Chartered Bank's (SCB) Group Security Adviser - came into the
Bank on 29 July to talk to Chris Sparkes (CJCS) about MBC's alleged role in the
recent Indian financial scandal;
JJ was also present.
Background
2
Reed had decided to approach us following a meeting with one of SCGB's
private investigators - Joe Harwood - who had met with CJCS last month (see my
NFR of 20.7.92)
.
Reed had not previously appreciated that we would deal with people such as
Harwood, who had suggested to him (i.e. Reed) that he had the ´ear' of the
Bank. Reed was willing to pursue any legitimate channel which would assist him
in the investigation. CJCS indicated that the Bank had an ´open door' to
listen to matters such as this and took each issue seriously; he also said
that any matters disclosed to the Bank were accepted in complete confidence but
that the Banking Act restrictions did not make this a two-way process. CJCS
went on to say that Harwood would appear to have misrepresented the
relationship - we did not know him before his offer to speak. We had concluded
after our meeting with Harwood, that we would want to liaise with SCB at some
point both to ensure that Harwood was indeed working for them and to get a
first hand account of the facts.
Organisation
of the investigation
3
(i) Reed explained how the investigation was organised
.
SCB
had two investigations running in parallel;
the first was headed up by Reed himself and geographically, was concentrated
mainly in India. He had used Lyndon management consultants (?) to assist him
in India but this arrangement had recently been terminated. The second strand
of the investigation focused on the UK for which, mainly because of the lack of
manpower, private investigators had been hired.
(ii)
The main firm of private investigators engaged by SCB had been ´Corporate
Investigations' the proprietor of which, Sam Cavanan, he knew well; it had in
fact been Cavanan who sub-contracted part of the investigation to Harwood.
Reed had been surprised by the rapid progress made by the UK investigators.
He had, however, met Harwood a couple of evenings before at Corporate
Investigations' premises and was singularly unimpressed with him; this
prompted Reed to speak to the Bank personally to avoid any misunderstandings
that might arise via Harwood. At the end of the meeting, CJCS and Reed agreed
they would feel more comfortable and risk less misunderstandings if there was
direct contact, without Harwood's intervention. Reed will speak to
Harwood/Cavanan.
Main
features of the investigation
4
Reed went through the main points which the investigation had raised.
(i)
Suresh Shah (Chairman of MBC) was alleged to be the banking ´frontman' for
Bhupendra Dalal who was said to be the key individual in the scandal and was
under arrest in India for his part in it. Reed told us that the had been
informed of the link between Shah and Dalal by his contact at India's Central
Bureau of Investigation (CBI).
I subsequently learnt that his contact was Madhavan who recently resigned from
the Indian Government's inquiry into the matter, in a storm of controversy (see
attached press cutting).
(ii)
Reed subsequently received further information (from a journalist in India)
which indicated that Dalal had managed to channel US$150 million of the
proceeds from the scam to ANZ in Dubai (or possibly Bank of America but Reed
thought that they didn't have a branch there with further sums going on to
Switzerland. From Dubai, Shah is said to have
purchased
for Dalal, US$70 million of India Development Bonds (IDB's) and US$80 million
of NRI (Non Resident) deposits - both of which can provide anonymity to
holders. Shah is then said to have taken
the
IDB's back to India for Dalal.
(iii)
However, Reed has not as yet been able to establish a direct link between Dalal
and Shah nor whether Shah acted bona fide in the forementioned transactions;
the evidence he has received on the matter so far has been purely
circumstantial. He also said that Shah was likely to be aware that his
associations with Dalal were being scrutinised by the Indian authorities (but
not necessarily by SCB)> The CBI had promised to show Reed the path of the
funds about a month ago but had not done so yet;
this information might be delayed further or not arrive at all given
Madhavan's resignation (though the latter has been quoted in the press as
saying that the CBI's inquiry was "not dependent on one person").
(iv)
Reed said that the investigation had suggested that the other key associates of
Dalal were:
-
Mr (Kalyanapuram) Sampath - a lawyer, Dalal's main man in the UK and
responsible for setting-up companies for him. He appears to be a director of
CIFCO (UK) Ltd which is said to have an account with MBC.
-
Messrs Patel - three persons named Patel, who work for a UK accountancy
practice called John Cumming and Partners, were said to be associated with
Sampath.
-Mr
Ruia - is alleged to be another ´Mr Big' in India; he was said to be
wealthier than Dalal having made his fortune in the cement market in Dubai.
Ruia was alleged to be connected with some of the companies through which funds
were channelled - Reed mentioned George Lillington & Co Ltd. and Snowcem
(and not Snow India as said by Harwood) in particular.
-Equatorial
Bank - Reed said that Equatorial's Isle of Man subsidiary (Equatorial Finance
Company ?) was involved in the setting up of companies for Sampath.
-
Sharesma - another Dalal company and Bahamian registered was said to have been
used as a vehicle to purchase securities for Dalal. Sharesma was also said to
have owned Dalal's UK apartment - 9 The Water Gardens, Edgware Road; Sampath
apparently resides at No. 12.
(iv)
Reed suggested that there was a correlation between MBC's increases in capital
and the Shah's ´losses' in Kenya
(Harwood suggested a linkage between increases in MBC's capital and Indian
financial scandals); he did not elaborate.
Other
points
5
(i) CJCS asked whether Reed had spoken to the UK police yet. The latter said
that he hadn't got round to it but would be speaking to the City of London
Fraud Squad (John Todd) and the SFO once the required information arrived from
CBI. Reed wanted to establish the precise movement of funds, where they ended
up and when
(he has suggested subsequently that some transactions may have taken place
earlier this year, maybe in January).
He
remarked that MBC was not ´a bank at all' and was simply a vehicle through
which Dalal laundered funds.
CJCS said that we had no knowledge of that particular point but would talk to
the relevant personnel in the Bank about the allegations and revert.
Reed
gave us a copy of a summary of points the investigation had produced but said
that the had other documents which we could see but not take copies of.
(ii)
Reed
said that SCB's loss in the scandal was to the order of £150 million
though part of t his had already been provided for. He felt that the funds
could be recovered by:
-
tracing
them;
-
obtaining
an ´attachment to property' order from the Indian courts and applying it
to the property of those accused;
-
the
accused agreeing to return funds to reduce their sentences.
"
By
their defence the SCB admit that following each of the meetings the Bank of
England prepared and published within the bank notes for record summarising
what had been said, but otherwise deny the plaintiff's case in relation to
SCB's responsibility for each publication.
The
final cause of action in libel is based on a document published to the
representatives of the Bank of England at the second of the two meetings
referred to above containing extracts from a written report (the report)
prepared by on behalf of SCB entitled "SCB India/Securities Fraud" containing
the following statements:-
5.
MOUNT
BANKING CORPORATION LIMITED
"The
company was incorporated on 1 March 1982 as I & M Credit Corporation
Limited and changed its name to Mount Credit Corporation Limited on 31 March
1982. It was authorised as a Licensed Deposit Taker on 9 February 1983.
Enquiries
regarding Mount Banking Corporation revealed that its Chairman is one Survakant
Bhagwanji Raja Shah, also know as Suresh Shah, a resident of Kenya. We
understand that Suresh Shah obtained his seed capital from involvement in a
Coca Cola bottling business in Kenya. Intelligence received from a reliable
source indicates that he has been convicted of exchange control evasion there
and is believed to have served a prison sentence.
The
ownership of Mount Banking Corporation is concealed and filings indicate that
the directors have no beneficial interest. Suresh Shah's involvement on behalf
of Dalal in Dubai may indicate that Dalal (or his associates) have some
controlling interest in the bank. The capital of Mount Banking Corporation has
been substantially built up in recent years and the source of the capital may
be suspect.
Mount
Banking Corporation is associated with Mount Trust SA Place du Molard 9, PO Box
347, CH-1211, Geneva, Switzerland.
Mount
Banking Corporation is also associated with Mount Finance Limited, a UK
company. Information received indicates that B N Patel has been engaged upon
work on behalf of Mount Finance during the time of our enquiries. Mount Finance
is 50% owned by Nemraj Holdings Limited a company with an address in Geneva.
A search, however, revealed that it is not a Swiss Company. Enquiries are
being made to establish its domicile. The remaining shares are held 49.9% by
Orchid Investments, a Jersey company and 0.1% by I & M Holdings Limited.
Discussions
with a large respected institution are taking place which may establish the
true ownership of mount Banking Corporation and whether any funds are at, or
have moved through, that organisation.
The
laundering of US$ 150 million mentioned earlier was thought to have been routed
through ANZ Dubai and Mount Bank (emerging finally in the form of US$ 70
million IDB's and US$ 80 million, NRI deposits). We believe that ANZ dealt
with Mount Bank from January 1992 onwards as a respected customer. ANZ Bank
not only know Mount Bank but also CIFCO. There does not however appear to be
any significant ANZ-CIFCO link.
...................
8.
SURESH
SHAH
Suryakant
Bhagwanji Raji Shah (known as Suresh Shah) dob 23/3/1944, PO Box
45484/484/30238, Nairobi is chairman of Mount Banking Corporation Limited and
also a director of Mount Finance Ltd. and Mount Nominees Ltd. He is known
currently to be in London and in daily contact with BN Patel. It has been
suggested that Suresh Shah is the ´front man' for Dalal but enquiries have
so far failed to substantiate that allegation."
The
publication of this report is admitted in the defence.
The
defamatory meanings pleaded by the plaintiffs as being borne by the respective
publications are as follows:-
The
Original Slander and the Report
"(1) that,
through Mount, the Plaintiffs, alternatively the First Plaintiff, had illegally
laundered $150 million of funds on behalf of Bhupen Dalal who had been charged
in India in connection with a securities market fraud;
(2) that,
as the Plaintiffs, alternatively the First Plaintiff, knew, the said funds
illegally laundered through Mount were the proceeds of that fraud;
(3) that
the Plaintiffs and each of them were reasonably suspected of operating Mount as
a front for Dalal and his fraudulent activities, their conduct having so
warranted that suspicion;
(4) that
the Plaintiffs and each of them were therefore reasonably suspected of having
falsely and dishonestly claimed to be the beneficial owners of Mount."
The
Harwood Slander and Libel
"That
the Plaintiffs were involved in a scandalous Indian securities fraud. in that,
through the bank of which they were senior official, they had knowingly
received and illegally laundered the funds realised by that fraud."
The
Reed Slander and Libel
(1) that,
through Mount, the Plaintiffs, alternatively the First Plaintiff, had illegally
laundered $150 million on behalf of Bhupen Dalal, the said funds being the
proceeds of Dalal's part in the fraud which had led Standard Chartered Bank to
sustain a loss of the order of £150 million;
(2) that,
as the Plaintiffs, alternatively the First Plaintiff, knew the said funds
illegally laundered through Mount were the proceeds of that fraud;
(3) that
the Plaintiffs, alternatively the First Plaintiff, was the banking frontman for
Dalal and Mount, which the Plaintiffs operated, was not a bank at but purely a
vehicle through which Dalal laundered funds from his fraudulent activities.
(4) that
the Plaintiffs and each of them had therefore falsely and dishonestly claimed
to be the beneficial owners of Mount;
(5) that,
by reason of their said conduct, the Plaintiffs and each of them had given good
cause for criminal prosecution and merited reporting to the City of London
Fraud Squad and/or the Serious Fraud Office."
The
defence denies the words bore those meanings, but by the plea of justification
seeks to prove the truth of the words, apart from the original slander, in
different natural and ordinary meanings as follows:-
"i. that
there were strong grounds to suspect the Plaintiffs and each of them of having,
through their Mount group of companies, knowingly and/or illegally assisted
Bhupen Dalal to launder the proceeds of his vast fraud on SCB;
ii. that
there were some grounds to suspect that the Plaintiffs were not, as they
claimed, the beneficial owners of Mount, but rather that it was secretly owned
in whole or part by Dalal and/or others.
iii. that
there were sufficient grounds for suspicion or concern as to the possible
involvement of Mount Bank and the plaintiffs in the disposal of the proceeds of
the said fraud, to warrant putting the matter before the Fraud Squad or the
Serious Fraud Office for them to consider opening an investigation." (the Reed
slander and libel only)
There
is also pleaded a defence of qualified privilege and a reply alleging malice
with which we are not presently concerned.
Order
82 rule 3A
The
core of the dispute under this heading is whether the references to money
laundering are, on the one hand, capable of imputing actual guilt as alleged by
the plaintiffs, and, on the other hand, whether they are capable of imputing no
more the mere reasonable suspicion as alleged by the defendant.
This
fundamental conflict needs to be resolved before embarking on consideration of
each sides' detailed criticisms of the other's formulation of the natural and
ordinary meanings in the particulars quoted above.
Mr.
Rampton's submission in a nutshell, was that, apart from the original slander,
none of the publications is capable of imputing actual guilt of money
laundering having regard to their context within the ambit of each publication
taken as a whole. He relies particularly on the passages in the notes for
record which are not complained of (the omitted words) which he says colour the
meaning of the remainder.
It
is very important to bear in mind that at this juncture we are not determining
the actual meaning of the words, but delimiting the outside boundaries of the
permissible range of meanings within which the tribunal could reasonably find
the actual meaning to lie.
In
the present case, even making full allowance for the omitted words, I am
satisfied that each of the publications is capable of imputing actual guilt of
money laundering.
The
Harwood slander and libel both assert in terms that the funds were likely to
have been remitted via Dubai, a known stop off point for funds washed from
India, and that Bank of America one of Mount's agent banks in India was also
used in the transaction chain; both publications then go on to speculate what
the route for the funds to Mount might have been. This seems to me capable of
directly implicating Mount in the money laundering, while leaving open the
question of how this was achieved.
The
Reed slander and libel, having in the opening passages referred to the movement
of funds, and having stated that "Shah then took the IDB's to India for Dalal"
then asserts, to my mind critically, that Mount is not a bank at all but simply
a vehicle through which Dalal launders funds. This last sentence is capable of
constituting a direct accusation of complicity in the money laundering.
The
report presents the weakest case from Mr. Browne's point of view, but I have
come to the conclusion that the specific reference to "the laundering" in the
penultimate paragraph in its context is capable of bearing the same imputation.
Coming
now to Mr. Rampton's meanings of no more than reasonable suspicion, his
argument of course rests principally on the context in each of the
publications, and in particular the omitted words with their frequent use of
qualifying words such as "alleged", "suggested", "apparently", "said to be",
and the like, coupled with the reservations sometimes expressed, such as the
statement in the last paragraph of the report that inquiries have so far failed
to substantiate that Suresh Shah is the frontman for Dalal. I do not propose
to go through these in detail, suffice it to say that I have come to the
conclusion that in the case of each of the publications these miscellaneous
qualifying words and reservations do render each set of the words complained of
capable of bearing a meaning of no more than reasonable suspicion.
As
already foreshadowed, in addition to the main points of principle, a number of
points of detail arise on the formulation of the respective meanings.
Mr.
Rampton objects to meaning (5) pleaded in relation to the Reed slander and
libel, on the ground that the words from which it is clearly derived (viz the
first sentence of paragraph 5(1) of the Reed libel) is phrased much too
tentatively to be capable of supporting the positive meaning that the
plaintiffs have given good cause for criminal prosecution and merited reporting
to the police and the SFO. I agree and would disallow that sub paragraph,
which is sought to be inserted by way of amendment.
Mr.
Browne's objections to the defendant's pleaded meanings were far more radical.
He submitted that the three different gradations ("strong grounds", "some
grounds" and "sufficient grounds") are so confusing as to be positively
embarrassing to the fair trial of the action, since they are likely to
prejudice the understanding of what ought to be quite simple issues. Mr.
Rampton submitted that the gradations reflect differences in degree of the
various levels of suspicion.
Mr.
Browne also objected to meaning (iii) on the ground that it is inconsistent
with meaning (i).
This
latter objection is in my judgment plainly well founded, and I would disallow
meaning (iii), which is sought to be added by way of amendment.
So
far as meanings (i) and (ii) are concerned, I consider they are unobjectionable
in principle, but think it would be far better if they were both formulated in
the orthodox manner alleging reasonable grounds for suspicion. Any differences
in degree can be explained to the tribunal of fact forensically.
In
addition, Mr. Rampton seeks to invoke, in relation to the slanders, a different
type of context which he suggests also colours the meanings of the words
complained of, as follows:-
"Further
or in the alternative to the above, as to each of the slanders complained of
the Defendant will so far as may be necessary contend that if (which is denied)
the words pleaded or words to the like effect were spoken by its representative
on that occasion, then by reason of the context in which they were spoken the
said words did not bear the meaning of meanings attributed to them by the
Plaintiff, but rather the meaning or meanings attributed to them at 5A below.
i. As
to each of the meetings, the fact that as the Bank of England representatives
present well knew from the outset of each meeting, its purpose was not to
present to the Bank of England firm and well-grounded factual accusations so
that it could act in reliance thereon, but rather was to put before the Bank of
England material and allegations concerning Mount Bank and the Plaintiffs,in
order to seek the Bank of England's assistance in determining whether and to
what extent that matter and those allegations, and the suspicions which arose
from them, were or were not well founded. The words spoken by Mr. Harwood and
Mr. Reed fell to be interpreted consistently with that purpose.
ii As
to each of the said meetings, the full terms of the words spoken at that
meeting, in the context of which the words complained of are to be interpreted.
As to the full words spoken by Mr. Harwood, the burden of proving them is on
the Plaintiffs, and no admissions are made; subject thereto the Defendant
relies on the full terms of the first Note for Record as evidencing that
meeting. As to the full words spoken by Mr. Reed, the Defendant's case is as
set out in his Answers to Interrogatories."
Mr.
Browne submitted that this plea, which is sought to be added by way of
amendment, is unsustainable since:-
1.
It is presented much too late.
2.
It is wholly implausible in the light of the Bank of England's prompt use of
the information before Millett J.
3.
It is defective for want of particulars.
Objection
1 goes to discretion, and I would not rule this plea out simply and solely on
the grounds of delay.
Objection
2 is a powerful argument, but not one on which it would be appropriate for us
at this stage to rule out consideration of this plea by the tribunal of fact.
Ground
3 on the other hand I regard as a substantial criticism. Mr. Rampton submitted
that he could rely on some inference to be drawn from the publications
themselves, but in my judgment the assertion that "it was the fact that, as the
Bank of England representatives well know,
from
the outset of each meeting
its purpose was ........" connotes the existence of an explicit understanding
between the Bank of England and SCB either before or at the beginning of each
meeting as to its purpose. Mr. Rampton told us that he could not presently
give particulars at such an understanding (which would clearly involve his
obtaining evidence to this effect from the Bank of England) and that he might
never be able to do so. In these circumstances I would disallow this amendment
unless within 21 days full particulars are forthcoming.
Justification.
This
part of the case raises important questions of principle as to the permissible
scope of the defence of justification of an imputation of reasonable suspicion
of guilt.
The
two main issues are:-
1.
Whether as the plaintiffs contend such an imputation connotes actual conduct on
the plaintiff's part which warranted such suspicion, so that a defence of
justification of such an imputation can only succeed if the defendant both
pleads and proves such conduct (the conduct requirement)
2.
Whether reliance in such a plea of justification on hearsay material infringes
the repetition rule (
Stern
v. Piper
[1996] 3 WLR 715) (the repetition rule)
I
shall consider these two points in turn, and then proceed to apply my
conclusion to the actual pleas of justification in the present case.
1.
The Conduct Requirement.
In
Lewis
v. The Daily Telegraph
[1964] AC 234 Lord Reid stated at page 260:-
"Before
leaving this part of the case I must notice an argument to the effect that you
can only justify a libel that the plaintiffs have
so
conducted their affairs
as to give rise to suspicion of fraud, or as to give rise to an inquiry whether
there has been fraud, by proving that they have acted fraudulently. Then it is
said that if that is so there can be no difference between an allegation of
suspicious conduct and an allegation of guilt. To my mind, there is a great
difference between saying that a man has
behaved
in a suspicious manner
and saying that he is guilty of an offence, and I am not convinced that you can
only justify the former statement by proving guilt I can well understand that
if you say there is a rumour that X is guilty you can only justify it by
proving that he is guilty, because repeating someone else's libellous statement
is just as bad as making the statement directly. But I do not think that it is
necessary to reach a decision on this matter of justification in order to
decide that these paragraphs can mean suspicion but cannot be held to infer
guilt. (emphasis added)
Lord
Devlin stated at page 284:-
"When
an imputation is made in a general way, the ordinary man is not likely to
distinguish between hints and allegations, suspicion and guilt. It is the
broad effect that counts and it is no use submitting to a judge that he ought
to dissect the statement before he submits it to the jury. But if on the other
hand the distinction clearly emerges from the words used it cannot be ignored.
If it is said of a man - ´I do not believe that he is guilty of fraud but
I cannot deny that
he
has given
grounds for suspicion,' it seems to me to be wrong to say that in no
circumstances can they be justified except by the speaker proving the truth of
that which he has expressly said he did not believe. It must depend on whether
the impression conveyed by the speaker is one of frankness or one of
insinuation. Equally, in my opinion, it is wrong to say that, if in truth the
person spoken of never
gave
any cause for suspicion
at all, he has no remedy because he was expressly exonerated of fraud. A man's
reputation can suffer if it can truly be said of him that although innocent
he
behaved in a suspicious way
;
but it will suffer much more if it is said that he is not innocent. (emphasis
added)
In
Evans
v. Granada Television
[1996] EMLR 429 at page 435 Stuart-Smith L.J. stated:-
"But
the jury are concerned with whether there are reasonable grounds to suspect the
plaintiff from an objective point of view. When considering this issue, the
other side of the picture is relevant. The defendant cannot fetter the scope
of the plaintiff's evidence in rebuttal of the charge"
The
question has also been considered at first instance in a number of cases in
Australia. In
Jackson
v. John Fairfax and Sons Ltd.
[1981] 1 NSWLR 36 at page 41 Hunt J. stated, following a concession by the
defendants, that "to say that a person is suspected of something necessarily
implies that he has so conducted himself as to have warranted that suspicion".
Hunt
J. reiterated this in
Ainsworth
Nominees PTY Ltd. v. Hanrahan
[1982] 2 NSLWLR 823 at page 827, subject however to some qualification as a
result of a decision of the New South Wales Court of Appeal in
Sergi
v. Australian Broadcasting Commission
[1983] 2 NSWLR 699. Hunt J. said:-
"In
Sergi
v. Australian Broadcasting Commission
(at 677), Glass JA said that it was possible to accompany a statement of that
suspicion with such a disavowal of its reasonableness as to leave the statement
of suspicion standing without any suggestion that it was warranted. I agree
that that is so, although such a line of reasoning to my mind clear supports
the proposition that a statement of such suspicion
without
more
is at least capable of suggesting that the suspicion is warranted. I now
accept that it does not
necessarily
convey that suggestion (as had been conceded in
Jackson
v. John Fairfax & Sons Ltd.).
But it is obviously
capable
of conveying the suggestion that the plaintiff had so conducted himself as to
have warranted that suspicion."
Mr.
Browne submitted that these authorities supported his contention. Mr. Rampton
invited us to disregard the Australian cases, in view of the attitude of the
New South Wales Court of Appeal in
Sergi's
case.
However,
that still leaves the important statements of Lords Reid and Devlin in
Lewis's
case on which Mr. Rampton himself relied in support of his general proposition
that a defence of reasonable suspicion is valid. Both these passages seem
clearly to suggest that the reason why a plea of reasonable suspicion is
sustainable is because its sting is that the plaintiff has by his conduct
brought suspicion upon himself. Hunt J.'s view is fully in line with this
approach.
For
these reasons I consider Mr. Browne's submission is correct, and that it is an
essential requisite of a defence of justification of reasonable suspicion that
it should
focus
on some conduct on the plaintiff's part giving rise to reasonable suspicion.
I
choose the word "focus" advisedly, in order to avoid any implication that such
a defence must be exclusively confined to allegations of such conduct. Clearly
it will be necessary, particularly in a complicated case like the present, for
the defendant to portray in some detail the relevant background, and also to
set out material which connects together the main facts relied upon.
The
Repetition Rule.
In
Stern
v. Piper
[1997] QB 123 the libel complained of consisted entirely of quotations from an
affirmation prepared in connection with a pending High Court action for debt
against the plaintiff, and the defendants pleaded justification by reference
exclusively to the statements in the affirmation and not the underlying facts.
This court (Simon Brown LJ, Sir Ralph Gibson and myself) struck out this
defence on the ground that it infringed the repetition rule, which was
described by Simon Brown L.J. at page 135 as follows:-
"The
repetition rule is a rule of law specifically designed to prevent a jury from
deciding that a particular class of publication - a publication which conveys
rumour, hearsay, allegation, repetition, call it what one will - is true or
alternatively bears a lesser defamatory meaning than would attach to the
original allegation itself. By definition, but for the rule, those findings
would otherwise be open to the jury on the facts; why else the need for a rule
of law in the first place?"
The
judgments traced through in great detail the history of the repetition rule,
dating back to the 1820's, thus showing how deeply embedded it is in our law
of defamation. They also cited very important passages from the judgments of
Lords Reid and Devlin in
Lewis's
case differentiating rumour from suspicion.
Mr.
Browne submitted that the repetition rule is a rule of law which not only
governs the assessment of the meaning of a publication complained of, but also
limits both the permissible scope of the plea of justification of such a
meaning, and the admissibility of evidence in support of such a plea.
Mr.
Rampton on the other hand submitted that the rule is simply and solely a rule
of meaning and not one regulating either the scope of a plea of justification
or the evidence admissible to support it. He accepted that, where, as in
Stern
v. Piper
itself, the words complained of are confined simply and solely to the
repetition of allegations made by a third party, the rule applies, but he went
on to submit that once the imputation is not so narrowly confined, the
defendant is entitled to rely on any material, first or secondhand, which would
support such reasonable suspicion, including evidence which would otherwise be
inadmissible. He illustrated this argument by submitting that if he said that
he suspected X was guilty because Y who is reliable told him so, he could prove
what Y told him without calling Y or otherwise proving first hand the truth of
what he had been told.
In
further support of this argument Mr. Rampton cited a number of authorities
dealing with the requirements of reasonable suspicion in wrongful arrest cases,
as accurately summarised in Clerk and Lindsell on Torts 17th Edition paragraph
16-10 as follows:-
"Reasonable
grounds for suspicion are not to be equated with prima facie proof of guilt, as
the former may properly be based on matters which would not be admissible in
evidence. The Court of Appeal disapproved any contention that reasonable
grounds for suspicion must be based on ´a good deal more' then ´mere
suspicion'. The test is simply whether in all the circumstances the objective
information available to the constable supports reasonable grounds for
suspicion, for conjecture or surmise of guilt. A direct charge made by a third
party may be sufficient to justify arrest unless there are surrounding facts to
show that the charge is unreasonable."
Mr.
Rampton also relied on the decision in
Aspro
Travel v. Owners Abroad Group
[1996] 1 WLR 13 where the Court of Appeal (Stuart-Smith, Waite and Schiemann
LJJ considered a defence of justification in a libel action in which the
defendants sought to prove that there were reasonable grounds for suspicion
against the plaintiffs based in part on particulars citing hearsay and rumour.
Giving the leading judgment with which Waite and Stuart-Smith LJJ agreed
Schiemann L.J. stated as follows at page 140:-
"Mr
Shields correctly submits that some of the particulars of justification are
hearsay and rumour. It is manifestly dangerous to publish hearsay and rumour
because in some circumstances the jury will accept that the true meaning of
what was said was that the rumour is well founded. Mr. Eady accepts that
hearsay and rumour cannot constitute justification for an assertion of fact
that the rumour was well founded and he does not seek to do so . However, he
submits that there can be circumstances in which the existence of a rumour
entitles a person to repeat that rumour even before he satisfies himself that
the rumour is true and that in such circumstances it is possible to plead in
justification that there were in truth such rumours. I agree in the abstract
and do not regard it as appropriate to strike out the plea of justification on
this basis. Striking out should only be done in clear and obvious cases."
Furthermore,
although at the time of the hearing of this appeal it seemed, to judge from the
law report, that
Lewis's
case had not been cited in
Aspro,
we have now ascertained that the contrary is the case, with the relevant
passages being quoted in Mr. Shield's skeleton argument.
This
led Mr. Browne to submit that
Aspro
and
Stern
v. Piper
are irreconcilable, and that we should prefer the latter.
I
have come to the conclusion that the repetition rule applies in the manner
described by Mr. Browne for the reasons he gave. Contrary to Mr. Rampton's
argument, I am satisfied that it is a rule of law which governs not only
meaning, but also the pleading and proof of a defence of justification.
Stern
v. Piper
is a very good illustration, since the ultimate decision was that the defence
of justification should be struck out. Moreover, I consider that the
repetition rule reflects a fundamental canon of legal policy in the law of
defamation dating back nearly 170 years, that words must be interpreted, and
the imputations they contain justified, by reference to the underlying
allegations of fact and not merely by reliance upon some secondhand report or
assertion of them.
I
do not gain assistance from the wrongful arrest cases, since I think that the
position of a police officer, who is carrying out a public duty and who may
have to take action, frequently under pressure, on information which is at that
stage incomplete, is very different from that of a publisher of defamatory
words who, save in special circumstances where a defence of qualified privilege
is likely to be available, is under no compulsion to make any statement at all.
I am not persuaded that the latitude rightly granted to the former in the
difficult circumstances in which he operates in any way justifies the extension
of a similar latitude to the latter in his very different environment.
I
am, I must acknowledge, troubled by the
Aspro
case, since I very much doubt whether Schiemann L.J.'s somewhat tentative view
would have been the same if the court had given the appropriate weight to the
authorities referred to in
Stern
v Piper
,
and, in particular to
Lewis's
case, including the well known dictum of Lord Devlin at page 284 that "for the
purpose of the law of libel a hearsay statement is the same as a direct
statement, and that is all there is to it."
I
do not find it easy to reconcile Schiemann L.J.'s view with those citations,
and I think the correct approach is to say that
Aspro
should be confined to its own facts, and not treated as laying down a general
principle.
One
most salutary advantage of holding fast to the repetition rule is that it
avoids lengthy investigation of the reliability of the makers of hearsay
statements which might otherwise be admissible.
The
Present Pleas of Justification.
The
particulars of justification begin with a paragraph headed "Premises" which
states as follows:-
a. That
SCB had been the victim of a massive fraud in India in late 1991 and early
1992; and that a principal suspect was Bhupen Dalal.
b. That
proceeds of the fraud could not readily be traced in India.
c. That
it was therefore likely that the proceeds had been sent out of India via the
´hawala' banking system, and there ´laundered' and returned to Dalal
and his associates in an untraceable form such as Indian Development Bonds
(IDBs) and Non Resident Indian deposits (NRIs).
It
then proceeds to set out five separate Grounds each of which is supported by a
number of particulars.
Ground
1 states "The plaintiffs are long-standing personal friends and business
associates of Bhupen Dalal and his colleagues".
Ground
2 states "The Plaintiffs, and Mount Bank, are not reputable bankers; the
covert manner in which they do business renders them likely participants in
Hawala and money laundering transactions".
I
shall return to these two grounds later.
Ground
3, which is the central allegation is as follows:-
"The
plaintiffs and Mount Bank were in fact involved, jointly with Bhupen Dalal and
his company CIFCO, in the purchase of large amounts of untraceable NRI and IDB
bearer-bonds in the Gulf in early 1992, just at the time when the proceeds of
the fraud on SCB would require ´laundering'.
3.1 In
early 1992, BD was engaged in setting up a new branch of his company CIFCO in
Sharjah, its principal activity to be dealing in IDBs and other securities for
non-resident Indian investors.
3.2 At
the same time, the First Plaintiff (on behalf of Mount Bank and the Second
Plaintiff) visited the Gulf, and approached ANZ Grindlays Bank Dubai with a
proposal that they should jointly purchase a large quantity of IDBs. Mount did
in fact purchase at least |US$11.5 million of IDBs via ANZ Grindlays Bank Dubai.
3.3 As
above pleaded, Mount Bank did in January 1992 buy a very large quantity of
IDBs, well in excess of its Bank of England limits, and forming a very high
proportion of its overall assets.
3.4 On
18 March 1992, Mount Bank requested the State Bank of India to deliver all the
said IDBs (purchased in three separate tranches, in Oman, Dubai and India) to
CIFCO in Bombay.
3.5 These
transactions are entirely consistent with a hawala deal whereby BD furnishes
stolen money to the Plaintiffs or their associates in India, and they in turn
purchase IDBs abroad in (relatively) small lots so as not to attract suspicion,
and then return them to CIFCO in India under the pretence that CIFCO is holding
them on behalf of clients of Mount or of itself.
3.6 In
May 1992, Mr. Patel of John Cumming & Partners visited Dubai, and then the
Isle of Man, where many of BD's and CIFCO's assets are held."
Ground
4 contains a number of items of hearsay information allegedly gleaned from
third parties.
Ground
5 relies on matters subsequent to publication, and is not now defended by Mr.
Rampton for the obvious reason that it is very difficult to see how subsequent
events could be a sound basis for reasonable suspicion.
Ground
3 in my judgment plainly meets the conduct requirement and must be allowed to
stand.
Ground
4 however, plainly infringes the repetition rule, and should therefore be
struck out in its entirety, together with Ground 5.
I
now return to Grounds 1 and 2 where Mr. Browne raised a number of detailed
objections.
Mr.
Browne objected to the Premises, on the ground that they are neither a meaning
sought to be justified in or particulars of facts by which the meaning will be
shown to be true, and also on the basis that they are inadequately
particularised. In my judgment the premises are properly pleaded as
background, which it will be incumbent on the defendants to prove by reference
to the particulars in the ensuing Grounds.
Ground
1, which is supported by several detailed particulars of business links between
the plaintiffs and BD, is objected to on the grounds that friendship and
association is irrelevant since it proves nothing. I disagree and consider
that this also is properly relied upon as part of the relevant background.
So
far as Ground 2 is concerned, I can see no objection to the second part of the
sentence "the covert manner ......." which is supported by a number of
particulars of alleged conduct on the plaintiffs' and Mount's part which to my
mind is legitimate background.
On
the other hand I do think Mr. Browne has a valid objection to the first few
words alleging that the plaintiffs and Mount are not reputable bankers, since
the plea of justification, for the reasons I have already given, must be aimed
at the plaintiffs' conduct and not at their antecedent reputation. I would
therefore strike out those words.
Conclusion
It
follows that the plaintiff's appeal under Order 82 rule 3A fails save in
respect of the defendant's meaning (iii). The defendant's attack on the
plaintiffs' meanings equally fails, save in respect of meaning (5) of the Reed
slander and libel.
The
attack on the defendant's plea of justification succeeds in relation to grounds
4 and 5, but otherwise fails apart from the minor adjustments to which I have
just referred.
It
follows that the appeal succeeds only to the extent identified above, and the
rival applications for leave to amend succeed save to the extent that I have
already mentioned.
By
way of postscript, I would like to add that, at the pre-trial review which will
certainly be necessary in this case, it should be a matter for careful
consideration whether it would be appropriate to follow or at least adapt the
practice successfully pioneered by Popplewell J. in the case of
Marks
& Spencer plc v. Granada Television Ltd.
(23 February 1998), whereby the issue as to the true meaning of the words was
decided in advance, and, having been resolved in the plaintiff's favour,
averted several weeks of trial on the plea of justification which depended on
the defendant's meaning which the jury rejected. In the present case, if the
fundamental conflict on meaning were to be resolved in the plaintiff's favour,
there would be little if anything left of the plea of justification, and the
trial would then proceed on the issues of qualified privilege and malice, with
a very great saving of time.
MAY
L.J.
I
entirely agree with the judgment of Hirst L.J. I agree in particular that the
publications which are the main subject of these proceedings are capable of
meanings to the short effect that there were reasonable grounds to suspect that
the plaintiffs had been involved in money laundering. This short additional
judgment deals only with the application of the repetition rule when a
defendant seeks to justify meanings of this kind.
Grounds
4 and 5 of the defendants' Particulars of Justification allege that the
defendant and its investigators had received credible allegations indicating
that the plaintiffs were or might be involved in laundering the fraud proceeds
of Bhupen Dalal. It is the plaintiffs' case that these particulars should be
struck out. The defendants say that they are permissible.
A
publication that a person is guilty of something differs from a publication
that there are reasonable grounds to suspect that he is guilty. Each is
normally capable of being defamatory. The second will usually be less serious
than the first. To justify the first publication, you have to establish that
the person is guilty. To justify the second publication, you have to establish
that there are objectively reasonable grounds for suspicion.
The
repetition rule in its simplest application is that, if you publish a statement
that Y said that X is guilty, it is not a defence to an action for defamation
to establish the literal truth of the publication, i.e. that it is indeed true
that Y said that X is guilty. You are repeating and endorsing Y's publication
and your justification must address the substance of what Y said, not the fact
that he said it. The obvious underlying reason for the rule is that statements
of this kind in substance restate the original publication. It is not, I
think, helpful to suggest, as did Mr Rampton, that the rule operates as a blue
pencil. It is rather a rule which encapsulates the fact that publications of
the bald kind under consideration do in substance amount to a republication of
the reported publication and that that is their meaning. The rule in its
simplest application thus addresses what it is that a defendant has to justify.
As Simon Brown L.J. said in
Stern
v. Piper
[1996] 3 WLR 715 at 725H:
"The
repetition rule (I gratefully adopt Hirst L.J.'s term for it ...) is a rule of
law specifically designed to prevent a jury from deciding that a particular
class of publication - a publication which conveys rumour, hearsay, allegation,
repetition, call it what you will - is true or alternatively bears a lesser
defamatory meaning than would attach to the original allegation itself. By
definition, but for the rule those findings would otherwise be open to the jury
on the facts; why else the need for a rule of law in the first place?
Take
the present case. If, as I would hold, the rule applies, it applies to prevent
the defendants from pleading and then inviting the jury to conclude that their
article is true because it does no more than recite what in fact is alleged in
Mr Gorman's affirmation, alternatively is less defamatory than Mr Gorman's
affirmation itself (which, of course, attracts absolute privilege) because it
does not assert the truth of the affirmation but merely reports that it
contains such allegations. ...
The
policy underlying and justifying the rule is that stated by Lord Reid in
Lewis
v. Daily Telegraph Ltd.
[1964] A.C. 234, 260:
"I
can well understand that if you say there is a rumour that X is guilty you can
only justify it by proving that he is guilty, because repeating someone else's
libelous statement is just as bad as making the statement directly."".
Simon
Brown L.J. also said at p.728a:
"As,
however, Hirst L.J. has shown in the passages he cites from the various
speeches (including Lord Devlin's), so far from
Lewis's
case undermining the repetition rule, it in fact reiterates it. And, as I
began by pointing out, the repetition rule is indeed a rule which, where it
applies, dictates the meaning to be given to the words used. Had Mr Gorman's
affirmation alleged, not that the appellant is guilty of dishonesty and
perjury, but only that he is suspected of such misconduct, then
Lewis's
case would be in point: the defendants on repeating such lesser allegation
would then have to prove merely grounds for suspicion and not actual guilt."
Hirst
L.J. carried out a full analysis of the repetition rule and the authorities
underlying it in
Stern
v. Piper
.
The rule goes back to the early 19th century and was followed and applied in
Watkin
v. Hall
(1868) L.R.3 Q.B. 396. Hirst L.J. said at page 724C that it was:
"...
very important to appreciate the weight of authority behind the repetition
rule, which was well established throughout most of the 19th century, which was
given unqualified endorsement as settled law by the Privy Council in
"Truth"
(N.Z.) Ltd. v. Holloway
[1960] 1 WLR 997, and which gained the final seal of approval from the House
of Lords in
Lewis v. Daily Telegraph Ltd.
[1964] A.C.234."
In
Stern
v. Piper
,
it was held that the repetition rule applied to the publication of defamatory
material which quoted from an affirmation prepared in connection with a pending
High Court action for debt against the plaintiff. It is relevant to note that
leading counsel for the defendants in
Stern
v. Piper
was Mr David Eady Q.C., as he then was.
Mr
Rampton accepts that the repetition rule applies to cases where there is a mere
repetition of a defamatory statement made by another person. But he submits
that, where the meaning of the publication is, not that a person is guilty, but
that there are reasonable grounds to suspect that he is guilty and where the
defendant wants to justify that meaning, it is permissible to call evidence of
what the defendant was told, not to prove the truth of what was said, but to
prove the fact that it was said. He submits that reasonable grounds for
suspicion may in appropriate circumstances be established by such evidence,
since reasonable grounds for suspicion may derive from what you are told by
people whom you know to be reliable. Thus, he submits, publications of this
kind may be justified by evidence such as "I have reasonable grounds to suspect
that X is guilty, because Y told me that X is guilty and because I know that Y
is honest and reliable." The submission did not address a secondary question
of the basis for the informant's supposedly reliable information. Y might
claim to know that X is guilty because he had personally seen the relevant
acts, or alternatively he might himself simply be passing on information which
he had himself been told by someone else.
Mr
Rampton relied on a passage in the opinion of Lord Hodson in
Lewis
v. Daily Telegraph
at p. 274-5 where Lord Hodson drew a distinction between rumour and suspicion,
and to an equivalent passage in the opinion of Lord Devlin at p. 282. But
these passages were, I think, directed to the distinction between the
publication alleging guilt and a publication alleging reasonable grounds to
suspect guilt. The fact that the unvarnished repetition of a rumour falls into
the first of those categories and requires proof of actual guilt does not mean
that a publication in the second category may be justified by proof of rumour.
It
is evident that Mr Rampton's submission has moved from addressing a simple
application of the repetition rule, which concerns the nature of the defamatory
publication and what has to be justified, to the rather different question of
what matters may be relied on and what evidence may be called where a defendant
wants to justify a defamatory publication to the effect that there are
reasonable grounds for suspicion. Is it permissable to rely on what you have
been told by someone else and, as Mr Rampton suggests, to bolster the
credibility of the hearsay information by asserting that your informant is
reliable?
Mr
Rampton referred to and relied on a passage in the judgment of Schiemann L.J. in
Aspro
Travel v. Owners Abroad
[1996] 1 W.L.R. 132. Representatives of the defendants published defamatory
statements to the effect that the plaintiff companies were about to become
bankrupt or that there were reliable rumours to that effect. The defendants
denied that the words were defamatory, but pleaded that, in so far as they
were, they were justified. They relied on the existence of hearsay and rumour.
The plaintiffs applied to strike out these particulars. At page 140, Schiemann
L.J. said:
"Mr
Shields correctly submits that some of the particulars of justification are
hearsay and rumour. It is manifestly dangerous to publish hearsay and rumour
because in some circumstances the jury will accept that the true meaning of
what was said was that the rumour is well founded. Mr Eady accepts that
hearsay and rumour cannot constitute justification for an assertion of fact
that the rumour was well founded and he does not seek to do so. However, he
submits that there can be circumstances in which the existence of a rumour
entitles a person to repeat that rumour even before he satisfies himself that
the rumour is true and that in such circumstances it is possible to plead in
justification that there were in truth such rumours. I agree in the abstract
and do not regard it as appropriate to strike out the plea of justification on
this basis. Striking out should only be done in clear and obvious cases."
There
are no doubt circumstances in which the existence of a rumour entitles a person
to repeat that rumour even before he satisfies himself that the rumour is true.
One such circumstance mentioned during submissions in this appeal might be
where a broker passes on to his client a rumour in the market so that the
client may decide whether to act upon it. Publications of this kind will be
legitimate in so far as they are the subject of qualified privilege. But on
the face of it the publication of such a rumour should be subject to the
repetition rule and it is not easy to see in what circumstances publications of
this kind might be justified by establishing that there were in truth such
rumours. The repetition rule and the authorities upon which it is based were
not referred to in the
Aspro
Travel
judgment and it is odd that Mr Eady, with whose submission Schiemann L.J.
agreed in the abstract, did not rely on the
Aspro
Travel
case in his submissions in
Stern
v. Piper
.
In so far as it may be suggested that
Stern
v. Piper
and
Aspro
Travel
do not sit happily together, I prefer
Stern
v. Piper
not least because it is a case which considers all the main authorities on the
repetition rule.
It
nevertheless remains to consider whether, if the meaning which the defendants
want to justify is that there are reasonable grounds for suspicion, it is
permissable to rely on what you have been told by someone else. In my
judgment, it is not. I maintain the view which I expressed at first instance in
Hinduja
v. Asia T.V.
(unreported 1996). In that case, the defendants wanted to justify a meaning of
a defamatory publication to the effect that there were credible grounds for
suspecting that the plaintiffs had been involved in an Indian bribery scandal.
The particulars of justification consisted mainly of repetition of hearsay
statements, many of them from newspaper articles, with unsubstantiated
assertions that in all the circumstances the reported statements were credible.
There were 25 or more paragraphs of such material and I held that the
particulars of justification should be struck out in their entirety, giving the
defendants the opportunity to replead particulars which did not rely on
reported material asserted to be credible. In doing so, I said:
"But
at this pleading stage it is in my view clear that the defendants'
justification has to address as a minimum the inherent credibility of the
underlying facts alleged to link the plaintiffs with the scandal. What others,
least of all newspapers, have said about those facts does not advance their
inherent credibility. Nor does bald assertion of credibility."
The
facts of the
Hinduja
case well illustrate problems which in my view Mr Rampton's submission cannot
overcome. If a defendant wishing to justify a publication to the effect that
there are reasonable grounds to suspect the plaintiff of discreditable conduct
can rely on what he has been told by persons whom he regards as honest and
reliable, it must follow that evidence would be admissible as to the reputed
honesty and reliability of the defendant's informants. The practical problems
which that might cause in a case such as the
Hinduja
case are obvious. In principle, however, evidence of this kind would be
objectionable because it would introduce irrelevant considerations in purported
proof of what the defendant has to establish. The defendant has to establish
that there are objectively reasonable grounds to suspect the plaintiff. The
evidence under consideration would be directed rather to an essentially
subjective judgment of the honesty and credibility of third parties. In human
terms, any one is entitled to believe what third parties tell them. But such
belief does not establish that what is reported is objectively credible.
I
agree with Hirst L.J. that there is no analogy between the subject under
discussion in defamation and what constitutes a defence of reasonable grounds
for suspicion in cases against police officers for unlawful arrest or malicious
prosecution.
In
my view, a proper balance between freedom of speech and protection of
reputation is achieved by rejecting Mr Rampton's submission. Those who publish
without malice defamatory statements to the effect that there are reasonable
grounds to suspect a plaintiff of discreditable conduct are protected if the
occasion is privileged. If the occasion is not privileged, they may justify
the publication by proving objectively that there are such reasonable grounds.
Allegedly credible hearsay may not contribute to such proof. Defendants will
have to call their informants or provide other direct evidence. If this is in
individual cases difficult, that only emphasises that reputation should not be
put at risk by publication on occasions which are not privileged of
unsubstantiated hearsay. In the end, the argument turns, not so much on the
repetition rule, as on the admissibility, probative value and relevance of
hearsay evidence.
For
these reasons I respectfully agree with the orders which Hirst L.J. proposes.
SIR
BRIAN NEILL
I
have had the advantage of reading the judgments of Hirst L.J. and May L.J. in
draft and I agree with them and with the orders proposed by Hirst L.J.. There
is nothing that I can usefully add.
Order:
Appeal allowed as per judgment; no order as to costs on amendment;
plaintiffs to have half their costs in Court of Appeal and before court below;
application for leave to appeal to the House of Lords refused.
(Order
not part of the judgment of the court)
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