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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Steinberg v Englefield & Anor [2005] EWCA Civ 824 (05 July 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2005/824.html Cite as: [2005] EWCA Civ 824 |
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COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
MR JUSTICE EADY
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE SEDLEY
and
LORD JUSTICE LONGMORE
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JONATHAN STEINBERG |
Appellant /Defendant |
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- and - |
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PRITCHARD ENGLEFIELD & ANOTHER |
Respondents /Claimants |
____________________
The Respondent was not represented and did not attend.
Hearing date: 23 June 2005
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Sedley :
"At this point, it seems to be impossible in his current mental status for Mr Steinberg to go back to court to face the legal battle in which he is involved. His anxiety coupled with persecutory ideation overwhelms him , and he is paralysed by such feelings….. Mr Steinberg's mental status does not allow him to go back to the courtroom. He should stay away from the legal battle for another 6 to 8 months."
"9. The appellant's underlying case is a good one in that the Claimant's case had on full inspection by the lower court judge (and without any representations being made by the Appellant/Defendant to those proceedings on the validity of the Claimant's case) been classified as potentially not amounting to a proper cause of action. Alternatively in the event that the Court considers that the alleged publication did amount to a technical cause of action, proceeding against a Defendant who the Claimant had learned through confidential information gained while instructed as a solicitor could not defend such action amounts to abuse of process as defined by Lord Phillips in Jameel v Dow Jones; that in such event this case is infinitely stronger than the Jameel case in that there was no suggestion of personal financial gain in Jameel whereas the Claimants/Respondents in this case are continuing this case and refused mediation solely for their own financial gain in recovering at their hourly rate for any time they could waste on motions, applications, enforcement proceedings, charging proceedings, possession proceedings and generally in these proceedings. The publication (i) generally (ii) by the Respondent/Defendant and (iii) to a third party should be viewed with extreme suspicion as no reasonable jury could find the Claimants have credibility when suggesting that their witness had come across the supposedly published letter on his own in view of the preponderance of evidence of abuse of process by the Claimants generally. As to the defamatory nature of the facts and matters set out in the letter, it is respectfully submitted that although strongly worded, on the evidence of the Respondent's conduct a jury might well come to the conclusion in private deliberation that those facts and matters were both a true and justified description of the Respondent's actions throughout the proceedings.
10. The appellant's underlying case is a good one in that "It was disproportionate and an abuse of process for the claimant to proceed with his claim where there was no substantial tort, publication within the jurisdiction was minimal, damage to his reputation was insignificant", there was no suggestion of active publication by the Defendant (which publication was in any event denied) "and the facts did no justify the grant of an injunction prohibiting republication" in that firstly there was no suggestion of intention to publish or republish and the Claimants had never proceeded with any motion or application for an injunction. Moreover, the recognition by the Claimants that there was no need for an injunction in 1998 of an alleged defamation which had become "sterile" (per Eady J) by 2003 constitutes an acceptance that there had been no substantial publication, no damage, no intention to republish and no prospect of future damages. It is significant in this regard that the Claimants had put a request for an injunction in the Writ and then not proceeded with any motion or application for an injunction while they were claiming damage and potential damage to their reputation. It will be argued that the failure to proceed with an injunction belies the substance of this claim and underscored the proposed Part 20 Counterclaim. It will in practice be impossible for the Claimants to convince any reasonable jury that they had any knowledge of any third party publishees existing at the time of alleged publication when they served proceedings without stating to whom publication had been made and when they had not moved for an injunction while at the same time alleging damage to reputation arising out of alleged publication. Under those circumstances, their claim that a tort existed at the time of Writ must fail and a reasonable judge may deny the Claimants any right to have the matter adjudicated by a jury. The Claimant's inability on "specialist defamation counsel" advice to plead publication to a third party along with their opposition to the motion for further and better particulars of the alleged third party publishee and refusal to provide details of to whom they alleged publication had been made (at the hearing of the motion for which they were represented by that "specialist defamation counsel" before Master Ungley) underscored the bad faith nature of the cause of action.
11. The Court ought properly to reconsider its decision in the light of the fact that there is no mention made in the judgment dismissing the appeal that the learned judge should have held that granting an application for summary judgment would infringe the Defendant's right of access to court, which is a constituent element of the right to a fair trial as embodied in Article 6 of the European Convention on Human Rights. In particular, the Court should have considered whether the learned judge should have held that granting an application for summary judgment in circumstances in which a litigant has been unable to be present at trial through no fault of his own would be disproportionate to the aims of seeking to ensure finality and the efficient handling of the litigation, and was thus incompatible with the Defendant's right of access to court under Article 6 (1)."
1.1 From 20 February 1998 or a date shortly thereafter the Defendant posted on the World Wide Web and on his website "J.R Steinberg Esq International Law Consultancy" and at the address http://www.internationalawyer.org/p63.htm the words set out at paragraph 3 of the Statement of Claim. At a date unknown to the Claimants but not later than 17 June 1998 the Defendant added to those words on the said web page the words at paragraph 4 of the Statement of Claim.
1.2 On or about 17 June 1998 the said words were published to Mr Tony Ford, Senior Counsel at IBM United Kingdom Limited when he made a search of the Internet for references to "Pritchard Englefield" and was offered, read, downloaded and printed the web page containing the said words.
1.3 The web page containing the said words has been made continuously available by the Defendant since first being posted by him on the World Wide Web to persons making a search for references to the First Claimant. The Claimants will rely on searches made by them using the Infoseek and GO search engines on the following dates: 17 June 1998; 24 September 1998; 30 April 1999; 7 May 1999. The Claimants will further rely on such further searches as may be made before trial using the Infoseek, GO, Google and other search engines.
1.4 The Claimants will contend that since the said words were posted on the World Wide Web by the Defendant as aforesaid searches of the Internet have become a basic, common and increasingly popular means of obtaining information. Further (and for this reason) the First Claimant has throughout that period publicised its services on the World Wide Web by means of a web page on the website of Pannone Law group and since 23 June 1999 has also had its own website. Necessarily persons using the search engine to find references to and information about the First Claimant will have been offered (as in the case of Mr Ford) the Defendant's web page containing the words complained of.
1.5 Further the Defendant has increased the likely number of publishees by inviting visitors to his website "J.R Steinberg Esq International Law Consultancy" to read the words complained of as follows. Visitors to the Home Page of that website have been invited, under the heading "Sample Briefs and Advice", to read "samples of briefs wholly prepared by this firm in recent years". The third such "sample" published to persons taking up this invitation comprises the web page containing the words complained of.
1.6 In the premises it is to be inferred that a substantial but necessarily unquantifiable number of persons including clients, potential clients, competitors, potential competitors, professional opponents or prospective professional opponents of the First Claimant and persons visiting the Defendant's "J.R Steinberg Esq International Law Consultancy" website will have accessed and read and/or will access and read the words complained of by virtue of the Defendant making them available on the World Wide Web."
"I have in the past attempted to give every opportunity to Mr Steinberg to demonstrate why it is that finality should not now be achieved. He could have produced an expert report to show that there was some substance in his denial of liability for publication of the relevant offending words….
"I indicated in an earlier ruling why it was that I was sceptical about the prospect of resisting the claimant's allegation that Mr Steinberg was responsible in law for the relatively limited offending publication. That scepticism has not been removed by anything which has subsequently emerged."
Longmore LJ:
Ward LJ: