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England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Jameel & Anor v The Wall Street Journal Europe Sprl [2003] EWHC 2945 (QB) (05 December 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2003/2945.html Cite as: [2003] EWHC 2945 (QB), [2004] 2 All ER 92 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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Mohammed Abdul Latif Jameel Abdul Latif Jameel Company Limited |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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The Wall Street Journal Europe SPRL |
Defendant |
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and Mr Justin Rushbrooke
(instructed by Peter Carter-Ruck and Partners) for the Claimants
Mr Geoffrey Robertson QC
and Mr Rupert Elliott (instructed by Finers Stephens Innocent) for the Defendant
Hearing dates : 24 and 25 November 2003
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Eady:
"Such actions involve a money award which may put the plaintiff in a purely financial sense in a much stronger position than he was before the wrong. Not merely can he recover the estimated sum of his past and future losses, but, in case the libel, driven under ground, emerges from its lurking place at some future date, he must be able to point to a sum awarded by a jury sufficient to convince a by-stander of the baselessness of the charge. As Windeyer J. well said in Uren v John Fairfax and Sons Pty. Limited., 117 C.L.R.115, 150:
'It seems to me that, properly speaking, a man defamed does not get compensation for his damaged reputation. He gets damages because he was injured in his reputation, that is simply because he was publicly defamed. For this reason, compensation by damages operates in two ways–as a vindication of the plaintiff to the public and as consolation to him for a wrong done. Compensation is here solatium rather than a monetary recompense for harm measurable in money.'
This is why it is not necessarily fair to compare awards of damages in this field with damages for personal injuries".
"There is no obligation on the plaintiffs to show that they have suffered actual damage. A plaintiff may, if he can, by way of aggravating damages, prove that he has suffered actual damage. But in every case he is perfectly entitled to say that there has been a serious libel upon him; that the law assumes he must have suffered damage; and that he is entitled to substantial damages. If the defendant, by giving evidence in mitigation of damages, or by saying that the libel is very nearly true, but not quite, can mitigate the damages, be it so. But in this case the defendants did nothing of that sort. It would have been open to the defendants in this case to attempt to justify the libel by saying that they were not bound by what the magistrate found in the police court proceedings; that this was a dishonest return; and that the plaintiffs made it dishonestly. Instead of choosing to do that, they accepted the situation that there was no moral obliquity on the plaintiff society at all.
Therefore one gets the position of a trading company having being charged, as the jury find by the answers to the questions left to them on the innuendo, with the most disgraceful conduct that any company could be charged with; and yet the jury are told that because the company have not given any evidence showing actual pecuniary loss, they can properly be compensated by a farthing. That was undoubtedly a misdirection".
"As with an individual plaintiff, where a company brings proceedings for libel, there is no obligation on them to show that they have suffered actual damage … The effect of this is, not that there is an irrebuttable presumption of substantial damage, but that a corporate plaintiff which shows that it has a reputation within the jurisdiction, and that the defamatory publication is apt to damage its goodwill, has a complete cause of action capable of leading to an award of substantial damages. Other considerations could lead to an award of nominal damages … "
"The absence of any evidence as to damages from a single person with capacity to do the respondent harm did not oblige the learned judge to refrain from giving damages for the mere risk of financial harm, and the contention on behalf of the appellant to the contrary must be rejected." (emphasis added)
Nevertheless the absence of any evidence of harm, for example from viewers of the relevant television programme, was a matter to which considerable weight should be attached in the assessment of damages. Notwithstanding the absence of specific loss, the court felt it right, although reducing the sum awarded at trial, to assess the appropriate sum at 100,000 dollars.
"Turning to the question of general damages, the trial judge referred in some detail to the evidence adduced by Comalco to demonstrate the circumstances in which the publication of the programme could have resulted in injury to its business activities. But it is of considerable significance that no evidence was adduced by Comalco to show any actual loss suffered by reason of the publication. The absence of such evidence must, of necessity, make the task of assessing a proper award of damages more difficult. One is left largely to speculate from the degree of seriousness of the defamatory material published and the general nature of Comalco's business, involving as it does substantial dealings with governments and large commercial enterprises both in Australia and abroad as well as dealings with the general public, what was the likelihood of injury to Comalco resulting from the publication of the programme in the Australian Capital Territory and the States of Victoria and South Australia (excluding from consideration publication or republication elsewhere)".
"Consequently, from the authorities to which I have referred above and a number of decisions in other common law jurisdictions which we have been invited to consider, I have come to the conclusion that there is no difference in principle between a trading company and a non-trading corporation for the purposes of suing in tort, including the tort of defamation. In each case a corporation has its reputation, separate from its members, capable of being adversely affected by defamatory statements and which it is entitled to protect by recourse to an action for libel".
"The question is really the same by whomsoever the action is brought – whether by a person, a firm, or a company. Although the law is the same, the application of it is, no doubt, different with regards to different kinds of plaintiffs
…
Then, if the case be one of libel – whether on a person, a firm, or a company – the law is that the damages are at large. It is not necessary to prove any particular damage; the jury may give such damages as they think fit, having regard to the conduct of the parties respectively, and all the circumstances of the case".
"The court is faced not with a choice between two conflicting principles, but with a principle of freedom of expression that is subject to a number of exceptions which must be narrowly interpreted".
Nonetheless, provided that it is understood, it has to be recognised that inevitably the exercise of reconciling the demands of competing rights involves an element of balancing. As Balcombe L.J. accepted in the Court of Appeal in Derbyshire County Council v Times Newspapers Ltd, at p. 814C:
"Article 10 requires a balancing exercise to be conducted: the balance in this case is between the right of freedom of expression and such restrictions that are necessary in a democratic society for the protection of the reputation of a non-trading corporation which is also a public authority"
In this case, by contrast, the court is concerned with balancing the right to freedom of expression and such restrictions as are necessary for protecting the reputation of foreign trading (and perhaps even of non-trading) corporations.