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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 >> Anglia Research Services Ltd & Anor v Finders Genealogists Ltd & Anor [2016] EWHC 297 (QB) (17 February 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2016/297.html Cite as: [2016] EWHC 297 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(sitting as a Judge of the High Court)
____________________
ANGLIA RESEARCH SERVICES LTD PHILIP TURVEY |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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FINDERS GENEALOGISTS LTD DANIEL CURRAN |
Defendants |
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Ms Kate Wilson (instructed by Child & Child) for the Defendants
Hearing dates: 11 and 16 December 2015
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Crown Copyright ©
HHJ Moloney QC :
This judgment is given on the Claimants' application for an order for pre-action disclosure under CPR 31.16. The application relates to a proposed claim in defamation and harassment, and was issued on 26 November 2015. It was listed for hearing before me on 11 December 2015. On 10 December 2015 the Claimants revealed, in their counsel's Skeleton Argument, that a defamation claim form had in fact now been issued but not served. The claim form was produced at the first hearing; it had been issued on 27 November 2015. Understandably, the Defendants took the point that this raised a significant new issue as to the Court's jurisdiction to make the order sought after proceedings had been commenced. I adjourned the hearing until 16 December 2015, on which date I heard full argument on the two live issues:
a. Does the Court have jurisdiction to make an order under CPR 31.16 in these circumstances?
b. If so, what order if any should it make?
a. which contain or refer to defamatory material which was located at the URL www.change.org/p/chief-constable-of-the-metropoli-press-charges-against-police-sergeant-adrian-musgrave-philip-turvey or which contain or refer to the URL itself;
b. which attach or refer to the PDF file "Anglia Research Philip Turvey Press 31_12_2014.pdf" (which contains a saved version of the defamatory material originally located at the said URL); or
c. which save the defamatory material originally located at the said URL in a different format or file to the said PDF file.
a. that he has complete underlying causes of action against the Defendants in defamation and harassment;
b. that the documents now sought would be discloseable in such an action as standard disclosure; and
c. that pre-action disclosure of the material now sought would be desirable to disclose fairly of the anticipated proceedings, in particular because it would enable the Claimants to know the full extent of the attack upon them and the damage it is likely to have caused, and thus to decide whether litigation should be pursued and/or on what terms the dispute should be settled.
"(2) On the application, in accordance with rules of court, of a person who appears to the High Court to be likely to be a party to subsequent proceedings in that court, the High Court shall, in such circumstances as may be specified in the rules, have power to order a person who appears likely to be a party to the proceedings and to be likely to have or to have had in his possession, custody or power any documents which are relevant to an issue arising or likely to arise out of that claim:-
a. to disclose whether those documents are in his possession, custody or power; and
b. to produce such of those documents as are in his possession custody or power to the applicant or, on such conditions as may be specified in the order, to: (i) the applicant's legal advisers…"
"31.16 Disclosure before proceedings start
1. This rule applies where an application is made to the court under any Act for disclosure before proceedings have started.
2. The application must be supported by evidence.
3. The court may make an order under this rule only where –
a. the respondent is likely to be a party to subsequent proceedings;
b. the applicant is also likely to be a party to those proceedings;
c. if proceedings had started, the respondent's duty by way of standard disclosure, set out in rule 31.6, would extend to the documents or classes of documents of which the applicant seeks disclosure; and
d. disclosure before proceedings have started is desirable in order to –
i. dispose fairly of the anticipated proceedings;
ii. assist the dispute to be resolved without proceedings; or
iii. save costs."
5.2 The claim form is endorsed as follows:
"Brief details of claim
The Claimants claim:
(1) Damages (including aggravated damages in respect of the Second Claimant) for libel in respect of words published by the Defendants in respect of the publications set out in the attached Schedule to this Claim Form
(2) An injunction to restrain the Defendants, whether by themselves or their servants or agents or otherwise howsoever from publishing, causing, or authorising to be published the words complained of, or any other words to the same or any similar defamatory effect in respect of the Claimants
(3) Relief under s.12 of the Defamation Act 2013 for the Court to order the Defendants to publish a summary of any judgment in the Claimants' favour
(4) The Claimants' costs of the action.
SCHEDULE TO CLAIM FORM
The publications that are the subject of the Claimants' claim are as follows:
1. A posting published by or at the instigation of the Defendants on or around 4 December 2014 under the username "DT77" on the website "conversation.which.co.uk" within the conversation thread that accompanied an article entitled "Are heir hunters cheating us out of our inheritance?" at the following URL [stating it]
2. An automated email notification of the posting identified at (1) above, containing the full text of that posting, which was sent to 22 unique email addresses on or around 4 December 2014
3. Two postings published by or at the instigation of the Defendants on or around 28 November 2014 under the username "John Davies" at the following URL [as per 3.1(a) above]."
(It will be noted that this Claim Form was issued a day before the expiry of the one-year limitation period applicable to a defamation claim in respect of a publication made on 28 November 2014.)
a. Is there a substantial and unresolved dispute between the Claimants and the Defendants, such that they would be likely to be parties to subsequent proceedings? (sub-rule (3) a. and b.)
b. If such proceedings were to be commenced, would the documents now sought be discloseable by way of standard disclosure? (sub-rule (3) c.)
c. Is there a real prospect in principle that such disclosure before proceedings are commenced would be desirable in terms of disposing fairly of the anticipated proceedings, assisting to resolve the dispute without such proceedings, and/or saving costs? (sub-rule (3) d. i.- iii.)
a. If an application under 31.16 was made before proceedings were commenced, but then proceedings were commenced before the application was heard, the court would not have jurisdiction to determine the application (except as to costs).
b. If in such a situation the claimant undertook to discontinue the first action and begin a second action which was not an abuse of process, the court would have jurisdiction over a 31.16 application relating to the second action, but not the first.
c. If one set of proceedings had been brought, and the claimant contemplated bringing a second set of proceedings which would not be an abuse of process (without discontinuing the first), the court would have jurisdiction to hear a 31.16 application in relation to the prospective second action notwithstanding that the first action was continuing.
(If I may respectfully say so, I find this general approach a practicable and persuasive one, and I propose to follow it and apply it so far as I can to the rather different fact-situation before me in this case.)
a. in defamation (C1 and C2 only) :
i. the email of 26 August 2015 referred to above;
ii. publication of the Change.org petition to specified beneficiaries in June 2014;
iii. further publications of that petition on a number of occasions between December 2014 and October 2015, which cannot better be identified pending disclosure.
b. in harassment under ss. 1 to 3 of the Protection from Harassment Act 1997:
i. by C1 as representative for its employees – a series of unspecified "aggressive communications"
ii. by C2 personally – a series of statements including the three complained of as libels in the first action, the three complained of as libels in the second action, the tweets about him between September and December 2014 and an alleged threat of violence by D2 in November 2013
iii. by C3 personally – the tweets about him between July and September 2014.
a. Would it be an abuse of process to bring that action while the first action was still extant?
b. Does the 31.16 application relate to the proposed causes of action complained of in the second action, as opposed to those already sued on in the first action?
a. This is not a case in which the claimant has only one substantive cause of action against the defendant (for example, a simple contractual dispute) so that the issue of more than one set of concurrent proceedings would obviously be an abusive duplication.
b. In defamation each separate publication even of the same document may be regarded as a separate cause of action, and certainly the publication of different words or of the same words on different occasions is properly so regarded. The defamation claims in the two actions clearly relate to distinct causes of action for which separate proceedings might properly be issued. Though it is likely they would in due course be consolidated or tried together, that does not render separate claim forms an abuse of process.
c. The exceptionally short one-year limitation period in defamation (as opposed to six years for harassment) will in appropriate circumstances provide a clear justification for the issue of a "protective writ" in respect of some parts of one's claim but not others. Given that the parties were in active correspondence in the run-up to the expiry of the limitation periods for the earlier publications complained of and that further instances of potential defamations were still coming to light, it was not an abuse of process to issue the first defamation proceedings within the limitation period, and it would not be an abuse of process to issue the second defamation proceedings concurrently in due course.
d. The statutory tort of harassment is unusual in that it relates not to single specific incidents but to the pursuit of a course of conduct or campaign comprising two or more such incidents. Those incidents can include the making of statements to a third party, which may or may not also be defamatory in their nature. To be civilly actionable, the campaign viewed as a whole must pass a test of criminal gravity. It follows that there is no inherent abuse of process in issuing harassment proceedings which include, among the incidents relied on, statements which are already the subject of existing defamation proceedings between the same parties.
a. the Claimants will know whether and in what terms to bring their case;
b. both sides will be in a position to engage in informed and realistic pre-action negotiation;
c. the interests of fair disposal and costs-saving will be advanced.
The present state of uncertainty puts all those desirable outcomes at risk.