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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 >> Burleigh v Telegraph Media Group Ltd [2020] EWHC 2359 (QB) (02 September 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2020/2359.html Cite as: [2020] EWHC 2359 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
MEDIA & COMMUNICATIONS LIST
B e f o r e :
____________________
Nina Burleigh |
Claimant |
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- and – |
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Telegraph Media Group Limited |
Defendant |
____________________
Adrienne Page QC and Jonathan Scherbel-Ball (instructed by Ince Gordon Dadds LLP)
for the Defendant
Written submissions: 28 July 2020
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Crown Copyright ©
The Honourable Mr Justice Nicklin :
"Melania Trump – An Apology
Following last Saturday's (Jan 19) Telegraph magazine cover story 'The mystery of Melania', we have been asked to make clear that the article contained a number of false statements which we accept should not have been published. [1] Mrs Trump's father was not a fearsome presence and did not control the family. [2] Mrs Trump did not leave her Design and Architecture course at University relating to the completion of an exam, as alleged in the article, but rather because she wanted to pursue a successful career as a professional model. [3] Mrs Trump was not struggling in her modelling career before she met Mr Trump, and [4] she did not advance in her career due to the assistance of Mr Trump.
[5] We accept that Mrs Trump was a successful professional model in her own right before she met her husband and obtained her own modelling work without his assistance. [6] Mrs Trump met Mr Trump in 1998, not in 1996 as stated in the article. [7] The article also wrongly claimed that Mrs Trump's mother, father and sister relocated to New York in 2005 to live in buildings owned by Mr Trump. They did not. [8] The claim that Mrs Trump cried on election night is also false.
We apologise unreservedly to The First Lady and her family for any embarrassment caused by our publication of these allegations. As a mark of our regret we have agreed to pay Mrs Trump substantial damages as well as her legal costs."
"… the Claimant negligently or maliciously wrote a piece so littered with serious and defamatory falsehoods about Mrs Trump that it should not have been published and justified the payment of substantial damages to her, as well as a full and prompt retraction and apology."
"… the Daily Telegraph had published an article containing statements about Mrs Trump which it accepts were false, which it should not have published, and for which it is appropriate that it publishes a correction and apology to her and pay her damages."
i) on the assumption that there were readers of the [Apology] who upon reading the [Apology] knew or recalled the identity of the Claimant as the author of the [Original Article], what natural and ordinary meaning… the [Apology] bears in respect of the Claimant; and
ii) whether that meaning is defamatory of the Claimant at common law.
The Master further directed that these preliminary issues would be determined by a Judge without a hearing on the basis of written submissions, following the practice established in Hewson -v- Times Newspapers Limited [2019] EWHC 650 (QB) [16]-[27]. The parties' written submissions were filed on 28 July 2020. Copies of these submissions will be available when this judgment is handed down.
Determination of Meaning: Legal Principles
"What is the correct meaning to be placed on the word 'unfounded'?... The word 'unfounded' could mean 'not true', 'groundless', 'without foundation', 'baseless'. It is certainly not defamatory to say that a person got his facts wrong or that what he said was not true or unfounded.
Mr Milmo accepted that ordinarily there is nothing defamatory to say that a person has made an unfounded statement. He argued that it depends on the context, how it was made and the surrounding circumstances…
Mr Milmo relied upon the case Tracy -v- Kemsley Newspaper The Times, April 9, 1954, where the plaintiff, a journalist, succeeded in obtaining damages in respect of an apology published by the defendant arising out of an article written by the plaintiff and published in the Sunday Times allegedly defamatory of Canon Maurice O'Connell… The apology admitted that the article of the plaintiff constituted an 'unjustifiable attack on the character and position of the Canon'. It went on to say 'the defendants are completely satisfied that any imputation against (the Canon) are (sic) wholly unfounded and are unreservedly withdrawn'. The judge directed the jury that those words were capable of bearing a meaning defamatory of the plaintiff for they said that 'as a journalist she had done bad work'. There was evidence that she was not able to obtain any offers of employment since the publication of the apology. The jury returned a verdict for the plaintiff.
In our present case, there is nothing in the apology which accused Mr Wright of having 'recklessly, irresponsibly and mischievously' written the letter…
I do not think that Tracy is authority for any general proposition that readers cannot reply to an article by a journalist to say that what the journalist wrote is quite wrong without thereby defaming the journalist, namely that he was slipshod in his work as a journalist. The report on the case was simply too brief. But I cannot see any justification why a reader may not say that what a journalist wrote is wrong or not correct without at the same time being construed as having attacked his integrity or competence… How could it be defamatory to merely say that a person erred or made a mistake?
In any event, Mr Wright is not a journalist. The present apology must be read in its true context. It meant that Wright drew the wrong inference or reached the wrong conclusion. Nothing therein sought to attack him in relation to his business or profession… In my view, it would be straining language to suggest that implicit in the words is the allegation that Wright wrote the three paragraphs recklessly and mischievously. To the ordinary fair-minded reader, not avid for scandal, the apology meant that [the newspaper] admitted that the allegations made by Wright against [the bank] were not correct and that [the newspaper] had published something that was wrong and which it should not have published; it therefore apologised to [the bank] for that."
Submissions
"This is why, from the outset of her complaint, [the Claimant] has had to cast about (inconsistently) amongst some, but far from all, of the possible explanations for a publication by [the Defendant] which [the Defendant] later admitted contained a number of false statements. On her case, the possible explanations range from [the Claimant] being supposedly 'incompetent and unprofessional' [from the letter before action] to [the Claimant] having supposedly acted 'negligently and maliciously'".
Decision
"… the Claimant had published an article containing several statements about Mrs Trump which were incorrect. The Daily Telegraph accepted that these false statements should not have been published and had agreed to publish a correction and apology and to pay substantial damages to Mrs Trump."