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High Court of Ireland Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> High Court of Ireland Decisions >> Griffin -v- Sunday Newspapers Ltd [2011] IEHC 331 (09 August 2011) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ie/cases/IEHC/2011/H331.html Cite as: [2011] IEHC 331, [2012] 1 IR 114 |
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Judgment Title: Griffin -v- Sunday Newspapers Ltd Composition of Court: Judgment by: Kearns P. Status of Judgment: Approved |
Neutral Citation Number: [2011] IEHC 331 THE HIGH COURT 2010 6827 P BETWEEN SEAMUS GRIFFIN PLAINTIFF AND SUNDAY NEWSPAPERS LTD DEFENDANT JUDGMENT of Kearns P. delivered the 9th day of August, 2011. The plaintiff is a former member of the Irish Army and in these proceedings claims damages for defamation arising from the publication by the defendant of an article in the Sunday World in its edition dated 27th June, 2010. However, the present application is one brought by the defendant pursuant to s. 14 (1) (a) of the Defamation Act 2009 which seeks to narrow or whittle down the scope of the plaintiff’s claim on the basis that certain imputations ascribed to the article are not reasonably capable of bearing the defamatory meaning contended for by the plaintiff. The relevant section of the Defamation Act 2009 provides as follows:
(a) as to whether the statement in respect of which the action was brought is reasonably capable of bearing the imputation pleaded by the plaintiff, and (b) (where the court rules that the statement is reasonably capable of bearing that imputation) as to whether that imputation is reasonably capable of bearing a defamatory meaning, upon an application being made to it in that behalf. (2) Where a court rules under subsection (1) that – (a) the statement in respect of which the action was brought is not reasonably capable of bearing the imputation pleaded by the plaintiff, or (b) that any imputation so pleaded is not reasonably capable of bearing a defamatory meaning, it shall dismiss the action insofar only as it relates to the imputation concerned. (3) An application made under this section shall be brought by notice of motion and shall be determined, in the case of a defamation action brought in the High Court, in the absence of the jury. (4) An application under this section may be brought at any time after the bringing of the defamation action concerned including during the course of the trial of the action.” On pages 10 and 11 of the edition of the Sunday World newspaper dated 27th June, 2010, an article appeared under the headings “Exclusive/Members of Elite Unit Moonlighting in War on Somali gangs” and, in even larger lettering, “Spooks in Paradise” with a subheading which read “Irish Army rangers at the centre of a row over training of Seychelles police unit known as ‘The Assassins’”. Beneath the headings in question were, on page 10, photographs of two men in military attire, one carrying what might be a Kalashnikov rifle and the other, identified as the plaintiff, holding a small child in his arms. Black rectangular squares mask the eyes of both men. Below the headings on page 11 various pictures appear which purport to depict Somali pirates in action above a photograph showing a beach view of the Seychelles. To the right of these photographs, at the extreme right of page 11, appears a further photograph of a person referred to as a “Somali pirate” who is photographed holding a number of guns above a heading “Pirate gangs strike fear on African coast” which constitutes the heading for a further short column by Niall Donald. The article complained of by the plaintiff was written by Nicola Tallant, described as “Investigations Editor” and is in the following terms:
Bugs are found by a team of spooks in the offices of the future president of a paradise island nation. Moonlighting special forces troops are called in from abroad to train a police squad dubbed ‘The Assassins’ and help them battle 21st century piracy on the High seas. And now, as former allies fall out amid a battle for lucrative security contracts, political and military investigations have been launched to get to the bottom of the whole sensational story. But this drama has not been playing out on a movie screen near you. It’s the extraordinary real plot of a story unfolding in the sun-soaked Seychelles in the Indian Ocean involving Ireland’s elite Army Ranger Wing, a spy firm from Athlone called the ‘CIA’ and ruthless Somali pirates. A major military investigation is underway into allegations that members of the elite Army Ranger Wing took leave of absence to give weapons training on the island to a squad of armed police nicknamed ‘The Assassins’. The Irish army’s Special Investigation Branch is also probing allegations that one or more of the trio, Seamus Griffin, Mark ‘Fred’ Conlon and Mark McEneany, was involved in purchasing black market arms from South Africa for the Seychelles. Scandal The ‘double jobbing’ scandal would be deeply embarrassing for the army if any of the allegations are proved. The officers have also been named in a sensational High Court case in Dublin where they are being sued by private investigation firm, Confidential Investigations Athlone (CIA). They are named in the action along with a retired army sergeant Niall Scully, and an ex-military intelligence officer Declan Barber. Scully is currently heading up the Seychelles police drug squad. Along with Barber he owns Aver International Limited, an Irish based security company with a staff of 12, which is also named on the writ. It is understood that the case involves a row over a multi-million euro contract with the Seychelles President, James Michel. Michel first employed CIA to sweep his office for bugs in the run up to the elections in the Indian Ocean state back in 2005. The Sunday World understands that highly trained ‘spooks’ employed by the company did indeed find listening devices deep in the walls of his building despite nothing turning up in earlier sweeps by both the real CIA and Israeli intelligence personnel. Since his election President Michel, who was educated by Irish nuns, has formed strong links with ex-Irish soldiers, retired gardaí and justice experts who have been taking up lucrative contracts in the sun-soaked tourist paradise in their droves. The amount of Irish involvement on the island has become a cause of friction between the government and the opposition whose newspaper has been highly critical of the number of jobs and contracts being given to Irish citizens and the wages and lifestyle they can afford compared to native Seychellois. This weekend former Criminal Assets Bureau legal advisor Barry Galvin, who has no links to Aver or CIA, is visiting the paradise islands on a contract he has been given to reform the justice system there. He will also be consulting on the setting up of a crime fighting bureau similar to CAB which he helped spearhead. Even former Taoiseach Garret Fitzgerald has been out to advise policy makers in the Seychelles on a number of occasions, highlighting the high level of Irish connections to the tiny island nation. Wranglings Now the Irish army is being dragged into the financial wranglings with the allegations that serving Rangers worked on contracts which involved weapons training for an elite police squad. Senior sources say that if the allegations are proved the ramifications will be deeply embarrassing for the army as the Ranger Wing is the most respected and highly trained unit in the defence forces. In a statement the Defence Forces told the Sunday World. ‘An investigation into matters concerning alleged off-duty employment of a number of members of the Defence Forces is ongoing; consequently it would be inappropriate to comment further.’ Earlier this month Sinn Fein’s Martin Ferris asked Defence Minister Tony Killeen for a statement on the allegations that serving officers had been implicated in buying illegal arms. He confirmed that an investigation was underway but refused to comment on the matter saying: ‘I am advised by the military authorities that they are conducting an investigation into the matters referred to by the Deputy. In these circumstances it would be inappropriate for me to comment on the matter until this investigation has been concluded.’ Senior army sources say that if evidence is found that any of the three former rangers was involved in purchasing arms they will likely be disciplined and possible (sic) ejected from the army. Griffin is the only one of the trio who has retired since the alleged double jobbing scandal and Conlon has since moved to the air corps. McEneany is still working in the army’s Infantry Weapons Wing. The alleged arms scandal comes just months after a deeply embarrassing tell all book by a former army corporal which claimed that Irish soldiers serving as peace-keepers in war ravaged Eritrea paid destitute prostitutes in frozen pizzas and chicken for sex. Controversy None of the men currently under investigation was involved in this controversy. Valerie O’Brien who quite the army three years ago claimed that officers serving on a UN mission Eritrea in 2002, used a local brothel all the time and often applauded one another as they came back from spending the night with local women. In her book ‘In the Shadow of Men’ she painted a sordid picture of life in the defence forces.”
(b) that the plaintiff improperly took a leave of absence from the Irish Army to give weapons training to armed police in the Seychelles; (c) that the plaintiff was training members of an armed police squad in the Seychelles to act as assassins; (d) that the plaintiff was training members of an armed police squad in the Seychelles in the use of lethal force with illegal, black market weapons; (e) that the plaintiff was working at a lucrative secondary job which conflicted with his primary employment as an Army Ranger; (f) that the plaintiff was the subject of a major military investigation; (g) that the plaintiff, while a member of the most respected and highly trained unit in the defence forces, was involved in activities which were deeply embarrassing to the Irish Army; (h) that the plaintiff was forced to retired from the Irish Army due to his involvement in a ‘double jobbing’ scandal; (i) that there were substantial grounds for believing that the plaintiff had acted in the manner described in paragraphs 5(a) to 5(h) above.” The defendants do not seek to challenge the imputations contended for at paragraph 5 (f) and 5 (i) of the statement of claim. Mr. Oisín Quinn, senior counsel for the defendant, contended that the article made clear at all times that there was a military investigation underway into allegations that members of the Army Rangers Wing took leave of absence to give weapons training to police in the Seychelles. A statement that an inquiry or investigation was underway could not be equated by any fair-minded reader as meaning that the plaintiff was guilty of the sort of wrongdoing pleaded in the paragraphs of the statement of claim which were under attack. In reply, Mr. Paul O’Higgins, senior counsel for the plaintiff, contended that, taken as a whole, the article was well capable of such a meaning, particularly insofar as it alleged that the plaintiff was “the only one of the trio who has retired since the alleged double jobbing scandal” and by an earlier reference in the article that “military investigations have been launched to get to the bottom of the whole sensational story”. He contended that the overall layout and get up of the article went much further than to merely relate that an investigation was in progress and was well capable of being understood to mean that the plaintiff had indeed been engaged in activities which would bear the meanings contended for in the disputed paragraphs of the statement of claim. THE LAW In McGarth v. Independent Newspapers (Ireland) Ltd. [2004] 2 IR 465, Gilligan J. was required to determine a preliminary issue which had arisen in that case as to whether a particular article was capable of bearing the defamatory meaning contended for on behalf of the plaintiff. That he determined the issue by reference to well established legal principles is apparent from the following passage of his judgment when he stated as follows at p. 433: -
The defendants did not deny that the words in their ordinary meaning were defamatory but pleaded justification, namely, that on the date in question, the police were in fact inquiring into the affairs of the company of which Mr. Lewis was chairman. They denied that the words meant or were capable of meaning that the plaintiffs were guilty of fraud. That case, like the present one, is not one where any innuendo meaning supported by extrinsic facts is alleged. In the course of his speech, Lord Reid made it clear that the defendants were entitled to seek a ruling from the trial judge that the words in the article were not capable of having the particular meaning which the plaintiff attributed to them. He found that they were entitled to such a ruling and that the test must be the same as that applied in deciding whether the words are capable of having any libellous meaning. However, of particular relevance to the instant case are the observations of Lord Reid in relation to reports about ongoing inquiries or investigations in relation to which he stated as follows (at p. 259):-
In Mapp v. Newsgroup Newspapers Ltd. [1998] QB 520, Lord Justice Hirst adopted a similar imaginary conversation to that portrayed by Lord Reid in Lewis’s case to emphasise that the reference to an investigation could not reasonably be read as imputing guilt to the plaintiffs as contrasted with reasonable suspicion of guilt (at pp. 529-530). The relevant test was again stressed in Charleston v. Newsgroup Newspapers Ltd. [1995] 2 AC 65, where Lord Bridge of Harwich again emphasised two basic principles to the law of libel when he stated as follows at p. 71:-
DECISION The plaintiff is clearly entitled to argue and make the case that the article as a whole suggested that there were “substantial grounds” for believing that the plaintiff had acted in the manner described at paras. 5 (a) – 5 (h), but in my view is not entitled to contend that the meanings contained in the imputations were that he was actually guilty of such behaviour. The article contains many statements to the effect that “allegations” only have been raised, allegations which remain to be proved. There are no less than four or five references to the launching of the military investigation and no suggestion whatsoever that it has reached a conclusion or made findings adverse to the plaintiff. Furthermore, the article specifically refers to a statement made by the then defence minister, Tony Killeen, which confirmed an investigation was under way, but stressed that it would be inappropriate for him to comment on the matter until the investigation had been concluded. I am thus satisfied that while a reasonable reader might well take the view that there were grounds for suspicion, he could not, or should not be permitted, to leap from that conclusion to one of guilt. I therefore propose to grant the relief sought in the notice of motion herein.
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