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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Nail & Ors v News Group Newspapers Ltd. & Ors [2004] EWCA Civ 1708 (20 December 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2004/1708.html Cite as: [2004] EWCA Civ 1708, [2005] EMLR 257, [2005] EMLR 12, [2005] 1 All ER 1040 |
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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 :
THE RIGHT HONOURABLE LORD JUSTICE MAY
and
THE RIGHT HONOURABLE LORD JUSTICE GAGE
____________________
(a) JIMMY NAIL (b) JIMMY NAIL |
Claimant/ Appellant |
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- and - |
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(a) (1) NEWS GROUP NEWSPAPERS LIMITED (2) REBEKAH WADE (3) JULES STENSON and (b) (1) GERAINT JONES (2) HARPER COLLINS PUBLICATIONS LTD |
Defendants/ Respondents Defendants/ Respondents |
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Smith Bernal Wordwave Limited, 190 Fleet Street
London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7421 4040, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Adrienne Page QC (instructed by Farrer & Co) for the Defendants
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice May:
Introduction
Sections 2-4 of the Defamation Act 1996
"13 Section 2 of the 1996 Act provides that a person who has published a statement alleged to be defamatory may offer to make amends under the section. The offer may be in relation to the defamatory statement generally or in relation to a specific defamatory meaning which the person making the offer accepts that the statement conveys. The defendants' offer in the present case was unqualified. An offer to make amends is an offer to make and publish a suitable correction and a sufficient apology, and to pay such compensation and costs as may be agreed or determined. An offer to make amends may not be made after a person has served a defence in defamation proceedings brought against him in respect of the publication in question.
14 Section 3 provides that, if an offer to make amends is accepted, the party accepting the offer may not bring or continue defamation proceedings against the person making the offer in respect of the publication, but he is entitled to enforce the offer. The parties can agree the steps to be taken. If they do not agree, the party who made the offer may take such steps as he thinks appropriate. He may make the correction and apology by a statement in open court in terms approved by the court. He may give an undertaking to the court as to the manner of publication. If the parties do not agree the amount to be paid by way of compensation, it is to be determined by the court on the same principles as damages in defamation proceedings. Proceedings under the section are to be heard and determined without a jury. The court is to take account of any steps taken in fulfilment of the offer, including the suitability of the correction, the sufficiency of the apology and whether the manner of their publication was reasonable in the circumstances: and the court may reduce or increase the amount of compensation accordingly. Thus, if in an ordinary case a claimant in defamation proceedings accepts an offer to make amends, he becomes entitled either by agreement or by determination of the court to full proper compensation for the defamatory publication. The defendant has capitulated at an early stage and before serving a defence on all issues except the amount of damages, if this is not agreed. The claimant can bring or continue the proceedings to determine the compensation. It is to be expected that most sensible claimants will accept unqualified offers to make amends. The main purpose of the statutory provisions is plain. It is to encourage the sensible compromise of defamation proceedings without the need for an expensive jury trial."
"If the parties do not agree the amount to be paid by way of compensation, it shall be determined by the court on the same principles as damages in defamation proceedings.
The court shall take account of any steps taken in fulfilment of the offer and (so far as not agreed between the parties) of the suitability of the correction, the sufficiency of the apology and whether the manner of their publication was reasonable in the circumstances, and may reduce or increase the amount of compensation accordingly."
"We see the main parliamentary intention as promoting machinery to enable defamation proceedings to be compromised at an early stage without the expense of a jury trial. If there is no issue as to the defamatory meaning of the statement published, an offer to make amends tenders to the claimant appropriate vindication and proper compensation. The defendant does not get out cheaply. If compensation is not agreed, it is determined by the court on the same principles as damages in defamation proceedings. As Eady J said in Abu v MGN Ltd [2003] 1 WLR 2001, the procedure is not to be confused with summary disposal under sections ss. 8-10 of the 1996 Act. There is no artificial cap on the level of compensation."
Eady J had gone on to say in Abu v MGN that there should be nothing in any sense "rough and ready" about the assessment of the claimant's reputation under the offer of amends procedure. It would clearly be inappropriate to deprive either party of a proper analysis of its case. In response to a submission that parliament cannot have intended that the defence based on a rejected offer of amends should be unanswerable, and, that if it were, the statutory mechanism would promote irresponsible journalism, this court said at paragraph 46:
"It is obviously correct that parliament intended to and did shift the balance in favour of the making of offers to make amends. This is not perhaps to say that the balance is shifted in favour of defendants, since claimants also benefit. … We do not consider that a mechanism which offers appropriate vindication and proper compensation is a recipe for irresponsible journalism. Further, the legislation does not apply only to journalists."
The two actions
"10. It is necessary now to say something about the News of the World allegations themselves. Miss Page did not overstate the literary quality of the article or make any claim to investigative prowess. She described it as "classic tabloid fodder for which readers buy such newspapers". The defamatory words related to events supposed to have happened many years ago. It is no part of the case of any of these Defendants to assert that they were true. That would be quite incompatible with the offer of amends procedure which they have adopted, and they have accepted, without any qualification, that the allegations are defamatory and untrue, as Mr Nail has maintained throughout.
11. Unfortunately, I do need to rehearse them to some extent in order to explain my decisions on the appropriate level of compensation. There is no doubt in my view that they have caused considerable distress and embarrassment to Mr Nail, and also to his partner, who provided an unchallenged witness statement for the proceedings, and who sat in court throughout the assessment hearing.
12. I will attempt to summarise the allegations under various categories based upon the meanings complained of on the Claimant's behalf.
13. First, there is the suggestion to which the headline refers; namely, that he "queued for an orgy with an outrageous sex-mad woman who demanded to be roped to a bedstead". Thus restrained, it seems, she entertained her gentlemen callers seriatim. "Nobody appeared to bat an eyelid". Her identity remained in obscurity to the readers of the book. Perhaps the only original contribution of the News of the World was to track her down as a "popular" young woman formerly known in the locality as "Randy Mandy". There is then a certain amount of misty eyed reminiscence. One former beau fondly recalls how in those days "We all loved Mandy".
14. Whenever she was supposed to be conducting herself in this way, if she ever was, it would appear to have been some time in the early seventies. What matters, however, is that Mr Nail says he simply had nothing whatever to do with her.
15. There is another specific incident when it is alleged that "another nude lover" (a brunette) was seen by a housemate to be jammed up against the cold enamel of his kitchen cooker. Miss Page emphasised, however, that from the article this appears to have been entirely consensual. They were both "at it hammer and tongs" in the onlooker's presence. This is based on a less fastidious passage in the book which adds an element of improvisation to the same occasion. It was said that fat from the nearby chip pan was then spontaneously utilised as a makeshift lubricant. The story is recounted third hand as deriving from "one of the lads". I understood Miss Page to suggest that this allegation was barely defamatory at all and more akin to an infringement of privacy. She thought there was nothing particularly unusual about the conduct alleged – save perhaps for the ambiance. Indeed, in the book the episode is described as demonstrating the Claimant's "masterly composure and dexterity of thought".
16. There was also another episode described as "loud nookie in a broom closet". Miss Page submits that Mr Nail may be a little over-sensitive, since few people would think the worse of him. It is once more simply a question of location. In these matters, however, location can sometimes be critical.
17. There were also more general allegations of indecent exposure and indiscriminate sexual encounters with fans in pubs and clubs.
18. I am not sure that I would accept Miss Page's characterisation of such episodes as merely infringements of privacy rather than defamatory. She suggests, I think, that most reasonable readers would not think the worse of the Claimant. It would probably be dismissed as youthful high spirits. I believe nevertheless that a significant number of readers would find the allegations fairly unappetising – even by modern standards. The matter hardly needs to be debated, however, since it is an application for the assessment of damages following the acceptance of an unqualified offer of amends. I must take the allegations, therefore, to be false and defamatory. I have no particular difficulty in doing so.
19. Another more specific charge is that the Claimant "tried to seduce the wife of his rock star pal". This is said to have occurred at a time when he was with his current partner, with whom he has been in a permanent relationship for the last 24 years. It therefore involves disloyalty towards not only her but also his friend. That allegation is given a degree of apparent confirmation, so far as readers are concerned, by a photograph of the two people posing together. Again, of course, it is accepted as being quite untrue.
20. A different allegation is that Mr Nail once ate a can of dog meat when pressed for cash in Germany. An "old friend" called Stan is quoted as saying, "He was that hungry. Still there's nothing wrong with the stuff. It doesn't kill dogs". That perhaps adds to an overall impression of general coarseness.
21. So far, the allegations might be thought, although no doubt distressing and offensive, not to impinge directly on Mr Nail's professional reputation. But the article also went on to allege that "Jimmy became more difficult to work with as his fame grew". He was portrayed as arrogant, rude and inconsiderate to "extras" in the background of a shot. "A man they'd so admired turned out to be a heartless, rude, b***d". That is clearly defamatory.
22. In a similar vein is the suggestion that, having bought a leather jacket he had worn in the first series of Auf Wiedersehen Pet, he then charged a few hundred pounds extra for allowing it to be used in the next series. He is thus portrayed again as arrogant, small-minded and mean. Miss Page suggests that this again is not defamatory and conveys an impression simply of a man with an astute business eye.
23. Counsel for Mr Nail summed up the impact of the newspaper coverage as follows. "It maps out a life in which he has progressed from being a dog meat eating yob, who engaged in grubby and obscene sexual behaviour, to heartless prima donna". The overall impression is thus far from flattering.
24. The book contains some similar suggestions, as I have indicated, but there are other defamatory implications as well. These include the allegation that he shunned his father in the latter years of his life, despite the fact that he suffered from emphysema. There is also an implication that he exploited the untimely death of a long time colleague "in order to extract a tawdry financial advantage for himself.
25. Another strand of meaning in the book is that the Claimant, as the Thatcher era dawned, became a property developer "possibly with the help of financiers who would not be found advertising their services in Yellow Pages". The implication is clearly (as it is pleaded) that he "… financed his new business by illegal, probably criminal, means". (Another accusation is that he portrayed his origins as more impoverished than was truly the case.)"
The judge's judgment
"35. The offer of amends regime provides, as it was supposed to, a process of conciliation. It is fundamentally important that when an offer has been made, and accepted, any claimant knows from that point on that he has effectively "won". He is to receive compensation and an apology or correction. In any proceedings which have to take place to resolve outstanding issues, there is unlikely to be any attack upon his character. The very adoption of the procedure has therefore a major deflationary effect upon the appropriate level of compensation. This is for two reasons. From the defendant's perspective he is behaving reasonably. He puts his hands up, and accepts that he has to make amends for his wrongdoing. As to the claimant the stress of litigation has from that moment at least been significantly reduced.
36. Whereas juries used to compensate for the impact of the libel "down to the moment of the verdict", once an offer of amends has been accepted the impact of the libel upon the claimant's feelings will have greatly diminished and, as soon as the apology is published, it is also hoped that reputation will be to a large extent restored. It is naturally true that if a defendant or his lawyers thereafter should behave irresponsibly, or try to drag in material to "justify by the back door", that will be an aggravating factor. On the whole, however, once a defendant has decided to go down this route, it would make sense to adopt a conciliatory approach and work towards genuine compromise over matters such as the terms of an apology or the level of compensation.
37. As I observed in Cleese v Clark at para [33], "I am not concerned with hypothesising as to what a particular group of 12 lay persons might have done, on the basis of what other groups of lay persons have done in the past". It is now appropriate, since the Court of Appeal's decision in John v MGN [1997] QB 586, to have an eye to personal injury awards with a view to keeping a sense of proportion and remembering the value of money."
"40. Miss Page has indicated, in the course of her submissions, that parties in libel litigation are still feeling their way under the new offer of amends regime and, although it is being increasingly used "after a slow start", this process could well go into reverse if media defendants feel that they are still going to be subject to arbitrary and disproportionate awards; or, to put it another way, if they are not to be given due credit, in financial terms, for using the system and placing themselves in the hands of the court. It was not an in terrorem point, and it is entirely fair to make it, because of the public policy objectives underlying the adoption of the statutory scheme by Parliament. If they do not feel confident of getting a "healthy discount" for adopting what is, in effect, a conciliation process, then I suspect (although Miss Page did not put it in this way) that there may be a return to the tactic (sometimes encountered on the part of media defendants in the old days) of using their considerable resources to complicate and prolong litigation with a view to discouraging less wealthy litigants.
41. In my judgment, Miss Page is right to press for a "healthy discount" for the reasons I have already indicated. Media defendants who act promptly when confronted with a claim are entitled to be rewarded for making the offer and, correspondingly, the claimant's ordeal will generally be significantly reduced with immediate effect."
"46. I think it is more helpful to focus on what I would have been inclined to award for these libels following a trial (i.e. sitting as a judge alone) in which there had been no significant aggravation (such as a plea of justification) and no significant mitigation (such as an apology). This is not a wholly artificial scenario. It might arise in various ways; for example, if there were a trial confined to meaning or qualified privilege (neither of which, at least in theory, adds further injury to the claimant's reputation). I would tend to ask, having regard to the current conventional overall ceiling for damages of £200,000, what the particular libel is worth on that scale of gravity. I would then aim to make a significant reduction to take account not only of any actual apology but also of the very willingness of the defendant to use the offer of amends route. A defendant is in those circumstances effectively laying down his arms, and inviting meaningful negotiation over compensation and restoration of reputation."
(a) Most of the 4,500 copies of the book were out of bounds for limitation reasons.
(b) Without criticising Mr Nail or his lawyers, the judge could not entirely ignore the fact that Mr Nail had not complained about the initial publication of the book.
(c) The allegations in the book were serious and offensive, both personally and professionally.
(d) There were web site apologies. Few readers may have seen them, but there was little else the publishers could do.
(e) The newspaper article was very different. Tabloid coverage could be very frightening and disorienting. "The publication of a libel in a tabloid can be an intensely distressing experience, but the great advantage of the offer of amends system is that it does at least tend significantly to mitigate the impact and, to a greater or lesser extent, enable the relevant claimant (to adopt a modish phrase) "to draw a line" under the episode and to make a fresh start".
(f) The range of damages suggested on behalf of Mr Nail - £70,000 to £100,000 – was very high when set against personal injury awards, to which however one must not be too tied.
(g) The newspaper article was prominently published. The apology was not as prominent, although it was reasonably eye catching and published relatively quickly after proceedings were issued. There was nothing unusual about the sequence of events leading to the apology which had a bearing on the level of compensation.
(h) There was no attempt to contact Mr Nail before publication, although most of the allegations had already been published in the book without complaint.
(i) There was a short lived indication that the defendant might seek to justify some or all of the allegations.
(j) The judge accepted Mr Nail's explanations for why he was slow in pursuing his remedies.
(k) There was nothing in the conduct of the negotiations which justified any element of aggravation in either action.
Ground of appeal and submissions
"In a great many cases proof of a cold-bloodied cost-benefit calculation that it was worth publishing a known libel is not there, and the ineffectiveness of a moderate award in deterring future libels is painfully apparent … judges, juries and the public face the conundrum that compensation proportioned to personal injury damages is insufficient to deter, and that deterrent awards make a mockery of the principle of compensation."
Lord Hoffmann discussed the need for vindication in libel cases in paragraph 55, particularly if the defendant has not apologised and withdrawn the defamatory allegations.
Discussion and decision
"The successful plaintiff in a defamation action is entitled to recover, as general compensatory damages, such sum as will compensate him for the wrong he has suffered. That sum must compensate him for the damage to his reputation; vindicate his good name; and take account of the distress, hurt and humiliation which the defamatory publication has caused. In assessing the appropriate damages for injury to reputation the most important factor is the gravity of the libel; the more closely it touches the plaintiff's personal integrity, professional reputation, honour, courage, loyalty and the core attributes of his personality, the more serious it is likely to be. The extent of publication is also relevant; a libel published to millions has a greater potential to cause damage than a libel published to a handful of people. A successful plaintiff may properly look to an award of damages to vindicate his reputation; but the significance of this is much greater in a case where the defendant asserts the truth of the libel and refuses any retraction or apology than in a case where the defendant acknowledges the falsity of what was published and publicly expresses regret that the libellous publication took place. It is well established that compensatory damages may and should compensate for additional injury caused to the plaintiff's feelings by the defendant's conduct of the action, as when he persists in an unfounded assertion that the publication was true, or refuses to apologise, or cross examines the plaintiff in a wounding or insulting way. Although the plaintiff has been referred to as "he", all this of course applies to women just as much as men."
Lord Justice Gage :
Lord Justice Auld: