[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> HH Prince Moulay Hicham Ben Abdallah Al Alaoui of Morocco v Elaph Publishing Ltd [2017] EWCA Civ 29 (27 January 2017) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2017/29.html Cite as: [2017] EMLR 13, [2017] WLR(D) 45, [2017] 4 WLR 28, [2017] EWCA Civ 29 |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [View ICLR summary: [2017] WLR(D) 45] [Buy ICLR report: [2017] 4 WLR 28] [Help]
ON APPEAL FROM THE QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
The Hon Mr Justice Dingemans
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
LADY JUSTICE KING
and
LORD JUSTICE SIMON
____________________
HH Prince Moulay Hicham Ben Abdallah Al Alaoui of Morocco |
Appellant |
|
and |
||
Elaph Publishing Limited |
Respondent |
____________________
Heather Rogers QC and David Glen (instructed by Payne Hicks Beach) for the Respondent on the first appeal and the Appellant on the second appeal
Hearing date: 30 November 2016
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Simon:
Introduction
Using former boxer Zakaria Moumni in a premeditated plot:
Moulay Hicham schemes to entrap Mounir Al-Majidi
[1] Moulay Hicham does not pass up any chance to sabotage the image of Moroccan King Mohammed VI, and the latest ploy utilised former boxer Zakaria Momeni to bring down Mounir Majidi, assistant and adviser to the King.
[2] Beirut: Everything that harms Morocco always involves Moulay Hicham. This argument has become increasingly prevalent in the corridors of the royal family palace in light of the machinations that the cousin of King Mohammed VI never ceases to weave, the most recent of which, recently involved a take-down of Mounir Majidi, an aid very close to the Moroccan monarch's heart.
Premeditated plots
[3] Reports emerged stating that Moulay Hicham met with former Moroccan boxer Zakaria Moumni on 26th June this year in the Fouquet Hotel in Paris in order to urge him to raise a case against Majidi in French courts on charges of making death threats. Hicham requested that Moumni keep the case a secret, so that Majidi could be forcibly held when he came to France.
[4] Hicham launched a similar strike last February on Abdellatif Hamouchi, head of Morocco's anti-espionage agency, who was called by the French judiciary for investigation while staying at the home of the Moroccan ambassador in Paris. This issue had a negative impact on French-Moroccan relations.
[5] Moumni insists that the alleged meeting happened only by coincidence - but this was the response that Hicham whispered into his ears. The latter is working very hard not to answer the fundamental question: what is the difference between a chance meeting that he claims took place and the meeting that lasted half an hour? Moumni admits, however, and without equivocation, that he met Moulay Hicham and his wife in the Fouquet hotel because he, himself, frequents the hotel and happened to see the Alaouite Prince, himself, visit that day.
Coincidence or conspiracy!
[6] Few believe the story of the accidental meeting, especially since Hicham visited the George V Four Seasons Hotel, owned by a relative of Saudi Prince Alwaleed bin Talal, when he was in Paris. The Fouquet Hotel, where the meeting took place, is situated on the same street.
[7] News reports list some of the finer details of this meeting, claiming that the Moroccan Prince spoke frequently while Moumni spent half an hour listening attentively. Hicham incited the former boxer to say, at every occasion and wherever he went, that Mounir Majidi, Secretary to the Moroccan King, threatened to kill him in France. He also urged him to submit a judicial complaint against Majidi, informing him of people that would help him do so and asking him to contact them.
[8] Moumni himself is the world champion of a type of Thai boxing called 'light contact.' He currently benefits from a decree issued by late Moroccan King Hassan II which appointed him Sports Advisor of Morocco, despite the fact that the sport that he practices is not included on the list of sports recognised by the Olympics. In 2006 Moumni received authorisation to operate two large fare-operated vehicles and take all the revenues. One would be placed under his name and the other under his father's name. Thus, the man set fire to the Kingdom's highest-ranking centres whose revenues he benefits from, just like a man who drinks from a well and then throws a stone inside it …
(1) that the Claimant had orchestrated a plot to sabotage the image of King Mohammed VI of Morocco whereby, in the course of a pre-arranged meeting at the Fouquet Hotel in Paris on 26 June 2014, he had induced [ ] Moumni: (a) to make false allegations against the King's close aide [ ] Majidi that he, Majidi, had threatened to kill Moumni, and (b) to bring a criminal complaint against Majidi on the basis of such false allegations so that Majidi would be arrested in France;
(2) that the Claimant had instructed Moumni to lie to cover up the plot by claiming, falsely, that his meeting with the Claimant at the Fouquet Hotel had been coincidental;
(3) that the Claimant had orchestrated a similar plot against [ ] Hamouchi, the head of Morocco's anti-espionage agency, in the February before this, which had resulted in Hamouchi's being called in for questioning by the French judicial authorities, and the Claimant was therefore responsible for the resultant negative impact on French-Moroccan relations.
The Judge's first judgment
It follows that it is not enough that the words should damage the claimant in the eyes of a section of the public only, see Modi v Clarke [2011] EWCA Civ 937. It does not defame someone to say that he wishes to destroy the structure of world cricket, because that depends on the views of that section of the public interested in the sport on the current structure, see paragraph 30. This mirrors Strasbourg jurisprudence which emphasises the latitude given to statements about public figures and political matters where reasonable persons may have very different views about actions and systems of government, see Lingens v Austria (1986) 8 EHRR 407 at paragraph 41 and the analysis in Curran v Scottish Daily Record and Sunday Mail Ltd (2011) CSIH 86 at paragraphs 51 and 53.
The Judge's second judgment
… that the Claimant was endlessly plotting, scheming and weaving machinations in order to damage his country Morocco and its monarch Mohammed VI, who was his own cousin, thereby showing himself to be devious, underhand and disloyal.
4. … The article does suggest that [the Prince], a cousin of the King, was plotting, scheming and weaving machinations against the King of Morocco, and suggests that such conduct was wrongful. However, whether such conduct is wrongful depends on the views of that section of the public interested in the politics of Morocco. It is not, in my judgment, capable of being defamatory of someone to say that they are plotting, scheming or weaving machinations against the King for the reasons given in Modi v Clarke.
5. In my judgment both the original suggested meanings in paragraphs 6.1 and 6.3 and the new meaning have the appearance of contrived meanings, fashioned so that an action in defamation can be pursued when (as appears from paragraph 22 of the original judgment) [the Prince's] real complaint is that the article was inaccurate.
The Prince's appeal
Ruling on Meaning
4.1 At any time the court may decide –
(1) whether a statement complained of is capable of having any meaning attributed to it in a statement of case.
The court should exercise great caution before concluding that words are incapable of a defamatory meaning.
The Judge's task under CPR PD 53 para 4.1 is no more and no less than to 'pre-empt perversity': see Jameel v The Wall Street Journal Europe Sprl [2004] EMRL 6. Though this issue normally arises in the context of rulings made about the meanings pleaded by the parties, it seems to me a similarly high threshold applies to the question whether words are capable of being defamatory of the claimant.
It is not, in my judgment, capable of being defamatory of someone to say that they are working against the interests of a ruler for the reasons given in Modi v Clarke.
Right thinking members of society have, by definition, a view of what is right or wrong in personal conduct. But the court cannot attribute to members of society generally any view on what might be the proper structures for the governance of cricket or the rules they should apply to any sport. That is not a matter of right or wrong in the sense of what is required by the legal definition of what is defamatory.
30. Actions designed to destroy cricket's structure or which could be viewed by the cricketing authorities as requiring banning a person from cricket because of the desire to destroy its structure would only be considered defamatory by that section of the cricketing public which has faith in the current structure. It is difficult to see how saying of someone that he wishes to destroy the structure of world cricket would be considered by society at large as being disparaging; there may be all sorts of reasons why someone would wish to change the structure of cricket, but it would be only to that section that believed in the present structure that making such a statement would be disparaging. If, by way of example in another world sport, a person was seeking to undermine the existing structure and that person had meetings without telling the establishment, the view of that person's conduct would depend entirely upon the views of that section of the public interested in that sport on the current structure.
33. … A person seeking to bring about change cannot always abide by the rules of activity he is seeking to change. An accusation that he is breaking the rules is therefore only disparaging in the eyes of that section of the cricketing public that believes in the current structure.
34. The position in respect of Mr Modi is, however, different to other people who might be engaged in the conduct which I have described. I agree with the judge that no one is likely to think less of Mr Modi because he is said to have expressed rebellious ideas for the future of cricket, as it is possible to hold strong dissenting views within an organisation without in any way being dishonourable.
35. However, although in respect of others who acted as Mr Modi did, it could not be said the e-mail and letter contained anything that was capable of being defamatory, the e-mail is capable of meaning that Mr Modi was acting dishonourably as he was breaking the rules to which he had subscribed. Given his position as a Member of the Board of Control of Cricket in India and an alternate director of the International Cricket Council, the reader would know he had agreed to be bound by the rules and practices of those organisations that govern international and national cricket. The e-mail was capable of meaning that he had by his actions undermined those rules to which he was party whilst professing to be bound by them; he had engaged in secret meetings and was therefore acting dishonourably.
Elaph's appeal
I must now turn to the Data Protection Act. I am by no means persuaded that it is necessary or proportionate to interpret the scope of this statute so as to afford a set of parallel remedies when damaging information has been published about someone, but which is neither defamatory nor malicious. Nothing was cited to support such a far ranging proposition, whether from the debate in the legislation or from subsequent judicial dicta.
Lady Justice King
Lord Justice Patten