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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Mincione v Gedi Gruppo Editoriale SPA [2022] EWCA Civ 557 (29 April 2022) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2022/557.html Cite as: [2022] EWCA Civ 557, [2022] EMLR 19, [2022] ILPr 30 |
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(formerly A2/2021/1176) |
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
MEDIA AND COMMUNICATIONS LIST
Mrs Justice Tipples
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE WARBY
and
LORD JUSTICE WILLIAM DAVIS
____________________
RAFFAELE MINCIONE |
Claimant/ Appellant |
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- and – |
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GEDI GRUPPO EDITORIALE S.p.A |
Defendant/ Respondent |
____________________
Aidan Eardley QC (instructed by Archerfield Partners LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 24 March 2022
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Crown Copyright ©
LORD JUSTICE WARBY:
Introduction
The factual and procedural history
The legal framework
"A person domiciled in a Member State may be sued in another Member State:
…
(2) in matters relating to tort, delict or quasi-delict, in the courts for the place where the harmful event occurred or may occur".
The CJEU decisions
"… on a proper construction of the expression 'place where the harmful event occurred' … the victim of a libel by a newspaper article distributed in several contracting states may bring an action for damages against the publisher either before the courts of the contracting state of the place where the publisher of the defamatory publication is established, which have jurisdiction to award damages for all the harm caused by the defamation or before the courts of each contracting state in which the publication was distributed and where the victim claims to have suffered injury to his reputation, which have jurisdiction to rule solely in respect of the harm caused in the state of the court seised."
"Although there are admittedly disadvantages to having different courts ruling on various aspects of the same dispute, the plaintiff always has the option of bringing his entire claim before the courts either of the defendant's domicile or the place where the publisher of the defamatory publication is established."
"… the person who considers that his rights have been infringed has the option of bringing an action for liability, in respect of all the damage caused … before the courts of the member state in which the centre of his interests is based."
It has not been necessary to consider this further option in this case. The claimant has not asserted that England and Wales is his centre of interests, nor has he pointed to any other jurisdiction which is. But the reasoning in eDate requires attention.
"That person may also, instead of an action for liability in respect of all the damage caused, bring his action before the courts of each member state in the territory of which content placed online is or has been accessible. Those courts have jurisdiction only in respect of the damage caused in the territory of the member state of the court seised".
These words are taken from paragraph [52] of the judgment, the language of which clearly echoes the passage in paragraph [33] of Shevill that I have quoted above.
"47. It is true that, in the eDate case [2012] QB 654, paras 51and 52, the court held that the person who considers that his rights have been infringed may also, instead of an action for damages in respect of all the harm caused, bring his action before the courts of each member state in whose territory content placed online is or has been accessible, which have jurisdiction only in respect of the harm caused in the territory of the member state of the court seised.
48. However, in the light of the ubiquitous nature of the information and content placed online on a website and the fact that the scope of their distribution is, in principle, universal (the eDate case, para 46), an application for the rectification of the former and the removal of the latter is a single and indivisible application and can, consequently, only be made before a court with jurisdiction to rule on the entirety of an application for compensation for damage pursuant to the case law resulting from Shevill's case [1995] 2AC 18, paras 25, 26 and 32 and the eDate case, paras 42 and 48, and not before a court that does not have jurisdiction to do so."
The English cases
"31. I take from Bolagsupplysningen the following:-
i) So far as internet publications are concerned, a claimant who is seeking relief such as an injunction may do so only (a) in a Member State where the defendant is domiciled (so that the Courts of that Member State have jurisdiction under art.4(1)); or (b) in the Member State where Claimant has his centre of interests.
…
iii) The Court was concerned exclusively with publications on the internet. So far as remedies for print publications are concerned, a claimant's options as set out in Shevill remain the same.
iv) Likewise, the Court was concerned exclusively with remedies for the rectification or removal of information from the internet. So far as other remedies, such as damages are concerned (even damages for internet publications) the Court appears to have made no change to the previous position. …
…
46. … As I have shown, in the case of an online publication an injunction will not be granted against a defendant domiciled in another Member State unless the Claimant's centre of interests is in England and Wales.
…
55. Since the Defendants are not domiciled in England, as I have shown, in consequence of Bolagsupplysningen the Claimant will not be entitled to an injunction from the English courts to restrain continued publication of the online article unless his centre of interests is in England."
The same point was made in the Judge's conclusion at [73].
"… the CJEU clarified that although in Shevill it had ruled that a claimant could sue for defamation in each member state where there was publication and damage to reputation an application to rectify incorrect information and to have content taken down from the internet was a single and indivisible application, and (following Shevill and eDate) could only be made in the jurisdiction where the court was able to rule on the entire claim for damages".
Precedent
"(1) A UK court must now decide any question as to the validity, meaning or effect of retained EU law for itself…;
(2) But the general rule is that the court must decide any such question in accordance with any retained case law and any retained general principles of EU law that are relevant…. "Retained EU caselaw" and "retained general principles" mean principles laid down and decisions made by the CJEU before IP completion day;
(3) The position is different in a 'relevant court', which includes the Court of Appeal. … A relevant court is not absolutely bound by any retained EU case law. It can depart from that law; but the test to be applied in deciding whether to do so is 'the same test as the Supreme Court would apply in deciding whether to depart from the case law of the Supreme Court' …
(4) When it comes to principles laid down or decisions made by the CJEU after IP completion day the court is not bound … but 'may have regard' to them …
(5) The test the Supreme Court applies is the one laid down by the House of Lords in its Practice Statement [1966] 1 WLR 1234 …".
The competing arguments
The judgment under appeal
"45. Further, the internet, unlike traditional media, is characterised by a significant lack of political power. Its global nature hinders intervention by the public authorities in activities which take place on the net, leading to a material deregulation which is criticised in many circles…. In addition to that material deregulation, there is also a conflict of laws fragmentation, a dispersed amalgam of national legal systems with their respective provisions of private international law which often overlap and hinder any approximation of the rules which govern a particular dispute.
46. The features described above have an unquestionable impact on the legal sphere. As has been stated, the global and immediate distribution of news content on the internet makes a publisher subject to numerous local, regional, state and international legal provisions. Moreover, the absence of a global regulatory framework for information activities on the internet, together with the range of provisions of private international law laid down by states, exposes the media to a fragmented, but also potentially contradictory legal framework, since that which is prohibited in one state may, in turn, be permitted in another…. Accordingly, the need to provide the media with legal certainty, by preventing situations which discourage the lawful exercise of freedom of information (the so-called chilling effect), acquires the character of an objective which the court must also take into consideration...".
"Paragraph 47 sets out where the person, who considers that his rights have been infringed as a result of the content placed online may bring his actions for damages, and the "mosaic" alternative is explained. Paragraph 48, on the other hand, sets out where that person may bring an action to rectify incorrect information published online concerning him and to remove any comments online which relate to him. It is plain that the "mosaic" alternative is not an option in these circumstances."
"If a person considers that his personality rights have been infringed as a result of online publication, he may wish to bring an action for damages in respect of the harm caused, and seek relief to prevent the distribution of the information alleged to be defamatory online. Paragraph [47] of the judgment in Bolagsupplysningen is directed at where that person's action for damages in respect of all harm caused must be brought. Paragraph [48] of the judgment is directed at where the relief to prevent the distribution of the information online must be brought. In the context of that case, it was described as an application for rectification of information and removal of comments. That is a remedy which in this jurisdiction is plainly injunctive relief in relation to information and content which has been placed online, the nature of which is "ubiquitous" and the scope of distribution is "in principle, universal". It is, of course, the very nature of information published online that its scope of distribution is in principle, universal. The fact that, in any particular case, attempts may be made to territorially ring fence the information by processes such as geo-blocking does not alter the fact that it is by reason of the fact that the information is published online which makes the distribution of it, in principle, universal and that is what paragraph [48][1] of Bolagsupplysningen is directed at."
"In my view, in the light of the evidence of Mr Bays, which is not in dispute, it is clear that the claimant is asking for the court to make an injunction against the defendant in relation to online publication which will inevitably take effect outside England and Wales. This is because the undisputed evidence is that geo-blocking can only be done at a UK level, and the removal of a YouTube video can also be only done at a UK level. This means that, even if the terms of the injunction are expressly limited to England and Wales, that order will inevitably extend beyond the jurisdiction of England and Wales to Scotland and Northern Ireland. That consequence, it seems to me, on the uncontested evidence, is sufficient to dispose of this point, and I am satisfied that even if there were jurisdiction to grant an injunction in the terms sought by the claimant, there is no proper basis to grant such an injunction in relation to the facts of this case."
The appeal
The first issue: the meaning of Bolagsupplysningen
"That rule of special jurisdiction is based on the existence of a particularly close connecting factor between the dispute and the courts of the place where the harmful event occurred or may occur, which justifies the attribution of jurisdiction to those courts for reasons relating to the sound administration of justice and the efficacious conduct of proceedings … (judgment of 17 October 2017, Bolagsupplysningen and Ilsjan, C-194/16, EU:C:2017:766, paragraph 26 and the case-law cited)."
The emphasis is mine. Plainly, jurisdiction over a case in which a harmful event may occur cannot be concerned with damages. This therefore is a case in which the CJEU used language that reflects the logical consequences of the Shevill principle and cited Bolagsupplysningen in support. It is at variance with the Judge's analysis. As a case decided after IP Completion Day, Gtflix does not bind us, but we can have regard to it.
The second issue: extraterritorial effect
The third issue: must the answer to the section 12 question be the same?
LORD JUSTICE WILLIAM DAVIS:
LORD JUSTICE POPPLEWELL:
Note 1 The judgment refers to paragraphs 46 and 47 but I have corrected what must be a typographical error. [Back]