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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Various Claimants v News Group Newspapers Ltd [2020] EWHC 1435 (Ch) (04 June 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2020/1435.html Cite as: [2020] EMLR 29, [2020] EWHC 1435 (Ch) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
BUSINESS LIST (ChD)
Rolls Building, 7 Rolls Buildings Fetter Lane, London EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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Various Claimants |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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News Group Newspapers Ltd |
Defendant |
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Clare Montgomery QC, Anthony Hudson QC and Ben Silverstone (instructed by Clifford Chance LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 20th, 21st and 22nd May 2020
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Mann :
Introduction
The background to the disclosure and what has been disclosed
"… search for and disclose to the Claimants (subject to the Defendant's right to protect its confidential sources):
….
b. any SAP payment records relating to Nigel [and his associated entities] and any emails on Relativity sent to or from [Nigel's email addresses]."
The "SAP payment records" are records in which, inter alia, payments to contributors are recorded. They have (according to the claimants) provided a fruitful source of information said to demonstrate payment for unlawful activities.
"4. [Nigel] was a freelance journalist who also previously worked at [another newspaper]. He was a source who provided me with information on a variety of stories and tips for publication over a number of years. This was on the understanding that he would not be identified as the source of any resulting material published. [Nigel] wanted his identity protected for the purpose of such publications. I have been shown copies of certain documents which I understand were withheld from disclosure. I confirm they identify [Nigel] as my source of information for stories or potential stories.
5. To the best of my knowledge, [Nigel] obtained all the information he provided to me legitimately."
Miss Montgomery confirmed, on instructions, that "certain documents" was not all the documents that are in dispute; Mr Sturgis was shown only some (we do not know how many) of those disputed documents.[1]
The arguments
The legal principles involved
"10 Sources of information
No court may require a person to disclose, nor is any person guilty of contempt of court for refusing to disclose, the source of information contained in a publication for which he is responsible, unless it be established to the satisfaction of the court that disclosure is necessary in the interests of justice or national security or for the prevention of disorder or crime."
This principle applies to unpublished material – X v Morgan-Grampian Ltd [1991] AC 1 at 40G. So in the present case it does not matter (of itself) that the documents may relate to tips that did not result in a story.
"32. En route to that conclusion the court [in Stichting Ostade Blade v Netherlands Application 8406/06, (2014) 59 EHRR SE9] referred to its extensive previous jurisprudence on the protection of journalistic sources, such as Goodwin v United Kingdom (1996) 22 EHRR 122, and stated (at [62]) that not every individual "used by a journalist for information is a 'source' in the sense of the case-law mentioned" (emphasis added). It concluded that the informant ("T"), who had "donned the veil of anonymity with a view to evading his own criminal accountability" was "not, in principle, entitled to the same protection as the 'sources' in cases like Goodwin …" (emphasis added). It is in this context that the court stated that it had "established that 'source protection' is not in issue". But it acknowledged an interference with Article 10(1) and went on to consider whether it was justified. The European Court's decision does not seem to me to involve a "bright line" determination of whether T was a source of information but rather an evaluation of the degree of protection to which he was entitled, and a comparison with "classic" journalistic sources. The motives of T were relevant for that purpose, and to the determination of whether he could in any sense be equated with the journalistic sources which were the subject of earlier jurisprudence. The decision certainly provides a vivid illustration of the point that not all sources are equal. It has little if anything of value to offer by way of guidance on the right approach to the interpretation of the word "source" in s 10 of the 1981 Act.
33. In my judgment it would be unsatisfactory for the court to adopt an approach to the meaning of the word "source" in s 10 which distinguishes between different categories or classes of person who, as a matter of fact, provide information to others with a view to that information being published to the public or a section of the public. Such an approach would tend to undermine legal certainty. It is hard to see a principled basis on which this approach could be adopted. Distinctions based on objective criteria about a person's role would be rational. But a person who provides information to someone else with a view to publication will often be jointly responsible in law with the person who writes the article or places the material online. That cannot be enough to deprive the person of the status of a source. The further or alternative suggestion appears to be that the court should take account of subjective factors such as motive or purpose, and whether the source was acting in good faith. But there is no reason to suppose that this was Parliament's intention. And such considerations surely do not bear on whether someone is or is not a source of information contained in a publication; logically, they belong to a different stage of the analysis.
34. The structure of s 10 enables the court to take such considerations into account, if appropriate, at the later stage when it assesses whether source disclosure is necessary for one or more of the purposes specified in s 10. That, in my opinion, is the approach that gives effect to Parliament's intention, and the better approach in practice. It is at this stage that an evaluative assessment can safely be conducted."
"37. At the same time, it must be recognised that the evaluation of whether information identifying a source is "really needed" in an individual case will always be fact-sensitive. Stichting Ostade Blade makes clear that the importance of source protection is not fixed and unalterable; there is a sliding scale. The status and role of the particular source require some evaluation. The closer the particular source appears to lie to the paradigm of the "classic" confidential journalistic source, the stronger the presumption is likely to be in favour of source protection. The nature of the information conveyed by the source must also be a relevant consideration. The higher its apparent public interest value, the greater the weight to be attributed to protection of the source. At the far end of the scale from these instances would be the written confession of serious criminality with which the court was concerned in Stichting Ostade Blade. A multitude of other considerations may come into play in some cases."
"64. Turning to the present case, the court is of the view that although the question has been the subject of much debate between the parties, it is not necessary to determine whether there actually existed an agreement binding the applicant company to confidentiality. The court agrees with the applicant company that there is no need to require evidence of the existence of a confidentiality agreement beyond their claim that such an agreement existed. Like the Chamber, the court sees no reason to disbelieve the applicant company's claim that a promise had been made to protect the cars and their owners from being identified."
"56. The applicant company replied that they could not realistically have been required to produce a written agreement. Their journalists had stated that in order to be allowed to take pictures, they had had to promise the organisers of the street race—who were acting on behalf of all participants—in advance that the identity of participants would not be revealed in any way."
This makes it look as though the debate was about whether there had to be a written agreement. The case of the media was that a promise had been made – presumably oral.
The application of the principles to the facts
"But, critically, just so I can just finish off with the confidential evidence, the evidence from the confidential annex to Ms Mossman's statement couldn't be clearer. It is that, so far as these documents are concerned, they are simply not relevant to the issues in the case, and in our submission, since they are not relevant firstly one can dismiss as hyperbole on the part of Mr Sherborne the suggestion that Nigel is going to be used as CS cover for any of the stories in the case. He isn't. If the stories in which he was involved were either the subject of claimant-specific claims or generic claims, they would not be irrelevant, they would clearly be relevant, but you have a clear statement that they are irrelevant."
That makes it plain that the defendant cannot assert that Nigel is the confidential (or non-confidential) source for any of the articles. The claimants will, of course, be free to probe claims of a confidential source in the usual way, provided they can do that without seeking answers which will tend to identify the source. They will now be able to do so in the knowledge that none of the sources can be Nigel.
Note 1 When I suggested to Ms Montgomery in argument that Mr Sturgis’s “certain documents” were less than the whole cohort of the disputed documents she said that that reading would be unfair and that it should be read in the sense that he had reviewed all of them. It turned out when she subsequently took instructions that the “unfair” reading was in fact the correct one. [Back]