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England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Roberts & Anor v Gable & Ors [2006] EWHC 1025 (QB) (12 May 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2006/1025.html Cite as: [2006] EMLR 692, [2006] EWHC 1025 (QB), [2006] EMLR 23 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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1. Christopher Roberts 2. Barry Roberts |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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1. Gerry Gable 2. Steve Silver 3. Searchlight Magazine Ltd |
Defendants |
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Gavin Millar QC and Guy Vassall-Adams (instructed by Kosky Seal) for the Defendants
Hearing dates: 26th and 27th April 2006
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Crown Copyright ©
The Hon. Mr Justice Eady :
"In May this column reported a BNP rally in London at which John Tyndall, the party's founder, was the main speaker and several of his supporters were present. It now seems this was an attempt to bring them together with their rivals, the supporters of Nick Griffin, the party's present leader.
Since then Tyndall has been expelled from the party and has announced that he is resorting to the courts to challenge the decision.
We described the London rally as the Night of the Short Knives. Soon afterwards the BNP's March bulletin accused two members of stealing the collection from the meeting. The story that was put around was that Dave Hill and Robert Jeffries, who is better known in the party as Bob James, stole the money from the house of Chris Roberts, the London and Essex organiser. It appears that the police investigated but decided not to act.
Perhaps the police are now more interested in Roberts and his brother Barry. Hill and Jeffries recently issued a long open letter attacking Griffin and his supporters, including Chris Roberts. It explains that it was Roberts who stole the money from the rally and that although it went against the grain, Hill and Jeffries reluctantly threatened to report him to the police. After Roberts angrily returned the money, the letter alleges, he and his brother Barry threatened to 'kneecap, torture and kill' Hill, Jeffries and their respective families.
The letter complains that the Griffin leadership described Roberts as a self-made millionaire who was leaving the City to devote his time and fortune to the BNP, but he turned out to be a disappointment. 'It was now quite obvious that a little village somewhere, was missing its idiot!'"
"that the First Claimant (i) stole money collected at a BNP rally, and (ii) did not return it until threatened with being reported to the police, and (iii) that both Claimants threatened to kneecap, torture and kill Dave Hill and Robert Jeffries alias Bob James, and the families of Dave Hill and Robert Jeffries alias Bob James and (iv) that both Claimants might be subject to police investigation".
"In a modern democracy all those who venture into public life, in whatever capacity, must expect to have their motives subjected to scrutiny and discussed. Nor is it realistic today to demand that such a debate should be hobbled by the constraints of conventional good manners – still less of deference. The law of fair comment must allow for healthy scepticism."
"In a modern, developed society it is only a small minority of citizens who can participate directly in the discussion and decisions which shape the public life of that society. The majority can participate only indirectly, by exercising their rights as citizens to vote, express their opinions, make representations to the authorities, form pressure groups and so on. But the majority cannot participate in the public life of their society in these ways if they are not alerted to and informed about matters which call or may call for consideration and action. It is very largely through the media, including of course the press, that they will be so alerted and informed. The proper functioning of a modern participatory democracy requires that the media be free, active, professional and inquiring. For this reason the courts, here and elsewhere, have recognised the cardinal importance of press freedom and the need for any restriction on that freedom to be proportionate and no more than is necessary to promote the legitimate object of the restriction".
There are several other similar pronouncements of high authority both in Strasbourg jurisprudence and domestic authorities.
i) There was a political dimension;
ii) There was reportage of an ongoing dispute (without adoption, endorsement or embellishment);
iii) It was made clear to whom the defamatory allegations were being attributed;
"What was clear from these mutual allegations … is that one or other if not both of these leading Committee members were being shown to be disreputable and that basic fact seems to me to be something which the appellant's readership were entitled to be kept informed about. In my judgment there was no need for the newspaper, at any rate at this early stage of mutual accusation, to commit itself to preferring and adopting the contentions of one side over the other.
… To my mind A K [the defendant's journalist] was entitled in this case to publish without attempting verification. Indeed in the present context verification could even be thought inconsistent with the objective reporting of the dispute. …
… there will be circumstances where … in short, both sides to a political dispute are being fully, fairly and disinterestedly reported in their respective allegations and responses. In this situation it seems to me that the public is entitled to be informed of such a dispute without having to wait for the publisher, following an attempt at verification, to commit himself to one side or the other."
"… the paper was reporting a split in a political group which was clearly of significant interest to its readers. It seems to me that in this context, what is said by the one side in relation to the other is of considerable interest. This is so whether what is said is of high political importance, or merely scurrilous gossip or personal accusations. The fact that allegations of the latter sort are made rather than the former enables the interested reader to obtain some insight into the nature of the dispute. It is the fact that the allegation of a particular nature has been made which is in this context important, and not necessarily its truth or falsity.
… Provided that the paper did not … in any way suggest that it was adopting the allegation, the fact that the allegation was made was a matter of proper interest to the reader and the paper had an appropriate duty to publish it …".
"… Shortly after the rally the BNP March members' bulletin came out with the claim that Hill and James had turned up at Robert's house and stolen the money collected at the meeting …
The story doing the rounds is that Hill and Jeffries initially went to collect the £200 booking fee for the meeting room, which Roberts had forgotten to pay in his rapid exit from the pub, but seeing all the money it appears that temptation got the better of them and they took the lot".