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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 >> W v JH & Anor [2008] EWHC 399 (QB) (05 March 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2008/399.html Cite as: [2008] EWHC 399 (QB), [2009] EMLR 11 |
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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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W |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) J H (2) A COUNTY COUNCIL |
Defendants |
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Mr Adam Wolanski (instructed by Berrymans Lace Mawer) for the Defendants
Hearing dates: 27 February 2008
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Tugendhat :
"I am surprised that [W] is working as a practise assessor as he had been due to appear before a disciplinary hearing regarding an allegation of sexual harassment but had left in a hurry before the hearing".
"a) the claimant quickly resigned from his job with the First Defendant when faced with disciplinary action against him for sexual harassment;
b) the claimant had been guilty of sexual harassment while working for the First Defendant; and/or
c) the claimant was not an appropriate person to work as a practise assessor for the University".
SUMMARY JUDGMENT – QUALIFIED PRIVILEGE.
"9.1. The First Defendant was at all material times a senior practitioner within the Second Defendant's adult services department. [R] was at all material times the Claimant's students' tutor at the University…
9.2. On 8 September 2005 the First Defendant attended a meeting of practise assessors at the University. She noticed that the claimant was present.
9.3. The First Defendant had concerns about the Claimant working as a practise assessor at the University. She decided to raise these concerns, initially with [her team leader at CC] and with [R]. She raised the concerns with [R] during a telephone conversation by means of an oral publication of the words complained of".
"The First Defendant cannot recall the exact words she used during the conversation with [R]. To the best of her recollection, at the beginning of the conversation she did express surprise that the Claimant was a practise supervisor, though she did not say this directly before referring to the disciplinary proceedings. She recalls mentioning the fact that allegations of harassment had been made by female members of staff against the Claimant, though she does not recall using the word 'sexual'. She made clear to [R] that she did not know the details of the allegations nor the outcome of the proceedings against the Claimant. In response to a question from [R] about what could happen in [CC] when allegations of this sort are made, the First Defendant said that there were a number of different possible outcomes, including that the Claimant may have left. The First Defendant suggested to [R] "that [R] contact [CC] to discuss her concerns about the claimant and to find out what in fact happened".
1) The statement was volunteered by the First Defendant. She was not requested by the University to give a reference or comment about the Claimant.
2) The First Defendant does not know the Claimant and as had no dealings with him.
3) The First Defendant had no direct knowledge or involvement in the disciplinary proceedings taken by the Second Defendant against the Claimant in 1994 and 1995, or the complaints made by [the complainants]. Further the First Defendant knew she had no such knowledge or involvement.
4) It was not part of the First Defendant's job description or role to pass onto the University information about disciplinary proceedings taken by the Second Defendant or complaints made to the Second Defendant.
5) The information given by the First Defendant to the University was inaccurate, as the Second Defendant's insurers admitted in a letter to the Claimant's solicitors dated 6th June 2006.
6) The First Defendant was acting officiously and without proper justification in publishing the words to R.
"1. This letter constitutes a final warning which will be placed on your personnel file in accordance with County Disciplinary Procedures. This will be reviewed for removal after a period of eighteen months.
2. You will be redeployed in a position that does not require you to manage or supervise staff.
You have the right to appeal … Should your misconduct be repeated within the eighteen month period, it would be necessary to reconvene a Disciplinary Hearing and the likely consequence could include dismissal".
"23 We find that the applicant was unfairly treated in 1995 by the respondent. The respondent withdrew the transfer imposed at the Disciplinary Hearing, but then when it transpired that it was not practical to put the Applicant back with his former team, they reintroduced the transfer through the back door by requiring the Applicant to take the Project Manager's position, with the termination of his employment as the only alternative. The Applicant chose, however, not to leave on the terms offered and to claim unfair dismissal then, but to continue in the respondent's employment.
24 Having decided to remain in the Respondent's employment, the Applicant cannot raise the earlier unfair treatment when he was subsequently made redundant from the post to which he was transferred in the summer of 1995".
"She had concerns about the Claimant working as a practice assessor because she did not personally want to work with the Claimant. She was also concerned for potentially vulnerable female students".
"24.2 The court may give summary judgment against a claimant... on the whole of a claim or on a particular issue if –
(a) it considers that –
(i) that claimant has no real prospect of succeeding on the claim or issue; ...; and
(b) there is no other compelling reason why the case or issue should be disposed of at a trial."
Submissions for Defendants
"A privileged occasion is … an occasion where the person who makes a communication has an interest, or a duty, legal or moral, to make to the person to whom it is made, and the person to whom it is so made has a corresponding interest or duty to receive it. This reciprocity is essential."
"a person giving a reference or reporting crime need not act responsibly: his communication will be privileged subject only to relevance and malice"
"It is so manifestly for the advantage of society that that those who are about to employ a servant should be enable to learn what his previous conduct has been, that it may be well deemed the moral duty of the former employer to answer inquiries to the best of his belief".
"… All that Lord Buckmaster was saying was that every circumstance has to be considered which bears on the question whether the necessary conditions for invoking privilege are satisfied. Where the communication is made within an established relationship and is relevant to it, the necessary conditions are satisfied. Lord Buckmaster was certainly not suggesting that verification is a relevant consideration in all qualified privilege cases; indeed, he was in part emphasising the importance of keeping distinct matters going to malice and those going to the existence of the privilege. That was a theme upon which Lord Diplock was later to expand in Horrocks -v- Lowe …" (emphasis original).
"I am left in no doubt that this was a classic case of qualified privilege based upon an existing relationship, and on a common and corresponding interest in the subject matter of the letter."
"28. Based on those and other such authorities it is Mr Caldecott's submission that common interest cases and duty-interest cases are quite distinct, communications in the former category attracting privilege on a wide and generous basis, communications in the latter category having to be much more closely scrutinised on the facts. Whereas attempts at verification and the like may well be relevant to the latter category of case, they will not, he submits, be relevant to the former unless and until the issue of malice is raised.
29. Mr Rampton submits on the contrary that there is no distinction between these various cases: one category shades into the other and the question whether qualified privilege attaches to any particular occasion or communication must always depend on the facts.
30. The argument, as it seems to me, has been much bedevilled by the use of the terms "common interest" and "duty-interest" for all the world as if these are clear-cut categories and any particular case is instantly recognisable as falling within one or other of them. It also seems to me surprising and unsatisfactory that privilege should be thought to attach more readily to communications made in the service of one's own interests than in the discharge of a duty - as at first blush this distinction would suggest. To my mind an altogether more helpful categorisation is to be found by distinguishing between on the one hand cases where the communicator and the communicatee are in an existing and established relationship (irrespective of whether within that relationship the communications between them relate to reciprocal interests or reciprocal duties or a mixture of both) and on the other hand cases where no such relationship has been established and the communication is between strangers (or at any rate is volunteered otherwise than by reference to their relationship). This distinction I can readily understand and it seems to me no less supportable on the authorities than that for which Mr Caldecott contends. Once the distinction is made in this way, moreover, it becomes to my mind understandable that the law should attach privilege more readily to communications within an existing relationship than to those between strangers. The latter present particular problems. I find it unsurprising that many of the cases where the court has been divided or where the defence has been held to fail have been cases of communications by strangers. Coxhead -v- Richards was just such a case. As Coltman J, one of those who held that privilege did not attach, observed:
"The duty of not slandering your neighbour on insufficient grounds, is so clear, that a violation of that duty ought not to be sanctioned in the case of voluntary communications, except under circumstances of great urgency and gravity." (emphasis added)"
Submissions for the Claimant
"all, or at all events, the great mass of right-minded men in the position of the defendant would have considered it their duty, under the circumstances, to inform Stanley of the suspicion which had fallen on the plaintiff."
Discussion
"Mr Price asks rhetorically why should one evaluate the quality of information for a social or moral duty case, as in Reynolds or Stuart -v- Bell for example, but not in cases of a common and corresponding interest? The answer to that question is, it seems to me, that it has long been the policy of the law to protect persons in certain kinds of relationship with one another, and indeed to encourage in such cases free and frank communications in what is perceived to be the general interest of society. In those cases, one does not need to assess the interest of society afresh in each case. We all need to know where we stand. In this area the law was thought to be settled, on the basis that the balance would fairly be struck if liability in such situations was confined to those cases where the occasion of communication was abused - in the sense that malice could be established. Nothing short of malice would undermine the law's protection. "
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;
(2) whether the statement is capable of being defamatory of the claimant;
(3) whether the statement is capable of bearing any other meaning defamatory of the claimant".
"every time a meaning is shut out (including any holding that the words…either are, or are not, capable of bearing a defamatory meaning) it must be remembered that the judge is taking it upon himself to rule in effect that any jury would be perverse to take a different view on the question. It is a high threshold of exclusion. Ever since Fox's Act 1792 the meaning of words in civil as well as criminal libel proceedings has been constitutionally a matter for the jury. The judge's function is no more and no less than to pre-empt perversity."
CONCLUSION