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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Thornton v Telegraph Media Group Ltd [2009] EWHC 2863 (QB) (12 November 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2009/2863.html Cite as: [2009] EWHC 2863 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
Sitting as a High Court Judge
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Dr. Sarah Thornton |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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Telegraph Media Group Limited |
Defendant |
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Mr David Price (instructed by David Price Solicitors and Advocates) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 20th October 2009
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Crown Copyright ©
SIR CHARLES GRAY
The issues on the application
The Parties
The Book Review
"Seven Days in the Art World by Sarah Thornton: review
Confronted with reflexive ethnographic research on the art market, Lynn Barber isn't buying
Sarah Thornton is a decorative Canadian with a BA in art history and a PhD in sociology and a seemingly limitless capacity to write pompous nonsense. She describes her book as a piece of "ethnographic research", which she defines as "a genre of writing with roots in anthropology that aims to generate holistic descriptions of social and cultural worlds". She also claims that she practices "reflexive ethnography", which means that her interviewees have the right to read what she says about them and alter it. In journalism we call this "copy approval" and disapprove.
Thornton claims her book is based on hour-long interviews with more than 250 people. I would have taken this on trust, except that my eye flicked down the list of her 250 interviewees and practically fell out of its socket when it hit the name Lynn Barber. I gave her an interview? Surely I would have noticed? I remember that she asked to talk to me, but I said I had already published an account of my experiences as a Turner Prize juror which she was welcome to quote, but I didn't want to add to. And although she lists all four Turner jurors from my year (2006) among her interviewees, it is obvious from the text that only one gave her any inside information, and a very partial account at that. He seems to have forgotten one particularly sensitive encounter he had with Sir Nick Serota at a judging meeting.
Thornton's seven "days" are seven chapters, some of which feel like years, set in different areas of the art world: a Christie's auction, an art criticism seminar at the California Institute of the Arts, Basel Art Fair, the Turner Prize, Artforum magazine, a visit to Takashi Murakami's studios and the 2007 Venice Biennale. The chapters on the CalArts seminar and Artforum are unreadably dull – though I was amused to learn that Artforum went through a period when it suffered from "the wrong kind or unreadability". Nowadays it seems to have attained the right kind or unreadability.
Her account of a 2004 Christie's auction in New York contains some interesting snippets about what sells best. Paintings sell better than sculpture because they are portable and "easily domesticated", though they have to be small enough to fit into the average Park Avenue lift. Blue and red paintings sell better than brown ones, cheerful ones better than glum ones; female nudes better than males. Collectors dislike anything that has to be plugged in and presumably flee in horror at the idea of something like Sarah Lucas's Two Fried Eggs and a Kebab, which requires new fried eggs every day. Collectors, it seems, are quite a timid bunch.
But the whole business of auctioning contemporary art has been blown apart by the recent Damien Hirst sale. In 2004, the period Thornton writes about, there was still an unwritten rule that auction houses did not encroach on galleries by selling new work, but the time gap between sale and resale was narrowing. Hirst first cut out the middle man by selling the contents of his Pharmacy restaurant at auction in 2004, but it was still second-hand work. Recently, he made the final jump to selling new work, and we are still waiting to see what the effect will be on dealers.
It is typical of Thornton's approach that she talks to auctioneers, collectors, art historians, academics and critics before she finally gets round to meeting an artist. She chooses the prolific and fashionable Takashi Murakami and visits his various studies in New York and Japan, where she finds teams of assistants literally painting by numbers, having started the day with ten minutes of communal callisthenics. Murakami is, predictably, a fan of Andy Warhol and confides, "Warhol's genius was his discovery of easy painting". But, in business terms, Warhol was an amateur compared to Murakami. Having redesigned Louis Vuitton's trademark monogram print in multi-colours, Murakami now insists on having a Louis Vuitton boutique in his shows. He calls it "my urinal" which, Marc Jacobs of Louis Vuitton hastens to explain, does not mean that he p---es on it but is referring to Marcel Duchamp's iconic work.
I wouldn't be sure. The art world is full of p--- and Thornton seems prepared to swallow any amount of it. Equipped with reams of earnest questions, she lacks the basic journalistic tool of scepticism, and seems to accept whatever anyone tells her at face value. She also suffers from that odd New York Times tic of believing that all facts, any facts, are equally important – thus, when interviewing an art consultant called Philippe Ségalot, she solemnly records "We both decide on fish carpaccio and sparkling water." Is this relevant? Would we read his remarks differently if he'd chosen, say, prosciutto and Evian? In journalism we call this "padding" – heaven knows what you call it in ethnographic research."
Dr. Thornton's Complaint
i) That [she] had dishonestly claimed to have carried out an hour-long interview with Lynn Barber as part of her research for Seven Days in the Art World, when the true position was that she had not interviewed Ms Barber at all, and had in fact been refused an interview.
ii) That [she] had given her interviewees the right to read what she proposed to say about them and alter it, a highly reprehensible practice which, in the world of journalism was known as "copy approval".
iii) That [she] had thereby shown herself to be untrustworthy and fatally lacking in integrity and credibility as a researcher and writer.
The Telegraph defence
"Further or alternatively, the passage of the article relating to reflexive ethnography, in so far as it is defamatory of the Claimant, is comment. The comment is based on true or sufficiently true facts. The comment is one that an honest person could hold on the basis of the facts. The subject matter of the comment is a matter of public interest, namely the Book, reflexive ethnography and/or the Claimant's practice of reflexive ethnography.
The meaning sought to be defended as comment
7.1 The Claimant's practice of reflexive ethnography is comparable to copy approval in journalism which is disapproved of by journalists."
The questions which arise on the present application
i) Do the words selected for complaint by Dr. Thornton include any statement of fact, as opposed to comment, such as would disentitle the Defendant from relying on the defence of fair comment?
ii) Is it fatal to the success of the defence of fair comment if the facts set out within the text of the review, or some of them, are materially misstated?
The applicable legal principles
"Fair comment: the objective limits
16. In order to identify the point in issue I must first set out some non-controversial matters about the ingredients of this defence. These are well established. They are fivefold. First, the comment must be on a matter of public interest. Public interest is not to be confined within narrow limits today: see Lord Denning in London Artists Ltd v Littler [1969] 2 QB 375 at 391.
17. Second, the comment must be recognisable as comment, as distinct from an imputation of fact. If the imputation is one of fact, a ground of defence must be sought elsewhere, for example, justification or privilege. Much learning has grown up around the distinction between fact and comment. For present purposes it is sufficient to note that a statement may be one or the other, depending on the context. Ferguson J gave a simple example in the New South Wales case of Myerson v Smith's Weekly (1923) 24 SR (NSW) 20 at 26:
"To say that a man's conduct was dishonourable is not comment, it is a statement of fact. To say that he did certain specific things and that his conduct was dishonourable is a statement of fact coupled with a comment".
18. Third, the comment must be based on facts which are true or protected by privilege: see, for instance, London Artists Ltd v Littler [1969] 2 QB 375 at 395. If the facts on which the comment purports to be founded are not proved to be true or published on a privileged occasion, the defence of fair comment is not available.
19. Next, the comment must explicitly or implicitly indicate, at least in general terms, what are the facts on which the comment is being made. The reader or hearer should be in a position to judge for himself how far the comment was well founded.
20. Finally, the comment must be one which could have been made by an honest person, however prejudiced he might be, and however exaggerated or obstinate his views: see Lord Porter in Turner v Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer Pictures Ltd [1950] 1 All ER 449 at 461, commenting on an observation of Lord Esher MR in Merivale v Carson (1888) 20 QBD 275 at 281. It must be germane to the subject-matter criticised. Dislike of an artist's style would not justify an attack upon his morals or manners. But a critic need not be mealy-mouthed in denouncing what he disagrees with. He is entitled to dip his pen in gall for the purposes of legitimate criticism: see Jordan CJ in Gardiner v Fairfax (1942) 42 SR (NSW) 171 at 174.
21. These are the outer limits of the defence. The burden of establishing that a comment falls within these limits, and hence within the scope of the defence, lies upon the defendant who wishes to rely upon the defence."
"41. the purpose for which the defence of fair comment exists is to facilitate freedom of expression by commenting on matters of public interest. This accords with the constitutional guarantee of freedom of expression. And it is in the public interest that everyone should be free to express his own, honestly held, views on such matters, subject always to the safeguards provided by the objective limits mentioned above. These safeguards ensure that defamatory comments can be seen for what they are, namely, comments as distinct from statements of fact. They also ensure that those reading the comments have the material enabling them to make up their own minds on whether they agree or disagree."
"The question, therefore, in all cases is whether there is a sufficient sub-stratum of fact stated or indicated in the words which are the subject matter of the action, and I find my view well expressed in the remarks contained in Odgers on Libel and Slander (6th Ed., 1929), at p.166. "Sometimes, however," he says "it is difficult to distinguish an allegation of fact from an expression of opinion. It often depends on what is stated in the rest of the article. If the Defendant accurately states what some public man has really done, and then asserts that "such conduct is disgraceful", this is merely the expression of his opinion, his comment on the plaintiff's conduct. So, if without setting it out, he identifies the conduct on which he comments by a clear reference. In either case, the Defendant enables his readers to judge for themselves how far his opinion is well-founded; and therefore what would otherwise have been an allegation of fact becomes merely a comment. But if he asserts that the plaintiff has been guilty of disgraceful conduct, and does not state what that conduct was, this is an allegation of fact for which there is no defence but privilege or truth. The same considerations apply where a Defendant has drawn from certain facts an inference derogatory to the Plaintiff. If he states the bare inference without the facts on which it is based, such inference will be treated as an allegation of fact. But if he sets out the facts correctly, and then gives his inference, stating it as his inference from those facts, such inference will, as a rule, be deemed a comment. But even in this case the writer must be careful to state the inference as an inference, and not to assert it as a new and independent fact; otherwise, his inference will become something more than a comment, and he may be driven to justify it as an allegation of fact".
"a defamatory statement is made about a private individual who is quite unknown to the general public, and he has never taken part in public affairs, and the statement takes the form of a comment only and is capable of being construed as comment and no facts of any kind are given, while it is conceivable that the comment may be made on a matter of public interest, nevertheless the defence of fair comment might not be open to a Defendant in that case. It is almost certain that a naked comment of that kind in those circumstances would be decided to be a question of fact and could be justified as such if that defence were pleaded. But if the matter is before the public, as in the case of a book, a play, a film, or a newspaper, then I think different considerations apply. Comment may then be made without setting out the facts on which the comment is based if the subject matter of the comment is plainly stated. This seems to me to accord with good sense and the true public interest."
"In an action for libel or slander in respect of words consisting partly of allegations of fact and partly of expressions of opinion, a defence of fair comment shall not fail by reason only that the truth of every allegation of fact is not proved if the expression of opinion is fair comment having regard to such of the facts alleged or referred to in the words complained of as are proved."
It is evident that the purpose of this provision was to widen the ambit of the defence.
"I am also required by the Human Rights Act, 1998 to take into account Article 10 and the jurisprudence associated with it. Having regard to those considerations, I am left in no doubt that the right to comment freely on matters of public interest would be far too circumscribed if it were a necessary ingredient of the English common law's defence of fair comment that the commentator should be confined to pleading facts stated in the words complained of. It would be more consonant with Article 10, and the rights of a free press in a democratic society, if the restriction were expressed in terms of the "subject matter" as did Lord Porter at [1952] AC 345. He did so not only at p.358… but also at p357 where he formulated the nature of the inquiry as being: "is there subject matter indicated with sufficient clarity to justify comment being made". So too did Birkett LJ in the Court of Appeal. I am therefore inclined to adopt his statement of the law in these terms (as cited above); namely that comment may be made, if the matter is already before the public, without setting out the facts on which the comment is based – provided the subject matter of the comment is plainly stated."
i) "If facts are stated in words complained of and are wrongly stated, this will undermine the defence of fair comment;
ii) A defendant is not precluded from pleading extrinsic facts in support of a plea of fair comment."
"Moreover, the words complained of were contained in a review by a critic, as any reader would appreciate, and which the reader will expect contain a subjective commentary by the critic. The words also embody, quite obviously, powerful elements of value judgments – the word "heroic" in itself does that… such value judgments are not something which a writer should be required to prove are objectively valid, as the Strasbourg Court has pointed out when dealing with the Article 10 right in Nilsen v Norway [2000] 30 EHRR 878 at [50]."
"the Claimant's conduct in relation to the false claims and criticisms has contributed in large part to a madness which has let perhaps hundreds of thousands of people die unnecessarily."
"The Defendants have a real prospect of persuading the court that the statement (that the Claimant had contributed to letting people die unnecessarily) is something which the reasonable reader can recognise as comment in the sense that the statement is, or can reasonably be inferred to be, a deduction, inference, conclusion, criticism, remark or observation."
Submissions on the first question
"…also, as part of a practice called "reflexive ethnography", the people who were quoted in a particular chapter had the opportunity to read what I wrote. Their feedback often led to a richer and more accurate of the art world, and I am exceptionally appreciative of those who took this extra time".
Conclusion on the first question
Submissions on the second question
"as part of a practice called "reflexive ethnography", the people who were quoted in a particular chapter had the opportunity to read what I wrote. Their feedback often led to a richer and more accurate account of their art world and I'm exceptionally appreciative of those who took this extra time".
Those facts are not reported in terms in the review by Ms Barber but I accept that Mr Price is entitled to rely upon extrinsic facts: see the dicta by Birkett LJ in Kemsley and by Eady J in Lowe cited at paragraphs 19 and 21 above.
Conclusion on the second question