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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 >> Quinton v Peirce & Anor [2009] EWHC 912 (QB) (30 April 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2009/912.html Cite as: [2009] FSR 17, [2009] EWHC 912 (QB) |
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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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CHRISTOPHER JOHN QUINTON |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) ROBIN HEYS PEIRCE (2) JAMES DAVID COOPER |
Defendants |
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Anthony Speaight QC (instructed by Goodman Derrick LLP) for the Defendants
Hearing dates: 1 - 6 April 2009
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Eady :
The parties to the dispute
The two causes of action relied upon
The statements contained in the offending leaflet
" … MORE HOUSES IN BEECH LANE?
At a crucial planning meeting in Crowmarsh, attended by many local residents and Parish Councillors, strong representations were made to persuade the committee to refuse planning permission for the housing development off Beech Lane. Robin Peirce and all who made the effort to go to Crowmarsh were appalled that Chris Quinton failed to attend the meeting, failing to speak and urge refusal of the unneighbourly planning application.
OUR VILLAGE DESERVES BETTER REPRESENTATION AT CROWMARSH."
" … HOUSING AT THE VILLAGE CROSSROADS
At a large public meeting in Woodcote residents overwhelmingly objected to the application. Following a refusal by SODC [South Oxfordshire District Council] of planning permission for houses opposite the village hall crossroads, a public inquiry was held in Goring. While Robin Peirce, supported by many residents and other Parish Councillors, spoke at the inquiry to urge refusal of the application, Chris Quinton failed to take any part in the inquiry.
OUR VILLAGE DESERVES BETTER REPRESENTATION FROM WOODCOTE'S DISTRICT COUNCILLOR."
"NEW LAND FOR DEVELOPMENT?
Local Conservative Councillors are actively encouraging significant housing developments on the edge of Woodcote. On the front page of the Woodcote Correspondent, May 2006, Chris Quinton wrote 'South Oxfordshire needs to provide more houses … to accommodate new residents attracted to the area by the buoyant economy and good living standards … suggested sites for development from landowners should be submitted to … the Council Offices … ' Woodcote now has more proposed housing sites than any other village in South Oxfordshire. ROBIN PEIRCE REMAINS TOTALLY COMMITTED TO PROTECTING WOODCOTE FROM UNWANTED LARGE DEVELOPMENTS AND LOSS OF RURAL VILLAGE IDENTITY."
"NEW LAND FOR DEVELOPMENT?
South Oxfordshire District Council is seeking views on where new housing should be sited, what types should be built and, particularly, what additional facilities and infrastructure will be needed, if additional houses are built. At the same time, land-owners and developers have been invited to submit suggestions for suitable sites for new housing development.
South Oxfordshire needs to provide more houses, primarily to meet local demand, but also to accommodate new residents attracted to the area, by the buoyant economy and good living standards. Availability and affordability of housing is a key issue in the district.
In its Oxfordshire Structure Plan 2016, the County Council requires that sites are found for about 1,300 additional houses in the district, all to be built by 2016. Their plan indicates that new development should take place in and around the towns and larger villages in this district.
The South Oxfordshire Local Plan defines the larger villages in the district as, Berinsfield, Benson, Chalgrove, Chinnor, Cholsey, Garsington, Goring, Horspath, Sonning Common, Watlington, Wheatley and Woodcote.
The Council will consider all sites submitted on their individual merits,
Initially, it is looking for previously developed land, but must also consider green-field sites, if there is insufficient land which can be re-used. Existing constraints, such as green belt, or Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty (AONB) designations will be important factors during the site assessment stage.
The Council is starting work on a plan to identify where the new houses should be. The plan will allocate land to meet the requirements of the County's structure plan and also identify broad locations for development for a further period to 2026. Sufficient land, in and around Didcot, has been allocated for the period to 2016. Work to identify further areas around Didcot for the period to 2026 will be undertaken as a separate project.
A programme for the preparation of the Housing Site Allocations document, together with background information, is available from the Council.
Comments on potential locations for new housing, the breakdown of house types, sizes and tenures, the additional facilities and infrastructure required as well as site plans, showing suggested sites for development from landowners should be submitted to the Planning Policy Team at the Council Offices, Benson Lane, Crowmarsh, Wallingford OX10 8JN by 6th June 2006."
The Claimant's case on injurious falsehood
"6.1 In stark contrast to the First Defendant, the Claimant was not committed to protecting Woodcote from unwanted large developments or loss of rural village identity. On the contrary, the Claimant was a supporter of significant or large housing developments on the edge of Woodcote for the purpose of accommodating new residents attracted to the area (as opposed to local people, young families and key workers, for whom affordable homes were desperately needed) although they were unwanted by locals and would destroy rural village identity.
6.2 The Claimant was actively encouraging significant housing development on the edge of Woodcote for the benefit of new residents, having gone so far as to write an article on the front page of the Woodcote Correspondent setting out his views to that effect and urging landowners to write to the Council suggesting sites for such development.
6.3 The Claimant's support for development of this kind explained the appalling neglect of his constituents' wishes and interests and his own responsibilities which the Claimant had shown by failing even to make the effort to attend a crucial planning meeting in Crowmarsh, concerning a planning application for a large and unneighbourly housing development in Beech Lane, which his constituents strongly opposed.
6.4 The Claimant's support for such development also accounted for the further neglect and/or disregard of his constituents' wishes and interests that he had shown by his complete non-participation in an important public inquiry concerning another large housing proposal, this time for houses opposite the Woodcote village hall crossroads, to which locals were overwhelmingly opposed."
These are what Mr Speaight describes, not unfairly, as "extended meanings" (i.e. going beyond the literal sense of the leaflet).
The Defendants' case on injurious falsehood
"In an action for slander of title, slander of goods or other malicious falsehood, it shall not be necessary to allege or prove special damage –
(a) if the words upon which the action is founded are calculated to cause pecuniary damage to the plaintiff and are published in writing or other permanent form, or
(b) if the said words are calculated to cause pecuniary damage to the plaintiff in respect of any office, profession, calling, trade or business held or carried on by him at the time of the publication."
Were it not for this statutory provision, it would have been necessary to prove actual financial loss.
"5.2 The basic allowance is not to be viewed as a wage or payment for carrying out the duties of a councillor. Primarily it is intended to be a sum sufficient to ensure that councillors are not out of pocket in the performance of their civic duties. It is also a token recognition of the time sacrifice involved."
The Claimant's case on the Data Protection Act
" … where the data controller is responsible for the publication of hard copies that reproduce data that has previously been processed by means of equipment operating automatically, the publication forms part of the processing and falls within the scope of the Act."
This was with a view to making clear that the Act does not cease to have application merely by reason of the processing resulting, as here, in hard copies.
The Defendants' case on the Data Protection Act
"Personal data shall mean any information relating to an identified or identifiable natural person (data subject); an identifiable person is one who can be identified, directly or indirectly, in particular by reference to an identification number or to one or more factors specific to his physical, physiological, mental, economic, cultural or social identity."
"Whereas the principles of protection must apply to any information concerning an identified or identifiable person. To determine whether a person is identifiable account should be taken of all the means likely reasonably to be used either by the controller or by any other person to identify such person; … whereas the principles of protection shall not apply to data rendered anonymous … ."
"It follows from what I have said that not all information retrieved from a computer against an individual's name or unique identifier is personal data within the Act. Mere mention of the data subject in a document held by a data controller does not necessarily amount to his personal data. Whether it does so in any particular instance depends on where it falls in a continuum of relevance or proximity to the data subject as distinct, say, from transactions or matters in which he may have been involved to a greater or lesser degree. It seems to me that there are two notions that may be of assistance. The first is whether the information is biographical in a significant sense, that is, going beyond the recording of the putative data subject's involvement in a matter or an event that has no personal connotations, a life event in respect of which his privacy could not be said to be compromised. The second is one of focus. The information should have the putative data subject as its focus rather than some other person with whom he may have been involved or some transaction or event in which he may have figured or have had an interest, for example, as in this case, an investigation into some other person's or body's conduct that he may have instigated. In short, it is information that affects his privacy, whether in his personal or family life, business or professional capacity … "
"(a) Information on his attendance, or non-attendance, at a meeting is not a statement as to his political opinions.
(b) Information on whether he participated or not at an inquiry he attended is not a statement as to his political opinions.
(c) Information on whether he has encouraged development is … a statement as to the effect of his actions, not his personal preference as to what should happen. It may be the inadvertent consequence of ham-fisted actions. But even the explicit statement, if it had been made, 'Quinton favours planning consent for a new housing estate at Woodcote' would not be a statement of his political opinions. The phrase 'political opinion' in the context of s.4, and reading it eiusdem generis with the other items in the list, connotes something in the nature of ideological or philosophical belief, not merely a policy position on one item of local administration."
"The information contained in the personal data has been made public as a result of steps deliberately taken by the data subject."
It is said that all the information contained in the leaflet related to Mr Quinton's public record. I consider that to be a formidable argument.
"Member states shall protect the fundamental rights and freedoms of natural persons, and in particular their right to privacy with respect to processing of personal data."
It would seem to be important, as so often when addressing rights of privacy, to set alongside and balance against them competing rights of other relevant persons under Article 10.
My conclusions