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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Cook v Telegraph Media Group Ltd [2011] EWHC 1519 (QB) (16 June 2011) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2011/1519.html Cite as: [2011] EWHC 1519 (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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FRANK COOK |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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TELEGRAPH MEDIA GROUP LIMITED |
Defendant |
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Mr David Price Q C(of David Price Solicitors and Advocates) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 9 June 2011
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Tugendhat:
i) Mr Cook's claim for £5 was particularly embarrassing having regard to his support of the campaign to commemorate a Battle of Britain hero;
ii) Mr Cook thought it appropriate to make a claim for a refund of £5;
iii) At the time Mr Cook made the claim he did not believe he could justify it to the public.
a) Whether an honest person could express the comments on the basis of the admitted facts;
b) The allegation of malice in paragraph 15(ii) of the Reply.
"[Mr Cook] informed Mr Sawer prior to publication that he did not consider it appropriate to claim the £5 and … Mr Sawer therefore knew it was untrue to state otherwise in the leader".
THE FACTS GIVING RISE TO THIS ACTION
THE THREE ARTICLES COMPLAINED OF
"MP claimed £5 for church collection
An M.P. used his expenses to claim for a £5 donation he made during a church service to commemorate the Battle of Britain.
Frank Cook a Labour backbencher sought reimbursement on his office expenses after the memorial service in his constituency town of Stockton On Tees. It was rejected by the parliamentary fees Office.
The controversial claim was one of a series made by M.Ps that can be disclosed today, including reimbursement for carpets bought in India, sweets bought by a former party leader and office expenses used for household items ...
Today the Sunday Telegraph discloses the expense claims of
members of parliament who represent low "value-for-money" when their voting records, participation in parliamentary debates and number of questions they ask are compared to their total level of expenses.
The most extraordinary was made by Mr Cook who tried to claim for £5 he gave at a Battle of Britain memorial service. A handwritten note attached to the claim by way of a receipt stated "Battle of Britain church service, Sunday 17.09.06. £5 contribution to offertory on behalf of Frank Cook M.P."
The fees office wrote on his claim "Not Allowed" and refused to pay out on the claim ....
It is particularly embarrassing because Mr Cook is an official supporter of the campaign to commemorate Air Chief Marshall Sir Keith Park who commanded the RAF's 11 Group Fighter Command during the Battle of Britain".
"Frank Cook, the Labour M.P., in flight gear. Despite
campaigning for the RAF he tried to claim on expenses £5
that he donated at a church service commemorating the
Battle of Britain".
"I'm sorry, church claim was unfair
Mr Cook last night said he could not remember making the claim but apologised for doing so. His claim for the donation is particularly embarrassing because he is an official supporter of the campaign to commemorate Air Chief Marshall Sir Keith Park who commanded 11 Group Fighter Command RAF at the Battle of Britain.
He is also a former member of the Commons Defence select committee and his son Andrew is a serving soldier with the Royal Electrical and Mechanical Engineers.
Mr Cook who was deselected as a candidate for the next general election by his local constituency party in 2008 after more than 24 years representing Stockton North is among the 20 MPs who represent poor value for money to taxpayers.
Despite claiming total expenses last year of £153,902 which included travel, home office and staffing costs Mr Cook turned up to just 44% of votes in Parliament, spoke 11 times and submitted four questions to ministers ...
Last year Mr Cook a former gravedigger, Butlins Redcoat and special needs teacher received £23,083 of taxpayers' money to run his second home in Camberwell, south London ... "
"Worthy causes: Frank Cook at Westminster before a charity run. The former gravedigger said claiming for a £5 church collection was 'unjustified'".
"COMMENT AND ANALYSIS
Now it is the people's turn to be heard
… When, as we report today, one Labour MP thinks it is appropriate to claim back from taxpayers the £5 he put in a church collection for an RAF charity, the most obvious conclusion that Labour is made up of people who will destroy the ethic of selfless public service.
If the expenses scandal had revealed flaws of character and
judgement in individual MPs, it has not revealed a fundamental flaw with Britain's basic system of representative democracy. None of those who made disgraceful claims were forced to do so by "the system", for there were plenty of MPs who only made claims that are beyond reproach. The difference between those who put their snouts in the trough, and those who did not, is that the individual who make up the first group decided to claim what they thought they could get away with, rather than what they could justify to their constituents".
MATTERS NOT IN DISPUTE
"I have been to many memorial services over the years and have never made any other claim like this. Neither have I claimed for wreaths, as some MPs have".
PERTINENCE
"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, 461, commenting on an observation of Lord Esher MR in Merivale v Carson (1888) 20 QBD 275, 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, 174".
MALICE
"the scope of malice has been significantly narrowed. The fact that the Defendant may have been motivated by spite or ill-will is no longer material. The only issue is whether he believed that his comment was justified."
"The first I became aware that the Telegraph were going to print a story about me was when I received a telephone call from Mr Patrick Sawer at approximately 8 pm on 30 May 2009. The call was completely out of the blue and at the time I received it I was in Stockton High Street".
CONCLUSION
THE TELEGRAPH'S APPLICATION