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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 >> WXY v Gewanter & Ors [2012] EWHC 1601 (QB) (13 June 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2012/1601.html Cite as: [2012] EWHC 1601 (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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WXY |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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Henry Gewanter Positive Profile Ltd |
Defendants |
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Mark Burby |
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Patrick Green QC and Kathleen Donnelly (instructed under the direct professional access scheme) for the Third Defendant
Hearing dates: 20th April, 9th-11th May 2012
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Crown Copyright ©
Mrs Justice Slade:
Confidential Schedule: Public Domain and balancing Articles 8 and 10
Submissions of the parties
"our understanding of what has appeared in the press and what can be accessed online via relevant search engine searches."
Mr Bateman exhibited the material which he had found.
"Privacy can be invaded by further publication of information or photographs already disclosed to the public."
"For the avoidance of doubt, nothing in this Order shall prevent the defendants from publishing, communicating or disclosing such of the information, or any part thereof, as was already in, or that thereafter comes into, the public domain in England and Wales [as a result of publication in the national media] (other than as a result of breach of this Order [of a breach of confidence or privacy]."
"42. These principles have the following consequences:
(1) The court cannot (and is not invited to) make any adverse finding about the veracity, propriety or motives behind D3's publication of his first and second submissions to the Joint Committee (which the Committee accepted as evidence). Such issues are a matter for Parliament.
(2) The court may, if it considers it appropriate, take into account and make adverse findings about:
…
(b) Any publication of D3's first and second written submissions, or reports thereof or commentary thereon, made by (or on behalf of) D3, outside Parliament;
(c) Any communication by (or on behalf of) D3 to the media, D1 or D2 or other third parties alerting them to the publication by the Joint Committee of his submissions and/or encouraging the reporting or commenting on those submissions."
"As these proceedings are anonymous it would clearly be inappropriate in the context of this submission to reveal her identity."
WXY is described by reference to the nature of her connection to an unnamed head of state from a named continent. Mr Eardley contended that readers of the document would learn a schematic summary of the information which is the subject of these proceedings but would not be able to relate it to the Claimant unless they were reliably informed of her identity from another source. An online edition of a newspaper ('N1') published at the end of February 2012 provided a link to the supplementary evidence.
"The fact that someone looking for information about [Mr Burby] might be led to the W4 postings which purport to identify the Claimant, is therefore nothing to the point. Even someone actively looking for information about the Claimant is unlikely to be directed to those postings. The likelihood of them coming to the attention of someone who takes only a passive interest is minimal."
Discussion and Conclusion
The supplementary evidence to the Parliamentary Committee
Print and online publications by N1
Online publication by N3
Online publication by N2
Website postings produced by Mr Burby
Which of the disputed items on the Confidential Schedule are or were likely to have come to the attention of members of the public?
"…even if his motives for publicising information regarding the Claimant had not been to exert pressure on her for his financial benefit, in all the circumstances his rights to publicise such information are of less weight than the Claimant's Article 8 rights."
No evidence has been produced or argument advanced to cause me to come to a different conclusion when now deciding whether permanent injunctive relief is to be granted.
"Harassment injunctions regularly prohibit a defendant from doing that which may be done lawfully by anybody else (e.g. entering a particular public street). Information which is publicly available may nevertheless be particularly dangerous in the hands of a defendant who threatens to pursue a course of conduct amounting to harassment. The fact that such conduct may be contrary to the criminal law is nothing to the point: the Act specifically provides for civil remedies."
Those submissions are well made. I accept that the fact that material may have entered the public domain does not provide a defence to injunctive relief to prevent harassment by publicising such material. However this conclusion is not necessary to the decision in this case as I have held that on the facts the relevant material has not entered the public domain.
"unless restrained, the Third Defendant is likely to resume publication of or threatening to publish private and confidential information of the Claimant and thereby to continue to harass her.",
my judgment that the relevant material has not entered the public domain in the respects and to the extent that injunctive relief would be fruitless, balancing the Claimant's Article 8 rights and Mr Burby's Article 10 rights and in the exercise of discretion having regard to all these matters, injunctive relief is granted in the terms sought with the agreed addition of words to paragraph (4) of the Confidential Schedule.
The body of the order
Paragraph 6
"6. By no later than 4pm on [14 days] 2012, the Third Defendant shall serve on the Claimant a Witness Statement, verified by a Statement of Truth, setting out:
(a) The name of each person or institution to whom since March 2009 the Third Defendant (whether by himself or through any other person acting on his behalf) has published [in England and Wales]
(i) Any document (including, for the avoidance of doubt, any email, text message, computer file or other electronic document) containing any part of the information or allegations set out in Confidential Schedule I;
(ii) Any document (whether or not falling within (a)(i) above) filed or served in these proceedings or sent or brought into existence for the purposes of these proceedings save for any documents not falling within (a)(i) above which the Third Defendant had in his possession prior to the commencement of the proceedings."
The dispute is therefore whether the obligation to state the names of those to whom Mr Burby has published documents only in England and Wales or whether the obligation is to disclose those names wherever publication took place.
"The Defendants and each of them are restrained from giving …any material served on them in connection with this order or these proceedings to anyone else [i.e. other than instructed lawyers] without prior permission of the Court."
Further, Mr Eardley contended that the requirement to state to whom publication had been made wherever that took place would further the integrity of the proceedings and protect against the risk that Mr Burby might be in a better position to harm the Claimant because of information he has obtained in the course of or for the purpose of the proceedings. It was pointed out that this was particularly important in light of the view expressed by Mr Burby and Mr Begg that they were not bound by the interim injunction in Jersey.
Paragraph 11
Paragraph 17