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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> McClaren v News Group Newspapers Ltd. [2012] EWHC 2466 (QB) (05 September 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2012/2466.html Cite as: [2012] EWHC 2466 (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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STEVE McCLAREN |
Claimant |
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- and – |
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NEWS GROUP NEWSPAPERS LIMITED |
Defendant |
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Richard Spearman QC (instructed by Simons Muirhead & Burton) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 18 August 2012
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE LINDBLOM:
"Public figures are persons holding public office and/or using public resources and, more broadly speaking, all those who play a role in public life, whether in politics, the economy, the arts, the social sphere, sport or in any other domain."
"Relationships of the sort which A had with C and D are not the categories of relationships which the court should be astute to protect when the other parties to the relationships do not want them to remain confidential. Any injunction granted after a trial would have to be permanent. It is most unlikely such an injunction would ever be granted."
Lord Woolf had spoken in an earlier passage in his judgment (in paragraph 11(xii)) of a public figure who
"… may hold a position where higher standards of conduct can be rightly expected by the public. The public figure may be a role model whose conduct could well be emulated by others. He may set the fashion. The higher the profile of the individual concerned the more likely that this will be the position. Whether you have courted publicity or not you may be a legitimate subject of public attention. If you have courted public attention then you have less ground to object to the intrusion which follows. In many of these situations it would be overstating the position to say that there is a public interest in the information being published. It would be more accurate to say that the public have an understandable and so a legitimate interest in being told the information."
"101. It is not for the judge to express personal views on such matters, still less to impose whatever personal views he might have. That is not the issue. The issue is what the judge should prohibit one person from saying publicly about another. …
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104. … There is no suggestion that the conduct in question in the present case ought to be unlawful, or that any editor would ever suggest that it should be. But in a plural society there will be some who would suggest that it ought to be discouraged. Freedom to live as one chooses is one of the most valuable freedoms. But so is the freedom to criticise (within the limits of the law) the conduct of other members of society as being socially harmful, or wrong. … It is as a result of public discussion and debate, that public opinion develops. …"
(see paragraph 29 of the judgment of Gross LJ, with whom the Master of the Rolls and Etherton LJ agreed).
"A benchmark has been set. Football and rugby are under a bit more of a spotlight."
Mr Spearman said the defendant wanted to make the legitimate point that high standards of conduct are absent in football. How this was to be done was for the defendant to decide. Once it was accepted that the freedom of the press should prevail, the way in which the defendant reported the matter was not to be determined by the court (see paragraph 48 of Lord Woolf's judgment in A v B). Mr Tomlinson's response was that the defendant could not use this rhetoric to justify an intrusion into the claimant's private life by publishing a "kiss and tell" story devoid of any public interest. What the claimant had done here was just the kind of private conduct the law was meant to protect. Freedom to criticize the conduct of others is one thing; treating private information as if it were public quite another.