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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 >> KC v MGN Ltd [2012] EWHC 483 (QB) (05 March 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2012/483.html Cite as: [2012] EWHC 483 (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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"KC" |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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MGN Limited |
Defendant |
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Heather Rogers QC (instructed by Rhiannon James, MGN Legal Department) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 27 February 2012
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Bean :
"At just 16 she met the father of Peter – 17 years her senior – and the two were married in Haringey Civic Centre. Her new husband was a sex offender."
"Peter's real father had also reappeared and had begun making frequent visits – something that would have set off alarm bells at Social Services as he had been convicted in the 1970s in Leicester for raping a 14 year old girl."
"I believe that it is implicit from this letter that we are, in effect, making an offer of amends pursuant to section 2 of the Defamation Act 1996 but I mention that we are so that there is no ambiguity about the position."
The two-stage assessment of compensation
"The first stage is to identify the figure I should award at the conclusion of a hypothetical trial in which the Defendant had done nothing to aggravate the hurt to the Claimant's feelings (e.g. by pleading justification or by insulting cross-examination) and nothing to mitigate (e.g. by the publication of an apology). At the second stage I must consider to what extent, if at all, that figure should be discounted to give effect to any mitigating factors of which this Defendant is entitled to take advantage."
"I think it is more helpful to focus on what I would have been inclined to award for these libels following a trial (i.e. sitting as a Judge alone) in which there had been no significant aggravation (such as a plea of justification) and no significant mitigation (such as an apology). This is not a wholly artificial scenario. It might arise in various ways: for example, if there were a trial confined to meaning or qualified privilege (neither of which, at least in theory, adds further injury to the Claimant's reputation). I would tend to ask, having regard to the current conventional overall ceiling for damages or £200,000, what the particular libel is worth on that scale of gravity. I would then aim to make a significant reduction to take account not only of any actual apology but also of the very willingness of the defendant to use the offer of amends route. A defendant is then in those circumstances effectively laying down his arms and inviting meaningful negotiation over compensation and restoration of reputation."
"One principle on which damages are awarded in defamation proceedings is that they are assessed as at the point of assessment. Of necessity, they are not in fact assessed at the date of publication, nor are they notionally assessed then. A further consequent principle is that conduct of the defendant after the publication may aggravate or mitigate the damage and therefore the award. Each case depends on its own facts and this will apply to the determination of compensation under section 3(5). That said, if an early unqualified offer to make amends is made and accepted and an agreed apology is published, as in the present cases, there is bound to be substantial mitigation. The defendant has capitulated at an early stage without pleading any defence, has offered to make and publish a suitable correction and apology (and has in fact done so in agreed terms in the present cases) and has offered to pay proper compensation and costs, these to be determined by the court if they are not agreed – see sections 2(4), 3(5) and 3(6). The claimant knows that his reputation has been repaired to the full extent that that is possible. He is vindicated. He is relieved from the anxiety and costs risk of contested proceedings. His feelings must of necessity be assuaged, although they may still remained bruised (and he is still entitled to say so, if that is so). He can point to the agreed apology to show the world that the defamation is accepted to have been untrue and unjustified. There may be cases in which some of these features are absent, or in which their impact may be slight. An example could be if the defendant had offered and published a correction and apology, which the claimant had not agreed and which the court found to be unsuitable and insufficient – see section 3(5), second sentence. There may also be aggravating features, although the use of the procedure would generally suggest that there is unlikely to be significant aggravation after the making of the offer to make amends. "A healthy discount" may be a more colourful phrase than "substantial mitigation", but they mean the same thing. …………
The adoption of the procedure will have what the judge referred to as a major deflationary effect upon the appropriate level of compensation because adopting the procedure is bound to result in substantial mitigation. I do think that the judge's use of the word "rewarded" in paragraph 41 is superficially open to misinterpretation. But there is no distinction in substance between a reduction in compensation on account of the substantial mitigation bound to result from the use of the procedure and a "reward" for using the procedure, provided that the mitigating factors are not brought into play twice." [emphasis added]
Stage one of the assessment: the cases
"….compensate him for the damage to his reputation; vindicate his good name; and take account of the distress, hurt and humiliation which the defamatory publication has caused. In assessing the appropriate damages for injury to reputation the most important factor is the gravity of the libel; the more closely it touches the plaintiff's personal integrity, professional reputation, honour, courage, loyalty and the core attributes of his personality the more serious it is likely to be. The extent of publication is also relevant: a libel published to millions has a greater potential to cause damage than a libel published to a handful of people. A successful plaintiff may properly look to an award of damages to vindicate his reputation but the significance of this is much greater when the defendant asserts the truth of the libel and refuses any retraction or apology than in a case where the defendant acknowledges the falsity of what was published and publicly expresses regret that the libellous publication took place."
"….the gravity of the allegations, the scale of publication, the extent to which any readers believed the words to be true, [and] any impact upon the Claimant's feelings, reputation or career. There may be matters of aggravation or mitigation which also need to be put in the scales. … A fundamental point always to be remembered is that the purpose of such damages, and indeed compensation awarded under section 3(5), is compensatory and not punitive."
"… a generous margin needs to be left at the upper end of the scale to accommodate the more serious libels. Occasionally, there are bound to be examples of allegations so grave and devastating in their impact that the maximum will seem inadequate. The perceived advantage of imposing an upper limit, however, is that there is likely to be greater clarity and consistency."
"I am quite satisfied that each of the claimants [has] merited an award at the highest permitted level. Indeed, they have earned it several times over because of the scale, gravity and persistence of the allegations and of the aggravating factors."
Stage one: submissions and decision
The second stage: the discount
Conclusion