![]() |
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | |
England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Alsaifi v Trinity Mirror Plc & Anor [2018] EWHC 1954 (QB) (26 July 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2018/1954.html Cite as: [2018] EWHC 1954 (QB) |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
Appeal Ref: QB/2018/0024 |
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
MEDIA & COMMUNICATIONS LIST
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
Tariq Alsaifi |
Claimant/ Appellant |
|
- and – |
||
(1) Trinity Mirror plc and Board of Directors (2) Newcastle College Group and Board of Governors |
Defendant/ Respondent |
____________________
Kate Wilson (instructed by Ward Hadaway Solicitors) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 17 July 2018
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
The Honourable Mr Justice Nicklin :
i) the First Defendant sought summary judgment on the claim on the basis that the Claimant had no real prospect of rebutting a defence of reporting privilege under the Defamation Act 1996. Insofar as there was any part of the article not covered by privilege, the remainder was protected by the defence of honest opinion or should be dismissed as an abuse of process under Jameel -v- Dow Jones [2005] 1 QB 946 ("the Summary Judgment Application"); and
ii) the Claimant sought a ruling pursuant to CPR Part 53 PD §4.1 that the words complained of in the article were capable of bearing the defamatory meanings he had ascribed to them ([41]-[42]) against the First Defendant and [45]-[46] against the Second Defendant) ("the Meaning Application").
[91] I agree that the Jameel doctrine applies here, and mandates the conclusion that any residual claim must be dismissed. The question is whether it is or could be legitimate and proportionate in all the circumstances to permit Mr Alsaifi to pursue a claim for libel against Trinity Mirror in respect of a single paragraph of the First Article, containing a quotation from Mr Lewin about how quickly Newcastle College had acted to suspend and then dismiss Mr Alsaifi three years earlier. The question must it seems to me be answered on the footing that any reader who drew a defamatory meaning about Mr Alsaifi from that single paragraph would also draw a similar, and equally serious defamatory meaning from the rest of the article, in respect of which Mr Alsaifi cannot complain. I am unable to see a basis on which paragraph [15] could be said to add materially to the overall defamatory sting of the article. Although it was not true that he had been dismissed, that error was corrected later. More importantly, the real sting of words such as these lies not in the allegation of dismissal but rather in the imputation that the claimant behaved in such a way as to justify dismissal. If that imputation was conveyed, it was conveyed in any event by the privileged report contained in the same article. (underlining added)
[62] Newcastle College accepts that the words complained of against it are capable of bearing a meaning which is defamatory of Mr Alsaifi at common law…
[64] I ask myself therefore what natural and ordinary defamatory meanings could be conveyed by the words complained of against Newcastle College. Ms Wilson invites me to approach that question by reference only to the final three paragraphs of the First Article (paragraphs [14] to [16]), submitting that her client is not and cannot be held responsible for any other part of that article. The principle on which she relies is included in this passage from Economou -v- De Freitas [2017] EMLR 4 [17]:
"A media publication will often include some material for which the source bears responsibility and some for which he bears none. … Such additional material is likely to affect the meaning of the publication. The additional material may make things worse, in which case the source cannot be blamed; or it may make the meaning less damaging, or even innocent, in which case the claimant must take the meaning as it emerges from the entire publication. A source or contributor cannot be sued for a defamatory meaning which only arises from part of the media publication to which he has contributed: see Monks -v- Warwick District Council [2009] EWHC 959 (QB) [12]-[14] (Sharp J)."
[65] But I am not sure the position here is quite so straightforward, for three reasons. First, I must approach the issue on the basis that Mr Lewin knew and intended that the words complained of against the College would appear in an article on chroniclelive. He clearly must have had some notion of the context in which his statements would appear. There has been no exploration of that issue at this stage. But paragraph [16] of the First Article indicates that Mr Lewin was aware that the published item would include an account of the decision and findings of the NCTL and the Secretary of State. He was entitled to assume that such an account would be a fair and accurate one; the College cannot be held responsible for any inaccuracy or unfair "spin" which the rest of the article contained, if that was not known to it. But I do not think it would be right to examine the three paragraphs in question in blinkers, as if the rest of the article did not exist. Secondly, there is the point I have made above about the potential mitigating impact of the first blob (paragraph [17]). Thirdly, the submission overlooks paragraph [18] which appears to reflect a deliberate contribution by Newcastle College to the third version of the First Article, and one which must (on the face of things) have been made in the knowledge of its then extant version.
"[The Claimant] had misconducted himself by inappropriate behaviour towards a 17-year-old pupil in the ways found proved by the NCTL in its Decision Notice; that he had thereby behaved in such a way as to justify his immediate suspension, subsequent dismissal, and ultimate prohibition from teaching; and that this last outcome was a pleasing and satisfactory one." (underlining added)
"(2) The statement complained of in the claim against the Second Defendant is capable of bearing a meaning defamatory of the Claimant and is capable of bearing meanings that he had misconducted himself by inappropriate behaviour towards a 17 year old pupil in the ways found proved by the NCTL in its Decision Notice; that he had thereby behaved in such a way as to justify his immediate suspension, subsequent dismissal, and ultimate prohibition from teaching; and that this last outcome was a pleasing and satisfactory one.
(3) The statements complained of are not capable of bearing any other meanings advanced by the Claimant."
27. It is [the Second Defendant's] position that the statement of Tony Lewin included in the Article and the scope of the meaning attributed to those words is true and/or honest opinion upon true facts and/or upon the first part of the Article which Mr Justice Warby held was protected by statutory qualified privilege
28. In respect of paragraphs 14 and 16 of the Article, [the Second Defendant] relies upon honest opinion and truth. In respect of paragraph 15, [the Second Defendant's] position it that the statement is substantially true, within section 2 of the Defamation Act 2013.
Mr Ward also asked the Court to rule that "the continuation of the proceedings against [the Second Defendant] will serve no purpose and are (sic) an abuse, by reference to the requirements of Jameel…"
i) the Second Defendant was sued only in respect of paragraphs 14-16 of the article;
ii) the Second Defendant was bound to succeed with the defence of honest opinion under s.3 Defamation Act 2013 in respect of paragraphs [14] and [16] because the three conditions under the section were satisfied:
a) by their nature, paragraphs [14] and [16] were plainly expressions of opinion (and not imputations of fact). Mr Lewin was commenting upon the preceding matters and the phrase "we are pleased" is not capable of being understood as anything other than Mr Lewis expressing a view. It is not a statement amenable to verification – as a factual imputation would be. In respect of the claim against the First Defendant, Warby J had held that both paragraphs were clearly opinion and "the contrary is not arguable" at [85]);
b) the basis of the opinion was indicated in the article. It was an opinion on the NCTL decision, as reported in the body of the article; and
c) in light of Warby J's decision that paragraphs [1]-[13] of the article were privileged, s.3(4)(b) is also clearly satisfied (and there is no need to consider s.3(4)(a) of the 2013 Act). The objectively honest person could clearly express the opinions in those paragraphs in light of the findings of the NCTL.
iii) there was no prospect of the Claimant demonstrating that Mr Lewin did not honestly believe the opinion expressed; and
iv) the claim was in any event an abuse of process within the Jameel principle:
a) paragraphs [1]-[13] of the article, which contained more serious defamatory allegations of fact, had been held to be protected by qualified privilege. In terms of harm to reputation, paragraphs [14]-[16] add nothing material; and
b) if paragraph [15] remained the only paragraph upon which a viable claim could be brought, then such a claim, in the context of the article, did not represent a claim in respect of a real and substantial tort.
v) the Second Defendant would, if necessary, advance a defence of truth under s.2 Defamation Act 2013 to prove the substantial truth of the meaning that the three paragraphs were found to bear. She invited the Court to grant summary judgment on the defence of truth because "there is no reason to suppose that a court would differ from the findings of fact by the NCTL…"
"The question for me, on a summary judgment application is whether the Second Defendant has satisfied me that Mr Alsaifi has no real prospect of overcoming that defence. She has not. My reasons are as follows:
i) The Second Defendant has not satisfied me that the court would be bound to find that the words complained of only contain the expression of opinion. The meaning I have found the words are capable of bearing (see paragraph 50(iii)) arguably contains factual elements. The actual meaning has not been determined. Conventionally, if a defendant wishes to seek a ruling as to whether the words complained of are an expression of opinion rather than an allegation of fact, that is done by seeking to have meaning and fact/opinion determined as preliminary issues. It is only in clear cut cases that summary judgment would be granted against a claimant when neither meaning nor fact/opinion has been finally determined…"
i) the Claimant had no real prospect of showing that the defence of honest opinion did not apply (§§5, 12);
ii) the Claimant had no real prospect of demonstrating that Mr Lewin (the spokesperson of the Second Defendant quoted in the article) did not honestly believe the comments attributed to him in the final three paragraphs of the article (§§1-3 and 6); and
iii) that if paragraph [15] or the final three paragraphs were considered in isolation, any defamation claim in relation to them would be an abuse of process within the Jameel principle ("not worth the candle") (§§9-10).
The Master did not refer to or consider the Capable Meaning found by Warby J and she did not dispose of the Claimant's claim on the basis of the Second Defendant's reliance upon the indicated defence of truth.
"Insofar as the Master also dismissed the Appellant's claim on the grounds that it was Jameel abusive, it is arguable that the Master has failed to consider and apply the principles from Ames -v- Spamhaus Project Ltd [2015] 1 WLR 3409 [33]-[36] guiding the exercise of this 'exceptional jurisdiction', in particular (from [36]) 'If a libel claimant has a real prospect of establishing a tort which is real and substantial, the court should be very reluctant to conclude that it is unable to fashion any procedure by which the claim can be adjudicated in a proportionate way, and that the only remaining way of dealing justly with the case is to dismiss it'. These principles were applied – on similar facts – in Alsaifi -v- Trinity Mirror [101]-[106] and it is arguable that many of the same considerations apply in this case."
2. The Master's decision was correct, having regard to the decision of Warby J ([2017] EWHC 1444 (QB)) that paragraphs 1-13 of the article complained of were a report to which statutory qualified privilege attached.
3. The ruling by Warby J on capable meaning… does not undermine the correctness of the Master's decision. Warby J's decision on capable meanings in that judgment was expressly subject to the first Defendant's summary judgment application (which he then granted), and the Master, rightly accepted the same approach to the Respondent's application.
4. The ruling on capable meaning was given prior to Warby J's consideration of, and decision on, statutory qualified privilege in respect of part of the article. It therefore had not taken into account the effect of applying Curistan -v- Times Newspapers (esp. [22(iv)] to the meaning which the Appellant could maintain in his claim. The capable meaning ruling therefore does not warrant allowing the Appellant's appeal.
Argument on the appeal
i) he hoped that he would be granted an injunction (a) to have paragraphs [14]-[16] removed from the article which continues to be published by the First Defendant; and (b) to prevent repetition of the allegation by the Second Defendant;
ii) he sought damages (now limited to £10,000); and
iii) when applying for jobs in the future, he wanted to be able to confront any reference to the NCTL case (and reporting of it) with a finding that the allegations were not true.
Decision
[14] Tony Lewin, principal at Newcastle College, said: "Safeguarding our students is our top priority and we take all student complaints seriously.
[15] "In the case of Mr Alsaifi, a part-time lecturer, three years ago, we acted upon the situation the same day, quickly and effectively leading to his immediate suspension and subsequent dismissal.
[16] "We are pleased with the outcome of the hearing."
i) [14] and [16] were opinion (see [85]). [16] was a statement of the Second Defendant's pleasure at the NCTL result and [14] a comment on the Second Defendant's policy. In context, reference to "student complaints" in [14] would be understood to relate to the complaint(s) made against the Claimant.
ii) [15] was a statement of fact: three years ago, the Claimant had been swiftly suspended and was subsequently dismissed because of the "situation". In context, readers would understand the "situation" that had been effectively dealt with by the College to be what is described in [1]-[13]. If [16] adds anything to meaning, it tends to confirm in the readers' minds that the College believed that its decision to suspend and dismiss had proved to be the right one.
From this, it is clear to me how Warby J arrived at the Capable Meaning.
i) The effect of Curistan is not to remove privileged paragraphs from a publication. Whilst they cannot be relied upon as words complained of, for the purposes of meaning, they remain as context for the non-privileged parts of the publication: Curistan [22(v)(1)] per Arden LJ; [84] per Laws LJ; and [102] per Lord Phillips MR.
ii) When the Capable Meaning of paragraphs [14]-[16] was determined, paragraphs [1]-[13] were already treated by Warby J only as context. They were never words complained of by the Claimant; indeed, he could not maintain a claim holding the Second Defendant responsible for their publication. On the facts of this case, Curistan could only have had potential relevance to the determination of meaning of the whole article for the publication of which the First Defendant was responsible (not that that was argued).
Jameel abuse: the law
"It is true that the number of addressees of the emails complained is small. But they are all persons who are or have been concerned with education and with the School. The words complained of are in electronic form. They may be stored indefinitely, and easily searched and republished, both generally to those concerned with education, and in particular to others in the Department for Education or in the first defendant. The damage so far suffered by the claimants may be small... But the main point of defamation proceedings is vindication. Vindication includes preventing, or reducing the risk of, future publications of the words complained of. The fact that the damage suffered so far may be small (if it is), is no indication of the extent of the damage which is prevented from occurring in the future, when a claimant in a libel action obtains a public retraction or a judgment in his favour from the court." (emphasis added)
Jameel abuse: conclusion
i) The original findings of the NCTL have been published, and continue to be published, by The Chronicle. As this publication is protected by privilege, the Claimant's avenue of redress through a defamation claim has been closed off. Indeed, his claims against the First Defendant's publication of at least two articles have been summarily dismissed without any adjudication of the truth or falsity of the underlying claims.
ii) The Claimant appealed against the findings of the NCTL. He was successful, and both the banning order imposed upon him and the findings that had been made against him were quashed.[1] However, his success was on the basis that the NCTL had lacked jurisdiction to investigate and make findings against him. There was no adjudication as to whether the allegations were true or not. Andrews J did conclude that the Claimant's other grounds of appeal (some of which challenged the factual findings of the NCTL) had no substance. Legally, however, following the quashing of the decision, those findings no longer have any legal status. He has no way to challenge those findings: in law, they no longer exist (hence, no question of collateral attack arises).
The Claimant has therefore not been able to challenge the truth or falsity of the allegations that were the subject of the NCTL findings by either route.
i) A significant aspect was that it would be disproportionate to hold the First Claimant responsible only for a statement made by the Second Defendant.
ii) As I read [91], part of the reasoning of the Judge for this conclusion was that the Claimant also had a claim against the Second Defendant that remained after he had dismissed the claim against the First Defendant.
iii) The claim against the First Defendant was in relation to the whole of the article. The Judge had found that, for the publication of fifteen of the sixteen paragraphs, the First Defendant had an unassailable defence (reporting privilege and, insofar as it was necessary, honest opinion). The additional element of the claim against the First Defendant that arose from paragraph [15] had to be seen in the context of the totality of the publication for which it was responsible and the defamatory sting it would convey. The Second Defendant, however, was not responsible for the publication of the first thirteen paragraphs of the article, but only the last three. The Second Defendant had chosen to make a statement, which it knew was liable to be published in The Chronicle and which has been found, on its own, to be capable of bearing a defamatory factual meaning against the Claimant. There is nothing unreasonable, or abusive, in the Second Defendant having to account for its own actions in making a statement about the Claimant for publication.
i) the Claimant would have a judgment which he could use on any occasion in the future when he is confronted with the original allegations, perhaps, as he suggests, when applying for a job;
ii) the proceedings might well be reported in media local to the Claimant, potentially counteracting the earlier publicity which he considers has been damaging to his reputation; and
iii) the First Defendant might, in light of the judgment in the Claimant's favour, make an editorial decision to remove the article. If it did not, the Claimant might be able to pursue other avenues of redress against that refusal, e.g. redress under data protection laws or a complaint to IPSO, the newspaper's regulator. I make no comment about the viability of these options, but it cannot be said that these are fanciful or are unavailable in the event of a defence of truth being rejected after trial.
"… Mr Alsaifi's claim has not even got to the stage of a defence being filed. I do not know, at this stage, whether the Second Respondent will defend the proceedings; and even if so, on what basis. I do not know the parameters of the likely litigation or its projected cost. Mr Alsaifi is currently acting in person, so the scale of his costs (when assessed as part of the overall costs of the 'game') will be very small indeed. As Warby J noted, this action like all other actions will be the subject of costs budgeting. I cannot say, at this stage, that it would be impossible to fashion a way of dealing with this case in a manner that is proportionate."
Precisely the same can be said about this claim.
Note 1 “The proceedings were a nullity; the panel had no power make any findings about the appellant's conduct, or to recommend a Prohibition Order in this case, and the Secretary of State had no power to make one.” [2016] EWHC 1519 (Admin) [100] per Andrews J [Back]