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Article Story:
MORE LIGHT SHED ON REYNOLDS' DEFENCE IN FIRST INSURANCE
INDUSTRY LIBEL TRIAL
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Date: 01/5/2002
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ENGLISH & OTHERS -V-
THE INSURANCE INSIDER & OTHER
MR JUSTICE GRAY; QBD –
31 JANUARY 2002
The Proceedings
In what is thought to be the first libel trial concerning the
activities of the London insurance market, Gray J set out with his
customary clarity more guidance as to how the courts will apply the
ten-point test set out by Lord Nichols in Reynolds v Times
Newspapers [2001] 2 AC p.24.
The case concerned allegations of impropriety made against two
claimants who were well known and established members of the
insurance community. They were managing director and a property
underwriter respectively at an international underwriting firm,
Trenwick International at the time of the events giving rise to the
allegations. Trenwick and the claimants were the subject of
allegations that they were unlawfully interfering with the contract
of a third party, and diverting business from that third party to
companies in which they had an undisclosed interest. The claimants
sued when those allegations were published both in the October 2000
edition of The Insurance Insider, and on
its website.
The allegations were contained in legal papers (including a
draft Particulars of Claim and draft Opinion of Counsel) which had
been leaked anonymously to the offices of The Insurance
Insider. However, there was little doubt in the mind
of the judge, or the parties, that the documents had been supplied
by the individual making the allegations with a view to putting
pressure on Trenwick and the claimants to settle their legal
claim.
The Defence
The statutory privilege given by Section 15 of the 1996
Defamation Act was initially relied on, but had effectively been
abandoned by the time of the trial because the defendants accepted
that the article was based at least in part on documents other than
the Particulars of Claim, namely a document required by law to be
open to public inspection.
The principal defence relied on by the defendants was the common
law defence of privilege as established in Reynolds; namely
that the information was of sufficient public interest to give rise
to a duty on the part of the defendants to publish contents of the
article, and a reciprocal right on the part of its readers to know
that information.
The Judgment
Gray J set the legal scene by reciting the tests set out in
Reynolds, namely 'whether the defendant can establish that
he was under a duty to publish the material in question and that
those to whom the material was disseminated have reciprocal
interest in receiving that material'. Gray J also quoted the
restatement of this test by Lord Philips (the Master of the Rolls)
in Loutchansky v Times Newspapers Limited [2001] EWCA Civ
1805:-
'Once Reynolds privilege is recognised, as it should be, as
a different jurisprudential creature from the traditional form of
privilege from which it sprang, the particular nature of the
'interest' and 'duty' which underlie it can more easily be
understood. The interest is that of the public in a modern
democracy and free expression and, more particularly, in the
promotion of a free and vigorous press to keep the public informed.
The vital importance of this interest has been identified and
emphasised time and again in recent cases and needs no restatement
here. The corresponding duty on the journalist (and equally his
editor) is to play his proper role in discharging that function.
His task is to behave as a responsible journalist. He can have no
duty to publish unless he is acting responsibly anymore than the
public has an interest in reading whatever may be published
irresponsibly. That is why in this class of case the question of
whether the publisher has behaved responsibly is necessarily an
intimately bound with the question whether the defence of Qualified
Privilege arises. Unless the publisher is acting responsibly
privilege cannot arise.'
After considering the authorities Mr Justice Gray summed up the
effect of the authorities as follows:-
'A conclusion that the journalist departed from the
standards of responsibility to be expected of him will invariably
be fatal to the defence of privilege, because (as was pointed out
in Loutchansky) it cannot be said to have been in
the public interest to publish in circumstances where the publisher
has not acted responsibly.'
Mr Justice Gray then addressed two cases relied on by the
defendants. The first was Al Fagih v HH Saudi Research &
Marketing Limited [2001] EWCA Civ 1634, in which the Court of
Appeal held, by a majority, that privilege was available despite
the failure of the newspaper to approach the claimant for his
comments before publication. It was common ground in this action
that Mr Hastie had approached neither of the claimants before
publishing the article.
Distinguishing Al Fagih because 'the defendant
newspaper had for some weeks been reporting what was in effect a
slanging match between two members of a dissident Saudi Arabian
political organization', Gray J went on to warn that the court
should hesitate before upholding this type of privilege where the
journalist was exercising a reporting function. He noted that Lord
Bingham had emphasised the distinction between the roles of a
reporter and investigator in McCartan Turkington Breen v Times
Newspapers Limited [2001] 2 AC 277 at paragraph 2. Lord Bingham
had addressed the statutory provisions of Schedule 1 to the 1966
Defamation Act, which confers privilege on statements 'subject
to explanation or contradiction'. Gray J commented that 'the
court should be reluctant to hold that common law privileges
available to the publication on the ground that it constitutes
reportage in circumstances where so to hold would confer greater
protection on the publisher than Parliament has deemed
appropriate.'
Gray J also distinguished Thoma v Luxembourg [European
Court of Human Rights, 29 March 2001, unreported], finding that it
was 'on its facts distinguishable from the present case in
several respects'.
The Ten-Point Reynolds Test
Gray J went on to recite the ten-point test set out by Lord
Nichols in Reynolds, and then noted the findings of the
jury, who found that on six of the seven disputed steps which Mr
Hastie claimed to have taken to check the contents of the article,
the jury had rejected the defendant's evidence, and found that
those steps had not been taken. These included alleged visits to
the Royal Courts of Justice and to Companies House.
Gray J went on to review the evidence according to the ten
criteria set out in Reynolds:-
1. The seriousness of the allegations
Gray J put forward his own view that the article suggested that
there was reasonable grounds for suspecting that the claimants were
guilty of the conduct alleged. He concluded however that the
allegations were serious, because The insurance industry depends on
trust, and reputation for integrity are therefore vital.
2. The nature of the information and the extent to which
the subject matter is a matter of public concern
Gray J considered that the allegations qualified as information
of legitimate concern to the readers of The Insurance
Insider with the caveat that 'the fact that the
article consisted of such allegations may increase the importance
of verifying them before publication'.
3. The reliability and motivation of the sources of
information
Although the documents were provided anonymously the parties
were at one in concluding that the source was likely to be the
aggrieved broker who made the allegations in the documents.
Although that individual was likely to have direct knowledge of the
information, Gray J concluded that there were 'powerful
reasons' why the editor 'should have doubted the
reliability of this source, since that source clearly had an axe to
grind'. The leaking of the papers rather than pursuing the
claim through the courts in the ordinary way constituted 'good
reason for doubting the reliability of the information provided and
the fore caution about the motivation of those presumed to have
provided it'.
4. The steps taken to verify the
information
The defendant editor did very little to verify the allegations
despite their obvious seriousness. Gray J concluded that there was
'good reason for doubting the reliability of the information
provided and therefore caution about the motivation of those
presumed to have provided it'. He went through the steps and that
the defendant editor claimed to have taken which were not contested
by the defendants, one of which put the editor on notice that the
allegations were unlikely to be true.
Other steps which the defendant editor claimed to have taken,
such as a visit to the Royal Courts of Justice and to Companies
House, were rejected by the jury. Gray J concluded:-
'In the light of Mr Hastie's own evidence in the answers
given by the jury to the questions asked of them, I am bound to
conclude that Mr Hastie did not take the steps to verify the
allegations against the claimants which was encumbered on him, as a
responsible journalist, to take.'
5. The status of the information
'The status of the information was that it consisted in
allegations made in Particulars of Claim and in a solicitor's
letter, none of which had been tested in court or otherwise
investigated.'
6. The urgency of the matter
Gray J considered that there was no real urgency, and the
article could have been held over to the next issue.
7. Whether comment was sought from the
claimants
It was accepted by the defendants that no comment was sought
from either claimant. Gray J observed that it was clear both from
Reynolds, Al Fagih and GKR Karate that a
failure to seek the claimants' comments was not fatal to have
gained Qualified Privilege. However Gray J clearly thought it
important in this case, and concluded that the defendant editor's
attempts, 'such as they were, to obtain comments from the
Claimants appear to me to have been wholly inadequate'.
8. Whether the article contains the claimants' side of
the story
Apart from the observation that one of the claimants was 'an
honourable man with Christian convictions' and a response from
the claimants' employers by their solicitors (contained in the
leaked legal documentation) a legitimate basis for one of the steps
complained of, 'the article contained nothing by way of answer
to or comment from the claimants upon the allegations of diversion
of funds. That was another failure of responsible
journalism.'
9. The tone of the article
Apart from the extent to which the jury's verdict indicated that
the article adopted the allegations it reported, Gray J found
'nothing objectionable about the tone of the article in the
sense there was anything sensational about it'.
10. Other circumstances
'Neither side has suggested that there are any other
criticisms to be taken into account.
Conclusion
Inevitably therefore Gray J concluded that the claim of
Qualified Privilege was not made out. Gray J summarises his
conclusions as follows:-
'The allegations were serious, albeit they did not impute
guilt on the part of the Claimants of the misconduct mentioned in
the article. I accept that the article raised issues of some public
concern. Even so it was incumbent on Mr Hastie, as a responsible
journalist, to proceed cautiously before publishing such
allegations because it should, objectively speaking, have been
apparent to him that the allegations emanated from someone with an
agenda of his own. Yet, accordingly the jury's answers, the
allegations were published with barely any attempt having been made
to verify them or seek comments from the claimant about them. The
article said nothing of the claimants' side of the story that they
had, or were suspected of having, surreptitiously diverted funds to
companies in which they or their associates had a beneficial
interest.'
The jury awarded £10,000 each to the claimants, which probably
reflected the modest extent of publication of the offending article
(about 1,500 recipients in all). It probably also reflected the
view expressed by the judge in his judgment (and hinted at by him
to the jury) that the article in effect meant that there were
reasonable grounds to suspect the claimants of the wrongdoing which
was the subject of the allegations, rather than that they were
actually guilty of that wrongdoing.
The proper and rigorous standard of good journalism stipulated
by Gray J in his judgment can serve only to improve the quality of
journalism which the right of freedom of expression preserves. That
freedom is of little use if the quality of information which is
disseminated under its auspices is so poor that the public are
misinformed (rather than informed) because if its abuse.
The judgment indicates that instances such as GKR Karate
and Al Fagih, where a journalist has failed to contact the
subject of the article but still enjoys the protection of Qualified
Privilege will be rare. In particular, obtaining a (draft) Opinion
of Counsel will by no means constitute information of sufficient
'status' to absolve the journalist from making his own independent
enquiries.
Journalists will have to be careful even when engaging what is
commonly known as 'reportage', since even if in so doing
allegations are reported in an unadopted form, the other
disciplines which were set out by Lord Nichols in his judgment must
still be applied if a journalist is to benefit from the defence of
Qualified Privilege. In particular, Gray J sets an important
qualification on the apparent loosening of the terms of the
repetition rule comprised by the leading Court of Appeal judgment
in Al Fagih. The statutory provision for reporting such
public affairs provides protection for the subject of allegations
made in the public forum, which protection journalists will ignore
at their peril.
Jonathan Coad
This article was first published in The Entertainment Law
Review 2002, Issue 4.
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