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Article Story:
PRIVACY - ARTICLE 8. WHO NEEDS IT?
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Date:
01/8/2001
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THE HUMAN RIGHTS ACT
Since the arrival in the law of this country in October last
year of Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights in the
form of the Human Rights Act, there has been much speculation in
the trade and lay press about its potential impact on the law of
this country. Just in case the terms of Article 8 are not
indelibly imprinted on your mind, here they are :
(1) Everyone has the right to respect for his private and
family life, his home and his correspondence.
(2) There shall be no interference by a public authority
with the exercise of this right except such as is in accordance
with the law and is necessary in a democratic society in the
interests of national security, public safety or the economic
well-being of the country, for the prevention of disorder or crime,
for the protection of health or morals, or for the protection of
the rights and freedoms of others.
During the course of the Parliamentary debates on the Human
Rights Bill, Lord Irvine LC commented: 'I believe that the true
view is that the courts will be able to adapt and develop the
common law by relying on existing domestic principles in the laws
of trespass, nuisance, copyright, confidence and the like to
fashion a common law right of privacy.'
The jurisprudence of the ECHR indicates that 'private and family
life should be interpreted broadly to protect the privacy of the
individual concerning his sexual relations, orientation and
identity.' The right to be yourself, and live as such, free
from interference (at least by the state) in our private lives, is
a hard right for the courts to protect, since it is so vague.
But European experience suggests that it will be attempted
nonetheless, and the European Court of Human Rights jurisprudence
also establishes that the state will be subject to positive as well
as negative obligations. It means that not only must public
authorities not disclose private information, but they must also
not make laws which invade the privacy of the individual.
Whether the Human Rights Act introduces a law of privacy is still a
matter of debate. There is evidently a growing judicial view
that it has. However, on the face of it, it will not cover
media intrusion into the private lives of individuals (although
some have argued to the contrary), and that is the subject which
this paper addresses.
The UK courts responded initially to their Article 8 obligations
by further developing the law of confidence. This led
inevitably to the adoption by the courts of a right of privacy
which is not delimited to the requirements of the law of
confidence. Doubtless in the future, it will look to the
European (and possibly the United States) jurisdictions for
guidance.
The European Court of Human Rights appears to have decided that
there is already adequate protection for privacy in this
country. Two ECHR decisions have held that complaints of
media intrusion into the private lives of individuals were
inadmissible because the remedies provided by English Law were
adequate (Winer v United Kingdom [1986] 25 EHRR CD 154 and
Earl Spencer and Countess Spencer v United Kingdom [1998] 25
EHRR CD 105).
The analysis attempted in this article supports that view; hence
the title. The first purpose of this article is then to
review the present state of the UK law to see what protection it
historically gave to the individual who sought to protect his or
her privacy. This case law in turn should provide the basis
for future developments for which the introduction of Article 8 has
already proved a catalyst.
The second purpose of this article is to set out the recent case
law which has very much moved this area of law on, with Article 8
providing the guiding principle.
The third purpose of the Article is to examine what of the
pre-Article 8 authorities can be cited in support of claims for
damages in this new area of law.
CONFIDENCE & PRIVACY – THE OLD LAW
The Law of Confidence
The three elements required for a successful action for breach
of confidence were set out by McGarry J in Coco v A.N. Clark
(Engineering) [1969] RPC 41, 47, who said that the information
must '[firstly] have the necessary quality of confidence about
it. Secondly, that information must have been communicated in
circumstances importing an obligation of confidence. Thirdly, there
must be unauthorised use of the information to the detriment of the
party communicating it.'
It is a moot point whether the element of detriment is
necessary, and the better view is that it is not. If it is,
then I believe it should be presumed in favour of the claimant,
rather as damage is presumed in favour of the claimant in
libel.
Some of the types of information which the courts have
considered bear the necessary quality of confidence include:
Unpublished etchings and photographs: Prince Albert v
Strange (1849) 1 Mac & G 25 and Pollard v Photographic
Co (1888) 40 Ch D 345; Marital confidences: Duchess of v
Duke of Argyll [1967] Ch 302; Details of a lesbian
relationship: Stephens v Avery [1988] 1 Ch 449.
One of the hurdles which will need to be removed, or at least
lowered, to allow a fully fledged right of privacy, is the
stipulation in the law of confidence that the information concerned
must have been imparted or received by the defendant in
circumstances where it is clearly intended to be
confidential. However, Megarry J said in Coco v Clark
at 48:
'It seems to me that if the circumstances are such that any
reasonable man standing in the shoes of the recipient of the
information would have realised that upon reasonable grounds the
information was being given to him in confidence, then this should
suffice to impose upon him the equitable obligation of
confidence.'
Notice that information which is confidential sufficient to
establish an obligation of confidence may be given in a wide
variety of ways. Information obtained (such as a photograph
taken) by a person after entering private property without
permission will be treated as having been received in confidence,
particularly where there are signs indicating that entry is not
permitted: Shelley Films v Rex Features [1994] EMLR
134. Restrictions on access to an otherwise public area may
constitute notice that the information it contains is confidential:
Creation Records v News Group Newspapers [1997] EMLR
444.
Telephone conversations are confidential and an unauthorised
tapper will be fixed with an obligation of confidence: Francome
v Mirror Group Newspapers [1984] 2 All ER 408. Where
confidential information is obtained by a trick (Lord Ashburton
v Pape [1913] 2 Ch 469) or received by mistake (English
& American Insurance v Herbert Smith [1988] FSR 232) the
recipient will be bound by a duty of confidence. Swinfen Eady
LJ said in Lord Ashburton v Pape:
'The principle upon which the Court of Chancery has acted for
many years has been to restrain the publication of information
improperly or surreptitiously obtained or of information imparted
in confidence which ought not to be divulged.'
However Laws J moved matters on considerably in Hellewell v
Chief Constable of Derbyshire [1995] 1 WLR 804, 807 when he
made the following obiter observation :
'If someone with a telephoto lens were to take from a distance
and with no authority a picture of another engaged in some private
act, his subsequent disclosure of the photograph would, in my
judgment, as surely amount to a breach of confidence as if he had
found or stolen a diary in which the act was recounted and
proceeded to publish it.'
Our European colleagues would unhesitatingly identify the
proposition put forward by Laws J as an attempt to protect the
privacy of an individual. Bound, doubtless, by the shackles
of our historical disaffinity with a broad protection of privacy in
English jurisprudence, and respecting the gentle pace at which the
common law normally proceeds, Laws J based his sage and appropriate
concern to protect victims of the telephoto lens on the
well-established terms of the law of confidence. What then
has been the attitude of the judiciary to the proposition that it
should protect the privacy of the individual whether or not that
protection falls within the limited (though burgeoning) terms of
the law of confidence?
The noes – there never was a right of Privacy
The existence of a right of privacy under United Kingdom law was
in effect rejected in Kaye v Robertson [1991] FSR 62, 66;
although, importantly, breach of confidence was not argued in that
case:
'It is well known that in English law there is no right to
privacy, and accordingly there is no right of action for breach of
a person's privacy' (Glidewell LJ)
Bingham LJ observed at p 70:
'This case ... highlights, yet again, the failure of both
the common law of England and statute to protect in an effective
way the personal privacy of individual citizens... If ever a person
has a right to be let alone by strangers with no public interest to
pursue, it must surely be when he lies in hospital recovering from
brain surgery and in no more than partial command of his
faculties. It is this invasion of his privacy which underlies
the plaintiff's complaint. Yet it alone, however gross, does
not entitle him to relief in English law.'
Lord Nicholls of Birkenhead observed in R v Khan [1997]
AC 558, 583-3:
'... the appellant contended for a right of privacy in
respect of private conversations in private houses. I prefer
to express no view, either way, on the existence of such a
right. This right, if it exists, can only do so as part of a
larger and wider right of privacy. The difficulties attendant
on this controversial subject are well known. Equally well known is
the continuing, widespread concern at the apparent failure of the
law to give individuals a reasonable degree of protection from
unwarranted intrusion in many situations. I prefer to leave
open for another occasion the important question of whether the
present, piecemeal protection of privacy has now developed to the
extent that a more comprehensive principle can be seen to
exist.'
The ayes – we always had one
Since, according to these judgments, Gordon Kaye did not appear
to have a basic right of privacy that the court could protect when
photographed in his hospital bed, the problems identified by
Leggatt LJ in Kaye v Robertson [1991] F.S.R. 62 have served
as something of a clarion call to the craftsmen of the common law
(although, perhaps surprisingly, breach of confidence was not
pleaded in Kaye). However the concept that a British citizen
enjoys some right of privacy goes back further in the common law
than you might think.
Although the issue before the court was one of trespass, some of
the Law Lords in Morris v Beardmore ([1980] 2 All ER 753)
recognised at least a species of a right of privacy in the British
Citizen to privacy over 20 years ago. Edmund-Davies LJ quoted
Cumming-Bruce LJ (at first instance) as follows:
'Nothing that has fallen from me should be interpreted to
suggest that it is the view of this court that, if in the case of
pursuit of suspected person, or pursuit of a person who is
reasonably suspected by the Police of being an appropriate subject
to a breathalyser test, the Police do infringe the strict rights of
privacy of the subject, such infringement is necessarily to be
regarded as oppressive.'
Edmund-Davies LJ went on to conclude that to reject the appeal
before him 'would entitle a constable who, in deliberate violation
of a householder's rights, forcibly invades his privacy ...'.
Lord Keith recognised that the statutory provision at issue
'authorised serious invasions of an individual citizen's right to
liberty and personal privacy ...' He went on to say: 'There are
no grounds for extending the scope of the invasion of privacy
authorised by [that section] beyond the strict terms of what is
enacted.'
Lord Scarman gave us one of his reasons for allowing the appeal
as follows:
'I have described the right of privacy as
'fundamental'. I do so for two reasons. The first
is apt to describe the importance attached by common law to the
privacy of the home ... second, the writer enjoys the protection of
the European Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and
Fundamental Freedoms ... which the United Kingdom has ratified and
under which the United Kingdom permits to those within its
jurisdiction the individual right of petition: see Arts. 8 and
25.'
Lord Roskill commented as follows:
'My Lords, the appellant's submissions rest on an attractive
foundation, namely, the right of the ordinary citizen not to have
his property, and thus his privacy, invaded against his will, save
where such invasion is directly authorised by law.'
An attempt was made in Khorasandjian v Bush [1993] QB 276
by the Court of Appeal to develop private nuisance to in effect
provide a limited protection against harassment. There has
also been extra judicial encouragement from no less than the Lord
Chief Justice, who in an influential speech said:
'Should there be a law to protect rights of personal
privacy? To a very large extent the law already does protect
personal privacy, but to the extent that it does not, it
should. The right must be narrowly drawn, to give full effect
to the right of free speech and the public's right to know.
It should strike only at significant infringements, such as would
cause substantial distress to an ordinary phlegmatic person.
My preference would be for legislation, which would mean that the
rules which the court applied would carry the imprimatur of
democratic approval. But if, for whatever reason, legislation is
not forthcoming, I think it almost inevitable that cases will arise
in the courts in which the need to give relief is obvious and
pressing; and when such cases do arise, I do not think the courts
will be found wanting.'
The foundation of an English law of privacy might be said to
have been laid in the Judgment of Lord Keith in Attorney General
v Guardian Newspapers [1990] 1 AC 109 at 255; Lord Keith said
that:
'Breach of Confidence involves no more than an invasion of
privacy.'
A NEW LAW OF PRIVACY?
Douglas & Others v Hello!
The most recent high profile cases have gone a long way to
recognizing a right to privacy in English law concerned injunctions
sought against the media to protect privacy. However, the
circumstances which gave rise to the actions could hardly be more
different. In Douglas and Others v Hello! Limited
[2001] EMLR 9 Michael Douglas and Catherine Zeta-Jones sought to
protect their privacy by preventing publication of unauthorized
photographs of their wedding. In that case the interim
injunctions were refused on the 'balance of convenience' test.
The Court of Appeal accepted that the courts must now take into
account the right to respect for private and family life under
Article 8 when interpreting the common law and the law of
confidence, and accordingly protect the privacy of the
individual. The court drew back from recognizing a full blown
right to privacy because it felt able to provide sufficient
protection by means of the law of confidence. Lord Justice
Brooke said:
'I do not consider their privacy-based case, as distinct
from their confidentiality-based case adds very much.'
However, Sedley LJ considered that it was powerfully arguable
that there was now a right of privacy in English law, observing
some of the antecedents of the case which I have set out above.
It seems then that the safest way to frame claims for invasion
of privacy is still to characterize them at least in the
alternative as a breach of confidence. The effect is that the
element previously required in the law of confidence that the
information was imparted in circumstances of confidence has now
fallen away. A confidential relationship can now be
'imputed'. Lord Justice Sedley observed:
'The law no longer needs to construct an artificial
relationship of confidentiality between the intruder and the
victim: it can recognize privacy itself as a legal principle drawn
from the fundamental value of personal autonomy.'
Venables & Another v News Group
The other action was brought by the killers of Jamie Bulger
which prevents publication of information that would permit their
identification on their release. In Venables and Another v
News Group Newspapers [2001] EMLR 10 they were granted
injunctions against the whole world to prevent publication of what
the court regarded as confidential information.
Although the case was ostensibly decided on the basis of
privacy/confidentiality, the significant risk of attacks on the
claimants clearly weighed heavily in the mind of the judge, who
indicated that if the only threat had been to 'respect for private
life', the injunction might not have been granted. The
decisive factor appears to have been the real and serious risk
faced by the claimants of their right to life being infringed
(Article 2) and degrading and inhuman treatment (Article 3).
The test applied by the judge was of a 'real possibility of
significant harm'. The possibility therefore of other
applicants for this relief which the general public would regard as
entirely unworthy (such as paedophiles or sex abusers) will make
the application of this precedent very difficult.
It is arguable therefore whether the latter case has truly
advanced the law of privacy. However, other unreported cases
indicate that the momentum of this new jurisdiction is unstoppable,
and since (for example) the press has at least adopted the pretence
in the Press Complaints Commission code of respecting private life,
then adoption by the courts of the principle which the press has
conceded seems merely to be part of the process whereby law is
formed out of principles which right-thinking members of the public
think should have some legal force.
More Recent Case Law
The most recent case law however appears to indicate a greater
willingness on the part of the courts of this country to step in to
protect the privacy of the individual. In a recent unreported
judgment of Eady J (28 June – Queen's Bench Division) he affirmed
an injunction awarded against MGN Limited on the eve of publication
by the Sunday People of photographs of the home of
David and Victoria Beckham. The injunction restrained NGM
'from publishing in any manner any photographs, or the
information contained in any photographs, of the claimants' house …
including its rooms, garden, swimming pool and out-buildings, save
for:
(1) photographs taken from outside the boundaries of the
property.
(2) photographs or information which are or is in the public
domain.
(3) [disclosure for legal reasons].'
In a similar application brought by Heather Mills (Paul
McCartney's fiancée) against News Group Newspapers (Chancery
Division, 4 June 2001) Ms Mills was only unsuccessful largely
because Mr Justice Lawrence Collins observed that The
Sun's editor (Mr Yelland) had consistently adopted the
position 'that he will not identify the house in The
Sun unless the material becomes public through being
published in other newspapers'.
In both these cases there was the additional, although
exceedingly common element of a genuine physical threat to the
claimants. This brings together to some extent the principles
adopted by the courts in the Hello case,
and the action brought on behalf of Thompson and Venables.
Harassment by Publication?
In Esther Thomas v News Group Newspapers (Unreported –
Court of Appeal, 18 July 2001) the Court of Appeal refused to
strike out the claimant's cause of action based on the Protection
from the Harassment Act 1997. This legislation was enacted
principally to protect people against stalkers. However, the
Act was drafted to cover a wider set of circumstances than the
phenomenon of stalking, and there has been some debate as to how
wide a set of activities will be caught by the criminal
offence.
The media was concerned that the Act might affect the
news-gathering activities of journalists. This is because by
virtue of section 1, a person must not pursue a course of conduct
which amounts to harassment of another, and which that person knows
(or ought to know) amounts to harassment of another. The test
as to whether the harasser ought to know whether his conduct
amounts to harassment is determined by asking whether a reasonable
person in possession of the information he has would think the
conduct amounted to harassment. It is clear from section 1(2)
that 'conduct' includes speech, although there must be at least two
instances of the conduct at issue. Harassment is both a
criminal offence and actionable in the civil courts.
In an action brought by someone described in The
Sun as a 'black clerk', the subject of that article
brought an action against News Group the publishers of
The Sun, amongst other things, on the
basis that the description of her as a 'black clerk' which caused a
number of letters to be written by readers of The
Sun amounted to harassment under the Act.
The Sun published a number of guilty
readers letters, and were therefore vitriolic of a court of
conduct. She alleged that she was a victim of hate mail as a
result of the Sun articles, and since her name and place of work
were published by The Sun, this amounted
to both racism and harassment.
When an application by News Group to strike the action out
failed, it went to the Court of Appeal, which held that despite the
article 10 principle of freedom of speech, the action by the
claimant did have a reasonable prospect of success, and should not
therefore be struck out or dismissed.
It was not anticipated that the Protection from Harassment Act
would be applied to publications by the media, but this judgment
clearly indicates that in appropriate circumstances the Act can be
invoked against the media where publication gives rise to
'harassment'. However, this claim could either be added to or
used as an alternative to one under Wilkinson v Downton (see
below) since the underlying principles are clearly related.
It seems then that where someone's right to lead an undisturbed
life is interfered with by the media by a series of obligations
which bring upon the claimant harassment and distress, this
legislation will provide protection.
DAMAGES IN PRIVACY
Wilkinson – v – Downton – the right to personal safety
What if the media entity publishes, or just threatens to
publish, private material about a vulnerable individual - say the
experiences of a stalking victim? What if that victim had a
well-founded fear of a revenge attack, which meant that the threat
to publish caused her to fear for her safety in the same way as a
victim of an assault? The answer from Esther Thomas v News
Group seems to be that if the publication takes place and there
is harassment, the statute aimed at stalkers themselves will give a
remedy in damages. The same Act should also provide
injunctive relief.
However, what if, as in one case I conducted, it was the
threat of publication, and the attendant physical danger,
which caused the psychological injury. The Protection from
Harassment Act may not provide a remedy. There may be a
common law solution to the problem. Alternatively, since it
is reported that Robert Thompson and John Venables are both fearful
(with good reason) of their identity/whereabouts being discovered,
and a possibly murderous revenge attack, what if a reporter made
contact with them and threatened to publish details of their
whereabouts? This would create in either or both of them a
very well-founded fear for their own safety, which might in turn
cause serious psychological injury. Again I believe the ever
flexible common law can provide an answer.
In those circumstances, where there is both real danger and that
fear has already caused severe distress to the claimant, the media
cannot say it is unaware of that individual's psychological
susceptibility, and if that individual suffers further severe
stress or trauma as a result should that individual not recover
damages? Surely the common law must be capable of providing a
remedy. The French have controversially brought in just such
a provision. I believe the common law here already does so by
means of this deliberate tort.
In Wilkinson v Downton [1897] 2 QB 57, the defendant, as
a practical joke, told the Plaintiff that her husband had been
injured returning from the races, and had suffered two broken
legs. The Plaintiff suffered 'vomiting and other more
serious physical consequences, at one time threatening her reason
and entailing weeks of suffering and incapacity ...' as a
result (i.e. a form of psychiatric injury) and sought damages for
(amongst other things) mental anguish and her consequent
illness.
The court found that the defendant meant the words to be acted
upon, that they were acted upon and that he knew the words to be
false. A sum of £l00 was awarded to compensate the Plaintiff
for her loss and damage. Mr Justice Wright held:
'The defendant has .... wilfully done an act calculated to
cause physical harm to the Plaintiff - that is to say, to infringe
her legal right to personal safety, and has in fact thereby caused
physical harm to her. That proposition without more appears
to me to state a good cause of action, there being no justification
alleged for the act. This wilful injuria is
in law malicious, although no malicious purpose to cause the harm
which was caused nor any motive of spite is imputed to the
defendant.'
This establishes that doing an act calculated (in the legal
sense of the word) to cause physical harm is actionable if physical
harm results. It seems then that the claimant must show that
the defendant's act would cause harm to a person of ordinary
firmness, and that the act caused the harm (and that it is not too
remote). According to the ordinary principles of law,
liability will attach even if the act would not affect a person of
ordinary sensibilities.
Wilkinson v Downton has been followed in only one English
decision: Janvier v Sweeny ([l919] 2 KB 316). In order
to gather information from the Plaintiff about some letters, a
private detective visited her and announced; 'I am a detective
inspector from Scotland Yard, and represent the military
authorities. You are the woman we want, as you have been
corresponding with a German spy.' The Plaintiff suffered
severe shock leading to physical incapacity from which she
recovered. Banks LJ was in no doubt that Wilkinson v Downton
was good law. Both of these actions included an element of
deceit - is that however a requirement of the tort? It seems
not.
The principle has been extended beyond false statements to
include threats (Khorasandjian v Bush ([1993] QB276) and
other conduct. In Bradley v Wingnut Films Limited
([1993] LNZLR 415) an injunction was granted to prevent (inter
alia) the intentional infliction of emotional distress on the
Plaintiff by a burial plot being shown as part of a comedy horror
film. Although the Plaintiff's claim was rejected on this
ground, the Judge proceeded on the basis that the film's depiction
of the cemetery plot constituted conduct sufficient to base a
Wilkinson v Downton action.
It appears that the defendant's act must be wilful; that is to
say either intentional or reckless. In Abramzik v
Brenner ([1976] 65 DLR) (2d) 651,654, Culliton CJC said:
'There can be no doubt that an action will lie for the
wilful infliction of shock, or a reckless disregard as to whether
or not shock will ensue from the actions committed.'
There appears to be some doubt as to the degree and nature of
intention required for this tort. The word used in the
original Wright J. Judgment is 'calculated'. The term cannot
be restricted to the normal meaning of the word 'intention' because
in Wilkinson v Downton the defendant's intention was not to
inflict physical harm/psychiatric damage. Academic opinion
and the caselaw suggest that the term means something between
'intended' and 'foreseeably likely'.
As usual for the law in this country, we must go West to observe
the future. So what do the Americans say?
The American perspective on the deliberate infliction of
harm
The equivalent principle to that in Wilkinson v Downton
in the United States of America is summarised in Section
46 of the Re-statement (Second) of
Torts. The tort is defined this: 'one who by
extreme or outrageous conduct intentionally or recklessly causes
severe emotional distress to another is subject to liability for
such emotional distress.... '
The tort has three elements: (a) the conduct must be extreme and
outrageous; (b) it must be intentional or reckless; (c) it must
cause severe emotional distress or bodily harm.
The key issue is the scope of activity covered by the
tort. It does not extend to 'mere insult, indignities,
threats, annoyances, petty oppressions or other trivialities.
The rough edges of our society are still in need of a good deal of
filing down, and in the meantime plaintiffs must necessarily be
expected and required to be hardened to a certain amount of rough
language, and to occasional acts that are definitely inconsiderate
and unkind...' There is only liability for conduct 'so
outrageous in character, and so extreme in degree, as to go beyond
all possible bounds of decency, and to be regarded as atrocious and
utterly intolerable in a civilised society.'
The American formulation of intention suffers from the same
Wilkinson v Downton ambiguity as regards precisely what must
have been intended, by simply stating that the relevant
conduct must have been intentional or reckless. In
Wilkinson v Downton it was held to be sufficient that the
defendant did an act which was 'calculated to cause physical
harm'. The judgment does not make it clear whether the court
found that the defendant foresaw/intended psychiatric injury (as
opposed to merely wishing to play a practical joke). If a
claimant in such a case does need to establish this degree of
intention, then this action (as any similar action) would face
almost insuperable evidential difficulties.
One authority indicates the view taken by the American courts
and these should point the way for us. In Rogers v Loes
L'Enfant Plaza Hotel ([1981] 526 F.Supp. 523 (US District
Court, District of Columbia)) the habitual sexual advances of the
Plaintiff to the defendant over a period of time were held so
outrageous as sufficient to allow a court to conclude that the
defendant intended to harm the Plaintiff. This is in line
with the attitude of the English Criminal Law to the issue of
intention. The 1967 Criminal Justice Act Section
8 allows a court to infer intention of a result 'by
reference to all the evidence'.
The last issue concerns what damage to the victim is recoverable
under the Wilkinson v Downton tort. In Wilkinson v
Downton itself the Plaintiff has clearly suffered physical
injury. The position in negligence is as follows:
'Damages are ... recoverable ... for any recognisable
psychiatric illness...' (Hinz v Berry [1970] 2 QB 40, 42 per
Lord Denning, MR)
It seems severe emotional distress falling short of actual
illnesses does fall however within this tort. It follows then
that the possible scope of Wilkinson v Downton (so far as
recoverable damage is concerned) is far wider than that in
negligence. This appears to have been the view of the Law
Commission in its report entitled 'Liability for
Psychiatric Illness'. The Law Commission comments in
a footnote:
'Damages for psychiatric illness caused by an intentional tort
appear to be available without special restriction (assuming that
the tort is one which protects against personal injury rather than,
e.g. economic loss.' In Wilkinson v Downton 'The
defendant, as a practical joke, deliberately and falsely told the
Plaintiff that her husband had been injured in a road
accident. The Plaintiff suffered severe shock and became
seriously ill. Wright J held that the Plaintiff was entitled
to recover in tort for the 'physical harm', in this case the
psychiatric illness, which she suffered as a result of the
defendant's wilful act.'
The American approach has been not to require proof of actual
physical injury where the tortious violation is intentional rather
than negligent. In State Rubbish Collectors Association v
Siliznoff ([1952] 24 p. 2nd-282 (Supreme Court of California))
the complaint was of emotional distress caused by threats.
While the Plaintiff vomited several times and had to stay away from
work for a few days, his main complaint was of continued emotional
distress.
I suggest that this is the correct approach in this
jurisdiction. This is surely more than the application of the
basic principles which we apply in the crime of assault.
Halsbury's defines assault as 'any
act committed intentionally or recklessly, which causes another
person to apprehend immediate and unlawful personal violence.'
If a newspaper intentionally exposes a victim of physical violence
to further physical violence by disclosing (or threatening to
expose) 'private' information about that individual, and that
individual suffers trauma as a result, then surely that newspaper
should be held liable. This should be subject of course to
the requirement for the free speech protection enshrined at Article
10 of the Convention and the public interest test which is a part
of that principle.
So far as the Press is concerned, the PCC Code helpfully sets
out the nonexclusive elements which have been agreed by the
media:
1. The public interest includes:-
(i) Detecting or exposing crime or a serious
misdemeanour.
(ii) Protecting public health and safety.
(iii) Preventing the public from being misled by some
statement or action of an individual or Organisation.
However, it is difficult to see the public interest in
re-inflicting on the victim of a crime the consequences of unlawful
acts, any more than a rape victim should suffer the public
humiliation of details of her sufferings being reported in the
national press.
The critical issue if the law is to develop is the one of
intention. The judgment in Wilkinson v Downton should
settle a matter. If the House of Lords had adopted a narrower
view of intention, then it would have accepted that Mr Downton's
'intention' was to conduct a practical joke (albeit a poor and a
cruel one). If he had been asked whether he intended (using
the term in its lay sense) to cause psychiatric damage to the
subject to his practical joke, doubtless he would have said he did
not.
Perhaps in the decision there is the germ of the negligence
principle composed some 30 years later, since we might more readily
say that he owed Mrs Wilkinson a duty of care, which duty he
negligently breached causing her loss in the form of psychiatric
damage. However, no-one has suggested that Wilkinson v
Downton is not good law, and if the courts remain faithful to
the broad view of intention adopted by the House of Lords in
Wilkinson v Downton, then the scope for using it as a
protection for the privacy of vulnerable individuals in particular
is substantial.
2. Negligence
If the media writes about you, does it not owe you some duty of
care? It clearly does on any of the accepted tests. The
starting point is that seminal judgment of Lord Atkin in
Donoghue v Stevenson ([1932] A.C. 562):-
'The rule, you are to love your neighbour, becomes in law,
you must not injure your neighbour and the lawyer's question, who
is my neighbour? receives a restricted reply. You must take
reasonable care to avoid acts or omissions which you can reasonably
foresee would be likely to injure your neighbour. Who, then, in law
is my neighbour? The answer seems to be - persons who are so
closely and directly affected by my act that I ought reasonably to
have them in contemplation as being so affected when I am directing
my mind to the acts or omissions which are called into
question.'
Lord Atkin went on to divide the test into two elements.
The first was of reasonable foresight of the injury
concerned. The second was the principle that the duty was
limited to 'persons so closely and directly affected' by the
defendant's acts that they should be in his contemplation (the
neighbour principle).
This has now been distilled to the principle set out by Lord
Bridge in Caparo Industries Plc v Dickman ([1990] to W.L.R.
605 at pages 607 - 618):
'What emerges is that, in addition to the foreseeability of
damage, necessary ingredients in any situation giving rise to a
duty of care are that there should exist between the party owing
the duty and the party to whom it is owed a relationship
characterised by the law as one of 'proximity' or 'neighbourhood'
and that the situation should be one in which the court considers
it fair, just and reasonable that the law should impose a duty of a
given scope on one party for the benefit of the other.'
The law requires a duty of care, i.e. one in which the law
attaches liability to carelessness. As set out in Clerk &
Lindsell, 'There has to be recognition by law that the careless
infliction of the kind of damage in suit on the type of person to
which the Plaintiff belongs by the type of person to which the
defendant belongs is actionable.'
Wilkinson v Downton was of course decided long before
Donoghue v Stevenson, so why not sue in negligence? The first
question then is whether the media owe a duty to the subject of
intrusive reporting. Clearly they do, and the largely ignored
PCC Code constitutes evidence of what the proper standard should
be: the PCC Code provides the following protection for the
individual, which is supposed to set out the voluntary restriction
adopted by the media on intrusive reporting concerning an
individual:
3. Privacy
(i) Everyone is entitled to respect for his or her
private and family life, home, health and correspondence. A
publication will be expected to justify intrusions into any
individual's private life without consent.
(ii) The use of long lens photography to take pictures of
people in private places without their consent is
unacceptable.'
As to whether the media have acted carelessly, I think this is
realistically beyond challenge if the Code is broken.
However, one of the pre-conditions for recovery for psychiatric
injury is a recognisable psychiatric illness, a limitation which
the Wilkinson v Daunton action is free from:
'[T]he first hurdle which a plaintiff claiming damages of
the kind in question must surmount is to establish that he is
suffering, not merely grief, distress or any other normal emotion,
but a positive psychiatric illness.' per Lord Bridge in
McLoughlin v O'Brian [1983] 1 A.C. 410, 431.
Damages have been awarded for morbid depression and hysterical
personality disorder (Hinz v Berry [1970] Q.B. 40 and
post-traumatic stress disorder (Frost v Chief Constable of South
Yorkshire Police [1997] W.L.R. 1994). There are, I am
sure, many who have suffered intensely from Press intrusion,
although only a few would pass the present thresholds.
The claimant must also satisfy the test of reasonable
foreseeability. In the first English case to recognise a
cause of action for negligently inflicted psychiatric illness not
consequent on any physical impact (Dulieu v White & Sons
[1901] 2 K.B. 669), Kennedy J suggested that recovery should only
be available where the plaintiff's illness arose from a reasonable
fear of injury to herself. This limitation was rejected by
the Court of Appeal in Hambrook v Stokes [1925] 1 QB 141,
where a more liberal test was adopted. It follows then that
the two requirements for recovery for psychiatric illness in
negligence can be fulfilled where publication (or threatened
publication) places a victim of crime in fear of further
injury.
Essentially the test that applies to the restriction of
reporting of legal proceedings (contrary to the general principles
set out in Scott v Scott [1952] 2 All ER 890) was helpfully
set out by Dyson J in In Re D (unreported). Mr Justice Dyson
analysed the relevant case law, and concluded that where the
reporting of the proceedings before him placed the applicant for
protection at real risk either of significant physical or
psychological injury, then the media should not be permitted its
normal and proper liberty to report the proceedings. The test
should be applied to the media generally, and should it publish or
threaten to publish in circumstances where there is such danger,
and danger is caused, the media should be liable.
CONCLUSION
The media should of course be allowed a wide latitude to report
for the sake of all of us the events which impact on our
lives. The law of defamation rightly disincentivises the
media from publishing untrue material which damages an individual
or corporation, subject to certain defences (thus ensuring the
'free speech' we hear is of a certain quality), the developing law
of qualified privilege being in effect a public interest
defence. The law of privacy should strike the same balance
and, subject to the public interest, the private lives of
individuals (especially vulnerable individuals) should be
protected.
Just as the law of confidence appears to have excluded the need
for detriment on the part of a claimant and damage is presumed in
libel, so the individual's right of protection or their private
lives should not require proof of actual harm. However, if
the individual's private life is intruded upon and that individual
suffers loss, then he or she should be compensated; otherwise any
privacy law is toothless, and the media does not have a proper and
necessary incentive to abide by it.
The common law has the necessary building blocks to provide that
protection. I hope that the introduction of Article 8 will
continue serve as a catalyst to complete the process, and that the
courts will be stringent in requiring the media to invest its -
invariably superior - resources to prove public interest where it
considers such an interest exists, and to compensate properly those
whose lives it wrongly affects in carrying out its otherwise lawful
and democratic responsibilities.
Jonathan Coad
This article was first published in Entertainment Law Review
Issue 8 2001.
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