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KOJO TSIKATA v. NEWSPAPER PUBLISHING PLC [1996] EWCA Civ 618 (30th September, 1996)
IN
THE SUPREME COURT OF JUDICATURE
QBENF
94/1544/C
COURT
OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON
APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
QUEEN'S
BENCH DIVISION
(Mr.
J. Sumption QC)
Royal
Courts of Justice
Strand
London
WC2
Monday,
30th September 1996
B
e f o r e :
LORD
JUSTICE NEILL
LORD
JUSTICE WARD
LORD
JUSTICE THORPE
---------------
KOJO
TSIKATA
Plaintiff/
Appellant
-v-
NEWSPAPER
PUBLISHING PLC
Defendant/
Respondent
---------------
Handed
Down Judgment prepared by
Smith
Bernal Reporting Limited
180
Fleet Street London EC4A 2HD
Tel:
0171 831 3183 Fax: 0171 831 8838
(Official
Shorthand Writers to the Court)
---------------
MR.
M. TUGENDHAT QC
and
MR.
R. PARKES
(instructed by Messrs. Bindman & Partners, London NW1) appeared on behalf
of the Appellant Plaintiff.
MR.
S. KENTRIDGE QC
and
MR.
A. CALDECOTT QC
(instructed by Messrs. Oswald Hickson, Collier, London EC4) appeared on behalf
of the Respondent Defendant.
---------------
J
U D G M E N T
(As
Approved by the Court)
Crown
Copyright
Monday,
30th September 1996
LORD
JUSTICE NEILL:
Introduction
For
about eleven years between 1981 and 1992 the government in Ghana was a military
regime under the control of Flight Lieutenant Rawlings and the Provisional
National Defence Council (the PNDC). In 1992, however, it was announced in
Ghana that there was to be a referendum and that the referendum would be
followed by an election and a return to civilian rule. The election was due to
take place in November 1992.
In
the months leading up to the election there was speculation as to whether Mr.
Rawlings would be a candidate for the office of President in the new civilian
government.
On
18 June 1992 the Independent newspaper published, among a number of articles on
foreign affairs, an article about the forthcoming election under the heading
"Can populist Rawlings win the peoples' votes?" The article had the further
heading "Supporters of the Ghanaian military leader are preparing the ground
for a return to democracy, writes Karl Maier in Accra." In the latter part of
the article reference was made to the fact that many people wanted a change
from the military rule which Mr. Rawlings personified. The article continued:
"Ghanaians,
whose nation symbolised the hopes and dreams of African nationalism and
independence from Britain 35 years ago, are embarrassed at being ruled by the
military, especially one which, in Ghanaian terms, has been a fairly bloody
affair.
While
ordinary Ghanaians giggle at Flt. Lt. Rawlings' renowned populist touch, such
as working alongside farmers to bring in the harvest, his many opponents are
sure to evoke the memories of the scores of people, including three heads of
state, executed by his regime. After taking power for the second time Flt. Lt.
Rawlings and his PNDC set up Committees for defence of the revolution and a
system of public tribunals which the New York - based human rights group,
Africa Watch, has described as ´a mockery of justice'."
It
is the next paragraph in the article which forms the subject matter of the
present proceedings:
"In
June 1982, three High Court judges were kidnapped and executed at an army
shooting range. A special inquiry into the killings recommended the
prosecution of ten people, including Flt. Lt. Rawlings' close aide, Captain
(Retired) Kojo Tsikata, who was named as ´the master mind' of the plot.
Five people were prosecuted and executed, but not Captain Tsikata."
At
the time of the publication of the article Mr. Tsikata had responsibility
within the PNDC for foreign affairs and national security.
The
article and in particular the paragraph to which I have drawn attention came to
the notice of Mr. Tsikata. He instructed solicitors and on 26 March 1993 a
writ was issued against Newspaper Publishing Plc, the publishers of the
Independent. In paragraph 4 of the statement of claim, which was served on 8
April 1993, it was alleged that the words in the paragraph in which Mr. Tsikata
was named meant and were understood to mean in their natural and ordinary
meaning "that [Mr. Tsikata] had in June 1982 masterminded the kidnap and murder
of three High Court judges and that he had escaped being prosecuted and
executed for his crime".
On
11 June 1993 the publishers served their Defence. In paragraph 4 of the
Defence it was pleaded by way of admission that the words meant and were
understood to mean that a special inquiry to be set up by the government of
Ghana had named [Mr. Tsikata] as the mastermind behind a conspiracy to murder
three High Court judges and that the inquiry had accordingly recommended that
[Mr. Tsikata] be prosecuted. In paragraph 5, however, it was pleaded that the
words were published on an occasion of qualified privilege.
On
20 December 1993 it was ordered by Master Hodgson that, pursuant to RSC Order
33 rule 3, the following question or issue should be tried by a judge alone as
a preliminary issue:
"Whether
the words complained of herein were published on an occasion of qualified
privilege whether by virtue of the provisions of paragraph 5 of Part I of the
Schedule to the Defamation Act 1952 or at common law."
The
Events of 1982 and 1983
Before
coming to the decision of the judge on the trial of the preliminary issue it
will be convenient to say something about the events of 1982 and 1983.
On
30 June 1982 three Ghanaian High Court judges and a retired army officer were
abducted and murdered. At that time Mr. Tsikata was the head of national
security of the PNDC.
Following these
murders a law was passed (Law 15) establishing a Board to be known as the
Special Investigation Board (Kidnapping and Killing of Specified Persons) (the
S.I.B) in order to investigate the kidnapping and killing of the three High
Court judges and of Major Acquah, the retired army officer. Section 3 of Law
15 set out the functions of the S.I.B. Section 3(1) provided:
"It
shall be the duty of the Board -
(a)
to investigate the kidnapping and killing of [the three judges and the army
officer who were named];
(b)
to investigate any other matter which appears to the Board to be reasonably
related to the foregoing; and
(c)
to submit its findings to the Attorney General for necessary action to be taken
thereon."
By
section 5(1) of Law 15 it was provided that the proceedings of the Board should
be in public but where the Board deemed it necessary in the national interests
it might sit in camera. The Law was signed by Mr. Rawlings as chairman of the
PNDC.
In
due course five members were appointed to the S.I.B. under the chairmanship of
Mr. Justice Crabbe. During the next few months the S.I.B. heard sixty
witnesses including Mr. Tsikata and Mr. Amartey Kwei, a former member of the
PNDC. On 5 November 1982 the Board presented an Interim Report to the Attorney
General, and on 30 March 1983 the Final Report was submitted.
The
Final Report included a summary of the Board's findings and recommendations. I
should refer to some of the paragraphs in the summary which contained cross
references to the paragraphs in the Report itself.
"21.
Having regard to the whole evidence, it is clear that the plan to kidnap and to
kill the four specified persons was masterminded by Captain Tsikata. (paragraph
292).
22.
Accordingly, it is recommended that Captain Tsikata should be arrested
immediately and placed in custody to await trial. (paragraph 293).
.....................
29.
On the evidence as a whole, it is clear that Captain Tsikata ... , Sgt. Alolga
Akata-Pore and Joachim Amartey Kwei ... were all implicated in the conspiracy
to kidnap the three judges and the retired army major. Indeed Amartey Kwei
described Captain Tsikata ... as ´the architect of the plot'. (paragraph
340)."
In
May 1983, after studying the report Mr. G.E.K. Aikins, the Attorney General and
the PNDC Secretary for Justice, prepared a document setting out his comments on
the S.I.B. report. In paragraph 3 of these comments the Attorney General
referred to the final report of the S.I.B.:
"In
that report the Board confirmed its adverse findings against [four named
individuals] and recommended that they should be prosecuted for conspiracy to
commit murder and the murder of the three High Court judges and the retired
army officer. The Board also recommended that J. Amartey Kwei should be
prosecuted for conspiring with the four suspects mentioned above to commit
murder. In addition the Board recommended that five other persons should also
be prosecuted for their part in joining the conspiracy with the criminal
purpose of killing the four victims. The five suspects are [four named
individuals] and Captain Kojo Tsikata (Rtd.)."
In
the following paragraphs of the comments the Attorney General stated his view
that there was evidence to support the charge of conspiracy to commit murder
against some of the individuals named in the Board's Report and the charge of
murder against others. In paragraph 7 he rejected the opinion that had been
expressed by the Bar Association that the Attorney General was obliged to
prosecute the whole of the findings of the Board and leave it to the court to
judge on the sufficiency or otherwise of the evidence against the accused. He
stated in paragraph 11 that the SIB was primarily an investigation board and
that, even if Law 15 had stated (which it did not) that the findings of the SIB
should be prima facie evidence of the facts found, the Attorney General still
had a discretion as to whether or not a person named should be put before the
court.
In
paragraph 19 of his comments the Attorney General dealt specifically with the
case of Mr. Tsikata. He said:
"In
connection with Captain Kojo Tsikata, to whom the Board devotes a substantial
part of its report, the finding of the Board that he was the ´mastermind'
of the whole affair is extremely difficult to reconcile with the detailed
evidence before the Board, which the Board accepted, of preparations undertaken
by Amartey Kwei independently of Captain Tsikata, and long before Amartey Kwei
claims that he was briefed by Captain Tsikata on 30 June 1982. Even leaving
aside Captain Tsikata's vehement denials and the evidence of two witnesses ...
which tended to indicate that Captain Tsikata was at the Castle at the critical
time when he was supposed to have been with Amartey Kwei, it is clear that
Amartey Kwei, whom the Board described as ´the hub of the conspiracy',
gave a number of inconsistent statements and that his story was not confirmed
by L/Cpl. Amedeka or indeed any other persons involved in the events of 30 June
1982. If Captain Tsikata were to be prosecuted, the State would have to rely
wholly on the evidence of Amartey Kwei, who is himself regarded as a key
participant in the offence charged. A part of Amartey Kwei's evidence, which
the Board considered critical, namely the part concerning a note allegedly sent
by Captain Tsikata through Amartey Kwei to Amedeka where Amartey Kwei claims
that he was told by Amedeka that the contents of the note contained a coded
message instructing the killings, would even be inadmissible third-hand hearsay."
The
Attorney General then examined what he described as the inconsistencies in Mr.
Amartey Kwei's statements. He concluded:
"71.
With all these inconsistencies in his statements it will be difficult to use
Amartey Kwei as a credible witness against Captain Tsikata. Moreover the only
material witness L/Cpl. Amedeka who could connect Captain Tsikata to the crime
of conspiracy to commit murder has denied ever obtaining any note from Amartey
Kwei and most of the allegations made by Amartey Kwei against Captain Tsikata
have been denied by L/Cpl. Amedeka.
72.
What is more the evidence of Amartey Kwei taken in its entirety cannot even
implicate Captain Tsikata in the crime of conspiracy to kidnap much more to
commit murder.
73.
I am unable to find on record any other strong corroborative evidence which
will enable the prosecution to sustain a case to answer against Captain Tsikata
at the close of the case for the prosecution when they are charged together.
Even if Captain Tsikata is charged separately the evidence of Lance Corporal
Amedeka will neutralise the little effect Amartey Kwei's evidence may have on
the case against Captain Kojo Tsikata."
On
or about 31 May 1983 the Attorney General held a press conference at which he
released to the public the S.I.B.'s final report as well as his own written
comments on the report. Both the S.I.B's report and the Attorney General's
comments were reported in the Ghanaian press during the course of the next few
days.
Mr.
Amartey Kwei, L/Cpl. Amadeka and three other persons were subsequently
prosecuted for conspiracy to murder the three High Court judges and the retired
army officer. The accused, other than Mr. Kwei, were also charged with murder.
The trial took place before a Public Tribunal. At the conclusion of the trial
all five accused were found guilty of the charges alleged against them and were
sentenced to death. Lance Corporal Amadeka was not present at the trial as he
had evaded arrest.
The
trial was held in public. Mr. Tsikata gave evidence for the prosecution. In
the course of his evidence Mr. Tsikata denied having ordered Mr. Kwei to commit
the murders. Mr. Kwei was invited by the Tribunal to cross examine Mr.
Tsikata to challenge this evidence, but he declined to do so. Later, however,
he made an unsworn statement from the dock, in the course of which he repeated
what he had said about Mr. Tsikata's role in the crime. The Tribunal concluded
that Mr. Kwei's failure to cross examine was to be treated as an admission of
Mr. Tsikata's evidence.
On
18 August 1983 Mr. Kwei was executed by firing squad. Immediately before his
execution he made statements confessing that he had invented his allegations
against Mr. Tsikata. It seems that this confession was made first to a
clergyman who attended Mr. Kwei just before his death and later to Flight
Lieutenant Rawlings himself, who attended at the execution ground. The
conversation with Mr. Rawlings was tape recorded and the tape was subsequently
played back at a press conference. Mr. Kwei's confession was reported in the
issue of the People's Daily Graphic dated 22 August 1983.
It
is to be noted that Mr. Tsikata himself was not prosecuted, though the
allegations against him were considered by the Tribunal.
The
Trial of the Preliminary Issue.
The
preliminary issue was tried by Mr. Jonathan Sumption QC sitting as a Deputy
Judge of the High Court. In his judgment dated 28 October 1994 the judge
referred to the events of 1982 and 1983. At page 4 of his judgment he said:
"I
make no findings, because I do not need to, about whether the diverse
conclusions of the Special Investigation Board, the Attorney General and the
Public Tribunal about Captain Tsikata's role were right or wrong. For present
purposes all that matters is that those were the views which they expressed."
The
judge then turned to consider the law. For this purpose he had to examine both
the common law of qualified privilege and the impact of the relevant provisions
of the Defamation Act 1952. He referred to the background to the statutory
privilege as follows:
"Historically,
qualified privilege meant a state of affairs which negatived legal malice and
meant that the plaintiff had to prove malice in fact. The classic form of
qualified privilege, which depends on a social or moral duty to communicate
information and a reciprocal duty or interest in receiving it, was never easy
for a newspaper to invoke, because a newspaper necessarily publishes its
contents indiscriminately. The courts, however, have always recognised that
the reporting of certain matters to the public at large is in the public
interest because those matters relate to some aspect of the community's public
affairs which it is right should be in the public domain, even if they are
defamatory and may be untrue."
He
drew attention to the fact that at an early stage qualified privilege at common
law became attached to judicial and parliamentary proceedings, but that it was
uncertain how much further it extended. He referred to the opinion of Lord
Uthwatt in
Perera
v. Peiris
[1949] AC1 where he said at 20:
"Reports
of judicial and parliamentary proceedings and, maybe, of some bodies which are
neither judicial nor parliamentary in character, stand in a class apart by
reason that the nature of their activities is treated as conclusively
establishing that the public interest is forwarded by publication of reports of
their proceedings. As regards reports of proceedings of other bodies, the
status of those bodies taken alone is not conclusive and it is necessary to
consider the subject-matter dealt with in the particular report with which the
court is concerned. If it appears that it is to the public interest that a
particular report should be published, privilege will attach."
The
judge had already set out the relevant provisions of the Defamation Act 1952.
Section 7, so far as is material, is in these terms:
"(1)
Subject to the provisions of this section, the publication in a newspaper of
any such report or other matter as is mentioned in the Schedule to this Act
shall be privileged unless the publication is proved to be made with malice.
..............
(3)
Nothing in this section shall be construed as protecting the publication ... of
any matter which is not of public concern and the publication of which is not
for the public benefit."
In
this case we are concerned with a report of the class identified in paragraph 5
of Part I of the Schedule to the Act of 1952. Paragraph 5 provides:
"A
fair and accurate report of any proceedings in public of a body or person
appointed to hold a public inquiry by the government or legislature of any part
of Her Majesty's dominions outside the United Kingdom."
It
is common ground that the definition of Her Majesty's dominions in paragraph 14
of the Schedule includes Ghana.
It
is clear from the judgment that the arguments which were addressed to the judge
were similar to those which were advanced before this court. It is therefore
sufficient if I state the judge's conclusions quite shortly, though by taking
this course I mean no disrespect to his helpful and illuminating judgment. I
hope I can fairly summarise his conclusions as follows:
(1)
There is no general defence in the law of defamation of fair information on a
matter of public interest. One has to look at the facts of the individual case.
(2)
Nor does English law recognise a general qualified privilege in respect of the
criticism of public men, as now exists in the United States since the decision
of the Supreme Court in
New
York Times Co. v. Sullivan
(1964) 376 U.S. 254.
(3)
A balance has to be struck between the free flow of information on public
affairs and the protection of private reputations. The matters which come
within the scope of public interest for this purpose may vary from one
generation to another.
(4)
The court must bear in mind Article 10 of the European Convention for the
Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms. It was to be noted that in
The
Attorney General v. Guardian Newspapers Ltd.
(N0.2)
[1990] 1 AC 109 Lord Goff observed at 283 that there is no difference of
principle between English law and Article 10 of the Convention as to where the
point of balance is to be found. The judge also reminded himself of the
dictum of the European Court of Human Rights in
Thorgeir
Thorgeirson v. Iceland
(1992) 14 EHRR 843 at 865: "freedom of expression constitutes one of the
essential foundations of a democratic society".
(5)
On the issues raised by section 7 of the Act of 1952 and by paragraph 5 of the
Schedule he concluded:
(a)
That once the final report of the S.I.B. had been published it became a
"proceeding in public" of the board.
(b)
That the first two sentences in the paragraph complained of by Mr. Tsikata
constituted a "fair and accurate report" of the proceedings of the S.I.B.
(c)
That the matters set out in the first two sentences were of public concern and
the publication of those two sentences were for the public benefit.
The
judge said that he considered that the impact of section 7(3) of the Act of
1952 was the real question at issue in the case. He rejected the argument on
behalf of Mr. Tsikata that the mere passage of time had made it impossible any
longer to satisfy the conditions set out in section 7(3). He also rejected the
submission that the recommendation of the S.I.B. had been so discredited since
its original publication in May 1983 that the privilege could no longer be
invoked. In the course of dealing with this argument the judge said:
"I
would for my part be prepared to accept that in extreme cases an allegation
which might have been contemporaneously reported with the benefit of qualified
privilege may be so conclusively and publicly discredited thereafter that its
further publication is no longer in the public interest. But the common
feature of all these examples is that the defamatory statement has been
authoritatively or conclusively refuted. The mere accumulation of evidence for
the contrary proposition is irrelevant. If the matter remains open to
legitimate debate, the privilege attaching to the report of a public body's
conclusions about it are unaffected."
He
rejected the contention that the views of the Attorney General or the decision
of the Public Tribunal put the question of Mr. Tsikata's involvement in the
events of 30 June 1982 beyond controversy.
(6)
In the result the statutory privilege extended to the first two sentences only,
but the third sentence in the paragraph was privileged at common law. In the
penultimate paragraph of his judgment he said:
"If
(as I have already held) there is a sufficient public interest in the
publication of the findings of a statutory inquiry that a member of the
government should be prosecuted for a political murder, then it seems to me
that the same public interest justifies the reporting of the response of that
same government."
Accordingly
the judge granted a declaration that the words complained of by Mr. Tsikata
were published on an occasion of qualified privilege.
Mr.
Tsikata has now appealed.
The
Appeal
Before
turning to the arguments advanced in support of the appeal it will be
convenient to set out again the paragraph complained of:
"In
June 1982, three High Court judges were kidnapped and executed at an army
shooting range. A special inquiry into the killings recommended the
prosecution of ten people, including Flt. Lt. Rawlings' close aide, Captain
(Retired) Kojo Tsikata, who was named as ´the master mind' of the plot.
Five people were prosecuted and executed, but not Captain Tsikata."
It
was argued on behalf of Mr. Tsikata that no part of this paragraph was capable
of being protected by the defence of qualified privilege. The publishers
purported to rely on qualified privilege at common law and on the statutory
privilege provided for in paragraph 5 of Part I of the Schedule to the Act of
1952, but, it was submitted, neither the first nor the third sentences of the
paragraph constituted a report "of any proceedings" and the second sentence did
not meet the conditions required for a defence of statutory privilege. Nor was
any part of the paragraph protected by common law privilege.
In
addressing the issue of statutory privilege counsel for Mr. Tsikata accepted
that the judge had correctly identified the four questions to be answered:
(a)
Was the final report of the S.I.B. a "proceeding in public" of the S.I.B.?
(b)
Were the words complained of a "report" of it in the sense in which that word
appears in paragraph 5 of the Schedule?
(c)
If it was a "report" of proceedings of the S.I.B., was it a fair and accurate
one?
(d)
Were the matters contained in the relevant part of the article matters of
"public concern" the publication of which was "for the public's benefit",
within the meaning of section 7(3) of the Act of 1952?
On
the first question counsel drew attention to the fact that, though the oral
evidence (save in respect of a few witnesses) was heard in public, the report
was submitted to the Attorney General. It was the Attorney General who made
the report public. The task of the S.I.B. was comparable to that of a
prosecuting authority charged with the duty of investigating an alleged crime.
The S.I.B. had no power to make its findings public. Moreover, the proceedings
on 31 May 1983 when the report was "published" were proceedings conducted by
the Attorney General and not by the S.I.B. In his skeleton argument counsel
expanded this suggested distinction between the proceedings of the Attorney
General and the proceedings of the S.I.B. as follows:
"Had
these events taken place in the United Kingdom the publication of the findings
on 31 May 1983 might have fallen within paragraph 12 of the Schedule (a fair
and accurate report or summary of a notice issued for the information of the
public by or on behalf of an officer of state) but not within paragraph 10(c)
which is the domestic equivalent of paragraph 5."
On
the second question counsel for Mr. Tsikata submitted that the second sentence
of the paragraph was not in any event a "report" within the meaning of the Act.
The kind of report contemplated by paragraph 5 of the Schedule was a report
published to the public as an item of news. The whole paragraph was merely a
commentary on past events which might have been published in a book and was not
a report which the public was interested to receive as a piece of news.
On
the third question counsel submitted that if (which he did not accept) the
report of the S.I.B. was a report of proceedings in public it became public at
the moment it was published by the Attorney General on 31 May 1983. In these
circumstances a report of the S.I.B.'s findings could not be a fair and
accurate report if published to the exclusion of the Attorney General's
comments. The report and the comments were released to the public
simultaneously. Furthermore, a fair and accurate report required some
reference to the later developments in the case including Mr. Kwei's retraction
of his allegations.
As
was pointed out in
Cook
v. Alexander
[1974] QB 279, a report to be fair and accurate must constitute a fair
presentation of that which took place on the relevant occasion. The purpose of
the statutory defence is to enable the public to be informed, usually by a
brief summary, of proceedings of importance and interest which in the nature of
things few people could have attended themselves.
The
fact that the reference to the findings of the S.I.B. were published without
regard to the comments of the Attorney General or the subsequent events
including Mr. Kwei's retraction were also of crucial importance in considering
the impact of section 7(3) of the Act of 1952. The publication of this stale
allegation was not of public concern nor was the publication for the public
benefit, particularly as the allegation had been publicly withdrawn by the
person who had made it. Furthermore, though the public might be concerned with
the suitability of Flight Lieutenant Rawlings as a candidate for election as
President, the reference to Mr. Tsikata was quite unnecessary.
Counsel
drew our attention to a passage in the judgment of Stephenson L.J. in
Blackshaw
v. Lord
[1984] QB 1 at 26F, where he said:
"Where
damaging facts have been ascertained to be true or being made the subject of
report, there may be a duty to report them ..., provided the public interest is
wide enough ... But where damaging allegations or charges have been made and
are still under investigation ... or have been authoritatively refuted ...
there can be no duty to report them to the public."
In
the present case, it was said, the Attorney General gave detailed reasons for
rejecting the S.I.B.'s recommendation to prosecute Mr. Tsikata and analysed
the inconsistencies in Mr. Kwei's statements. In addition it was important to
bear in mind that Mr. Kwei had not cross examined Mr. Tsikata at the trial and
indeed, before his execution, had retracted his accusation altogether. In the
circumstances there had been an "authoritative refutation" of the allegations
against Mr. Tsikata.
In
addition counsel referred to section 15(3) of The
Defamation Act 1996 which
re-enacted the condition that statutory privilege would not attach to the
publication of matter which was not of public concern or where the publication
was not for the public benefit.
Counsel
also dealt with the suggested defence of qualified privilege at common law,
which was the only defence relied on in respect of the third sentence in the
words complained of. Counsel submitted that there was no room for the
application of a common law privilege where Parliament had laid down the scope
of the protection to be conferred by statute and indeed had recently considered
the matter again at the time when the Defamation Bill was being scrutinised
earlier this year. The decision of the Privy Council in
Perera
v. Peiris
(supra) had to be treated with care because it preceded the enactment of The
Defamation Act 1952.
These
are formidable arguments.
Counsel
for the publishers sought to counter them by pointing to the evolution of the
defence of qualified privilege, both at common law and later by statute which
had been developed to protect the publication of reports of Parliamentary and
judicial proceedings. As time went by the protection was extended to
proceedings of tribunals and other public bodies. In deciding whether a
privilege attached to any particular publication, the court was concerned, it
was submitted, to examine both the status of the body whose deliberations had
been reported and the subject matter with which it was concerned. One might
add that it is also relevant to take account of the extent to which the
conclusions of the body concerned can be said to have been reached after
detailed examination.
Counsel
for the publishers also submitted that except (possibly) in the case of a
complete refutation the question of qualified privilege has to be looked at in
the first instance by reference to the report itself. In this case the
findings of the S.I.B. stood on their own.
If
one applied a purposive construction to paragraph 5 of the Schedule, it was
said, the first two sentences (which had to be read together) constituted a
fair and accurate report of the proceedings in public of the S.I.B. It was not
to the point that the final report of the S.I.B. was in fact submitted to the
Attorney General and then published by him at the news conference on 31 May 1983.
Conclusions
I
propose to deal first with the issue of statutory privilege. It is convenient
to consider this issue in two stages:
(a)
Whether the words complained of, or any of them, are covered by paragraph 5 of
the Schedule to the Act of 1952.
(b)
Whether, though prima facie covered by section 7(1) of the Act and paragraph 5,
protection is lost because of the provisions of section 7(3).
Paragraph
5 applies to "a fair and accurate report of any proceedings in public of a body
or person" appointed to hold a public inquiry by the Government of Ghana.
I
agree with the judge that the final sentence of the words complained of did not
form part of any report. This sentence is a statement as to subsequent events.
Accordingly the sentence is not protected by statutory privilege. It was not
argued that paragraph 4 of the Schedule had any relevance.
I
turn to the first two sentences of the words complained of which, in my view,
have to be read together. The first sentence identifies the subject matter of
the report.
It
will be remembered that it was argued on behalf of Mr. Tsikata that the
recommendation in the final report was not a report at all because it was
published as a piece of information long after the event, that the final report
was not a proceeding in public because it was sent to the Attorney General and
only made public by him on 30 May 1983, and that, because it failed to include
the contemporary comments of the Attorney General, it was not fair and accurate.
I
am satisfied that section 7(1) and paragraph 5 of the Schedule should be
construed so as to give effect to the clear intention of Parliament and not by
the adoption of a narrow linguistic approach.
One
starts with the status and procedure of the S.I.B. The S.I.B. was charged with
investigating a matter of great public concern in Ghana. The chairman was a
High Court judge. The proceedings took place in public and, save for a few
witnesses whose evidence was held in camera, the oral evidence was heard in
public. It is true that the final report was submitted to the Attorney
General, but this circumstance did not in my view prevent the final report, as
being in effect the judgment of the S.I.B., forming part of the proceeding in
public.
Nor
do I think that, for the purposes of paragraph 5, the protection which would
have covered a report in a newspaper published at the beginning of June 1983
ceased to exist because the report of the proceedings was published nearly ten
years later. To be covered by paragraph 5 a report of proceedings does not
have to be a contemporary report or an item of recent news. Furthermore, for
the purposes of paragraph 5, the fairness and accuracy of a report has to be
measured by reference to that to which it purports to relate. Later events,
whether a successful appeal or arising in some other way, may raise doubts as
to the propriety of publishing a report and may be very relevant to the
considerations which arise under section 7(3), but in my view they do not have
an impact on the fairness and accuracy of the report itself.
I
now come to section 7(3) because, like the judge,
I
consider that the questions which arise under section 7(3) constitute the real
matters at issue.
It
will be remembered that it was argued on behalf of Mr. Tsikata that there was
no need in 1992 to mention his name at all. This argument, however, can be
disposed of quite easily. Mr. Tsikata continued to be a member of the
Government in 1992 and he provided the suggested link with the events of 1982.
The
much more difficult question to my mind is whether the publishers can claim
that it was for the public benefit to publish a reference to the
recommendations of the S.I.B. without at the same time (a) giving the public
any information about the Attorney General's comments and the reasons which he
gave for declining to accept the S.I.B.'s recommendations and, (b) referring to
Mr. Kwei's subsequent retraction of his allegations that Mr. Tsikata was
involved in the killings.
I
confess that I have found this to be a more difficult point than did the judge.
In the end I think the solution is to be found by considering the basis on
which this privilege exists and the surrounding facts. The law provides that
in certain circumstances and in relation to certain types of subject matter a
newspaper is entitled to qualified protection if it publishes a fair and
accurate report of proceedings in public before a tribunal in a Commonwealth
country. A newspaper may not know what happened subsequently nor may the
newspaper be in a position to assess the quality or effect of any later denials
or refutations.
Each
case must depend on its own facts. But in this case it seems to me that a
prima facie defence is made out and that the conditions in section 7(3) are
satisfied.
I
turn now to the third sentence in the words complained of and the question of
qualified privilege at common law.
The
decision of the Privy Council in
Perera
v. Peiris
(supra) provides guidance as to the scope of the qualified privilege which
exists at common law for reports of the proceedings of this nature.
Parliament, however, has conferred a statutory privilege in certain
circumstances by the provisions enacted in the Act of 1952. In these
circumstances the fact that the first two sentences of the words complained of
might have been protected by common law privilege is no longer of importance
except in so far as it throws light on the possible protection of the third
sentence.
I
have come to the conclusion, as did the judge, that if the facts stated in the
third sentence had any defamatory meaning the publication of them was prima
facie protected by qualified privilege as being part of the matters relating to
the proceedings which the public were entitled to know. I would therefore hold
that the third sentence was protected by qualified privilege at common law.
I
should make it quite clear, however, that what I have said is wholly without
prejudice to the question whether the defence of qualified privilege can be
defeated by proof of malice. The care which was exercised in relation to this
publication and the reasons why, as it could be said, only one side of the
story was told will no doubt require careful examination.
For
the reasons which I have endeavoured to outline I would dismiss the appeal.
LORD
JUSTICE WARD:
I agree with Neill L.J.'s judgment. With diffidence, but with deference to
the compelling submissions addressed to us on the delicate and important
balance between the integrity of personal reputation and the freedom of the
press, aspects of the which I did not conceal were troubling me, I shortly
state how I came to my conclusions.
These questions seem to me to need answer:
1.
What
were the "proceedings in public of a body ... appointed to hold a public
inquiry by the government" of Ghana?
Were
they:
(a)
only those sittings of the S.I.B. which were open to members of the public; or,
(b)
did the proceedings comprise not only the evidence, submissions, rulings, etc.
occurring in the public hearings but also the report of the body's conclusions
even though the Board itself did not make its findings public but only
submitted the report to the Attorney General, as it was required to do, "for
the necessary action to be taken thereon"; or,
(c)
bearing in mind that it was the Attorney General who made the report public,
did the "proceedings in public" incorporate his public refutation of the
report and his reasons for exonerating the plaintiff and for not prosecuting him?
There is no issue about (a) because the public sittings were at least part
of, if not the whole of the proceedings but this does not advance the case
because the Defendant's publication did not relate to that part. To my mind
there is no difficulty about (c) and about excluding the Attorney's comments on
the Board's report. "Proceedings" are defined to be the proceedings of "a body
appointed to hold an inquiry." The Attorney held no such appointment. He could
not be part of the appointed body nor could he become part by doing what he
had to do, namely, take action on the report.
Question (b) is not so easy to answer.There is force in the submission that
the proceedings in public ended with the last open sitting of the Board. Whilst
"proceedings in public of an international court" provided for in paragraph 3
of the Schedule might ordinarily include the most important part of the
proceedings - the judgment - that would invariably be delivered in open court.
A public inquiry by contrast usually submits its conclusions to the government
which decides whether to publish or not. Mr Tugendhat Q.C. submits that had
these events taken place in the United Kingdom, the publication of the findings
may have fallen within paragraph 12 which covers "any notice or other matter
issued for the information of the public by or on behalf of any government
department, officer of state...or chief officer of police" but does not fall
under paragraph 10(c) which deals with the reports of "proceedings at any
meeting or sitting"of any "commission, tribunal, committee or person appointed
for the purposes of any inquiry by ...a Minster of the Crown". He submits that
paragraph 10(c) is the domestic equivalent of paragraph 5. I cannot accept that
submission. Paragraph 10(c) must be narrower because it refers to the report of
proceedings
at
any meeting or sitting
.
Paragraph 5 has no such limitation. If the reports to be protected under
paragraph 5 were intended to be confined to reports of the meetings and
sittings of the Board, paragraph 5 could have expressly so provided as was done
in paragraph 10(c). Something more than the meetings and sittings must be
envisaged.
In
my judgment a literal construction of the schedule is not appropriate. If it
were, paragraph 12 is wide enough to apply but neither party submits that can
be right. That literal approach would produce the absurdity that a judgment of
the Supreme Court of the U.S.A. might not be covered but a notice issued by the
chief officer of police in Ruritania might be. A purposive construction must be
given to the schedule. The purpose was to avoid the common law investigation
into the origin and status of the inquiring body and to categorise those whose
reports would automatically enjoy privilege. Common sense informs us that the
proceedings of a public inquiry begin with the evidence but end with the
findings. Save exceptionally,the findings are published in the public interest.
Those conclusions are what the public want to know and what the newspapers want
to report. The purpose of the Act must be to give such reporting protection.
"Proceedings" should be widely enough construed to cover the culminating act of
the Board if those findings are made public in the ordinary course of events.
That may vary from case to case but the facts here are so close to the facts of
Perera
v Peiris
[1949] AC 1 that a statutory privilege must be inferred in place of the
common privilege which would previously have been enjoyed.
2.
What
constitutes a"report" of those proceedings?
On
the face of it, to write the first two sentences -(1)" ...three High Court
Judges were...executed... " and (2) "A special inquiry ...recommended the
prosecution of ... (the Plaintiff) ... as the mastermind of the plot", is to
give some narration of and so give a "report" of the proceedings. The first
sentence, whilst not itself alluding to the report, is necessary to introduce
the commentary and only the punctuation separates it from the second sentence.
They must be read together. On the other hand, the third sentence deals with
events that followed and cannot, therefore, be a report of the proceedings
which can thereby gain statutory privilege.
In
my judgment, it is a report if it is an account of or a resume of the
proceedings. There is no limitation of time or editorial purpose as Mr
Tugendhat contends. There is no requirement of the kind found in section 3 of
the Law of Libel Amendment Act 1888 relating to judicial proceedings that the
report must be published contemporaneously with the proceedings. Current
reporting was not required by section 4 of that Act (the forerunner of the
provisions before us). Nor do I see any justification for a distinction between
a report as a news item and a report as a political commentary. The role of the
press is to inform the public of fact as well as by comment based on fact.
3.
Was
the report a "fair and accurate report of (the) proceedings"?
The report correctly summarises the board's findings and there can be no
challenge to its accuracy.
Fairness
is essentially a matter of balance. A certain degree of selectivity is given to
the reporter who, subject of course to malice, can report a resume only
provided that the impression he recounts would approximate with the opinion of
the reader of the whole of document thus summarised. The theory is that the
reporter represents the public - he is their eyes and ears and he has to do his
best, using his professional skill, to give them a fair and accurate picture of
what he saw or heard. In
Cook
v Alexander
[1974] Q.B. 279, 288, a case involving a Parliamentary sketch, Lord Denning
M.R. gave this test :-
“He
need not report it verbatim word for word or letter for letter and it is
sufficient if it is a fair presentation of what took place so as to convey to
the reader the impression which the debate itself would have made on a hearer
of it. Test it this way: if a member of the house were asked: "What happened in
the debate ? Tell me about it." His answer would be a sketch giving in words
the impression it left on him, with more emphasis on one thing and less
emphasis on another, just as it stuck in his memory."
The
report must be a fair report "of any proceedings". The proceedings are the
Board's proceedings and do not include the Attorney's reasons for rejecting
their findings. For the purpose under consideration, the required balance has
to be struck internally and the Attorney's view do not come into that equation.
Fairness is established.
4.
Is
this a publication of matter "which is not of public concern and the
publication of which is not for the public benefit"?
This
is the most troublesome question for me. If the answer is yes, then by virtue
of section 7(3) protection is lost. At common law the essence of the
privilege,as it is expressed in
Perera
v Peiris
at p.21 is that:-
“If
it appears that it is to the public interest that the particular report should
be published privilege will attach."
I
venture to think that the public interest may be measured by the degree of
public concern and public benefit. I agree that the public are legitimately to
be concerned about the extent to which fundamental human rights and freedoms
are being upheld in Commonwealth countries. The assassination of the three
judges was a gross attack on the freedom of the law. It was an act so
reprehensible that the public of the United Kingdom had a concern to know about
it and to know that a judicial inquiry had laid the blame squarely on the
Plaintiff. But that was not the only view taken of his responsibility. The
Attorney analysed the Board's findings and pointed to inconsistencies he found
in it. The Plaintiff gave evidence for the prosecution of the others named in
the Inquiry,and his denial of his involvement was not challenged and so was
accepted by the Military Tribunal. His accuser apparently recanted in the face
of the firing squad. There was, therefore, another side to the story. I am not
sure how much of that was known to the journalist. What has caused me great
anxiety is whether the public truly gain benefit from this article if they are
only told half the truth about the matter in issue. Should reputation suffer
such a sacrifice to give freedom to the press? At the end Mr Kentridge
persuaded me that there a public benefit in receiving this information. Its
source was a judicial inquiry whose status derived from a law passed to empower
it. The inquiry was conducted along judicial lines. The Plaintiff had the
opportunity to put his case. The subject matter was of the gravest relevance to
the conduct of affairs in Ghana and the due administration of its government.
The Plaintiff was then a Special adviser to ruling Council and was responsible
for the security services. He was a close aide of Flight Lt. Rawlings.
Moreover, and crucially, he remained in high office in the government whose
part in the forthcoming elections was under critical review. He is not part of
history though his actions may be. There is a benefit in knowing what view the
Inquiry had taken of him. Their status commands some respect. To require a
newspaper so thoroughly to investigate subsequent events and report them in
order to place the whole picture before the public in order to exclude damage
to individual reputation is to make unacceptable inroads into the press' role
as the public watchdog. It transforms investigative journalism from a virtue to
a necessity. A degree of flexibility must be allowed and that will vary from
case to case. Here I have been persuaded that the publication of the report is
entitled to its qualified privilege.
5.
Is
the third sentence privileged?
This
can only enjoy a common law privilege if publication is in the public interest.
The information conveyed by this sentence is so closely related to the first
two that the same considerations will apply to protect it.
I
agree the appeal should be dismissed.
LORD
JUSTICE THORPE:
I
have had the advantage of reading in draft the judgment of Lord Justice Neill
and I am in complete agreement with it. The unusual facts of this case give
rise to a point that I as a newcomer to this field have not found easy. If the
first publication of the report of a public enquiry is by a Government minister
at press conference and if simultaneously the minister publishes his own report
reasoning his rejection of the recommendation contained in the public enquiry
report I considered as a matter of strong first impression that subsequent
newspaper reports should not be entitled to invoke any special defence to a
plea of defamation if they had chosen to report only the criticism contained in
the public enquiry report and to omit any reference to the minister's
simultaneous dissenting report. However I was persuaded by Mr Kentridge's
submission that section 7 of the Defamation Act 1952 allows that outcome.
There
can be no doubt, in my judgment, that the report of the Special Investigation
Board falls within the terms of paragraph 5 of the schedule to the Act. The
Board conducted its inquiry in public and its report was subsequently made
public by the Attorney General. It would be quite unrealistic to construe
paragraph 5 narrowly to distinguish between the public hearings of the Board
and the publication of the report not by the Board but by the Attorney General.
The report is an essential part of the proceedings of the Board and its
proceedings were throughout essentially public.
Strictly
analysed only the second of the three sentences complained of reports the
outcome of the Special Investigation Board. Although it is no more than the
briefest of summaries it could not be said to be unfair or inaccurate in
itself. Thus it is entitled to statutory protection under section 7 unless
that protection is forfeit under section 7(3). The issue raised under section
7(3) is agreed by both parties to be the nub of this appeal.
Events
in Ghana at the date of publication seem to me to show beyond doubt that the
article complained of addressed matters of public concern and was of benefit to
the public in that it enabled the substantial body of the readership interested
in current foreign affairs to form a more balanced judgment on the issues in
and outcome of the pending Ghanian election. Of course it is said that benefit
to the public was sacrificed by such a selective presentation of the history of
events in 1983. To be of true benefit the public should have been informed not
only of the condemnation of the Special Investigation Board but also of the
Attorney General's report with its reasoned rejection of the recommendation of
the Special Investigation Board. Mr Kentridge's response is that the
Independent was entitled to report the accusatory findings of the Special
Investigation Board as a distinct outcome and without reference to subsequent
or even contemporaneous qualification. He founds that submission principally on
Perera
v Peiris
[1949] AC 1 and
Blackshaw
v Lord
[1984] QB 1. Only authoritative refutation has the effect of removing the
qualified privilege which otherwise attaches to the report. I conclude that
that submission is justified by the authorities. Whether or not a report is on
a matter of public concern and for the public benefit within the terms of
section 7(3) is a question of fact and in this case by agreement that question
of fact was to be determined by the judge. There seems little guidance as to
what constitutes authoritative refutation. It seems that the phrase was coined
by Stephenson LJ in
Blackshaw
v Lord
and I accept Mr Kentridge's submission that it is most easily illustrated by
the case of a criminal charge subsequently conceded to have been mistakenly
brought alternatively subsequently dismissed. Mr Tugendhat's submission that
here was an a fortiori situation I did not find convincing. The facts found by
the Special Investigation Board led them to the conclusion that the plaintiff
was the mastermind of the conspiracy to murder. They reached that conclusion
having heard sworn evidence from those seeking to exonerate themselves. The
Attorney General rejected their recommendation on the ground that in his
judgment he would not secure a conviction against the plaintiff. The
subsequent events during the trial before the Public Tribunal and the
circumstances surrounding the execution of Joachim Kwei seemed to me to be of
doubtful weight. But the judge gave careful consideration to these and other
circumstances before reaching the conclusions which he did. Despite Mr
Tugendhat's able submissions no error in those conclusions has been
demonstrated to me.
Order: appeal
dismissed with costs; leave to appeal to the House of Lords refused.
© 1996 Crown Copyright
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