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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Fiddes v Channel 4 TV Corporation & Anor [2010] EWCA Civ 516 (24 March 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2010/516.html Cite as: [2010] EWCA Civ 516 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
(MR JUSTICE TUGENDHAT)
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LADY JUSTICE SMITH DBE
and
LORD JUSTICE WILSON
____________________
FIDDES |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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CHANNEL 4 TV CORPORATION & ANR |
____________________
WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
165 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2DY
Tel No: 020 7404 1400 Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court )
Mr Matthew Nicklin (instructed by Messrs Aslan Charles Kousetta LLP ) appeared on behalf of the Respondent.
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Pill:
"The second defendant do restore and then carry out a search of its back up tapes for the period between 1st March 2008 and 4th July 2008 for e-mails and their attachments (if any) concerning the programme complained of and sent to or from or copied to the third defendant and/or Alice Bowden. (2) The second defendant do provide the claimant with disclosure by a list of documents found pursuant to the search carried out pursuant to paragraph one above by 11th February 2010.
"The action is in respect of a broadcast made on the 27th November 2008 under the title The Jacksons Are Coming. It was about a visit of the family of the late Michael Jackson to Cornwall. The claimant knew the family and participated extensively in the broadcast. The third defendant, Miss Preston, is a journalist and film maker and she was engaged by the second defendant for the purpose of making the programme, which has been complained of. She was also the director and narrator of the programme. Alice Bowden was her assistant.
3. The meanings complained of by the claimant need not be set out. They are somewhat more serious than that pleaded by the defendant which the defendant is proposing to justify. The meaning pleaded by the defendant as true is as follows: 'The claimant had betrayed the trust that the Jackson family had placed in him and hypocritically deceived them by using his position as an apparent friend by seeking to exploit their fame for his own personal benefit and was a manipulative and dishonest individual. ' There are 43 sub-paragraphs of particulars of justification extending over many pages. The defendants also plead a defence of honest comment.
'Insofar as the words complained of conveyed or were understood to convey any or all of the following statements (a) the claimant had betrayed the Jackson family appallingly (b) that the claimant had sought to exploit the Jacksons' fame for his own personal benefit and/or (c) that the claimant was manipulative, then they are honest comment on a matter of public interest namely the claimant's behaviour in relation to the Jackson family and the making of the programme'.
4. All the statements of case to which I refer have been amended and I refer to the amended versions. There is a reply that covers some 44 pages which pleads in detail to the particulars of justification. It denies the meaning sought to be justified and it includes also in response to the plea of comment, a plea of malice. It includes two passages which give the substance of the claimant's case in this action. The first is as follows (paragraph 9)
' The second and/or third defendants manipulated the underlying footage which they had recorded so as to create or reinforce this false and defamatory allegation and/or chose to omit or distort in the final edited version of the programme a series of key facts or matters which if referred to in the broadcast would have completely undermined the allegations complained of and/or utterly destroyed the credibility of the programme itself.'
In paragraph 12, under particulars of malice, there is pleaded:
'The third defendant and the second defendant (through its vicarious liability for Stephen Lambert) knew that the central message of the programme was completely untrue and/or had no honest belief in the same. There was no betrayal of trust by the claimant. He was not guilty of betraying the Jacksons for his own benefit or otherwise by leaking stores to the press or seeking publicity before and during their trip despite their wishes to avoid any publicity. This message was conveyed or reinforced by the way in which the programme and/or the underlying footage was selected or edited as referred to in paragraph nine above."
"…the third defendant…and others for the approximate date range March 2008 to June 2008 on the Studio Lambert email account. These documents are at last in the control of the third defendant in approximately August to October 2009 when she deleted them due to lack of storage space on the account"
"(1) When giving standard disclosure, a party is required to make a reasonable search for documents falling within rule 31.6(b) or (c).
(2) The factors relevant in deciding the reasonableness of a search include the following –
(a) the number of documents involved;
(b) the nature and complexity of the proceedings;
(c) the ease and expense of retrieval of any particular document; and
(d) the significance of any document which is likely to be located during the search.
(3) Where a party has not searched for a category or class of document on the grounds that to do so would be unreasonable, he must state this in his disclosure statement and identify the category or class of document.
(Rule 31.10 makes provision for a disclosure statement)"
"[2A.1
Rule 31.4 contains a broad definition of a document. This extends to electronic documents, including e-mail and other electronic communications, word processed documents and databases. In addition to documents that are readily accessible from computer systems and other electronic devices and media, the definition covers those documents that are stored on servers and back-up systems and electronic documents that have been 'deleted'. It also extends to additional information stored and associated with electronic documents known as metadata.
2A.2
The parties should, prior to the first Case Management Conference, discuss any issues that may arise regarding searches for and the preservation of electronic documents. This may involve the parties providing information about the categories of electronic documents within their control, the computer systems, electronic devices and media on which any relevant documents may be held, the storage systems maintained by the parties and their document retention policies. In the case of difficulty or disagreement, the matter should be referred to a judge for directions at the earliest practical date, if possible at the first Case Management Conference.
2A.3
The parties should co-operate at an early stage as to the format in which electronic copy documents are to be provided on inspection. In the case of difficulty or disagreement, the matter should be referred to a Judge for directions at the earliest practical date, if possible at the first Case Management Conference.
2A.4
The existence of electronic documents impacts upon the extent of the reasonable search required by Rule 31.7 for the purposes of standard disclosure. The factors that may be relevant in deciding the reasonableness of a search for electronic documents include (but are not limited to) the following:–
(a) The number of documents involved.
(b) The nature and complexity of the proceedings.
(c) The ease and expense of retrieval of any particular document. This includes:
(i) The accessibility of electronic documents or data including e-mail communications on computer systems, servers, back-up systems and other electronic devices or media that may contain such documents taking into account alterations or developments in hardware or software systems used by the disclosing party and/or available to enable access to such documents.
(ii) The location of relevant electronic documents, data, computer systems, servers, back-up systems and other electronic devices or media that may contain such documents.
(iii) The likelihood of locating relevant data.
(iv) The cost of recovering any electronic documents.
(v) The cost of disclosing and providing inspection of any relevant electronic documents.
(vi) The likelihood that electronic documents will be materially altered in the course of recovery, disclosure or inspection.
(d) The significance of any document which is likely to be located during the search.
2A.5
It may be reasonable to search some or all of the parties' electronic storage systems. In some circumstances, it may be reasonable to search for electronic documents by means of keyword searches (agreed as far as possible between the parties) even where a full review of each and every document would be unreasonable. There may be other forms of electronic search that may be appropriate in particular circumstances."
"It has subsequently appeared that there are some emails of Miss Preston and perhaps all of the emails of Miss Bowden which may be retrievable from a number of back up tapes, which probably number about three. It may be that there were more than three, possibly as many as six relevant back up tapes. The laptop of Miss Preston has been lost. The claimant is not satisfied as to the explanation for that, but that is the factual position. I am not concerned with that matter today. The tapes that are the subject of this application are thus those which would include emails for the period March to June 2008 and the two ladies named. Of course, the back up tapes would also include a vast quantity of other material as well."
"I have to observe that it is a matter of great concern that the costs of this libel action should have reached the figures that they have. By reference to that figure, Mr Sherborne for the appellant is able to say that a sum of the order of £10,000 is hardly significant. Indeed, as I observed in the course of submissions, it may well be that the cost of this application exceed that figure, but that is not the right approach. On that basis, there would be little ground for attempting to limit costs in libel actions at all. Searches of back up tapes are not required in every case and are not to be encouraged as a general rule. Whether they are required or not must depend on the facts of each particular case. On any view, the total cost of this action illustrate the general public concern as to the cost of libel actions. Only about four jury actions per year are fought, and a roughly similar number tried by judge alone out of some 200 or more claims that are issued, or have been issued, in each of the most recent years. Those actions that are fought have given rise to great public concern as to their costs.
21. I accept that in an ideal world, the claimant should have disclosure of the e-mails sought but it is not an ideal world. In this case, it is a matter of speculation whether the search that he requests I order would produce anything relevant, and if it did, whether it would help the Claimant's case or undermine it. There will undoubtedly be cases where retrieving and searching back up tapes will be a proportionate exercise in a libel action. But in this case, it seems to me, that the issues in the action will be most likely to be resolved on the contemporaneous documents that have been disclosed and the oral evidence of the Claimant and third Defendant, if the case gets that far. In my judgment, the claimant cannot in the present case show that there is a sufficient likelihood of retrieving any email that is both relevant and significant and on that basis, I dismiss this application.
"The appellate court should only interfere when they consider that the judge of first instance has not merely preferred an imperfect solution which is different from an alternative imperfect solution which the Court of Appeal might or would have adopted, but has exceeded the generous ambit within which a reasonable disagreement is possible"
"The converse is that if one restores a back-up tape and searches the e-mail account of a specified individual, one may find relevant e-mails which went to persons other than those whose e-mail accounts have survived and been searched. One will also find e-mails from the specified individual to third parties outside the Defendant companies. The Defendants submit that there will be very few additional documents which turn up as a result of restoring the back-up tapes to search the e-mail accounts of the 7 individuals. The Defendants accept, as they must, that they cannot rule out the possibility that there will be additional material. In that case, they cannot rule out the possibility that the additional material might be of great significance. In my judgment, it is very difficult to predict the scale of the additional material which will be found on a search of 7 further e-mail accounts. However, I am not able to rule out the need for a further search just because some part, perhaps even a large part, of what will emerge has already been disclosed."
"A reasonable search should be tailor-made to the value and significance of the likely product of such a search."
He considered that there should not be "a blanket prima facie rule against any standard disclosure" Rix LJ added at paragraph 73 that the concerns of Jacob LJ, who dissented: "…might be met by a rigorous application of the rationale of standard disclosure". I stated at paragraph 82 that the judge should consider:
"…the features of the particular case with a view to making an order tailored to achieving a just outcome, which includes limiting, as far as possible, the costs incurred."
I added at paragraph 91 that:
"…consideration should be given to the needs of the particular case."
A deletion in an entry for Thursday 15th at page 159 of the bundle as to whether "there aren't enough Jacksons going to Devon".
A deletion, page 170 of the bundle, when a reference was made to "Jackie and Siggie leaving for Los Angeles", of the words "for business".
At a later stage he referred to narrative added, at page 163 of the bundle, dealing with the possible relationship between two of those involved in the programme.
An added reference at page 163 to the writer "still awaiting to hear who else will come", that is to Devon.
And the reference at 166 added: "I hope this doesn't bode badly for Devon."
Conclusion
"…the claimant cannot in the present case show that there is a sufficient likelihood of retrieving any email that is both relevant and significant, and on that basis, I dismiss this application."
Lady Justice Smith:
Lord Justice Wilson:
Order: Application granted.