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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Waterson v Lloyd MP & Anor [2013] EWCA Civ 136 (28 February 2013) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2013/136.html Cite as: [2013] EWCA Civ 136 |
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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 :
LORD JUSTICE RICHARDS
and
LORD JUSTICE McCOMBE
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Nigel Waterson |
Respondent |
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- and - |
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(1) Stephen Lloyd MP (2) Rebecca Carr |
Appellants |
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Richard Rampton QC and Ian Helme (instructed by Goodman Derrick LLP) for the Appellants
Hearing date : 17 December 2012
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Richards :
The first publication
"The borough of Bromley is where Mr Waterson and his family live, more than 60 miles from his constituents.
Taxpayers have paid almost £70,000 during the last four years towards the cost of Mr Waterson's Kent family home. The MP also claimed for food, cleaning, utility bills and over £1,000 to have his garage redecorated at the taxpayers' expense.
Mr Waterson has also claimed for the cost of glossy brochures, featuring the photo-opportunities for his visits to Eastbourne".
"Local residents have delivered their verdict on the MPs' expenses scandal.
Eastbourne's Conservative MP Nigel Waterson has come under fire in recent months for his own scandalous expenses claims.
Mr Waterson claimed almost £70,000 for the mortgage on his large family home in Kent, which is over 60 miles away from his constituents.
He also claimed over £1000 to have his garage re-decorated.
It's clear that Mr Waterson's expenses claims have upset many people in Eastbourne."
"The electorate is fed up with the entire House of Commons, our MP included … It is time for Eastbourne to vote for a new Member of Parliament".
"Why does Mr Waterson need a large house in Beckenham?"
"I for one would prefer my local MP to live in Eastbourne full-time and offer us taxpayers value for money. Eastbourne deserves more than second best and perhaps it's time we got it".
"Why are you allowed to claim £70,000 of tax payers' money for the mortgage on your home in Beckenham, Kent … why are you allowed to claim tax payers' money to fund your 'Sea Vews' [sic] magazine'? … you do not seem to enjoy mixing with the ordinary voter."
"7. In their natural and ordinary meaning the words complained of … meant and were understood to mean that the Claimant's conduct in making the various expenses claims listed had given rise to legitimate outrage, and that the cause of such scandal was his grave abuse for his own financial advantage of the Parliamentary rules governing such claims.
8. Further, or in the alternative, the words complained of … meant and were understood to mean that the Claimant was one of a number of notorious Members of Parliament, whose conduct had rightly become a subject of recent scandal, because their claims were unlawful and/or in breach of the Parliamentary rules, or such that they were liable to repay the amounts they had received.
Particulars of Innuendo
8(1) In or about July 2009 the Daily Telegraph published over a number of days details of expenses claims made by individual Members of Parliament between 2004 and 2009. The details published became an unprecedentedly notorious matter of national scandal, and it emerged that a very large number of Members of Parliament had made unlawful claims or claims for payment to which they were not entitled under the Parliamentary rules or claims which though within the rules were essentially improper.
8(2) As the scandal increased, on 19 May 2009 the Prime Minister asked Sir Thomas Legg to investigate MPs' claims, and on 19 June 2009 Scotland Yard announced that a number of MPs would face criminal investigation. On 5 February 2010 the Director of Public Prosecutions announced that three MPs would face criminal charges of false accounting.
8(3) Following the articles in the Daily Telegraph a large number of MPs of all parties repaid monies to which they had not been entitled, either voluntarily or as a result of rulings by Sir Thomas Legg.
8(4) The above facts and matters were known to a very large but unquantifiable proportion of the readers of the words complained of."
"10. The words complained of constituted honest comment on a matter of public interest, namely, the generosity of the Parliamentary expenses system as it was at the time of publication, the use that the Claimant had made of that system while he was MP for Eastbourne and the anger and resentment that those matters were apt to cause, and had caused, amongst voters and taxpayers.
Particulars of Comment
10.1 The comment expressed by the words complained of in their natural and ordinary meaning and in their proper context was that Claimant's conduct in exploiting the expenses system to help purchase and maintain a large house in Kent, sixty miles from his constituency, at considerable expense to the taxpayer, and in maintaining his family home there in preference to Eastbourne, was scandalous and such as to cause legitimate anger, resentment and criticism, with the result that it would be no more than the Claimant deserved if he lost his seat in the forthcoming General Election for those reasons (amongst others)."
The second publication
"We've seen the scandal of MPs abusing their expenses."
Alongside that column, under the headline "Eastbourne needs a new MP", is an article the second paragraph of which reads:
"Local residents were angry to discover that Nigel Waterson claimed £70,000 in just four years for his large Kent family home, 60 miles from his constituents."
Laid out next to the article is a column headed "Nigel Waterson's Roll of Shame" which includes the following entry in capital letters:
"In just four years claimed £70,000 for his family home sixty miles away in Kent."
On the fourth page, under the headline in capitals "It's a two horse race" and after assertions that Labour cannot win in Eastbourne and that this means the choice for local people is between a new Liberal Democrat MP or the unpopular Conservative, it is stated:
"Voting Labour here in Eastbourne and Willingdon will just let our expenses scandal MP off the hook."
"10(1) the Claimant's conduct in making an expenses claim in relation to his home in Kent was a shameful abuse of the Parliamentary rules for his own advantage, and had given cause for legitimate public indignation and anger, and
10(2) he would escape his just deserts for such scandalous conduct in relation to his expenses, unless the electorate voted for the First Defendant."
The innuendo meaning alleged is in the same terms as that pleaded in respect of the first publication.
The legal framework
"The legal principles relevant to meaning … may be summarised in this way: (1) The governing principle is reasonableness. (2) The hypothetical reasonable reader is not naïve but he is not unduly suspicious. He can read between the lines. He can read in an implication more readily than a lawyer and may indulge in a certain amount of loose thinking but he must be treated as being a man who is not avid for scandal and someone who does not, and should not, select one bad meaning where other non-defamatory meanings are available. (3) Over-elaborate analysis is best avoided. (4) The intention of the publisher is irrelevant. (5) The article must be read as a whole, and any 'bane and antidote' taken together. (6) The hypothetical reader is taken to be representative of those who would read the publication in question. (7) In delimiting the range of permissible defamatory meanings, the court should rule out any meaning which, 'can only emerge as the produce of some strained, or forced, or utterly unreasonable interpretation …' …. (8) It follows that 'it is not enough to say that by some person or another the words might be understood in a defamatory sense.'"
"16. … First, the comment must be on a matter of public interest ....
17. Second, the comment must be recognisable as comment, as distinct from an imputation of fact. If the imputation is one of fact, a ground of defence must be sought elsewhere, for example, justification or privilege. Much learning has grown up around the distinction between fact and comment. For present purposes it is sufficient to note that a statement may be one or the other, depending on the context. Ferguson J gave a simple example in the New South Wales case of Myerson v. Smith's Weekly Publishing Co Ltd (1923) 24 SR (NSW) 20, 26: 'To say that a man's conduct was dishonourable is not comment, it is a statement of fact. To say that he did certain specific things and that his conduct was dishonourable is a statement of fact coupled with a comment.'
18. Third, the comment must be based on facts which are true or protected by privilege …. If the facts on which the comment purports to be founded are not proved to be true or published on a privileged occasion, the defence of fair comment is not available.
19. Next, the comment must explicitly or implicitly indicate, at least in general terms, what are the facts on which the comment is being made. The reader or hearer should be in a position to judge for himself how far the comment was well founded.
20. Finally, the comment must be one which could have been made by an honest person, however prejudiced he might be, and however exaggerated or obstinate his views: ….
21. These are the outer limits of the defence. The burden of establishing that a comment falls within these limits, and hence within the scope of the defence, lies upon the defendant who wishes to rely upon the defence."
"5. This merits elaboration. Jurists have had difficulty in defining the difference between a statement of fact and a comment in the context of the defence of fair comment. The example given in Myerson v. Smith's Weekly Publishing Co Ltd … cited by Lord Nicholls is not wholly satisfactory. To say that a man's conduct was dishonourable is not a simple statement of fact. It is a comment coupled with an allegation of unspecified conduct upon which the comment is based. A defamatory statement about a person will almost always be based, either expressly or inferentially, on conduct on the part of the person. Judges and commentators have, however, treated a comment that does not identify the conduct on which it is based as if it were a statement of fact. For such a comment the defence of fair comment does not run. The defendant must justify his comment. To do this he must prove the existence of facts which justify the comment."
"105. For the reasons that I have given I would endorse Lord Nicholls's summary of the elements of fair comment that I have set out at para 3 above, save that I would rewrite the fourth proposition: 'Next the comment must explicitly or implicitly indicate, at least in general terms, the facts on which it is based."
"36. … the Court recalls that while freedom of expression is important for everybody, it is especially so for an elected representative of the people. He or she represents the electorate, draws attention to its preoccupations and defends its interests. Accordingly, interferences with the freedom of expression of an opposition Member of Parliament, like the applicant, call for the closest scrutiny on the part of the Court.
38. The Court recalls that the limits of acceptable criticism are wider with regard to politicians acting in their public capacity than in relation to private individuals, as the former inevitably and knowingly lay themselves open to close scrutiny of word and deed by both journalists and the public at large. Politicians must display a greater degree of tolerance, especially when they themselves make public statements that are susceptible to criticism …."
The judgment below
"47. I have no hesitation reaching this conclusion. On the contrary, I found difficulty in following how a reasonable reader in the circumstances specified in Jeynes could be expected to understand the 'scandal' in question to be confined to the mere fact that Mr Waterson made a claim in respect of a mortgage and decoration. The scandal referred to would reasonably be understood as meaning, and in my judgment does mean in each publication, that Mr Waterson was himself guilty of abuse of the Parliamentary rules for his own financial advantage, as more fully set out in each of the natural and ordinary meanings and innuendo meanings which Mr Waterson attributes to the two publications that he complains of. These meanings are plainly defamatory (as is not in dispute), and in my judgment they are plainly statements of fact. There is no attempt by the writers to distinguish what can only be factual statements (such as the amounts of the claims, and the location of the house in Kent) from matters of comment or opinion.
48. The court is not required in a case such as this to choose between the meanings advanced by each of the parties. The court must come to its own conclusion as to what the words complained of mean. In the present case I conclude that the meanings attributed to the words complained of by Mr Waterson are the meaning that those publications do bear.
49. For the avoidance of doubt, I accept that it would have been possible for the Defendants to do what Mr Rampton submits that they did. It would have been possible to identify the scheme applicable to MPs' expenses, to have expressed the opinion that it was a scandalous scheme, to state that Mr Waterson had made claims under the scheme entirely lawfully, and to express the opinion that nevertheless it was wrong for him to have made the claims. But I do not accept that a reasonable reader would understand that that is what the Defendants achieved in the publications Mr Waterson complains of."
"52. Readers of this judgment will appreciate that the Defendants accept that Mr Waterson had a home in the Eastbourne constituency. They also accept that the second home which he had with his family in Kent was a home in the London Borough of Bromley, which is close enough to Westminster to have enabled him to attend Parliament conveniently (particularly late at night), and for his wife to attend the hospital where she works at Great Ormond Street. They also accept that since Parliament sits at Westminster, it is necessary for MPs to have a place to stay near to Westminster, in addition to a home in the constituency, where the constituency is not itself in London. A reader of the publications complained of might not have understood that the Defendants did accept all these things. But it was for Mr Waterson to choose what to complain about. I have dealt in this judgment with the matters which he has complained about, and am not concerned with matters which he has not complained about."
The arguments on the appeal
"In the light of all that has take place over the past 12 months, it is in my judgment unreal to suggest that readers would not think the worse of a member of Parliament who had taken advantage of (or 'milked') the expenses system simply because he or she had stayed within the letter of the law or of the rules. Everybody knows that some members of Parliament have been forced to 'pay back' sums of money, either by party leaders or by media pressure, even though the payments had originally been made in accordance with the prevailing rules. That is because they are perceived now as having behaved disreputably."
Discussion and conclusion
Lord Justice McCombe:
"(2)…must be treated as being a man who is not avid for scandal and someone who does not, and should not, select one bad meaning where other non-defamatory meanings are available. (3) Over elaborate analysis is best avoided…"
"…because I am very conscious of the difficulty which a judge faces in trying to ascertain the meaning which the ordinary layman would attribute to words which he reads in a newspaper. Much of a judge's time is spent in construing statutes and legal documents – an apparently similar task to the one which now confronts us, but a task which, in reality, requires a different technique."
"To say that a man's conduct was dishonourable is not comment, it is a statement of fact. To say that he did certain things and that his conduct was dishonourable is a statement of fact coupled with a comment".
I recognise, of course, the qualification put on this dictum by Lord Phillips of Worth Matravers in Joseph v Spiller [2010] UKSC 53. The passage has already been cited by my Lord, Richards LJ at paragraph 20 of his judgment. As Lord Phillips pointed out, however, a comment that does not identify the conduct on which it is based is treated by the courts as if it were a statement of fact. Here the conduct, on which comment is advanced, is clearly identified.
"…I found difficulty in following how a reasonable reader in the circumstances specified in Jeynes could be expected to understand the "scandal" in question to be confined to the mere fact that Mr Waterson made a claim in respect of a mortgage and decoration."
In the precise factual circumstances identified in the publications it was being said that it was "a scandal" that Mr Waterson could and did claim very substantial sums to maintain a family home at the stated distance from his constituency at the taxpayer's expense. There was, in my view, no allegation of scandal beyond the stated facts. The fact that there was thought to be a wider "scandal" does not alter the position.
"…for free speech in this country if this kind of controversy on a matter of public though local interest were discouraged by the fear that every word written to be read in haste should be subjected in a court of law to minute linguistic analysis of the kind to which these [papers] have been subjected… "
Lord Justice Laws: