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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 >> George v Cannell & Anor [2022] EWCA Civ 1067 (27 July 2022) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2022/1067.html Cite as: [2022] EWCA Civ 1067, [2022] 3 WLR 1168, [2023] QB 117, [2022] EMLR 22, [2022] WLR(D) 336 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
MEDIA AND COMMUNICATIONS LIST
Mr Justice Saini
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(Vice-President of the Court of Appeal (Civil Division))
LORD JUSTICE WARBY
and
LORD JUSTICE SNOWDEN
____________________
FIONA GEORGE |
Claimant/ Appellant |
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- and - |
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(1) LINDA CANNELL (2) LCA JOBS LIMITED |
Defendants/Respondents |
____________________
David Price QC (instructed by Brabners LLP) for the Respondents
Hearing date: 14 June 2022
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
LORD JUSTICE WARBY:
Introduction
"In an action for slander of goods, slander of title or other malicious falsehood it shall not be necessary to allege or prove special damage
(a) if the words upon which the action is founded are calculated to cause pecuniary damage to the plaintiff and are published in writing or other permanent form; or
(b) if the said words are calculated to cause pecuniary damage to the plaintiff in respect of any office, profession, calling, trade or business held or carried on by him at the time of the publication."
The issues
Background to the appeal
"Please can you put our search for staff from you on hold. I have spoken again to Lyn Cannell today she advises that as part of your terms you should not be approaching her clients. As you know, I have dealt with Lyn for 10 yrs and until you have come to a resolution with her, I think its best we put on hold for now. I wish you all the best in future".
"The Claimant signed a contract with the Defendants by which she agreed not to contact companies for whom the Defendants had worked. By searching for new staff for Balgores she had breached that contract. Therefore, Balgores should stop using the Claimant to find candidates."
"Hi Graham. I hope you are well, and that business is good. You may recall we had a conversation in November regarding the suitability of recruiting Fiona for a potential Recruitment Consultants role with you. Whilst I explained that I felt Fiona possessed some great potential, I also advised that there were reservations, ultimately resulting her departure. Whilst not all of my reservations were revealed during our conversation, I recall mentioning her lack of attention to detail and failure to respect LCA rules and processes. It is therefore with great sadness and disappointment, that I write to inform you that despite making clear to Fiona, both verbally and in writing, of her legal obligations under the terms of her employment with LCA, not to solicit business from our clients and candidates (and Fiona's absolute assurances that this is something she would never do), that she has been proactively approaching our clients for new business as well as contacting candidates of LCA. I am writing to you firstly to ask if this is something you are aware of and secondly to ask from one business owner to another to ensure the post-employment restrictions preventing her from contacting our clients and candidates is respected by you and ask for your assurances that this will stop immediately. I have worked hard to build a business based on honesty, trust, and loyalty and as I am sure you will appreciate, will do all I can to protect it. I have emailed Fiona today explaining her breach of post-employment obligations and asked her to confirm in writing within the next seven days, that she will desist from contacting our Clients and candidates. Failure to receive confirmation will result if (sic) me taking legal action which I know will have an impact on her performance (I allowed Fiona over two months off work during her employment with LCA as she was unable to fulfil her duties to a satisfactory level whilst dealing with a personal court case)".
"The Claimant, in breach of the restrictions contained in her contract of employment with the Second Defendant, and contrary to her express assurances that she would never do this and thus disloyally and contrary to her word, had been approaching the Second Defendant's clients to solicit business from them as well as contacting the Second Defendant's job applicants".
The main issue: the interpretation of section 3(1)
The interpretative approach
The common law context
"written or oral falsehoods, not actionable per se nor even defamatory, where they are maliciously published, where they are calculated in the ordinary course of things to produce, and where they do produce, actual damage."
"As much certainty and particularity must be insisted on, both in pleading and proof of damage, as is reasonable, having regard to the circumstances and to the nature of the acts themselves by which the damage is done. To insist on less would be to relax old and intelligible principles. To insist upon more would be the vainest pedantry."
The Porter Committee
"(3) Actions on the Case
We recommend that the existing law with respect to written or oral falsehoods which are made maliciously and calculated in the ordinary course of things to produce actual damage should be amended so as to make them actionable without proof of special damage."
The 1952 Act Parliamentary history
" by this Clause we are seeking to establish a certain amount of ethical and moral principles.
The effect of this Clause will be that, wherever a false or malicious statement is made about a man, his property or his business, which naturally would be calculated to cause damage, is published in permanent form he would have an automatic remedy. If some words are said verbally in such a manner as to be calculated to cause him financial loss in his calling, then without proof of special damage he would be able to maintain his action on the case."
Authority
"In my opinion, the word 'calculated', where it appears in the Defamation Act, should be given the meaning of 'likely' or 'probable' rather than such as might well happen, or something which is a possibility. I say that for the reasons advanced by Mr Caldecott [Counsel for the defendant]. Namely, firstly, that the purpose of s 3(1) Defamation Act is to relieve a claimant of having to shoulder the evidential difficulties of proving actual damage. Secondly, that Article 10 requires that any restriction on freedom of expression must be strictly justified as necessary in a democratic society. And a wider interpretation of 'calculated' in s 3(1) would constitute an additional restriction on freedom of expression. Thirdly, that the word 'calculated' which one finds in the statute, of itself suggests a higher rather than lower degree of likelihood."
(1) Nicklin J expressly stated that his observations about the adequacy of the pleaded case were not necessary to his decision: see [90].
(2) Paragraph [94(iii)] of Nicklin J's judgment, on which reliance is placed, does identify a number of problems with the claimant's case on causation, including his "very public sacking" some days before the Announcement and publicity for the Stobart Judgment thereafter. Reading these passages in the context of the judgment as a whole I am not persuaded that they adopt the historic approach. In this section of his judgment Nicklin J was considering compendiously and simultaneously whether there was a tenable case of special damage or under s 3. This is clear, in particular, from [96] where he concluded that the claimant "cannot demonstrate that the publication of the announcement either caused him special damage or that it was likely to cause him pecuniary damage".
(3) In this context it is relevant to note some of what Nicklin J said about the law at [44]: "(i) A claimant can recover general damages under section 3(1) Defamation Act 1952 if s/he can show that the alleged false statements were more likely than not to cause him pecuniary damage (iii) If the claimant's claim falls within section 3(1) Defamation Act 1952, the fact that s/he cannot demonstrate actual financial loss does not mean that the court must award only nominal damages ". At [93] he recognised that in setting the requirements for a plea under s 3 "the court must not effectively compel a claimant to provide evidence of special damage." These passages clearly suggest that he was not adopting the historic approach to s 3.
(4) As this court upheld Nicklin J's conclusion that the claim should be struck out as an abuse, what it said on the pleading issue was not an essential element of its decision either. I agree that the section of the judgment headed "Section 3 of the Defamation Act 1952" includes analysis of the claimant's prospects of establishing causation of the heads of damage he alleged as a matter of fact. There are however some strong indications in this section of the judgment that, like Nicklin J, the court was looking at actual damage and s 3 together. In any event, I do not consider the court was deciding whether or not the extraneous causal factors mentioned were legally relevant to a claim based on s 3. At most it was assuming that they could be, as appears to have been common ground (see [55]-[57], [59]-[61]). A court is not bound by a proposition of law which, although part of the ratio decidendi of an earlier decision, was assumed to be correct by the earlier court and had not been the subject of argument before or consideration by that court: R (Kadhim) v Brent London Borough Council Housing Benefit Review Board [2001] QB 955, 965-966 (CA).
The reasoning of the Judge
Other points raised by the defendants
Application to the facts
The second issue: is the case worth more than nominal damages?
" once the plaintiff is entitled to sue for malicious falsehood, whether on proof of special damage or by reason of section 3 of the Defamation act 1952, I can see no reason why, in an appropriate case, he or she should not recover aggravated damages for injury to feelings. As Sir Donald Nicholls V-C pointed out in Joyce v Sengupta justice requires that it should be so."
Conclusion
LORD JUSTICE SNOWDEN:-
LORD JUSTICE UNDERHILL:-