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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Family Division) Decisions >> Newman v Southampton City Council & Ors (COSTS and PTA) [2020] EWHC 2148 (Fam) (05 August 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Fam/2020/2148.html Cite as: [2020] EWHC 2148 (Fam) |
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FAMILY DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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MELANIE NEWMAN |
Applicant |
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- and - |
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SOUTHAMPTON CITY COUNCIL (1) AB (2) TR (3) and M (a child) (through her Children's Guardian) (4) |
Respondents |
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(No. 2: Costs and the application for Permission to Appeal) |
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Heather Rogers QC and Sarah Earley (instructed by Southampton City Council) for the Local Authority
Deidre Fottrell QC (instructed by Goodman Ray) for the Guardian
Hearing dates: 2nd and 3rd March 2020
Judgment released to counsel on 31 May 2020
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HTML VERSION OF JUDGMENT APPROVED
Crown Copyright ©
See also: Newman v Southampton City Council & Ors [2020] EWHC 2148 (Fam) (05 August 2020)
Mrs Justice Roberts :
A. COSTS
"Finally, in seeking to vary/lift reporting restrictions, the standard approach as to costs in children's cases will apply and a reporter, media organisation or their lawyers should not be at risk of a costs order unless he or she has engaged in reprehensible behaviour or taken an unreasonable stance."
"The non-party who seeks access will be expected to pay the reasonable costs of granting that access."
(i) The redaction exercise
(ii) The copying exercise
(i) This was a case where the court was considering the fundamental right of a journalist to access documents which went to the heart of the exercise of those rights. Whilst the court undertook the necessary balancing exercise in relation to those rights as against the child's Article 8 rights, any measure which interferes in those rights must go no further than is necessary or proportionate. Regardless of what is said in Dring, there must be circumstances where the burden imposed by requiring a party seeking access to court documents to pay costs could amount to a disproportionate, and thus unlawful, interference in those Convention rights.
(ii) The judgment of the Court of Appeal in Dring cannot be interpreted as a settled mandate to a court dealing with similar applications in future to award costs against an applicant in relation to a particular disclosure exercise. In this context, reliance is placed on that part of the Court of Appeal's judgment where it was observed:
"The court may order that copies be provided of documents which there is a right to inspect, but that will ordinarily be on the non-party undertaking to pay reasonable copying costs, consistently with CPR 31.15(c). There may also be additional compliance costs which the non-party should bear, particularly if there has been intervening delay" [emphasis added].
B. THE APPLICATION FOR PERMISSION TO APPEAL
Ground 1: the balancing exercise
Ground 2: insufficient consideration of the interference with Ms Newman's Article 10 rights
Ground 3: flawed approach to the ultimate balancing exercise
"162. As I have made clear at several stages of this judgment, I am not deciding matters of general principle. This is a targeted and fact-specific exercise which has involved a careful balancing exercise of all the competing rights involved as between the individual parties to this particular case. I have rejected Ms Newman's application for wholesale disclosure of the court file but I have agreed that she should be entitled to see limited aspects of the material it contains. To the extent that I have interfered with either the mother's or M's Article 8 rights and/or Ms Newman's Article 10 rights, I have done so in what I judge to be an entirely proportionate manner. An important factor in my decision has been the mother's consent to disclosure but this does not mean that in every case where an aggrieved parent supports media access to material generated in children's proceedings, journalists should be encouraged to make applications."
(a) the court considers that the appeal would have a real prospect of success; or
(b) there is some other compelling reason why the appeal should be heard.
I do not consider either limb to be made out in this case.
Order accordingly
Note 1 Dring (on behalf of the Asbestos Victims Support Group) v Cape Intermediate Holdings Ltd (Media Lawyers Association Intervening) [2019] UKSC 38, [2019] 3 WLR 429 [Back]