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England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Meade v Pugh & Anor [2004] EWHC 408 (QB) (05 March 2004) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2004/408.html Cite as: [2004] EWHC 408 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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GLENROY TERENCE MEADE |
Claimant/ Respondent |
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- and - |
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KATY PUGH and MARIE HAMILTON |
Defendants/ Appellants |
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The Respondent appeared in person
Hearing dates: 25th February 2004
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Tugendhat :
'3.4 (2) The court may strike outa statement of case if it appears to the court – (a) that the statement of case discloses no reasonable grounds for bringing or defending the claim;
24.2 The court may give summary judgment against a claimant or defendant on the whole of a claim or on a particular issue if –
(a) it considers that –
(i) that claimant has no real prospect of succeeding on the claim or issue; or ...; and
(b) there is no other compelling reason why the case or issue should be disposed of at a trial.'
'52.11 (1) Every appeal will be limited to a review of the decision of the lower court unless – .... (b) the court considers that in the circumstances of an individual appeal it would be in the interests of justice to hold a re-hearing.
(2) Unless it orders otherwise, the appeal court will not receive –
... (b) evidence which was not before the lower court.
(3) The appeal court will allow an appeal where the decision of the lower court was –
(a) wrong; or
(b) unjust because of a serious procedural or other irregularity in the proceedings in the lower court.
(4) The appeal court may draw any inference of fact which it considers justified on the evidence.'
'The above comments discredited my reputation as highlighted earlier; they were malicious due to the assumption of Ms Pugh assuming that I 'did not participate sufficiently in the main office environment and consequently did not observe and develop the manner normally used by staff'. Because of this, Ms Pugh's ulterior motive was to slow down my progression on the Diploma in Social Work course, as well as to delay or stop my progression in Social Work. Comments mentioned by a Carer highlighting that the Carers' Centre should employ someone like me; was not only written down on paper but it was brought to the attention of Ms Pugh when she telephoned a client whilst I was on a home visit, inquiring if I was there, this I thought peculiar. On hearing positive feedback Ms Pugh in my opinion decided to act maliciously to sabotage my future placement and career'.
'The claimant believes that the comments made by defendants one and two were not based on facts and that the defendants acted maliciously by giving the claimant an offensive doorknocker. The talking doorknocker did not have the desired effect so defendants one and two engineered an ulterior motive to discredit the claimant's reputation by writing maliciously about him in the practice teacher's report. The claimant believes that defendants one and two did so maliciously because the claimant did not over familiarise or socialise with them and their colleagues in the manner to which they would have liked'.
'Evidence of the breach was in the form of an embarrassing and humiliating talking doorknocker … which was given to the claimant by defendant number two … on his last day at the Carers' Centre. Members of the staff team were present at the time, in particular a new colleague who started on the claimant's last day. On knocking the doorknocker, the claimant was greeted with a message saying: "Hello! You look 'fantastic', maybe when you've finished here, we could go out together, what do you think?" … On knocking a second time the claimant was greeted with a very malicious, humiliating and degrading message, which said: "I don't know who the hell you think you are but you're not welcome her, now get lost!"
'In this particular case there is evidence before me of an incident which occurred some short while before the publication of the two memoranda in question. That incident was the handing over of a talking door knocker by a representative or representatives of the Carer Institute …. I have asked myself whether the fact of presenting the claimant with such an object which uttered offensive words should be regarding evidence of malice. I do not think I can say that there is no real prospect of the claimant showing malice ….'.
'The public interest that the law should provide an effective means whereby a man can vindicate his reputation against calumny has nevertheless to be accommodated to the competing public interest in permitting men to communicate frankly and freely with one another about matters in respect of which the law recognises that they have a duty to perform or an interest to protect in doing so. What is published in good faith on matters of these kinds is published on a privileged occasion. It is not actionable even though it be defamatory and turns out to be untrue. With some exceptions which are irrelevant to the instant appeal, the privilege is not absolute but qualified. It is lost if the occasion which gives rise to it is misused. For in all cases of qualified privilege there is some special reason of public policy why the law accords immunity from suit - the existence of some public or private duty, whether legal or moral, on the part of the maker of the defamatory statement which justifies his communicating it or of some interest of his own which he is entitled to protect by doing so. If he uses the occasion for some other reason he loses the protection of the privilege.
So, the motive with which the defendant on a privileged occasion made a statement defamatory of the plaintiff becomes crucial. The protection might, however, be illusory if the onus lay on him to prove that he was actuated solely by a sense of the relevant duty or a desire to protect the relevant interest. So he is entitled to be protected by the privilege unless some other dominant and improper motive on his part is proved. "Express malice" is the term of art descriptive of such a motive. Broadly speaking, it means malice in the popular sense of a desire to injure the person who is defamed and this is generally the motive which the plaintiff sets out to prove. But to destroy the privilege the desire to injure must be the dominant motive for the defamatory publication; knowledge that it will have that effect is not enough if the defendant is nevertheless acting in accordance with a sense of duty or in bona fide protection of his own legitimate interests.
The motive with which a person published defamatory matter can only be inferred from what he did or said or knew. If it be proved that he did not believe that what he published was true this is generally conclusive evidence of express malice, for no sense of duty or desire to protect his own legitimate interests can justify a man in telling deliberate and injurious falsehoods about another, save in the exceptional case where a person may be under a duty to pass on, without endorsing, defamatory reports made by some other person.
Apart from those exceptional cases, what is required on the part of the defamer to entitle him to the protection of the privilege is positive belief in the truth of what he published or, as it is generally though tautologously termed, "honest belief." If he publishes untrue defamatory matter recklessly, without considering or caring whether it be true or not, he is in this, as in other branches of the law, treated as if he knew it to be false. But indifference to the truth of what he publishes is not to be equated with carelessness, impulsiveness or irrationality in arriving at a positive belief that it is true. The freedom of speech protected by the law of qualified privilege may be availed of by all sorts and conditions of men. In affording to them immunity from suit if they have acted in good faith in compliance with a legal or moral duty or in protection of a legitimate interest the law must take them as it finds them. In ordinary life it is rare indeed for people to form their beliefs by a process of logical deduction from facts ascertained by a rigorous search for all available evidence and a judicious assessment of its probative value. In greater or in less degree according to their temperaments, their training, their intelligence, they are swayed by prejudice, rely on intuition instead of reasoning, leap to conclusions on inadequate evidence and fail to recognise the cogency of material which might cast doubt on the validity of the conclusions they reach. But despite the imperfection of the mental process by which the belief is arrived at it may still be "honest," that is, a positive belief that the conclusions they have reached are true. The law demands no more.
Even a positive belief in the truth of what is published on a privileged occasion - which is presumed unless the contrary is proved - may not be sufficient to negative express malice if it can be proved that the defendant misused the occasion for some purpose other than that for which the privilege is accorded by the law. The commonest case is where the dominant motive which actuates the defendant is not a desire to perform the relevant duty or to protect the relevant interest, but to give vent to his personal spite or ill will towards the person he defames. If this be proved, then even positive belief in the truth of what is published will not enable the defamer to avail himself of the protection of the privilege to which he would otherwise have been entitled. There may be instances of improper motives which destroy the privilege apart from personal spite. A defendant's dominant motive may have been to obtain some private advantage unconnected with the duty or the interest which constitutes the reason for the privilege. If so, he loses the benefit of the privilege despite his positive belief that what he said or wrote was true.
Judges and juries should, however, be very slow to draw the inference that a defendant was so far actuated by improper motives as to deprive him of the protection of the privilege unless they are satisfied that he did not believe that what he said or wrote was true or that he was indifferent to its truth or falsity. The motives with which human beings act are mixed. They find it difficult to hate the sin but love the sinner. Qualified privilege would be illusory, and the public interest that it is meant to serve defeated, if the protection which it affords were lost merely because a person, although acting in compliance with a duty or in protection of a legitimate interest, disliked the person whom he defamed or was indignant at what he believed to be that person's conduct and welcomed the opportunity of exposing it. It is only where his desire to comply with the relevant duty or to protect the relevant interest plays no significant part in his motives for publishing what he believes to be true that "express malice" can properly be found.
There may be evidence of the defendant's conduct upon occasions other than that protected by the privilege which justify the inference that upon the privileged occasion too his dominant motive in publishing what he did was personal spite or some other improper motive, even although he believed it to be true.'
'If a piece of evidence is equally consistent with malice and the absence of malice, it cannot as a matter of law provide evidence on which the jury could find malice. The judge would be bound so to direct the jury. If there are no pieces of evidence which are more consistent with malice than the absence of malice, there is no evidence of malice to go to the jury.'
'As is well known from Lord Diplock's speech in Horrocks v Lowe [1975] AC 135, it is, at least theoretically, possible that a finding of malice could be made notwithstanding a conclusion that the defendant was speaking honestly on an occasion of qualified privilege. Lord Diplock emphasised that judges and juries should be slow to find a defendant malicious on the sole ground that the publication of the defamatory words (even though he believed them to be true) was prompted by the dominant motive of injuring the claimant. I have never heard of such a finding, but it is there in the jurisprudence as a possible outcome.'