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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 >> John v Associated Newspapers Ltd. [2006] EWHC 1611 (QB) (23 June 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2006/1611.html Cite as: [2006] EWHC 1611, [2006] EMLR 722, [2006] EWHC 1611 (QB), [2006] EMLR 772 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
The Strand London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
SIR ELTON JOHN |
Applicant |
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- v - |
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ASSOCIATED NEWSPAPERS LTD |
Respondent |
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Suite 91 Temple Chambers,
3 - 7 Temple Avenue, London EC4Y OHP
Telephone 020 7404 7464
(instructed by Messrs Carter Ruck) appeared on behalf of THE APPLICANT
MR MARK WARBY QC (instructed by Messrs Reynolds Porter Chamberlain LLP, London EW1) appeared on behalf of THE RESPONDENT
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE EADY:
"Section 12(3) makes the likelihood of success at the trial an essential element in the court's consideration of whether to make an interim order. But in order to achieve the necessary flexibility the degree of likelihood of success at the trial needed to satisfy section 12(3) must depend on the circumstances. There can be no single, rigid standard governing all applications for interim restraint orders. Rather, on its proper construction the effect of section 12(3) is that the court is not to make an interim restraint order unless satisfied the applicant's prospects of success at the trial are sufficiently favourable to justify such an order being made in the particular circumstances of the case. As to what degree of likelihood makes the prospects of success `sufficiently favourable', the general approach should be that courts will be exceedingly slow to make interim restraint orders where the applicant has not satisfied the court that he will probably ('more likely than not') succeed at the trial. In general, that should be the threshold an applicant must cross before the court embarks on exercising its discretion, duly taking into account the relevant jurisprudence on Article 10 and any countervailing Convention rights. But there will be cases where it is necessary for a court to depart from this general approach and a lesser degree of likelihood will suffice as a prerequisite. Circumstances where this may be so include those mentioned above: where the potential adverse consequences of disclosure are particularly grave, or where a short-lived injunction is needed to enable the court to hear and give proper consideration to an application for interim relief pending the trial or any relevant appeal."
That seems to me to be the guideline which I should adopt in approaching this application.
"Any interference with the press has to be justified because it inevitably has some effect on the ability of the press to perform its role in society. This is the position irrespective of whether a particular publication is desirable in the public interest."
That, if I may say so with respect, is a general statement of the law which remains valid. In other words, it is not necessary to demonstrate, in the case of a tabloid publication in particular, that the contents of an article or the content of photographs is desirable in the public interest. It may very well be that, in certain circumstances, it will be necessary to focus upon whether or not it is in the public interest to publish material in respect of which there is a prima facie legitimate expectation of privacy. But that is a consideration which has to be addressed later down the line.
".... Usually the answer to the question whether there exists a private interest worthy of protection will be obvious. In those cases where the answer is not obvious an answer will often be unnecessary. This is because the weaker the claim for privacy the more likely that the claim for privacy will be outweighed by the claim based on freedom of expression."
"Where an individual is a public figure, he is entitled to have his privacy respected in the appropriate circumstances. The individual, however, should recognise that because of his public position he must expect and accept that his actions will be more closely scrutinised by the media. Even trivial facts relating to a public figure can be of great interest to readers and other observers of the media. .... Whether you have courted publicity or not, you may be a legitimate subject of public attention."
MR WARBY: My Lord, I invite you to do so and order costs in favour of the defendants.
MR JUSTICE EADY: Mr Browne?
MR BROWNE: My Lord, could I just take instructions for a moment in relation to the matter of an appeal?
MR JUSTICE EADY: Yes, certainly. Do you want me to rise?
MR BROWNE: Yes, for five minutes.
(The court adjourned for a short time)
MR BROWNE: My Lord, I ask first for permission to appeal and for an injunction to be granted pending either the prosecution of the appeal, if your Lordship grants permission, or in the event that you do not, to enable us to go to the Appeal Court and seek permission. Your Lordship will recall that, clearly if the boot had been on the other foot, an application would have been made by Mr Warby. That was made clear in the letter that we received today. Can I just indicate the basis upon which I suggest that, in addition to there obviously being, as the defendants have said, an issue of great importance here and an issue where the law needs clarifying because this is the sort of case that can occur very often and leads to public concern, that the reason that I suggest that there is an arguable point of appeal here is that one is not concerned in applying section 12(3) with a direction question of discretion. Your Lordship is concerned with an issue of law: whether or not the claimant is more likely than not to succeed at trial. It is not the usual case where it can be said that this is all a matter for the discretion of the judge. The judge has to weigh the law and weigh the law in a developing area. In that area obviously, as Mr Warby has indicated, consideration has to be given to the differing emphases in the judgments of the house in Campbell. Your Lordship approached this on the basis of the informational content of the photograph. With great respect, that fails to give adequate weight to the approach at any rate of Lord Hope and Lady Hale, which was to treat the tort as one of intrusion. In other words, we have gone beyond simply a tort whose basis is the law of confidential information to look at what is intrusive in relation to Article 8 rights of privacy in the home. In other words, in Lord Hope's words, this is not an ordinary street scene. What is intended here is clearly going to be, as your Lordship acknowledged, derisive of his baldness and personally offensive, all added to the breach of Article 8 rights.
The second point that I would made is that your Lordship, although mentioning Douglas v Hello in passing, did not consider -- and this is extremely important in the context of the Cream assessment -- the point that was made in Douglas that damages would be an inadequate remedy. That is a matter which swayed the Court of Appeal in Douglas v Hello the second time and was said to be a criticism of their predecessors three or four years before.
So, my Lord, I do ask, as Mr Warby would be asking were the boot on the other foot, for permission to appeal and for your Lordship to extend the grant of an injunction to enable us to go to the Court of Appeal. This is a photograph that was taken last Monday. There is no conceivable urgency if the Daily Mail wish deride Sir Elton John, it is no matter to them whether the do so tomorrow or two or three weeks hence.
MR JUSTICE EADY: May I just ask whether any contact has been made with the Court of Appeal?
MR BROWNE: Not by us. It may well be that Mr Warby may have set it up.
MR JUSTICE EADY: Sometimes one is told that the Court of Appeal is as it were standing by.
MR BROWNE: I do not know whether Mr Warby has put that in hand. We have not.
MR WARBY: No, we have not. Mr Browne has misunderstood some of the things we said. We said that we would go there if necessary, but we did not say that we had it all lined up.
MR BROWNE: No, I was not suggesting that, but it is quite clear that they regarded this as much a matter of importance requiring issues to be resolved of some complexity and difficulties to justify going to the Court of Appeal, and we feel the same, particularly given the nature of the article which is likely to be published, coupled with the intrusive photograph capitalising on a physical feature of Sir Elton, just as humiliating and intrusive in its way as if they had capitalised on his state of health. Indeed, one could perhaps treat baldness as a feature of health.
MR JUSTICE EADY: Yes, thank you. Mr Warby?
MR WARBY: My Lord, it is an evaluative exercise, your Lordship's decision, and what your Lordship has done is to apply the existing principles laid down in the authorities to the facts of this particular case. Mr Brown says it is an issue of great importance. What we said was that the ramifications would be considerable if the novel proposition advanced by his side was accepted. The converse does not apply. It certainly does not mean that there is any merit in the proposition that lay behind the application. So the point of principle does not really arise at all. Your Lordship did refer to the informational content of the photograph, but you also noted the clear reference the question of whether distress and embarrassment would be caused. Your Lordship took all the relevant factors into account and the Court of Appeal would have no basis for interfering with the evaluative exercise your Lordship carried out.
The second point that was made was that your Lordship mentioned Douglas, but not the point about damages being an adequate remedy. Well, your Lordship having given sufficient grounds for the decision, that point did not really arise. Your Lordship has dismissed the application on the basis that it did not cross the threshold. You were not satisfied it crossed the threshold and you were not satisfied that it would succeed when balancing Article 8 with Article 10. So damages being an adequate remedy, it quite simply was not necessary for your Lordship to address. So I invite you to refuse permission and leave it to Mr Browne, if so advised and instructed, to take his application to the Court of Appeal.
MR BROWNE: My Lord, it is obviously very late and it will be difficult now, as the Court of Appeal pointed out in Douglas v Hello if an injunction is refused, that represents a considerable intrusion on the claimant's Convention rights, obviously assuming that he is right, as I would ask your Lordship to do for the purposes of this argument.
My Lord, so far as the section 12(3) point is concerned, this is not simply a question of evaluation. Your Lordship has to evaluate the factual evidence, but the real question is the application of the law. I will not repeat myself, save to this extent. Where, with great respect, a point of great importance arises is whether it is right in a case like this to be concerned solely with the informational content of the photograph or whether one has regard to the intrusive nature of a covert, non-consensual photograph, which is the approach we say that was taken in Von Hannover. So, my Lord, we do say that issues of great importance arise here, not least because, as has been said by these defendants, these matters arise so frequently. In those circumstances, having regard to the stress that is obviously likely to be caused to Sir Elton by the publication of the photograph focusing, as that photograph did, on his baldness, and speculating about whether he wears a wig or a hairweave, my Lord, we say that we should be permitted to have the injunction for as long as it takes us to get this matter before the Court of Appeal. But I do ask your Lordship to say that this is a case where permission to appeal would be proper and justified, bearing in mind the lack of urgency to publish.
MR JUSTICE EADY:
MR BROWNE: Your Lordship will have to form a view as to the need to have spent as much as twelve hours.
MR JUSTICE EADY: I am concerned for the moment with the principle. MR BROWNE: I am so sorry, my Lord. So far as costs are concerned, the only argument that I could mount is that it should be costs in the action. That, of course, assumes that it will go on. That in the ordinary way would be the appropriate order because it does not necessarily follow from your Lordship's ruling on section 12(3) that the case is doomed, even if your Lordship is right. So that is the order that I would seek, costs in the action, and in due course a detailed assessment if the action goes not further. One does not know quite what will be published and what Sir Elton will wish to do, having regard to the advice from the Court of Appeal that damages are an inadequate remedy once the cat is out of the bag.
MR JUSTICE EADY: All right. Thank you. I think you are entitled to your costs as a matter of principle, Mr Warby. Are you asking me to make a summary assessment?
MR WARBY: Yes, we have done the decent thing and produced a statement of costs.
MR JUSTICE EADY: Have you done the decent thing in serving it on the other side 24 hours beforehand?
MR WARBY: Yes, we have. That is what I meant, but I did not say it.
MR JUSTICE EADY: Yes, I see.
MR WARBY: Yes, we have provided this to the other side. That is what Mr Browne began by talking about.
MR JUSTICE EADY: Yes.
MR WARBY: Could I have a copy handed up to your Lordship and invite you to assess the costs in the sum specified?
MR JUSTICE EADY: Thank you.
MR WARBY: The focus of Mr Browne's submission, half made before he had second thoughts, was the second count, the apparently extravagant amount of twelve hours spent by Miss Hartley dealing with this matter. Of course, there being no costs statement from the other side, we are not to know how many hours --
MR JUSTICE EADY: I never find that terribly helpful anyway. People always like to refer to it, but I would rather concentrate on what has been --
MR WARBY: I always find it rather intriguing.
MR JUSTICE EADY: Well, that is a different point.
MR WARBY: Your Lordship's views are what matter. My Lord, I can say that that time was principally spent from between about six o'clock yesterday when the question of a threatened injunction was raised again and the time this hearing began. From personal experience, to-ing and fro-ing was going on throughout the course of last evening, as your Lordship will understand. Taking the statement of the journalist whose e-mail confirming and proofing the statement came in at some time after ten o'clock.
MR JUSTICE EADY: Yes.
MR WARBY: So, in my submission, twelve hours at that rate is remarkably modest compared to many that one sees. It is a thoroughly reasonable sum in a matter of this kind.
MR JUSTICE EADY: Can I check with you whether in this case VAT is properly claimed?
MR WARBY: VAT is not charged, no.
MR JUSTICE EADY: It is claimed here.
MR WARBY: Yes, I apologise for that.
MR JUSTICE EADY: That ought to come out?
MR WARBY: Yes, because that can be reclaimed.
MR JUSTICE EADY: That is what I thought, yes.
MR WARBY: So I drop the claim for VAT. The fee is £7,081.
MR JUSTICE EADY: Do you want to say anything about the detail? You were about to say something about the twelve hours, Mr Browne?
MR BROWNE: Well, your Lordship has to approach this with a fairly broad brush and twelve hours does seem an awful lot. I will not speculate about what Mr Taite has worked out. As your Lordship said, it would not be helpful, but in our submission the sum of £7,000 odd, which remains after the VAT is deducted, ought to be knocked down by a reasonable percentage.
MR JUSTICE EADY: Mr Warby, unless you want to persuade me to the contrary, I think the right figure for summary assessment is £6,000.
MR WARBY: My Lord, I will leave it there.
MR JUSTICE EADY: Thank you very much.