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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> TUV v Persons Unknown [2010] EWHC 853 (QB) (22 April 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2010/853.html Cite as: [2010] EWHC 853 (QB), [2010] EMLR 19 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
SITTING IN PRIVATE
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
TUV |
Applicant |
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- and - |
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PERSON OR PERSONS UNKNOWN |
Respondent(s) |
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Hearing date: 14 April 2010
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Eady :
i) The continuation until trial or further order of what Mr Spearman QC, for the Applicant, refers to as the "principal protection"; that is to say, restrictions imposed upon the Respondents preventing their dealing with, or parting with possession of, the goods identified as having been stolen in the burglary on the night of 29-30 March 2010; restrictions upon infringement of copyright; restrictions upon the use or communication of any information derived from the stolen goods and also upon revealing the fact that the Applicant had an interest in these proceedings (i.e. restraining any reference to her identity as the Applicant); and a prohibition against causing or authorising any other person to do any of those acts.
ii) An extension was sought until 21 days after the identification of the Respondents of the time within which the claim form is to be served upon them.
iii) A restriction in the following terms:
"Pursuant to CPR 25 APD 9.2, … , the Applicant shall be required to provide the legal advisers of any third party served with a copy of this Order promptly on request with (a) a copy of any materials read by the Judge, including material prepared after the hearing at the direction of the Judge or in compliance with the Order and/or (b) a note of the hearing on their written undertaking to use those documents and the information contained in those documents only for the purposes of these proceedings AND PROVIDED ALWAYS that before complying with any such request the Applicant shall be permitted to redact the name of the individual who assigned copyright to the Applicant."
"Injunctions against third parties
9.1 The following provisions apply to orders which will affect a person other than the applicant or respondent, who:
(1) did not attend the hearing at which the order was made; and
(2) is served with the order.
9.2 Where such a person served with the order requests–
(1) a copy of any materials read by the judge, including material prepared after the hearing at the direction of the judge or in compliance with the order; or
(2) a note of the hearing,
the applicant, or his legal representative, must comply promptly with the request, unless the court orders otherwise."
"A party to whom a document has been disclosed may use the document only for the purpose of the proceedings in which it is disclosed, except where–
(a) the document has been read to or by the court, or referred to, at a hearing which has been held in public;
(b) the court gives permission; or
(c) the party who disclosed the document and the person to whom the document belongs agree."
It was submitted by Mr Spearman that these provisions would offer his client, or any applicant in her position, no protection in respect of documents passed to a third party in accordance with CPR 25 APD 9.2 or as to the information contained in such documents. He submits, therefore, that the interpretation by the legal adviser to MGN is wrong.
"Except as provided by this rule, a witness statement may be used only for the purpose of the proceedings in which it is served."
(None of the exceptions is relevant for present purposes.)
"It is not for me to lay down practice directions, but what I can say is that a proper consideration for the Art.10 rights of media publishers, and indeed their rights under Art.6 as well, would require that where a litigant intends to serve a prohibitory injunction upon one or more of them, in reliance on the Spycatcher principle, those individual publishers should be given a realistic opportunity to be heard on the appropriateness or otherwise of granting the injunction, and upon the scope of its terms. As is well known, it is relatively easy for the media in such circumstances to instruct their lawyers to come to court at short notice and, if they are content to do so and no conflict arises, to arrange for common representation (just as, here, Mr Spearman represents the interests both of MGN and NGN)."
" … Eady J cannot have been contemplating an obligation being imposed on individual claimants, who may be of limited means, to arrange through their legal advisers to serve what might be a substantial body of evidence on a large number of media non-parties. It seems to me that the obligation to serve them must, as a matter of common sense and economy, be confined to those media organisations whom the claimant has reason to believe have displayed an interest in publishing the story which the claimant is seeking to injunct."