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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 >> Bacon v Automattic Inc & Ors [2011] EWHC 1072 (QB) (06 May 2011) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2011/1072.html Cite as: [2011] EWHC 1072 (QB), [2011] 2 All ER (Comm) 852, [2012] 1 WLR 753, [2012] WLR 753 |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
LOUIS BACON |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1)AUTOMATTIC INC (2) WIKIMEDIA FOUNDATION (3) DENVER POST LLC |
Defendants |
____________________
The Defendants did not appear and were not represented
Hearing dates: 19 April 2011
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Tugendhat:
"If through no fault of his own a person gets mixed up in the tortious acts of others so as to facilitate their wrongdoing he may incur no personal liability but he comes under a duty to assist the person who has been wronged by giving him full information and disclosing the identity of the wrongdoers. I do not think that it matters whether he became so mixed up by voluntary action on his part or because it was his duty to do what he did. It may be that if this causes him expense the person seeking the information ought to reimburse him. But justice requires that he should co-operate in righting the wrong if he unwittingly facilitated its perpetration."
"Please provide us with a court order including a court's decision regarding this particular content; if any content is found to be defamatory or illegal by a court of law, it will be removed immediately from our service. Any court order, should you obtain one, should be sent to the following e-mail address: court-orders at wordpress.com".
"I have removed the statements complained of and have raised a task for one of our biography specialists to further investigate the quality of sources of information in the article. While you will not automatically be notified of the outcome of this, it generally results in articles being cleaned up and improved above and beyond the triage and removal of obviously wrong statements which the Quality Support Team provides…."
"You request log details and IP information for a registered Wikipedia editor. We will be happy to provide you with this information upon receipt of an official court order/subpoena requesting the data. An official copy of the court order/subpoena should be sent via postal mail via our registered agent using the address noted at [and a website address is given]".
"Unfortunately, the Wikimedia Foundation does not disclose personally identifying information regarding its users absent US subpoena. Please note that we do not comply with foreign subpoenas absent and immediate threat to life or limb, due to the varying standards and requirements of courts from country to country. There is a procedure by which you can have a foreign subpoena recognised by US courts. Should you choose to pursue this course of action, please send the US subpoena to me and we will comply with the subpoena to the best of our ability".
"The Post will disclose information. The Post maintains that when required to do so by law or pursuant to a legal proceeding, including without limitation, in response to a court order or a subpoena. The Post may also disclose such information in response to a law enforcement agency's request…"
"Where the claimant wishes to serve a claim form or any other document on a defendant out of the United Kingdom, it may be served –
(a) by any method provided for by –
(i) rule 6.41 (service in accordance with the Service Regulation);
(ii) rule 6.42 (service through foreign governments, judicial authorities and British Consular authorities); or
(iii) rule 6.44 (service of claim form or other document on a State);
(b) by any method permitted by a Civil Procedure Convention or Treaty; or
(c) by any other method permitted by the law of the country in which it is to be served."
"6.15(1) Where it appears to the court that there is a good reason to authorise service by a method or at a place not otherwise permitted by this Part, the court may make an order permitting service by an alternative method or at an alternative place…
6.37(5) Where the court gives permission to serve a claim form out of the jurisdiction – …
(b) it may –
(i) give directions about the method of service; ..."
"(4) An order under this rule must specify –
(a) the method or place of service;
(b) the date on which the claim form is deemed served; and
(c) the period for –
(i) filing an acknowledgment of service;
(ii) filing an admission; or
(iii) filing a defence."
"I emphasise in accepting this submission about the general structure of CPR Pt 6 that I do not consider there to be a clear, consistent and rigid line of demarcation to be found in the amended CPR Pt 6 between the method of service and place (where and on whom) service is made. Any such inflexible distinction would be artificial, and after all, CPR r 6.3(c) concerns the place of service, cross-referring to rr 6.7, 6.8, 6.9 and 6.10. I mention this because it is of considerable importance to the court's jurisdiction about service by an alternative method out of the jurisdiction. The amended CPR r 6.15, expressed to be about alternative method and place of service, applies only to service within the jurisdiction. Under the old rules the court exercised the power conferred by the CPR r 6.8 to make orders for service about on whom or where a claim form might be served outside the jurisdiction (see, for example, Marconi Communications International Ltd v PT Pan Indonesia Bank TBK [2004] EWHC 129 (Comm), [2004] 1 Lloyd's Rep 594 at para 39 et seq). The change is observed in the notes in Civil Procedure 2009 ed, Vol 1 at p 178, para 6.15.7. However, in the amended CPR r 6.37 there is a provision that "Where the court gives permission to service a claim form out of the jurisdiction . . . (b) it may (i) give directions about the method of service". Although the amended CPR r 6.37 refers to "method" of service, I do not interpret it as conferring a more restricted power than the court was generally recognised to have under the old rules, and consider that so to interpret it would not respect the overriding objective and the principle of interpretation stipulated in CPR r 1.2." (emphasis added)
"I have set out the headings to the rules as well as the rules themselves. It is not in dispute that reference may be made to the headings in interpreting the rules. The CPR are a kind of delegated legislation made under the authority conferred on the Civil Procedure Rule Committee by the Civil Procedure Act 1997. Just as headings may, and indeed should, be considered in interpreting primary legislation provided that due account is taken of that fact that the function of a heading is to provide a brief and therefore necessary inexact guide to the material to which it applies (see Bennion on Statutory Interpretation, Code ss 255 and 256), so too headings are relevant when interpreting delegated legislation. Indeed, while in the case of primary legislation it is relevant to keep in mind that headings are not included in a bill for debate but for ease of reference (see R v Montila [2004] UKHL 50 at para 34, [2005] 1 All ER 113, [2004] 1 WLR 3141), this consideration might not detract in the same way from the assistance available from the headings in the CPR: there would be no constraint upon the Rules Committee debating headings."
"20…[Counsel for the GMC] submits that the court should accept that the power to allow alternative methods of service, which is referred to in rule 6.15 of Part 6, although expressly dealing with service within the jurisdiction, ought to be construed as being capable of extension to service outside the jurisdiction. He relies on the service of Andrew Smith J in the case of Andrew Brown v. Innovatorone…
21. I accept that the court does have such a power. It would be consistent with the practicable way that these matters need to be handled, and also consistent with the proper care and attention that needs to be given to bringing claims to the attention of defendants resident outside the UK. No doubt there does need to have to be good reason why the court should allow alternative service and should examine with care the Rules…".
"[66] It follows, in my judgment, that while the fact that proceedings served by an alternative method will come to the attention of a defendant more speedily than proceedings served under the Hague Convention is a relevant consideration when deciding whether to make an order under CPR r 6.15, it is in general not a sufficient reason for an order for service by an alternative method.
[67] Quite apart from authority, I would consider that in general the desire of a claimant to avoid the delay inherent in service by the methods permitted by CPR r 6.40, or that delay, cannot of itself justify an order for service by alternative means. Nor can reliance on the Overriding Objective. If they could, particularly in commercial cases, service in accordance with CPR r 6.40 would be optional; indeed, service by alternative means would become normal….
[68] Service by alternative means may be justified by facts specific to the defendant, as where there are grounds for believing that he has or will seek to avoid personal service where that is the only method permitted by the foreign law, or by facts relating to the proceedings, as where an injunction has been obtained without notice, or where an urgent application on notice for injunctive relief is required to be made after the issue of proceedings. In the present case, ...
[69] This does not mean that a Claimant cannot bring proceedings to the attention of a defendant by email, fax or other more speedy means than service pursuant to CPR r 6.40. The Claimants could have done so in the present case. But, as I have indicated, service is more than this. In my view, the judge confused this possibility with service itself…
[113] It may be that orders permitting alternative service are not unusual in the case of countries with which there are no bilateral treaties for service and where service can take very long periods, of up to a year (cf Marconi v PT Communications International Ltd [2004] EWHC 129 (Comm), [2004] 1 Lloyd's Rep 594 (David Steel J) at 44-45). In the present case, that did not apply to any of the defendants, and I would prefer to leave such cases out of account. The rule, CPR 6.15(1), expressly requires "good reason", and it may be that some flexibility should be shown in dealing with such cases, especially where litigation could be prejudiced by such lengthy periods. However, in Knauf this court observed that mere desire for speed was unlikely to amount to good reason. As it is, the second defendant was a US company, the first and fourth defendants could be served in the USA, all in accordance with the Hague Convention, and the third defendant, a company incorporated in Afghanistan could, it seems, be served under Afghanistan law and therefore pursuant to CPR 6.40 by registered post and courier to its registered business address. Therefore the Claimants did not require more than about two months for service. In such a case, I agree that some special circumstance is needed to amount to good reason: after all, any case of service out earns the Claimant an additional two months for service (the difference between the standard initial period of four months in a case of service within the jurisdiction and six months in the case of a claim form for service outside the jurisdiction)….
[115] Finally in this context, the possible lacuna highlighted in para 6.15.7 of The White Book 2010 may be noted".
"6.3 (1) A claim form may (subject to Section IV of this Part and the rules in this Section relating to service out of the jurisdiction on solicitors, European Lawyers and parties) be served by any of the following methods –...
(d) fax or other means of electronic communication in accordance with Practice Direction 6A; …"
"Service by fax or other electronic means
4.1 Subject to the provisions of rule 6.23 … (6), where a document is to be served by … electronic means -
(1) the party who is to be served … must previously have indicated in writing to the party serving –
(a) that the party to be served ...is willing to accept service by ... electronic means; and
(b) the ... e-mail address or other electronic identification to which it must be sent; ...".
"Where a party indicates in accordance with Practice Direction 6A that they will accept service by electronic means other than fax, the e-mail address or electronic identification given by that party will be deemed to be at the address for service."
Conclusion