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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 >> Fox v Boulter [2012] EWHC 3183 (QB) (13 November 2012) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2012/3183.html Cite as: [2012] EWHC 3183 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
LIAM FOX MP |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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HARVEY BOULTER |
Defendant |
____________________
Mr Mathew Nicklin (instructed by DLA Piper) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 8 November 2012
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Tugendhat :
"the court must under CPR PD 53 para 4.1 consider not only the pleaded meaning but also "whether the statement is capable of bearing any other meaning defamatory of the claimant", the court must consider any meanings that can properly be advanced".
THE PARTICULARS OF CLAIM
"1. The Claimant is the Member of Parliament for North Somerset and from 12th May 2010 until 14th October 2011 was the Secretary of State for Defence.
2. The Defendant is a British businessman principally resident in Dubai (but who also maintains a residence in the UK) and is the Chief Executive Officer of Porton Capital Inc, a Cayman Islands based legal entity, which conducts business in the UK, Dubai and other jurisdictions.
3. In June 2011 the Defendant was the subject of widely reported allegations ("the Allegations") which he has characterised as being to the effect that he was guilty or there were strong grounds to suspect that he was guilty of an unlawful campaign of blackmail against 3M Co. in an effort to extort millions of dollars in settlement of a hopeless piece of litigation. The Allegations arose following the Defendant's sending of two emails to 3M's lawyers on 18th and 19th June 2011. The Allegations were the basis of a legal claim against the Defendant brought by 3M Co., a US corporation ("3M"). The Defendant counter-sued 3M for libel in England. These matters were well publicised in the national press.
4. Some months later, on or about 7th November 2011 the Defendant published or caused to be published by an exclusive televised interview he had arranged and gave with Sky News or Sky Television which was broadcast on 7th November 2011 and which was posted at Internet address news.sky.com/story/898791/fox-and-werrity-to-be-court-witnesses (where it remains to this daywhere it remained until it was removed in or about October 2012) and transcribed there within an article under the headline "Fox And Werritty 'To Be Court Witness'", to an enormous but necessarily unquantifiable number of television and Internet viewers and readers, the following words defamatory of the Claimant:
'We plan on calling Dr Liam Fox and his pal Adam Werrity to give evidence in some of these ongoing legal disputes so they can tell the truth and so we can debunk these baseless allegations against me.
This will also shine a spotlight on some of the murkier side of politics and lobbying and we need to get into some of those aspects in a little more detail.
For instance, Atlantic Bridge, Fox's so-called charity which looks like a political lobbying group, and some of its connections into the US.
I don't know what we will find at the moment but there are a lot of unanswered questions and until some of those questions are answered we will have to keep looking.…
It does warrant some pretty hard questions being asked, and at some point they have to come forward and answer some of those tough questions.…
They have stated they will be willing to come forth and give evidence in the US.
I hope when they get there they can put their hand on the bible and tell the truth – and I suspect they will be forced to come if they do not do it willingly'.
5. In their natural and ordinary meaning and/or by way of innuendo the said words meant and were understood to mean that reprehensibly and dishonourably although he was uniquely in a position to do so the Claimant had failed to speak out with the truth in order to debunk the supposedly baseless Allegations made publicly against the Defendant, the gravity and discredit of which omission was reflected by the fact that if the Claimant did not attend court voluntarily in the United States to exonerate the Defendant then the Claimant would be compelled by legal process to attend…. [there then follow six sub-paragraphs of Particulars of Innuendo]"
THE LAW TO BE APPLIED ON THE MEANING APPLICATION
"The legal principles relevant to meaning … may be summarised in this way: (1) The governing principle is reasonableness. (2) The hypothetical reasonable reader is not naïve but he is not unduly suspicious. He can read between the lines. He can read in an implication more readily than a lawyer and may indulge in a certain amount of loose thinking but he must be treated as being a man who is not avid for scandal and someone who does not, and should not, select one bad meaning where other non-defamatory meanings are available. (3) Over-elaborate analysis is best avoided. (4) The intention of the publisher is irrelevant. (5) The article must be read as a whole, and any "bane and antidote" taken together. (6) The hypothetical reader is taken to be representative of those who would read the publication in question. (7) In delimiting the range of permissible defamatory meanings, the court should rule out any meaning which, "can only emerge as the produce of some strained, or forced, or utterly unreasonable interpretation…" …. (8) It follows that "it is not enough to say that by some person or another the words might be understood in a defamatory sense."
"…every time a meaning is shut out (including any holding that the words complained of either are, or are not, capable of bearing a defamatory meaning) it must be remembered that the judge is taking it upon himself to rule in effect that any jury would be perverse to take a different view on the question. It is a high threshold of exclusion. … the meaning of words in civil as well as criminal libel proceedings has been constitutionally a matter for the jury. The judge's function is no more and no less than to pre-empt perversity. That being clearly the position with regard to whether or not words are capable of being understood as defamatory or, as the case may be, non-defamatory, I see no basis on which it could sensibly be otherwise with regard to differing levels of defamatory meaning. Often the question whether words are defamatory at all and, if so, what level of defamatory meaning they bear will overlap."
"The ordinary and natural meaning of words may be either the literal meaning or it may be an implied or inferred or an indirect meaning: any meaning that does not require the support of extrinsic facts passing beyond general knowledge but is a meaning which is capable of being detected in the language used can be a part of the ordinary and natural meaning of words. See Lewis v. Daily Telegraph Ltd. [1964] AC 234. The ordinary and natural meaning may therefore include any implication or inference which a reasonable reader guided not by any special but only by general knowledge and not fettered by any strict legal rules of construction would draw from the words. The test of reasonableness guides and directs the court in its function of deciding whether it is open to a jury in any particular case to hold that reasonable persons would understand the words complained of in a defamatory sense".
"… the statement that C left in a hurry on its face imports nothing bad to C, but wears a different air when the context shows that what he left was his employment and there were disciplinary proceedings pending".
THE PUBLICATIONS IN QUESTION
1) "The Dubai businessman at the heart of Liam Fox's departure from government wants to force the former defence secretary and his friend and self-styled adviser Adam Werritty to answer questions in open court as to the exact nature of their much-criticised working relationship.
2) Harvey Boulter, who had a meeting with Dr Fox brokered by Mr Werrity, intends to subpoena both men to appear as he counter-sues US technology giant 3M in the British courts.
3) The Prime Minister had said that all questions about Mr Werritty, his numerous visits to the Ministry of Defence, his trips overseas, and business cards which claimed he was an adviser to Dr Fox, would be answered- but a Cabinet Office-led investigation left many dissatisfied.
4) Dr Fox resigned as Defence Secretary on October 14, following weeks of questions and speculation.
5) Speaking exclusively to Sky News, Mr Boulter said: "We plan on calling Dr Liam Fox and his pal Adam Werritty to give evidence in some of these ongoing legal disputes so they can tell the truth and so we can debunk these baseless allegations against me.
6) "This will also shine a spotlight on some of the murkier side of politics and lobbying group, and some of its connections into the US.
7) "For instance, Atlantic Bridge, Fox's so-called charity which looks like a political lobbying group, and some of its connections into the US.
8) "I don't know what we will find at the moment but there are a lot of unanswered questions and until some of those questions get answered we will have to keep looking" he added.
9) If Mr Boulter is successful I would be the first time Mr Werritty would be required to answer questions in public as to why he was given unprecedented access to the then - Defence Secretary- and whether or not, as some have alleged, he was pushing a right wing Atlanticist foreign policy at Dr Fox's request.
10) Mr Boulter said he felt "defrauded" by Mr Werritty's claim to be an advisor to Dr Fox.
11) "It does warrant some pretty hard questions being asked, and at some point they have to come forward and answer some of those tough questions," he said.
12) "I am concerned myself that I shared a considerable amount of information with somebody who purported to be an adviser to the minister, part of the Ministry of Defence and clearly he wasn't – and so I have no clue where that sensitive information has gone and I personally feel that I've been defrauded.
13) Dr Fox has previously said he would be happy to travel to the US to speak in any legal action there.
14) "They have stated they will be willing to come forth and give evidence in the US," Mr Boulter said.
15) "I hope when they get there they can put their hand on the bible and tell the truth – and I suspect they will be forced to come if they do not do it willingly.
16) Mr Boulter's company the Porton Group is currently in a legal battle with 3M bought MoD technology it was claimed could detect the MRSA superbug.
17) Following the meeting between Dr Fox and Mr Boulter, it was reported that the businessman wrote two emails in which he threatened that the British Government could reconsider the knighthood granted to 3M's British chief executive if the case was not settled.
18) On Monday, Mr Boulter claimed a victory in his fight with 3M when the High Court in London found 3M was "in material breach of its obligation" under an agreement to actively market the MRSA test, Baclite
19) "I am delighted that we have been vindicated in our attempt to force 3M to face up to their responsibilities," he said.
20) "But the victims here are those infected with MRSA. A weapon in that fight was wrongfully abandoned by 3M.
21) "This is a question of trust and honour which in my opinion seems to have been sadly lacking in 3M's behaviour.
22) "The judge has made it quite clear that 3M did not live up to its promises," he added.
23) Kevin Jones MP, Labour's shadow defence minister, responding to the news that Mr Boulter intends to subpoena both Liam Fox and Adam Werritty, said: "There are big, unanswered questions remaining over Liam Fox and Adam Werritty's activities.
24) "It is regrettable that US courts rather than the UK Government may reveal the full facts. The Prime Minister's investigation was inadequate and there is much evidence which merits real scrutiny.
25) "It is important that we understand what happened at one of the Government's most sensitive departments for the 18 months Dr Fox was in office, in order to be confident that similar activities will never take place again. The Government should have a full and thorough investigation".
SUBMISSIONS ON MEANING
DISCUSSION
THE APPLICATION FOR PERMISSION TO AMEND
"5.1 Paragraph 3 above is repeated.
5.2 On 20 June 2011 the Guardian newspaper reported that the Defendant had been accused of blackmail by 3M. In particular, it was reported that the Defendant had sent two emails to 3M as part of settlement negotiations in respect of a legal dispute between Porton Capital, a company of which the Defendant was CEO, and 3M, and that 3M had alleged that those emails constituted blackmail.
5.3 In the emails the Defendant had put pressure on 3M to pay Porton Capital $30 million to satisfy Porton Capital's claim against 3M. In the first email, dated 18 June 2011, he had claimed that he had discussed the legal dispute with the Claimant, then Secretary of State for the Defence, at a meeting ("the Dubai meeting"), and implied that, as a result of that meeting, his demands were made with the Claimant's, and the government's, authority or approval. In particular, he alleged or implied that the Claimant had told him that the issue of George Buckley's knighthood, the CEO of 3M, would be imminently discussed by the Cabinet and that the outcome of that discussion would be affected by 3M's response to the Defendant's demand for money. It was also reported that the Defendant had sent a second email pressing 3M for a response in which he claimed that the Claimant expected a response from 3M by the following Sunday night.
5.4 3M had sued the Defendant for blackmail immediately following receipt of the emails. The US attorneys for 3M sent a copy of the proceedings to the Guardian newspaper, and as a result the Guardian publicised the allegations in an article of 20 June 2011. The Defendant sued 3M for libel.
5.5 The dispute between the Defendant and 3M received further publicity in the Guardian and other national media, including in articles published in the Guardian on 27 June 2011, 7 August 2011, 19 October 2011, 26 October 2011 and 7 November 2011. The Defendant actively sought publicity for his claims, including giving an interview to the BBC on 11 October 2011 in which he characterised the Claimant's version of the Dubai meeting as a "half-truth".
5.7 As a result of this publicity, the story was fresh in the public mind and it was well known to a large but unquantifiable number of viewers of the interview containing the words complained of and to readers of the report of that interview that the Claimant was the unique position of being able to "debunk" the Allegations, if they were false, because he could confirm the truth of the Defendant's story and specifically confirm that he (the Defendant) was, in writing the emails, merely acting as a conduit for a message for 3M from the government.
5.6 Such viewers and/or readers would have understood the words complained of to mean that the Claimant had acted dishonourably or reprehensively in not coming forward publicly to debunk the false, and extremely serious, allegations against the Defendant."
"(4) … but only if the conditions specified in sub-section (5) are satisfied…
(5) The conditions referred to in subsection (4) are the following:
(a) in the case of a new claim involving a new cause of action, if the new cause of action arises out of the same facts or substantially the same facts as are already in issue on any claim previously made in the original action …" (emphasis added)
"The policy of [the Limitation Act 1935 s.35] is that, if factual issues are in any event going to be litigated between the parties, the parties should be able to rely upon any cause of action which substantially arises from those facts".
CONCLUSION