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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Hyde Park Residence Ltd v Yelland & Ors [2000] EWCA Civ 37 (10 February 2000) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2000/37.html Cite as: [2000] EWCA Civ 37, [2000] ECDR 275, [2000] RPC 604, [2001] Ch 143, [2000] 3 WLR 215, [2000] EMLR 363 |
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Case No:1999/0459/3
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF JUDICATURE
COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
ON APPEAL FROM CHANCERY DIVISION
MR JUSTICE JACOB
Royal Courts of Justice
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL
Thursday, 10th February 2000
Thursday, 10th February 2000
LORD JUSTICE ALDOUS:
1. On 30th August 1997, Diana Princess of Wales and Mr Dodi Fayed visited the
Villa Windsor in Paris. It was a private home held on a long lease by Mr Al
Fayed. In the early hours of the next day they were involved in a car crash
which resulted in their deaths. The resulting national and international
emotion and interest are well known.
2. On arrival at and departure from the Villa Windsor, the Princess and Mr Dodi
Fayed were recorded on video tape by at least two of the security cameras that
were installed. Security at the Villa Windsor was the responsibility of Hyde
Park Residence Limited (Hyde Park), a company controlled by Mr Al Fayed. At
the time of the visit, Mr Murrell was the employee of Hyde Park responsible for
the security of the Villa Windsor. He let them in and saw them out. According
to Mr Murrell a few days after the accident, he was instructed to print stills
from the tape recording of the Princess and Mr Dodi Fayed arriving and leaving
the Villa. I will refer to them as the driveway stills. He printed two copies
and sent one set to Mr Klein, the president of the Ritz Hotel in Paris, and the
other set was retained in the operations room at the Villa.
3. On 5th August 1998, Mr Paul Thompson, a reporter for The Sun, was approached
by a woman who asked him whether he was interested in speaking to one of Mr Al
Fayed's security guards. He said that he was and a meeting was arranged
between himself and Mr Murrell. On 5th or perhaps 6th August, Mr Murrell gave
to Mr Thompson the set of driveway stills that he had taken, without
permission, from the operations room at the Villa Windsor. They were published
without the consent of Hyde Park in The Sun on 2nd September 1998 as part of an
article entitled "Video That Shames Fayed".
4. By writ dated 4th September 1998, Mr Al Fayed and Hyde Park started
proceedings against Mr Yelland, the editor of The Sun; News Group Newspapers
Limited, the publishers; News International Newspapers Limited, the
proprietors, and Mr Murrell. Mr Al Fayed withdrew from the proceedings as he
was not considered to be a necessary party.
5. In the statement of claim served on 30th October 1998, Hyde Park alleged
that the acts of the defendants were wrongful. They relied upon a number of
causes of action including breach of contract, inducement of breach of
contract, breach of confidence and infringement of copyright. By summons dated
28th October 1998, Hyde Park sought summary judgment under O.14 and 14A RSC in
respect of the allegations of breach of copyright. The essential allegations
were that Hyde Park were the owners of the copyright in the film from which the
driveway stills were printed and that by publishing the driveway stills in The
Sun the defendants had infringed that copyright either by carrying out an
exclusive right possessed by Hyde Park pursuant to the Copyright, Designs and
Patents Act 1988 or authorising such an act. They claimed, amongst other
things, an injunction, delivery up, an inquiry as to damages including damages
for flagrancy (section 97(2)) and alternatively an account of the profits.
6. The summons came before Jacob J. Before him ownership and subsistence of
copyright were not in dispute. Although a draft defence alleged that the
driveway stills did not form a substantial part of the copyright work, that
appears to have been abandoned. The substantive defence was twofold. First
that there was no infringement as the driveway stills had been used in such a
way as to constitute "fair dealing" within section 30(2) of the 1988 Act and
second that publication was not unlawful as it was in the public interest.
7. Those defences were pleaded in the draft defence in this way:
"22.3 Further or alternatively, the exploitation of the Villa Windsor Pictures
in and in connection with the publication of the Bodyguard Exclusive
constituted fair dealing with the same for the purpose of reporting current
events and, if necessary, the Defendants will contend that this was accompanied
by a sufficient acknowledgement. The Defendants will rely upon the provisions
of section 30(2), of the Copyright, Design and Patents Act 1988."
"22.1 At all material times it was in the public interest for copies of the
Villa Windsor Pictures to be published as they were in the issues of The Sun
dated 2, 3 and 4 September 1988 as part of the Bodyguard Exclusive, as without
such publication the exposure of the falsehoods that was contained in the
Bodyguard Exclusive would have lacked independent evidence to corroborate Mr
Murrell's account and accordingly would have [been] ineffective, alternatively
substantially less effective, to achieve that lawful end. Paragraph 13 above
is repeated mutatis mutandis."
8. In his judgment of 16th March 1999 the judge upheld the defences of fair
dealing and public interest. On that day the parties attended to make
submissions as to the order that should be made. The defendants submitted that
upon the terms of the judgment not only should the plaintiffs' application for
summary judgment be dismissed, but that they were entitled to judgment
dismissing the claim against them for infringement of copyright. The judge
accepted that submission and without giving a further judgment ordered that the
action for infringement of copyright be dismissed and that judgment be entered
for the defendants in respect of the claim for copyright infringement. He gave
leave to appeal and Hyde Park appealed contending that the judge was in error
in concluding that the defendants had a bona fide defence based on fair dealing
or public interest. They also contend that, even though the O. 14 summons was
dismissed with the result that the defendants would have leave to defend, the
judge should not have dismissed their claim for infringement of copyright.
9. It is important to bear in mind that the issues raised in this appeal arise
before there has been a trial. Judgment, as sought by Hyde Park, can only be
ordered if it be established that the defendants have no bona fide defence to
the copyright claim. Order 14 does not provide a procedure for resolving
disputes of fact and should not be used to carry out a trial on affidavit
evidence. It follows that, when considering Hyde Park's case for O. 14
judgment, I will assume that the facts are as stated in the draft defence and
as stated by the defendants in the evidence, except where they accept the
evidence of Hyde Park or there could be no controversy. Thus allegations by
the defendants as to what happened will appear as facts in the following
account, whereas many of them are in dispute.
10. After the accident on 31st August 1997, there was considerable public
interest in how it occurred. Mr Cole, the Harrods' director of public
relations, on 5th September 1997, briefed the press on behalf of Mr Al Fayed.
He said that an unnamed person in Paris had passed on to Mr Al Fayed the
Princess's last words and requests. He also referred to a £130,000
diamond solitaire ring Mr Dodi Fayed had given to the Princess on 30th August.
He said that Mr Al Fayed, when he went to Paris, had seen the bodies of both
the Princess and Mr Dodi Fayed. Clearly Mr Cole was asked about the
allegations that had been made that the driver of the car involved in the
accident, an employee of the Ritz, had been drinking alcohol. He sought to
throw doubt upon the blood alcohol levels found in the blood of the driver, but
ran through the timetable of events leading up to the car crash. He accurately
told the press the times of the arrival at and departure from the Villa Windsor
by the Princess and Mr Dodi Fayed.
11. Despite the accurate briefing by Mr Cole of the times of arrival and
departure from the Villa Windsor, Mr Al Fayed fabricated and gave wide
publicity to a different version in a book entitled "Death of a Princess"
written by Mr Thomas Sancton and Mr Scott MacLeod which was published in 1998,
and the 8th February 1998 edition of the Sunday Times; in the 12th February and
31st August 1998 editions of The Mirror; and in a television programme "Secrets
of the Crash" broadcast on ITV in July 1998. The gist of the falsehoods
conceived by Mr Al Fayed are pleaded in paragraph 12.5 of the draft defence in
this way:
"12.5 .... the gist of the falsehoods thus conceived and published to the
general public throughout England and Wales was to the effect that (in addition
to an earlier visit made on the weekend of 26 and 27 July 1997) on 30th August
1997, in preparation for a new life together and consistent not only with their
intention to get married and to live in the Villa Windsor with the blessing of
Mr Al Fayed but also with the existence of a conspiracy to kill them in order
to prevent their marriage, Dodi and Diana had visited Villa Windsor for at
least two hours, had been accompanied by an Italian designer who had already
drawn up detailed plans for some of the apartments that Mr Al Fayed knew about
because he was personally involved in these events, had manifested great
happiness and affection towards one another, had examined every part of the
house, and had taken a detailed interest in every aspect of the house and
garden."
12. To those falsehoods must be added the fabricated story that Mr Al Fayed had
paid for a ring to mark the engagement of the Princess and Mr Dodi Fayed, that
he saw the bodies and that he was informed of the Princess's last words.
13. The reason why Mr Murrell stole copies of the driveway stills was explained
in his affidavit. As he said:
"From the time of the accident until my resignation almost a year later,
together with other employees of the plaintiff/Al-Fayed, I was subjected to a
number of demands made by Al-Fayed and/or his senior managers on his behalf in
what was a very clear attempt to put forward to the world at large an account
that did not accord with the true sequence of events surrounding the crash. I
cannot speculate on Al-Fayed's motives, but what was and is clear is that
Al-Fayed wanted to create his own version of events, thereby misleading the
public and, in particular, the investigating Judge who was examining the
circumstances surrounding the crash. The cumulative effect of Al-Fayed's
attempts to use me as a pawn so as to put forward his version of events, caused
to me to decide at the very beginning of August 1998, as I set out below, that
I no longer wished to be part of this deceit. I therefore took the decision to
resign and expose Al- Fayed as a liar."
14. Mr Murrell went on in paragraph 26 of his affidavit:
"After taking the decision to resign, I believed it was important that the
truth about Dodi and Diana's visit to Villa Windsor on 30th August 1997 should
be made public in order to put an end to the lies that they were being told
about this visit, and the alleged earlier visit and to make public the attempts
by Al-Fayed to get Mr Rees-Jones to give a version of events that was
convenient to Al-Fayed but which was untrue. I also wanted to make a stand
against the pressure put upon employees of Al-Fayed and to demonstrate that I
at least would not tell lies on Al-Fayed's behalf, as well as wanting to expose
the pressure that was put upon various individuals employed by Al-Fayed through
the Plaintiff to wrongly influence the true version of events surrounding the
death of Dodi and Diana."
Despite the motives expressed by Mr Murrell, he sought and accepted payment for
the story and supply of the driveway stills that he had taken dishonestly.
Fair dealing
15. The defence of fair dealing is provided by section 30 of the 1988 Act.
"Criticism review and news reporting
30(1) Fair dealing with a work for the purpose of criticism or review, of that
or another work or of a performance of a work, does not infringe any copyright
in the work provided that it is accompanied by sufficient acknowledgement.
(2) Fair dealing with a work (other than a photograph) for the purpose of
reporting current events does not infringe any copyright in the work provided
that (subject to subsection (3)) it is accompanied by sufficient
acknowledgement.
(3) No acknowledgement is required in connection with the reporting of current
events by means of a sound recording, film, broadcast or cable programme."
16. The judge held that the defence of fair dealing had been established.
Although he made no explicit finding as to what were the relevant current
events, it appears that he believed them to be the events that took place on
30th August 1997 and perhaps 31st August 1997. As he said:
"A report on what actually happened which is in effect what these pictures
were, was entirely topical at the time of publication: Mr Al Fayed had given
them fresh impetus. Besides, at the time of publication the events were so
much still under discussion that it would be pedantic to regard them as
anything other than still "current"."
17. He went on to hold that the use made of the driveway stills by The Sun was
within the phrase "for the purpose of reporting current events" giving those
words the wide scope required. He also held that the use made was "fair
dealing". He concluded The Sun were in a position where it was close to
necessary to publish the photographs to refute what Mr Al Fayed had said in The
Mirror and elsewhere. He said:
"Besides, in this case I think The Sun was in the position where it was
close to necessary to publish the photographs to refute what Mr Al Fayed said
in The Mirror and elsewhere. Mr Bloch said The Sun could have
said they had interviewed Mr Murrell and seen the photographs without actually
publishing them. Or it could have first told Mr Al Fayed that it had the
pictures and challenged him to withdraw his statement. But the former course
would not have had anything like the same impact and force as actual
publication of the stills. A picture says more than a thousand words. The
Sun was showing that it had convincing evidence of the duration of the
visit. The latter course would have been to invite pre-emptive legal action.
However, Mr Al Fayed had clearly put into the public debate the question of
what happened at the Villa Windsor. It was used in part to support a matter
which was not only interesting for the public but involving as it did the
mother of a future sovereign was genuinely of public interest. The suggestions
being made, if true, were of far reaching importance. They even had similar
hints of evil. So if they were false it was equally important that the falsity
be exposed as soon as possible. It would have been inadequate for The
Sun or Mr Murrell to supply the photographs merely to a relevant proper
authority which was the investigating French Judge. By raising the matter in
the public forum, in my judgment, Mr Al Fayed made it a "fair dealing" for
The Sun to come back in that very forum."
18. The judge did not consider whether there had been sufficient
acknowledgement as Hyde Park did not suggest that there was not. However, that
will be a serious issue if the copyright claim goes to trial.
19. Mr Spearman QC who appeared for the defendants supported the reasoning of
the judge. He submitted that this Court should not disturb the judge's
conclusion unless it was established that he had made some error of principle
or his conclusion was clearly unsustainable.
20. Mr Bloch QC who appeared for Hyde Park submitted the judge had gone wrong
in principle and was plainly wrong. He submitted that the events of 30th
August 1997 were not current on 2nd September 1998, the date of the publication
of the driveway stills in The Sun. Secondly upon a fair reading of The Sun of
2nd September the purpose of the use of the driveway stills was not to report
the events of 30th August, but to attack the veracity of Mr Fayed and to vilify
him. Thirdly the way that the driveway stills were dealt with was not fair
taking account of the use, the motives of Mr Murrell and The Sun, and that the
driveway stills were unpublished and had not been circulated to members of the
public. Publication by The Sun had destroyed their intrinsic value derived
from the fact that they were amongst the last pictures taken of the Princess
and Mr Dodi Fayed. He submitted that the motive of The Sun was to attack the
veracity of Mr Fayed rather than to report any current events, and that the
suggestion by the judge that The Sun was in a position where it was close to
necessary to publish the photographs to refute what Mr Al Fayed said in The
Mirror and elsewhere was contrary to the facts. The Sun had before 31st August
1998, the date of The Mirror article, acquired the driveway stills and produced
the article. Further the exact timing of the visit to the Villa Windsor had
been made public by Mr Cole in September 1997 during his press briefing.
21. The most recent consideration of "fair dealing" provisions, now contained
in the 1988 Act, was by the Court of Appeal in Pro Sieben AG v Carlton UK
Television Ltd [1999] 1 WLR 605. Robert Walker LJ gave the judgment with
which the other members of the Court agreed. The case was concerned with use
of part of a filmed interview in a television programme criticising cheque book
journalism. The Court of Appeal differed from the judge as to what was the
purpose of the use of the alleged infringing work. Robert Walker LJ at page
616 asked himself how and why the judge came to form such a different
impression of the programme as a whole, and in particular of the alleged
infringing extract. The reason, he concluded, was that the judge had erred in
focusing too much on the expressed purpose, intention and motive of those
involved in planning the programme and focusing too little on the likely impact
on the audience. As Robert Walker LJ said at page 614B:
"It seems to me that in the composite phrases "for the purposes of criticism or
review" and "for the purpose of reporting current events" the mental element on
the part of the user is of little more importance than in such everyday
composite expressions as "for the purpose of argument" or "for the purpose of
comparison". The words "in the context of" or "as part of an exercise in"
could be substituted for "for the purpose of" without any significant
alteration of meaning.
That is not to say that the intentions and motives of the user of another's
copyright material are not highly relevant for the purposes of the defences
available under section 30(1) and section 30(2). But they are most highly
relevant on the issue of fair dealing, so far as it can be treated as a
discrete issue from the statutory purpose (arguably the better course is to
take the first 24 words of section 30(1) and the first 16 words of section
30(2), as a single composite whole and to resist any attempt at further
dissection). It is not necessary for the court to put itself in the shoes of
the infringer of the copyright in order to decide whether the offending piece
was published "for the purposes of criticism or review". This court should not
in my view give any encouragement to the notion that all that is required is
for the user to have sincere belief, however misguided, that he or she is
criticising a work or reporting current affairs. To do so would provide an
undesirable incentive for journalists, for whom facts should be sacred, to give
implausible evidence as to their intentions. The point is illustrated by two
cases to which the court was referred, Hindley v Higgins and News Group
Newspapers Ltd (unreported) 24 August 1983; Court of Appeal (Civil
Division) Transcript No. 830 of 1983 and Associated Newspaper Group Plc v
Newsgroup Newspapers Ltd [1986] RPC 515."
22. It follows that the first task of the court is to read the relevant parts
of The Sun of 2nd September to ascertain what was the perceived purpose of the
use of work, so as to decide whether it was or was not "for the purpose of
reporting current events". I therefore turn to the article in The Sun of 2nd
September 1998.
23. Most of the front page is taken up by the words "Fayed's Diana Lies".
There follow these phrases "'Marriage' to son Dodi was a sickening sham";
"Tycoon hid behind 'MI5 murder' claim." The rest of the front page consists of
a picture of Mr Al Fayed above which appears the words "World Exclusive
Bodyguard Speaks Out". Below the picture is the start of an article written by
Mr Thompson. It opens in this way:
"Tycoon Mohamed Al Fayed told a string of sickening lies in a bid to make the
world believe Princess Diana was going to marry his son Dodi, The Sun can
reveal.
The Harrods boss ordered aides to deceive millions of people into believing
the couple were about to get engaged when they died a year ago.
And he told staff to announce the couple planned to live at the Al Fayed-
owned Villa Windsor in Paris.
The astonishing claims were made by one of the multi-millionaire's most
trusted bodyguards.
Ex-marine Ben Murrell, 33 - at the heart of Al Fayed's security for three
years - also told how his boss:
ORDERED a butler to lie about Diana's visit to the Villa Windsor on August 30
last year- the day before she was killed in a car smash;
CLAIMED Diana had made a previous visit to the mansion - with an Italian
interior designer;
WANTED another bodyguard to lie on TV about Dodi and Diana, 36, getting
engaged;
TOLD staff to "get to" Dodi's minder Trevor Rees-Jones who survived the crash,
before he could make a statement to police and British embassy officials;
Made the ridiculous statement that Rees-Jones was part of an MI5 CONSPIRACY to
kill Di and Dodi. ..."
24. The article continues on pages 4 and 5. The driveway stills are reproduced
on page 4 and cover over a third of the page. The first still shows a car
parked in a driveway with a man and a woman who appear to have got out of the
car and to be approaching the entrance of a house. The man and woman are
ringed and the caption points out that the picture shows the Princess and Mr
Dodi Fayed arriving at the Villa Windsor "where Al Fayed claims Di intended to
live". At the bottom right-hand of the still is the date and the time it was
taken, namely 15.47. The second still shows a woman leaving the house and
approaching the car in the driveway. The time is recorded as 16.15. The
caption states "Diana walks out of the house alone to leave after 28 minutes -
yet Al Fayed said she spent two hours there". The third still shows two
vehicles driving away at 16.18.
25. A heading "VIDEO THAT SHAMES FAYED" stretches across pages 4 and 5.
Underneath the heading on page 4 are the words "It proves Di was not setting up
house with Dodi says Ben Murrell, Fayed's ex-minder." The article which starts
on page 4 continues on page 5. It sets out what Mr Murrell told The Sun. The
opening paragraphs state:
"This is the vital video which proves Mohamed Al Fayed LIED about Princess
Diana's love for his son Dodi.
Three black and white stills from the film show Diana was at Al Fayed- owned
Villa Windsor in Paris for only 28 minutes - nowhere near the two hours claimed
by the Harrods tycoon.
The pictures - never seen before - are taken from a security video shot as Di
and Dodi visited the villa the day before they died. And the mansion's former
head of security Ben Murrell says they show the Princess was NOT considering
setting up home with Dodi - contrary to Al Fayed's constant claims.
Special Boat Squadron veteran Ben, 33, said "They did not give me the
impression of a couple who were looking round a house with a view to moving
in.
"Diana was not that interested and Dodi was showing it off to her because they
were his father's instructions.
"Diana seemed as if she wanted to get the visit over as quickly as possible
and get out of the place."
26. Page 5 contains pictures of the Princess and Mr Dodi Fayed on holiday, the
Villa Windsor and Mr Murrell in one of the bedrooms. Underneath those pictures
are what are described as the "Fayed File". That is a table containing five
lies put out by Mr Al Fayed set against what are said to be the truth. Page 5
also contains an attack by Mr Murrell on the way that Mr Al Fayed dealt with a
dog called Bruno.
27. As the headline of The Sun of 2nd September makes clear, the driveway
stills are part of an exposure of the false statements of Mr Al Fayed that had
been disseminated in the way set out in the pleading which I have quoted.
28. The judge concluded, in the passage I have quoted, that the relevant
current events reported were the events of 30th August 1997. They remained, in
his view, current due to the continued publicity. Mr Spearman supported that
conclusion. He submitted that events, such as tragedies in which people are
killed, continue to be current events so long as the events themselves continue
to feature in the news. It would be astonishing if works, for examples parts
of films of events or statements of eyewitnesses, ceased to be available for
lawful use for the purpose of reporting such events at some arbitrary moment
during the time when, as in this case, they were still enormously and
unceasingly in the news.
29. Mr Bloch submitted that that submission failed to take account of the
difference between events which were no longer current but were of continued
interest. For example on fiftieth anniversary of the D-Day landings there was
renewed interest in those events, but the landings themselves were not current
events and the renewed interest did not mean that they regained their currency.
30. Mr Bloch's submission that the events that happened on 30th August 1997
were no longer current on 2nd September 1998 has, in my view, force; but I do
not believe it right, upon an application for Order 14 judgment, to reject the
defence of fair dealing upon that basis. The investigation into the events of
the night of 30th and the morning of 31st August was continuing and therefore
the events had an element of currency. However the driveway stills were not
used in The Sun of 2nd September 1998 for the purpose of reporting the events
of 30th and 31st August 1997. The clear purpose and context were to expose the
false statements of Mr Al Fayed and to vilify him. They were used, as the
headline on pages 4 and 5 stated as the "VIDEO THAT SHAMES FAYED". Therefore
adopting the objective approach required by the Court of Appeal in
Pro-Sieben AG the defence of fair dealing could not succeed on this
basis.
31. Mr Spearman anticipated that it might be held that the events of 30th and
31st August were not the current events being reported in The Sun. His primary
submission was that the driveway stills were used for the purpose of reporting
current events at the time, namely the media coverage that had been generated
by Mr Al Fayed's string of falsehoods that had been reported, the most recent
being in the 31st August 1998 edition of The Mirror.
32. For the purposes of this appeal I accept that such media coverage can be
described as "current events" when those words are construed liberally,
although the judgment of Walton J in Associated Newspapers Group Plc v News
Group Newspapers Ltd [1986] RPC 515 and that of Lightman J in Newspaper
Licensing Agency v Marks and Spencer [1999] RPC 536 provide good reasons
for the contrary view. That being so, I will assume that the use made of the
driveway stills was for the purpose of reporting that coverage. I therefore
come to consider whether the use made was fair dealing and to review the cases
where guidance has been given as to the way the words "fair dealing" should be
applied.
33. British Oxygen Company Limited v Liquid Air Limited [1925] 1 Ch 383
was a case in which the plaintiff alleged breach of copyright by publication of
a letter. The defence of fair dealing was rejected by Romer J. At page 393 he
said:
"But I need not consider this further, and for this reason; the Act no doubt
extends to unpublished as well as published works, and, accordingly, this
permission of criticism would seem at first sight to extend to unpublished
literary works. The permission was no doubt necessary in the case of
unpublished dramatic and musical works, inasmuch as performance in public of
such works is not publication for the purposes of the Act. But it would be
manifestly unfair that an unpublished literary work should, without the consent
of the author, be the subject of public criticism, review or newspaper summary.
Any such dealing with an unpublished literary work would not, therefore, in my
opinion, be a "fair dealing" with the work. This being so s. 2 sub-s. 1, of
the Act does not assist the defendants. In any case I cannot see that it was
necessary for the defendants, for the purposes of criticism, to have
photographic copies of the work prepared, and to send one of those copies to a
broker on the London Stock Exchange for perusal by him and by the defendants'
jobber friends."
34. Lord Denning MR in Hubbard v Vosper [1972] 2 QB 84 qualified
the view expressed by Romer J. He said at page 94:
"I am afraid I cannot go all the way with those words of Romer J. Although a
literary work may not be published to the world at large, it may, however, be
circulated to such a wide circle that it is "fair dealing" to criticise it
publicly in a newspaper or elsewhere. This happens sometimes when a company
sends a circular to the whole body of shareholders. It may be of such general
interest that it is quite legitimate for a newspaper to make quotations from
it, and to criticise them - or review them - without thereby being guilty of
infringing copyright. The newspaper must, of course, be careful not to fall
foul of the law of libel. So also here, these bulletins and letters may have
been so widely circulated that it was perfectly "fair dealing" for Mr Vosper to
take extracts from them and criticise them in his book."
In that passage Lord Denning had in mind the facts of that case where the works
in which copyright was claimed had been widely circulated amongst followers of
the Church of Scientology. However the general thrust of the conclusion of
Romer J remained, namely that it was difficult to imagine that it could be fair
dealing to use a work that had not been published nor circulated to persons for
the purposes of criticism, review or newspaper reporting.
35. Lord Denning also said in Hubbard that it was impossible to define
what is "fair dealing"; but when considering whether the dealing was fair it
was appropriate to take account of the use made of the infringing work in
extent and purpose. To that I would add the second reason why Romer J rejected
the defence in British Oxygen, namely whether the use was necessary for
the purpose, in this case of reporting the current events.
36. In Beloff v Pressdam Ltd [1973] 1 AER 241, a member of the staff of
The Observer sued the publishers of the magazine Private Eye who had published
a memorandum of the plaintiff which had been circulated amongst the employees
of The Observer. Ungoed-Thomas J rejected the defence of fair dealing. He
pointed out that the relevant fair dealing must be fair dealing for the
approved purpose and not dealing which might be fair for some other purpose or
fair in general. He said that what amounts to fair dealing is a question of
fact and impression and that matters which had been held to be relevant
included the extent and importance of the quotation, whether the work was
unpublished, the extent to which the work had been circulated and the motives
and intention of the alleged infringer. As Ungoed-Thomas J pointed out at page
263:
"The law by bestowing a right of copyright on an unpublished work bestows a
right to prevent its being published at all; and even though an unpublished
work is not automatically excluded from the defence of fair dealing, it is yet
a much more substantial breach of copyright than publication of a published
work."
37. I have already quoted the extract from Robert Walker LJ's judgment in
Pro Sieben AG in which he accepted that the motives of the user were
relevant when considering whether the dealing was fair. Thus the cases
establish, and I believe it right, that it is appropriate to take into account
the motives of the alleged infringer, the extent and purpose of the use, and
whether that extent was necessary for the purpose of reporting the current
events in question. Further if the work had not been published or circulated
to the public that is an important indication that the dealing was not fair.
38. As section 1 of the 1988 Act makes clear, copyright is a property right.
It "is transmissible by assignment, by testamentary disposition or by operation
of law, as personal or moveable property" (section 90). But the defence of
fair dealing is not affected by any assignment. Section 30 looks at the use
made of the copyright work, not who the owner was or is. Thus the Court must
judge the fairness by the objective standard of whether a fair minded and
honest person would have dealt with the copyright work, in the manner that The
Sun did, for the purpose of reporting the relevant current events, in this case
the published untruthful statements of Mr Al Fayed.
39. Mr Spearman submitted that such a man would have dealt with the copyright
work in just the same way that The Sun had. He submitted that the driveway
stills exposed the lie which brought down the pack of lies. The fact that the
Princess and Mr Dodi Fayed only stayed 28 minutes at the Villa Windsor was at
the heart of the false assertion that they were going to be married. The
motive was to report the untrue statements, the extent was necessary to prove
the lies as the driveway stills were the only piece of hard evidence available.
40. I reject Mr Spearman's submission. I have come to the conclusion that the
defence of fair dealing cannot succeed. I do not believe that a fair minded
and honest person would pay for the dishonestly taken driveway stills and
publish them in a newspaper knowing that they had not been published or
circulated when their only relevance was the fact that the Princess and Mr Dodi
Fayed only stayed the 28 minutes at the Villa Windsor - a fact that was known
and did not establish that the Princess and Mr Dodi Fayed were not to be
married. To describe what The Sun did as fair dealing is to give honour to
dishonour. Further the extent of the use was excessive. The only part of the
driveway stills relevant to the alleged purpose was the information as to the
timing of arrival and departure. That information could have been given in the
articles by Mr Thompson stating that he had seen the photographs which proved
the Princess and Mr Dodi Fayed only stayed at the Villa Windsor for 28 minutes.
If he needed confirmation he could have relied upon the statement by Mr Cole.
Despite that The Sun used the driveway stills so that they covered over one
third of page 4. The information as to the time of arrival and departure did
not establish that Princess Diana and Mr Dodi Fayed were not going to be
married nor that the other statements made by Mr Al Fayed, that are said to be
untrue, were false.
41. The suggestion that the use of the driveway stills was a fair
dealing for the purposes of reporting the events of 30th August 1997 is, to
draw upon the words of Henry LJ in Time Warner v Channel 4 TV [1994]
EMLR 1 at 14, an attempt to dress up the infringement of Hyde Park's copyright
in the guise of reporting an event. In my view the judge came to the wrong
conclusion and the allegation of fair dealing by the defendants could not
provide them a defence to the action.
Public Interest
42. Before the judge Mr Bloch submitted that there was no defence of public
interest to an action for infringement of copyright. He accepted that over the
years a number of judges had expressed the contrary conclusion, but he
submitted that they were wrong. Alternatively, if such a defence existed then
it could not succeed in this case. The judge rejected both those submissions.
Mr Bloch submitted in this Court that the judge was wrong to do so.
43. Mr Bloch's submission that no public interest defence exists starts with an
analysis of the 1988 Act. As he correctly pointed out, copyright is an
intellectual property right provided for by the 1988 Act. That Act contains
detailed provisions in the 51 sections in chapter III of Part I of the types of
acts that are permitted to be carried out by persons without the copyright
owner's consent. They range from fair dealing to use for education, by
libraries and for public administration. They are, as he submitted, provisions
directed towards achieving a proper balance between the protection of
copyright, and the wider public interest. They would therefore appear to set
out in detail the extent to which the public interest overrides copyright. I
agree. The 1988 Act does not give a court general power to enable an infringer
to use another's property, namely his copyright in the public interest. Thus a
defence of public interest outside those set out in Chapter III of the 1988
Act, if such exists, must arise by some other route.
44. The courts have an inherent jurisdiction to refuse to allow their process
to be used in certain circumstances. It has long been the law that the courts
will not give effect to contracts which are, for example, illegal, immoral or
prejudicial to family life because they offend against the policy of the law.
In my view that inherent jurisdiction can be exercised in the case of an action
in which copyright is sought to be enforced as is made clear by section 171(3)
of the 1988 Act:
"171(3) Nothing in this Part affects any rule of law preventing or restricting
the enforcement of copyright, on grounds of public interest or otherwise."
45. As Mr Bloch submitted, that subsection should not be interpreted so as to
interfere with a private property right without compensation as no clear
intention to that effect is expressed. I also accept Mr Bloch's submission
that refusal of relief upon equitable principles is not a defence to an action
for infringement of copyright under the 1988 Act.
46. The judge set out examples on page 18 of his judgment which he said
established the need for a public interest defence. He said:
"One can also legitimately test the whole question of the existence of a public
interest defence, and the suggestion that there can be a restriction on
enforcement only in respect of discretionary remedies against extreme examples.
This is because the question is not limited to any particular sort of case.
Thus, take a case where a document, carefully researched and compiled by a team
of bank robbers, indicated the precise weaknesses of the security systems of
each of the branches of a major bank. Copyright is normally accorded to
carefully and skilfully compiled lists as being original work. But it can
hardly be the law that the police could not make copies of the list to give to
the bank and its security advisors. Nor does it make sense to say that the
robbers could sue at least for nominal damages if the police did so. Or
suppose the police obtained from a security video a picture of a bank robber.
Do they really have to get the permission of a copyright owner (perhaps not
readily identifiable in a hurry) before showing the picture of the robber on
television when seeking the help of the public to track him down? And if they
do not do so, could the copyright owner really sue for nominal damages? The
questions only have to be asked to be answered. Other extreme cases come
readily to mind."
47. Mr Bloch submitted that those extreme examples did not show the need for a
public interest defence. They were perhaps examples of the defence of
necessity that was recognised in actions of tort.
48. In my view the examples given by the judge do show why the courts refuse in
certain circumstances to enforce copyright. To enforce copyright in a document
prepared for a bank robbery would offend against principles of public order and
morality and a court would be amply justified in refusing to enforce copyright
in such a document under its inherent jurisdiction. Such an exercise of the
court's inherent jurisdiction would be akin to a refusal to enforce an
agreement which was illegal. As to the right of the police to publish a
picture of a robber without permission of a copyright owner, I have some doubts
as to whether in all cases they could lawfully do so, but no court would allow
its process to be used to obstruct the course of justice. A court has, under
its inherent jurisdiction, the right to refuse to enforce an action for
infringement of copyright just as it can refuse to enforce a contract or other
cause of action which offends against the policy of the law. The more
difficult question is to define the circumstances when that is the appropriate
course.
49. There have been a number of cases where the courts have refused to enforce
copyright as the works in question were considered libellous, immoral, obscene,
scandalous or irreligious. As the driveway stills are not of that type, I need
not revert to those cases and can start with Beloff v Pressdam (supra).
In that case, it was argued that publication of a memorandum about Mr Maudling
was justified both as fair dealing and in the public interest. Ungoed-Thomas J
held that the two defences existed and were separate defences. In relation to
the defence of public interest he said at page 259:
"The most important recent cases referred to were the Court of Appeal cases,
Initial Services Ltd v Putterill [[1968] 1 QB 396] and of Hubbard v
Vosper [[1972] 2 WLR] (where the claims were for infringement of copyright
and also for breach of confidence).
The Initial Services case [supra] was on appeal to strike out certain
provisions in the defence relying, in justification of disclosure of
confidential information, on its exposure first of breach of statutory duty to
register a restrictive trade agreement and secondly that a circular issued by
the plaintiffs to their customers attributing increases in their charges to the
selective employment tax was misleading to the public. Lord Denning MR said
[at page 405] that the exception to the obligation not to disclose confidential
information -
`extends to any misconduct of such a nature that it ought in the public
interest to be disclosed to others. Wood, V-C, put it in a vivid phrase:
"There is no confidence as to the disclosure of iniquity." In Weld-Blundell
v Stephens [[1919] 1 KB 520] Bankes, LJ, rather suggested that the
exception was limited to the proposed or contemplated commission of a crime or
a civil wrong. But I should have thought that was too limited. The exception
should extend to crimes, frauds and misdeeds, both those actually committed as
well as those in contemplation, provided always - and this is essential - that
the disclosure is justified in the public interest. The reason is because "no
private obligations can dispense with that universal one which lies on every
member of the society to discover every design which may be formed, contrary to
the laws of the society, to destroy the public welfare": see Annesley v Earl
of Anglesea [(1743) 17 State Tr. 1139]."
And Salmon LJ said at page 410:
`I do not think that the law would lend assistance to anyone who is proposing
to commit and to continue to commit a clear breach of a statutory duty imposed
in the public interest.'
In that case publication, justifiable in the public interest, was considered to
extend beyond exposure of what appears, at first blush, to have been meant by
`contrary to the laws of the society' as stated in Earl of Anglesea,
although not, as I see it, beyond `disclosure of iniquity' in Wood, V-C's
phrase.
In Hubbard v Vosper [supra], Lord Denning MR treated material on
scientology published in breach of confidence as susceptible to a defence of
public interest on the ground that it was dangerous material, namely medical
quackeries `dangerous in untrained hands'.
The defence of public interest clearly covers and, in the authorities does not
extend beyond disclosure, which as Lord Denning emphasised must be disclosure
justified in the public interest, of matters carried out or contemplated, in
breach of the country's security, or in breach of law, including statutory
duty, fraud or otherwise destructive of the country or its people, including
matters medically dangerous to the public: and doubtless other misdeeds of
similar gravity. Public interest, as a defence in law, operates to override
the rights of the individual (including copyright) which would otherwise
prevail and which the law is also concerned to protect. Such public interest,
as now recognised by the law, does not extend beyond misdeeds of a serious
nature and importance to the country and thus, in my view, clearly recognisable
as such."
51. Ungoed-Thomas J cited two cases. The first, Initial Services Ltd v
Putterill [1960] 1 QB 396 was a decision of the Court of Appeal refusing to
strike out a defence in an action in which breach of confidence by an
ex-employee was alleged. The court held that the defendant might establish at
trial that the public interest demanded, or at least, excused, publication to
the press. It is not an authority which established that a defence to an
allegation of infringement of copyright, as opposed to the use of information,
was available provided that the infringement was in the public interest.
52. The second case was Hubbard v Vosper [1972] 2 QB 84. In that case
the Court of Appeal refused to grant an interlocutory injunction restraining
breach of confidence or breach of copyright. All three judges held that there
was an arguable defence to the action for breach of copyright and that in the
circumstances of that case an interlocutory injunction would not be
appropriate. They also held that there were good grounds for thinking that the
information should be made known in the public interest. It is important to
note that a public interest defence was not raised as a defence to the
allegation of infringement of copyright. The crux of the conclusion is
illustrated by these words of Lord Denning MR at page 96:
"But here, although Mr Hubbard owns the copyright, nevertheless, Mr Vosper has
a defence of fair dealing: and although Mr Hubbard may possess confidential
information, nevertheless, Mr Vosper has a defence of public interest. These
defences are such that he should be permitted to go ahead with the publication.
If what he says is true, it is only right that the dangers of this cult should
be exposed. We never restrain a defendant in a libel action who says he is
going to justify. So in copyright action, we ought not to restrain a defendant
who has a reasonable defence of fair dealing. Nor in an action for breach of
confidence, if the defendant has a reasonable defence of public interest. The
reason is because the defendant, if he is right, is entitled to publish it: and
the law will not intervene to suppress freedom of speech except when it is
abused."
53. A similar position arose in Fraser v Evans [1969] 1 QB 349 where the
Court of Appeal considered a defence of public interest to the claim for breach
of confidence, but not in respect of the claim for breach of copyright.
54. There are other cases where the courts have refused to grant interlocutory
injunctions to restrain a breach of confidence upon the basis of public
interest. The principle is, as stated by Lord Denning MR in Woodward v
Hutchins [1977] 1 WLR 760 at 764:
"In these cases of confidential information it is a question of balancing the
public interest in maintaining the confidence against the public interest in
knowing the truth."
55. That principle has particular relevance to an action for breach of
confidence. Such an action is brought to enforce an obligation of confidence
in respect of information of a confidential nature imparted in circumstances
where the courts import an obligation of confidence (see Coco v Clark
(Engineers) Ltd [1969] RPC 41). The court can therefore weigh the public
interest in knowing the truth against the public interest in maintaining the
confidence in the light of the facts of each case. That cannot be the test to
be applied where copyright infringement has taken place for three reasons.
First copyright is a property right which is given by the 1988 Act. Chapter
III of the Act provides for exceptions in the public interest. It would
therefore be wrong for a court which had rejected a defence of, for example
fair dealing, because there was not a sufficient acknowledgement, to uphold a
defence because publication was in the public interest. That would result in a
disregard of an important requirement set out in the Act. Second, copyright is
concerned with protection of the form of works in which copyright can subsist
and not with protection of information. That can be illustrated with the facts
of the present case. Nobody has suggested nor could it be suggested that the
information recorded on the driveway stills could be the subject of copyright
nor that use of that information would be an infringement of the copyright
which subsists in the film. It follows that the weighing operation is not apt
when the information can be published even though the action for infringement
of copyright succeeds. Third, the 1988 Act gives effect to the United
Kingdom's obligations pursuant to the Paris and Berne Conventions and certain
European Union Directives. Those Conventions came into being to provide for
uniform and effective protection of copyright amongst the signatories. Article
10 of the Berne Convention allows quotations from copyright works provided that
the quotation is compatible with fair practice. Section 30 of the 1988 Act is
thought to be within the terms of that Article. However there is no general
power for courts of the signatories to such Conventions to refuse to enforce
copyright if it is thought to be in the public interest of that State that it
should not be enforced. Thus a general defence of public interest would appear
to be contrary to this country's international obligations.
56. Mr Spearman relied heavily on Lion Laboratories Ltd v Evans [1985]
QB 526. Lion Laboratories manufactured and marketed the Lion Intoximeter which
was used by the police for measuring blood alcohol levels of motorists. In the
early part of 1984 two ex-employees approached the Press with four documents
taken from Lion Laboratories. Those documents indicated that the Lion
Intoximeter had faults which could have resulted in a significant number of
motorists being wrongly convicted. On 8th March 1984, Lion Laboratories
started proceedings against their ex-employees and Express Newspapers Limited
to restrain disclosure of the information as to the faults. They obtained an
interlocutory injunction restraining breach of confidence and infringement of
copyright. The defendants appealed to the Court of Appeal which allowed the
appeal.
57. The documents contained confidential information and it was not disputed
that it would have been a breach of confidence to publish the information in
them and an infringement of copyright to publish the documents themselves
unless there were defences which permitted that in the public interest.
Stephenson LJ concluded that the judge was "right to make no difference between
confidence and copyright for the purposes of this case" and therefore did not
consider them separately. He went on at page 536:
"The problem before the judge and before this court is how best to resolve,
before trial, a conflict of two competing public interests. The first public
interest is the preservation of the right of organisations, as of individuals,
to keep secret confidential information. The courts will restrain breaches of
confidence, and breaches of copyright, unless there is just cause or excuse for
breaking confidence or infringing copyright. The just cause or excuse with
which this case is concerned is the public interest in admittedly confidential
information. There is confidential information which the public may have a
right to receive and others, in particular the press, now extended to the
media, may have a right, and even a duty to publish, even if the information
has been unlawfully obtained in flagrant breach of confidence and irrespective
of the motive of the informer. The duty of confidence, the public interest in
maintaining it, is a restriction on the freedom of the press which is
recognised by our law, as well as by article 10(2) of the Convention for the
Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms (1953) (Cmd. 8969); the
duty to publish, the countervailing interest of the public in being kept
informed of matters which are of real public concern, is an inroad on the
privacy of confidential matters. So much is settled by decisions of this
court, and in particular by the illuminating judgments of Lord Denning, MR in
Initial Services v Putterill [1968] 1 QB 396; Fraser v Evans
[1969] 1 QB 349; Hubbard v Vosper [1972] 2 QB 84; Woodward v
Hutchins [1977] 1 WLR 760; and per Lord Denning MR (dissenting) in
Schering Chemicals Ltd v Falkman Ltd [1982] QB 1. I add to those the
speeches of Lord Wilberforce, Lord Salmon and Lord Fraser of Tullybelton in
British Steel Corporation v Granada Television Ltd [1981] AC 1096.
There are four further considerations. First, "there is a wide difference
between what is interesting to the public and what it is in the public interest
to make known" said Lord Wilberforce in British Steel Corporation v Granada
Television Ltd, at p. 1168. The public are interested in many private
matters which are no real concern of theirs and which the public have no
pressing need to know. Secondly, the media have a private interest of their
own in publishing what appeals to the public and may increase their circulation
or the numbers of their viewers or listeners; (and I quote from Sir John
Donaldson MR in Francome v Mirror Group Newspapers Ltd [1984] 1 WLR 892,
898B, "they are peculiarly vulnerable to the error of confusing the public
interest with their own interest." Thirdly, there are cases in which the
public interest is best served by an informer giving the confidential
information, not to the press but to the police or some other responsible body,
as was suggested by Lord Denning MR in Initial Services Ltd v Putterill
[1968] 1 QB 396, 405-406 and by Sir John Donaldson MR in Francome v
Mirror Group Newspapers Ltd [1984] 1 WLR 892, 898. Fourthly, it was said
by Wood V-C in 1856, in Gartside v Outram (1856) 26 L.J.Ch. 113, 114,
"there is no confidence as to the disclosure of iniquity": and though Mr
Hoolahan concedes on the plaintiffs' behalf that, as Salmon LJ said in
Initial Services Ltd v Putterill [1968] 1 QB 396, 410, "what was
iniquity in 1856 may be too narrow or ... too wide for 1967," and in 1984
extends to serious misdeeds or grave misconduct, he submits that misconduct of
that kind is necessary to destroy the duty of confidence or excuse the breach
of it, and nothing of that sort is alleged against the plaintiffs in the
evidence now before the court.
Mr Alexander, on behalf of the third and fourth defendants, and Mr Bloch on
behalf of the first and second defendants, have not been able to find any case
where a defendant has been able to rely on public interest in defence of a
claim for breach of confidence and the plaintiff has not also been guilty of
such misconduct. And there are passages in the speeches of Lord Wilberforce
and Lord Fraser of Tullybelton in British Steel Corporation v Granada
Television Ltd [1981] AC 1096, 1165, 1195 in which they appear to be
satisfied with describing the "public interest rule" as the "iniquity rule".
But I nowhere find any authority for the proposition, except perhaps in the
judgment of Ungoed-Thomas in Beloff v Pressdam Ltd [1973] 1 All ER 241,
260, that some modern form of iniquity on the part of the plaintiffs is the
only thing which can be disclosed in the public interest; and I agree with the
judge in rejecting the "no iniquity, no public interest" rule; and in
respectfully adopting what Lord Denning said in Fraser v Evans [1969] 1
QB 349, 362, that some things are required to be disclosed in the public
interest, in which case no confidence can be prayed in aid to keep them secret,
and "[iniquity] is merely an instance of just cause or excuse for breaking
confidence."
58. The extracts from the cases relied on by Stephenson LJ, to support the
conclusion he reached were cases concerned with allegations of breach of
confidence. In fact the whole passage is concerned with confidential
information, save for the three words "or infringing copyright" in the third
sentence. That is not surprising as the dispute before the court revolved
around the information as to the Intoximeter which was known to the
ex-employees and was contained in the documents. The relief needed by Lion
Laboratories was an injunction to restrain dissemination of the information and
if that was obtained the documents could not have been published. Therefore an
injunction restraining infringement of copyright was in practice irrelevant
although part of the package thought necessary to prevent disclosure. That
appears to have been the reason why the parties and the court did not feel it
necessary to consider the actions for breach of confidence and infringement of
copyright separately. Stephenson LJ said at p. 540:
"What makes this case so special is that the plaintiffs' right to keep
inviolate the secrecy of the information which the defendants wish to publish
is undisputed, and the only question for interlocutory decision is whether that
right is outweighed by the public interest, not in exposing persons who may be
guilty of offences for which they have not been punished, but in disclosing the
risk of the plaintiffs being instrumental in punishing other people for
offences which they may not have committed."
59. His conclusion was:
"The issue raised by the defendants is a serious question concerning a matter
which affects the life, and even the liberty of an unascertainable number of
Her Majesty's subjects and though there is no proof that any of them has been
wrongly convicted on the evidence of the plaintiffs' Intoximeter, and we
certainly cannot decide that any has, we must not restrain the defendants from
putting before the public this further information as to how the Lion
Intoximeter 3000 has worked, and how the plaintiffs regard and discharge their
responsibility for it, although the information is confidential and was
unlawfully taken in breach of confidence."
60. The Lion Laboratories case was considered by Sir Nicholas Browne-Wilkinson
VC in Express Newspapers Plc v News (UK) Plc [1991] FSR 36. He
concluded at page 45:
"In my judgment, that decision has no application to the present case. Where
that type of defence is put forward it permits the publication of secret
information which it is in the public interest should be known. It does not
apply to information of the kind which it may be of interest to the public to
know. Moreover, the basis of the defence being that the public needs to know,
the whole basis for the defence goes once such information has been disclosed
to all, i.e. by one paper. There is no further requirement of public
interest that another paper should be able to repeat the revelation of that
information."
61. The judge in this case reviewed the authorities in depth. As to the
Lion Laboratories case, he said at page 13:
"The upshot of Mr Bloch's analysis, which I think is correct, is that neither
in Beloff nor in Lion was there any substantial basis in
precedent for the judges' conclusions that a defence of public interest
existed."
62. I agree with the judge's conclusion. He also correctly pointed out that
the Lion Laboratories case was cited with approval in A-G v Guardian
Newspapers No.2 [1990] 1 AC 109. There are however indications in the
speeches as to the correct approach to the defence of public interest in a
copyright action. Lord Griffiths said at page 275:
"If Peter Wright owns the copyright in Spycatcher, which I doubt, it
seems to me extremely unlikely that any court in this country would uphold his
claim to copyright if any newspaper or any third party chose to publish
Spycatcher and keep such profits as they might make to themselves. I
would expect a judge to say that the disgraceful circumstances in which he
wrote and published Spycatcher disentitled him to seek the assistance of
the court to obtain any redress: see Glyn v Weston Feature Film Co.
[1916] 1 Ch. 261."
63. Lord Jauncey said at page 294:
"The courts of the United Kingdom will not enforce copyright claims in relation
to every original literary work. Equitable relief has been refused where the
work contained false statements calculated to deceive the public (Slingsby v
Bradford Patent Truck and Trolley Co [1905] WN 122; [1906] WN 51) and where
the work was of a grossly immoral tendency (Glyn v Weston Feature Film
Co [1916] 1 Ch. 261. In a passing-off action, Bile Bean Manufacturing
Co v Davidson (1906) 23 RPC 725 the Second Division of the Court of Session
refused relief to a company which had perpetrated a deliberate fraud on the
public by a series of false factual statements about its products. Lord
Justice-Clerk Lord Macdonald said, at p. 734:
`No man is entitled to obtain the aid of the law to protect him in carrying on
a fraudulent trade, but the cases quoted at the debate by the Lord Ordinary
establish, as I think, very clearly that the courts have in the past given
effect to the principle which allows nothing to the man who comes before the
seat of justice with a turpis causa.'
The publication of Spycatcher was against the public interest and was in
breach of the duty of confidence which Peter Wright owed to the Crown. His
action reeked of turpitude. It is in these circumstances inconceivable that a
United Kingdom court would afford to him or his publishers any protection in
relation to any copyright which either of them may possess in the book."
64. I have pointed out earlier in this judgment that the basis of the defence
of public interest in a breach of confidence action cannot be the same as the
basis of such defence to an action for infringement of copyright. In an action
for breach of confidence the foundation of the action can fall away if that is
required in the public interest, but that can never happen in a copyright
action. The jurisdiction to refuse to enforce copyright, which I believe has
been recognised comes from the court's inherent jurisdiction. It is limited to
cases where enforcement of the copyright would offend against the policy of the
law. The Lion Laboratories case was such a case. Lion Laboratories
sought to obtain an interlocutory injunction to restrain publication of
documents which showed that they had suppressed information leading to or which
might lead to the wrongful conviction of motorists. The action was based upon
documents which in the circumstances reeked of turpitude. As Lord Mansfield CJ
said in Holman v Johnson (1775) 1 Cowp 341 at 343:
"No court will lend its aid to a man who founds his cause of action upon an
immoral or an illegal act."
65. To rely upon copyright to suppress documents which could exonerate
motorists convicted of drink driving or which might lead to their acquittal is,
in my view, to found a cause of action upon an immoral act.
66. The circumstances where it is against the policy of the law to use the
court's procedure to enforce copyright are, I suspect, not capable of
definition. However it must be remembered that copyright is assignable and
therefore the circumstances must derive from the work in question, not
ownership of the copyright. In my view a court would be entitled to refuse to
enforce copyright if the work is:
(i) immoral, scandalous or contrary to family life;
(ii) injurious to public life, public health and safety or the administration
of justice;
(iii) incites or encourages others to act in a way referred to in (ii).
67. Mr Spearman's submission that the driveway stills needed to be published in
the public interest to expose the falsity of the statements made by Mr Al Fayed
has no basis in law or in logic. Perhaps the driveways stills were of interest
to the public, but there was no need in the public interest in having them
published when the information could have been made available by The Sun
without infringement of copyright and was in any case in the public domain
after the statement by Mr Cole on behalf of Mr Al Fayed. The driveway stills
contained nothing, nor was there any circumstance relating to them which could
require the court to refuse to enforce the statutory property right provided by
the 1988 Act. The only possible defence in respect of the copyright work, of
which the driveway stills were part, was fair dealing.
68. For the reasons expressed, I would allow the appeal and give judgment for
Hyde Park.
LORD JUSTICE MANCE:
69. I gratefully adopt the account of the facts given by Aldous L.J in his
judgment and agree with him in the result and in most of his reasoning. I have
however some reservations about the matter, which I feel that I should express.
The first relates to the nature of the application before the Court. The
claimants have chosen to select the claim in copyright, and to seek summary
judgment upon it alone. Claims are included in the writ for breach, or
procuring or inducing breach, of the employment contract and/or confidentiality
agreement dated 4th February 1996 between the appellants and the
fourth defendant, Mr Murrell, as well as for breach of confidence by Mr
Murrell. These claims and the possible defences to them have not been
considered. Whether or not, in the light of our decision, they will now be
pursued remains to be seen. But it is unfortunate in my view that it has not
been possible to consider the whole picture. This is particularly so, when much
of the argument revolves around potential distinctions between a proprietary
claim for breach of copyright and personal claims for breach, or procuring or
inducing breach of contract, and to restrain use of confidential information.
When and if the damages recoverable for breach of copyright are assessed, the
extent to which the information contained in the driveway stills, about the
timing of the visit to Villa Windsor on 30th August 1997, could
anyway have been used, if there had been no reproduction of the stills, may
itself be material to any damages recoverable. Bearing in mind the other
photographic material in the public arena relating to the Princess of Wales and
Mr Dodi Fayed, these poor quality and distant stills can hardly have had much
if any value apart from the information recorded in them about timings.
70. Both the suggested defences of fair dealing and public interest must be
considered in the light of the particular circumstances. The Sun was, as Aldous
L.J. has shown, seeking to expose the falsity of statements disseminated on
various occasions by Mr Fayed senior. The Sun's essential justification for its
conduct is that publication of the stills was like the removal of the card
which brings the whole pack down.
71. In Woodward v. Hutchins [1977] 1 WLR 760, this Court discharged an
interlocutory injunction which had been granted to restrain the disclosure of
confidential information obtained by a press relations agent to a well-known
pop group, starring Tom Jones and Engelbert Humperdinck. As the group's press
agent, the defendant's role had been to see that the group received favourable
publicity. However, after parting company, amicably, with the group, the
defendant disclosed "no doubt, for a very considerable reward" to the Daily
Mirror "secrets" about the group, including episodes of allegedly discreditable
nature involving drink, sex and other matters. Lord Denning said at
pp.763H-764A:
"If a group of this kind seek publicity which is to their advantage, it seems
to me that they cannot complain if a servant or employee of theirs afterwards
discloses the truth about them. If the image which they fostered was not a true
image, it is in the public interest that it should be corrected. In these cases
of confidential information it is a question of balancing the public interest
in maintaining the confidence against the public interest in knowing the
truth."
72. Bridge L.J. added at p.765E:
"It seems to me that those who seek and welcome publicity of every kind bearing
upon their private lives so long as it shows them in a favourable light are in
no position to complain of an invasion of their privacy which shows them in an
unfavourable light."
73. That principle is of obvious significance to any attempt by the claimants
to claim redress for the disclosure by The Sun of the information obtained from
Mr Murrell relating to the falsity of Mr Fayed senior's statements and Mr Fayed
senior's attempts to enlist employees including Mr Murrell to give false
accounts regarding the conduct of Diana Princess of Wales with Mr Dodi Fayed.
The claimants and Mr Fayed have been treated before us as synonymous. An
employer who himself and through agents or employees puts forward to the public
an untrue story stands on weak ground in insisting that employees, all the more
others who refuse to participate, owe a duty of confidence requiring them not
to disclose the true position. Mr Fayed was and is a figure in the public eye.
The events about which he put forward to the public a false picture were events
in the public eye. It seems to me therefore that we should approach the present
application on an assumption that the claimants can have no claim for, or for
inducing or procuring, breach of contract or for misuse of confidential
information.
74. This is quite apart from the point that Mr Fayed's conduct in seeking to
enlist Mr Murrell in public lies at the end of July 1998 led directly to Mr
Murrell tendering his resignation on 7th August 1998 with immediate
effect "[d]ue to the fact that I find my position untenable". That itself could
well, it seems to me, be regarded as a discharge by accepted repudiation of any
further contractual obligations or obligations of confidence on Mr Murrell's
part.
75. Why then is the copyright claim to be viewed differently? The answer lies
in my view in distinctions between confidential information and copyright,
which are of particular significance in relation to any claim to have been
entitled to publish the stills without the claimants' consent. Confidential
information is information about A's affairs which B possesses, but in respect
of which B may owe A a duty not to disclose the information to others.
Confidence and secrecy on the one hand and disclosure and publication on the
other lie at opposite ends of one and the same continuum. Protection of
confidence depends on the force of A`s interest in maintaining secrecy. Freedom
to publish depends on the force of competing considerations such as the public
interest in knowing the truth.
76. Copyright is by contrast a property right, conferring on A alone the
exclusive right to do certain acts in relation to certain works including sound
recordings and films. It protects the form of such works and not any
information which they contain as such. And it is regulated by stature. S.30 of
the Copyright Act 1988 expressly allows fair dealing with certain works for the
purpose of criticism or review or of reporting current events. Copyright does
not lie on the same continuum as, nor is it the antithesis of, freedom of
expression. The force of an owner's interest in the protection of his copyright
cannot be weighed in the same direct way against a public interest in knowing
the truth. S.171(3) of the Copyright Act expressly preserves the possibility
that the enforcement of copyright may be prevented or restricted on grounds of
public interest. But, there is an obvious need for caution about recognising
any wider public interest in the same general area as addressed by s.30, while
the different considerations applicable to confidential information and
copyright must on any view make the exercise of identifying an overriding
public interest a different one.
77. In the present case, I agree with Aldous L.J. that the use made of the
driveway stills was not a fair dealing for the purposes of reporting either the
events of 30th August 1997 (treating them as current events) or the
continuing investigation and discussion during 1998 about those events and
their significance, including in particular the theories put into the public
arena by Mr Fayed senior. Mr Murrell's removal and supply to The Sun of the
stills involved clear misappropriations of the stills (a word which I would
prefer to use to theft, in order to avoid pre-judging a matter on which it is
conceivable that there might be some scope for argument). The interest which in
my view existed in exposing the general falsity of Mr Fayed senior's assertions
did not, as a matter of fair dealing, require Mr Murrell's misappropriation of
the stills or their supply to The Sun, presumably for money, or their
publication by The Sun. In reaching this conclusion I recognise the force of
the submission that (whatever The Sun said in its articles) these stills had in
reality no significance save as recording information as to timings. The
absence of any other merit or interest is a factor which, I would accept, may
make it easier to conclude that it was "fair dealing" to publish the stills.
78. However, misappropriation and use of other people's property are not
lightly to be regarded as fair dealing. Here, the correct information about
timings had already been put into the public arena at an earlier stage by Mr
Cole on behalf of Mr Fayed senior. And, even if it had not been, The Sun could
have used the same information as supplied to them by Mr Murrell. The Sun
argues that it was critical to reinforce its story in the public eye by
publishing the stills. But, as Aldous L.J. has pointed out, the stills do not
bear on what The Sun claimed about Diana Princess of Wales's love for Mr Dodi
Fayed. Secondly, while they may destroy Mr Fayed's statements about the length
of time spent by the two at Villa Windsor and so to some extent undermine his
reasons for suggesting that it was clear that the two were in love and
intending to marry, that point, for what it was worth, could have been made
sufficiently without using misappropriated copyright material. Thirdly, the
matter appears to me ultimately one of judgment and degree: if Mr Fayed's
statements about a conspiracy to murder Diana Princess of Wales because of her
love for his son had been anything other than ridiculous, and if the stills had
had any real bearing on the inaccuracy of such statements, then one might have
begun to see some basis for suggesting that "fair dealing" justified the
overriding of the claimants' proprietary copyright interest. But that is not
this case. Perhaps paradoxically, the transparent absurdity of Mr Fayed's
allegations is thus a factor in the conclusion I reach that The Sun had no
basis under s.30 for disregarding his company's proprietary copyright
interest.
79. I also agree with Aldous L.J. that the case is not one where the public
interest can supply a justification for the infringement of the claimants'
copyright. My reasons for this conclusion echo what I have already said in the
context of s.30. If the use made of the stills could not be fair dealing in the
context of that section, it is difficult to see scope for a conclusion that it
was nonetheless in the public interest that the claimants' copyright should be
overridden.
80. I should however say something about Lion Laboratories Ltd. v. Evans
[1985] QB 526. The difficulty which the case presents is that the claim to
copyright protection in respect of the critical documents was evidently an
important feature in it: see e.g. pp. 536C-D, 538D-E, 547E and H and 550A-B. Of
course, the plaintiffs were concerned to restrain use of both the information
and of the documents themselves, and O'Connor L.J. spoke of unauthorised use of
confidential information as "the heart of the matter" (p.547H). But it was in
terms of the use of the documents that the court considered the issues (see
e.g. Stephenson L.J. at pp. 541A-542A, and Griffiths L.J. at p.552B-F). I
cannot help thinking that, if the plaintiffs could have done in Lion,
they would have done what the present claimants seek to do, that is condemn
(and there prevent) the use of the documents irrespective of whether the
information in them could be used. The Court in Lion refused both to
prevent the use of the confidential information and to prevent the use of
certain copyright material. Its reasons were that the public interest required
each of these interests to be overridden. No distinction was drawn between the
two interests. It may be, on the facts in Lion, that the publication
which the newspaper wished to make could not realistically have been made
without quoting large extracts from the relevant memoranda. The memoranda were
certainly relevant for their contents as information, rather than as
compositions. The Court may also have viewed the public interest in knowing the
full position regarding the Intoximeter 3000 as so strong that it could,
perhaps exceptionally, only be met by extensive publication of the
documents.
81. One question which may be raised in relation to Lion is why no
defence of "fair dealing" was mounted. The report indicates that the recently
introduced Intoximeter 3000, to which the case related, and the convictions
founded upon it were already the subject of lively public controversy (see e.g.
pp.533G-534C, 539F-G and 542H-543A). The fact that the newspaper wished to
publish hitherto unpublished internal memoranda may have been viewed as
preventing reliance on s.30. Perhaps, the full scope of s.30 may not have been
appreciated. Be that as it may, the case was argued and decided on the sole
basis of public interest. But the fact that s.30 was not even considered does
to my mind throw some further doubt on Lion as an authority that there
is a general public interest exception to copyright equating with that
applicable to confidence.
82. In considering the circumstances in which copyright may be overridden in
the public interest, Aldous L.J. treats Lion as an action based on
documents which in the circumstances reeked of turpitude, and as one where the
plaintiffs were , in substance, seeking to found upon an immoral act. That,
however, does seem to me to be too restrictive a view of Lion on any
view. Lion was decided on the basis that it is not necessary to find any
immoral act or "iniquity" on the part of a claimant in order to reach a
conclusion that either breach of confidence or copyright is overridden. No
distinction was drawn between the two in this connection, and Lord Denning MR's
dictum in Fraser v. Evans [1969] 1 QB 349, 362 that ".... [iniquity] is
merely an instance of just cause or excuse for breaking confidence." was
applied to both: see per Stephenson L.J. at p.535C-E, 536C-D and F-G and 538A-E
and per Griffiths L.J. at p550A-E. But that, as I have said, does not mean that
the public interest in maintaining or overriding confidence and copyright is
necessarily to be equated.
83. Whilst account must be taken of the different nature of the right involved
in copyright, I prefer to state no more in this case than that the
circumstances in which the public interest may override copyright are probably
not capable of precise categorisation or definition. I would not at present
advised agree with Aldous L.J's suggestion that "the circumstances must derive
from work in question, not ownership of the copyright". No doubt this would
normally be so. But the possibility of assignment does not appear to me to lead
to a conclusion that it must always be so. Of course, if copyright has been
assigned, e.g. to a purchaser having no notice of circumstances which might
have affected its enforceability in the hands of the assignor, that would be a
very relevant circumstance when considering whether the public interest
overrode copyright. But, aside from situations of assignment, it seems to me
possible to conceive of situations where a copyright document itself appeared
entirely innocuous, but its publication -as a matter of fair dealing or, in
circumstances outside the scope of s.30, in the public interest - was justified
by its significance in the context of other facts. It might conceivably
represent the relevant, though by itself apparently meaningless, piece needed
to complete a whole jigsaw.
LORD JUSTICE STUART-SMITH:
84. I agree that the appeal should be allowed for the reasons given by Aldous
LJ.
Order: Appeal allowed. Judgment given for claimant. Agreed minutes to be
produced by Counsel. Defendants' application for permission to appeal to the
House of Lords refused. Order does not form part of approved judgment.