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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Sivier v Riley [2021] EWCA Civ 713 (14 May 2021) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2021/713.html Cite as: [2021] WLR(D) 282, [2021] 4 WLR 84, [2021] EMLR 22, [2021] EWCA Civ 713 |
[New search] [Printable PDF version] [Buy ICLR report: [2021] 4 WLR 84] [View ICLR summary: [2021] WLR(D) 282] [Help]
ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
MEDIA AND COMMUNICATIONS LIST
Mrs Justice Collins Rice
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE HENDERSON
and
LORD JUSTICE WARBY
____________________
MICHAEL SIVIER |
Appellant/ Defendant |
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- and - |
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RACHEL RILEY |
Respondent/Claimant |
____________________
John Stables (instructed by Patron Law) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 27 April 2021
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Crown Copyright ©
Covid-19 Protocol: This judgment was handed down remotely by circulation to parties' representatives by email and release to BAILII and publication on the Courts and Tribunals Judiciary website. The date of hand-down is deemed to be as shown opposite: Date: 14 May 2021
LORD JUSTICE WARBY:
The procedural background
"1. The statement complained of means that,
(1) the Claimant has engaged upon, supported and encouraged a campaign of online abuse and harassment of a 16-year-old girl, conduct which has also incited her followers to make death threats towards her.
(2) By so doing, the Claimant is a serial abuser and has acted
a. hypocritically: by complaining about being the victim of online abuse and death threats herself whilst at the same time committing serial abuse of someone who has in consequence herself now been subjected to death threats (but someone who, unlike the Claimant, cannot afford additional security protection);
b. recklessly and irresponsibly: by provoking her followers to subject the 16-year-old to further abuse and harassment, including death threats; and
c. obscenely.
2. The meaning at paragraph 1(1) above is a statement of fact.
3. The meaning at paragraph 1(2) above is an expression of opinion.
4. The meaning as a whole is defamatory at common law."
"c) In an interview with the journalist, Krishnan Guru-Murthy, broadcast by Channel 4 News on 9 January 2019, the Claimant complained that she was a victim of online abuse.
d) The Claimant further complained that she was a victim of online abuse including physical threats with the result that "We are getting more security for Countdown" in an article published on 26 January 2019 by The Times newspaper ("Rachel Riley of Countdown finds her Jewish roots to take on the Corbynistas")
e) In its article, "Rachel Riley to get extra security after receiving online threats", also published on 26 January 2019, The Guardian newspaper reported the Claimant's statements in The Times newspaper that she was to receive extra security at work following physical threats to which she had been subjected online."
"4 Publication on matter of public interest
(1) It is a defence to an action for defamation for the defendant to show that
(a) the statement complained of was, or formed part of, a statement on a matter of public interest; and
(b) the defendant reasonably believed that publishing the statement complained of was in the public interest.
(2) Subject to subsections (3) and (4), in determining whether the defendant has shown the matters mentioned in subsection (1), the court must have regard to all the circumstances of the case.
(3) If the statement complained of was, or formed part of, an accurate and impartial account of a dispute to which the claimant was a party, the court must in determining whether it was reasonable for the defendant to believe that publishing the statement was in the public interest disregard any omission of the defendant to take steps to verify the truth of the imputation conveyed by it.
(4) In determining whether it was reasonable for the defendant to believe that publishing the statement complained of was in the public interest, the court must make such allowance for editorial judgement as it considers appropriate.
(5) For the avoidance of doubt, the defence under this section may be relied upon irrespective of whether the statement complained of is a statement of fact or a statement of opinion.
(6) The common law defence known as the Reynolds defence is abolished."
"The Defendant's Article addressed the following matters of public interest:
(1) Online bullying and harassment including death threats.
(2) The power of an adult celebrity compared to the relative powerlessness of a vulnerable child suffering anxiety.
(3) Mental health.
(4) Anti-Semitism."
"40.
(1) The Channel 4 News broadcast (watched by 7.4m people per month in 2018), The Times article (daily online readership of 683,000), The Guardian article (daily online readership of 4,874,000) as well as the Claimant's own tweets (published to her approximately 610,000 Twitter followers) reported that she was the victim of online harassment and physical threats. Furthermore, in her tweets the Claimant denied being a bully.
(2) The Defendant's Article provided a wider context to the story by way of a counter-narrative suggesting that the Claimant was a hypocrite given her own harassment (leading to death threats from her followers) of a child victim who was vulnerable both as a minor and anxiety sufferer.
(3) Given the Claimant's purported campaigning against anti-Semitism the Article further questioned her record on the issue.
41. The basis for the Defendant's belief was reasonable:
a) The Defendant's Article was based on the tweets sent by and on behalf of the Claimant compared to those sent by and on behalf of Rose.
b) The Defendant further based his Article on Mr Lawson's two articles, "Enough is Enough: Rachel Riley, GnasherJew, and the Political Weaponisation of Antisemitism" published online on 12 January 2019 and "Beneath Contempt: How Tracy Ann Oberman and Rachel Riley harassed, dogpiled and slandered a 16-year-old child and her father" published online on 18 January 2019 (hyperlinks to both of which were included in his Article).
c) Having compared a) and b) above to establish the evidential basis for his Article it was the Defendant's editorial judgement that publication was in the public interest.
d) At the outset of his Article the Defendant set out the Claimant's statements and position, as reported by The Guardian newspaper.
e) Further, it was the Defendant's editorial judgement that the Claimant should not be approached for comment. Her position had been consistently stated, not least in the publications referred to at paragraph 40(1) above. In particular, in her 14 tweet barrage at 4.45pm on 15 January 2019, the Claimant had vehemently denied bullying Rose whilst further attacking her. It was the Defendant's judgment that firstly, the Claimant was highly unlikely to comment, and secondly, in the event that she did she would only take the opportunity to double down in her attacks on Rose.
f) Given the currency of the story and the fast pace of the online news agenda it was the Defendant's editorial judgement that the public importance in the Article required that it be published as soon as practicable after the articles that day in The Times and The Guardian. Otherwise, its impact and relevance could be lost.
g) In all of the circumstances the publication of the Article amounted to a lawful exercise of the Defendant's Article 10 Convention right to free expression."
"2.1 The defence of truth and its particulars are impermissibly and/or irrelevantly pleaded and disclose no proper defence.
2.2 The particulars of truth specified in the application notice do not allege primary facts in relation to the Claimant's conduct that are properly arguable, or are impermissible as not alleging primary facts at all, or are irrelevant, or seek to reverse the burden of proof, and ought not to have been pleaded.
2.3 The impermissible inclusion in the Defence at §1 and §§48 and 49 of allegations not complained of. These ought not to have been pleaded.
2.4 The impermissible inclusion in the Defence at §1 and §50 of matters pleaded being neither related to the claim nor admissible as Burstein particulars. These ought not to have been pleaded."
"Similarly the defence brought under s.4 DA 2013 cannot have been reasonably believed if the facts relied on in the truth defence are incapable of supporting a plea of truth." (sic).
The argument was, therefore, that everything turned on the defence of truth. We are told that this short written submission was not developed in oral argument.
The judgment of Collins Rice J
Conclusions on the Defence of Substantial Truth
63 I have not been able to discern in Mr Sivier's pleadings a case, arguable with a realistic prospect of success, that it is substantially true that Ms Riley engaged upon, supported and encouraged a campaign of online abuse and harassment of Rose. That itself precludes the possibility of arguing that any such conduct incited others to make death threats to Rose. If such threats were made there is no basis for saying they were incited by Ms Riley's conduct as alleged, since there is no arguable basis for establishing the objective fact of that course of conduct.
64 the only online speech of Ms Riley cited in this case falls far short of anything that could fairly and arguably be said to constitute a campaign of harassment and abuse of Rose. There is no sustainable basis pleaded for imputing to her responsibility for supporting and encouraging, by her speech or by her silence, any such conduct by third parties. No other conduct of Ms Riley is pleaded to the requisite standards of sufficiency and particularity.
65 In these circumstances it is neither fair nor in the interests of justice for a proposed defence of substantial truth to proceed to trial. Mr Sivier's pleading discloses no reasonable grounds for defending the substantial truth of his factual allegations, and to that extent falls to be struck out.
The Honest Opinion and Public Interest Defences
66 Defamatory expressions of opinion may be defended if an honest person could have held them on the basis of any fact which existed at the time of publication. The supporting facts pleaded in this case are the defamatory allegations, and Ms Riley's own complaints of others' speech and threats against herself. The opinion expressed that Ms Riley is a serial abuser and has acted hypocritically, recklessly, irresponsibly and obscenely has in any event been ruled to be an opinion attached to the assertion that this was by virtue of her having done in fact what he had alleged.
67 If it is not even arguably true that Ms Riley engaged in or encouraged and supported a campaign of online abuse and harassment of Rose, I do not see that opinions based on the fact of her having done so can themselves survive to be defended. If Ms Riley did not engage in, encourage or support a campaign of online abuse and harassment of Rose, there is no survivable basis in these pleadings to defend an opinion that by so doing she is a serial abuser meriting the pejorative epithets applied to her conduct.
68 The same must go for the public interest defence. There can be no reasonable belief in the public interest in publishing untrue allegations and unsustainable opinions without some clear explanation and justification. None appears here."
Issues raised in the appeal
Discussion
"At all relevant times the Claimant had some 610,000 followers on Twitter and used her profile and celebrity as a television presenter in order to pursue a vociferous campaign against perceived anti-Semitism in the Labour Party. She actively and robustly engaged online with people who did not share her views. In 2019 the Claimant accepted a 'Warrior for Truth' award issued by The Algemeiner, a news outlet concerned with matters of Jewish interest around the world, for being 'a prominent voice against antisemitism in the UK Labour party'".
A major theme of the Article was the charge of hypocrisy. Mr Sivier was contrasting what Ms Riley had said to millions via the news media (Channel 4 News, The Times, and The Guardian) with her own public behaviour in front of hundreds of thousands on Twitter. Mr Sivier was suggesting that her public statements deprecating online abuse were at odds with her own conduct, which was that of a serial abuser who had encouraged others to threaten the life of a teenage girl. He was, in the process, criticising Ms Riley's conduct on the public platform of Twitter, suggesting it was a cause of the death threats made to Rose. No doubt there is more than one way to put it, but one way it could be put is that the matters of public interest which the Article was "on", or about, were the public conduct of a prominent public figure and, in particular, statements she had made or caused to be made publicly (a) in a media interview and (b) on Twitter.
Lord Justice Henderson:-
Dame Victoria Sharp, P:-
APPENDIX
Words complained of
"Serial abuser Rachel Riley to receive 'extra protection' on grounds that she is receiving abuse
[Photograph of the Claimant, captioned:] Death threats: Rachel Riley says she needs extra security on Countdown but her own behaviour has encouraged others to threaten a teenage girl's life.
. . .
It is absolutely right that abuse should not be tolerated, and anybody abusing or threatening another person over any issue needs to be tackled over it.
And that includes Ms Riley because she is, herself a serial abuser.
. . .
- Cold-shouldering a 16-year-old girl with anxiety problems who had pointed out that Ms Riley has adopted questionable allies, in such a way that her (Ms Riley's) supporters subjected her to an appalling amount of abuse (known as dogpiling).
- Doubling-down on this behaviour by including a tweet from the same teenager as an example of anti-Semitism.
- Comparing this teenager's attempt to point out the inconsistencies in her own behaviour with "the spread of Antisemitism".
You can find evidence in support of all the above in this article. [Hyperlink to first Shaun Lawson article.]
Oh, and she also:
- Supported actress Tracy Ann Oberman's campaign of harassment against the same teenage girl.
- Tried to gaslight her followers into thinking that the article I mention immediately above was inaccurate by supporting false claims by one of her allies.
- Attacked that teenage girl yet again, along with her father.
You can find the evidence supporting this claims here. [hyperlink to second Shaun Lawson article]
Now, if you visit those evidence-packed articles by Shaun Lawson, you'll see some extremely harsh comments about Ms Riley. As mentioned twice above, I don't condone abuse of any kind and so I don't support those expressions of opinion although, reading through the evidence, I can certainly understand why he made them.
And you should too, from this summary of what has happened to the teenager who has suffered so much abuse from two television celebrities:
"The consequences of Riley and Oberman's obscene conduct have been as follows:
1. Rosie's Twitter account has been hacked several times, by people trying to delete screenshots. Now why might that be ?
2. People have tried to track down her family's address and her devastated mother's Facebook page.
3. Someone eavesdropped on Rosie in class and tried to sell the story to The Sun. Which in keeping with its reputation of being lower than vermin, printed something before deleting it hours later.
4. She has people in college believing she's an anti-Semite.
5. She, a 16-year-old child, has received death threats.
I'm not saying Ms Riley intentionally tried to get her followers to threaten this girl with death. But nobody can deny that her irresponsibility has encouraged others to do so, and that she has been reckless as to the consequences of her behaviour.
So now we see that a person who has complained to the newspapers about "extra security" on the TV show she co-presents because of death threats has herself provoked death threats against a teenage girl.
And you can be sure this girl won't be getting "extra security" or, indeed, any security at all."