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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 >> Amersi v Leslie & Anor [2023] EWCA Civ 1468 (07 December 2023) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2023/1468.html Cite as: [2023] EWCA Civ 1468 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE
KING'S BENCH DIVISION
MEDIA AND COMMUNICATIONS LIST
Mr Justice Nicklin
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(Vice-President of the Court of Appeal, Civil Division)
and
LORD JUSTICE WARBY
____________________
MOHAMED AMERSI |
Claimant/ Appellant |
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- and – |
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(1) CHARLOTTE LESLIE (2) CMEC UK & MENA LIMITED |
Defendants/ Respondents |
____________________
David Price KC and Jonathan Price (instructed by Rradar Limited) for the Respondents
Hearing date: 23 November 2023
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Crown Copyright ©
LORD JUSTICE WARBY: -
Background to the application
"the claimant has largely retained the approach of pleading a 'composite' case of alleged serious harm to reputation (now significantly expanded in §§65-128). However, he also sought to introduce several paragraphs relating to serious harm to reputation in earlier sections of the pleading …"
The defendant then applied to strike out the claim on the basis that the claimant had failed to plead any tenable case on the issue of serious harm, as well as on certain other grounds to which I shall refer later.
The judge's reasoning
"The point about whether it is permissible to 'aggregate' reputational harm across multiple publications is a pure matter of law. It can, and should, be resolved now. For the reasons I have given, the argument is wrong and must be rejected. The point has been decided by the Court of Appeal in Banks -v- Cadwalladr. The proper course, in this case, is for the Court to assess, publication by publication, whether the Claimant has a real prospect of showing that it has caused or is likely to cause serious harm to his reputation."
"If the claimant sues A over the publication to B (and relies on the republication to C as Slipper damage) then s/he must establish that the publication to B has caused serious harm to his/her reputation (or is likely to do so). If the claimant fails to show that the publication to B caused serious harm …. then the cause of action will fail."
The appeal
(1) The Judge was wrong to proceed on the basis that s 1(1) requires a separate assessment of each publication by reference to what the publishees believed rather than an assessment of the impact of each defamatory statement.
(2) The Judge was wrong to decide that Slipper damages were only available where it is first proved that the initial publication of a defamatory statement has caused or is likely to cause serious harm to a claimant's reputation. He should have held that any damage caused by the publication can be taken into account.
(3) The Judge was wrong to conduct a "mini-trial" of the evidence on serious harm. He should have held that these were matters which had to be dealt with on the basis of oral evidence at trial.
(4) The Judge reached erroneous conclusions as to the Claimant's conduct of the litigation which he wrongly took into account in his determination of the Defendant's strike out application.
(5) The Judge was wrong not to provide the Claimant with a further opportunity to amend his Particulars of Claim.
1. My provisional view is that none of grounds 3, 4 and 5 has any realistic prospect of success, and I am not yet persuaded that there is any other compelling reason why any of those grounds should be argued.
2. But Grounds 1 and 2 raise points of law about the way that section 1 of the Defamation Act 2013 is to be interpreted and applied, each of which has wider importance and currently seems to me to be arguable.
(1) Ground 1 raises the question of whether any individual publication of an imputation with a reputationally harmful tendency can be sued upon in the absence of proof that the particular publication actually caused serious harm to reputation. The judge's answer was that by virtue of s 1 it cannot. The consequence would be that the claim would fail even if the publication in question was one of multiple publications by the same defendant of the same imputation which collectively did cause serious harm. The appellant's argument is, in essence, that this does not flow from the statutory wording nor is it compelled by authority or legal logic. It is said that for the purposes of deciding whether a statement (or imputation) satisfied the serious harm requirement and is accordingly defamatory, the court should look at the cumulative impact of "its publication" on the reputation of the claimant, that is to say all and any publications of the statement or imputation. I do not currently view this as fanciful.
(2) Ground 2 raises the question of whether, when deciding whether any individual publication of an imputation caused serious harm to reputation the court is entitled to take account of "Slipper" damage …. The judge's answer was that it is not; the question of whether the publication of the imputation complained of caused serious reputational harm is to be answered without reference to any such onward publication. The appellant's case is that "Slipper" damage is reputational harm caused by the original publication that falls within the meaning of s 1. This argument also seems to me to have a real prospect of success.
3. That said, the court does not ordinarily hear appeals if the outcome would be academic so far as the parties are concerned. And I can see a good deal of force in the respondent's argument that the outcome of this case would be the same whatever the answers to these questions of law. … In all the circumstances it is appropriate to look into that issue further, with the benefit of written and oral argument from both sides.
An appeal with a real prospect of success?
The judge's decision on the facts
"One example could, for instance, perhaps be where the defendant considers that he has irrefutable evidence that the number of publishees was very limited, that there has been no grapevine percolation and that there is firm evidence that no one thought any the less of the claimant by reason of the publication. Whether such evidence is in truth unanswerable and whether such matters are best resolved on a summary judgment application or best left to trial is then for the court to determine."
The judge's legal analysis
The claimant's case
"From late December 2020 to mid-January 2021 the First Defendant published a series of documents to a number of influential individuals which contained allegations highly defamatory of the Claimant at common law and which have caused him and/or are likely to cause him serious reputational harm."
I have added the emphasis to highlight the use of the plural throughout. This is not a statement of case alleging the multiple publication of the same statement, or statements that are substantially the same.
Another opportunity to amend?
A discretion to refuse permission for an appeal with a real prospect of success?
Another compelling reason to hear an appeal?
LORD JUSTICE UNDERHILL: