BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Ecclestone v Telegraph Media Group Ltd [2009] EWHC 2779 (QB) (06 November 2009) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2009/2779.html Cite as: [2009] EWHC 2779 (QB) |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
PETRA ECCLESTONE |
Claimant |
|
- and - |
||
TELEGRAPH MEDIA GROUP LIMITED |
Defendant |
____________________
Mr David Price, of David Price, Solicitors & Advocates for the Defendant
Hearing date: 13 October 2009
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mrs Justice Sharp :
Introduction
"Sir Paul McCartney's call for 'Meat-Free Mondays" hasn't impressed Petra Ecclestone, left, the daughter of Bernie Ecclestone, the Formula One racing boss. "I am not a veggie and I don't have much time for people like the McCartneys and Annie Lennox" she told Mandrake at the 10th Anniversary party of Asia de Cuba, the West End restaurant.
Unlike Sir Paul's daughter Stella McCartney who refuses to use animal products in her range of clothes, Petra, 21, who launched a men's fashion line called Form says "I'm all or nothing", so don't have a problem using leather as a designer. I am now going to bring out my first womenswear collection. It will be in leather and out in the Spring for Autumn 2010. I am basing it on what a girl like myself likes to wear."
"[T]he Claimant was disrespectful and dismissive of the McCartneys and Annie Lennox to the point of being willing to disparage them publicly for promoting vegetarianism."
Legal principles
i) The court should give the material complained of the natural and ordinary meaning which it would have conveyed to the ordinary reasonable reader reading it once;
ii) The hypothetical reasonable reader is not naïve but he is not unduly suspicious. He can read between the lines. He can read in an implication more readily than a lawyer and may indulge in a certain amount of loose thinking. But he must be treated as being a man who is not avid for scandal and someone who does not, and should not, select one bad meaning where other non-defamatory meanings are available;
iii) While limiting its attention to what the defendant has actually said or written the court should be cautious of an over-elaborate analysis of the material in issue;
iv) The reasonable reader does not give a newspaper item the analytical attention of a lawyer to the meaning of a document, an auditor to the interpretation of accounts, or an academic to the content of a learned article;
v) In deciding what impression the material complained of would have been likely to have on the hypothetical reasonable reader the court is entitled (if not bound) to have regard to the impression it made on them;
vi) The court should not be too literal in its approach.
"... The real question ...is how the courts ought to go about ascertaining the range of legitimate meanings… the impression is not of what the words mean but of what a jury could sensibly think they meant. Such an exercise is an exercise in generosity, not in parsimony …."
"There is a distinction between imputing what is merely a breach of conventional etiquette and what is illegal, mischievous, or sinful."
"[J]uries should be free to award damages for injuries to reputation is one of the safeguards of liberty. But the protection is undermined when exhibitions of bad manners or discourtesy are placed on the same level as attacks on character and are treated as actionable wrongs."
Discussion
"A statement should be taken to be defamatory if it would tend to lower [the claimant] in the estimation of right-thinking members of society generally, or be likely to affect a person adversely in the estimation of reasonable people generally.
Per Sir Thomas Bingham MR (at 286)