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England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> AMM v HXW [2010] EWHC 2457 (QB) (07 October 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2010/2457.html Cite as: [2010] EWHC 2457 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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AMM |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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HXW |
Defendant |
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Mr Hugh Tomlinson QC (instructed by JMW Solicitors LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 4 October 2010
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Tugendhat :
"TV celebrity wins court order gagging his ex-wife.
A married TV star has won a court gagging order to prevent details of his private life being published.
The celebrity, who has a huge public profile has obtained an injunction stopping his ex-wife writing about their relationship and claiming that they had a sexual affair after he remarried.
Neither the married man nor his ex-wife can be identified, but he becomes the latest figure to use the courts to protect his privacy.
Yesterday, it emerged that another married public figure had won a footballer-style gagging order to hush up his infidelity.
He had claimed it would be 'very distressing' if his sexual encounters with a woman, which took place in his home, were revealed. A High Court judge agreed that it would breach his human rights and granted him an injunction after hearing that the woman was trying to blackmail him by threatening to expose their relationship unless he paid a 'very substantial sum' of hush money.
The latest injunction contains the same anonymity provisions which protect the identity of the TV star, raising questions over whether blackmail is involved.
The injunction, granted by Mr Justice Edwards-Stuart and effective until October 4 prevents the ex-wife disclosing her claims that they had a sexual affair since he remarried.
Details of the other case, involving the married public figure, were initially secret because he obtained a 'super-injunction' similar to the one footballer John Terry used to prevent the public learning he had cheated on his wife.
Super-injunctions mean the media cannot even report that a gagging order has been granted.
Limited details of the cheating public figure's case can be disclosed because the High Court agreed that the risk of them leaking on to the internet could never be eliminated.
The order obtained by the TV star is not a super-injunction. But it prevents his ex-wife from publishing any details of their life together…"
"22. … [Counsel for the Claimant] submits that looking at the matter from the perspective of Article 8, there is a plain interference with the applicant's right to respect for privacy and family life which cannot be justified under Article 8(2).
23. As to the Article 10 rights of the respondent, the evidence before me currently suggests the applicant is likely to establish at trial that disclosure of the information (whether to the media or generally) would be the fulfilment of a blackmailing threat. I accept [Counsel for the Claimant]'s submission that the expression rights of blackmailers are extremely weak (if they are engaged at all)….
26 Any provisions derogating from the principles of open justice and the provisions of the CPR must be necessary on the facts of the case…
27 [Counsel for the Claimant] submits [that the anonymity order] should remain in place until trial or further order. Anonymity orders have been considered twice by the Supreme Court in 2010; and he has referred me to the judgment given by Lord Rodger in Secretary of State for the Home Department v AP (No. 2) [2010] UKSC 26 where he summarises the test to be applied as follows:
"the Court must ask itself "whether there is sufficient general, public interest in publishing a report of the proceedings which identifies [AP] to justify any resulting curtailment of his right and his family's right to respect for their private and family life. "" [7]
28 He submits the answer to this question in the present case is plainly "no". In particular, he says the publication of the applicant's name would lead to large scale media intrusion which would, in itself, constitute a very substantial intrusion into his private and family life and would be very distressing for him and his family. There is in addition a very strong public interest in the prevention of blackmail and in encouraging victims of blackmail not to give in. It would be contrary to that public interest to publish the fact that the applicant was being blackmailed. As a result, all that any report of the proceedings could do would be to identify the applicant as the person who has obtained an injunction…
35 … I also consider [Counsel for the Claimant] is right when he says the blackmail element of this case brings extremely strong public interest considerations into play. The fact that the applicant has been blackmailed should not be published…."
"21. (1) A person is guilty of blackmail if, with a view to gain for himself or another or with intent to cause loss to another, he makes any unwarranted demand with menaces; and for this purpose a demand with menaces is unwarranted unless the person making it does so in the belief -
(a) that he has reasonable grounds for making the demand; and
(b) that the use of the menaces is a proper means of reinforcing the demand."
"The ordinary blackmailer normally threatens to do what he has a perfect right to do namely, communicate some compromising conduct to a person whose knowledge is likely to affect the person threatened. Often indeed he has not only the right but also the duty to make the disclosure, as of a felony, to the competent authorities. What he has to justify is not the threat, but the demand of money. The gravamen of the charge is the demand without reasonable or probable cause: and I cannot think that the mere fact that the threat is to do something a person is entitled to do either causes the threat not to be a 'menace' ... or in itself provides a reasonable or probable cause for the demand" (at pp. 806-807)".
"… a judge has a discretion at common law to permit a witness, whose identity will be known to the court and to the parties, to refrain from identifying himself openly… this discretion has typically been exercised in certain types of blackmail".
"(644)…all of us concerned in the law know that for more years than any of us can remember it has been a commonplace in blackmail charges for the complainant to be allowed to give his evidence without disclosing his name. That is not out of any feelings of tenderness towards the victim of the blackmail, a man or woman very often who deserves no such consideration at all. The reason why the courts in the past have so often used this device in this type of blackmail case where the complainant has something to hide, is because there is a keen public interest in getting blackmailers convicted and sentenced, and experience shows that grave difficulty may be suffered in getting complainants to come forward unless they are given this kind of protection….
(p650) the Crown at this stage had presented a prima facie case of contempt … because to my mind it is quite evident that if witnesses in blackmail actions are not adequately protected, this could affect the readiness of others to come forward in other cases".
"As Lord Griffiths said in In re an Inquiry [1988] AC 660 at p 704, "whether a particular measure is necessary, although described as a question of fact for the purpose of s 10 [of the Contempt of Court Act 1981] involves the exercise of a judgment upon the established facts". His next remark, that "[i]n the exercise of that judgment different people may come to different conclusions on the same facts", does not reduce the exercise to one of discretion. As Lord Bridge was later to explain in X v Morgan-Grampian (above, at p 44):
"Whether the necessity of disclosure in this sense is established is certainly a question of fact rather than an issue calling for the exercise of the judge's discretion, but, like many other questions of fact, such as the question whether somebody has acted reasonably in given circumstances, it will call for the exercise of a discriminating and sometimes difficult value judgement. In estimating the weight to be attached to the importance of disclosure in the interests of justice on the one hand and that of protection from disclosure in pursuance of the policy which underlies section 10 on the other hand, many factors will be relevant on both sides of the scale."
I have given earlier my reasons for thinking that the effect of ss 2 and 3 of the Human Rights Act 1998 has been to move the evaluation of necessity further towards the status of a question of law, albeit one which is still heavily fact-dependent and value-laden." (emphasis added)
"29 As for the prohibition of publication of the fact of the order, he submits if no such provision is made then experience suggests that the press will publicise the fact of the order adding "snippets" of identifying information with a substantial risk of a "jigsaw identification" of the applicant, thus defeating the purpose of the action. Such "jigsaw identification" has taken place in the recent past when other injunctions have been granted, as explained in the evidence. In addition, if the fact that the injunction has been granted is publicised this will, inevitably, lead to press and internet speculation as to the identity of the applicant. Such speculation will itself cause the applicant distress and will interfere with his Article 8 rights. Such speculation risks breaches of the injunction taking place in forums on the internet. There is a temptation for journalists who become aware of the identity of the applicant to release this anonymously. This has happened in previous cases. There is no substantial public interest served by the public availability of the fact of an order - without any background information…"
"… by destroying the confidence of witnesses in potential future blackmail proceedings in the protection which they would get, there was an act calculated to interfere with the course of justice".