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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 >> Ronaldo v Telegraph Media Group Ltd [2010] EWHC 2710 (QB) (27 October 2010) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2010/2710.html Cite as: [2010] EWHC 2710 (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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Cristiano Ronaldo |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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Telegraph Media Group Limited |
Defendant |
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David Price of David Price Solicitors & Advocates for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 22nd October 2010
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Crown Copyright ©
Mrs Justice Sharp:
The action
"By partying in the Hollywood nightclub, Villa, where he danced without his crutches and drank copious amounts of champagne when he was recovering from his recent ankle operation, [Mr Ronaldo] was behaving unprofessionally, irresponsibly and with a reckless indifference to his recovery."
"Shortly after having undergone surgery on his ankle and when he would otherwise have been due to return for pre-season training and having publicly agreed with the suggestion that he was being treated like "a slave" because of Manchester United's refusal to allow him to terminate his contract in order for him to fulfil his wish to move to Real Madrid and having behaved out of line with the reasonable expectations of Manchester United, [Mr Ronaldo] went on an unnecessary trip to Los Angeles unconnected with Manchester United, notwithstanding the reservations of his medical team, during which he "lived it up" and went "out on the town" on crutches, thereby unnecessarily increasing the risk of injury to the ankle and/or lengthening the requisite period of recovery and absence from football and generating inevitable media coverage including photographs."
"[Mr Ronaldo] has made claims against MGN Ltd and Sports Newspapers Ltd in respect of the publication of words to the same or similar effect as the words on which he has brought these proceedings. [The Telegraph] reserves the right to rely on these and any other claim under s.12 of the Defamation Act 1952."
"[A]lthough section 12 is relied on by each defendant, it would be better if the jury in the Telegraph action had the benefit of considering what actual sum was awarded against the Mirror, if any, when considering what sum, if any, should be awarded in respect of the words complained of in the Telegraph action."
The application to stay this action
"In their natural and ordinary meaning the said words meant and were understood to mean that by partying and drinking champagne when he should have been recovering from his recent ankle operation, the claimant was deliberately behaving in a manner calculated to dismay and/or anger his manager, Sir Alex Ferguson.
By way of innuendo the said words meant and were understood to mean that the claimant, who was, following his ankle operation, supposed to be resting and recuperating at a rehabilitation clinic in order to ensure that he would be able to return to playing football as soon as possible, instead flew to Hollywood where he went partying in nightclubs, dancing without his crutches, drinking champagne and deliberately behaving in a manner calculated to dismay and/or anger his manager, Sir Alex Ferguson".
Discussion
"The successful plaintiff in a defamation action is entitled to recover, as general compensatory damages, such sum as will compensate him for the wrong he has suffered. That sum must compensate him for the damage to his reputation; vindicate his good name; and take account of the distress, hurt, and humiliation which the defamatory publication has caused."
"It seems to me that properly speaking, a man defamed does not get compensation for his damaged reputation. He gets damages because he was injured in his reputation, that is simply because he was publicly defamed. For this reason, compensation by damages operates in two ways: as a vindication of the plaintiff to the public and as consolation to him for a wrong done. Compensation here is a solatium rather than a monetary recompense for harm measurable in money."
"It has not been the law that a man pays less for his defamatory remarks which he cannot justify merely because someone else has published previously or concurrently the same libel. If it were otherwise a defamed man might have no adequate redress, for the full range and extent of publication or republication can rarely if ever be traced and established and every offender brought to justice."
"These statutory provisions only emphasise the existence of the general rule of Saunders v. Mills 6 Bing. 213 and in no way serve to prevent a plaintiff from receiving the full compensation for the wrong done to him but only to prevent him being paid the full damage more than once, or at least to avoid an overlapping of damages, taking into consideration that the matters for assessment may not always have common features affecting the amount of damages, some defendants may have apologised at once most generously, or may have made the publication complained of in excusable circumstances, whereas others may have acted maliciously and sustained their allegation to the end. Damages for libel of the same purport would clearly from the nature and extent of a publication not necessarily be the same against all defendants against whom liability was established, except in the case of joint tortfeasors."
"The reasoning behind Saunders v. Mills 6 Bing. 213 and Harrison v. Pearce 1 F. & F. 567 is, I think, simply that the damage done by other publications is deemed to be irrelevant. So in one sense it is. If each publisher is thought of as having his own circle of readers or listeners, he will be made responsible for the publication to them but not beyond, and it is irrelevant to say that some other publisher will be responsible for another publication of the same libel to another circle. But in defamation the damage goes beyond the harmful effect upon the minds of those who receive the publication at first hand. There has to be taken into account as well, for example, the element of mental distress which does not increase proportionately with the extent of the publication.
More important, there is the slow spread of the libel beyond the immediate circle; and if eventually the whole public mind is permeated, no one can identify each separate source of infection. The damage due to mental distress and to widespread repetition constitute, it may be said, an indivisible injury for which the damages cannot be separately assessed as between different publications of the same libel, and therefore each wrongdoer whose act is a substantial cause of the injury must pay for the whole. " each publisher is answerable for his act to the same extent as if the calumny originated with him." This statement of the law in Gatley (4th ed., p. 106), has recently been approved in Cadam v. Beaverbrook Newspapers Ltd [1959] 1 Q.B. 413. and in "Truth" (N.Z.) Ltd. v. Holloway [1960] 1 WLR 997, 1003.
The common law position has been partly alleviated by legislation which foreshadowed to a limited extent the solution that was later applied for joint torts in 1935 [Law Reform (Married Women and Tortfeasors) Act, 1935]. The Law of Libel Amendment Act, 1888, s. 5, provides that where actions are brought in respect to the same or substantially the same libel against two or more defendants, the actions may be consolidated and tried together and the damages given in respect of the libel apportioned between the defendants. By the Defamation Act, 1952, s. 12, enlarging the scope of a similar provision previously made in section 6 of the Act of 1888, the defendant is permitted to give in evidence in mitigation of damages that the plaintiff has recovered damages or brought actions for damages or received or agreed to receive compensation in respect of publications to the same effect as that sued upon."
"If a man reads four newspapers at breakfast and reads substantially the same libel in each, liability does not depend on which paper he opens first. Perhaps one newspaper influences him more than another, but unless he can say he disregarded one altogether, then each is a substantial cause of the damage done to the plaintiff in his eyes. A fortiori, when a reader of the "Daily Mail" picked up the issue for June 16 and read the article complained of, it is not possible to say how much damage was done by the privileged extract from the report and how much by Bromley's story; all that can be said is that they combined to injure the plaintiff's reputation.
In the application of these general principles to damage done by a libel there are two qualifications to be borne in mind. Each of them is illustrated by an authority relied upon by Mr. Faulks. The first is that damage done by two distinct libels is separately measurable and it is immaterial that the two libels form part of the same publication. The second is that the damage done by the publication of a libel must be measured, albeit roughly, in accordance with the number of people to whom the publication is made. A man's reputation is in the keeping of others and it is by words uttered to those others that it is injured; the larger the number to whom the publication is made the greater the injury. If the libel is spread from mouth to mouth by a series of utterances, the damage done by each must be separately assessed; if the publication consists of only one utterance to a large number, there can be only one assessment but it must be made in accordance with size."
"Here there were similar libels published in two national newspapers on the same day and each has to be dealt with by a different jury. If each jury were to award damages without regard to the fact that the plaintiffs are also entitled to damages against the other newspaper, the aggregate of the damages in the two actions would almost certainly be too large. Section 12 of the Defamation Act, 1952, is intended to deal with that. In effect it requires that each jury shall be told about the other action, but the question is what each jury should be told. I do not think it is sufficient merely to tell each jury to make such allowance as they may think fit. They ought, in my view, to be directed that in considering the evidence submitted to them they should consider how far the damage suffered by the plaintiffs can reasonably be attributed solely to the libel with which they are concerned and how far it ought to be regarded as the joint result of the two libels. If they think that some part of the damage is the joint result of the two libels they should bear in mind that the plaintiffs ought not to be compensated twice for the same loss. They can only deal with this matter on very broad lines and they must take it that the other jury will be given a similar direction. They must do the best they can to ensure that the sum which they award will fully compensate the plaintiffs for the damage caused by the libel with which they are concerned, but will not take into account that part of the total damage suffered by the plaintiffs which ought to enter into the other jury's assessment."
Note 1 This provides that: In any action for libel or slander the defendant may give in evidence in mitigation of damages that the plaintiff has recovered damages, or has brought actions for damages, for libel or slander in respect of the publication of words to the same effect as the words on which the action is founded, or has received or agreed to receive compensation in respect of any such publication. [Back] Note 2 The trial date was then set for the 9 November 2009. [Back] Note 3 See [2009] EWHC 2862 (QB). In that ruling I also dealt with the history of the amendments to the pleadings, and reference can be made to it for that background if necessary. [Back]