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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 >> CTB v News Group Newspapers Ltd & Anor [2011] EWHC 1326 (QB) (23 May 2011) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2011/1326.html Cite as: [2011] EWHC 1326 (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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CTB |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) NEWS GROUP NEWSPAPERS LIMITED (2) IMOGEN THOMAS |
Defendants |
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Richard Spearman QC (instructed by Farrer & Co) for the First Defendant
David Price QC (of David Price Solicitors & Advocates) for the Second Defendant
Hearing date: 16 May 2011
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Eady :
a) conduct a search of its email system including any backup servers;
b) disclose all emails located as a result of that search sent by Kelvin MacKenzie to any external email address during the period 14 April 2011 to 13 May 2011 which refer to the Claimant or tend in any way to identify the Claimant;
c) disclose any other emails located as a result of that search sent by anyone employed by the First Defendant to any external email address during the period 14 April 2011 to 13 May 2011 which refer to the Claimant or tend in any way to identify the Claimant;
d) disclose the recipient email address of any emails disclosed pursuant to (b) and (c) above;
e) disclose any other documents including SMS text messages created by Kelvin MacKenzie between 14 April 2011 and 13 May 2011 which refer to the Claimant or tend in any way to identify the Claimant;
f) disclose any other documents including SMS text messages created by anyone employed by the First Defendant between 14 April 2011 and 13 May 2011 which refer to the Claimant or tend in any way to identify the Claimant;
g) disclose each and every recipient of any document disclosed pursuant to (e) and (f) above.
"The court should guard against slipping into playing the role of King Canute. Even though an order may be desirable for the protection of privacy, and may be made in accordance with the principles currently being applied by the courts, there may come a point where it would simply serve no useful purpose and would merely be characterised, in the traditional terminology, as a brutum fulmen. It is inappropriate for the court to make vain gestures."
The circumstances here are rather different. In Mosley, I took the view that there was no point in granting an injunction because, even before the application was made, several hundred thousand people had seen the intimate video footage which NGN had put on line – conduct that was recently characterised by the European Court of Human Rights as a "flagrant and unjustified intrusion": Mosley v UK (App. No. 48009/08), 10 May 2011 at [104]. In a real sense, therefore, it could be said that there was nothing left for the court to protect by an injunction.
"In particular, once it has entered what is usually called the public domain (which means no more than that the information in question is so generally accessible that, in all the circumstances, it cannot be regarded as confidential) then, as a general rule, the principle of confidentiality can have no application to it."
The law thus recognises that a time may come, at least in relation to state secrets or commercial confidentiality, when the information in question has become so widely available that there is really nothing left for the law to protect. At an earlier stage in the same litigation, relating to Spycatcher, Sir John Donaldson MR had famously likened confidential information to an ice cube. Once it has melted, of course, it is simply too late to afford any effective remedy. That is Mr Spearman's argument in a nutshell.