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 >> GYH v Persons Unknown [2018] EWHC 121 (QB) (01 February 2018) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2018/121.html Cite as: [2018] EWHC 121 (QB) |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
GYH |
Claimant |
|
- and - |
||
PERSONS UNKNOWN |
Defendant(s) |
____________________
The Defendant(s) did not appear and were not represented
Hearing dates: 23 January 2018
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Julian Knowles:
a. An order that her claim for an injunction and award of damages is allowed, by way of disposal of her claim. She submits that in light of the findings in the Judgment, that there is no real prospect of the Defendant(s) successfully defending her claim as it is set out in her claim form and the evidence filed in support of it when it was issued.
b. The granting of her claim for damages on the same basis, with assessment to be stayed (she is still attempting to identify the Defendant(s), and asks that the assessment be stayed, with damages to be assessed if she is able to identify him/them).
The factual background
"1. The claimant applies without notice to the defendant for an interim non-disclosure order to restrain what she alleges is a campaign of harassment. The campaign consists mainly of the publication of various items or categories of personal information or purported information about the claimant. These include allegations that the claimant has HIV/AIDS, and other information or purported information about her sexual life, and her physical and mental health. It is the claimant's case that the allegation that she has HIV/AIDS is false, as is some of the other information about her.
2. Such information or purported information has been, and continues to be, published online at several locations. The claimant's case is that the publications have caused her considerable distress. They are said to amount to harassment by the misuse of private information. The claimant also maintains, as part of her claim, and as part of her argument in support of an injunction, that some of them are both defamatory and untrue. She relies on other more recent conduct as forming part of the same campaign.
…
18. The best way to summarise the claim is to set out the relevant parts of the Details of Claim contained in the Claim Form, to which I have added paragraph numbers. The Claim Form describes the parties as follows:
"[1] The Claimant is a transgender woman who works as an escort, and who provides sexual and companionship services to her clients under a work name ("the Services"). She is an active user of social media and maintains a Facebook profile, a YouTube Channel and a blog. "
[2] The Defendant is the unknown person responsible for conduct and a series of publications set out in more detail below, and thought to be resident in this jurisdiction. The Defendant is identified by description.
19. The Claim Form goes on to make the following factual allegations:
"[3] Around 4 December 2015, the Claimant received a text message from an unknown person claiming to be a student who wished to meet her socially, but not to pay her for the Services. The Claimant declined to meet the unknown person and the text message conversation deteriorated into abuse, including the allegation that the Claimant spreads sexually transmitted diseases. The Claimant received anonymous telephone calls around this time which also directed abuse of a similar kind towards her.
[4] Shortly following the exchange of text messages with the unknown person, the Claimant was targeted by a wide-ranging campaign of online harassment, in which information was posted on websites in relation to both her legal and work names. The Court will be asked to infer that the same unknown person was responsible for the text messages, the phone calls and the website postings.
[5] The websites in question relate to the provision of sexual services for money, and to sex and pornography specifically relating to transgender women ("the Websites"). They target the Claimant, ensuring that they come to her attention, and to that of anyone searching for either her legal or work name on the internet. They do so by: using her work name in their URLs, headlines and other areas where such usage is likely to have an effect on the Websites' prominence in search results; using pictures of the Claimant (often altered in an offensive manner); and by publishing highly specific and identifying personal information about the Claimant's background, legal name, sexuality, and provision of the Services.
[6] The publication of the Websites is persistently harassing of the Claimant, and they contain a number of very oppressive and unpleasant features beyond those which target her set out above, including: (1) the purported private information that the claimant is mentally ill, is anorexic, practices unsafe sex with her partner, and has STDs, including HIV; (2) the defamatory and seriously harmful allegation that, when offering the Services, the Claimant does so notwithstanding her infection with STDs and/or HIV, and the associated allegation that she practises unsafe sex when offering the Services; and (3) images of the Claimant, or supposed images and video of the Claimant, some of which have been altered in an offensive manner, containing extremely intimate and private information, the publication of which exacerbates the impact of the disclosures and allegations set out immediately above."
"10. … The claimant sues "Persons Unknown" … I shall refer to the defendant as "he", because it seems most likely to be one male individual. It is open to a claimant who cannot identify those responsible for the conduct complained of to sue "Persons Unknown". The principles are identified in Bloomsbury Publishing Group plc v News Group Newspapers Ltd [2003] 1 WLR 1633. The court must however keep a watchful eye on claims brought against persons unknown, to guard against any abuse of the facility to bring claims in this way.
11. … . Section 12(2) of the Human Rights Act 1998 prohibits the court from granting relief which might affect the exercise of the Convention right to freedom of expression unless it is satisfied "that there are compelling reasons why the respondent should not be notified or that the applicant has taken all practicable steps to notify the respondent." There is no suggestion that there are any good reasons for not notifying the defendant. The issue, so far as it is concerned, is whether all practicable steps have been taken to notify him.
12. The evidence before the Court describes in some detail the efforts made on behalf of the claimant to identify the person responsible for the offending publications. These efforts have been extensive and, in my judgment, thorough; but although the claimant can identify those responsible for the platforms on which the statements have been made, it has proved impossible to trace any individual who has posted those statements. The evidence was updated at the start of the hearing by means of a statement explaining the steps taken to prompt a police investigation, and the status of that investigation. I am satisfied that the claimant has taken all the steps that could be taken to identify a defendant who might be served with this claim, but without success."
Steps taken following the Judgment and the Order
Legal principles
Disposal of a claim under Part 8
"(5) Where the claimant uses the Part 8 procedure he may not obtain default judgment under Part 12."
"8.1 The court may on the hearing date—
(1) proceed to hear the case and dispose of the claim;"
Final injunctive relief against Persons Unknown
"24.2 The court may give summary judgment …if
(a) it considers that–
(i) …; or
(ii) that the defendant has no real prospect of successfully defending the claim or issue; and
(iii) there is no other compelling reason why the case or issue should be disposed of at a trial."
"In order to defeat the application for summary judgment it is sufficient for the respondent to show some 'prospect', ie some chance of success. That prospect must be 'real', ie the court will disregard prospects which are false, fanciful or imaginary. The inclusion of the word 'real' means that the respondent has to have a case which is better than merely arguable (International Finance Corp v Utexafrica Sprl [2001] CLC 1361 and ED&F Man Liquid Products Ltd v Patel [2003] EWCA Civ 472)."
"… the absence of a named defendant should never be permitted by the court to operate as a bar to the obtaining of injunctive relief in a privacy case, and thereby prevent the effective protection of a claimant's Article 8 ECHR rights, where the grant of such relief is otherwise appropriate. Furthermore, if the concerns expressed by the Court of Appeal in Hutcheson v Popdog Ltd about the correctness of Jockey Club v Buffham turn out to be well founded, it may come to be regarded as appropriate to grant final injunctive relief in privacy cases in 'persons unknown' form."
Discussion