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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 >> Spicer v The Commissioner of Police of the Metropolis [2019] EWHC 1439 (QB) (07 June 2019) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2019/1439.html Cite as: [2019] EWHC 1439 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
MEDIA AND COMMUNICATIONS LIST
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
William Alexander Spicer |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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The Commissioner of Police of the Metropolis |
Defendant |
____________________
Gervase de Wilde (instructed by Legal Directorate, Metropolitan Police Service) for Defendant
Hearing date: 5 June 2019
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE WARBY:
Parties
The article
Procedural history
The rival cases as to meaning
"William Spicer and Farid Reza have been found guilty by a jury of unlawfully killing a young woman pedestrian, Hina Shamin, at about 9pm on 31st March 2015 while recklessly racing their high performance BMWs against each other at more than 60 mph in a 30 mph zone in Kingston town centre. Spicer also failed to stop and illegally drove on. He was later found by the Police, charged and arrested."
This is the meaning complained of in the Particulars of Claim, with the immaterial change that the spelling of Mr Reza's name has been corrected.
"There are reasonable grounds to suspect that [the Claimant] was involved in racing his high-performance car against another similar vehicle at more than 60 mph in a 30 mph zone in Kingston Town Centre. The other vehicle struck a young woman, Hina Shamin, who was killed instantly, and its driver was convicted of causing death by dangerous driving. The Claimant failed to stop at the site of the collision, and then made an illegal right-hand turn. He was arrested the following day and charged with causing death by dangerous driving, and causing serious injury by dangerous driving. He was found not guilty of those two offences, but guilty of careless driving, and was given nine penalty points on his licence, a £1,000 fine, and ordered to pay £500 costs."
The approach to deciding defamatory meaning
"(1) At common law, a statement is defamatory of the claimant if, but only if, (a) it imputes conduct which would tend to lower the claimant in the estimation of right-thinking people generally, and (b) the imputation crosses the common law threshold of seriousness, which is that it "[substantially] affects in an adverse manner the attitude of other people towards him or has a tendency so to do": Thornton v Telegraph Media Group Limited [2010] EWHC 1414 (QB) [2011] 1 WLR 1985 [96] (Tugendhat J).
(2) "Although the word 'affects' in this formulation might suggest otherwise, it is not necessary to establish that the attitude of any individual person towards the claimant has in fact been adversely affected to a substantial extent, or at all. It is only necessary to prove that the meaning conveyed by the words has a tendency to cause such a consequence": Lachaux v Independent Print Limited [2015] EWHC 2242 (QB) [2016] QB 402 [15(5)]."
In this case, all the meanings proposed by the parties are agreed to be defamatory meanings, by these criteria.
"The publication must be read as a whole, and any "bane and antidote" taken together. Sometimes, the context will clothe the words in a more serious defamatory meaning (for example the classic "rogues' gallery" case). In other cases, the context will weaken (even extinguish altogether) the defamatory meaning that the words bear if they were read in isolation (e.g. bane and antidote cases)."
"[If] in one part of the publication something disreputable to the plaintiff is stated, but that is removed by the conclusion, the bane and the antidote must be taken together."
"I do not see how, consistently with this single standard, it is possible to carve the readership of one article into different groups: those who will have read only the headlines, and those who will have read further. The question, defamatory or no, must always be answered by reference to the response of the ordinary reader to the publication.
This is not to say that words in the text of an article will always be efficacious to cure a defamatory headline. It all depends on the context, one element in which is the layout of the article. Those who print defamatory headlines are playing with fire. The ordinary reader might not be expected to notice curative words tucked away further down in the article. The more so, if the words are on a continuation page to which a reader is directed. The standard of the ordinary reader gives a jury adequate scope to return a verdict meeting the justice of the case."
The present case is well on the other side of the borderline."
"Whether the text of a newspaper article will, in any particular case, be sufficient to neutralise the defamatory implication of a prominent headline will sometimes be a nicely balanced question for the jury to decide and will depend not only on the nature of the libel which the headline conveys and the language of the text which is relied on to neutralise it but also on the manner in which the whole of the relevant material is set out and presented."
"The hypothetical reader is taken to be representative of those who would read the publication in question. The Court can take judicial notice of facts which are common knowledge, but should beware of reliance on impressionistic assessments of the characteristics of a publication's readership."
Submissions
Discussion and conclusions
The claimant (1) took part with an acquaintance, Farid Reza, in a car race in the streets of Kingston upon Thames, in which they showed off by driving their high-performance cars at speeds of almost 70mph along public roads in an urban area at around 9pm, to see who had the fastest car; (2) did so with three friends in his car; (3) when Mr Reza's car struck and killed a pedestrian, Hina Shamin, failed to stop but drove past the accident and away from the scene; (4) was for those reasons reasonably suspected of being jointly responsible with Mr Reza for causing the death of Hina Shamin, and of causing serious injury to a young boy who was one of Mr Reza's passengers, by dangerous driving; (5) was arrested for, charged with, tried for and acquitted of those offences (Reza being convicted of both); but (6) was guilty and convicted of careless driving.
Next steps
Two guilty of killing a woman while racing their cars
News Jan 26,2017 17:21 GMT
Picture Hina Shamin
[1] Two men who raced their high performance cars along a street in Kingston, leading to the death of a young woman, have been found guilty by a jury.
[2] Farid Reza, 36 (3.04.80) of Surbiton Road, Kingston was convicted at the Old Bailey today, Thursday, 26 January, of causing death by dangerous driving and also causing serious injury by dangerous driving after a young boy inside his car suffered multiple fractures.
[3] He was sentenced to five years and three months for causing death by dangerous driving and three years imprisonment for causing serious injury by dangerous driving, to run concurrently. He was also disqualified from driving for five years, will be required to take an extended retest and must pay a victim surcharge of £120.
[4] William Spicer, 28 (6.06.88) of Somervell, Harrow, was found not guilty of those two offences but guilty of careless driving.
[5] He was given nine penalty points on his licence, a £1,000 fine and ordered to pay £500 costs.
[6] Hina Shamin, 21, was killed instantly when she was struck by a BMW - driven by Reza who had five children in the car with him - as she crossed Penrhyn Road on 31 March 2015.
[7] Detective Sergeant Jeff Edwards, from the Met's Roads and Transport Policing Command, said:"Reza and Spicer were essentially showing off, racing each other to see who had the fastest car.
[8] "Miss Shamin didn't stand a chance; at the speed Reza was travelling it was impossible for him to stop in time and avoid the collision. Not only that but he had five children in his car whose lives he also put in danger through his incredibly reckless and needless actions. One was badly injured.
[9] "I would like to commend Miss Shamin's family for their dignity throughout the trial, undoubtedly an incredibly difficult time for them, as well as the police investigation and prosecution teams for their tireless work to secure these convictions."
[10] The court heard that around 21:00hrs Reza was racing his white convertible BMW M3 against a dark grey BMW 330d, driven by Spicer who had three friends with him. They drove from the area of Kingston town centre towards Surbiton, reaching speeds of almost 70mph in a 30mph zone as they came into Penrhyn Road.
[11] Miss Shamin, a student studying sports science at Kingston University, was crossing the road as she made her way to the campus library.
[12] She was hit at speed by Reza's car.
[13] The vehicle then crashed into a bus before spinning and stopping on the pavement.
[14] Witnesses heard crying and saw Reza trying to get young children out of the car. Miss Shamin was lying motionless on the pavement beside the vehicle.
[15] Spicer continued past the collision and made an illegal right-hand turn into Surbiton Road.
[16] Police were called and commenced CPR but Miss Shamin died at 21:43hrs.
[17] They identified that five children - aged four, four, eight, 12 and 16 - had been in Reza's car. The 16-year-old was still trapped and had to be cut out of the vehicle by the London Fire Brigade.
[18] The children were taken by ambulance to St George's Hospital with shock and cuts and bruises. Following a scan, one of the four-year-olds was found to have fractures to his skull, jawbone, collarbone and a bone in his face. He has since recovered.
[19] A post-mortem examination on Miss Shamin found she died from multiple injuries, including fractures to her arms, left leg and pelvis and a brain injury.
[20] Examination of Reza's car found no child seats and only two seatbelts in the back of the vehicle, meaning at least two of the children were unrestrained.
[21] Collision investigators estimated both vehicles were travelling at around 62 or 63 mph at the time of the collision. Had Reza been travelling within the 30mph speed limit, officers found he would have stopped in time upon seeing Miss Shamin in the road ahead.
[22] Reza was arrested on 1 April 2015. Following further enquiries officers arrested Spicer the next day.
[23] Reza and Spicer, who were not friends but knew each other locally, were subsequently charged.
[24] At the conclusion of sentencing the trial Judge HHJ Marks commended the Forensic Collision Investigator PC Simon Palmer saying "his evidence was central to the case and was presented and delivered in a thoroughly professional manner."
[25] In an impact statement, Hina's father Shamin Khan said: "On the day Hina died, a part of me died with her. Her death has left a void in my life that can never be filled.
[26] "Hina was my eldest child. I was in my mid-40s when Hina was born and I had waited so long to become a father so the day of her birth was the happiest day of my life. For every parent, their child is precious. In my case, Hina was my life.
[27] "In our culture, people tend to favour sons over daughters but for me, Hina was everything. Hina was a delightful child who grew up to become a compassionate and selfless woman, always placing the wishes and needs of others before her own. She loved her family and her family loved her. She had so much to live for.
[28] "Hina had diligently pursued her studies at Kingston University. Had she not been killed she would have graduated in three months and we as proud parents would have attended her graduation. Not long before her death she was invited to attend an interview for a specialist nutritionist food company. The start of such a promising career or so we thought. She also had ambitions to continue studying for her Masters degree such was her passion.
[29] "My wife and I had nurtured so many dreams for Hina's life but sadly none of these will ever be fulfilled. She was robbed of her life and we have been robbed of a daughter and, my sons, a sister.
[30] "My wife and I take each day as it comes without respite from the heartache of losing Hina. Not a day has passed without my wife crying. The upset has caused her eyesight to suffer and she has been diagnosed with glaucoma. She is truly heartbroken.
[31] "No parent should outlive their child. I remember her as a newborn baby; now our last memory of Hina is seeing her inside a coffin at our local mosque.
[32] "I had to break the news of Hina's death to her already ill grandmother in Pakistan . As soon as she heard the news she went into shock and as a result is completely bedridden. I now live mostly outside the UK in order to look after my mother.
[33] "Our local community was also deeply affected by what had happened. At the funeral we estimated 4,000 to 5,000 mourners came to pay their respects. Their love and support has been truly wonderful.
[34] "A 'Just Giving' page was set up in Hina's memory. The funds raised, approximately £24,500, enabled a mosque to be built in an impoverished area in Pakistan. Further to that, in the Philippines a house was built for a poor family and 11 water wells were constructed for affected areas as well as community income generating projects set up. A separate charity was also set up in Hina's memory. This raised £4,500 and was spent constructing a large water well, supplying water to an African village. These donations did not come from the UK alone but from overseas, as news of Hina's death and the circumstances surrounding it became known, such was the impact.
[35] "Although Hina is buried we as a family have not yet been allowed to mourn properly due to the ongoing court case. Both men charged with causing Hina's death had an opportunity to own up to their terrible lack of judgement and to apologise to us openly and honestly. In time I'm sure that we as a family could have found peace in that. Instead we have endured lies and false sentiment. Mr Reza shed tears during his evidence but they weren't tears for Hina or for his family but more for his predicament, we are no fools. Mr Spicer started so humbly only for his true arrogant character to surface. Not only was he disrespectful to the barristers but to us as a family. Suffice to say all the lies have compounded and prolonged our grief. I ask them, what gives you the right to put so many people's lives in danger by your dangerous driving, such unbelievable arrogance.
[36] "Each day, I wake up hoping that it was a bad dream but sadly, that will never be the case. I am hopeful that with the passage of time, my sons will come to terms with the loss of their sister but for my wife and I, feel that our lives will forever remain desolate."