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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 >> IS Prime Ltd v Siddiqui (2) Tf Global Markets (UK) Ltd [2021] EWHC 3810 (QB) (27 October 2021) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2021/3810.html Cite as: [2021] EWHC 3810 (QB), [2021] EWHC 3810 (KB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
MEDIA & COMMUNICATIONS LIST
Strand, London WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
IS PRIME LTD |
Claimant / Respondent |
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-v- |
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MOHAMMED ADIL SIDDIQUI (2) TF GLOBAL MARKETS (UK) LTD |
Defendants / Applicants |
____________________
2nd Floor, Quality House, 6-9 Quality Court, Chancery Lane, London WC2A 1HP.
Telephone No: 020 7067 2900. DX 410 LDE
Email: [email protected]
Web: www.martenwalshcherer.com
MR. JUSTIN RUSHBROOKE, QC and MS. KATE WILSON (instructed by Carter-Ruck) appeared for the Defendants
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Crown Copyright ©
MASTER DAVISON:
"In an action for slander of title, slander of goods or other malicious falsehood, it shall not be necessary to allege or prove special damage (a) if the words upon which the action is founded are calculated to cause pecuniary damage to the plaintiff and are published in writing or other permanent form, or (b) if the said words are calculated to cause pecuniary damage to the plaintiff in respect of any office, profession, calling, trade or business, held or carried on by him at the time of the publication."
"Since the claim is for general damages it is unnecessary for the claimant to identify the amount of pecuniary loss which it is said the falsehoods were calculated to cause. All that is required in order to make the nature of the case clear is identification of the nature of the loss and the mechanism by which it is likely to be sustained."
"7. The defendant's publication of the said statements was calculated to cause pecuniary damage to the claimant in respect of its business. The messages, therefore, fall squarely within and the defendant relies upon the provisions of section 3(1)(b) of the Defamation Act 1952.
8. Or, in the alternative, by reason of matters included above, the claimant has suffered loss and damage and a general loss of business. In support of that contention the claimant will rely upon the following matters."
"8.6 Indeed despite the relatively short passage of time since the defendant's publication of the false statements in the messages the claimant has already experienced clients reacting adversely to the messages, including by reducing their trade volume with the claimant. The claimant is currently assessing these losses and will update and expand upon these particulars, including the particulars of special damages, in due course as and when it is in a position to do so.
8.7 In the premises it is reasonable to infer as is inevitable, or at least foreseeable, that other clients will do the same resulting in very substantial financial losses for the claimant as a result. It is inevitable or foreseeable that the claimant's losses will also include a significant reduction in new client enquiries. Such losses are currently accruing and are not yet amenable to calculation, particularly pending full disclosure by the defendants of all the parts of the false statements and the claimant will provide details of such losses once they have crystallized.
"1. Give full particulars of loss and damage which the claimant has suffered.
2. Since the claimant must know now whether it has in fact suffered a general loss of business, state with full particularity what general loss of business the claimant relies upon giving particulars of the size of the loss of business in monetary terms."
"2. In paragraph 7 of the particulars of claim the claimant pleads its reliance on section 3(1)(b) of the Defamation Act 1952, which expressly provides that there is no requirement for the claimant to plead or prove financial loss to succeed in a claim for malicious falsehood. The claimant will rely on the facts and matters set out in paragraph 8 of the particulars of claim in support of its case on probably damage under section 3(1)(b) of the Act.
3. In addition, the claimant has also pleaded a claim for general damages, including a general loss of business, the best particulars of which it can give at the present time are set out in paragraphs 8.1 to 8.8 of the particulars of claim. Those matters will be amplified in the claimant's evidence for trial but are sufficient to enable the defendants to understand the case they are expected to meet and certainly for the purposes of pleading to this in their defence (nor do they provide any basis for arguing otherwise).
4. Further, the defendants have unreasonably withheld from the claimant crucial information as to the identity of the recipients of the messages despite the claimant requesting this information on five separate occasions. This has significantly hampered and continues to hamper the claimant's ability to plead a full case on the loss and damage that it has suffered as a result of the defendants' publication of the messages. The overall volume that a broker client of the claimant trades through the claimant can vary from time to time and it is therefore difficult for the claimant to identify over a short period of time and without any further information whether a change in volume traded through the clamant is attributable to a change in that client's overall trading activity or whether it is as a result of other factors (such as publication of the messages). In the circumstances and particularly given the defendants' refusal to provide the identity of recipients of the messages, the claimant is not yet in a position to provide meaningful information of the nature sought.
12. The defendants' unreasonable refusal to disclose at this stage this most basic but crucial information notwithstanding the fact that they will be required to do so under the CPR in due course, not only prevents the claimant from ascertaining the full extent of the damage that publication of the messages has caused, but also prevented them from taking meaningful steps to mitigate that damage."
Response 5: "As can be seen from the request itself sub-paragraph 8.7 explicitly states that losses are currently accruing and that they are 'not yet amenable to calculation'. The claimant will provide such losses when it is able to do so as already stated. In the circumstances, this is not a valid request for further information and is either a matter for submission or an impermissible attempt at cross-examination."
"In such an action there must in order to support it be an express allegation of some particular damage."
"The necessity of alleging and proving actual temporal loss with certainty and precision in all cases of the sort have been insisted upon for centuries." [I will omit the cases referred to in support of that proposition.] "But it is an ancient and established rule of pleading that the question of generality of pleading must depend on the general subject matter." [Again I will omit the authorities cited.] "In all actions accordingly on the case where the damage actually done is the gist of the action, the character of the acts themselves, which produced the damage and the circumstances under which these acts are done must regulate the degree of certainty and particularity with which the damage done ought to be stated and proved. As much certainty and particularity must be insisted on both in pleading and proof of damage as is reasonable having regard to the circumstances and to the nature of the acts themselves by which the damage is done. To insist upon less would be to relax old and intelligible principles, to insist upon more would be the vainest pedantry."
"If the plaintiff desires to predicate its rights to recover damages upon general loss of custom it should have alleged facts showing an established business, the amount of sales for a substantial period preceding the publication, the amount of sales subsequent to the publication, facts showing that such loss of sales form the natural and probable result of such publication and facts showing that the plaintiff could not allege the names of particular customers who withdrew or withheld their custom."