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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom House of Lords Decisions >> Cassell & Co Ltd v Broome (No 1) [1972] UKHL 3 (23 February 1972) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKHL/1972/3.html Cite as: [1972] 2 WLR 645, [1972] AC 1027, [1972] UKHL 3 |
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Die Mercurii, 23° Februarii 1972
Parliamentary
Archives,
HL/PO/JU/4/3/1220
HOUSE OF LORDS
CASSELL & COMPANY LIMITED
v.
BROOME and Another
Lord
Chancellor Lord Reid
Lord
Morris of Borth-y-Gest
Viscount
Dilhorne
Lord
Wilberforce
Lord
Diplock
Lord
Kilbrandon
Lord Chancellor
my lords,
NATURE OF THE PROCEEDINGS
THE RESULT OF THE TRIAL
So far as relevant to this
appeal, the entire proceedings before Lawton J.
were conducted by
all the counsel concerned and summed up by the judge
to the jury
on the basis of the remarks of Lord Devlin on pages 1220-1233
of
the report of Rookes v. Barnard ([1964] AC 1129), and
of the direction
following Lord Devlin's remarks by Widgery J. in
Manson v. Associated
Newspapers Ltd. [1965] 1 W.L.R.
1038. This was not surprising since all
the other members of the
House of Lords had expressly concurred in Lord
Devlin's opinion on
this point, though without adding reasons of their own,
and the
opinion in Rookes v. Barnard which was strictly an
intimidation
case, though obviously intended to apply generally,
had been expressly
applied to defamation proceedings by the Court
of Appeal in McCarey v.
Associated Newspapers Ltd. [1965] 2
Q.B. 86, by Pearson, Willmer and
Diplock L.J.J.; in Broadway
Approvals Ltd. v. Odhams Press Ltd. [1965]
A
2
1 W.L.R. 805, by Sellers, Davies
and Russell L.J.J.; in Fielding v. Variety
Incorporated
[1967] 2 Q.B. 841, by Lord Denning, M.R. and Harman and
Salmon
L.J.J.; and in Mafo v. Adams [19701 1 Q.B. 548, a case
of deceit
and other causes of action, the principles enunciated in
Rookes v. Barnard
were accepted as applicable where
the evidence justified it by Sachs and
Widgery L.J.J. and Plowman,
J.
THE APPEAL TO THE COURT OF APPEAL
JUDGMENT OF THE COURT OF APPEAL
But the Court of Appeal did not
stop at dismissing the appeal on these
grounds. Whether or not
they were encouraged by the zeal of plantiffs'
counsel, they put
in the forefront of their judgments the view that Rookes
v.
Barnard was wrongly decided by the House of Lords
and was not binding
even on the Court of Appeal. It was, so they
said, arrived at per incuriam,
and without argument from
counsel. It ignored, they claimed, two previous
decisions in the
House of Lords, Ley v. Hamilton (1935) 153 L.T.R. 384
and
E. Hulton & Co. v. Jones [1910] AC 20, which had approved awards of
punitive or exemplary damages on
lines inconsistent with Lord Devlin's
opinion in Rookes v.
Barnard. They felt themselves fortified in this view
with
the somewhat cool reception in the Commonwealth of Rookes
v.
Barnard, particularly in the Australian Supreme
Court decision in Uren v.
John Fairfax and Sons Pty.
Ltd. [1967] A.L.R. 25 which had been affirmed
so far as
regards Australian law by the Judicial Committee of the Privy
Council
in the associated case of Australian Consolidated Press Ltd.
v.
Uren [1969] 1 A.C. 590. Neither Denning M.R.
nor Salmon L.J. seem to
have been in any way inhibited or
embarrassed by the fact that each had
been party to at least one
of the decisions of the Court of Appeal applying
Rookes v.
Barnard without question. Not content with all this, all three
3
THE COURSE TAKEN BY THE COURT OF APPEAL
4
literally, impossible. Whatever
the merits, chaos would have reigned until
the dispute was
settled, and, in legal matters, some degree of certainty
is at
least as valuable a part of justice as perfection.
"Their Lordships regard the
use of precedent as an indispensable
" foundation upon which
to decide what is the law and its application
" to individual
cases. It provides at least some degree of certainty
" upon
which individuals can rely in the conduct of their affairs, as
"
well as a basis for orderly development of legal rules.
"Their Lordships
nevertheless recognise that too rigid adherence
" to
precedent may lead to injustice in a particular case and also
"
unduly restrict the proper development of the law. They propose,
"
therefore, to modify their present practice and, while treating
former
" decisions of this House as normally binding, to
depart from a previous
" decision when it appears right to do
so".
"In this connection they
will bear in mind the danger of disturbing
" retrospectively
the basis on which contracts, settlements of property
" and
fiscal arrangements have been entered into and also the especial
"
need for certainty as to the criminal law.
"This announcement is not
intended to affect the use of precedent
" elsewhere than in
this House."
THE MERITS OF THE APPEAL
(i) That
there was no evidence to be left to the jury that the conditions
were
fulfilled to bring the case within one of the three " categories
" of
case listed by Lord Devlin in Rookes v. Barnard
as being appropriate
for an award of punitive damages, and in
particular the second, which
was admittedly the only relevant
category.
(ii)
That, even on the assumption that the first contention was
wrong,
Lawton J. had misdirected the jury in at least two
important matters.
(iii) That in any event the
award of £25,000 was excessive, and
could not be sustained.
In order to understand these
contentions it is necessary to say something
about the facts.
5
THE FACTS ON WHICH THE BOOK WAS FOUNDED
The fate of the PQ 17 convoy is one of the most
publicised, as well as
one of the most tragic, naval operations of
World War II. The evidence
showed that it had been written about
many times, notably by Captain
Roskill. R.N., the official Naval
historian, and by the late Mr. Godfrey Winn,
whose book was said
to have sold half a million copies. It is unnecessary
to
recapitulate the facts here. They are graphically described in the
judgment
of the Master of the Rolls.
It is sufficient to say that the primary cause of the
disaster flowed from
an order to the convoy to scatter, which made
the ships in it an easy prey
to the aircraft and submarines by
which they were attacked. This order to
scatter was issued by the
Admiralty in Whitehall and was due to a faulty
appreciation by the
Naval Staff, in particular, as is now known, by the then
First Sea
Lord himself, that the German battleship Tirpitz was at sea, and
to
a decision, also by the then First Sea Lord, to take the
responsibility for
the order on himself rather than leave the
decision to the discretion of the
naval officers on the spot. The
naval officers on the spot, including Admiral
Hamilton in command
of the Cruiser Squadron, and Captain Broome, had
no option but to
obey, and the convoy was thus left to fan out on individual
courses
covering a vast area of sea.
So far there can be no controversy. But the two naval
officers, rightly
considering that the order to scatter must
denote the approach of a superior
hostile surface force, sailed
West in company. Admiral Hamilton was acting
under precise orders
from the Admiralty. Captain Broome was not. Captain
Broome had
proposed and Admiral Hamilton accepted that he should put
himself
under command of the Admiral commanding the cruisers. That
this
decision was courageous there can be no doubt. What has been
subse-
quently disputed was whether it was as wise as it was
certainly brave. Some
have thought that it was no more than the
inevitable reaction of gallant and
experienced naval officers to
the threat of surface action. Others have
thought that its effect
was to remove from the area of the convoy the only
naval elements,
which might have countered the U Boat and air attacks, and
thus to
contribute to the extent of the convoy's losses. Which of these
two
views be correct it is not appropriate here to discuss. But
what is relevant
to the present appeal is that those who
criticised the decision had previously
fastened the responsibility
on Admiral Hamilton. It was one of the distinc-
tive features of
Mr. Irving's book (which it may have shared with a German
work
with whose author he had collaborated) that it attempted to
place
responsibility for the withdrawal of the destroyers entirely
or mainly on the
shoulders of Captain Broome. This was a difficult
thesis to sustain since
Captain Broome was the junior officer of
the two, and had only " proposed "
the course which both
forces ultimately pursued. It also involved the
propositions, both
disputable, that the decision was wrong in the light of
the
information then available, and that the absence of the
destroyers made a
significant difference to the loss of life and
material.
From the start Captain Broome contended that the
passages in the book
relating to himself which it is not necessary
to set out at length were defam-
atory. In his statement of claim
he said that they meant and were intended
and understood to mean:
—
" that the Plaintiff was disobedient, careless,
incompetent, indifferent
" to the fate of the merchant ships
and/or by virtue thereof had
" wrongly withdrawn his
destroyer force from the convoy and/or taken
" it closer to
the German airfields than he had been ordered to and
" had
thereby been largely responsible for or contributed extensively to
"
the loss of the aforesaid ships and the effective destruction of
more
" than two-thirds of the Convoy PQ.17."
In addition, at the trial it was contended that the
ordinary and natural
meaning of one of the relevant passages was
that Captain Broome was a
coward and for this reason " needed
no second bidding" to desert the
convoy. The defendants both
disputed that the book bore any of these
meanings, but contended
that without them the passages in the book were
6
true. It is evident from their verdict and from the
magnitude of the
award of damages that the jury rejected the
contentions of the defence,
though how far and to what extent must
be to some extent a matter of
speculation.
THE MATERIAL BEFORE THE JURY
From the commencement of the trial it was contended for
Captain
Broome that notwithstanding the limitations of Rookes
v. Barnard, he was
entitled to " exemplary "
or " punitive" damages. The trial judge ruled
(though on
this point he was subsequently overruled by the Court of
Appeal)
that, if so, he was bound to include a plea to this effect in
his
statement of claim, and the pleading consequently introduced
into the
statement of claim by way of reamendment affords a
convenient summary
of the way the case was then put. The pleader
wrote: —
" The plaintiff will assert that the defendants and
each of them
" calculated that the money to be made out of
the said book containing
" the passages complained of would
probably exceed the damages at
" risk (if any) and that the
plaintiff is consequently entitled to recover
" exemplary
damages."
He then went on to give particulars. If established, the
plea clearly
puts the case within the second of the three
exceptional categories listed by
Lord Devlin in Rookes v.
Barnard. The question for the judge was whether
there was
evidence to leave to the jury on which they could find that the
case
was indeed to be placed in this category. If there was such
evidence,
and if the jury were not misdirected, inclusion within
the second category
would have entitled (though not compelled)
them to make some award on
this account.
The Appellants contended before the Court of Appeal and
before us
that there was no such evidence. In my opinion, this
contention wholly fails.
To convince us they would in practice
have to establish that there was
no evidence on which a properly
directed jury could find that at the time
of publication they were
fully aware the words bore and were intended and
understood to
bear the meanings attached to them in the statement of claim
since
if at the time of publication the words were known to bear
these
meanings, they were false to the knowledge of the appellants
and published
with that knowledge for profit. In my view, the
meanings or most of them
are sufficiently obvious from a casual
reading of the book, and the inadequate
attempts by the author or
the publishers to provide an alternative meaning
or an escape
route by which they could argue the alternative before a jury
by
small modifications or carefully phrased ambiguities are less an
indication
of innocence or naivete than a clear sighted
appreciation of the danger
that they faced. Mr. Irving was not
represented before us, but his case
was strenuously advanced
before the Court of Appeal, and in another context
(to be
discussed later) we had to consider his case when counsel for
the
Appellant expressly accepted as accurate the Master of the
Rolls' colourful
account of his behaviour. It is abundantly plain
from this account that
Mr. Irving at least knew, and carefully
planned, what he was doing, that he
went on with it in spite of
repeated warnings from the most authoritative
sources, that he
conceived the book " as a book with a difference as all men
"
(that is including Captain Broome) " were shown to be
cowards ", and that
he prided himself on being able to say "
some pretty near the knuckle things
" about these people "
(he was directly referring to Captain Broome's threat
of
proceedings) " but if one says it in a clever enough way, they
cannot take
" action ". The rules of evidence preclude
us from taking these admissions
of his state of mind as evidence
against the Appellants. But, in my opinion,
the " near the
knuckle things " said about Captain Broome in the course
of
this book, including the allegation that he was a coward, were
said
sufficiently plainly for an experienced publisher to know
perfectly well what
their meaning was and (he fact that they were
said "in a clever enough
" way " should have told
them plainly that they were said with deliberate
intent to convey
the meanings without incurring heavy damages.
7
The Appellants were not the first publishers selected by
Mr. Irving. His
original publishers were William Kimber Ltd., who
ultimately refused to
publish the book on the ground that the book
was " a continuous witch hunt
of Captain Broome" having
been advised by Captain Roskill, who gave
evidence for Captain
Broome, and perhaps by others that " the book reeks
" of
defamation ". In the absence of evidence by either defendant at
the
trial it is impossible to say how much of this was known to
the Appellants.
But it is certain that Mr. William Kimber warned
the Appellants in unmis-
takable terms that his House had rejected
the book precisely on the grounds
that it was libellous, amongst
others of Captain Broome. The undisputed
response of the
Appellants was either flippant or cynical. Moreover, Cap-
tain
Broome himself had warned them on several occasions that if
they
published the book, as they did, in substantially the form in
which he had
seen it, they must expect an action for libel from
himself. That they took
these threats seriously can be seen from
their reaction to the latest of them
which followed the issue of
the proof copies. On receipt of this, the Appel-
lants placed a
stop on the book in the following terms: —
" Will you please note that absolutely and
positively, not one single
" copy, on any pretext whatsoever,
is to be removed from the House
" without reference to me."
In attempts to sell the serial rights their efforts were
" shot down " by
three national Sunday newspapers
presumably on the same grounds.
What the full explanation of their subsequent
publication may have been
will never be known, since the
Appellants did not elect to give evidence.
But in the absence of
any explanation the jury were perfectly entitled to
infer that
they had calmly calculated that the risks attendant on
publication
did not outweigh the chances of profit What is certain
is that, in so far
as they were aware that the passages complained
of could be reasonably
understood to bear the meanings attached to
them by Captain Broome,
including the allegation of cowardice,
they published them knowing them in
this sense to be false, since
no effort was made at any stage to suggest
that there was any
material on which a reasonable publisher could base the
belief
that the passages complained of, if they bore these meanings,
were
true. In his judgment in the Court of Appeal the Master of
the Rolls lists
other features of the case against the Appellants
upon which the jury were
entitled to base inferences with most of
these, except the reference to
the paperback edition, which,
contrary to what he says (perhaps per
incuriam), was not
published by the Appellants but under licence
by another
publisher, I find myself in agreement. In particular, I concur
in
what was said in the Court of Appeal about the dust cover of the
book,
which, making every allowance for the popular style in such
productions
and putting the most favourable interpretation upon
every phrase in it,
seems, to my mind, in the absence of
explanation, to indicate that the pub-
lishers were well aware of
the full implication of the passages complained
of and were
prepared to sell the book on this sensational interpretation.
In
such circumstances to argue that there was no evidence from which
the
jury could infer that " the Appellants had calculated
that the money to be
" made out of the book containing the
passages complained of would
" probably exceed the damages at
risk (if any) " was, to my mind a somewhat
forlorn hope, and
nothing which Counsel for the Appellants said in the
course of his
strenuous and ably conducted argument has convinced me to
the
contrary. I will refer to the passage from Lord Devlin's speech
in
Rookes v. Barnard relating to the categories
later for its proper interpreta-
tion, but I cannot see how, on
any view, if these facts were proved to be
satisfaction of a jury,
properly directed, they are not sufficient to enable the
jury to
base inferences bringing the publication within the second
category.
8
THE DIRECTION ON THE RELATION BETWEEN
THE TWO AWARDS
There was much more substance in, and I find much
greater difficulty in
deciding upon, the Appellants' second
contention, which was based, not
upon Lord Devlin's three listed
categories, but upon his exposition of the
general conditions
under which exemplary damages may be awarded after the
conclusion
of the three " considerations " listed on pp. 1227 and 1228
of the
report which, he says, ought always to be borne in mind. At
this point,
Lord Devlin said :—
" Thus a case for exemplary damages must be
presented quite differ-
" ently from one for compensatory
damages; and the judge should not
" allow it to be left to
the jury unless he is satisfied that it can be
" brought
within the categories I have specified. But the fact that the
"
two sorts of damage differ essentially does not necessarily mean
that
" there should be two awards. In a case in which
exemplary damages
" are appropriate, a jury should be
directed that if, but only if, the sum
" which they
have in mind to award as compensation (which may, of
"
course, be a sum aggravated by the way in which the defendant
has
" behaved to the plaintiff) is inadequate to
punish him for his outrageous
" conduct, to mark their
disapproval of such conduct and to deter him
" from
repeating it, then it can award some larger sum." (italics
mine).
" If a verdict given on such direction has to be
reviewed upon appeal,
" the appellate court will first
consider whether the award can be justified
" as compensation
and if it can, there is nothing further to be said. If
" it
cannot, the court must consider whether or not the punishment is,
"
in all the circumstances, excessive. There may be cases in which it
is
" difficult for a judge to say whether or not he ought to
leave to the jury
" a claim for exemplary damages. In such
circumstances, and in order
" to save the possible expense of
a new trial, I see no objection to his
" inviting the jury to
say what sum they would fix as compensation and
" what
additional sum, if any, they would award if they were entitled
"
to give exemplary damages. That is the course which he would have
"
to take in a claim to which the Law Reform (Miscellaneous
Provisions)
" Act, 1934, applied."
In my opinion, this passage contains a most valuable and
important con-
tribution to the law of exemplary damages which
prior to Rookes v. Barnard
had not, so far as I am
aware, been adequately stressed in any previous case,
and which,
in my view, would retain, and possibly even increase, its value
even
if the categories in Rookes v. Barnard were to
be wholly rejected.
In essence the doctrine is that the award of a punitive
element in damages,
if it is ever permissible, must also remain
discretionary, and, in order to give
effect to the second of the
three " considerations " listed at page 1227, the
judge
should always warn a jury that they need not award anything, and
must
not do so unless they are satisfied that a purely compensatory
award
(in a sense which I will explain) is inadequate. It follows
that whatever they
do award should only be a sum which has taken
into account the award of
damages already notionally allowed as
compensation, including, where appro-
priate, the "
aggravated " element required by a defendant's bad conduct,
and
should never exceed the amount by which the required penalty
(if that is
the right word) exceeds the required compensation.
I shall revert to this feature of Rookes v.
Barnard later. But what is said
in substance by the
Appellants in this case is that the summing-up failed to
give
effect to this important and, in my view, vital principle.
The learned judge directed the jury over two days and
much that he said
was irrelevant to the question of exemplary
damages. Of what was relevant to
exemplary damages, most was a
direction to the jury about the second cate-
gory and the evidence
in the case relevant to it. This reflected the balance
of argument
by counsel during the case and it appears from a remark in
the
judgment of Phillimore L.J. in the Court of Appeal that, in
some sense at
least, both counsel agreed that dependent on the
view which the jury took
of the facts Lawton J. should leave the
question of exemplary damages to
9
the jury. But there were two
passages in the summing-up relevant to the
present issue. The
first was a passage on the first day of the summing-up
when the
judge, having directed the jury that punitive damages were in
the
nature of a fine, went on to give two examples from the
criminal law carrying
the moral that the punishment must neither
be excessive nor inadequate to
the gravity of the offence and
said:—
" If you are going to punish a man to show him that
libel does not
" pay. provided, of course, it comes within
Mr. Justice Widgery's defini-
" tion" (he was referring
to Manson v. Associated Newspapers Ltd.,
"
supra) what you do must be reasonable in all the circumstances,
"
bearing in mind that is a penalty."
The second, and more important, of the passages was on
the second day
of the summing-up when, after leaving an agreed
list of questions to the jury,
the learned judge said: —
" As you will see, the issue of damages has been
divided into two
" questions. The first one is No. 3, ' What
compensatory damages do
"' you award the plaintiff? ' You
will remember that compensatory
" damages are compensation
for something, they are not given to you.
" When you come to
consider that question you must remember that
" this is a
joint publication by Cassells & Co., Ltd., and Mr. Irving.
"
You do not award two different sums. You award one sum and you
"
will leave the lawyers to work out what it means, but it is one
sum.
" Do you all follow that? Then having decided what are
the proper
" additional compensatory damages then you will go
on and consider the
" fourth question, namely, ' Has the
plaintiff proved that he is entitled
"' to exemplary damages?
' It is for him to prove that he is entitled
" to it, not for
the defendants to prove that he is not. This question
" has
got to be divided up into a number of subsidiary questions and
"
the reason for this is problems of law which arise, but you do not
"
have to concern yourselves with those. That is my responsibility.
"
There are two defendants and, as I have been at pains to point out
"
to you during my summing-up, the case against each defendant on the
"
issue of punitive damages is different, so you will have to
consider
" the case against each defendant separately. I
suggest you start with
" Mr. Irving and then go on to Cassell
& Co., Ltd. In respect of each of
" them you will ask
yourselves this question: ' Has the plaintiff proved
"' his
entitlement against that defendant? ' If the answer is yes then
"
you will have to go on and assess how much punitive damages should
"
be awarded. If the answer is no he will get no punitive damages. At
"
least that will be your finding. What the law is is another matter,
but
" that will be your finding.
" Having carried out that
operation in relation to Mr. Irving you should
" carry out
exactly a similar operation in relation to Cassells & Co.
"
Remember all the time that letters written by Mr. Irving or to Mr.
"
Irving, other than by Cassells, are not evidence against Cassells &
Co.
" I cannot stress that too much. You will have to ask
yourselves: ' Has
"' he proved that he is entitled to
punitive damages against Cassells
"' & Co. Ltd.? ' If the
answer is no that is that. If the answer is yes
" you will
have to assess the damages.
" I have put all that into an
omnibus lawyers' series of questions. I
" could have put it
all into one question, but I came to the conclusion
" that it
would probably be better for you. I will read paragraph 4
"
again. ' Has the plaintiff proved that he is entitled to exemplary
"'
damages? If yes, has he proved his entitlement against one or both
"'
of the defendants? If one only, against which one? ' Then you see
"
the last question under this heading, ' What additional sum should
be
"' awarded him by way of exemplary damages? ' Would you be
good
" enough to underline the word 'additional', because I
want to know,
" and learned counsel want to know, if you do
decide to award punitive
"damages, how much more do you award
over and above the
" compensatory damage."
10
What was said against this passage on behalf of the
Appellants was that
this summing-up was defective in that it did
not make it absolutely plain to
the jury that before making any
punitive award against the defendant they
must first take into
account and assess the punitive effect of any compensatory
award
(including any element of "aggravated" damage) and only
award
such amount (if any) by which the appropriate penalty
exceeded such award.
I am bound to say that I have found the
greatest difficulty in accepting the
summing-up on this point as
adequate, and my difficulties were increased
by two passages in
the final speech of Captain Broome's counsel which as
counsel for
the Appellants persuasively argued seemed to indicate that
the
respective awards of compensatory and punitive damages were
entirely
separate assessments and that one should not be balanced
against the other.
In so far as counsel said this, and he appears
to have done so, he was, in my
opinion, entirely wrong. In the
end, however, I have come to the conclusion
that the judge's
direction was just adequate to convey the impression intended
in
the passage of Lord Devlin's speech which had been accurately read
to
the jury by counsel for Mr. Irving and that the jury were not
in fact misled.
In coming to this conclusion I have been
impressed, as was the Court of
Appeal, by the stress the judge
laid on the word " additional " in the passage
cited, by
the fact that the form of the questions left to the jury (which
did
not include as it should have done, the words " if any "
in that relating to
punitive damages) was agreed by counsel and by
the fact that the line of the
judge's summing-up was entirely in
accord with the case for the Appellants
as it was put to the jury
on their behalf, and that everyone seems to have
assumed that the
result of the jury's answers was that which in fact obtained.
I
desire, however, to say that the direction on this point, if
sufficient, as I am
constrained to say it was, was only barely
sufficient, and that I trust that in
future cases of this kind
trial judges will stress the matter a good deal more
clearly and
with greater emphasis than was done here. In the present case
I
do not think that the judge can be blamed for putting the matter
compen-
diously in a form which seems to have misled no one, which
accorded with
the way and with the emphasis with which it had been
put to the jury on
behalf of the Appellants, and which,
according to Phillimore L.J.'s
observation quoted above
had, in some sense, been agreed.
A SINGLE AWARD OR TWO?
Less meritorious, in my view, was the second criticism
of the direction
put before us. This was in effect that the judge
did not correctly direct
the jury as to the principles on which a
joint award of exemplary damages
can be made against two or more
defendants guilty of the joint publication
of a libel in respect
of which their relevant guilt may be different, and their
means of
different amplitude. With high regard for the judgments of the
Master
of the Rolls and of Salmon L.J., I differ from both in what they
said
on this aspect of the matter, both as to the effect of the judge's
sum-
ming up and to what it ought to be in such cases. The Master
of the Rolls
said: —
" There is, of course, a
difficulty. How is a jury to assess the one
" figure
against two defendants. Are they to fix it at a high sum which
"
they think the more blameworthy ought to pay? Or a low sum for
the
" least blameworthy? That must be left to the
jury. They may, if they
" choose, fix a figure in
between. The Judge can, I think, tell them that
" they
can fix it as against the more blameworthy, expecting him to pay
"
it: and leave the least blameworthy (if he is called upon to pay)
to
" recover contribution. In this case the Judge left
it to them without any
" specific direction. That was,
J think, quite legitimate: and is no
" ground for
disturbing the verdict." [the italics are mine].
The
Master of the Rolls then added:
" In any case, however, I think Cassells are not at
liberty to take this
" point. They did not ask Judge or jury
to split the damages. The
" Judge told Counsel the questions
he was going to put to the jury: and
" asked their comments.
That was the time for Counsel to ask for the
" exemplary
damages to be split. Not having asked, it is too late to
"
ask in this Court."
11
Salmon L.J. appears to have thought that the award
should reflect the
amount due by the most guilty of the
tortfeasors and he said: —
" It is well settled that where there are several
defendants who have
" all committed a joint tort, there can
be only one award of one sum
" of damages against all of
them: Greenlands Ltd. v. Wilmshurst &
" London
Assn. for Protection of Trade [1913] 3 KB 507. It may
"
bear hardly on one or more of the defendants. The moral may be
"
that you must be as careful in choosing your companions in tort
as
" you are in choosing your companions when you go out
shooting."
[The italics are again mine.]
With respect to both judgments
which, as will be seen, are arguably not
quite consistent with one
another, I think the effect of the law is exactly
the opposite and
that awards of punitive damages in respect of joint publica-
tions
should reflect only the lowest figure for which any of them can
be
held liable. This seems to me to flow inexorably both from the
principle
that only one sum may be awarded in a single proceeding
for a joint tort,
and from the authorities which were cited to us
by Mr. Parker in detail
in the course of his argument. Mr. Parker
referred us to Haydon's case
(1611) (11 Co. Rep. 5a); Clark
v. Newsam, [1847] 1 Ex. 131 ; Hill v.
Good-
child (1771) 5 Burr. 2791 ; Dawson v.
McLelland [1899] 1 R. 486; Green-
lands Ltd. v.
Wilmshurst and Another [1913] 3 KB 507 esp. at 521 ; Smith
v.
Streatfeild [1913] 3 KB 764 at 769; Chapman v.
Ellesmere (Ld) [1932]
2 K.B. 431 at 471 per Slesser L.J.;
Dougherty v. Chandler (N.S.W.) [1946]
State Reports
370; Egger v. Chelmsford [1965] 1 Q.B. 248 at 262 and
to
the current (6th) edition of Gatley at para. 1390. I think that
the inescap-
able conclusion to be drawn from these authorities is
that only one sum can
be awarded by way of exemplary damages where
the plaintiff elects to sue
more than one defendant in the same
action in respect of the same publica-
tion, and that this sum
must represent the highest common factor, that is
the
lowest sum for which any of the defendants can be held liable
on this
score. Although we were concerned with exemplary damages,
I would
think that the same principle applies generally and in
particular to aggra-
vated damages, and that dicta or apparent
dicta to the contrary can
be disregarded. As counsel conceded,
however, plaintiffs who wish to
differentiate between the
defendants can do so in various ways, for example,
by electing to
sue the more guilty only, by commencing separate proceedings
against
each and then consolidating, or, in the case of a book or
newspaper
article, by suing separately in the same proceedings for
the publication of
the M.S. to the publisher by the author.
Defendants, of course, have their
ordinary contractual or
statutory remedies for contribution or indemnity
so far as they
may be applicable to the facts of a particular case. But these
may
be inapplicable to exemplary damages.
" You may be saying to
yourselves: if we do take the view that both
" these
defendants should pay something by way of punitive damages,
"
should we take into consideration the relative culpability of each
one?
" Again, and I merely say this by way of illustration,
and certainly not
" by way of guidance to you, say, for
example you took the view that
" Mr. Irving was more to blame
than Cassells & Co., or to be fair, you
" took the
view that Cassells & Co. being an experienced firm of
"
publishers were more to blame than this young man. Mr. Irving,
"
should you make Cassells & Co. pay a larger sum by way of
punitive
" damages than Mr. Irving? The answer
to that is no " (italics mine).
" Whatever damages,
if any, you decide should be awarded by way of
12
" punitive damages must be the same sum in respect
of both Mr. Irving
" and Cassells & Co. Ltd., if you find
them both liable to pay punitive
" damages. Have I made that
clear? "
This direction is in many ways defective as a piece of
clear English prose.
In particular, it contains an ambiguity,
later cured by an exchange in the
presence of the jury between
counsel and the Bench as to whether the jury
is to award a single
sum against both defendants or two sums, each against
one of the
defendants. But on the crucial point as to whether this sum,
when
awarded, should represent the higher or the lower figure for
which
the jury found either guilty I myself find no difficulty in
thinking that the
jury would have been clear that they were to
award the lower. I would
hope that on other occasions this would
be made even plainer, but I find
it difficult to criticise an
experienced judge for not being absolutely crystal
clear on this
point at the end of a two day direction over a wide range
of
different topics following a seventeen day trial. I would not
disturb the
verdict on these grounds.
I also consider that having agreed to the form of the
questions left to the
jury it was not really open to the
Appellants to contend, on appeal, that the
awards should be split.
In any case I am fortified in my view of the matter
by the fact
that I find the same difficulty as did the Court of Appeal
in
differentiating in any way between the moral culpability of the
two
defendants. Mr. Irving may have been the author of the
defamatory matter.
But the Appellants published it, on the jury's
finding, with their eyes open
as to what it contained. It may be
that Mr. Irving had fewer means and
if the jury were looking on
the exemplary damages from the point of view
of deferring him,
they could have awarded a smaller sum. But there seems
to have
been no evidence concerning the means of either party, and I do
not
see how at this late date we can properly be invited to speculate.
The
enterprise was essentially a joint one, and if the Appellants
had not all
the information available to Mr. Irving, they had
enough to make sure
that they knew exactly what they were doing.
It is difficult to know on
what principle the jury could have
differentiated between the two defendants.
WAS THE AWARD EXCESSIVE?
The final point taken for the Appellants was that the
award of £25,000
exemplary damages, or, as it was equally
properly, and possibly better put,
the total award of £40,000
(which included the exemplary element) was
so far excessive of
what twelve reasonable men could have awarded that
it ought to be
set aside and a new trial ordered. I cannot disguise from
myself
that I found this an extremely difficult point in the case, and
have
only decided that the verdict should not be disturbed, with
great hesitation,
because I am very conscious of the fact that I
would certainly have awarded
far less myself, and possibly, to use
a yardstick which some judges have
adopted as a rule of thumb,
less than half the £25,000.
A number of factors lead me, however, to the belief that
the verdict
should not be disturbed. The first, and paramount,
consideration in my
mind is that the jury is, where either party
desires it, the only legal and
constitutional tribunal for
deciding libel cases, including the award of
damages. I do not
think the judiciary at any level should substitute itself
for a
jury, unless the award is so manifestly too large, as were the
verdicts
in Lewis v. Daily Telegraph Ltd. [1963] 1
Q.B. 340 or manifestly too small,
as in English & Scottish
Co-operative Properties Mortgage & Investment
Society Ltd. v.
Odhams Press Ltd. [1940] 1 K.B. 440, that no sensible
jury
properly directed could have reached the conclusion. I do not
think much
depends on the exact formula used to describe the test
to be applied,
whether the traditional language " so large
(or small) that twelve sensible
"men could not reasonably
have given them " (per Esher M.R. in Praed v.
Graham
(1890) 24 Q.B.D. 53 at p. 55 or that of Palles C.B. in McGrath
v.
Bourne I.R. 10 C.L. 160 at 164 cited by Lord Wright in
Mechanical and
General Inventors Co. & Lehwess v.
Austin [1935] A.C. 346 at 378. that
" no
reasonable proportion existed between it and the circumstances of the
13
" case ". The point is that the law makes the
jury and not the judiciary
the constitutional tribunal, and if
Parliament had wished the roles Co be
reversed in any way,
Parliament would have said so at the time of the
Administration of
Justice (Miscellaneous Provisions) Act, 1933. since section
6 of
that Act expressly accepts defamation actions (otherwise than in
a
limited class of case) from the general change which it then
authorised.
In addition to the above cases counsel for the
Respondent cited
Youssoupoff v. Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer
(1934) 50 T.L.R. 581. at pp. 583,
584; Bocock v.
Enfield Rolling Mills [1954] 1 W.L.R. 1303 ; Scott v.
Musial
[1959] 2 Q.B. 429 at 436; Morey v. Woodfield
[1964] 1 W.L.R. 16; McCarey
v. Associated Newspapers
[1965] 2 Q.B. 86; Broadway Approvals Ltd. v.
Odhams
Press [1965] 1 W.L.R. 805. esp at 818. and 820.
I do not see anything in the above cases which alters
the principle
involved, nor am I aware of anything in the nature
of exemplary damages
to alter it in this limited class of case. It
may very well be that, on the
whole, judges, and the legal
profession in general, would be less generous
than juries in the
award of damages for defamation. But I know of no
principle of
reason which would entitle judges, whether of appeal or at
first
instance, to consider that their own sense of the proprieties is
more
reasonable than that of a jury, or which would entitle them
to arrogate
to themselves a constitutional status in this matter
which Parliament has
deliberately withheld from them, for aught we
know, on the very ground
that juries can be expected to be more
generous on such matters than
judges. I speak with the greater
conviction because my own view is that
the legal profession is
right to be cautious in such matters and juries are
wrong if they
can be said to be more generous. But that is not the law
and I do
not think that judges who hold my view are any more entitled
to
change the law on this topic than they have been in the past.
Counsel very rightly drew our attention to observations
of Lord Devlin
in Rookes v. Barnard at p. 1227 when
he said:
" I should not allow the respect which is
traditionally paid to an
" assessment of damages by a jury to
prevent me from seeing that the
" weapon is used with
restraint. It may even be that the House may
" find it
necessary to follow the precedent it set for itself in Benham
"
v. Gambling (1941) A.C. 157, and place some arbitrary limit
on
" awards of damages that are made by way of punishment."
I regard Benham v. Gambling as setting an
absolutely necessary but
wholly arbitrary rule to solve an
absolutely insoluble problem, and I do
not think it could readily
be extended to exemplary damages for libel simply
on the ground
that judges do not agree with juries on quantum. I do not
think
the first sentence in Lord Devlin's observation means more than
that
the House will use its legitimate powers to interfere with awards
by
juries with particular regard to the need for preserving
liberty, which he
was concerned to express, and if it means that
the House was conferring
on itself greater powers than it
previously possessed I would have regarded
it as an usurpation of
the function of the legislature as a whole. We were
also referred
to the observations of the Court of Appeal in Ward v.
James
[19661 1 Q.B. 273 at p. 301. If the passage quoted
there means more than
that Court, in exercising its undoubted
right to interfere with unreasonable
verdicts will have more
regard than heretofore to the general level of
damages in cases of
a similar nature, and particularly personal injury
cases, it may
need further consideration.
The second reason which leads me to decline to interfere
with the jury's
verdict in this case is the peculiar gravity of
the facts of this case. I share
with Lord Justice Phillimore the
view that the jury must have found that
" these grave libels
were perpetrated quite deliberately and without regard
" to
their truth by a young man and a group of publishers interested
solely
" in whether they would gain by the publication of
this book. They did
" not care what distress they caused."
It is true, and I have been con-
strained to say, that I would
have treated this heinous offence against
public decency with far
less severity than did the jury in this case. But, at
the end of
the hearing, I found myself as unable to say as were the three
14
eminent judges in the Court of Appeal that no twelve
reasonable jurors
could have come to a different conclusion from
myself. These matters
are very highly subjective, and I do not
feel myself entitled to substitute
my own subjective sense of
proportion for that of the constitutional tribunal
appointed by
law to determine such matters.
I should add, lest I be thought to have overlooked the
point that, to
avoid the expense and anxieties of a new trial
Counsel on both sides
agreed to leave to us, in case the appeal
should succeed, the assessment
of any sum to be awarded. I doubt
myself how satisfactory this would have
been but, quite obviously,
before we embarked upon such a task we should
have to be first
satisfied that the original verdict could not stand, and to
this
preliminary issue the agreement between counsel is
necessarily
irrelevant.
THE DECISION IN ROOKES v. BARNARD
I make no complaint of their
view that Rookes v. Barnard clearly needs
reconsideration
by this House, if only because of the reception it has received
in
Australia, Canada and New Zealand. I view with dismay the
doctrine
that the Common Law should differ in different parts of
the Commonwealth,
which is the effect of the decision in
Australian Consolidated Press v. Uren
[1969] 1 AC 590, and anything one can do in this case to bring the
various
strands of thought in different Commonwealth countries
together ought to
be done. Moreover, as I shall show, many of Lord
Devlin's statements have
been misunderstood, particularly by his
critics, and the view of the House
may well have suffered to some
extent from the fact that its reasons were
given in a single
speech. Whatever the advantages of a judgment of an
undivided
court delivered by a single voice, the result may be an
unduly
fundamentalist approach to the actual language employed.
Phrases which
were clearly only illustrative or descriptive can be
treated in isolation from
their context, as being definitive or
exhaustive. I am convinced that this
has happened here and that to
some extent at least, the purpose and nature
of Lord Devlin's
exposition has been misunderstood.
THE LAW BEFORE ROOKES v. BARNARD
" Prior to Rookes v.
Barnard, the law as to exemplary damages was
" settled
".
15
"Such damages are variously called punitive
damages, vindictive
" damages, exemplary damages, and even
retributory damages. They
" can apply only where the conduct
of die defendant merits punishment,
" which is only
considered to be so when his conduct is wanton, as when
" it
discloses fraud, malice, violence, cruelty, insolence, or the like.
or.
" as it is sometimes put, where be acts in contumelious
disregard of the
" plaintiff's rights . . . Such damages are
recognised to be recoverable
" in appropriate cases in
defamation ".
If the Master of the Rolls had gone on to quote from
para. 212 of the
same edition he would have read the following
passage, inconsistent with
his construction of the foregoing,
under the heading " A Double Rationale "
which should, I
hope, have disabused him of the idea that the law of
punitive
damages was in fact settled prior to Rookes v. Barnard.
The
passage is as follows:
" 3. A Double Rationale
" Through all these various cases, however, runs
another thread,
" giving a very different explanation of the
position. For indeed it
" cannot be said that
English law has committed itself finally and fully
" to
exemplary damages, and many of the above cases point to the
"
rationale not of punishment of the defendant but of extra
compensa-
" tion for the plaintiff for the injury to
his feelings and dignity. This is,
" of course, not
exemplary damages at all. It is another head of non-
"
pecuniary loss to the plaintiff."
(The italics are mine).
Indeed, in the well-known American textbook on the law
of damages by the
late Professor Charles T. McCormick, published
in 1935 by the West
Publishing Company of Minnesota occurs the
following passage to the same
effect on page 278: —
" In England, where exemplary damages had their
origin, it is still
" not entirely clear whether the accepted
theory is that they are a distinct
" and strictly punitive
element of the recovery, or they are merely a
" swollen or '
aggravated' allowance of compensatory damages per-
" mitted
in cases of outrage. It is only in America that the cases have
"
clearly separated exemplary from compensatory damages, and it is
"
only here that the doctrine, thus denitely isolated, has been
attacked
" and criticised."
More characteristic than either of these passages and
more illustrative of
the confusion which reigned before Rookes
v. Barnard is the paragraph on
the subject in Lord
Simonds' edition of Halsbury's Laws of England (Vol. 11
title
Damages p. 223)
" Exemplary damages. Where the wounded feeling and
injured pride
" of a plaintiff, or the misconduct of a
defendant, may be taken into
" consideration, the principle
of restitutio in integrum no longer applies.
" Damages
are then awarded not merely to recompense the plaintiff for
"
the loss he has sustained by reason of the defendant's wrongful
act,
" but to punish the defendant in an exemplary manner,
and vindicate
" the distinction between a wilful and an
innocent wrongdoer. Such
" damages are said to be ' at
large', and, further, have been called
" exemplary,
vindictive, penal, punitive, aggravated, or retributory."
This passage clearly shows the extraordinary confusion
of terminology
reflecting differences in thinking and principle
which existed up to 1964.
Apart from anything else, "
aggravated " damages, classed as compensatory
by Mayne and
MacGregor, and by Professor McCormick, are assimilated to
exemplary
or punitive damages as such, as is the phrase damages " at large
",
—an expression so indefinite in its connotation that
counsel for the appellants
in argument felt able to include within
it (as this passage suggests
inappropriately) even the general
damages for pain and suffering in a
personal injuries case.
Clearly, before Rookes v. Barnard, the thinking
and
the terminology alike called aloud for further investigation and
exposi-
tion, and, since in such cases it is the classic function
of this House to
make such reviews I cannot accept the simpliste
doctrine of the Court of
16
Appeal either that there was no need to make it, or that
the only thing to
restore clarity is to go back to the state of
the law as it was in 1963.
In passing, I may say that I do not
attach so much importance as did
the Court of Appeal to the
circumstance that the two categories mentioned
by Lord Devlin had
never been discussed in argument by counsel. The
cases and text
books on exemplary damages had been exhaustively read,
and when
this House undertakes a careful review of the law it is not
to be
described as acting per incuriam or ultra vires if it
identifies and
expounds principles not previously apparent to the
counsel who addressed
it or to the judges and text book writers
whose divergent or confusing
expressions led to the necessity for
the investigation. Of course, in a sense,
it would be easy enough
to direct a jury under the old law if one simply
said to them that
any conduct of which they chose on rational grounds to
disapprove
would give rise to an award of exemplary damages and that
any sum
they chose to think appropriate as the penalty would be
acceptable.
But no-one in recent years has ever thought this,
although it is noteworthy
that as recently as 1891 the author of
Sedgwick's " A treatise on the Measure
" of Damages "
was writing (op: cit: eighth edn: pp. 502 and following)—
"Until comparatively recent times juries were as
arbitrary judges of
" the amount of damages as of the facts .
. . Even as late as the time
" of Lord Mansfield it was
possible for counsel to state the law to be
" that ' The
Court cannot measure the ground on which the jury find
"'
damages that may be thought large: they may find upon facts
"'
within their own knowledge' . . . The doctrine of exemplary
"
damages is thus seen to have originated in a survival in this
limited
" class of cases of the old arbitrary power of
the jury". (Italics
mine.)
Clearly modern juries must be given adequate
professional guidance and
the object of Lord Devlin's opinion in
Rookes v. Barnard was to enable
them to have it.
Speaking for myself, and whatever view I formed of the
categories,
I would find it impossible to return to the chaos which
is
euphemistically referred to by Phillimore LJ. as " the law
as it was before
" Rookes v. Barnard ".
Before I examine the actual decision in Rookes v.
Barnard I would now
propose to make two sets of
observations of a general character. The first
relates to the
context in which damages must be awarded, the second to
the
terminology to be used in particular classes of case.
THE SUBJECTIVE ELEMENT IN DAMAGES
Of all the various remedies available at common law,
damages are the
remedy of most general application at the present
day, and they remain the
prime remedy in actions for breach of
contract and tort. They have been
defined as " the pecuniary
compensation obtainable by success in an action
" for a wrong
which is either a tort or a breach of contract". They
must
normally be expressed in a single sum to take account of all
the factors
applicable to each cause of action and must of course
be expressed in
English currency. (Mayne and MacGregor on Damages
12th Edition
paragraph 1.)
In almost all actions for breach of contract, and in
many actions for tort,
the principle of restitutio in integrum
is an adequate and fairly easy guide
to the estimation of
damage, because the damage suffered can be estimated
by relation
to some material loss. It is true that where loss includes
a
pre-estimate of future losses, or an estimate of past losses
which cannot in
the nature of things be exactly computed, some
subjective element must enter
in. But the estimate is in things
commensurable with one another, and
convertible at least in
principle to the English currency in which all sums
of damages
must ultimately be expressed.
In
many torts, however, the subjective element is more difficult. The
pain
and suffering endured, and the future loss of amenity, in a
personal injuries
case are not in the nature of things convertible
into legal tender. The
difficulties arising in the paraplegic
cases, or, before Benham v. Gambling,
in estimating the
damages for loss of expectation of life in a person who
17
died instantaneously, are only examples of the
intrinsically impossible task
set judge or juries in such matters,
Clearly the £50,000 award upheld in
Morey v.
Woodfield (No. 2) [1964] 1 W.L.R. 16 could never
compensate
the victim of such an accident. Nor. so far as I can
judge, is there any
purely rational test by which a judge can
calculate what sum. greater or
smaller, is appropriate. What is
surprising is not that there is difference of
opinion about such
matters, but that in most cases professional opinion
gravitates so
closely to a conventional scale. Nevertheless in all actions in
which
damages, purely compensatory in character, are awarded for
suffering,
from the purely pecuniary point of view the plaintiff
may be better off. The
principle of restitutio in integrum,
which compels the use of money as its
sole instrument for
restoring the status quo, necessarily involves a factor
larger
than any pecuniary loss.
In actions of defamation and in any other actions where
damages for loss
of reputation are involved, the principle of
restitutio in integrum has neces-
sarily an even more
highly subjective element. Such actions involve a money
award
which may put the plaintiff in a purely financial sense in a
much
stronger position than he was before the wrong. Not merely
can he recover
the estimated sum of his past and future losses,
but, in case the libel, driven
underground, emerges from its
lurking place at some future date, he must
be able to point to a
sum awarded by a jury sufficient to convince a bystander
of the
baselessness of the charge. As Windeyer J. well said in Uren
v.
John Fairfax & Sons Pty. Ltd. 117 C.L.R. at p.
150:
" 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 is
here a solatium
" rather than a monetary recompense for harm
measurable in money."
This is why it is not necessarily fair to compare awards
of damages in this
field with damages for personal injuries. Quite
obviously, the award must
include factors for injury to the
feelings, the anxiety and uncertainty under-
gone in the
litigation, the absence of apology, or the reaffirmation of the
truth
of the matters complained of, or the malice of the defendant. The
bad
conduct of the plaintiff himself may also enter into the
matter, where he has
provoked the libel, or where perhaps he has
libelled the defendant in reply.
What is awarded is thus a figure
which cannot be arrived at by any purely
objective computation.
This is what is meant when the damages in defam-
ation are
described as being " at large ". In a sense, too, these
damages are
of their nature punitive or exemplary in the loose
sense in which the terms
were used before 1964, because they
inflict an added burden on the defend-
ant proportionate to his
conduct, just as they can be reduced if the defendant
has behaved
well—as for instance by a handsome apology—or the
plaintiff
badly, as for instance by provoking the defendant, or
defaming him in return.
In all such cases it must be appropriate
to say with Esher, M.R. in Praed v.
Graham (1890) 24
Q.B.D. 53 at p. 55): —
" In actions of libel ... the jury in assessing
damages are entitled
" to look at the whole conduct of the
defendant" (I would personally
add " and of the
plaintiff ") " from the time the libel was published
"
down to the time they give their verdict. They may consider what
"
his conduct has been before action, after action, and in Court
during
" the trial".
It is this too which explains the almost indiscriminate
use of " at large "
" aggravated ", "
exemplary ", and " punitive " before Rookes v.
Barnard.
To quote again from Professor McCormick's work, it
was originally only in
America that the distinction between "
aggravated " damages (which take
into account the defendant's
bad conduct for compensating the plaintiff's
injured feelings) and
" punitive " or " exemplary " damage was really
drawn.
My own view is that no English case, and perhaps even in no
statute,
where the word " exemplary " or " punitive
" or " aggravated " occurs before
1964 can one be
absolutely sure that there is no element of confusion
between the
two elements in damages. It was not until Lord Devlin's
18
speech in Rookes v. Barnard that the
expressions "aggravated" on the
one hand and "
punitive " or " exemplary " on the other acquired
separate
and mutually exclusive meanings as terms of art on
English law.
The next point to notice is that it has always been a
principle of English
law that the award of damages when awarded
must be a single lump
sum in respect of each separate cause of
action. Of course, where part of
the damage can be precisely
calculated it is possible to isolate part of it
in the same cause
of action. It is also possible and desirable to isolate
different
sums of damages receivable in respect of different torts, as was
done
here in respect of the proof copies. But I must say I view with
some
distrust the arbitrary subdivision of different elements of
general damages
for the same tort, as was done in Loudon v.
Ryder [1953] 2 Q.B. 202, and
even, subject to what I say
later, what was expressly approved by Lord
Devlin in Rookes v.
Barnard at page 1228 for the laudable purpose of
avoiding a
new trial. In cases where the award of general damages con-
tains
a subjective element, I do not believe it is desirable or even
possible
simply to add separate sums together for different parts
of the subjective
element, especially where, as was done by
agreement in this case, the sub-
jective element relates under
different heads to the same factor, in this
case the bad conduct
of the defendant. I would think with Lord Atkin in
Ley v.
Hamilton:
" The 'punitive' element is not something which is
or can " (italics
mine) " be added to some known
factor which is not punitive ",
or in the words of Windeyer
J. in Uren v. Fairfax & Sons Property Ltd.
117C.L.R.
118 at p. 150:
" The variety of the matters which, it has been
held, may be con-
" sidered in assessing damages for
defamation must in many cases
" mean that the amount of a
verdict is the product of a mixture of
" inextricable
considerations ".
(Italics again mine.)
In other words the whole process of assessing damages
where they are
"at large" is essentially a matter of
impression and not addition. When
exemplary damages are involved,
and even though, in theory at least, it may
be possible to winnow
out the purely punitive element, the dangers of
double counting by
a jury or a judge are so great that, even to avoid a new
trial, I
would have thought the dangers usually outweighed the
advantages.
Indeed, though it must be wholly illegitimate to
speculate in such a matter,
the thought crossed my mind more than
once during the hearing that it may
even have happened in this
case.
TERMINOLOGY
This brings me to the question of terminology. It has
been more than
once pointed out the language of damages is more
than usually confused.
For instance, the term " special
damage " is used in more than one sense
to denominate actual
past losses precisely calculated (as in a personal in-
juries
action), or " material damage actually suffered" as in
describing
the factor necessary to give rise to the cause of
action in cases, including
cases of slander, actionable only on
proof of " special damage ". If it is
not too deeply
embedded in our legal language, I would like to see "
special
damage " dropped as a term of art in its latter sense
and some phrase like
" material loss " substituted. But
a similar ambiguity occurs in actions of
defamation, the
expressions " at large ", " punitive ", "
aggravated ", " re-
tributory ", " vindictive
" and " exemplary " having been used in, as I
have
pointed out, in extricable confusion.
In my view
it is desirable to drop the use of the phrase " vindictive
"
damages altogether, despite its use by the County Court
judge in Williams
v. Settle [1960] 1 W.L.R. 1072.
Even when a purely punitive element is
involved, vindictiveness is
not a good motive for awarding punishment. In
awarding "
aggravated " damages the natural indignation of the court at
the
injury inflicted on the plaintiff is a perfectly legitimate
motive in making
a generous rather than a more moderate award to
provide an adequate
19
solution. But that is because the injury to the
plaintiff is actually greater
and as the result of the conduct
exciting the indignation demands a more
generous solatium.
Likewise the use of " retributory " is
objectionable because it is ambiguous.
It can be used to cover
both aggravated damages to compensate the plaintiff
and punitive
or exemplary damages purely to punish the defendant or
hold him up
as an example.
As between " punitive " or " exemplary ",
one should, I would suppose,
choose one to the exclusion of the
other, since it is never wise to use two
quite interchangeable
terms to denote the same thing. Speaking for myself.
I prefer
"exemplary", not because "punitive" is
necessarily inaccurate,
but "exemplary" better expresses
the policy of the law as expressed in
the cases. It is intended to
teach the defendant and others that " tort does
" not
pay" by demonstrating what consequences the law inflicts
rather
than simply to make the defendant suffer an extra penalty
for what he has
done, although that does, of course, precisely
describe its effect.
The expression " at large " should be used in
general to cover all cases
where awards of damages may include
elements for loss of reputation,
injured feelings, bad or good
conduct by either party, or punishment, and
where in consequence
no precise limit can be set in extent. It would be
convenient if,
as the appellants' counsel did at the hearing, it could be
extended
to include damages for pain and suffering or loss of amenity.
Lord
Devlin uses the term in this sense in Rookes v. Barnard at
p. 1221,
when he defines the phrase as meaning all cases "
where the award is not
" limited to the pecuniary loss that
can be specially proved ". But I suspect
that he was there
guilty of a neologism. If I am wrong, it is a convenient
use and
should be repeated.
Finally, it is worth pointing out, though I doubt if a
change of terminology
is desirable or necessary, that there is
danger in hypostatising "com-
" pensatory ", "
punitive ", " exemplary " or " aggravated "
damages at all.
The epithets are all elements or considerations
which may, but need not,
be taken into account in assessing a
single sum. They are not separate heads
to be added mathematically
to one another.
ANALYSIS OF ROOKES v. BARNARD
This being said, it is necessary to analyse the decision
in Rookes v.
Barnard, a case, it must be remembered,
of intimidation and not libel. The
only actual decision on damages
must be looked for on p. 1232 where
Lord Devlin says:
" I doubt whether the facts disclosed in the
summing-up show even
" a case for aggravated damages ; a
different impression may be obtained
" when the facts are
fully displayed upon a new trial. At present
" there seems to
be no evidence that the respondents were motivated by
"
malevolence or spite against the appellant. They wronged him not
"
primarily to hurt him but so as to achieve their own ends.
" If that had not been their
dominating motive, then what they
" did would not have been
done in furtherance of a trade dispute and
" the whole case
has been fought on the basis that it was. It is said
" that
they persisted in believing that their closed shop position was
"
endangered by the appellant's conduct even when their official
leaders
" told them that it was not. Be it so; pig-headedness
will not do.
" Again, in so far as disclosed in the
summing-up there was no evidence
" of offensive conduct or of
arrogance or insolence. It was, I think,
" suggested that
some impolite observations were made about the appel-
" lant,
but that is not enough ; in a dispute of this sort feelings run
"
high and more than hard words are needed for aggravated damages.
"
Mr. Silkin relied strongly on the flagrant breach of contract with
"
B.O.A.C. and the respondents' open disregard of their pledges and
"
their lack of consideration. But this was not conduct that affected
the
" appellant. He was no more distressed or humiliated by
it than any
" of B.O.A.C.'s passengers whose convenience, it
might be said, and
" interests were brushed aside by the
respondents in their determination
" to secure their object."
20
Although, as will be seen, I prefer much of what Lord
Devlin said on
the subject of exemplary damages to what has been
said by his subsequent
critics, and propose to follow it, the
decision in Rookes v, Barnard must be
viewed in the light
of these conclusions. It is not verbally inspired. But
it is a
careful and valuable decision not lightly to be set aside.
The passages in the report which have given rise to
criticism and discussion
go from page 1220 of the Law Report to
the top of page 1231 and can
be divided conveniently into the
following parts.
The first part consists in exposition of the authorities
and principles which
is contained in pages 1220 to 1225 where Lord
Devlin begins to draw Ms
conclusions.
These conclusions, which form the second portion of his
opinion, include
the three " alleged categories "
(1225-1227), the three " considerations " (1227-
1230)
and finally from 1230 to 1231 the commentary and exposition of
the
consequences of what he has said and these occupy the rest of
the passage
under discussion.
WAS THE DECISION PER INCURIAM ?
Now, I think J must protest at the outset at the theory
that Lord Devlin,
(or those members of the House who agreed with
him) was speaking " per
" incuriam ".
I have already dealt with the argument that his conclusions
did
not follow the actual submissions of counsel on either side.
Lord Devlin was, of course, perfectly well aware that,
in drawing these
conclusions from the authorities, he was making
new law in the sense in
which new law is always made when an
important new precedent is
established. Thus, he said:
" I am well aware that what I am about to say will,
if accepted, impose
" limits not hitherto expressed on such
awards and that there is powerful,
" though not compelling,
authority for allowing them a wider range. I
" shall not,
therefore, conclude what I have to say on the general
"
principles of law without returning to the authorities and making
it
" clear to what extent I have rejected the guidance they
may be said to
" afford."
But a judge is always entitled to do this when the exact
limits, rationale, and
the extent of a principle is being
discussed, and when those limits, rationale,
and extent have never
been authoritatively defined.
Nor can it be said fairly that he had ignored Ley v.
Hamilton (1935) 153
L.T. 384. In fact he quoted from it at
length and treated it, making allowance
for the confusion in the
legal terminology at the time to which I have already
drawn
attention, as a case of " aggravated " damages. I think he
was right
in so doing.; although I also think Salmon L.J. was
almost certainly right
in thinking that the inverted commas in
which Lord Atkin puts " punitive "
are not a guide to
its meaning. The word is in inverted commas for the same
reason
that " real" in the earlier passage is in inverted commas.
They are
quotation marks and Lord Atkin was quoting the actual
words in the
judgment of Maugham L.J. which he was criticising.
It is a fairer criticism of Lord Devlin to say that he
did not mention
E. Hulton & Co. v. Jones [1910] AC 20. Both Mr. Hewart in argument in
that case and Lord
Loreburn, L.C., in his speech (at page 24) which may
have been ex
tempore, reflect a view of the law of damages for
libel
apparently at variance with the law as Lord Devlin has now
declared it to be.
But, as I shall show, the difference is more
apparent than real. It is difficult
to square either Mr. Hewart's
argument or the passage of Lord Loreburn's
speech with the
explicit admission made in the Court of Appeal and repeated
in the
facts stated on page 20 of the report, that the use of the name
"
Artemus Jones " by the editor and author was innocent, and it is
on this
basis that the case is normally cited as an authority.
Judging the use made
of the case in the Court of Appeal by their
own criteria of Lord Devlin,
the case is certainly not a binding
authority on the law of exemplary damages.
It was never argued as
such, although the observations of Lord Loreburn,
L.C., can
be fairly used as testimony, and even as persuasive authority, for
the
21
state of legal thinking at the
time. In law, however, if Lord Devlin be right,
the law of
exemplary damages was still evolving, and Hulton v. Jones
made
no pretence at altering or defining it, nor did either
counsel in the case argue
the case in terms which raised the
question in its present form.
DID ROOKES v. BARNARD EXTEND
EXEMPLARY
DAMAGES TO FRESH TORTS?
"As I understand Lord
Devlin's speech, the circumstances in which
" exemplary
damages may be obtained have been drastically reduced;
" but
the range of offences in respect of which they may be granted has
"
been increased, and I see no reason since Rookes v. Barnard
[1964]-
" A.C.I 129 why, when considering a claim for
exemplary damages, one
" should regard the nature of the tort
as excluding the claim."
WHERE SOLATIUM IS ENOUGH
The
surprising thing about Rookes v. Barnard is not that
Lord Devlin
restricted the award of exemplary damages viewed as an
addition to or
substitution for damages by way of solatium to
the three so called categories,
but that he allowed the three so
called categories to exist by way of excep-
tion to the general
rule. That he did this is due at least in part to the fact
that he
felt himself bound by authority to do so, but partly also because
he
thought that there were cases where, over and above the figure
awarded
for loss of reputation, for injured feelings, for outraged
morality, and to
enable a plaintiff to protect himself against
future calumny or outrage of a
similar kind, an additional sum was
needed to vindicate the strength
of the law and act as a
supplement to its strictly penal provisions—(cf. what
he
says at pp. 1226, 1230 of the report).
22
IS ROOKES v. BARNARD UNWORKABLE?
I confess I am quite unable to see why such a view of
the matter is " un-
" workable ". As I have already
pointed out, it has been worked in fact for
nearly eight years. On
the contrary, by insisting on a single sum being
awarded for
outrageous behaviour in nearly every case of tort, and allowing
the
jury full vent to their legitimate feelings within the proportions
set by the
injury involved, it seems to me that judge and jury are
set an inherently less
difficult task than if they were told first
to take into account the aggravating
factors, and then to impose
an additional " fine " for the size of which they
have
neither the qualifications, nor any measure by which they can limit
their
discretion, particularly since neither counsel nor the judge
can mention parti-
cular figures which can have any relevance to
the actual case. The difficulty
consists, not in working the
system of aggravated and purely compensatory
damages, where they
apply, as they do in almost every case of contumelious
conduct
under Lord Devlin's opinion, but in working a system of
punitive
damages alongside the system of aggravated and
compensatory damage. This
difficulty exists whether Lord Devlin's
limitation to the categories be right
or wrong and, if it were
wrong, would exist in every case, and not only in a
small minority
of cases. The difficulty resides in the fact that the
thinking
underlying the two systems is as incompatible as oil and
vinegar, the one
based on what the plaintiff ought to receive, the
other based on what twelve
reasonable, but otherwise uninstructed,
men and women think the defendant
ought to pay.
THE MEANING OF THE CATEGORIES
As regards the meaning of the particular categories I
have come to the
conclusion that what Lord Devlin said was never
intended to be treated
as if his words were verbally inspired, and
much of the criticism of them
which has succeeded reports of the
case has been based on interpretations
which are false to the
whole context and unduly literal even when taken in
isolation from
it.
The only category exhaustively discussed before us was
the second, since
the first could obviously have no application to
the instant case. But I
desire to say of the first that I would be
surprised if it included only servants
of the Government in the
strict sense of the word. It would, in my view,
obviously apply to
the police, despite A.-G. for New South Wales v. Per-
petual
Trustee Co. Ltd. [1955] AC 457, and almost as certainly to
local
and other officials exercising improperly rights of search
or arrest without
warrant, and it may be that in the future it
will be held to include other
abuses of power without warrant by
persons purporting to exercise legal
authority. What it will not
include is the simple bully, not because the
bully ought not to be
punished in damages, for he manifestly ought, but
because an
adequate award of compensatory damages by way of solatium
will
necessarily have punished him. I am not prepared to say
without
further consideration that a private individual misusing
legal powers of
private prosecution or arrest as in Leith v.
Pope [1779] 2 Wm.B.l. 1327,
where the defendant had the
plaintiff arrested and tried on a capital charge,
might not at
some future date be assimilated into the first category. I
am not
prepared to make an exhaustive list of the emanations of govern-
ment
which might or might not be included. But I see no reason to
extend
it beyond this field, to simple outrage, malice or
contumelious behaviour.
In such cases a properly directed jury
will not find it necessary to differen-
tiate between what the
plaintiff ought to receive and what the defendant
ought to pay,
since the former will always include the latter to the
extent
necessary to vindicate the strength of the law.
When one comes to the second category we reach a field
which was
more exhaustively discussed in the case before us. It
soon became apparent
that a broad rather than a narrow
interpretation of Lord Devlin's words
was absolutely essential,
and that attempts to narrow the second category
by a quotation out
of context of one sentence from the passage wherein
it is defined
simply will not do. Lord Devlin founded his second category
on a
sequence of cases beginning with Bell v. Midland Railway
Co. [1861]
23
10 C.B.N.S. 287, and on the judgment of Maule J. in
Williams v. Currie
(1845] 1 C.B, 841, 848, and the
dictum of Martin B. in Crouch v. Great
Northern Railway
[1856] 11 EX 742, 759. None of these were examples
of
precise calculation of the balance sheet type.
Then he said:—
" It" (that is the motive of making a profit)
" is a factor also that
" is taken into account in
damages for libel; one man should not be
" allowed to sell
another man's reputation for profit. Where a defen-
" dant
with a cynical disregard for a plaintiff's rights has calculated
"
that the money to be made out of his wrong-doing will probably
"
exceed the damages at risk, it is necessary for the law to show that
it
" cannot be broken with impunity. This category is not
confined to
" moneymaking in the strict sense. It
extends to cases in which the
" defendant is seeking to gain
at the expense of the plaintiff some
" object—perhaps
some property which he covets—which either he
"
could not obtain at all or not obtain except at a price greater
than
" he wants to put down. Exemplary damages can
properly be awarded
" whenever it is necessary to teach a
wrongdoer that tort does not pay."
(Italics mine.)
Even a casual reading of the above passage shows that
the sentence:
" Where a defendant, with a cynical disregard
for a plaintiff's rights has
" calculated that the money to
be made out of his wrongdoing will probably
" exceed the
damages at risk, it is necessary for the law to show that it
"
cannot be broken with impunity " is not intended to be
exhaustive but
illustrative, and is not intended to be limited to
the kind of mathematical
calculations to be found on a balance
sheet. The sentence must be read
in its context. The context
occurs immediately after the sentence: "One
" man should
not be allowed to sell another man's reputation for profit",
where
the word " calculation " does not occur. The context also
includes
the final sentence: " Exemplary damages can properly
be awarded whenever
" it is necessary to teach a wrongdoer
that tort does not pay ". The whole
passage must be read
sensibly as a whole, together with the authorities on
which it is
based.
It is true, of course, as was well pointed out by
Widgery J. in Manson v.
Associated Newspapers Ltd.
[1965] 1 W.L.R. 1038 at p. 1045 that the mere
fact that a
tort, and particularly a libel, is committed in the course of
a
business carried on for profit is not sufficient to bring a case
within the
second category. Nearly all newspapers, and most books,
are published for
profit. What is necessary in addition is (i)
knowledge that what is proposed
to be done is against the law or a
reckless disregard whether what is pro-
posed to be done is
illegal or legal, and (ii) a decision to carry on doing it
because
the prospects of material advantage outweigh the prospects
of
material loss. It is not necessary that the defendant
calculates that the
plaintiff's damages if he sues to judgment
will be smaller than the defendant's
profit. This is simply one
example of the principle. The defendant may
calculate that the
plaintiff will not sue at all because he has not the money,
(I
suppose the plaintiff in a contested libel action like the present
must be
prepared nowadays to put at least £30,000 at some
risk), or because he
may be physically or otherwise intimidated.
What is necessary is that the
tortious act must be done with
guilty knowledge for the motive that the
chances of economic
advantage outweigh the chances of economic, or
perhaps physical,
penalty.
At this stage one must examine some of the counter
arguments which
found favour in the Court of Appeal. How, it may
be asked, about the
late Mr. Rachman, who is alleged to have used
hired bullies to intimidate
statutory tenants by violence or
threats of violence into giving vacant
possession of their
residences and so placing a valuable asset in the hands of
the
landlord? My answer must be that if this is not a cynical
calculation
of profit and cold-blooded disregard of a plaintiff's
rights. I do not know
what is. It is also argued that the second
category does not take care of
the case a man who pursues a
potential plaintiff to ruin out of sheer hatred
and malice. The
answer is that it does not do so because this is already taken
24
care of in the full compensation or solatium for
the injuria involved in which
the jury can give full rein
to their feeling of legitimate indignation without
going outside
the bounds of compensatory damages in the sense in which
I have
explained the phrase, that is, damages of sufficient size to
enable
the plaintiff to point to the size of the award to indicate
the baselessness
of the false charge, and damages for the outrage
inflicted in exact proportion
as it was unprovoked, unatoned for,
or malicious. I would have thought the
second category was ample
to cover any form of injury committed within
the scope of those
torts for which aggravated and exemplary damages may
be awarded
where the motive was material advantage. Mafo v. Adams
([1970]
1 Q.B. 548) is not really an authority to the contrary, although
I
would have thought that the damages there awarded for
inconvenience,
breach of covenant, and loss of a regulated tenancy
were perhaps at present
day values too small for the wrong
committed. What was at issue in
Mafo v. Adams was
the award of exemplary damages in an action for
deceit (see from
Sachs L.J. at p. 555) and this, in the event, was never
decided.
What was decided in that case was that the plaintiff had not
dis-
charged the onus of proof that the defendant's motives were
such as to bring
the case within the second category. This is
clear from the fact that both
Sachs and Widgery L.JJ. based their
judgments on a passage from the deci-
sion of the county court
judge, where he said: " The defendant's reasons for
"
his actions ar obscure " (see per Sachs L.J. at p. 556, and per
Widgery L.J.
at p. 559). I am far from saying that in so far as it
could have been shown
that the defendant was actuated by gain, and
if the action had been one
of trespass, exemplary damages could
not have been awarded under the
second category, and even though
in the absence of authority I am of
opinion that exemplary damages
cannot be awarded in an action for deceit,
I cannot claim that the
matter has been finally determined.
The main criticisms of Lord Devlin's speech are thus
shown to have been
unfounded. That he went beyond the existing law
he had no doubt, and
nor have 1. But, as I have shown, he was
entitled to do so It may very
well be that, in deciding in favour
of the two exceptional categories, he was
making an unnecessary
concession to tradition. But he made the concession
after a
careful analysis of the authorities and, speaking for myself, and
given
the cautious approach indicated in Lord Gardiner's practice
declaration, and
by a majority of this House in Jones v.
Secretary of State for Social Services,
I do not think
there is any reason for disturbing them. I regard the
Australian
cases, and in particular Uren v. Fairfax &
Sons Pty. Ltd., as deciding no
more than on the particular
facts of that case the award of exemplary
damages was not
acceptable. In so far as they claim to establish that
exemplary
damages can be awarded for any contumelious disregard of
the
plaintiff's rights I may not, of course, comment so far as
regards the law of
Australia, but, so far as regards the law of
England, I would say that an
adequate award of compensatory
damages in such a case must of necessity
include, and perhaps more
than include, any punitive or exemplary element.
The proposition,
as a proposition, would have been perfectly acceptable so
long as
the looser terminology prevalent before Rookes v. Barnard
was in
use. So far as regards the more strict terminology now
to be employed, the
proposition is not to be treated as acceptable
in the English Courts.
Before turning to the so-called " considerations "
I desire to say a word
concerning the decision in Williams v.
Settle [I960] 2 All E.R. 806 and
Loudon v. Ryder
[1953J 2 Q.B. 202, upon which Lord Devlin also com-
mented. In
Williams v. Settle was a case under s. 17(3) of the
Copright Act
1956. I agree with Lord Devlin that it is for
consideration in the light of
subsequent cases whether that
section, which does not use the phrase " exem-
plary
damages", does in fact give a right to damages which are
exemplary
in the narrower sense used since Rookes v.
Barnard. If it does, the case
should be regarded as a
second category case, since the defendant's motive
was profit. If
it does not, and if it is to be regarded as still
authoritative,
Williams v. Settle can only be
regarded as an extreme example of aggravated
damages, though the
language of the county court judge was so strong as to
lead me to
think that I would not myself have been prepared to make so
large
an award.
25
Loudon v. Ryder is the earliest instance
which I have been able to find
where a split award was made of
exemplary and compensatory damages for
the same tort, and the
split was made in circumstances which are not alto-
gether plain
from the report, after an award of a lump sum had been
announced.
What would have happened if Devlin J. (as he was) had summed
up to
the jury in favour of a generous award of aggravated damages on
the
lines of his later speech in Rookes v. Barnard is,
of course, a question which
no-one can possibly answer. The answer
might well have been, substituting
" trespass " for "
defamation " what Windeyer J. said in Uren v. John
Fairfax
and Sons Pty. Ltd., at p. 152:
" Telling the jury in a defamation action that
compensation is to be
" measured having regard to aggravating
circumstances the result of the
" defendant's conduct might
not result in a verdict different from that
" which they
would return if they were told that because of that conduct
"
they could give damages by way of example."
What is certain is that the summing-up by Devlin J. in
that case could not,
as Lord Devlin himself surmised, now survive
the analysis by Lord Devlin in
Rookes v. Barnard of
the theoretical basis of exemplary damages in the
sense in which
the term should now be employed.
THE "CONSIDERATIONS"
I turn now to Lord Devlin's three " considerations
". It is worth pointing
out that neither the Court of Appeal
nor any of the counsel who appeared
before us attacked these as
such. Nor, so far as I am aware, have these
been attacked in the
cases in which Commonwealth judges have felt con-
strained to
criticise Rookes v. Barnard. This alone would be a good
reason
against a simple return to the status quo ante proposed
by the Court of
Appeal, because the first and second "
considerations " coupled with the
passage from which I have
already quoted on page 1225 are themselves, and
quite
independently of the " categories ", an important, and I
think original,
contribution to the law on exemplary damages.
Whilst, as I have indicated,
I cannot myself follow what Lord
Devlin says on the second category so
far as regards the right of
appellate courts to interfere with jury awards on
principles
different from the traditional nor, I think, with the proposal
that
Benham v. Gambling offers a precedent for
arbitrary limits imposed by the
judiciary in defamation cases, I
regard it as extremely important that, for the
future, judges
should make sure in their direction to juries that the jury is
fully
aware of the danger of an excessive award. A judge should first
rule
whether evidence exists which entitles a jury to find facts
bringing a case
within the relevant categories, and, if it does
not, the question of exemplary
damages should be withdrawn from
the jury's consideration. Even if it is
not withdrawn from the
jury, the judge's task is not complete. He should
remind the jury
(i) That the burden of proof rests on the plaintiff to
establish the facts
necessary to bring the case within the
categories.
(ii) That the mere fact that the case falls within the
categories does not
of itself entitle the jury to award damages
purely exemplary in
character. They can and should award nothing
unless
(iii) They are satisfied that the punitive or exemplary
element is not
sufficiently met within the the figure which they
have arrived at for
the plaintiff's solatium in the sense I
have explained and
(iv) That, in assessing the total sum which the
defendant should pay,
the total figure awarded should be in
substitution for and not in
addition to the smaller figure which
would have been treated as
adequate solatium, that is to
say, should be a round sum larger than
the latter and satisfying
the jury's idea of what the defendant ought
to pay.
(v) I would also deprecate, as did Lord Atkin in Ley
v. Hamilton, the
use of the word " fine " in
connexion with the punitive or exemplary
element in damages, where
it is appropriate. Damages remain a
civil, not a criminal remedy,
even where an exemplary award is
26
appropriate, and juries should not be encouraged to lose
sight of
the fact that, in making such an award they are putting
money into
a plaintiff's pocket, and not contributing to the
rates, or to the
revenues of Central Government.
If this be correct, the agreed list of questions
submitted to the jury in the
present case is not the ideal
procedure for ensuring that the jury keep their
verdict within
bounds. They should normally be asked to award a single
sum
whether as solatium or as exemplary damages. If, in order to
avoid a
second trial, they are asked a second question, they
should be asked, in
the event of their awarding exemplary damages,
what smaller sum they would
have awarded if they had confined
themselves to solatium in the sense
explained.
It follows from what I have said that I am not prepared
to follow the
Court of Appeal in its criticisms of Rookes v.
Barnard, which I regard as
having imposed valuable limits
on the doctrine of exemplary damages as
they had hitherto been
understood in English law and clarified important
questions which
had previously been undiscussed or left confused. From one
point
of view, there is much to be said for the interpretation put upon
Lord
Devlin's speech by Windeyer J. in Uren v. John
Fairfax & Son Pty, Ltd. at
p. 152 immediately before the
passage I have just quoted:
" What the House of Lords has now done is, as I
read what was said,
" to produce a more distinct terminology.
Limiting the scope of terms
" that often were not
distinguished in application makes possible an
" apparently
firm distinction between aggravated compensatory damages
"
and exemplary or punitive damages."
But it is not to be inferred from this that the ruling
in Rookes v. Barnard
is a pure question of
semantics. It may well be true that in most individual
cases the
precise terminology in which the question is asked of the jury
may
not make much difference to the amount of the award. Both Windeyer
J.
in the passage just cited and Lord Devlin at page 1230 were
evidently
of this view. But the following positive advantages can
be gained from
adhering to the rules he laid down, if properly
interpreted: —
The danger of double counting, of adding a pure "fine"
to what
has already been awarded as solatium,
without regarding
the deterrent or punitive effect of the
latter, has been eliminated,
or at least reduced to a minimum.
In all cases where the categories do not apply, the
jury must be
told to confine the punitive or deterrent element in
their thinking
within the limits of a fair solatium. In
other words, to borrow the
language, though not the sentiments,
expressed in Forsdike v. Stone
(1868) (L.R. 3 C.P.
607, 611) the jury must be told to consider
only what the
plaintiff should receive after giving full allowance
to the need
to re-establish his reputation and for the outrage inflicted
upon
him, and not what the defendant should pay independently
of
this consideration.
In cases where the categories do apply, juries can be
given directions
a little more informative and regulatory than
was the case up to
and including the new analysis.
Rookes v. Barnard has not perhaps proved
quite the definitive statement
of the law which was hoped when it
was decided. This is often the case.
I remember with suitably
mixed feelings of filial piety and inherited caution,
that in his
judgment in Addie v. Dumbreck [1929] A.C.358 my
father
believed he was putting a final end to doubts about the
limits of occupiers'
liability to trespassers, licensees, and
invitees. But the way forward lies
through a considered precedent
and not backwards from it. I would hope
very much that, in the
light of observations made on Rookes v. Barnard
in this
case, Commonwealth Courts might see fit to modify some of
their
criticisms of it. I do not know how far it can be of value
in the United
States of America where it seems to me that the
decisions of the Supreme
Court have been influenced greatly by the
terms of the First Amendment
to the Constitution, and by the
unsatisfactory rules prevalent in American
27
Courts as to the recovery of costs. However that may be,
we cannot depart
from Rookes v. Barnard here. It was
decided neither per incuriam nor
ultra vires this
House; we could only depart from it by tearing up the
doctrine of
precedent, and this was not the object of this House in assuming
the
powers adopted by the practice declaration of 1966.
Lest I should have been thought to have forgotten it, I
would observe
that the Court of Appeal overruled the decision of
Lawton J. that a claim
for exemplary damages should be pleaded. I
am content to accept their
view on the basis of the present
practice. But in the light of the decision
of this House in the
instant case I propose to refer to the Rule Committee
the question
whether in the light of Rookes v. Barnard and the
present
decision the present practice should not be altered. There
is much to be
said for the view that a defendant against whom a
claim of this kind is
made ought not to be taken by surprise.
My Lords, it follows from what I have said in my opinion
this appeal
should be dismissed and that costs should follow the
event.
Lord Reid
my lords,
The Appellants published a book "The Destruction of
Convoy P.Q.17 "
which according to their advertisement on the
dust jacket was the result of
five intensive years of meticulous
research by the author. It contained many
statements about the
conduct of the Respondent who was the naval officer in
command of
the convoy. He sued the Appellants and the author for damages
for
libel. After a trial which lasted for some seventeen days a number
of
questions were left to the jury. They found that the words
complained of
were defamatory of the Respondent and were not true
in substance and in
fact. They were asked what compensatory
damages they awarded, and they
awarded £15,000. Then they
were asked " Has the plaintiff proved that he
is entitled to
exemplary damages? " Their answer was yes against
both
defendants. Next they were asked " What additional sum
should be awarded
him by way of exemplary damages? " Their
answer was £25,000. So
judgment was entered against both
defendants for £40,000.
Others of your Lordships have dealt in detail with these
statements and I
do not think it necessary to say more than that
in my opinion the jury were
well entitled to find that they
conveyed imputations of the utmost gravity
against the character
and conduct of the Respondent as a naval officer.
Indeed the
Appellants do not now seek to disturb the award of £15,000 as
"
compensatory damages". Their contention before your Lordships
is
twofold: first that the jury were not entitled to award any
exemplary damages
and secondly that the amount awarded under this
head was much too great.
As no objection was taken at the time to
the form of the question there
cannot now be any objection to the
jury having been asked in this case to
consider separately
compensatory and exemplary damages.
The whole matter of exemplary damages was dealt with in
this House in
Rookes v. Barnard [1964] AC 1129 in
a speech by Lord Devlin with which
all who sat with him, including
myself, concurred. The Court of Appeal
dealing with the present
case held that if they applied the law as laid down in
Rookes
v. Barnard the Appellants' appeal must fail and the jury's
verdict
must stand. They could have stopped there, but they chose
to go on and
attack the decision of this House as bad law. They
were quite entitled to
state their views and reasons for reaching
that conclusion but very unfortu-
nately Lord Denning M.R.,
appearently with the concurrence of his two
colleagues, went on to
say: " This case may, or may not, go on appeal to
" the
House of Lords. I must say a word, however, for the guidance of
judges
" who will be trying cases in the meantime. I think
the difficulties presented
" by Rookes v. Barnard are
so great that the judges should direct the juries
" in
accordance with the law as it was understood before Rookes v.
Barnard.
" Any attempt to follow Rookes v. Barnard
is bound to lead to confusion."
It seems to me obvious that the Court of Appeal failed
to understand Lord
Devlin's speech, but whether they did or not I
would have exepected them to
28
know that they had no power to give any such direction
and to realise the
impossible position in which they were seeking
to put those judges in advising
or directing them to disregard a
decision of this House.
That aberration of the Court of Appeal has made it
necessary to re-
examine the whole subject and incidentally has
greatly increased the expense
to which the parties to this case
have been put.
The very full argument which we have had in this case
has not caused me
to change the views which I held when Rookes
v. Barnard was decided or to
disagree with any of Lord
Devlin's main conclusions. But it has convinced
me that I and my
colleagues made a mistake in simply concurring with Lord
Devlin's
speech. With the passage of time I have come more and more firmly
to
the conclusion that it is never wise to have only one speech in this
House
dealing with an important question of law. My main reason is
that experience
has shewn that those who have to apply the
decision to other cases and still
more those who wish to criticise
it seem to find it difficult to avoid treating
sentences and
phrases in a single speech as if they were provisions in an Act
of
Parliament. They do not seem to realise that it is not the function
of
noble and learned Lords or indeed of any judges to frame
definitions or to
lay down hard and fast rules. It is their
function to enunciate principles and
much that they say is
intended to be illustrative or explanatory and not to be
definitive.
When there are two or more speeches they must be read together
and
then it is generally much easier to see what are the principles
involved
and what are merely illustrations of it.
I
am bound to say that, in reading the various criticisms of Lord
Devlin's
speech to which we have been referred, I have been very
surprised at the fail-
ure of its critics to realise that it was
intended to state principles and not to
lay down rules. But I
suppose that those of us who merely concurred with
him ought to
have foreseen that this might happen and to have taken steps
to
prevent it. So I shall try to repair my omission by stating now
in a different
way the principles which I, and I believe also Lord
Devlin, had in mind. I do
not think that he would have disagreed
with any important part of what I am
now about to say.
Damages for any tort are or ought to be fixed at a sum
which will compen-
sate the plaintiff, so far as money can do it,
for all the Injury which he has
suffered. Where the injury is
material and has been ascertained it is generally
possible to
assess damages with some precision. But that is not so where
he
has been caused mental distress or when his reputation has been
attacked—
where to use the traditional phrase he has been
held up to hatred, ridicule or
contempt. Not only is it impossible
to ascertain how far other people's minds
have been affected, it
is almost impossible to equate the damage to a sum of
money. Any
one person trying to fix a sum as compensation will probably
find
in his mind a wide bracket within which any sum could be regarded
by
him as not unreasonable—and different people will come to
different con-
clusions. So in the end there will probably be a
wide gap between the sum
which on an objective view could be
regarded as the least and the sum which
could be regarded as the
most to which the plaintiff is entitled as compensa-
tion.
It has long been recognised that in determining what sum
within that
bracket should be awarded, a jury, or other tribunal,
is entitled to have re-
gard to the conduct of the defendant. He
may have behaved in a high-handed
malicious, insulting or
oppressive manner in committing the tort or he or his
counsel may
at the trial have aggravated the injury by what they there said.
That
would justify going to the top of the bracket and awarding as
damages
the largest sum that could fairly be regarded as
compensation.
Frequently in cases before Rookes v. Barnard
when damages were increased
in that way but were still within
the limit of what could properly be regarded
as compensation to
the plaintiff, it was said that punitive, vindictive or ex-
emplary
damages were being awarded. As a mere matter of language that
was
true enough. The defendant was being punished or an example was
being
made of him by making him pay more than he would have had to
pay if his
29
conduct had not been outrageous.
But the damages though called punitive
were still truly
compensatory: the plaintiff was not being given more than his
due.
I thought and still think that that is highly anomalous.
It is confusing
the function of the civil law which is to
compensate with the function of the
criminal law which is to
inflict deterrent and punitive penalties. Some objec-
tion has
been taken to the use of the word fine to denote the amount by
which
punitive or exemplary damages exceed anything justly due to
the plaintiff. In
my view the word fine is an entirely accurate
description of that part of any
award which goes beyond anything
justly due to the plaintiff and is purely
punitive.
Those of us who sat in Rookes v. Barnard
thought that the loose and con-
fused use of words like
punitive and exemplary and the failure to recognise
the difference
between damages which are compensatory and damages which
go beyond
that and are purely punitive had led to serious abuses, so we
took
what we thought was the best course open to us to limit those
abuses.
Theoretically we might have held that as purely punitive
damages had
never been sanctioned by any decision of this House
(as to which I shall say
more later) there was no right under
English law to award them. But that
would have been going beyond
the proper function of this House. There are
many well established
doctrines of the law which have not been the subject of
any
decision by this House. We thought we had to recognise that it had
be-
come an established custom in certain classes of case to
permit awards of
damages which could not be justified as
compensatory, and that that must re-
main the law. But we thought
and I still think it well within the province of
this House to say
that that undesirable anomaly should not be permitted in
any class
of case where its use was not covered by authority.
In order to determine the classes of case in which this
anomaly had
become established it was of little use to look merely
at the words which
had been used by judges because, as I have
said, words like punitive and
exemplary were often used with
regard to damages which were truly com-
pensatory. We had to take
a broad view of the whole circumstances.
I must now deal with those parts of Lord Devlin's speech
which have
given rise to difficulties. He set out two categories
of cases which in our
opinion comprised all or virtually all the
reported cases in which it was
clear that the Court had approved
of an award of a larger sum of damages
than could be justified as
compensatory. Critics appear to have thought
that he was inventing
something new. That was not my understanding.
We were confronted
with an undesirable anomaly. We could not abolish
it. We had to
choose between confining it strictly to classes of cases
where it
was firmly established, although that produced an illogical
result,
or permitting it to be extended so as to produce a logical
result. In
my view it is better in such cases to be content with
an illogical result
than to allow any extension.
It will be seen that I do not agree with Lord Devlin's
view that in
certain classes of case exemplary damages serve a
useful purpose in vindi-
cating the strength of the law. That view
did not form an essential step
in his argument. Concurrence with
the speech of a colleague does not
mean acceptance of every word
which he has said. If it did there would
30
be far fewer concurrences than there are. So I did not
regard disagreement
on this side issue as preventing me from
giving my concurrence.
I think that the objections to allowing juries to go
beyond compensatory
damages are overwhelming. To allow pure
punishment in this way contra-
venes almost every principle which
has been evolved for the protection of
offenders. There is no
definition of the offence except that the conduct
punished must be
oppressive, high-handed, malicious, wanton or its like—
terms
far too vague to be admitted to any criminal code worthy of the
name.
There is no limit to the punishment except that it must not
be
unreasonable. The punishment is not inflicted by a judge who
has experi-
ence and at least tries not to be influenced by
emotion: it is inflicted
by a jury without experience of law or
punishment and often swayed by
considerations which every judge
would put out of his mind. And there
is no effective appeal
against sentence. All that a reviewing court can do
is to quash
the jury's decision if it thinks the punishment awarded is more
than
any twelve reasonable men could award. The Court cannot
substitute
its own award. The punishment must then be decided by
another jury
and if they too award heavy punishment the Court is
virtually powerless.
It is no excuse to say that we need not waste
sympathy on people who
behave outrageously. Are we wasting
sympathy on vicious criminals when
we insist on proper legal
safeguards for them? The right to give punitive
damages in certain
cases is so firmly embedded in our law that only
Parliament can
remove it. But I must say that I am surprised by the
enthusiasm of
Lord Devlin's critics in supporting this form of palm tree
justice.
Lord Devlin's first category is set out on page 1226. He
said—" The
" first category is oppressive,
arbitrary or unconstitutional action by the
" servants of the
government. I should not extend this category—I say
"
this with particular reference to the facts of this case—to
oppressive action
" by private corporations or individuals".
This distinction has been
attacked on two grounds: first, that it
only includes Crown servants and
excludes others like the police
who exercise governmental functions but are
not Crown servants
and, secondly, that it is illogical since both the harm to
the
plaintiff and the blameworthiness of the defendant may be at
least
equally great where the offender is a powerful private
individual. With
regard to the first I think that the context
shews that the category was
never intended to be limited to Crown
servants. The contrast is beween
" the government" and
private individuals. Local government is as much
government as
national government, and the police and many other persons
are
exercising governmental functions. It was unnecessary in Rookes
v.
Barnard to define the exact limits of the category.
I should certainly
read it as extending to all those who by common
law or statute are exercis-
ing functions of a governmental
character.
The second criticism is I think misconceived. I freely
admit that the
distinction is illogical. The real reason for the
distinction was, in my view,
that the cases shewed that it was
firmly established with regard to servants
of " the
government" that damages could be awarded against them
beyond
any sum justified as compensation, whereas there was no
case except one
that was overruled where damages had been awarded
against a private bully
or oppressor to an amount that could not
fairly be regarded as compensa-
tory, giving to that word the
meaning which I have already discussed. I
thought that this House
was therefore free to say that no more than that
was to be awarded
in future.
We are particularly concerned in the present case with
the second
category. With the benefit of hindsight I think I can
say without disrespect
to Lord Devlin that it is not happily
phrased. But I think the meaning is
clear enough. An ill disposed
person could not infrequently deliberately
commit a tort in
contumelious disregard of another's rights in order to obtain
an
advantage which would outweigh any compensatory damages likely to
be
obtained by his victim. Such a case is within this category. But
then
it is said, suppose he commits the tort not for gain but
simply out of malice
why should he not also be punished. Again I
freely admit there is no
logical reason. The reason for excluding
such a case from the category is
31
simply that firmly established authority required us to
accept this category
however little we might like it, but did not
require us to go farther. If
logic is to be preferred to the
desirability of cutting down the scope for
punitive damages to the
greatest extent that will not conflict with established
authority
then this category must be widened. But as I have already said
I
would, logic or no logic, refuse to extend the right to inflict
exemplary
damages to any class of case which is not already
clearly covered by
authority. On that basis I support this
category.
In my opinion, the conduct of both defendants in this
case was such
that the jury were clearly entitled, if properly
directed, to hold that it brought
them within the second category.
Again, I do not intend to cover ground
already covered by my noble
and learned friends. So I say no more than
that the jury were
fully entitled to hold that the Appellants knew when
they
committed this tort that passages in this book were highly defamatory
of
the Respondent and could not be justified as true and that it
could properly
be inferred that they thought that it would pay
them to publish the book
and risk the consequences of any action
the Respondent might take. It
matters not whether they thought
that they could escape with moderate
damages or that the enormous
expense involved in fighting an action of this
kind would prevent
the Respondent from pressing his claim.
It was argued that to allow punitive damages in this
case would hamper
other publishers or limit their freedom to
conduct their business because it
can always be inferred that
publishers publish any book because they expect
a profit from it.
But punitive damages could not be given unless it was
proved that
they knew that passages in the book were libellous and could
not
be justified or at least deliberately shut their eyes to the truth.
I
would hope that no publisher would publish in such
circumstances. There
is no question of curtailing the freedom of a
reputable publisher.
The next passage in Lord Devlin's speech which has
caused some difficulty
is what has been called the " if but
only if " paragraph on page 1228. I see
no difficulty in it
but again I shall set out the substance of it in my own
words. The
difference between compensatory and punitive damages is
that in
assessing the former the jury or other tribunal must consider
how
much the plaintiff ought to receive whereas in assessing the
latter they must
consider how much the defendant ought to pay. It
can only cause confusion
if they consider both questions at the
same time. The only practical way
to proceed is first to look at
the case from the point of view of compensating
the plaintiff. He
must not only be compensated for proved actual loss but
also for
any injury to his feelings and for having had to suffer
insults
indignities and the like. And where the defendant has
behaved outrageously
very full compensation may be proper for
that. So the tribunal will fix
in their minds what sum would be
proper as compensatory damages. Then
if it has been determined
that the case is a proper one for punitive damages
the tribunal
must turn its attention to the defendant and ask itself whether
the
sum which it has already fixed as compensatory damages is or is
not
adequate to serve the second purpose of punishment or
deterrence. If they
think that that sum is adequate for the second
purpose as well as for the
first they must not add anything to it.
It is sufficient both as compensatory
and as punitive damages. But
if they think that sum is insufficient as a
punishment then they
must add to it enough to bring it up to a sum sufficient
as
punishment. The one thing which they must not do is to fix sums
as
compensatory and as punitive damages and add them together.
They must
realise that the compensatory damages are always part of
the total
punishment.
It was argued that the jury were not properly directed
by the trial judge
on this matter. I agree with your
Lordships that that argument must fail.
A judge's direction to a
jury is not to be considered in vacuo. It must be
read in
light of all the circumstances as they then existed and I
cannot
believe that the jury were left in any doubt as to how they
must deal
with this matter.
Next there are questions arising from the fact there
were two defendants.
When dealing with compensatory damages the
law is quite clear. There was
32
one tort of which both defendants were guilty. So one
sum is fixed as
compensation and judgment is given for that sum
against both defendants
leaving it to the plaintiff to sue
whichever he chooses and then leaving it to
the defendant who has
paid to recover a contribution if he can from the
other.
But when we come to punitive damages the position is
different. Although
the tort was committed by both only one may
have been guilty of the
outrageous conduct or if two or more are
so guilty they may be guilty in
different degrees or owing to one
being rich and another poor punishment
proper for the former may
be too heavy for the latter.
Unless we are to abandon all pretence of justice, means
must be found
to prevent more being recovered by way of punitive
damages from the least
guilty than he ought to pay. We cannot rely
on his being able to recover
some contribution from the other.
Suppose printer author and publisher
of a libel are all sued. The
printer will probably be guiltless of any out-
rageous conduct but
the others may deserve punishment beyond compen-
satory damages.
If there has to be one judgment against all three then it
would be
very wrong to allow any element of punitive damages at all to
be
included because very likely the printer would have to pay the
whole and
the others might not be worth suing for a contribution.
The only logical way to deal with the matter would be
first to have a
judgment against all the defendants for the
compensatory damages and
then to have a separate judgment against
each of the defendants for such
additional sum as he should pay as
punitive damages. I would agree that
that is impracticable. The
fact that it is impracticable to do full justice
appears to me to
afford another illustration of how anomalous and indefen-
sible is
the whole doctrine of punitive damages. But as I have said before
we
must accept it and make the best we can of it.
So, in my opinion, the jury should be directed that,
when they come to
consider what if any addition is to be made to
the compensatory damages
by way of punitive damages, they must
consider each defendant separately.
If any one of the defendants
does not deserve punishment or if the compen-
satory damages are
in themselves sufficient punishment for any one of the
defendants,
then they must not make any addition to the compensatory
damages.
If each of the defendants deserves more punishment than is
involved
in payment of the compensatory damages then they must determine
which
deserves the least punishment and only add to the
compensatory
damages such additional sum as that defendant ought
to pay by way of
punishment.
I do not pretend that that achieves full justice but it
is the best we can
do without separate awards against each
defendant.
It was argued that here again there was misdirection of
the jury because
all that was not made plain to them. But again I
agree with your Lordships
that in the whole circumstances we ought
not to hold the direction of the
learned trial judge to be
inadequate. Again the jury can have been in no
doubt as to what
was required of them.
There remains what is perhaps the most difficult
question in this case—
whether the additional award of
£25,000 as punitive damages is so excessive
that we can
interfere. I think it was much too large, but that is not the test.
I
would like to be able to hold that the Court has more control over
an
award of punitive damages than it has over an award of
compensatory
damages. As regards the latter it is quite clear that
a Court can only interfere
if satisfied that no twelve reasonable
men could have awarded so large a
sum and the reason for that is
plain. The Court has no power to substitute
its own assessment for
the verdict of a jury. If it interferes it can only send
the
matter back to another jury. So before it can interfere it must be
well
satisfied that no other jury would award so large a sum. I do
not see how
this House could arrogate itself any wider power with
regard to punitive
damages. We could not deprive the plaintiff of
his right to a new trial so
we must adhere to the established
test. Any diminution or abolition of the
33
functions of a jury in libel cases can only come from
Parliament. If this
case brings nearer the day when Parliament
does take action I for one shall
not be sorry.
Whether or not we can interfere with this award is a
matter which is not
capable of much elaboration. In considering
how far twelve reasonable men
might go, acting as jurors commonly
do act, one has to bear in mind how
little guidance the Court is
entitled to give them. All that they can be told
is that they must
not award a sum which is unreasonable. In answer to
questions
whether anything more definite could properly be said neither
counsel
in this case was able to make any suggestion and I have none
to
offer. The evidence in this case is such that the jury could
take an extremely
unfavourable view of the conduct of both
defendants. I do not say that
they ought to have done so, but they
were entitled to do so. And they must
have done so. I find it
impossible to say that no jury of reasonable men.
inexperienced
but doing their best with virtually no guidance, could reach
the
sum of £25,000. Or, to put it in another way, I would feel no
confidence
that if the matter were submitted to another jury they
must reach a substan-
tially different result. So with
considerable regret I must hold that it would
be contrary to our
existing law and practice if this House refused to uphold
this
verdict.
It is true that in this case the parties agreed that if
the verdict for £25,000
were quashed they would leave it to
this House to substitute another figure.
But that agreement cannot
justify us in doing otherwise than we would
have done if the
parties had stood on their legal rights. The obvious reason
for
that agreement was a common desire to avoid the enormous expense of
a
new trial. This is not the first occasion on which I have felt bound
to
express my concern about the undue prolixity and expense of
libel actions.
I would not blame any individuals. It may arise
from the conduct of a
trial before a jury being more expensive
than a trial before a judge. If so
that is an additional argument
for taking these cases away from juries. Or
it may be that it
suits wealthy publishers of newspapers, books and periodicals
that
the cost of fighting a libel action is so great that none but a
person
with large financial backing can sue them effectively.
Whatever be the
reason the costs of this case have already reached
a figure which many
laymen would call scandalous. I think that
those in a position to take
effective action might take note.
Finally, I must say something about a strange
misconception which appears
in the judgments of the Court of
Appeal in this case. Somehow they reached
the conclusion that the
decision of this House in Rookes v. Barnard was
made
per incuriam, was ultra vires, and had produced an
unworkable
position. It must be noted that in at least three
earlier cases the Court of
Appeal were able without difficulty or
question to apply that decision
(McCarey v. Associated
Newspapers, Ltd. [1965] 2 Q.B. 86; Broadway
Approvals v.
Odhams Press Ltd. [1965] W.L.R. 805 and Fielding v.
Variety
Incorporated [1967] 2 Q.B. 841). What has caused
their change of mind
does not appear but I must deal with their
new view. As regards the present
position being unworkable, of
course many difficulties remain in this branch
of the law, but
these difficulties are an inheritance from the confusion of the
past.
I have dealt fairly fully with the proper interpretation of Rookes
v.
Barnard and it appears to me that that decision
removes many old difficulties
and creates few if any new ones.
I need not deal separately with the novel idea that a
decision of this
House can be ultra vires because that
charge appears to be consequential
on the charge that this House
acted per incuriam in reaching its decision.
It is
perfectly legitimate to think and say that we were wrong but
how
anyone could say we acted per incuriam in face of the
passage on page 1230
I fail to understand.
This charge is really based on what appears to me to be
a misreading
by the Court of Appeal of two decisions of this
House, E. Hulton v. Jones
[1910] AC 20 and Ley
v. Hamilton [1935] 153 L.T. 384. Hulton's case
has
always been regarded as the leading authority for the proposition
that a
defamatory description intended to apply to a fictional
person may in fact
34
be a libel on a real person and therefore a subject for
damages. I see
nothing in the speeches in this House to indicate
that punitive damages in the
modern sense were being considered.
It was said that there was an element
of recklessness in the
failure of the defendants to realise that there was a
real Artemus
Jones and that this justified a rather high sum of damages
but I
see nothing to indicate any view that the damages went beyond
any-
thing that could be justified as compensation and could only
be justified
as being punitive in the modern sense.
Ley v. Hamilton requires rather fuller
consideration. But again I see
nothing to indicate that this House
held that the damages went beyond
compensation or that there had
been outrageous conduct justifying a punitive
award which went
beyond compensation. The majority in the Court of
Appeal certainly
held that the £5,000 damages awarded was punitive in the
modern
sense. They held that the real damage was trifling and the
rest
punishment. Greer L.J. said (151 L.T. page 369) that if
Hamilton had been
prosecuted for criminal libel it was
inconceivable that he would have been
fined £5,000. Maugham
L.J. said (at page 374) that the damages could not
be described as
a fair and reasonable compensation but were in the nature
of a
fine.
In this House only Lord Atkin delivered a speech. I read
it as intended
to shew that elements properly included in
compensatory damages were
far wider than the majority in the Court
of Appeal had thought and that
the whole of this £5,000 was
in fact justified as being compensatory. He
said:
" The fact is that the criticism with great respect
seems based upon
" an incorrect view of the assessment of
damages for defamation.
" They are not arrived at as the Lord
Justice seems to assume by
" determining the ' real' damage
and adding to that a sum by way
" of vindictive or punitive
damages. It is precisely because the ' real'
" damage cannot
be ascertained and established that the damages are
" at
large. It is impossible to track the scandal, to know what quarters
"
the poison may reach: it is impossible to weigh at all closely the
"
compensation which will recompense a man or a woman for the insult
"
offered or the pain of a false accusation. No doubt in newspaper
"
libels juries take into account the vast circulations which are
justly
" claimed in present times. The ' punitive' element is
not something
" which is or can be added to some known factor
which is non-punitive.
" In particular it appears to present
no analogy to punishment by fine
" for the criminal offence
of publishing a defamatory libel."
By saying that compensation for insult or the pain of a
false accusation
cannot be weighed at all closely and that there
was nothing here analogous
to punishment by fine, he was to my
mind making it as clear as words can
make it that the whole of
this £5,000 was truly compensatory in character.
So I think
that Lord Devlin was perfectly right in saying that there is
no
decision of this House which recognises punitive damages in the
modern
sense of something which goes beyond compensation. Where
the Court
of Appeal went wrong was in failing to realise that in
the older cases
damages were frequently referred to as exemplary
or punitive although they
were in reality compensatory.
On the whole matter I would dismiss this appeal.
Lord Morris of Borth-y-Gest
my lords,
At the trial of this action questions arose as to
whether if the plaintiff
succeeded, he was entitled to recover
exemplary damages in addition to
compensatory damages. The law
relating to exemplary damages was con-
sidered in your Lordships'
House in 1964 and was laid down in the decision
in Rookes v.
Barnard [1964] AC 1129. That decision bound the
learned
judge. It bound the Court of Appeal. It continues to be
binding authority
35
in all courts unless and until it appears to your
Lordships to be right to
depart from it.
In
presiding at the trial the learned judge set himself loyally and
faith-
fully to follow the binding authority of the decision. His
directions to
the jury followed the approach laid down in the
decision though it is con-
tended that in regard to one or two
matters there was faulty exposition
which was sufficiently serious
to vitiate the award made by the jury of
exemplary damages. These
matters call for separate consideration. If the
contentions
concerning them do not succeed there remains an issue as to
whether
the award of the jury was excessive and should be set aside. If
it
is held that there was nothing amiss at the trial and that the law as
laid
down in your Lordships' House was properly applied by the
learned judge
it would be an unhappy conclusion if it were now
held that the trial had in
fact been conducted on wrong or at
least on unnecessary lines but that this
had only been so because
the law which had to be followed had been wrongly
laid down. If
that were the conclusion it is by no means certain that it
would
be possible to avoid ordering a new trial which would then
be
conducted on the basis of the law as newly laid down. But a
result so
lamentable (and for the parties so calamitous) must be
contemplated as at
least a possibility if it is decided that the
law was wrongly declared in 1964
and must now be changed or
changed back again.
Before considering this aspect of the matter further I
must express my
view in regard to the main contentions which are
raised by the Appellants.
They for their part do not in any way
question the validity of Rookes v.
Barnard. Their appeal
relates only to the award of exemplary damages.
The jury found
that the words compained of in the hardback edition
were
defamatory of the plaintiff and that the words were not true in
sub-
stance or in fact. They found similarly in regard to the
proof copies. They
awarded compensatory sums respectively of
£14,000 and £1,000. No chal-
lenge as to such results
is made. No criticism is advanced in regard to
the very careful
summing up of the learned judge dealing with the facts
and with
the issues as to liability. No suggestion is made that the awards
of
compensation can be attacked as being excessive or unreasonable.
The learned judge left three questions to the jury on
the issue of exem-
plary damages. First they were asked whether
the plaintiff had proved
that he was entitled to exemplary
damages. Here the learned judge was
carefully following Rookes
v. Barnard. There may be exemplary damages
if a defendant has
formed and been guided by the view that though he
may have to pay
some damages or compensation because of what he
intends to do yet
he will in some way gain (for the category is not confined
to
moneymaking in the strict sense) or may make money out of it, to
an
extent which he hopes and expects will be worth his while. I do
not
think that the word " calculated " was used to
denote some precise balancing
process. The situation contemplated
is where someone faces up to the
possibility of having to pay
damages for doing something which may be
held to have been wrong
but where nevertheless he deliberately carries out
his plan
because he thinks that it will work out satisfactorily for him. He
is
prepared to hurt somebody because he thinks that he may well gain
by
so doing even allowing for the risk that he may be made to pay
damages.
As the learned judge put it in reference to defamation
there may be exemplary
damages in cases where someone wilfully or
knowingly or recklessly peddles
untruths for profit. There must be
evidence fit to be left to the jury but
if there is then it is for
the jury to decide whether there is entitlement to
exemplary
damages on the basis to which I have referred.
It was contended on behalf of the Appellants that there
was no evidence
fit to be left to the jury in this case on this
issue. In my view this contention
wholly fails. There was ample
evidence. It was painstakingly recounted
in the summing up of the
learned judge. It is helpfully referred to and
summarised in the
judgment of the learned Master of the Rolls. It is
reviewed in the
speech of the Lord Chancellor which I have had the
advantage of
reading in advance.
36
Similar considerations apply to the question which was
put to the jury
and which they answered by saying that entitlement
to exemplary damages
was proved against both Defendants.
It is in regard to the next question and answer that the
greatest doubts
and difficulties in my view arise. Being
asked—What additional sum should
be awarded him by way of
exemplary damages? The answer of the jury
was £25,000. So
there were three awards: one being (for the hardback
edition) the
compensatory figure of £14,000: another being the
exemplary
damages figure of £25,000. For the total of
£40,000 judgment was entered.
I must confess that for my part I should greatly regret
it if the practice
became general of having a separate award of
exemplary damages in this
manner (I will return to this question
later). But the learned judge was only
following the guidance
specifically given in Rookes v. Barnard. There it
was said
(at page 1228) that the fact that the two sorts of damage
differ
essentially does not necessarily mean that there should be
two awards. But
it was said that there may be cases in which it is
difficult for a judge to say
whether he ought or ought not to
leave a claim for exemplary damages to
the jury. I can quite see
that in such a case it will be easier for an appellate
court
(where an issue is raised whether there was evidence which
could
justify an award of exemplary damages) if there are two
awards. The award
of exemplary damages could be set aside without
the necessity for a new
trial if the appellate court considered
that the evidence was not such as to
have been fit for the
consideration of the jury so as to entitle them to award
exemplary
damages. For this reason it was stated in Rookes v.
Barnard
that if a judge is in doubt whether he ought to
leave a claim for exemplary
damages to a jury then he could invite
them to say " what sum they would
" fix as compensation
and what additional sum, if any, they would award if
" they
were entitled to give exemplary damages ". It was this course
that
the learned judge followed in the present case. But if this
course is followed
the words " if any " become of
importance. They were not included in the
question which was put
to the jury.
There are three very important issues which arise. (1)
Did the learned
judge give an adequate direction to the jury to
ensure that they understood
that they should only award an "
additional " sum if they were satisfied
that the amount they
were awarding as compensatory damage was in itself
not enough to
punish the defendants. (2) Did the learned judge give an
adequate
direction to meet the situation where (as in this case) there are
two
defendants and (3) In any event is the sum of £40,000
excessive as an award
of exemplary damages and a figure which no
reasonable jury could award
—with the result that though the
purely compensatory part £15,000 is not
challenged the award
of an additional £25,000 must be set aside. (1) The
relevant
sentences in the summing up have been referred to in the speech
of
the Lord Chancellor and I need not set them out. I would have
been happier
if the direction on this point (which came towards
the end of what I venture
to think was a masterly review of the
case) had been ampler and more
explicit than it was. But the
learned judge did emphasise the word " addi-
" tional".
He asked the jury to underline it. He said that they should
underline
it because both the court and counsel would want to know " if
"
you do decide to award punitive damages how much more do you award
"
over and above the compensatory damage ". Even so it would have
been
better to have made it abundantly clear that the punitive
element is not to
be considered in isolation: an enforced
obligation to pay a large sum by
way of compensation has itself a
punitive impact. So a jury ought fully
to understand that only if
a sum awarded as compensation is inadequate
as a punishment should
any larger sum be awarded.
Much earlier in his summing-up the learned judge had
dealt with this
matter in an introductory way. He told the jury
that they were being
asked " not only to give Captain Broome
compensatory damages that is a
" reasonable sum for the
injury to his reputation and the exacerbation of
" his
feelings: but hi addition to fine Cassels and Mr. Irving for having
"
done what they have done. The money which you decide—if you
do
" decide—to award by way of punitive damages will
not go into the National
" Exchequer. It will have to go into
Captain Broome's pocket." Here
37
again there was an omission to emphasise that an award
of compensation
must always and inevitably be a part of the "
fine" in cases where the
imposition of a " fine "
is warranted.
Though a study of the shorthand note of what was said
has led me to the
view that there should have been amplification
in the way to which I have
referred, the important question now is
whether it should be held that
the jury were misled with the
result that heir award cannot stand. The
emphasis placed upon the
word " additional" could not have been lost
sight of by
the jury. Additional to what? Quite clearly, additional to the
amount
of compensation awarded. The jury were asked " how much more
"
they would award. The " more " was to be "
over and above " the com-
pensation. It surely must have been
clear to the jury that any " more "
that they decided
upon or any " additional" sum would have to be paid
by
those against whom they awarded it on top of the sum that they
were
first awarding. Here was a jury that listened to the case
over a period of
seventeen days. They deliberated for nearly five
hours. They awarded
a sum of £25,000 to be "
additional" to their award of £15,000. They
knew that
the total was £40.000. Thereafter they heard both counsel
agree
that there should be a single judgment for that amount. No
suggestion
was made (or I think could possibly have been made)
that the £25,000
included the £15,000. I would find it
difficult to accept that at the stage
in their deliberations when
they were considering whether Cassells and
Mr. Irving should be
punished by being made to pay money they should
at that stage have
left out of account one part of the money that they
themselves
were awarding. If having decided that it was a case for punish-
ment
the jury were considering the monetary sum which, as such
punishment,
should be paid the point would surely have been raised
by one member
if not by all members of the jury: Are we not
punishing them enough by
saying that they must pay £15,000?
They could have recorded that as
their view had they entertained
it. I am not prepared to assume that
something which at that stage
must really have been quite obvious was
overlooked by the jury.
There is nothing in regard to this question which I
could usefully
add to what the Lord Chancellor has said in
reviewing the authorities and
in formulating his conclusion. I
express my concurrence.
The approach which should be followed by an Appellate
Court in
considering whether an award of damages made by a
jury should be
assailed on the ground that the sum awarded is
excessive has been clearly
defined in authoritative decisions.
They are referred to in the speech of
the Lord Chancellor. I am
bound to say that the figure of £40,000 appears
to me to be
a high figure. Certainly it must be a very unusual case in
which
on a correct application of the law as laid down in Rookes
v.
Barnard the amount which defendants must pay should
so greatly exceed
the amount which is reasonably to be received
by the plaintiff by way
of compensation. It is this disparity
between the £40,000 and the £15.000
that has caused
disquiet as to whether the jury may have been caused
or allowed
to be under a misunderstanding. But if the conclusion is
reached
that the jury knew what they were about and chose their
figures
advisedly then I do not think that I ought to conclude
that their " additional "
figure of £25,000 was
so high that no reasonable jury could award it. To
translate
injury to and attack upon reputation into monetary terms is at
all
times a difficult exercise. But it was the same jury that fixed
the
" additional " figure of £25,000 that
also—without being impeached for so
doing—fixed the
compensatory figure of £15,000. If they did not go wide
when
fixing the latter why should it be determined that they went wide
in
fixing the former. The conclusion which I think can be drawn is
that
the jury took a very serious view of the conduct and
attitude of the
defendants. If, after hearing all the relevant
features of the case probed
and examined over a period of
seventeen days and hearing the evidence
of such of the parties as
decided to call or give evidence, the jury did take
a very
serious view there was evidence which entitled them to do so.
They
38
may have regarded the conduct
and attitude of each of the defendants with
equally sharp
disfavour. If it was their considered collective view that
the
defamation was grave and that publication was deliberately
undertaken by
those who had regard for their own advantage but
none for the honour
and renown of one whom they traduced then the
jury were warranted in
deciding that such conduct should be
heavily penalised. Whatever might
have been my personal assessment
had I been on the jury I have not been
persuaded that it must be
decided that the penalty imposed was beyond the
limit to which a
reasonable jury could go. Nor can it be said with any
assurance
that an estimation of a figure by a learned judge would
necessarily
have superior validity. A learned judge has experience
and knowledge of
other cases but in a matter so elusive as fixing
in monetary terms a reflection
of feelings of disapproval there is
no norm. It may be difficult to give
guidance but a judge should
be able to express to a jury the same guidance
as he would give to
himself.
It would be idle to deny that a
very considerable pruning operation was
decided upon. It may be
that there are some who would not have pruned
so much and so
drastically. It may be that there are some who would have
pruned
more severely. What was done was done in the hope of removing
from
the law " a source of confusion between aggravated and
exemplary
damages ". It may be that there are some who feel
that though the previous
law (built up, as the common law is, as a
result of particular decisions
given in particular sets of
circumstances) was in very many respects imprecise
and even
illogical yet it was somehow found in practice to work and to be
no
serious cause of confusion. It may be that there are some who
consider
that manifest variations and divergencies in terminology
did not reflect any
really fundamental differences of approach:
that for example when in The
Mediana [1900] AC 113, 118
Lord Halsbury L.C. made a reference, though
only a passing and
incidental one, to punitive damages (" I put aside cases
"
of trespass where a high-handed procedure or insolent behaviour has
been
" held in law to be a subject of aggravated damages, and
the jury might
" give what are called punitive damages ")
he had much the same conception
in mind as had Lord Atkinson when
in Addis v. Gramophone Company Ltd.
[1909] A.C. 48,
496, he made an incidental reference to circumstances of
malice,
fraud, defamation or violence which would sustain an action of
tort
in which a person might no doubt "recover exemplary damages or
"
what is sometimes styled vindictive damages " or as had Lord
Loreburn
L.C. when he spoke in Hulton v. Jones [1910] AC 20.25 ("In the second
" place the jury were
entitled to say this kind of article is to be condemned.
"
There is no tribunal more fitted to decide in regard to
publications,
39
" especially publications in the newspaper press,
whether they bear a stamp
" and character which ought to
enlist sympathy and to secure protection.
" If they think
that the licence is not fairly used and that the tone and style
"
of the libel is reprehensible and ought to be checked, it is for the
jury
" to say so").
But even if some of the thoughts above referred to are
in fact entertained
do they give warrant for re-opening now the
debate that led to the decision
in Rookes v. Barnard? I
do not think so. I do not think that the power
that was
referred to in the statement of the 26th July 1966 was intended
to
encourage a tendency periodically to chop and change the law.
In
branches of the law where clarification becomes necessary there
may well be
decisions which as a matter of policy are not
universally welcome or where
some may think that some variant of
the decision one way or the other
would have been more acceptable.
But this does not mean that decisions of
this House should readily
be reviewed whenever a case presents itself which
is covered by a
decision. There must be something much more.
In his book "Principles of the Law of Damages"
(1962) Professor Street
poses the question whether awards of
exemplary damages are ever justified.
He outlines seven arguments
against them and with mathematical impartiality
seven arguments in
their favour concluding that one cannot say whether
or not
exemplary damages are desirable. Whatever general views may
be
entertained or whatever inclination there may be in different
personal views
I see no advantage in refusing at this juncture to
recognise that a deliberate
pronouncement was made in Rookes v. Barnard.
Though I consider that no reason has been shown for
denying to that
pronouncement the authority of a decision of this
House it is not inconsistent
with this approach to express the
hope that a necessity for a separate and
isolated assessment of
exemplary damages will be rare. In the search for
authority only
one case was found prior to Rookes v. Barnard in which
there
was such a result. That was Loudon v. Ryder [1953]
2 Q.B. 202 now
repealed. The present case is I think the first one
subsequent to Rookes v.
Barnard in which such a
separate award has actually been made.
In the older cases the " vindictive " or "
exemplary " or " punitive " aspect
merely became
one element in a composite whole. Thus the law as it was
in 1877
was summarised in the 3rd edition of Mr. Mayne's Treatise on
Damages.
He pointed (see page 37) to the difference between damages in
cases
of contract (where they were only a compensation) and in cases
of
tort. In the latter " if there were no circumstances of
aggravation they are
" generally the same ". But where
he said, " the injury is to the person, or
" character,
or feelings, and the facts disclose fraud, malice, violence,
cruelty,
" or the like, they operate as a punishment, for the
benefit of the community,
" and as a restraint to the
transgressor ". In the various cases cited (see
pages 36, 37,
514, 515, 516) one amount only of damages was assessed.
For a
later general summary of the law (as it was in 1895) reference may
be
made to Sir Frederick Pollock's 4th edition of The Law of
Torts. He refers
(see page 174) to cases where there is great
injury without the possibility of
measuring compensation by any
numerical rule. In such cases he said—
" juries have
been not only allowed but encouraged to give damages that
"
express indignation at the defendant's wrong rather than a value set
upon
" the plaintiff's loss. Damages awarded on this
principle are called exemplary
" or vindictive ". He
went on to explain that—" the kind of wrongs to
"
which they are applicable are those which, besides the violation of a
right
" or the actual damage, import insult or outrage ".
The cases cited, to which
I need not refer in detail, again appear
to me to be cases in which only one
figure of damages was
assessed.
When juries came to award damages in such cases of tort
they did therefore
give and indeed were " encouraged "
to give a sum which marked displeasure
or indignation or which was
to serve as a deterrent or as an example or
which vindicated the
law or which was a way of punishing the defendant.
But juries were
not invited to isolate such element as was purely punitive.
I do
not expect that they did in practice. In some cases their displeasure
or
indignation would operate as a kind of topping-up process. But
if the
40
process by which they had arrived at a figure could have
been analysed
(which normally it could not have been) while it
would probably have been
found that there had been nothing in the
nature of a mathematical addition
of separate sums yet it would
have been recognised that some (wholly
unascertainable) part of
the whole must have been purely punitive. Stated
otherwise such
(unascertained) part was a fine. Logical analysis forces
the
conclusion therefore that in the result there would in a civil
action have
been punishment for conduct not particularised in any
criminal code and
that such punishment had taken the form of a
fine not receivable by the
State but as a sort of bonus by a
private individual who would apart from
it be solaced for the
wrong done to him. There may be much to be said for
making it
permissible in a criminal court to order in certain cases that
a
convicted person should pay compensation. There is much to be
said against
a system under which a fine becomes payable in a
civil court without any
of the safeguards which protect those
charged with crimes. If therefore the
working of the law before
Rookes v. Barnard is exposed to a relentless
logical
examination it has to be conceded that some features of it
were not in
principle acceptable. Yet it may be that no serious
injustice resulted. And
indeed as we have been told the life of
the law often lies not in logic but in
experience. It would
however be an unfortunate and bizarre result if a
wholly laudable
attempt to rationalise the law had brought it about that the
element
which it was most sought to suppress was so brought into sharp
relief
that it attained a significance never before exhibited.
I would regard the present case as exceptional in the
sense that the jury
must have considered that the conduct of the
defendants merited very special
condemnation. In other than an
exceptional case where exemplary damages
are to be awarded I would
hope that a jury would be unlikely to award a
total sum which
exceeded its purely compensatory component element to an
extent in
any way comparable to that which is revealed in the present case.
I would dismiss the appeal.
Viscount Dilhorne
my lords.
The main issues to be determined in this appeal are (1)
whether what was
said by my noble and learned friend Lord Devlin
in Rookes v. Barnard
[1964] AC 1129 with regard to
exemplary damages, and with which all
the other members of the
House then sitting agreed, correctly states the
law: (2) if it
does, whether Lawton J. erred in leaving the question of
exemplary
damages to the jury: (3) having left it to them, whether
he
misdirected them with regard thereto: and (4) whether the sum
of £40,000
awarded by them, of which £25,000 was
exemplary damages, was so excessive
that that verdict cannot be
allowed to stand.
I propose to consider the first of these questions last.
Although Rookes
v. Barnard was not concerned with
damages for libel, I consider the other
questions on the
assumption that what was said in that case is not to be
regarded
as obiter in relation to libel cases and is to be regarded as
binding
on all inferior Courts.
Lord Devlin expressed the view that there were only
three categories of
cases in which exemplary damages could be
awarded, namely: —
Where there had been oppressive, arbitrary or
unconstitutional action
by servants of the government.
Where the defendant's conduct had been calculated by
him to make
a profit for himself which might well exceed the
compensation pay-
able to the plaintiff: and
Where exemplary damages are expressly authorised by statute.
The Appellants contended that this case did not come
within the second
category. They called no evidence at the trial
and the question whether
it should have been left to the jury to
consider exemplary damages, depends
on whether there was evidence
given or adduced on behalf of the plaintiff
on which the jury were
entitled to infer and conclude that the defendant's
conduct was of
that character.
41
I do not think that Lord Devlin ever envisaged that, to
bring a case within
the second category, the plaintiff would have
to show that there had been
something in the nature of a
mathematical calculation by the defendant, an
assessment of the
profit likely to ensue from the publication of defamatory
matter
and an estimation of the risk of being sued and the damages likely
to
be awarded if an action was brought. If a plaintiff had to prove
that,
it would be seldom that he would be in a position to do so.
Newspapers and books are usually published for profit
and that fact does
not by itself make the publisher liable to pay
exemplary damages.
I think that Widgery J., as he then was, was right when
he said in Manson
v. Associated Newspapers Ltd. [1965]
1 W.L.R. 1038:
"... it is perfectly clear, from those authorities
" (McCarey v. Asso-
ciated Newspapers Ltd. [1965]
2 W.L.R. 45: Broadway Approvals Ltd.
v. Odhams Press
[1965] 1 W.L.R. 805) " that in a case in which a news-
"
paper quite deliberately publishes a statement which it either
knows
" to be false or which it publishes recklessly,
careless whether it be
" true or false, and on the calculated
basis that any damages likely
" to be paid as a result of
litigation will be less than the profit which
" the
publication of that matter will give, then Lord Devlin's conditions
"
are satisfied and exemplary damages are permissible."
He went on to say that he proposed to tell the jury that
they could consider
exemplary damages
"if, having considered what material there is
before them, they are
" driven to the inference that this was
an article published by the
" defendants conscious of the
fact that it had no solid foundation and
" with the cynical
and calculated intention to use it for what it was
" worth,
on the footing that it would produce more profit than any
"
possible penalty in damages was likely to be."
I think too that Lawton J. put the matter correctly when
he said in the
course of his summing-up: —
" A man is liable to pay damages on a punitive
basis if he wilfully
" and knowingly, or recklessly peddles
untruths for profit."
In my opinion, there was ample evidence on which the
jury was entitled
to come to the conclusion that the case came
within the second category.
On the 9th December, 1966, Mr. Irving
the author, sent the manuscript
of the book to Cassells with a
letter in which he said that Captain Broome
had threatened legal
action if the manuscript was published, and on the 23rd
December
he sent them a long letter in which he quoted an extract from
a
letter he had received from Kimbers the publishers to whom he
had first
submitted the manuscript. That extract stated: —
" if the book goes to a legal man as it is, he
could only tell you that
" half is libellous. We could not
possibly publish the book as it is ... ".
The manuscript submitted to Cassells was identical with
that which
Kimbers had seen. Perusal of it by any intelligent
publisher must, even with-
out the advantage of having the views
of another publisher, have led to the
conclusion that it contained
many very grave and serious libels on Captain
Broome and the jury
were fully entitled to conclude that Cassells realised this.
Mr. Kimber gave evidence that about the 8th March, 1967,
he had tele-
phoned Mr. Parker, a director of Cassells and told
him that they had had
one or two threats of libel actions if they
published the book ; to which
Mr. Parker's response was " In
that case we will tighten up the indemnity
" clause in Mr.
Irving's agreement".
On the 27th December, 1967, Captain Broome wrote to
Cassells saying
that the manuscript was " unquestionably
libellous ". They replied saying
that in the light of his
comments " drastic revisions " had been made. In
fact,
as Cassells must have known, the revisions that were made did
not
materially affect the passages defamatory of Captain Broome.
On the 16th February, 1968, the Business Director of
Cassells circulated
a memorandum in the following terms, to all
concerned.
42
"It is anticipated that early copies of THE
DESTRUCTION OF
" CONVOY PQ 17 will start coming into the
House on March 5th.
" Will you please note that absolutely and
positively not one single
"copy, on any pretext whatsoever,
is to be removed from the House
" without reference to me.
" Mr. Mitchell: Would you please notify the printer
that this book
" is to treated on a maximum security basis
and ensure that not
" one single copy slips through their
net."
Shortly thereafter Cassells circulated proof copies of
the book. Why
they did so after the circulation of this memorandum
is not known for no
evidence was given for them. In the absence of
any explanation the jury
were, in my view, entitled to draw the
inference that they had decided to
publish the book, despite
Captain Broome's threats of action, knowing that
passages in the
book were libellous of Captain Broome and not caring
whether those
passages were true or false and on the footing that it was
worth
their while to run the risk of an action being brought by him and
of
his obtaining damages in order to make a profit on the book.
On the 5th March, 1967, Captain Broome issued a writ for
libel. On the
29th April, 1968, has Statement of Claim was
delivered. Cassells then knew,
if they were in any doubt before,
of what passages he was complaining.
On the 14th June, 1968, they
delivered their Defence. They pleaded that
the words complained of
were true in substance and in fact in their natural
and ordinary
meaning. They did not seek to justify the meaning which
the
Statement of Claim alleged the words complained of bore, inter
alia,
that Captain Broome had been disobedient, careless,
incompetent, indifferent
to the fate of the merchant ships and had
been largely responsible for or
contributed extensively to the
loss of two-thirds of the ships of the convoy.
Despite the issue of this Writ, Cassells went on and
published a hard-
back edition of the book. That led to another
writ being issued by Captain
Broome.
Again in their Defence to this Statement of Claim
Cassells pleaded that
the words complained of were in their
natural and ordinary meaning true in
substance and in fact but did
not seek to justify the meanings which in the
Statement of Claim
it was alleged they bore. The jury by their verdict
rejected the
plea of justification and must have accepted that the
passages
complained of bore the meanings alleged by the plaintiff.
I do not propose to set out what those passages were
Suffice it to say that
they clearly alleged that Captain Broome
had been disobedient, careless,
incompetent, indifferent to the
fate of the merchant ships, that he had wrongly
withdrawn his
destroyer force from the convoy, that he had taken it closer
to
the German airfields than he had been ordered to do and that he
had
been responsible for the loss of two-thirds of the ship in the
convoy. He was
in fact accused of cowardice.
That Cassells did not appreciate that the passages
complained of could
be understood to have these meanings, is hard
to accept. Yet after publica-
tion of the proof copies, after
receipt of the writ and the Statement of Claim
in respect of that
publication, and when they knew the meanings which it
was alleged
the passages bore, they went on and published the hardback
edition,
and at the trial persisted in their plea of justification.
In these circumstances if Lawton J. had ruled at the end
of the plaintiff's
case, as he was asked to do, that there was no
evidence from which the jury
could infer that the case came within
the second category, he would in my
opinion have erred. I
therefore reject this contention of the Appellants.
After specifying the three categories of cases in which
in his view ex-
emplary damages might be awarded, Lord Devlin in
Rookes v. Barnard
said that there were three
considerations which must always be borne in
mind and then went on
to say: —
" In a case in which exemplary damages are
appropriate, a jury
" should be directed that if, but only
if, the sum which they have in
" mind to award as
compensation (which may, of course, be a sum
43
" aggravated by the way in which the defendant has
behaved to the
" plaintiff) is inadequate to punish him for
his outrageous conduct, to
" mark their disapproval of such
conduct and to deter him from repeat-
" ing it then it can
award some larger sum."
Complaint is made that Lawton J. gave no such direction
to the jury,
with the agreement of counsel, he asked them to
answer seven questions.
The first was whether in respect of the
hardback edition the words com-
plained of were defamatory of the
plaintiff; the second, were they true in
substance and in fact.
Their answer to the first question was, Yes and to
the second, No.
The third question was " what compensatory damages do
"
you award the Plaintiff? " Their answer was £14,000. Then
in answer
to the fourth and fifth questions they said that he was
entitled to exemplary
damages against both Defendants. The sixth
question was " What additional
" sum should be awarded
him by way of exemplary damages? " Their
answer was £25,000.
After the questions had been handed to the jury in the
course of the
summing-up, Lawton J. told them that, after
considering what were the
compensatory damages if they found for
the plaintiff, they should go on
to consider whether he was
entitled to exemplary damages. As to that, he
told them to
consider the case against each defendant separately, saying: —
" In respect of each of them you will ask
yourselves this question:
"' Has the plaintiff proved his
entitlement against that defendant? ' If
" the answer is yes,
then you will have to go on and assess how much
" punitive
damages should be awarded."
In the next paragraph of his summing-up, he repeated this, saying: —
" You will have to ask yourselves: ' Has he proved
that he is entitled
" to punitive damages against Cassells &
Co. Ltd.? ' If the answer
" is no, that is that. If the
answer is yes, you will have to assess the
" damages."
and then he asked the jury to underline the word "
additional" in the sixth
question as he and learned counsel
wanted to know.
" if you do decide to award punitive damages, how
much more do
" you award over and above the compensatory
damage ".
The jury were thus clearly told that if they found that
the plaintiff was
entitled to punitive damages, they must then
assess what punitive damages
should be awarded. They were never
told that in considering whether any
sum should be so awarded,
they must have regard to the sum they awarded
for compensatory
damages, and if, and only if, that sum was inadequate
to punish
the defendants, should they add to it by awarding a sum for
exemplary
damages.
The failure to give such a direction, I regret that I
cannot but regard
as a most serious omission. It is one of the
most important features of
Lord Devlin's speech that a direction
on the lines he stated should be
given. It was not, and instead
the jury were told twice that, if they held
that Captain Broome
was entitled to exemplary damages, they must assess
them. The
jury's verdict shows that they thought that £15,000
compensatory
damages was insufficient, but if they had been told
that they must, in
assessing exemplary damages, take into account
the sum awarded in com-
pensation, it is possible that they would
have awarded not £25,000 but only
£10,000 as exemplary
damages, that is to say, that they would have deducted
from the
£25,000 the £15,000 compensatory damages.
I regret having to come to this conclusion but I see no
escape from it.
After a trial lasting 17 days and lengthy hearings
in the Court of Appeal
and in this House, one feels some
reluctance to say that the jury's verdict
should not stand. If all
the counsel engaged in the case had told the
jury that a sum
should only be awarded for exemplary damages if the
amount of the
compensatory damages was insufficient punishment, then it
might be
possible to say that despite the omission in the summing-up, the
jury
can have been in no doubt as to what they were required to
do.
Unfortunately all counsel did not tell them that. One counsel
told the
44
jury in his final address that
they must consider exemplary damages quite
separately from
compensatory damages. He told them
" they are completely
unconnected with each other and in no sense
" does the one
head fall to be balanced against the other "
and
"
The two sums are so different that there is no propriety in any
"
sense in balancing them up ".
The summing-up contained this passage: —
"... say, for example, you
took the view that Mr. Irving was more
" to blame than
Cassells & Co., or to be fair, you took the view that
"
Cassells & Co., being an experienced firm of publishers were more
to
" blame than this young man, Mr. Irving, should you make
Cassells &
" Co. pay a larger sum by way of punitive
damages than Mr. Irvine?
" The answer to that is No. Whatever
damages, if any, you decide should
" be awarded by way of
punitive damages must be the same sum in
" respect of both
Mr. Irving and Cassells & Co. Ltd., if you find them
"
both liable to pay punitive damages."
45
two. It may, of course, be the
case that the jury did not find that one was
more guilty than the
other.
On this ground, too, in my opinion the verdict cannot stand.
46
To say that a decision of this House was given per
incuriam is, to say the
least, unusual and could be taken,
though I cannot believe it was so
intended, as of a somewhat
offensive character. While I regret the use of
this expression, I
doubt if it was intended to mean more than that the
questions
involved deserved more consideration in relation, among other
things,
to libel actions. If that is what was meant, it is, I must confess,
a
view with which I have considerable sympathy.
As I understand the judicial functions of this House,
although they involve
applying well established principles to new
situations, they do not involve
adjusting the common law to what
are thought to be the social norms of
the time. They do not
include bowing to the wind of change. We have
to declare what the
law is, not what we think it should be. If it is clearly
established
that in certain circumstances there is a right to exemplary
damages,
this House should not, when sitting judicially, and indeed, in
my
view, cannot properly abolish or restrict that right. This,
indeed, was
recognised by Lord Devlin when he said (at p. 1226)
that it was not open
to this House to " arrive at a
determination that refused altogether to
" recognise the
exemplary principle ". If the power to award such damages
is
to be abolished or restricted, that is the task of the Legislature,
it may
be after full and prolonged investigation by the Law
Commission.
" where the conduct of the
defendant merits punishment, which is
" only considered to be
so where his conduct is wanton, as where it
" discloses
fraud, malice, violence, cruelty, insolence or the like, or, as
"
it is sometimes put, where he acts in contumelious disregard of the
"
plaintiff's rights ".
A similar statement is to be
found in Mayne on Damages 11th Ed. (1946)
p. 41.
" it cannot be said that
English law has committed itself finally and
" fully to
exemplary damages "
a view which conflicts with the
opinion of Lord Devlin to which I have
referred,
" and many of the cases
point to the rationale not of punishment of
" the defendant
but of extra compensation for the plaintiff for the injury
"
to his feelings and dignity. This is, of course, not exemplary
damages
" at all. It is another head of non-pecuniary loss to
the plaintiff".
Lord Devlin's first category "oppressive, arbitrary
or unconstitutional
" action by servants of the government",
a category which he said he would
not extend to oppressive action
by private corporations or individuals, was
47
subjected to serious criticism
by Taylor J. in Uren v. Fairfax supra. He
pointed
out that in none of the three old cases on which this category
was
apparently based, did the decisions turn on the fact that the
defendants had
acted for the government. Surely it is conduct, not
status, that should
determine liability. Power to award exemplary
damages may be an anomaly,
but I doubt whether it is beneficial to
the law to seek to reduce the area of
that anomaly at the price of
creating other anomalies and illogicalities.
Surely it is
anomalous if a person guilty of oppressive conduct should only
be
liable to exemplary damages if a servant of the government. In
these
days there are others than the government who can be guilty
of oppressive
conduct. Why should they be treated differently? I
can find nothing in
the three cases to indicate that if the
conduct complained of had been by
persons other than servants of
the government, liability to exemplary
damages would have been
excluded.
Just as the definition of this category might be said to
have been obiter
to the decision in Rookes v. Barnard,
so might consideration of it be regarded
in this case.
Nevertheless as Rookes v. Barnard has to be considered
in this
appeal in consequence of the action taken by the Court of
Appeal, I feel
I should express my opinion which is that this
narrow definition does not
appear to me to be justified by the
authorities on which it was based.
It may also be contended that Lord Devlin's second
category is also too
narrowly drawn for why should conduct lead to
exemplary damages if
inspired by the profit motive or some
material interest, and similar conduct
due to other motives not do
so. But the substantial criticism that can be
made is that by his
categorisation, the previously existing and recognised
power to
award exemplary damages is restricted. Lord Devlin indeed
appre-
ciated the novelty of what he was doing when he said that
acceptance of his
views " would impose limits not hitherto
expressed on such awards " (p.
1226). I do not think that
this should have or could properly be done. It
should have been
left to the Legislature.
This conclusion does not, however, mean that the jury's
verdict as to
liability must be interfered with. It was urged that
Cassell's decision to call
no evidence was based on the assumption
that Rookes v. Barnard applied—
and that the
issue was, did the case come within the second category. While
it
may be that the plaintiff would have presented his case differently
but for
what was said in Rookes v. Barnard, the
defendants had to meet the case as
presented whether or not Rookes
v. Barnard applied, and it was in relation
to that case
that they decided to call no evidence. As the case presented
would
prior to Rookes v. Barnard, if established, have
justified the award of
exemplary damages, I cannot accept that the
defendants might have reached
a different decision about calling
evidence on the case as presented if Rookes
v. Barnard
had not been followed.
I now turn to the passage in Lord Devlin's speech
dealing with the assess-
ment of damages, a passage which, save in
the respect to which I have
referred, was closely followed by
Lawton J. in his summing-up.
I think that Salmon L.J., as he then was, correctly
summarised the pre-
Rookes v. Barnard practice when he
said: —
" Judges used to direct juries in libel actions
that, if they found in
" favour of the plaintiff, they should
award him a sum which would
" make it plain to the world that
there was no truth in the libel and
" which, as far as money
could do so. would compensate him for the
" distress,
humiliation and annoyance which the libel had caused him.
"
They were also told in appropriate cases that they could take the
"
whole of the defendant's conduct into account down to the moment
"
they returned their verdict, and that if they came to the conclusion
that
" he had behaved outrageously they might, as a
deterrent, reflect their
" disapproval of the defendant's
conduct in the amount of the damages
" which they awarded. At
the same time they were always warned to
" be fair and
reasonable and not to allow themselves to be inflamed
"
against the defendant but to decide dispassionately what in all the
"
circumstances would be a reasonable sum to award."
48
The summing up in Loudon v. Ryder [1953] 2
Q.B. 202 which was
approved by the Court of Appeal, also
recognised that outrageous conduct
was a ground for exemplary
damages. That appears to be the first case in
which a jury was
asked to award separate sums for exemplary and for com-
pensatory
damages and in which it was suggested that the amount awarded
for
exemplary damages was to be regarded as the imposition of a fine.
In Ley v. Hamilton (1934) 151 L.T. 360 the
Court of Appeal by a majority
(Greer and Maugham L.JJ's: Scrutton
L.J. dissenting) allowed an appeal
from a jury's verdict awarding
£5,000 damages for libel, one ground for the
decision being
that the damages awarded were excessive; Maugham L.J.
saying that
the sum could not be described
" as a fair or reasonable compensation for the
damages which the
" plaintiff "
had suffered, that the verdict could only be justified
on the view that the jury
were exercising the right to give
vindictive or punitive damages, and that
" when the damages in question are really not
compensation for an
" injury sustained by the plaintiff but
in the nature of a fine inflicted
" on the defendant "
the Court of Appeal would be compelled to interfere.
In this House ((1935) 153 L.T. 384) Maugham L.J.'s
approach was
rejected by Lord Atkin in a speech with which Lords
Tomlin, Thankerton,
Macmillan and Wright agreed. Part of the
relevant passages of Lord Atkin's
speech were cited by Lord Devlin
but two sentences which I underline and
which I regard as
important were omitted.
The full passage is as follows: —
"The fact is that the criticism" (Maugham
L.J.'s) "with great
" respect seems based upon an
incorrect view of the assessment of
" damages for defamation.
They are not arrived at as the Lord Justice
" seems to
assume by determining the ' real' damage and adding to
" that
a sum by way of vindictive or punitive damages. It is precisely
"
because the 'real' damage cannot be ascertained and established
that
" the damages are at large. It is impossible, to track
the scandal, to
" know what quarters the poison may reach: it
is impossible to weigh
" at all closely the compensation
which will recompense a man or a
" woman for the insult
offered or the pain of a false accusation.
" No doubt in
newspaper libels juries take into account the vast
"
circulations which are justly claimed in present times. The '
punitive '
" element is not something which is or can be
added to some known
" factor which is non-punitive. In
particular it appears to present no
" analogy to
punishment by fine for the criminal offence of publishing
"
defamatory libel."
Maugham L.J. did not in his judgment refer to "
real " damage. I think
it is clear that by " real "
damage Lord Atkin meant the damage which
the plaintiff had
suffered.
Yet is not the very process condemned in Ley v.
Hamilton that which it
was said in Rookes v. Barnard
should be followed and that which, pursuant
to Rookes v.
Barnard, was followed in this case? Lord Atkin said that
for
the reasons he gave " real " damage i.e., compensatory
damage, could
not be ascertained and established. Under Rookes
v. Barnard a jury is
to be directed that that which
Lord Atkin said could not be done, is to be
done and "
compensatory " damages assessed first. The punitive element
is
not something that can be added. Yet in Rookes v.
Barnard it is said that
it should be added if, but only if,
the compensatory damages are insufficient.
Lord Atkin said that
there was no analogy to punishment by a fine for a
criminal libel,
yet following Rookes v. Barnard, juries are told that
punitive
damages amount to a fine.
I must confess my inability to reconcile the views of
this House as
expressed in Ley v. Hamilton with
those expressed in Rookes v, Barnard.
Before Rookes v. Barnard the words "
aggravated", " punitive".
" exemplary "
and " retributory " were used indiscriminately to indicate
that
the damages awarded might be enhanced and might contain a
punitive
49
element. By Rookes v. Barnard
precise meanings were attached to the words
"aggravated
"and "exemplary ". Lord Devlin recognised (at p. 1221)
that
the jury could take into account the motives and conduct of
the defendant
where they aggravate the injury to the plaintiff. "
There may be " he said
" malevolence or spite or the
manner of committing the wrong may be such
" as to injure the
plaintiff's proper feelings of dignity and pride. These are
"
matters which the jury can take into account in assessing the
appropriate
" compensation ". So where the injury is
aggravated, an addition can be
made to the compensatory damages.
For the reasons I have stated, I would allow the appeal.
Lord Wilberforce
my lords,
50
in the book principally complained of reflected upon the
conduct of officers
of the Royal Navy, in combat conditions, there
was an obvious danger that
the jury may have become inflamed. This
made it particularly necessary
that there should be a
dispassionate and cool review of the sums awarded
and of the
summing-up in the Court of Appeal.
If matters had taken their proper and normal course,
these matters should
have been disposed of within a few days—by
dismissal of the appeal or
by an order for a new trial, and no
question of appeal to this House would
have arisen.
This did not happen. The trial had been conducted
properly, and inevi-
tably upon the basis that the law to be
applied as regards any claim for
punitive damages was that staled
by this House in Rookes v. Barnard [1964]
A.C. The
learned judge considered that he was bound by what was said
in
this House, as he clearly was. But in the Court of Appeal
argument
was admitted to the effect that Rookes v. Barnard, on
punitive damages,
was wrong and should not be followed: the Court
of Appeal so decided,
and three judgments, separate exercises in
forceful advocacy, were delivered
giving their reasons.
The course permitted and taken was doubly surprising.
First, there was
nothing new about Rookes v. Barnard. It
was decided in 1964: it had
been followed and applied in England
by the Court of Appeal itself three
times since then in, amongst
others, libel cases without difficulty or protest
by any of the
Lords Justices involved. Secondly, it was, on the view of
the
facts which the Court of Appeal took, unnecessary for the decision
of
the appeal to decide whether Rookes v. Barnard on
punitive damages was
right or wrong. The Court of Appeal, having
held that it was wrong, still
dismissed the appeal, and in an
alternative passage held that the same
result followed if it was
right.
The consequences for the present litigants have been
heavy. An appeal
has been brought here and argued for thirteen
days. Counsel for the Appel-
lant were forced into the necessity
of arguing at length that Rookes v.
Barnard is
right, and this argument was answered on the Respondent's
side. A
mountain of costs has piled up and it is as well that the size
of
this should be understood: it is open on the record. As shown
by the
Order of the Court of Appeal, (he plaintiff's costs at the
trial have been
taxed at £22,000. His costs as assessed in
the Court of Appeal are £7,000.
His costs in this House must
exceed this figure. The taxed costs of the
defendants are unlikely
to be less: there will be further solicitor and own
client costs
on either side. It may not be unfair to put the aggregate bill,
which
an unsuccessful party may have to bear, at more than £60,000.
It
would be entirely unfair to suggest that the whole, or even
half this sum, is
due to the course taken in the Court of
Appeal—the greater part flows
from the inherent nature of
our system. But it is necessary to say that in
a legal system so
extravagant and punitive as to costs as ours is in civil
cases,
and particularly libel actions, the addition of further burdens,
and
here they were certainly considerable, carries the result
further into an
unacceptable area of injustice. England has not
the equivalent of the New
South Wales Suitors Fund Act, 1951, nor
of the Victoria Appeal Costs
Fund Act, 1964, so when the machinery
creaks it is the private litigants
who pay. I have felt deep
concern about this throughout the hearing.
My Lords, observations have already been made on other
aspects of the
Court of Appeal's judgments. I concur entirely with
what has been said,
and the fact that for reasons of space I
abstain from using my own words
does not mean that my concurrence
is any the less wholehearted.
I proceed to the principal task we have, which is to
decide the present
appeal. Before examining the summing-up, on
which the jury's verdict
was based, it is necessary to establish
the law. This involves some re-
examination of those parts of the
decision in Rookes v. Barnard which
relate to
punitive damages.
I shall consider Rookes v. Barnard under
three heads. First, as to the
analysis it contains of damages in
tort cases: secondly, as to defamation
actions in relation to Lord
Devlin's second category—both of these being
51
directly relevant to the
present case: thirdly, and briefly, as to the first and
second
categories, their inclusions and exclusions.
* See as to Canada 48 Canadian Bar Review (1970) p. 373.
52
daily unreported practice of the courts. Its place in
the law has been
endorsed by many eminent judges in terms which
clearly recognise the puni-
tive element. The principle of
punitive damages has been recognised by the
High Court of
Australia on five occasions, by the Supreme Court of Canada
and by
the Supreme Court of the United States of America.
To my mind the strongest argument against it is that
English law already
contains a heavy, indeed exorbitant, punitive
element in its costs system;
contrast the United States where it
is the absence of this (advocate's costs
not being normally
recoverable) which is invoked as a justification for
punitive
damages. One or other must clearly be reformed, and it is
Parlia-
ment alone that can do it.
I take the discussion one step further, because the
point is very relevant
here. In Lord Devlin's opinion the
distinction is made between aggravated
damages and punitive
damages; it is said that many of the authorities are
really cases
of aggravated damages though other words are used, that apart
from
the exceptional cases included in the three categories,
aggravated
damages are the appropriate and sufficient remedy.
Although I doubt very
much whether all the cases can be explained
in this way—to do so seems
to attribute a high degree of
confusion of thought or inaccuracy of expression
to judges of
eminence—there is attraction in the distinction. It has
the
advantage, to some minds, of reducing the area of "
punitive " damages, and
of bringing the remedy nearer to "
compensation ".
But closer examination causes one to doubt whether the
separation, other-
wise than in analysis, of compensatory from
punitive damages does not
involve some real danger in practice. As
Windeyer J. said in Uren's case
(117 C.L.R. 118, 152) "What
the House of Lords has now done is ... to
" produce a more
distinct terminology. Limiting the scope of terms that
"
often were not distinguished in application makes possible an
apparently
" firm distinction between
aggravated compensatory damages and exemplary
" or punitive
damages. How far the different labels denote concepts really
"
different in effect may be debatable. I suspect that in seeking to
preserve
" the distinction we shall sometimes find ourselves
dealing more in words
" than ideas." [cf. Salmond on
Torts 15th Ed. (1969) which maintains the
old " confusion ".]
The distinction does not in my belief greatly correspond
to what
happens in reality. Take a common case: a man is assaulted, or
his
land is trespassed upon, with accompanying circumstances of
insolence
or contumely. He decides to bring an action for damages,
he need not
further specify the claim. Is he suing for
compensation, for injury to his
feelings, to teach his opponent a
lesson, to vindicate his rights, or " the
" strength of
the law ", or for a mixture of these things? Most men would
not
ask themselves such questions, many men could not answer them.
If
they could answer them, they might give different answers. The
reaction to
a libel may be anything from " how outrageous "
to " he has delivered
" himself into my hands ".
The fact is that the plaintiff sues for damages,
inviting the
court to take all the facts into consideration, and, if he wins,
he
may ascribe his victory to all or any of the ingredients.
As, again, Windeyer J. has said, the amount of the
verdict is the product
of a mixture of inextricable considerations
(117 C.L.R., 118, 150). Sedgwick
(Measure of Damages, 3rd Ed.
1858) said " Where either of these elements
" [sc.
malice, oppression etc.] mingle in the controversy, the law, instead
of
" adhering to the system, or even the language of
compensation adopts a
" wholly different rule. It permits the
jury to give what it terms punitive,
" vindictive or
exemplary damages, in other words, it blends together the
"
interests of society and of the aggrieved individual and gives
damages not
" only to recompense the sufferer but to punish
the offender. This rule . . .
" seems settled in England and
in the general jurisprudence of [U.S.A.]".
Lord Atkin said
just this in Ley v. Hamilton (1935) 153 L.T. 384 in
a
passage (cited in other opinions, vide that of Viscount
Dilhorne) which, if
any in modern times, is clear and
authoritative. Dixon C.J. endorsed the
principle—see
citation below—as did the key passage in Halsbury's Laws
of
England (Vol. 11, page 223) cited by the Lord Chancellor. To
segregate
the punitive element is to split the indivisible and to
invite the stock criticism
(vide Street 1.c.) that civil courts
have no business to impose fines.
53
I regret that this rather lenthy analysis has been
necessary before I deal
with the present appeal: but in my view it
is fundamental to a consideration
of the summing-up.
The full account of the trial which has been given in
previous opinions
enables me to summarise. The critical stages
were these (page references
are to the appeal record Appendix Part
II):
The jury were told that there were two aspects of
damages, compensa-
tory and punitive. They were asked first to
consider compensatory damages.
They had read to them a passage
from the judgment of Pearson L.J. in
McCarey v. Associated
Newspapers [19651 2 Q.B. 86) in which it was said
in clear
terms that if there had been any high-handed, oppressive or
con-
tumelious behaviour which increased the mental pain and
suffering caused
by the defamation, this might be taken into
account (pages 91-3).
The judge then pointed out that Captain Broome had
suffered no
actual pecuniary loss: that he had not been shunned
by his comrades:
that the trial had been conducted without
exacerbation: but that what was
said in the book might be very
wounding to his feelings (pages 93-98).
The learned judge then dealt with punitive damages by
reference to
the second category in Rookes v. Barnard,
cited the words of Widgery J.
in Manson v. Associated
Newspapers [1965] I W.L.R. 1038 and said: " You
"
are being asked here not only to give Captain Broome compensatory
"
damages, that is, a reasonable sum for the injury to his reputation
and
" the exacerbation of his feelings; but in addition
to fine Cassells and Mr.
" Irving for having done
what they have done . . . You are really in the
54
" position of a judge or a magistrate trying a
criminal case; you have got,
" so to speak, to fine
the defendant" (page 101) (emphasis supplied) and he
gives
examples of reasonable and unreasonable fines.
Later he gives lengthy directions relevant to the second
category (was
there a calculation of profit etc.) and on the next
day returns finally to
damages (page 137).
(4) The final direction as to damages consisted of the
statement of ques-
tions for the jury and explanation of them. The
first question (No. 3)
is " What compensatory damages do you
award the plaintiff? " The sum-
ming up continues—"
Then having decided what are the proper additional
" (sic)
compensatory damages you will go on and consider the fourth ques-
"
tion, namely, ' Has the plaintiff proved that he is entitled to
exemplary
" ' damages? ' " and directs the jury to
consider this in relation separately
to each defendant. Lastly
there is this passage—" Then you see the last
"
question under this heading, ' What additional sum should be
awarded
"' him by way of exemplary damages? ' Would you be
good enough to
" underline the word ' additional', because I
want to know, and learned
" counsel want to know, if you do
decide to award punitive damages, how
" much more do you
award over and above the compensatory damage."
The result of
this was an award of £15,000 compensatory damages and
£25,000
as an additional sum for exemplary damages.
My Lords, I regret to have reached the conclusion that
this verdict ought
not to stand. Apart from the reasons given by
my noble and learned friend,
Lord Diplock, with which I
respectfully agree, I think for myself that the
separation of the
element of compensatory damages from that of punitive
damages,
brought about through the interpretation placed on the
second
category and the application of it, involving, as it did,
the need to fix com-
pensation (plus aggravation) first, see if
the case came within the category,
and then fix a separate
punitive sum, is fundamentally wrong. It has
brought about
precisely the result which was to be feared from breaking
down the
indivisible whole, namely, of fixing a compensation figure swollen
by
aggravation and then adding a fine on top—a fine in this case
exceeding
greatly the aggravated compensation. If the matter
rested on the figures
alone, I should find the greatest difficulty
in supporting, even with all the
inhibitions properly felt against
substituting a judicial opinion for that
of the jury, so large a
punitive element, particularly in a case such as this
where the
libel was considered to be (I say nothing as to my own opinion)
of
a most wounding character, so that the " compensatory "
damages must
necessarily include a large " punitive "
element. But when it is seen how
the jury were directed to
calculate, and the direction was certainly clear
and certainly and
visibly acted on, their figures become impossible to accept.
In argument the issue was put in the form whether the
judge's direction
complied with Lord Devlin's " if but only
if " advice (1.c. page 1232). I
think that it certainly did
not. The dangers of separating the compartments
(compensatory
damages and punitive damages) in so watertight a way
are so great,
as I have tried to explain: indeed, in my opinion, so wrong
in
principle that I doubt very much whether any instructions, in a
difficult
case, could avoid them. That is why I think that any
interpretation placed
on Rookes v. Barnard which
requires this separation, or authorises it, and
the introduction
of the profit gateway which almost compels it, ought to be
discarded.
But however that may be, the directions given fall far short
of
what was necessary—I say this without any criticism of the
learned
judge who was merely following Rookes v. Barnard
as previously applied
by the Court of Appeal. When all is said
the warning to the jury against
the danger was contained in the
word " additional" in question 4. I think
this was not
enough, for they had been told that they could inflict a fine.
For these reasons, without committing myself to any
particular figure
if we were called upon to substitute one, I
agree with the conclusion of my
noble and learned friend, Lord
Diplock, as to the necessity for a new
trial on the question of
punitive damages.
55
I must add one other point. This is the question of a
joint award of
damages against two wrongdoers, publisher and
author. There is no doubt
that the existing law is ill adapted to
deal fairly with a case where " guilt"
of joint
defendants is unequal. But it is clear enough what the law is: it
is
state by the Lord Chancellor in terms which I need not repeat.
In the
Court of Appeal the Master of the Rolls said that the jury
were free to
decide whether to fix punitive damages at the highest
figure, the lowest
figure, or at a figure between the two and I
fear that the jury may well
have proceeded on this somewhat
libertarian view of the law. One may
escape from the conclusion
that this vitiates the verdict by assuming that
the two defendants
were equally " guilty ", but I am not prepared to make
this
assumption or to ascribe a view to that effect to the jury. I think
that
the jury must have been, at best, confused, at worst misled
by the direction,
and I cannot accept that acquiescence by counsel
validates the defect.
I must now deal as briefly as I can with other aspects
of the judgment
in Rookes v. Barnard. I deal first
with its effect on the law of damages for
defamation.
I am far from convinced that Lord Devlin ever intended
to alter the
law as to damages for defamation or intended to limit
punitive damages in
defamation actions to cases where a "
profit motive " is shown. (I use this
compendiously for the
formula in his second category.) I summarise the
reasons:
Defamation is normally thought of as par excellence the
tort when
punitive damages may be claimed. It was so presented
in argument by
counsel for the Respondent (arguing against
punitive damages) and he was
an acknowledged expert in the
subject. Every practitioner and every judge
would take this
view.
Lord Devlin's passage where he sets up his second
category does
not refer to any defamation case, but to three
other miscellaneous cases which
he illuminatingly bases in the
profit motive. He makes merely an incidental
reference to libel
where he says the profit motive is always a factor, not,
it
should be observed, a condition.
It is difficult to believe that Lord Devlin was
intending to limit the
scope of punitive damages in defamation
actions so as to exclude highly
malicious or irresponsible
libels. At least if he intended to do so at a
time when the
media of communication are more powerful than they have
ever been
and certainly not motivated only by a desire to make money,
and
since elsewhere the judgment shows him conscious of the need to
sanction
the irresponsible, malicious or oppressive use of power,
I would have expected
some reasons to be given.
If we cannot interpret his judgment as leaving libel
outside category 2
as a separate case, well known to everyone, in
which punitive damages may
be given in familiar circumstances and
as stating category 2 as a qualification
for other cases, hitherto
not explained or rationalised, then since the disposal
of
defamation actions was there dealt with briefly, I would say
incidentally,
and obiter, I consider that in this case
where we are directly concerned with
such an action we should
disagree with it.
This would leave the law as I understand it to be in
Australia and Canada,
countries where, in this respect, there is
not known to me to be any such
difference in " social
conditions " as to call for the recognition, by this
House,
judicially, of a divergent law. If changes are to be made,
they should be
made, after proper investigation, by Parliament.
I would add, with reference to this point, that the
present case well
illustrates the irrationality of the supposed
new principle. For if the profit
motive is essential for the
recovery of punitive damages, one would expect
the damages given
to bear some relation to the supposed profit and/or to
the means
of the offender: the idea (if there is any logic in the
requirement)
must be to take the profit out of wrongdoing. Yet
there was not, and in
many such cases cannot be, any real
consideration of the likely profit or of
56
the offender's means. There was no evidence what these
might be and the
jury were given no guidance. How, then, could the
punitive £25,000 be
other than an arbitrary guess? If one
replies that it represents the jury's
view of the defendants'
conduct (as it probably did) what purpose is served
by introducing
the profit motive gateway?
Finally, as to other torts as to which, before Rookes
v. Barnard, punitive
damages could be given but on
which some restriction is evidently intended
to be placed by the
judgment. That this House, as a matter of law, or of
legal policy,
was entitled to restrict the scope of punitive damages I have,
with
all respect to the Court of Appeal, no doubt and, whatever my
own
reservations as to the wisdom of the policy, I should feel
myself obliged
to accept a new statement of principle if it were
clear, consistent and
workable and intelligibly related to the
main stream of authority. That it
was not entirely clear, appears
well enough from the opinions in the present
case: and I cannot
entirely blame the Court of Appeal for attempting to
escape from
it, just as one may sympathise with a customer when he finds his
new
suit almost at once requiring alteration, or patching, for putting it
aside
and reaching for his old tweedes. There is not perhaps much
difficulty
about category 1: it is well based on the cases and on
a principle stated in
1703—" if public officers will
infringe men's rights, they ought to pay greater
" damages
than other men to deter and hinder others from the like offences
"
Ashby v. White 2 Ld. Ray. 956 per Holt C.J.
Excessive and insolent use of
power is certainly something against
which citizens require as much protection
today: a wide
interpretation of " government" which I understand
your
Lordships to endorse would correspond with Holt C.J.'s "
public officers "
and would partly correspond with modern
needs. There would remain,
even on the most liberal
interpretation, a number of difficulties and incon-
sistencies as
pointed out by Taylor J. in Uren's case.
I have more difficulty with the commonplace types of
trespass or assault
accompanied by insult or contumely, which,
even more than " first category "
cases touch the life
of ordinary men and occupy the county courts. Although
Lord Devlin
studiously refrains from overruling earlier cases (other than
Loudon
v. Ryder) which undoubtedly proceeded on, or contained, a
punitive
element, his opinion has been understood as laying down
that in future such
cases cannot, unless the " profit motive
" is present, be treated as cases for
punitive damages but
only as cases for aggravated damages. The phrase
used has been "
aggravated damages can do the work of punitive damages ".
I understand that a majority of your Lordships, for
possibly differing
reasons, are satisfied with this so it will
remain the law in this country. But,
if only in fairness to the
Court of Appeal with whose approach to this
matter I agree, I must
state very briefly why I feel some difficulty.
I am far from clear how juries, or judges, are intended
to act in the future.
Are they to take it that the law has been
changed, so that (absent a profit
motive) only " compensatory
" damages can be given, plus an element for
"
aggravation " if that is proved? I fear that there will be
difficulty in seeing
how far earlier cases, or Commonwealth cases,
are now authority and that
there will be much argument whether a
particular case was one of
" aggravated" or "
punitive" damages or of both. Alternatively, if
"aggravated
damages " are " to do the work of punitive damages "
and if it
is to be supposed that juries, or judges, will continue
giving damages much
as before, then nothing has been gained by
changing the label and we are
indulging in make belief and
encouraging fictional pleading. The whole point
is well brought
out by Pearson L.J. in McCarey v. Associated
Newspapers
(supra.)—" if the compensatory principle
is accepted, punitive damages must
" not be allowed to creep
back into the assessment in some other guise "
(1.c. page
105). I must confess to sympathy with the Court of
Appeal's
preference for the older system and with the objections
to the new stated by
Taylor J. in Uren's case, the weight
of which clearly impressed the Privy
Council. Their validity has
been endorsed by cases post-Rookes v. Barnard
in
Australia, Canada and New Zealand. I share their doubt whether
we
have yet arrived at a viable substitute.
57
But I note with satisfaction and agreement the opinion
expressed by the
noble and learned lord on the Woolsack that the
relevant passage in Lord
Devlin's judgment, which he cites, should
be read sensibly as a whole together
with the authorities on which
it is based. This may provide a sound basis for
re-development of
the law.
My Lords, on all other points not expressly dealt with
in this opinion I
wish to express my concurrence with that of the
Lord Chancellor. I regret
to differ from him in thinking that the
appeal should be allowed 'on the
grounds I have stated.
Lord Diplock
my lords,
The trial of this action proceeded, correctly, on the
basis that as respects
the measure of the damages which the jury
might award, the judge was bound
to direct them in accordance with
the law as laid down by this House in
Lord Devlin's speech in
Rookes v. Barnard ([1964] AC 1129).
I agree with all your Lordships that there was material
upon which the
jury were entitled to find that the conduct of each
of the defendants brought
the case within Lord Devlin's second
category of cases in which exemplary
or, as I would have preferred
to call them, punitive damages may be awarded.
The jury did so
find by special verdicts. That part of the judge's summing-
up in
which he directed them as to the matters for their consideration
in
arriving at their findings on this issue as respects each of
the defendants
cannot be faulted.
It was, however, also incumbent upon the judge to
instruct the jury as to
the measure of the damages which they
might award if they reached the
conclusion that the case as
against each of the defendants was one in which
they were not
precluded from awarding punitive damages. On this aspect
of the
case there were two principles of law which should have been
stated
clearly to the jury. Neither was self-evident.
The first was that, even if the jury found that the case
came within Lord
Devlin's second category and that the defendant's
conduct merited punish-
ment, it did not necessarily follow that
they must award as damages to the
plaintiff a greater sum than was
sufficient to compensate him for all the
harm and humiliation that
he had suffered as a consequence of the defendants'
tortious acts.
They should take into account as part of the punishment
inflicted
on the defendants any sum (in the result £15,000) which they
were
minded to award to the plaintiff as compensatory damages ;
and only if they
thought that sum to be inadequate in itself to
constitute sufficient punishment
were they to award such
additional sum as would, when added to the
compensatory damages,
amount to an appropriate penalty for the defendants'
improper
conduct.
The second was that if the jury thought that the conduct
of one of the
joint defendants deserved to be penalised by a
lesser sum than the conduct of
the other, the most that the jury
were entitled to award against the defendants
was that lesser sum,
if it were to exceed the amount which they were minded
to award as
compensatory damages.
I have the misfortune to differ from the majority of
your Lordships in
that I find it impossible to discover in the
languauge of the summing-up any
clear statement of either of these
principles. At best I think that when the
jury retired they must
have been confused as to how the punitive damages,
if any, were to
be assessed. At worst I think that they may well have thought
that
they were to arrive at a sum which they thought was an
appropriate
penalty for the defendants' conduct and to add it to
any sum awarded as
compensatory damages.
My Lords, I do not think that on this vital question of
the assessment of
exemplary damages the jury were adequately
directed. I am fortified in this
view by my conviction that, if
properly directed, no reasonable jury could
possibly have reached
the conclusion that the appropriate penalty to inflict
on the less
culpable of the defendants was £40,000 for publishing a libel
of
58
which the victim was in their view adequately
recompensed at £15,000 for
all the harm and humiliation that
it had caused to him.
A penalty of £40,000 is, I believe, very much
larger than any of your
Lordships would have thought it
appropriate to inflict upon the defendants.
I doubt if any of your
Lordships would have hesitated to interfere with it if
it had been
awarded by a judge sitting alone. He would have been
vulnerable
because he would have given his reasons. Shibboleths
apart, there survive
to-day two valid reasons why an appellate
court should be more reluctant to
disturb an assessment of damages
by a jury than an assessment by a judge.
The first is applicable
to all kinds of actions. It is that a judge articulates
his
findings on the evidence and his reasoning, whereas a jury state
the
result of their findings and their reasoning but otherwise are
dumb. In
considering whether an award of damages by a jury is
excessive an appellate
court cannot do other than assume that the
jury made every finding of fact
and drew every inference that was
open to it on the evidence as favourably
as possible to the
plaintiff and as adversely as possible to the defendant.
In the
instant case, however, this handicap to an appellate's court ability
to
do justice is palliated by the facts: that there was no
conflict of evidence for
them to resolve—for the defendants
called none, and that the jury were given
a partial gift of
speech. By their special verdict this House has been told
that
they considered that the plaintiff would be fully compensated by
£15,000.
The second reason for reluctance to interfere with
a jury's award of damages
applies particularly to actions for
defamation. It is that, unless the parties
otherwise agree, the
consequence of setting aside the jury's verdict must
be a new
trial before another jury. This involves the parties, through
no
fault of their own, in greatly increased costs which,
particularly in libel
actions, are, to the discredit of our legel
system, out of all proportion even
to the large compensatory
damages awarded in the instant case. For my part,
I should not be
deflected from setting aside a jury's verdict as unreasonable by
the
fear, sometimes expressed by appellate judges, that another
unreasonable
jury might make a similar unreasonable award of
damages on the new trial.
So far as I know this has never happened
yet. But the consideration of the
costs involved is one which it
would be unrealistic and unjust to ignore.
In the instant case,
however, the parties agreed that this House should
assess the
damages in the event of the jury's verdict being set aside. No
more
costs would be incurred if the appeal were allowed than if it
were
dismissed—though the incidence of them on the parties
might be different.
It may be said, and not implausibly, that there is
nothing in the training
or experience of a judge which makes him
fitter than a jury to determine the
pecuniary compensation which a
plaintiff should receive for a reputation
that is damaged or
feelings that are hurt. And there may be safety in
numbers. But it
runs counter to the basis of our criminal law, in which the
jury
determine guilt and the judge determines the appropriate punishment,
to
treat the jury as better qualified than a judge to assess the
pecuniary penalty
which a defendant ought to pay for conduct which
merits punishment. On
an appeal from the jury's award of £40,000
which I know to be compensatory
to the extent of £15,000
only, I should approach it in the same way as I
should approach a
fine of £40,000 imposed by a judge in a criminal prosecu-
tion.
Even if I thought the jury had been given an adequate direction by
the
judge, I would have set the award aside and substituted an
award of
£20,000.
I have thought it right to express my own minority
opinion as to what
the result of this appeal should be. It is that
with which the parties are
primarily concerned—and it is
they who are paying for it. It is, however,
inherent in our legal
system that owing to the manner in which the Court
of Appeal dealt
with the instant case, the unsuccessful party is also paying
for
the ruling of this House upon two questions of law of much more
general
importance. The first is as to the effect of the decision
in Rookes v. Barnard
on the assessment of damages
for defamation and whether that decision
ought to be followed. The
second is as to the propriety of the manner in
which the Court of
Appeal, as an intermediate appellate court, dealt with
the
decision of this House in Rookes v. Barnard. To these
two topics I
now turn.
59
In Rookes v. Barnard the plaintiff's claim
was for damages for the tort of
intimidation. At the trial the
Judge had summed up to the jury in terms
which left it open to
them to award exemplary damages. There was a cross-
appeal against
the amount of damages, upon which this House heard separate
and
lengthy argument. It was necessary as a matter of decision of the
cross-
appeal for this House to determine whether the facts in
Rookes v. Barnard
brought it within a category of
cases in which exemplary damages were
recoverable at common law.
This House determined that they did not and
ordered a new trial.
There were two different processes of reasoning by which
it would have
been possible to reach this conclusion of law. One,
which was not adopted
by this House, was to hold that the
particular tort of intimidation was one
in which the common law
did not permit of exemplary damages. The other,
which was adopted
by this House, was to state the categories of cases in
which alone
exemplary damages might be awarded at common law and to
determine
whether the facts in Rookes v. Barnard brought it
within one of
these categories-
Lord Devlin's speech upon the cross-appeal in Rookes
v. Barnard, in
which all the five members who heard the
appeal explicitly concurred, was
a deliberate attempt by this
House to do two things:
As a matter of legal exposition, to formulate the
rationale of the
assessment of damages for torts in which damages
are " at large ".
As a matter of legal policy, to restrict the categories of cases in
which
damages can be awarded against a defendant in order to
punish him,
to those in which this method of inflicting punishment
still
serves some rational social purpose today.
Lord Devlin's speech, however, does not follow the
simple arrangement
of exposition followed by choice of policy. He
starts by formulating three
heads of damages. The purpose of two
of them is to compensate the
plaintiff; that of the third is to
punish the defendant. This formulation is
followed by an analysis
of the previous authorities. These authorities lead
to the policy
decision to accept two categories of cases in which exemplary
damages
may be recovered and, proleptically, to reject other categories
of
cases in which it had previously been thought that damages
might be awarded
in order to punish the defendant. He then reverts
to exposition of some
considerations which follow from the purpose
served by exemplary damages
and which should be borne in mind when
awards of exemplary damages are
made. Finally he reverts to an
analysis of the previous authorities for the
purpose of completing
the policy decision by over-ruling those which were
authority for
the award of exemplary damages where the injury to the
plaintiff
had been aggravated by malice or by the manner of doing the
injury,
that is, the insolence or arrogance by which it was accompanied
It
is, however, convenient for the purposes of the instant appeal to
deal
with exposition and with policy separately.
The three heads under which damages are recoverable for
those torts for
which damages are " at large " are
classified under three heads.
Compensation for the harm caused to the plaintiff by
the wrongful
physical act of the defendant in respect of which
the action is
brought. In addition to any pecuniary loss
specifically proved the
assessment Of this compensation may
itself involve putting a money
value upon physical hurt, as in
assault, upon curtailment of liberty,
as in false imprisonment or
malicious prosecution, upon injury to
reputation, as in
defamation, false imprisonment and malicious prose-
cution, upon
inconvenience or disturbance of the even tenor of life,
as in
many torts, including intimidation.
Additional compensation for the injured feelings of the
plaintiff
where his sense of injury resulting from the wrongful
physical act
is justifiably heightened by the manner in which or
motive for which
the defendant did it. This Lord Devlin calls "
aggravated damages ".
60
(3) Punishment of the defendant for his anti-social
behaviour to the
plaintiff. This Lord Devlin calls "
exemplary damages ". I should
have preferred the alternative
expression " punitive damages " to
emphasise the fact
that their object is not to compensate the plaintiff
but to punish
the defendant and to deter him, and perhaps others,
from
committing similar torts. To avoid confusion I have,
however,
accepted the lead of the Lord Chancellor in adhering to
Lord
Devlin's adjective " exemplary ".
It may seem remarkable that there had not previously
been any judicial
analysis, even as elementary as this, of the
constituent elements of the
compound "damages at large".
But it has to be remembered that at
common law the assessment of
damages was the exclusive function of a
jury, and, despite growing
exceptions from the mid-nineteenth century
onwards, nearly all
actions for torts in which damages were at large were
tried by
jury until after 1933. The assessment of damages was an arcanum
of
the jury box into which judges hesitated to peer; and it does
not
appear to have been their practice to give any direction to
the jury as to
how they should arrive at the amount of damages
they should award, beyond
some general exhortation to do their
best in a matter which was peculiarly
within their sphere.
What is disclosed by an examination of previous
judgments since the
eighteenth century, given upon applications
for a new trial on the grounds
that the award of a jury was too
large or too small, is a confusion of
language and consequently of
thought as to what were the constituent
elements in an award of
damages at large. In particular there is a complete
failure to
distinguish between aggravated and exemplary damages in cases
where
the malice of the defendant or the manner in which he did the
wrongful
act had both increased the injury to the plaintiff's
feelings and aroused
the indignation of the jury themselves.
In addition to the cases specifically referred to by
Lord Devlin in Rookes
v. Barnard, your Lordships
have been referred to many others in the course
of the argument in
the instant appeal. They serve but to confirm the
confused state
of the law upon this subject before 1964.
The tort of defamation, to which Lord Devlin made only a
passing
reference in Rookes v. Barnard, has special
characteristics which may make
it difficult to allocate
compensatory damages between Head (1) and Head (2).
The harm
caused to the plaintiff by the publication of a libel upon him
often
lies more in his own feelings, what he thinks other people
are thinking
of him, than in any actual change made manifest in
their attitude towards
him. A solatium for injured feelings,
however innocent the publication by
the defendant may have been,
forms a large element in the damages under
Head (1) itself even in
cases in which there are no grounds for " aggravated
"
damages " under Head (2). Again the harm done by the
publication, for
which damages are recoverable under Head (1) does
not come to an end
when the publication is made. As Lord Atkin
said in Ley v. Hamilton ((1935)
153 L.T. 384 at
386): " It is impossible to track the scandal, to know what
"
quarters the poison may reach ". So long as its withdrawal is
not com-
municated to all those whom it has reached it may
continue to spread.
I venture to think that this is the rationale
of the undoubted rule that
persistence by the defendant in a plea
of justification or a repetition of the
original libel by him at
the trial can increase the damages By doing so he
prolongs the
period in which the damage from the original publication
continues
to spread and by giving to it further publicity at the trial, as
in
Ley v. Hamilton, extends the quarters that the
poison reaches. The defend-
ant's conduct between the date of
publication and the conclusion of the trial
may thus increase the
damages under Head (1). In this sense it may be
said to "
aggravate " the damages recoverable as, conversely, the
publication
of an apology may " mitigate " them. But
this is not " aggravated damages "
in the sense that
that expression was used by Lord Devlin in Head (2).
On the other
hand the defendant's conduct after the publication may also
afford
cogent evidence of his malice in the original publication of the
libel
and thus evidence upon which "aggravated damages"
may be awarded
61
under Head (2) in addition to damages under Head (t).
But although
considerations such as these may blur the edges of
the boundary between
compensatory damages under Head (1) and
compensatory damages under
Head (2) in the case of defamation,
they do not affect the clear distinction
between the concept of
compensatory damages and the concept of exemplary
damages under
Head (3).
My lords, the major clarification of legal reasoning to
be found in the
expository part of Lord Devlin's speech in Rookes
v. Barnard was the
recognition, first, that the award
of a single sum of money as damages
for tort, while it must always
peform the function of giving to the plaintiff
what he deserves to
receive to compensate him fully for the harm done to
him by the
defendant, may in appropriate cases also perform the quite
different
function of fining the defendant what he deserves to pay by way
of
punishment; and secondly, that even in those appropriate cases, it
is
only if what the defendant deserves to pay as punishment
exceeds what the
plaintiff deserves to receive as compensation,
that the plaintiff can be also
awarded the amount of the excess.
This is a windfall which he receives
because the case happens to
be one in which exemplary damages may be
awarded.
It is not necessary to dwell upon the three
considerations which Lord
Devlin referred to as arising from the
nature and function of punitive
damages. The first consideration
qualifies the categories of cases in which
exemplary damages may
be awarded. The plaintiff must himself have
been the victim of the
conduct of the defendant which merits punishment:
he can only
profit from the windfall if the wind was blowing his way.
The
second consideration is relevant to the attitude of an appellate
court
to a jury's assessment of exemplary damages. I have already
taken it into
account in forming my conclusion that the jury's
award of £40,000 ought to
be set aside. The third conclusion
relates to the relevance of the defendant's
means to any
assessment of punitive damages in excess of the amount
required to
compensate the plaintiff.
These three considerations are followed by the crucial
exposition of the
way in which a jury should be directed in a case
in which it is open to them
to award punitive damages. I have
already dealt with this in the first
criticism which I have made
of the summing up at the trial in the instant
case.
It should perhaps be pointed out that Lord Devlin did
not suggest that
in a case which clearly came within a category
which justified an award of
exemplary damages the jury should be
invited to make separate awards in
respect of the compensatory and
the punitive element, although no doubt
a judge sitting alone
should do so. It was only in cases where it might
be doubtful
whether exemplary damages were permissible that he suggested
that
special verdicts splitting the total award might serve a useful
purpose
in avoiding the necessity of a new trial in the event of
appeal.
It has not been contended that those parts of Lord
Devlin's speech which
expounded the rationale of the award and the
assessment of exemplary
damages in those cases in which they could
be recovered did not serve
a useful purpose which lay well within
the functions of this House in its
judicial capacity. It brought
some order out of chaos, some light and
reason into what was
previously a dark and emotive branch of the common
law. What has
been criticised is the decision of legal policy to restrict
the
categories of cases in which exemplary damages may be awarded.
If the
common law stood still while mankind moved on, your Lordships
might
still be awarding bot and wer to litigants whose
kinsmen thought
the feud to be outmoded—though you could not
have done so to the
plaintiff in the instant appeal, because
defamation would never have become
a cause of action. The common
law would not have survived in any of
those countries which have
adopted it, if it did not reflect the changing
norms of the
particular society of which it is the basic legal system. It
has
survived because the common law subsumes a power in judges to
adapt
its rules to the changing needs of contemporary society—to
discard those
which have outlived their usefulness, to develop new
rules to meet new62
situations. As the supreme
appellate tribunal of England, your Lordships
have the duty, when
occasion offers, to supervise the exercise of this power
by
English courts. Other supreme appellate tribunals exercise a
similar
function in other countries which have inherited the
English common law
at various times in the past. Despite the
unifying effect of that inheritance
upon the concept of man's
legal duty to his neighbour, it does not follow
that the
development of the social norms in each of the inheritor
countries
has been identical or will become so. I do not think
that your Lordships
should be deflected from your function of
developing the common law of
England and discarding judge made
rules which have outlived their purpose
and are contrary to
contemporary concepts of penal justice in England,
by the
consideration that other courts in other countries do not yet
regard
an identical development as appropriate to the particular
society in which
they perform a corresponding function. The fact
that the courts of Australia,
of New Zealand and of several of the
common law Provinces of Canada
have failed to adopt the same
policy decision on exemplary damages as
this House did for England
in Rookes v. Barnard affords a cogent reason
for
re-examining it; but not for rejecting it if, as I think to be the
case,
re-examination confirms that the decision was a step in the
right direction
—though it may not have gone as far as could
be justified.
63
The second category was of cases
where an act known to be tortious
was committed in the belief that
the material advantages to be gained by
doing so would outweigh
any compensatory damages which the defendant
would be likely to
have to pay to the plaintiff. This would seem to be
analogous to
the civil law concept of enrichessement indue subject to
a
similar limitation that the act resulting in enrichment must be
tortiuous.
The cases cited by Lord Devlin do not include
underground trespass to
minerals, which provide the classic
examples in the nineteenth century of
this category of tort. There
is high authority both in this House (Living-
stone v.
Rawyards Coal Co. [1880] 5 App. Cas. 25) and in the Privy
Council
(Bulli Coal Mining Co. v. Osborne [1899] AC 351) that in the case of wilful
clandestine trespass to
minerals the damages may be assessed at the market
value of the
minerals without deduction for the cost of working—an
award
which would exceed both the loss to the plaintiff and the
profit to the
defendant from his wrongful act. The excess is
punishment.
64
that there were circumstances in
which a power to award exemplary damages
still served a useful
social purpose and the descriptive words must be
understood in the
light of the social purpose which they were designed
to serve.
65
inevitable in a hierarchical
system of courts that there are decisions of
the supreme appellate
tribunal which do not attract the unanimous ap-
proval of all
members of the Judiciary. When I sat in the Court of Appeal
I
sometimes thought the House of Lords was wrong in over-ruling me.
Even
since that time there have been occasions, of which the
instant appeal itself
is one. when, along or in company, I have
dissented from a decision of
the majority of this House. But the
judicial system only works if someone
is allowed to have the last
word and if that last word, once spoken, is loyally
accepted.
The Court of Appeal found
themselves able to disregard the decision of
this House in Rookes
v. Barnard by applying to it the label per incuriam.
That
label is relevant only to the right of an appellate court to decline
to
follow one of its own previous decisions, not to its right to
disregard a
decision of a higher appellate court or to the right
of a Judge of the High
Court to disregard a decision of the Court
of Appeal. Even if the juris-
diction of the Court of Appeal had
been co-ordinated with the jurisdiction
of this House and not
inferior to it the label per incuriam would have been
misused.
The reasons for applying it were said to be: first, that Lord
Devlin
had overlooked two previous decisions of this House in
Hulton v. Jones
([1910] AC 20) and Ley v.
Hamilton (ubi sup); secondly, that the "two
categories
" selected as those in which the power to award exemplary
damages
should be retained had not been previously suggested by
counsel in the
course of their arguments.
Lord Kilbrandon
my lords,
There
are several reasons which induce me to be as brief as I can.
First,
the case in its important general aspects is concerned with
doctrines, and
to some extent with procedures, with which I am not
familiar. Secondly,
66
those general aspects have been examined in great detail
and in an authorita-
tive manner by your Lordships who have
preceded me. Thirdly, since it is
unlikely that any contribution
of mine would be regarded as of value in
clarifying the law of
England, I may at least wind up the consideration of a
disastrous
case with economy, the lack of which, especially in this class
of
litigation, is, as others of your Lordships have observed, a
notoriously
discreditable feature of our jurisprudence. In short,
having had the advantage
of reading the speeches prepared by my
noble and learned friends the Lord
Chancellor, Lord Reid and Lord
Morris of Borth-y-Gest, I agree with them.
It is conceded by the Appellants
that they libelled the Respondent, and
they do not attack as
excessive the sum awarded by the jury as compensation
for the
damage they did to his feelings and his reputation. It is also
con-
ceded that, if there was evidence upon which a properly
directed jury could
find that the Appellants had calculated that
they might make a profit from
publication which might exceed the
compensation payable to the plaintiff,
then, since " one man
should not be allowed to sell another man's reputa-
" tion
for profit", and since it may " be necessary to teach a
wrong-doer
" that tort does not pay ", the jury were
entitled to award punitive damages,
on the authority of Rookes
v. Barnard [1964] AC 1129. The first question,
and
one which from first to last occupied a very great deal of time in
your
Lordships' House, was whether there was such evidence.
67
made, per contra, for
causes of action subsisting against the estates of
deceased
persons. Since punitive damages are punitive or deterrent against
the
author of them, it would have been understable if the statute had
refused
to allow them against a dead man. But, instead, they have
been disallowed
when they are claimed in respect of an injury to a
dead man. This leads
me to suppose that by the phrase "
exemplary damages " Parliament was
here referring to what are
usually called " aggravated " damages; the estate
of a
dead man must pay them in order to indemnify the living, but
the
estate of a dead man, whose feelings post mortem have
become irrelevant,
does not receive them.
In the same sense I would
interprete section 13 (2) of the Reserve and
Auxiliary Forces
(Protection of Civil Interests) Act, 1951, which provides
for the
award, in certain circumstances, of " exemplary damages ".
Section
13 (2) applies, by virtue of section 13 (6), to Scotland,
and since I can hardly
believe that this Act introduced for the
first time, as it were by a side-wind,
the doctrine of punitive
damages into the law of Scotland, I conclude again
that "
exemplary " really means " aggravated ". Aggravated
damages, in
the English sense, are available to pursuers in
defamation cases in Scotland,
subject to this qualification, that
the conduct of counsel (cf. Greenland's Ltd.
v. Wilmshurst
[1913] 3 KB 507) is not accepted as an aggravation unless
that
conduct has been on the express instructions, or with the
privity, of counsel's
client—see James v. Baird
1916 S.C. 510. Finally, Lord Devlin (at page 1225)
doubted
whether section 17 (3) of the Copyright Act, 1956, authorised
an
award of exemplary damages: in my opinion it did not.
68
Finally,
I do not consider it necessary for me to say anything on the issue
of
the relations between this House and the Court of Appeal, except that
I
entirely agree with what has fallen from the Lord Chancellor on
this topic.
I would, accordingly, dismiss this appeal.
(322814) Dd. 197075 150 2/72 St.S.