BAILII is celebrating 24 years of free online access to the law! Would you consider making a contribution?
No donation is too small. If every visitor before 31 December gives just £1, it will have a significant impact on BAILII's ability to continue providing free access to the law.
Thank you very much for your support!
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | ||
England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Sarah Lynette Webb v Lewis Silkin Llp [2016] EWHC 1225 (Ch) (04 May 2016) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2016/1225.html Cite as: [2016] EWHC 1225 (Ch) |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
CHANCERY DIVISION
B e f o r e :
____________________
SARAH LYNETTE WEBB |
Claimant |
|
- and – |
||
LEWIS SILKIN LLP |
Defendant |
____________________
(a trading name of Opus 2 International Limited)
Official Court Reporters and Audio Transcribers
25 Southampton Buildings, London WC2A 1AL
Tel: 020 7831 5627 Fax: 020 7831 7737
[email protected]
MISS L. SKINNER (instructed by Bond Dickinson LLP) appeared on behalf of the Defendant.
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
(Transcript prepared from poor quality recording)
MR. JUSTICE NUGEE:
"There is no general exception to open justice where privacy or confidentiality is in issue. Applications will only be heard in private if and to the extent that the court is satisfied that by nothing short of the exclusion of the public can justice be done."
"... the witness statement has been put in evidence at a hearing held in public."
LATER
"This paragraph only applies where a party wishes to accept a Part 36 offer or other offer of settlement in relation to a claim for –
(1) libel;
(2) slander;
(3) malicious falsehood;
(4) misuse of private or confidential information."
"A party may apply for permission to make a statement in open court before or after he accepts the Part 36 offer in accordance with rule 36.9(1) or other offer to settle the claim."
"The statement that the applicant wishes to make must be submitted for the approval of the court and must accompany the notice of application."
"The rule of law, before this new rule was passed [that being a reference to a change in the Rules in 1933], was that there could not be a plea of payment into court in a libel action with a denial of liability for the obvious reason that what a plaintiff who had been, or who said that he had been, libelled or slandered wanted, just as much as money compensation, was the opportunity for stating in open court, and proving if necessary, that he was not the villain he was alleged to be by the defendant and it was felt, when these new rules were made, that it was right, if the privilege was granted to the defendant of paying money into court with a denial of liability and the money was sufficient to satisfy the plaintiff's claim, so that the plaintiff went on at his peril, that the plaintiff should have that which he would have had before - namely the opportunity to make a statement in open court, with the approval of the judge in Chambers, so as to clear his character from the alleged slander, and that was the reason for the provision in sub-r.4."
"It seems to me that an opportunity to make a statement in open court was thus seen more than 50 years ago as something which was an incident, or part of the available procedure, in a defamation action which the plaintiff was at least entitled to expect to be available to him, provided that the terms of the statement were approved by the judge and there was nothing in the case which made it unfair to another party to the statement to be made."
"The judge was right, in my view, to regard the settlement of proceedings as a public good which the court should encourage and facilitate if, having regard to the interests of all the parties, it is right and just so to do. Although a party has no right to make a statement in open court upon which he can insist, if the circumstances are such that the judge cannot in his discretion approve that course, it seems to me that parties who have made a bona fide settlement of a defamation action and ask leave to make a statement in open court may expect to be allowed to do so unless some sufficient reason appears on the material before the judge why leave should be refused to them."
"If there is no sufficient reason to refuse it, a plaintiff who has reached a settlement with a defendant should be allowed to make an approved statement."
"... often a valuable endpoint to litigation brought to achieve vindication since it provides a means for more publicity to be given to a settlement and, therefore, to a claimant's vindication than might otherwise occur. Such statements often include an explanation of why proceedings were brought, why what was said was particularly hurtful or damaging, and the effect that the publication complained of, and of events associated with it, has had on a claimant."
"The court is unlikely to intervene in the absence of any real or substantial unfairness to the objecting or other third party and 'nit-picks' are to be discouraged. This relatively high threshold for intervention is correctly calibrated in my view, for two reasons. First, because as the judge pointed out, a party making a statement in open court is exercising their right to freedom of expression and the court should not be too ready to intervene in those circumstances, not least because a defendant is free to say what it wants about the settlement, without interference from a claimant. Secondly, the value of the procedure might be undermined if disputes preceding settlement were permitted to leach too readily into the settlement mechanism designed to bring the proceedings to an end, thereby giving rise to further, collateral disputes."
"I quite accept that a statement in open court (whether unilateral or joint) must be fair and proportionate. It should not misrepresent a party's case, or the nature of any settlement that is reached. The interests of third parties should also be borne in mind having regard to the fact that a statement in open court is made with the benefit of absolute privilege, and so can be freely reported. Beyond that however, I think it would be unwise to be overly prescriptive. What is fair and proportionate for litigants to say in a statement in open court must depend on the facts."
"Much of the utility enabling an action to be disposed of by a payment into court could be lost, if the same issues which would be decided if the action litigated had to be resolved on a summons for leave to make a statement in open court."
"(1) A judge should be slow to refuse a plaintiff leave to make an appropriate statement in open court, especially where the matter complained of as being defamatory has received wide publicity; in the absence of any formal right of reply, such a statement may be the plaintiff's only opportunity to vindicate his reputation.
"(2) One of the factors which may persuade the judge to refuse leave is the smallness of the sum paid into court, when compared to the seriousness of the libel.
"(3) In any event, the judge should not give leave to the plaintiff to make a statement in open court to which the defendant can take legitimate exception. In such an event it would be difficult to refuse an application by the defendant, under the rule, for leave to make a counter-statement in open court, which could give rise to a most unsatisfactory situation.
"(4) The seriousness of the libel, the nature of the defence, the amount of the payment in, and the fact that the payment in of itself implies no admission to the merits of the plaintiff's claim are all matters to be taken into consideration by the judge who is asked to approve the form of the statement. This list is not intended to be exhaustive: in any particular case there may well be other relevant matters."
"In my judgment Mr. Warby was correct not to rely on that part of the judgment which would require the court to attempt to resolve disputed questions as to the truth of the publication. In a case such as this that would be an impossible task without embarking on a full scale trial of the action."
"On the other hand, the court can and should, in my view, take into account the pleaded cases of the parties and, whilst not attempting to resolve any conflict, should endeavour to ensure that the rival contentions are referred to in the statement. Thus whilst, on the one hand, the plaintiff should be entitled to say that the allegations are entirely false, on the other hand, if there is a fully particularised defence of justification, the statement should record that the defendants have always maintained that the imputations complained of could be justified."
"I am unable to find anything in this draft that is inconsistent with the way she has pleaded or expressed her complaint from the outset."
"I see no reason why the claimant should not also be allowed to publicise her understanding of the settlement, provided she does so in a fair and proportionate way."
"... the smallness of the sum paid into court, when compared to the seriousness of the libel."
Other than cases like that, it does appear from the defamation cases that a claimant who accepts a payment into court in settlement of the action has a right to expect that a fair and reasonable statement, not prejudicial to third parties, is one that they will be allowed to make. It seems to me that, the procedure having been extended to privacy cases, the same ought to apply and that the general expectation should be that a claimant who settles a claim for breach of confidence should normally be able to expect to make a statement in open court setting out the nature of the case and the effect of the case on them and their perception of the settlement.
"Such statements often include an explanation of why proceedings were brought, why what was said was particularly hurtful or damaging, and the effect that the publication complained of, and of events associated with it, has had on a claimant."
" ... the value of the procedure might be undermined if disputes preceding settlement were permitted to leach too readily into the settlement mechanism designed to bring the proceedings to an end ..."
"In the course of the arbitration, the defendant informed the claimant that it intended to access the email account operated by the claimant whilst a partner with [S] and held on the servers of [S] for the purpose of obtaining emails that were said to be potentially relevant to the arbitration proceedings. The claimant informed the defendant that the email account contained legally privileged and sensitive personal and confidential information and that therefore she did not consent to the emails being accessed by [S] or any third party acting on their behalf."
"Despite this, a number of searches of the email account were made by employees and members of the defendant. The claimant found out about this only when a number of personal emails from the account were disclosed on behalf of [S] in the arbitration."
"The defendant denied that the review of the claimant's emails was improper or unlawful. It also asserted that any breach of the claimant's rights was trivial or de minimis. However, in the course of these proceedings, following disclosure, including an application for specific disclosure, the claimant discovered the hundreds of personal emails were reviewed and read."
"These included personal and private communications with her husband and her legal advisors, contrary to assurances previously given to her by the defendant."
There is then a reference to the assurances in the form of the quotation from Proudman J's judgment. She said that that was unfair because it suggested that the assurances which had been given had been false and the suggestion, therefore, would be that assurances should never have been given.