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England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Chancery Division) Decisions >> Various Claimants v MGN Ltd [2021] EWHC 771 (Ch) (30 March 2021) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Ch/2021/771.html Cite as: [2021] EWHC 771 (Ch), [2021] 4 WLR 55, [2021] WLR(D) 202 |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS OF ENGLAND AND WALES
BUSINESS LIST (ChD)
Rolls Building, 7 Rolls Buildings Fetter Lane London EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
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Various Claimants |
Claimants |
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- and - |
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MGN Limited |
Defendant |
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Richard Munden and Ben Gallop (instructed by RPC LLP) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 25th February 2021
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Mann :
Introduction
Background matters
Generic issues
Pleading invoices and contribution requests in relation to associates outside the period of association
(a) The potentially fact-sensitive nature of some of the argument.
(b) When more facts emerged, the defendant (properly, in my view) abandoned its resistance in some cases.
(c) There is the potential for (b) to be repeated if relevant facts are made clearer.
(d) Even the evidence in these applications, extensive though it was, and even when coupled with the skeleton arguments, did not always make the relevant facts sufficiently clear.
(e) There was sometimes a dispute as to what the pleaded period of association actually was.
(f) I have been left with the distinct impression that the claimant has not given enough thought as to how much of the pleaded material really needs to appear in the pleading. I have got the impression that an insufficiently discriminating judgment has been brought to bear on the point. For example, if the claimant is seeking to make the point that pre-association invoices/requests are needed to establish a prior interest, one does not need 6, 8 or 10 items to establish that. 1, 2 or 3 ought to be enough. If the claimant is seeking to establish a pattern of unlawful conduct, then to a large degree that is unnecessary because it has been found in my judgment in Gulati; and if it is necessary to establish the pattern any more widely than that then that is a generic point which is not dealt with by pleading specific invoices/requests in an individual case.
(g) There is scope for the pleadings to get too long and too complicated in all these cases.
(h) It is arguable that a lot of the material is on the cusp of evidence which does not have to be pleaded.
(i) The pleadings that I have seen do not justify the pleading of the out of period invoices/requests on the basis suggested by Mr Sherborne (as one of Mr Munden's submissions reflected), or at least not in relation to the pre-period material. Taking Ms Turner's case as an example, in paragraph 20(k) she pleads that the defendant commissioned the inquires of the PIs "to obtain details about the claimant and her private and family life", and she then relies on (inter alia) the disputed material. So far as pre-period invoices/requests are concerned that cannot be the case. This may or may not be a manifestation of a "kitchen sink" approach to the introduction of this material; it is possible, but I do not have to decide whether it is the case or not.
(j) The sample invoices/requests argued before me were very limited number of the overall number across all the cases. I do not propose to labour for many hours working my way through each of the other invoices (dozens) listed by the parties in their skeleton arguments and evidence to make the sampling more representative. That would not be a sensible use of judicial time, particularly if (as would be plausible bearing in mind what happened at the hearing), a further justification advanced by the claimant led to the defendant conceding the point.
"Description: Gloria Hunniford. The People (Pics News Excl & MBU) Ordered By: Deena Bowers
Level 1: Authorised by: Paul Bennett.
Level 3: Authorised by Len Gould."
The public domain declaration
"2. In Individual particulars of claim, served from the date of sealing of this order, Claimants shall:
a. specify that to the best of their knowledge and belief that they had not directly or indirectly introduced any of the private information complained of in respect of any pleaded article into the public domain, whether by themselves or their family or agents; and
b. distinguish between articles which are relied on merely as marking occasions of unlawful information gathering and articles whose publication is itself the subject of a claim."
Pleading Associate PI payment records which refer to birth certificates, car details and the like
The costs of pleading additional associates
"30. Mr Butler reminded us that the general rule is that those who obtain permission to amend are ordered to pay the other parties' costs of and occasioned by the amendment. He referred us to paragraph 17.3.10 in the notes to Volume 1 of Civil Procedure, which records that such orders are 'often' made; and to paragraph 8.5 of The Costs Practice Direction, which records that such orders are 'commonly' made. Both references reflect judicial practice with which anyone with experience of contentious litigation will be familiar."
The costs of pleading additional PI payment records, palm pilot entries and contact lists
The costs of pleading additional articles
The costs of the "asterisk exercise"
Individual articles
(a) Abigail Crouch - a one sentence article (no 58), presumably captioning a photograph - "Peter Crouch and his girlfriend Abbey Clancy looking petrified on the rollercoaster ride at Alton Towers". Of itself this probably does not cross the privacy threshhold, and in any event is too trivial. I would disallow this amendment as an article said to infringe privacy. I make no ruling on whether it is capable of marking an underlying invasion of privacy.
(b) Glenn Hoddle
Article 47 - this article is theoretically capable of containing private information - that Mr Hoddle wishes to stay managing Chelsea. It seems to me highly likely, but perhaps not quite inevitable, that this is attributable to normal football tittle tattle. However, it is not quite immediately obvious enough that this is hopeless enough to justify refusal of permission to amend and I will allow it. It does, however, justify some sort of scrutiny of the other articles pleaded by the same professional source because it raises a strong suspicion that a "kitchen sink" judgment has been brought to bear on articles.
Articles 48, 50-53. I agree with the defendant that these articles obviously do not contain or disclose Mr Hoddle's private information, as opposed to the information of the club. I would disallow these articles.
Article 60 - details of plans relating to Michael Owen and team selection. There is an argument that his thought processes are private for these purposes, though damages might not be thought to be particularly significant. I would not disallow this.
Article 64 - said to be details of an altercation between Mr Hoddle and Sir Alex Ferguson. I agree with Mr Munden that it does not say that. It implies some sort of disagreement. The article does not match the privacy matter alleged. I would disallow this.
(c) Ryan Giggs
Articles - various. The articles complained of are "asterisked" articles, that is to say they are treated as marking the occasion of unlawful information gathering rather than as disclosing private information. The defendant seeks to say that the argument is not plausible. I do not regard the challenge as obviously right and the better place to deal with these more elaborate points is the trial rather than an amendment application.
(d) Stanley Collymore
Article 65 - details of an altercation. Although not the most serious of infringements, this disclosure is capable of being more than trivial (just). I would allow the amendment.
Articles 72 and 74 - these are sustainable. I do not accept that the defendant does not know the case it has to meet in relation to Article 74.
Article 76 - the fact and nature of discussions is capable of being private and being non-trivial. I allow this amendment.
Article 77. The disclosed transfer fee is said to be private. I do not accept that so far as Mr Collymore is concerned; if it was private, the privacy was the clubs' as opposed to Mr Collymore's. There is no other information which one could realistically call private in this article. I disallow this amendment.
Article 81 - the information about Mr Collymore's dispute is capable of being private. If the agent says what it is reported he says then that undercuts most of the claim, but that will be a matter for trial. The information about the mother's health (which is very limited) and Mr Collymore's compassionate leave is doubtful as Mr Collymore's private material, but it can stay, just. I doubt if it will attract any significant damages. This is an instance of a context in which claimants really ought to think very carefully about before pleading the article itself.
Article 83 - this is allowed, but only just. My remarks about the need to plead carefully apply.
Article 84 - this is not quite trivial enough to be disallowed, particularly since it might be said to form part of an overall pattern of intrusion, which could be significant.
(e) Kerry Katona
The first complaint in the skeleton argument is that the privacy claim is inadequately particularised in relation to the new articles. The appropriate course here is to raise a request for further information. I do not consider the pleading to be so inadequate as to justify refusal of permission to amend.
The second complaint relates to publications in the Irish edition of the defendant's newspaper. Mr Sherborne indicated that he would not be pursuing those amendments, at least for the time being.
Mr Sherborne's skeleton argument anticipated other complaints, but they were not advanced in Mr Munden's skeleton argument so I do not deal with them.
Other points