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England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> A v B & Ors [2005] EWHC 1651 (QB) (13 July 2005) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2005/1651.html Cite as: [2005] EMLR 851, [2005] EWHC 1651 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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A |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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1. B 2. C 3. D |
Defendants |
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David Sherborne (instructed by Mishcon de Reya) for the first Defendant
Andrew Caldecott QC and Catrin Evans (instructed by Reynolds Porter Chamberlain) for the second and third Defendants
Hearing dates: 15th and 16th June 2005
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Eady :
The Claimant's application
What does the Claimant need to establish?
"I am very concerned that no-one should think that on a speculative basis you can go to the courts and call upon the publisher of printed material or television or radio material to come forward and tell the court exactly what it is proposed to do, and invite the court to act as censor. That is not the function of the court."
"… There will be cases where it is necessary for a court to depart from this general approach and a lesser degree of likelihood will suffice as a prerequisite. Circumstances where this may be so include those mentioned above: where the potential adverse consequences of disclosure are particularly grave, or where a short-lived injunction is needed to enable the court to hear and give proper consideration to an application for interim relief pending the trial or any relevant appeal".
Mr Spearman submits that, if he has to, the Claimant can demonstrate in the light of his evidence that "the potential adverse consequences of disclosure are particularly grave". I shall return to this factor in due course.
The relevance of the Claimant's own revelations of personal information
i) In the context of personal information, which is treated differently in this respect from confidential information of a commercial nature, the fact that something has been published does not necessarily mean that further revelation cannot itself infringe the claimant's right to protect his privacy. That is especially the case perhaps where it is the defendant who has himself put the information into the public domain in the first place and would otherwise be enabling himself to profit from his own wrong: see e.g. Att.-Gen. v Guardian Newspapers (No. 2) [1990] 1 AC 109.
ii) Where it is the claimant who has chosen to put personal information into the public domain, even though it may be such as to attract prima facie the protection of the law, it does not necessarily follow that it is open season for the media to publish any other information pertaining to the same subject-matter: see e.g. Douglas v Hello! [2005] EWCA Civ 595. Individuals are permitted some degree of control over how much they choose to reveal.
Those are important matters which I need to bear in mind.
The precise terms of the order sought against C and D
"2. Until Trial or further Order in the meantime the Second and Third Defendants and each of them must not publish any details relating to the Claimant's health, medical history, past or present medical condition or treatments, sexual life, finances, drug use, drug rehabilitation, alleged involvement in telephone bugging or computer hacking, childhood, relationship with and marriage to the First Defendant, relationship with the child of his marriage to the First Defendant, and the divorce proceedings between the First Defendant and the claims made in those proceedings (save details which have already been published in the news media) and must not cause or authorise any other person, firm or company to do any of those acts".
Mr Caldecott's first submission was that this was hopelessly wide.
The applicable principles of law
"… it is important to note this is a highly unusual case. On any view of the matter, this information related closely to the fact, which admittedly could be published, that Miss Campbell was receiving treatment for drug addiction. Thus when considering whether Miss Campbell had a reasonable expectation of privacy in respect of information relating to her attendance at Narcotics Anonymous meetings the relevant question can be framed along the following lines: Miss Campbell having put her addiction and treatment into the public domain, did the further information relating to her attendance at Narcotics Anonymous meetings retain its character of private information sufficiently to engage the protection afforded by article 8?
I doubt whether it did. Treatment by attendance at Narcotics Anonymous meetings is a form of therapy for drug addiction which is well known, widely used and much respected. Disclosure that Miss Campbell had opted for this form of treatment was not a disclosure of any more significance than saying that a person who had fractured a limb has his limb in plaster or that a person suffering from cancer is undergoing a course of chemotherapy. Given the extent of the information, otherwise of a highly private character, which admittedly could properly be disclosed, the additional information was of such an unremarkable and [in]consequential nature that to divide the one from the other would be to apply altogether too fine a toothcomb. Human rights are concerned with substance, not with such fine distinctions".
"A person may attract or seek publicity about some aspects of his or her life without creating any public interest in the publication of personal information about other matters. I think that the history about Ms Campbell's relationship with the media does have some relevance to this case, … but that would not without more justify publication of confidential personal information.
… It is only in connection with the degree of latitude which must be allowed to the press in the way it chooses to present its story that I think it is relevant to consider Ms Campbell's relationship with the media. She and they have for many years both fed upon each other. She has given them stories to sell their papers and they have given her publicity to promote her career. That does not deprive Ms Campbell of the right to privacy in respect of areas of her life which she has not chosen to make public. But I think it means that when a newspaper publishes what is in substance a legitimate story, she cannot insist upon too great a nicety of judgment in the circumstantial detail with which the story is presented".
The particular categories of information the Claimant wishes to protect
a) "Medical information": He described a particular disorder from which he was suffering and the medication he was prescribed. The Defendants, however, indicated that they did not wish to publish any of this material.
b) "Childhood": Reference was made to particular childhood experiences but, again, the Defendants confirmed that there was no intention to publish any information in this category. They wished, however, to reserve the right to include within the article general information relating to his childhood period which was already in the public domain.
c) "My use of drugs during our marriage and rehabilitation process": As I have already made clear, this was the central area of dispute between the parties for the purposes of the present application. The Claimant acknowledges certain lapses into drug use during the period of his marriage but contends, despite the coverage to which I have already referred, that "a lot of information including the effect of drugs upon me, my conduct when using drugs and details of my rehabilitation and use of N.A. meetings is not publicly known". This is the context in which Mr Caldecott urges me not to apply "too fine a toothcomb".
d) "Sexual life": A referred to intimate aspects of his relationship with his wife, but Mr Caldecott indicated that his clients have no wish to cover this area at all.
e) "Financial": The Claimant was concerned to protect information relating to his income, trust funds, general financial standing and the financial aspects of the pending divorce proceedings. Again, however, save in the most general terms, the Defendants made it clear they had no wish to go into such matters.
f) "Matrimonial proceedings": Save in certain very limited respects, previously identified in correspondence, and to which I shall return briefly in due course, there was no wish on the Defendants' part to include material within this category.
"I also claim to be entitled to protect any other confidential and private information that my wife is aware of arising out of my first meeting with her … , our subsequent relationship, marriage and divorce".
This was unsatisfactory from the Defendants' point of view, since it would be impossible for them to govern their conduct by reference to an order couched in such general and vague terms. The Defendants would need to know, apart from anything else, what exactly B was "aware of". That would be impractical from their point of view.
i) The Claimant's "frequent disappearances": The Claimant spoke extensively in earlier articles about his drug taking, where it took place, and consequent absences from his family. He also addressed the impact of these disappearances on them. Information was supplied about attendances for treatment, the identity of those treating him, and how he responded to it. Mr Caldecott made the following submissions:
a) Drug taking in a social context could not sensibly be regarded as being personal or confidential information or as falling within the notion of marital confidence.
b) The Claimant had already chosen to speak publicly about the impact of his drug related problems on his marriage.
c) Information the Defendants wished to cover in the course of the article belonged to the same period of time about which the Claimant had apparently chosen to speak freely.
d) The Claimant's position was to be contrasted to that adopted by Princess Caroline of Monaco (the subject of a recent case in the European Court of Human Rights: Von Hannover v Germany (2005) 40 EHRR 1) and by Mr and Mrs Michael Douglas, who had striven to keep the subject-matter of the relevant articles private. He could not thus expect reasonably to maintain the same degree of protection which the law would otherwise afford.
ii) The details of a particular "drug binge" in a specific location: For the Defendants it was argued that this was not, as such, about the Claimant's addiction but about a "specific and rather disgraceful episode of drug-taking". It was merely a particular instance of his behaviour about which the Claimant had spoken in general terms.
iii) "Details of paranoid fantasies" in particular locations: The Defendants did wish to publish the fact that the Claimant had paranoid fantasies, but without any description of the fantasies themselves. Since the Claimant has publicly admitted large scale drug abuse, it would hardly come as a surprise to readers that he would be likely to suffer from such fantasies. It was accepted in argument, without any formal concession, that descriptions of his particular fantasies might be too intrusive.
iv) The "first relapse during the marriage" on a specific trip: Reference was made to the Evening Standard article, in the light of which it was submitted that the Claimant could no longer have a reasonable expectation of privacy in relation to any similar "chapter of drug-taking in the same historic period".
v) The allegation that the Claimant "freebased and disappeared for several days at a time in different cities using [a pseudonym]" and visited a crack den: The Defendants resist any restriction on a similar basis; namely, the information was confined to the same historic period and, furthermore, "crack" is not so qualitatively different from cocaine as to be still covered by a reasonable expectation of privacy.
vi) "Details concerning our client's divorce proceedings": The Defendants had no wish to go into these matters.
vii) A promise made to his wife that he would "stay clean" during his marriage: The Defendants submit that this cannot be the subject of protection in the light of the fact that he had himself referred to private arrangements and promises made to his wife in connection with drug taking in the course of the earlier article. This could be categorised simply as "more of the same".
viii) Certain problems the Claimant had with his trustees and to the use of his wife's funds: The Defendants made clear there was no intention to refer to the trustees in the article; moreover, it was submitted that there could be no objection to B referring in the article to the Claimant having used some of her money. He himself had already chosen in one of the earlier articles to go into some detail as to his personal wealth.
ix) An incident concerning the child of the marriage: The Defendants have no intention of referring to this.
x) The subject of ancillary relief in the current matrimonial proceedings: The Defendants will not be referring to the merits of the dispute but wish to reserve the right to identify in general terms the nature of the relief sought.
xi) An allegation relating to the seizure of the Claimant's computer system: This is said to be in the public domain, and the Defendants accordingly reserve their right to refer to it.
xii) The subject of the Claimant's current sobriety and the fact that he visits the child of the marriage regularly: This is said to be anodyne and complimentary and thus a matter which, in all the circumstances, could not be said to be covered by any reasonable expectation of keeping the subject-matter private.
Conclusion
i) that the second and third Defendants were proposing to publish anything in respect of which he had a reasonable and continuing expectation of privacy;
ii) that an injunction would be likely to be effective in protecting any of his rights (whether at common law or under the European Convention) or in preventing significant harm;
iii) that any of the criteria identified in Cream Holdings could be fulfilled.