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 (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Yeo v Times Newspapers Ltd [2015] EWHC 2132 (QB) (22 July 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2015/2132.html Cite as: [2015] 4 Costs LR 687, [2015] EWHC 2132 (QB) |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
TIM YEO |
Claimant |
|
- and - |
||
TIMES NEWSPAPERS LIMITED |
Defendant |
____________________
Gavin Millar QC and Ben Silverstone (instructed by Reynolds Porter Chamberlain) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 16 July 2015
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Warby:
i) The extent to which Article 9 of the Bill of Rights 1689 applies to the issues in the case, and its potential implications for the trial. Mr Yeo's team has raised the question of whether the court should at this stage lay down "ground rules" on that issue.
ii) An application by TNL for an order striking out, or summary judgment on, the claim in respect of the 23 June article.
iii) An application by TNL to strike out passages in the claimant's witness statement which it maintains are irrelevant or otherwise inadmissible or illegitimate, and related parts of the claimant's statements of case.
iv) An application by Mr Yeo for the court's approval of an amendment to his costs budget.
The Bill of Rights
Events since August 2014
"13.— Evidence concerning proceedings in Parliament.
(1) Where the conduct of a person in or in relation to proceedings in Parliament is in issue in defamation proceedings, he may waive for the purposes of those proceedings, so far as concerns him, the protection of any enactment or rule of law which prevents proceedings in Parliament being impeached or questioned in any court or place out of Parliament.
(2) Where a person waives that protection—
(a) any such enactment or rule of law shall not apply to prevent evidence being given, questions being asked or statements, submissions, comments or findings being made about his conduct, and
(b) none of those things shall be regarded as infringing the privilege of either House of Parliament."
"Our preliminary view is that much of the potentially problematic evidence can be omitted with little or no effect on the claim or defence. Even without Article 9, good case management would demand that the essential issues in this case are tried by reference to the transcript/recordings of the meeting, the dealings between the parties before and after the meeting and your client's post-Meeting/pre-publication conduct.
Conversely, it seems to us that the evidence which delves into past parliamentary proceedings – such as our client's alleged previous conduct – is simply unnecessary."
i) Reference to business interests developed by Mr Yeo or other parliamentarians cannot engage Article 9 as these are not proceedings in Parliament. Such activity does not "form part of, nor is it incidental to, the core or essential business of Parliament, which consists of collective deliberation and decision making": R v Chaytor [2011] 1 AC 684 [62] (Lord Phillips).
ii) It is not a breach of Article 9 for a journalist to hold an opinion about parliamentary conduct, or to express such an opinion in print, online, in a broadcast, or otherwise. As Lord Browne-Wilkinson said in Pepper v Hart [1993] AC 593, 638: "Plainly article 9 cannot have effect so as to stifle the freedom of all to comment on what is said in Parliament, even though such comment may influence Members in what they say."
iii) Nor can it infringe Article 9 for a journalist to give evidence in defence of a libel claim, explaining why such an opinion was held. That is the purpose of the evidence here. Its function is, essentially, to rebut the case pleaded by the claimant in his Reply, by explaining the justification for investigating Mr Yeo, and using subterfuge in the process. That is not a process which "questions" any parliamentary proceeding.
iv) If that is wrong, then Parliamentary Privilege is in conflict with the requirements of a fair trial and/or it represents an interference with freedom of expression that requires, and may not have, a proportionate justification. It is established that Parliamentary Privilege may so limit what can lawfully be investigated in a libel action that proceedings must be brought to a halt by a stay, to avoid an unfair trial: Prebble v Television New Zealand [1995] 1 AC 321 (PC). That, however, may not suffice to avoid a breach of Article 10 of the Convention. The threat or prospect of proceedings which may or may not be stayed, with all the costs involved, may represent an unjustifiable interference with free speech. Furthermore, a stay leaves the publisher unable to vindicate its position. Thus, Parliamentary Privilege represents an immunity which may be in conflict with the Convention.
The claim in respect of the article of 23 June 2013
"Three lords and a select committee chairman are being investigated by the parliamentary authorities after The Sunday Times revealed that they were selling themselves as parliamentary advocates for paying clients."
"The article did not name Mr Yeo but his case is that he was identified as the "select committee chairman" referred to in para [8]. In support of that contention Mr Yeo says that there were readers of this article, he says a "large but unquantifiable number", who had already seen the articles of a fortnight earlier and who would therefore know that it was he who was being referred to."
"Although I was not named, the article stated that 'Three Lords and a select committee chairman were being investigated…' It would have been obvious to anyone who read this, from the extensive publicity about the original allegations that I was the "select committee chairman" to which this article referred".
Mr Yeo's witness statement and other parts of his statements of case
i) Para 89. Objection is taken to the inclusion of a complaint of unreasonable delay by TNL in providing a copy of the video recording of the Nobu lunch to the Standards Commissioner. Mr Millar points out that TNL's case is that it acted with reasonable speed. He submits that TNL has a case which could not be advanced without infringing Parliamentary Privilege, as it would involve a critical examination (in both senses) of the conduct of Mr Yeo in instigating the investigation and of the dealings between TNL and the Commissioner. He cannot go into further detail to support this argument without infringing privilege, he submits. The argument is that it is unfair to allow Mr Yeo to make this complaint, if TNL would be prevented or hampered by privilege from defending itself. I accept that submission. As Lord Woolf MR said in Hamilton v Al Fayed [1999] 1 WLR 1569, 1586G, the courts cannot and must not pass judgment on any parliamentary proceedings. See also Stanley Burnton J in Office of Government Commerce v Information Commissioner [2010] QB 98 at [58]. In deciding to strike out this passage, and the corresponding pleading, I bear in mind proportionality. We are concerned here with complaints made in aggravation of damages, in a case where, if the claim succeeds, there will be substantial damages awarded.
ii) Para 90 makes a similar complaint, of deliberate withholding of evidence from the Commissioner. That must be struck out for the same reasons.
iii) TNL objects to a number of passages in a section of the witness statement that deals with whether Mr Yeo "coached" a witness to a Parliamentary Committee, one John Smith. The fundamental nature of the objection taken is that Mr Yeo does not complain of any defamatory allegation of that nature, there is accordingly no pleaded defence in that regard, and this section is irrelevant prejudice. I have concluded as follows:
a) Para 77: deletion of the first and last sentences is conceded. The other material is of little assistance, perhaps, and to some extent repetitive, but not so prejudicial that it is necessary to strike it out.b) Para 78: the objection that has not been conceded is to Mr Yeo's statement that if "the coaching allegation" had been put to him he would have denied it, but it was not mentioned until too late. Since he does not complain of such an allegation this is irrelevant. He complains elsewhere in his statement of being given late notice of the allegations of which he does complain.c) Para 80: the first three sentences deal with the merits of a complaint about "the coaching allegation" and the way it was put to TNL in correspondence. Mr Browne submits that the facts related here are true and unobjectionable. They are however irrelevant and should be removed.iv) The part of paragraph 10.2 of the Amended Particulars of Claim that corresponds to Mr Yeo's paragraph 89 must be struck out, for the reasons given above.
Revision of Mr Yeo's costs budget
"Each party shall revise its budget in respect of future costs upwards or downwards, if significant developments in the litigation warrant such revisions. … The court may approve, vary or disapprove the revisions, having regard to any significant developments which have occurred since the date when the previous budget was approved or agreed."
i) Can PD3E 7.6 be employed to obtain approval for costs that, by the time of the revised budget, are incurred costs? Paragraph 7.6 itself refers to "future costs", and PD3E 7.4 provides that the court "may not approve costs incurred before the budget".
ii) Has there been a "significant development in the litigation"? TNL submit that there has been none, and that the approach to Parliamentary Privilege adopted on Mr Yeo's side has been both tactical and misconceived.
iii) To the extent that there are costs, incurred or future, which it would be reasonable for the claimant to recover what mechanism is available, other than PD3E 7.6? The answer is of course relevant to issue (i) above. Mr Millar identifies two alternative routes:
a) CPR 3.18(b) (a Court may depart from a budget where "there is good reason to do so") orb) PD3E 7.9 ("If interim applications are made which, reasonably, were not included in a budget, then the costs of such interim applications shall be treated as additional to the approved budgets.")
"If work identified as a contingency is included in a budget but not considered probable by the court no budget for it should be approved. If the improbable occurs, in the form of an unexpected interim application, the costs will be added to the budget pursuant to PD3E 7.9, unless the matter involves a "significant development" within para 7.6[1] in which case, if time permits, a revised budget should be prepared and agreed or approved."
Note 1 I have corrected a typographical error in the original. [Back]