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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 >> Dyson v MGN Ltd [2022] EWHC 2469 (QB) (26 July 2022) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2022/2469.html Cite as: [2022] EWHC 2469 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
MEDIA & COMMUNICATIONS LIST
Strand London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
SIR JAMES DYSON |
Claimant |
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- and – |
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MGN LIMITED |
Defendant |
____________________
BEN GALLOP (instructed by MGN Ltd's solicitor) appeared on behalf of the Defendant.
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE NICKLIN:
"… the Claimant was a cheat and a person who sought to advance his own interests through dishonest means, who had screwed his country by voting for the UK to leave the European Union in the 2016 Referendum whilst subsequently moving Dyson's global head office to Singapore."
(a) the natural and ordinary meaning of the online print version of the Article;
(b) whether the meaning or meanings found is or are defamatory at common law;
(c) whether the article was a statement of fact or was, or included, an expression of opinion; and
(d) insofar as the Article contained an expression of an opinion, whether, in general or specific terms, the basis of the opinion was indicated.
(a) The natural and ordinary meaning of the article is:
"The claimant was a confusing choice of role model for schoolkids by the chair of the Commons Education Committee, being someone who talked the talk and then screwed his country, having championed Vote Leave due to the economic opportunities it would bring to British industry before moving his global head office to Singapore."
(b) This meaning is not defamatory at common law;
(c) The Article was an expression of opinion, and the underlined words in the meaning advanced by the defendant are expressions of opinion; and
(d) The basis of the opinion was sufficiently indicated by the words, "...who championed Vote Leave due to the economic opportunities it would bring to British industry before moving his global head office to Singapore."
THE LEGAL PRINCIPLES
"Put simply, the more clearly a statement indicates that it is based on some extraneous material, the more likely it is to strike the reader as an expression of opinion."
"At common law, a meaning is defamatory and therefore actionable if it satisfies two requirements. The first, known as 'the consensus requirement', is that the meaning must be one that 'tends to lower the claimant in the estimation of right-thinking people generally.' The Judge has to determine 'whether the behaviour or views that the offending statement attributes to a claimant are contrary to common, shared values of our society': Monroe -v- Hopkins [2017] 4 WLR 68 [51]. The second requirement is known as the 'threshold of seriousness'. To be defamatory, the imputation must be one that would tend to have a 'substantially adverse effect' on the way that people would treat the claimant: Thornton -v- Telegraph Media Group Ltd [2011] 1 WLR 1985 [98] (Tugendhat J)."
SUBMISSIONS
(a) The overarching theme in the Article, clearly flagged by the headlines and [1] (and revisited in the final paragraph [14]), is that young people of today who want to do the right thing are being set deplorable examples to follow by the people who run the country such that the message they must take away is that "cheats do prosper", honesty and decency are not the best policy, and "looking after number one is". The body of the Article explains why this is the case by reference to a series of specific examples.
(b) The third example on the list after a reference to (i) criminal firms who have stolen £4.3bn from taxpayers by abusing the furlough schemes ([2]), and (ii) Prince Andrew ([4]).
(c) The Article refers to the claim by the chair of the Commons Education Select Committee that if school children want to succeed, they need to follow the example of the Claimant ([5]) but then explains why he is, in truth, a deplorable role model.
(d) The Article states that the Claimant championed Vote Leave due to the economic opportunities it would bring to British industry for moving his global head office to Singapore ([5]). It goes on: "In other words, 'Kids, talk the talk but then screw your country and if anyone complains, tell them to suck it up'."
(e) The Article then moves on to cite the next, and most prominent, example in the form of the Prime Minister who is presented in terms as a liar and a cheat.
(f) In the final paragraph of the Article, the reader is told: "… [o]ur revised advice to kids should be that cheats do prosper and honesty's not the best policy. Looking after No.1 is."
"The claims included in the Articles only make sense to readers if he is seen as an incident of the phenomenon that the journalist was criticising, i.e. of young people being set a terrible moral example by people in positions of power and authority."
"...championed Vote Leave due to the economic opportunities it would bring to British industry before moving his global head office to Singapore."
(a) The words complained of are the headline and four paragraphs within a weekly column written by a Daily Mirror columnist Brian Reade whose byline reads, "Frank and fearless ... and funny".
(b) In that column, Mr Reade offers his own 'take' on political stories current in the news. It is clearly signposted as a vehicle for his opinions and the reader would know immediately that this was what they were reading, as opposed to a factual report.
(c) That is firmly reinforced by the language of the piece including the headline. This is a satirical and sarcastic ribbing of those in powerful positions. The clear focus is on the Prime Minister.
(d) The piece has a clear structure: six short introductory paragraphs which then move to a "polemic" about the Prime Minister's handling of the "partygate" scandal;
(e) Those introductory paragraphs employ a repeated device: a clear set up and then a punchline. This is done in respect of the Chancellor ([2]), Prince Andrew ([3]-[4]), and the Claimant ([5]-[6]). Each punchline reflects, he submits, a conclusion particular to each person. In respect of the Chancellor and the Claimant, these are parodies of moral "lessons" or proverbs. They are light-hearted in tone and develop a theme which is then referred back to in the weightier part of the Article.
(f) After this opening section, the Article than pivots to the clear focus: the Prime Minister. Here, specific criticism is developed in more detail and clearly relates to the "partygate" scandal and moves, for the first time, to the issue of honesty. It is the Prime Minister (and only the Prime Minister) who is characterised as a liar and a cheat ([6]). This is accompanied by a change of tone and more detailed commentary on the Prime Minister's response to the scandal. This is the subject matter of the remainder of the Article.
(g) In context, the headline and the final paragraph clearly reflect the punchline or "lesson" concerning the Prime Minister (the columnist calling back to the structure adopted in the introductory paragraphs). This is, as Mr Reade puts it "the revised advice to kids" that "cheats do prosper and honesty is not the best policy", drawing together the threads of the criticism being made of Mr Johnson. This flows, he submits, naturally in the reader's mind from what has been said about the Prime Minister's conduct and pertains directly to him.
Decision
"(a) the Claimant had publicly supported the benefits of Brexit to British industry, yet following Brexit he had moved the global head office of his business to Singapore.
(b) by so doing, the Claimant was a hypocrite who had screwed the country and who set a poor moral example to young people."
(a) the natural and ordinary meaning of that set out in [21] above;
(b) meaning (a) is a non-defamatory allegation of fact and meaning (b) is an expression of opinion;
(c) overall, the meaning is defamatory at common law because of the defamatory nature of the opinion; and
(d) the article indicated the basis of the opinion.
APPENDIX
"'Our government is making young people believe that cheats do prosper'
Brian Reade says young people are being set a terrible example by the current government
[1] It must be very confusing at the moment to be a young person who wants to do the right thing.
[2] We tell them that crime never pays. Yet we've just seen the Chancellor write off £4.3billion stolen from taxpayers by criminals who abused the furlough schemes. Lesson: don't be exploited on the minimum wage by amoral firms kids, set up your own one.
[3] We tell those who want to become a senior public servant, such as an MP, that they must swear an oath to the Queen vowing 'true allegiance' to herself and all her 'heirs and successors, according to law'.
[4] Yet one of them, her second son, is Prince Andrew. The very sight of whom, I'm guessing, makes most young people want to swear in a different way.
[5] Then there's Robert Halfon, chair of the Commons Education Select Committee, claiming that if schoolkids want to succeed they need to follow the example of James Dyson. That's the vacuum cleaner tycoon who championed Vote Leave due to the economic opportunities it would bring British industry before moving his global head office to Singapore.
[6] In other words, kids, talk the talk, then screw your country, and if anyone complains, tell them to suck it up. But what must really puzzle them now is why they need to be truthful. We teach them that honesty is the best policy and cheats never prosper, yet the man elected to the top job in the country is acknowledged by even his closest colleagues to be a liar and a cheat.
[7] Treating the truth like a house guest with fleas hasn't done the Prime Minister's prospects any harm, has it? What must young people make of that?
[8] What must they make of Britain spending the last couple of months in political paralysis over Downing Street's refusal to admit it was Party Central when their parents will soon struggle to heat the house and Russia threatens war? All because Boris Johnson lacked the moral decency to be honest when Partygate surfaced.
[9] There would have been no need for a drawn-out Sue Gray report or the drip-drip of leaks about illegal drinks in No10 if the people who made the rules we were all ordered to follow had owned up to breaking them and faced the consequences.
[10] And as Johnson looks to ride out whatever damning conclusions are in that report and carry on as though nothing happened, what does that tell young people on the cusp of adult life?
[11] Especially one who has a Tory MP, who, rather than call Johnson out for what he is, cheered him on as he brazened out his shame in the Commons.
[12] Or a Tory MP who waits to see how the report's conclusions play with their constituents before calculating the best course for themselves.
[13] Then there's the country's top cop, whose skin has been repeatedly saved by the PM, refusing to investigate criminal allegations against him until a report about them is set to be released, then stepping in to effectively censor it.
[14] Our revised advice to kids should be that cheats do prosper and honesty's not the best policy. Looking after No.1 is. But the next time you give a young person a lecture about decency don't be surprised if, like the people running the country, they laugh in your face."
Transcribed by Opus 2 International Limited Official Court Reporters and Audio Transcribers 5 New Street Square, London, EC4A 3BF Tel: 020 7831 5627 Fax: 020 7831 7737 [email protected] |