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] | ||
Scottish Court of Session Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> Scottish Court of Session Decisions >> Macleod v. Lewis Justices of Peace [1892] ScotLR 30_186 (20 December 1892) URL: http://www.bailii.org/scot/cases/ScotCS/1892/30SLR0186.html Cite as: (1892) 20 R 218, [1892] ScotLR 30_186, [1892] SLR 30_186 |
[New search] [Printable PDF version] [Help]
Page: 186↓
[
Reparation
After the closing of the record in an action, the pursuer's agent, at the request of a newspaper reporter, handed him a reprint of the record, which contained new statements of fact added by the pursuer at the adjustment without the denial of said statements put in by the defenders in answer. The pursuer's statements contained charges against the defenders which were libellous if false. Next day the said statements appeared in the newspaper. Thereafter the defenders wrote to the newspaper, if the newspaper published, a letter characterising the allegations made by the pursuer on record as “a tissue of libellous falsehoods.”
An application by the pursuer that the letter should be held to have constituted a contempt of Court, and that the defenders and the newspaper proprietors and publishers should be appointed to appear at the bar for punishment, refused, without expenses to any of the parties.
Opinions that the proprietors and publishers of a newspaper could not plead privilege if they published portions of an open or closed record not referred to in discussions in open Court, and before the trial of the cause.
Malcolm Macleod, general grocer and spirit dealer, Stornoway, raised an action against Donald Smith, Chief Magistrate of Stornoway, and others, Justices of the Peace for the Lewis district of the county of Ross and Cromarty, for reduction of a decree by the defenders sitting in the Licensing Court on 19th April 1892 refusing him renewal of his licence, and for an order upon the defenders requiring them to issue a certificate to him.
The record in the action was adjusted and closed on 28th October. The pursuer, by way of adjustment, added to his condescendence certain articles containing charges against two of the defenders, viz., Dr Roderick Ross, Barvas, Lews, and the Rev. Roderick Macrae, minister of the Free Church, Carloway, Lews, accusing them of getting up bogus petitions against the granting of the licence. The pursuer's agent, instead of communicating these additions in manuscript to the defenders' agents, for convenience reprinted the record with the additions, and so communicated them. Thereafter the defenders answered these additional articles with a general denial. When the record was closed in Court, the reporter of the North British Daily Mail applied to the pursuer's agent for a copy of the record, and received the reprinted record with the pursuer's additions, but without the defenders' denial. In the report of the case in the North British Daily Mail on 29th October, and the Scottish Highlander on 3rd November, the articles added by the pursuer at the closing of the record, and containing the above mentioned grave charges against Dr Ross and Mr Macrae appeared in extenso without the denial put in for these defenders. The pleas-in-law for the parties were also published, one of the defenders' being a general denial of the pursuer's averments.
On 3rd and 10th November respectively a letter appeared in the North British Daily Mail and the Scottish Highlander in practically identical terms. The letter to the Mail was as follows:—
“ Macleod v. lewis justices.
Sir,—Referring to the report of the proceedings in the Court of Session in your paper of the 29th ult., we, the undersigned, beg to state that the allegations made concerning us in the record by pursuer in the above case are a tissue of libellous falsehoods, which have not the slightest foundation in fact; and accordingly we trust that you, and all others who may have given currency to said report, will insert this correction in an early issue of your paper.—We are, &c.,
Roderick Ross, J.P.
Roderick macrae, J.P.
Island of Lewis, November 2.”
The pursuer presented a minute to the Court asking that it be found that the letters constituted a contempt of Court, and that the defenders Dr Ross and the Rev. Mr Macrae, and also Alexander Mackenzie, the managing director and editor of the Scottish Highlander, and Gunn & Cameron, the publishers of the North British Daily Mail, be appointed to appear at the bar for punishment.
The Lord Ordinary (
Stormonth Darling ) reported the case to the Second Division.On 24th November the Court ordered intimation and answers.
In their answers the defenders Dr Ross and the Rev. Mr Macrae averred—“They both felt that the publication of those statements, without the explicit denial of the defenders, was calculated seriously to prejudice them both in their personal character and in their respective capacities as minister of the Gospel and medical practitioner. To communicate with their agents in Edinburgh would have taken several days, and the Scottish Highlander, in which a report appeared, is only published once a week. These respondents therefore felt that it was necessary for them at once to explain that the statements referred to were emphatically denied by them. Their only motive and object was to correct the newspaper reports, and the letters were only sent to those news
Page: 187↓
papers in which, so far as known to them, the partial and, as appeared to those respondents, incorrect and misleading report of the case appeared.” In the answers lodged by Gunn & Cameron and Alexander Mackenzie they averred that having given publication in their newspapers to an incomplete record, they thought it fair to allow the writers of the letters to emphasise their denial of the statements made on the other side, and that they had published the letter in good faith and without intention of offending.
Argued for the pursuer—The motion should be granted. The defenders Dr Ross and Mr Macrae had written this letter describing the pursuer's case as “a tissueof libellous falsehoods,” which meant that it contained falsehoods deliberately concocted for the purpose of injuring the defenders. The North British Daily Mail and the Scottish Highlander had published that letter. It was not permissible for one of the parties to a cause to put his version of the case before the public by means of the public prints while the cause was depending in a court of law. Such conduct in a case like the present was doubly objectionable, because (1) prejudice would be excited in the public mind so as to bias a jury at the trial; and (2) the newspapers were circulated and statements promulgated among a classof impressionableand not very well educated people, with the result that animus would be aroused in the minds of possible witnesses, and prevent them coming forward to give testimony. The defenders Dr Ross and Mr Macrae, in writing the letter and sending it to the newspapers for publication, and the newspapers in publishing such a letter, had committed contempt of Court. Authorities— Henderson v. Laing, December 10, 1824, 3 S. 384; Miller v. Mitchell, March 7, 1835, 13 S. 644, and December 16, 1835, 14 S. 172; Paterson v. Kilgour, July 19, 1865, 3 Macph. 1119. The precedents in the English Courts were more recent, and also applied— Dow v. Eley, December 15, 1868, L.R., 7 Eq. 149; Brodribb v. Brodribb, May 4, 1886, L.R., 11 Prob. Div. 66; Peters v. Bradlaugh, March 19, 1888, 4 Times' Law Rep. 414; ex parte Green and Others, March 24, 1891, 7 Times' Law Rep. 411. The case of Kitcat v. Sharp, December 14, 1882, 48 Law Times, 64, was specially applicable, as there one of the parties to the cause threatened to publish as a comment on his opponent's case precisely the same words as were used here, viz., “a tissue of falsehoods.” [ Lord Young—But had the adversary waited for the trial in that case? Was the party complaining waiting for the trial, or had he sent his accusations to the papers for publication? Mr W. C. Smith—There had been no publication at all. Lord Young—That makes a great difference; you did not wait for the trial. You sent your charges to the papers for publication, and the papers most improperly published them. Mr Smith—Whatever liabilities might be involved in that act it would not excuse the contempt of Court committed by the defenders Dr Ross and Mr Macrae, and by the newspapers in writing and publishing the letter.] The suggestion that the letter was written to point out and correct a defect in the newspaper report was inadmissible, for these reasons—(1) The report contained a general denial in the defenders' plea-in-law, and a general denial was all that was afterwards put on record; (2) the letter does not distinguish between the averments first put in and those added at adjustment; and (3) the letter makes an offensive attack on pursuer. The pursuer therefore appealed to the jurisdiction of the Court to protect him from the contempt of Court.
Argued for the defenders Dr Ross and Mr Macrae—It was now admitted that the pursuer through his agent supplied the incomplete record to the newspapers. The letter was simply a correction of this incomplete statement. If it should be considered more, it was justified in the circumstances of the case. There was no substantial or technical contempt of Court in the letter. There was no evidence that it had prevented witnesses coming forward. The application should be refused— Schlesinger v. Flersheim, 1845, 2 Dowling Lowndes, 737.
Argued for the proprietors and publishers of the North British Daily Mail and the Scottish Highlander—The newspapers had no intention or desire to do anything except what was right in the matter. Having made a publication which reflected very grievously on Dr Ross and Mr Macrae, they thought it also right to give their denial, however warmly expressed.
At advising—
Page: 188↓
Page: 189↓
Page: 190↓
The Court refused the application of the pursuer, and found none of the parties entitled to expenses.
Counsel for Pursuer— Graham Murray, Q.C.— W. C. Smith. Agent— James Purves, S.S.C.
Counsel for Defenders Ross and Macrae— Guthrie. Agents— Henry & Scott, W.S.
Counsel for Gunn & Cameron—Lord Adv. Balfour, Q.C.— W. Campbell. Agents— J. & J. Galletly, S.S.C.
Counsel for Alexander Mackenzie— Strachan. Agents— W. & J. L. Officer, W.S.