Written evidence submitted by the Master
of the Rolls
1. The judiciary of England and Wales (the
judiciary) welcome this opportunity to assist the Department of
Culture, Media and Sport Select Committee (the Committee) in its
investigation into Press Standards, Privacy and Libel.
2. The Committee has outlined a number of areas
in which it is interested in hearing evidence viz., statistical
information regarding the number of defamation cases being heard
before the courts, the percentage of time they take up and their
cost to the tax payer; the relationship between the judiciary
and the media; costs and access to justice in respect of defamation
proceedings; contempt of court; and recently announced reviews.
3. I have been asked by the Lord Chief Justice
to prepare this written submission and do so as Head of Civil
Justice. I am sure that you will appreciate that in preparing
this document I have consulted others, and in particular, the
Judicial Office for England and Wales and my Legal Secretary,
John Sorabji. Having done so I set out my response to the various
issues raised below. Before doing so I should point out that it
is not possible for the judiciary to provide the statistical information
requested. Such details, if they are kept at all, will be kept
by Her Majesty's Court Service (HMCS). Enquiry might therefore
be better directed to HMCS or the Ministry of Justice.
SUMMARY
4. What follows is divided into three parts:
(i) The Relationship between the Judiciary
and the Media
This section deals with both issues raised by
the Committee.
The first section, which is contained in paragraphs
5-11, deals with the judiciary's media-panel. The media plays
a crucial campaigning and scrutinising role in any democratic
society. The judiciary is rightly scrutinised by the media. It
is not however appropriate for the judiciary to respond to such
scrutiny. Since 2005 a number of judges have however been trained
to speak on the judiciary's behalf in a limited number of circumstances.
They do not comment on individual judgments, political matters
or matters of social policy. Their role is a clarificatory one.
The second section, which is contained in paragraphs
12-39, deals with criticism that the courts have recently developed
a privacy law. It discusses the case law that has been engendered
by the Human Rights Act 1998. It does so in order to clarify:
i) that the developments in this area arise as a consequence of
sections 2 and 6 of the Human Rights Act 1998 and its incorporation
of Articles 8 and 10 of the European Convention on Human Rights;
ii) those developments have been made by the Court of Appeal and
the House of Lords consistently with Strasbourg jurisprudence,
as required by the Human Rights Act 1998; and iii) they have not
been made by Mr Justice Eady.
It is not appropriate for the judiciary to comment
on the policy, as given expression by the Human Rights Act 1998,
which lies behind these developments.
(ii) Costs and Access to Justice in Defamation
Proceedings
This section is contained in paragraphs 40-51.
Litigation cost is an area of concern both generally and specifically
in respect of defamation proceedings. There are currently two
costs reviews; one being conducted by the Ministry of Justice,
the other is being conducted by Sir Rupert Jackson on my behalf.
I cannot comment on the Ministry of Justice's review.
Sir Rupert Jackson's cost review, which encompasses
a wholesale examination of costs, including both Conditional Fee
Agreements and defamation costs, is on-going. It has reached the
stage where a two-volume Interim Report has been published. That
report is evidence-based. A copy is submitted with this evidence.
It is anticipated that a Final Report will be published in December
2009. That will contain recommendations for reform. At the present
time, while it is clear that there are widely held concerns about
costs generally and costs in defamation proceedings specifically,
it is premature for me to comment on what those reform proposals
might be.
The final section, contained in paragraphs 52-60,
focuses on the Contempt of Court Act 1981. It does not deal with
common law contempt. The 1981 Act balances the need to protect
the right to fair trial with the right to free expression. It
does so by protecting the integrity of the jury and by providing
a framework within which the self-regulating media, which in respect
of criminal trials generally acts in a responsible manner, can
properly act as the eyes and ears of the public.
1) THE RELATIONSHIP
BETWEEN THE
JUDICIARY AND
THE MEDIA
5. The judiciary is not, nor should it be,
immune from scrutiny or criticism. It is not above the law. Media
scrutiny and comment may at times be uncomfortable, but they are
an essential, a fundamental, part of our open and democratic society.
Without effective media scrutiny of judicial decisions policy
debates could not properly arise. The courts apply and develop
the law. The media comment on it, draw attention to it and, as
for instance Camilla Cavendish of The Times newspaper has
done in respect of family courts, campaign for change. This is
right and proper. That judicial decisions, the law's development
and the social policy that underpins them are the subject of rational
criticism and open debate is a sign of a healthy functioning democracy.
It is one example of the exercise of free expression, which Lord
Bingham rightly described as "an essential condition of
an intellectually healthy society"; a society where:
"free communication of information, opinions
and argument about the laws which a state should enact (and I
should add, its courts develop and apply) and the policies its
government at all levels should pursue is an essential condition
of truly democratic government. These are the values which article
10 exists to protect, and their importance gives it a central
role in the Convention regime, protecting free speech in general
and free political speech in particular. "[1]
6. The judiciary has traditionally not responded
to adverse media comment. It is inappropriate for it do so. It
speaks through judgments. If it were to do otherwise it would
run the risk of undermining, or being perceived to have undermined,
its independence, its ability to apply the law as between citizen
and citizen and citizen and the State impartially, and public
confidence in it. It would run the risk of politicising itself,
not simply to its own detriment, but to the detriment of society
as a whole. In order to ensure that the judiciary and society
are not compromised in this way through being drawn into a debate
arising out of its judicial decisions Parliament properly imposed
a duty on the Lord Chancellor, through section 3 of the Constitutional
Reform Act 2005, to uphold the independence of the judiciary and
to defend that independence. This is all the more pertinent and
important a duty where adverse comment is ill-informed or partial.
I return to this.
7. In respect of the judiciary's relationship
with the media the Committee raises two questions. First, it raises
a question about the impact that the introduction of a small group
of media trained judges has had. Secondly, it raises a question
about the impact of media criticism on the judiciary. It does
so with specific reference to Mr Paul Dacre's criticism of Mr
Justice Eady's so-called single-handed development of the law
of privacy. I deal with each in turn.
(a) Media-Trained Judges
8. Notwithstanding the Lord Chancellor's
duty the judiciary has since 2005 trained a number of judges to
speak publicly for it. The media panel scheme was set up by the
Judges' Council. It is overseen by its Communications Sub-Committee,
which monitors and evaluates both individual interviews and the
success of the scheme generally. The media panel was set up as
a means by which the judiciary could clear up media confusion
which can simply and easily be rectified and thereby improve public
understanding and confidence in the justice system. It does not
exist to enter into a debate with the media or to respond to adverse
comment by the media. Currently, there are a number of serving
judges on the panel who are trained to undertake broadcast media
interviews. They are located across England and Wales and represent
all the major jurisdictions: criminal; civil; and family justice.
9. The panel is selective in respect of the interviews
it gives. Panel judges are not available "on tap" on
any and every topic. There are occasions when we feel that an
objective opinion voiced by a judge will be helpful eg, where
confusion has arisen about bail decisions, sentencing and housing
repossession processes. There are also matters on which panel
judges cannot comment. They never comment, for example, on individual
judgments, sentencing or other judicial decisions. Equally, there
are areas on which panel judges decline and will continue to decline
giving interviews ie, on matters that are overtly political, raise
social policy issues or concern party political argument. Media
attention on bail is a good example of where an issue developed
and become too political for it to be appropriate for judges to
give interviews about it. Once it became political and an announcement
was made to review the law on bail it was decided that any interview
would draw the judge into a conversation about what changes should
be made. As such comment is inappropriate for a member of the
judiciary, requests to interview panel judges were then declined.
Once the situation changed and ceased to be a matter of political
comment, panel judges were able to give a number of interviews.
10. Each interview request received by the
Judicial Communications Office (JCO) is considered on its merits.
Requests are discussed by the JCO with the relevant Head of Division
as well as panel judges. Interview requests can be granted on
the understanding that if a judge is asked a particular question,
normally ones relating to a specific case, they will not be able
to answer that question. Programme-makers tend to approach the
JCO at the development stage. In this way it is possible to gain
an understanding of the issues they are interested in, while outlining
clearly what a panel judge can and cannot discuss or comment on.
This aids programme-makers, as they understand the limits placed
on the panel judge, while facilitating agreement of panel judges
to be interviewed. To date Panel members have given twelve television
and radio interviews across a wide spectrum of subjects. These
are listed in Annex A.
11. The media-panel's creation is a new
departure for the judiciary. It is still in its infancy. While
we are proceeding with care, we hope that it is and will in the
future contribute to better public understanding of the justice
system and the role the judiciary plays in society.
(b) Criticism of the Judiciary, Privacy
and Free Expression
12. The role of the panel of media-trained
judges' role is, as I have said, a limited one. Where there has
been adverse comment or criticism of the judiciary or individual
judges which would tend to undermine either judicial independence
of public confidence in our judicial system, it is, as Parliament
intended, for the Lord Chancellor to take action. One area where
the judiciary, and particularly an individual judge, have recently
been the subject of sustained criticism by the media is privacy
and press freedom. Privacy and press freedom are topics which
are rightly subject to debate. They have, for instance, recently
been the subject of properly informed debate in The Times
and the Guardian. The criticism levelled at the judiciary
has been repeated before this Committee by a number of witnesses,
as indeed have been the counter-arguments to it.[2]
The criticism made is this: first, the judiciary have introduced
into English law a privacy law; and secondly, that privacy law
has been introduced single-handedly by Mr Justice Eady. Both elements
of the criticism are misrepresentations of the true position;
misrepresentations that can simply be set right.
(i) Respect for Privacy
13. English law has not historically incorporated
a general law of privacy.[3]
Parliament has examined on a number of occasions whether it should
do so. Lord Mancroft introduced a privacy bill in 1961. It went
no further than a second reading. Brian Walden MP introduced another
such bill in 1969. It too went no further than a second reading.
A number of reports and commissions examined the issue during
the 1970s and 1980s but no general privacy law was introduced
as a consequence. In 1990 the Court of Appeal affirmed that only
Parliament and not the courts could create a general privacy law.[4]
As Lord Justice Leggatt said in Kaye v Robertson (1991)
FSR 62 (Kaye). "We do not need a [US] First
Amendment to preserve the freedom of the press, but the abuse
of that freedom can be ensured only by the enforcement of a right
to privacy. This right has so long been disregarded here that
it can be recognised now only by the legislature. Especially since
there is available in the United States a wealth of experience
of the enforcement of this right both at common law and also under
statute, it is to be hoped that the making good of this signal
shortcoming in our law will not be long delayed. "[5]
14. Parliament did not then step in and
take action. Many people would say that it still has not done
so. They would in one sense be correct. Parliament has not enacted
a specific Act of Parliament of the nature of Lord Mancroft's
or Brian Walden MP's privacy bills. Parliament did however, as
is well known, enact the Human Rights Act in 1998 (the 1998 Act)
and through it incorporate into English law the European Convention
on Human Rights. Article 8(1) of the Convention provides a right
to respect for privacy and not a right to privacy: see Lord Walker
in M v Secretary of State for Work and Pensions [2006]
2 AC 91 at [62]. It is a general right, subject to such qualifications
as are compatible with Article 8(2).
15. In enacting the 1998 Act Parliament
introduced a generalised right to respect for privacy not a general
privacy law. It did so in the knowledge, as Lord Irvine, the then
Lord Chancellor, put it in November 1997, that there was no intention
on the government's part "to introduce legislation in
relation to privacy" but that through the 1998 Act it
was "expected that the judges would develop the law appropriately
having regard to the requirements of the Convention. "[6]
As Lord Phillips MR (sitting with Clarke and Neuberger LJJ hearing
an appeal from Lindsay J) put it in Douglas v Hello! (No. 6):
"The enactment of the Human Rights Act 1998
provoked a lively discussion of the impact that it would have
on the development of a law protecting privacy. The Government
has made it clear that it does not intend to introduce legislation
in relation to this area of the law, but anticipates that the
judges will develop the law appropriately, having regard to the
requirements of the Convention for the Protection of Human Rights
and Fundamental Freedoms : see the comment of Lord Irvine of Lairg
LC in the course of the debate on the Human Rights Bill (Hansard,
HL Debates, 24 November 1997, col 771) and the submissions of
the United Kingdom in Spencer (Earl) v United Kingdom (1998) 25
EHRR CD 105. "[7]
16. Parliament did not simply take this
step. It took it in the full knowledge that it was doing so and
that a general right to respect for privacy carried with it the
potential to restrict free expression. Lord Bingham, then Lord
Chief Justice, warned of this during the Parliamentary debate
on the Human Rights Bill, as it then was. He said this:
"Discussion of the new Bill so far would
suggest, I think rightly, that one of the most difficult and sensitive
areas of judgment will involve reconciliation of the right of
privacy guaranteed by Article 8 with the right of free expression
guaranteed by Article 10. While the law up to now afforded some
protection to privacy (in actions for breach of confidence, trespass,
nuisance, the new tort of harassment, defamation, malicious falsehood
and under the data protection legislation) this protection has
been patchy and inadequate. But it seems very likely that difficult
questions will arise on where the right to privacy ends and the
right to free expression begins. The media are understandably
and properly concerned that the conduct of valuable investigative
journalism may be hampered or even rendered impossible. It is
very difficult, and probably unwise, to offer any opinion in advance
about where the line is likely to be drawn. "[8]
17. I am not the first to conclude that
they were prescient words. They were words, as I have said, which
were made as the Bill, which became the 1998 Act, passed through
Parliament. Parliament heeded the warning to some extent in that
what is section 12 of the 1998 Act became part of the Bill. That
requires courts, when considering whether to grant relief which
might effect, if granted, the exercise of the Article 10 right,
to:
"have particular regard to the importance
of the Convention right to freedom of expression and, where the
proceedings relate to material which the respondent claims, or
which appears to the court, to be journalistic, literary or artistic
material (or to conduct connected with such material), to:
(a) the extent
to which:
(i) the
material has, or is about to, become available to the public;
or
(ii) it
is, or would be, in the public interest for the material to be
published;
(b) any relevant
privacy code. "
18. Except in one respect, Parliament went
no further than this in guiding the courts as to how they are
to strike the balance between the Article 8 and Article 10 rights.
The other means provided by Parliament, by way of guidance to
the courts in their development of Convention rights and the balance
struck between them, is set out in sections 2 and 6 of the 1998
Act. The former imposes an explicit obligation on courts and tribunals
when determining questions arising in connection with any of the
Convention rights to take account of, amongst other things, any
"judgment, decision, declaration or advisory opinion of
the European Court of Human Rights. "[9]
The latter renders it unlawful for any public authority, and that
includes courts and tribunals, to act in a way that is incompatible
with a Convention right. This requirement is subject to the proviso
that public authorities can act in a way that is incompatible
with a Convention right if they are i) required to do so by primary
legislation, or ii) if their actions give effect to primary legislation
which cannot be read, or given effect to, in a way that is compatible
with those rights.[10]
19. These statutory provisions subject the
courts to an express obligation not only to give effect to the
right of respect for privacy and the right to free expression.
They also require the courts to do so consistently with the jurisprudence
developed by the European Court of Human Rights (Strasbourg jurisprudence).
Parliament has required the courts to take account of Strasbourg
jurisprudence; albeit they are not bound by its decisions, as
the House of Lords affirmed in R (Alconbury Developments Ltd
and Others) v Secretary of State for the Environment, Transport
and the Regions [2003] 2 AC 295 at [76]. Although not binding,
such decisions are of the first importance to the court in discharging
its constitutional role as a court of justice consistently with
the obligation imposed on it under sections 2 and 6 of the 1998
Act.
20. To return to Lord Irvine, whom I cited
earlier, Parliament has required the courts to develop the right
to respect for privacy consistently with the requirements of the
Convention, the Convention as interpreted and understood by Strasbourg
jurisprudence. They are required to do so, as the House of Lords
put it in R (Ullah) v Special Adjudicator [2004] 2 AC 323
at [20] and in R (Al-Skeini) v Secretary of State for Defence
[2008] 1 AC 153 at [105][106], by keeping pace with Strasbourg
jurisprudence as it evolves over time. They must go no further
than that jurisprudence, but equally they cannot do any less than
it requires. As Lord Bingham put it in R (Ullah) at [20],
section 2 of the 1998 Act imposes an obligation on the courts
to ensure that it does not, without strong reason, dilute or weaken
the effect of the Strasbourg jurisprudence.
21. A number of points can therefore be
made. First, Parliament introduced, through the 1998 Act and its
incorporation of Article 8 of the Convention, a right to respect
for privacy. Secondly, it did so in the full knowledge that incorporation
carried with it potential problems insofar as the balance between
Article 8 and the Article 10 right of free expression was concerned,
and that the Strasbourg court had explained that Article 8 carried
with it positive obligations to secure respect for privacy as
between individuals: see X and Y v the Netherlands (March
26, 1985) Series A no.91, p.11 at [23]; Stjerna v Finland
(November 25, 1994) Series A no.299-B, p.61 at [38]; and Verliere
v Switzerland (dec.), no.41953/98, ECHR 2001-VII as explained
in Von Hannover v Germany [2004] EMLR 21 (Von Hannover)
at [57]. Thirdly, it did so expecting and requiring, under section
2(1) of the 1998 Act, the courts to develop the right and, a
fortiori, the balance between it and the Article 10 right
in light of Strasbourg jurisprudence. Finally, Parliament, by
way of section 6 of the 1998 Act, directed the courts to give
effect to the Convention rights.
22. Parliament's policy decision, enacted
through the democratic process and following full public debate,
has had important consequences for the law's development and the
balance that is struck between the Article 8 and 10 rights.
(ii) Judicial Development
23. The question might, reasonably, be raised
as to whether there is a difference between a general right to
respect for privacy and a general law of privacy and if there
is what is it. There is a difference. The courts have been developing
the general right to respect for privacy, as required by the 1998
Act. They have firmly rejected the introduction, by any body other
than Parliament, of a general law of privacy.
24. It is not the case that the High Court is
developing a general law of privacy. It is not because the House
of Lords, not least though Lord Hoffmann's decision in Wainwright
v Home Office [2004] 2 AC 406, has affirmed the law as set
out in Kaye. In that case the House of Lords dismissed
appeals from a decision of the Court of Appeal (Lord Woolf LCJ,
Mummery and Buxton LJJ), which was itself an appeal from a decision
of the Leeds County Court (Judge McGonigal) in a trespass to the
person action arising from a strip search conducted at Armley
Prison, Leeds in 1996. The House of Lords was invited to hold
that in light of the 1998 Act English law now contained a general
law of privacy; a tort of invasion of privacy. The judges sitting
rejected that invitation. As Lord Hoffmann put it, "I
would reject the invitation to declare that since at the latest
1950 there has been a previously unknown tort of invasion of privacy.
"[11]
In doing so he explained what had previously been taken as the
acceptance by Lord Justice Sedley, in the Court of Appeal in Douglas
v Hello! [2001] QB 967 at 104, of a general law of privacy
as no more than a call for the well-known and long-established
tort of breach of confidence to be renamed the tort of invasion
of privacy. That call for a change of name was not a call for
an extension of the tort, and through that extension, the creation
of a general law of privacy.[12]
25. Lord Hoffmann arrived at this decision
for a number of reasons; reasons which bear on the difference
between the Article 8 right to respect for privacy and a general
law of privacy. First, he noted that there was a well-established
difference between the identification of privacy as a value that
underlies a rule of law and may point to the direction the law
might take as it developed (Lord Irvine's point) and privacy's
existence as a principle of law in itself. There was a difference
between an underlying value, such as respect for privacy, and
a concrete law, such as a general law of privacy.[13]
Secondly, he noted that the Convention, as interpreted by the
Strasbourg court, did not require the creation of a general privacy
law in order to give proper effect to the Article 8 right to respect
for privacy.[14]
In other words the Convention does not justify what it does not
necessitate and the courts post-2000 cannot therefore rely on
it to do what the Court of Appeal in Kaye said only Parliament
could do. The courts can do no less than the Convention requires,
but equally they can, in reliance on it, do no more.
26. Lord Hoffmann, and the House of Lords
in Wainwright, have not had the last word on the subject.
In Campbell v MGN Ltd [2004] 2 AC 457 (Campbell)
the House of Lords returned to the question of whether there was,
since Article 8's incorporation into English law, a general law
of privacy. That decision is well-known. It arose out of a claim
by Naomi Campbell for breach of confidentiality by the Daily Mirror
arising from the publication of certain photographs of her. The
tort in question was the one which Lord Justice Sedley, as explained
by Lord Hoffmann in Wainwright, wanted to rename, and no
more than rename, as a tort of invasion of privacy. In Campbell
the House of Lords (allowing an appeal from the Court of Appeal
(Lord Phillips MR, Chadwick and Keene LJ) from a decision of Mr
Justice Morland), through Lord Nicholls, affirmed once more that
there was and is no general law of privacy known to English law.[15]
This was restated by the Court of Appeal (Buxton, Latham and Longmore
LJJ) when dismissing an appeal from a decision of Mr Justice Eady
in Ash v McKennitt [2007] 3 WLR 194 (Ash). Lord
Justice Buxton put it this way:
"Since the content of that law is in
some respects a matter of controversy, I set out what I understand
the present state of that law to be. I start with some straightforward
matters, before going on to issues of more controversy:
(i) There
is no English domestic law tort of invasion of privacy. Previous
suggestions in a contrary sense were dismissed by Lord Hoffmannn,
whose speech was agreed with in full by Lord Hope of Craighead
and Lord Hutton, in Wainwright v Home Office [2004] 2 AC 406 [28]-[35].
(ii) Accordingly,
in developing a right to protect private information, including
the implementation in the English courts of articles 8 and 10
of the European Convention on Human Rights, the English courts
have to proceed through the tort of breach of confidence, into
which the jurisprudence of articles 8 and 10 has to be "shoehorned":
Douglas v Hello! (No3) (sic) [2006] QB 125[53].
(iii) That
feeling of discomfort arises from the action for breach of confidence
being employed where there was no pre-existing relationship of
confidence between the parties, but the "confidence"
arose from the defendant having acquired by unlawful or surreptitious
means information that he should have known he was not free to
use: as was the case in Douglas, and also in Campbell v MGN [2004]
2 AC 457. Two further points should however be noted:
(iv) At least
the verbal difficulty referred to in (iii) above has been avoided
by the rechristening of the tort as misuse of private information:
per Lord Nicholls of Birkenhead in Campbell [2004] 2 AC 457[14]
(v) Of great
importance in the present case, as will be explained further below,
the complaint here is of what might be called old-fashioned breach
of confidence by way of conduct inconsistent with a pre-existing
relationship, rather than simply of the purloining of private
information. "[16]
27. Whatever else can be said, it is clear
beyond any doubt that the English courts have not, since the enactment
of the 1998 Act, used Article 8 of the Convention as a vehicle
to introduce into English law a general law of privacy, which
would not necessarily require a balance to be struck between the
Article 8 right and the Article 10 right, and which would apply
generally rather than as present to those circumstances which
are protected by a number of discrete causes of action eg, "trespass,
nuisance, defamation and malicious falsehood; there is the equitable
action for breach of confidence and statutory remedies under the
Protection from Harassment Act 1997 and the Data Protection Act
1998. "[17]
On the contrary the House of Lords and the Court of Appeal have
spoken with one voice: there is and remains no general law of
privacy in English law. The position remains as it was in Kaye:
it is only for Parliament to introduce one if one is to be introduced
at all.
28. While the courts have not introduced
a general law of privacy, they have developed individual forms
of privacy protection that have long been known to English law.
They have developed these individual torts consistently with both
Article 8 and Article 10 of the Convention and by striking a balance
between those rights and the values they express and protect.
They have done so for the reason I set out earlier: Parliament
has required them to do so. This is most clearly explained by
Baroness Hale in her judgment in Campbell at [132]. She
said this, affirming what Lord Woolf CJ had held in the Court
of Appeal in A v B plc [2003] QB 195 (Woolf CJ, Laws and
Dyson LJJ allowing an appeal from Mr Justice Jack):
" [132] The 1998 Act does not create
any new cause of action between private persons. But if there
is a relevant cause of action applicable, the court as a public
authority must act compatibly with both parties' Convention rights.
In a case such as this, the relevant vehicle will usually be the
action for breach of confidence, as Lord Woolf CJ held in A v
B plc [2003] QB 195, 202, para 4:
` [Articles
8 and 10] have provided new parameters within which the court
will decide, in an action for breach of confidence, whether a
person is entitled to have his privacy protected by the court
or whether the restriction of freedom of expression which such
protection involves cannot be justified. The court's approach
to the issues which the applications raise has been modified because,
under section 6 of the 1998 Act, the court, as a public authority,
is required not to "act in a way which is incompatible with
a Convention right". The court is able to achieve this by
absorbing the rights which articles 8 and 10 protect into the
long-established action for breach of confidence. This involves
giving a new strength and breadth to the action so that it accommodates
the requirements of these articles.'"
29. The same point was made by Lord Phillips
MR in Douglas v Hello! (No 6) at [53], when he said:
"We conclude that, in so far as private
information is concerned, we are required to adopt, as the vehicle
for performing such duty as falls on the courts in relation to
Convention rights, the cause of action formerly described as breach
of confidence. As to the nature of that duty, it seems to us that
sections 2, 3, 6 and 12 of the Human Rights Act 1998 all point
in the same direction. The court should, in so far as it can,
develop the action for breach of confidence in such a manner as
will give effect to both article 8 and article 10 rights. In considering
the nature of those rights, account should be taken of the Strasbourg
jurisprudence. In particular, when considering what information
should be protected as private pursuant to article 8, it is right
to have regard to the decisions of the European Court of Human
Rights. We cannot pretend that we find it satisfactory to be required
to shoehorn within the cause of action of breach of confidence
claims for publication of unauthorised photographs of a private
occasion. "
30. The Court of Appeal in both Ash
and more recently in Murray v Big Pictures (UK) Ltd [2008]
3 WLR 1360 at [27] (Clarke MR, Laws and Thomas LJJ, allowing an
appeal from Mr Justice Patten) reiterated the statements by Lord
Woolf, Baroness Hale and Lord Phillips.
31. The courts are not just required to
take account of both Article 8 and Article 10; they are required
to strike a balance between them. That balance has to be struck
in such a way that neither Article is afforded precedence over
the other. This position was initially set out by the House of
Lords in Campbell at [17]. It is more recently been summarised
by the House of Lords (hearing an appeal from the Court of Appeal
(Lord Phillips MR, Latham and Hale LJJ) which dismissed an appeal
from Hedley J) in Re S (a child) [2005] 1 AC 593. Lord
Steyn in that case summarised the nature of the balancing exercise
in this way:
"The interplay between articles 8 and
10 has been illuminated by the opinions in the House of Lords
in Campbell v MGN Ltd [2004] 2 WLR 1232. For present purposes
the decision of the House on the facts of Campbell and the differences
between the majority and the minority are not material. What does,
however, emerge clearly from the opinions are four propositions.
First, neither article has as such precedence over the other.
Secondly, where the values under the two articles are in conflict,
an intense focus on the comparative importance of the specific
rights being claimed in the individual case is necessary. Thirdly,
the justifications for interfering with or restricting each right
must be taken into account. Finally, the proportionality test
must be applied to each. For convenience I will call this the
ultimate balancing test. This is how I will approach the present
case. "
32. Applying the law, as Mr Justice Eady
did in Ash, meant that despite section 12 of the 1998 Act,
neither Article 8 nor Article 10 was to be given precedence. Mr
Justice Eady had no choice in this matter. The doctrine of precedent
required this, as acknowledged by Lord Justice Buxton in Ash
at [46][47]. It required its application in that case
just as it did when Mr Justice Eady was faced both with Mr Mosley's
application for an injunction, which he refused, in Mosley
v News Group Newspapers Ltd [2008] EWHC 687 (QB) at [28] and
his substantive damages action in Mosley v News Group Newspapers
[2008] EMLR 20 at [7][23].
33. It is noteworthy that in the substantive
damages action Mr Justice Eady refused to accept Mr Mosley's submission
that the development of the law since the 1998 Act's enactment
justified an award of exemplary damages. He did so noting the
chilling effect such damages would have and that neither the common
law nor statute, implicitly including the 1998 Act, justified
such an award in an infringement of privacy case. Moreover he
held that the extension of exemplary damages to such claims would
be neither necessary nor proportionate in cases where Article
8 and Article 10 rights needed to be balanced: see [2008] EMLR
20 at [187][197]. This might well be taken as a further
example of the court's no less yet no more approach. Equally,
it could be seen as acknowledging that neither Article 8 nor Article
should be afforded precedence, as explained in Campbell
and Re S (a child).
34. It should also be noted that the application
of section 12 of the 1998 Act in cases where Article 8 and Article
10 are in issue, is also subject to the interpretation placed
on it by the House of Lords in Campbell. Baroness Hale
in her judgment in that case noted specifically how section 12,
because it requires the court to take account of the Press Complaints
Commission's Code of Practice, requires the same balancing act
as was required in Von Hannover. As Baroness Hale stated,
in assessing whether to allow the appeal from the Court of Appeal
and reinstate Mr Justice Morland's decision:
" [159] The judge was also obliged by
section 12(4)(b) of the 1998 Act, not only to have particular
regard to the importance of the Convention right to freedom of
expression, but also to any relevant privacy code. The Press Complaints
Commission Code of Practice supports rather than undermines the
conclusion he reached:
`3. 2 Privacy'
` (i) Everyone is entitled to respect
for his or her private and family life, home, health and correspondence.
A publication will be expected to justify intrusions into any
individual's private life without consent. (ii) The use of long
lens photography to take pictures of people in private places
without their consent is unacceptable. Note Private places
are public or private property where there is a reasonable expectation
of privacy.'
`The public
interest'
`There may be exceptions to the clauses
marked 3 where they can be demonstrated to be in the public interest.'
`1. The
public interest includes: (i) Detecting or exposing crime or a
serious misdemeanour. (ii) Protecting public health and safety.
(iii) Preventing the public from being misled by some statement
or action of an individual or organisation |'
This would appear to expect almost exactly
the exercise conducted above and to lead to the same conclusion
as the judge. "
35. In the circumstances it is apparent
that the House of Lords and Court of Appeal in these, six, decisions,
only one of which arose from a first instance decision of Mr Justice
Eady, have explained a number of things very clearly.
35.1 First, that the 1998 Act, and specifically
section 6, requires the English courts to give effect to both
Article 8 and Article 10.
35.2 Second, giving effect to the two rights
in this way has required the court to absorb the principles enshrined
in Articles 8 and 10 into the tort of breach of confidence. As
a consequence when courts assess the question whether there has
been a breach of the tort they must now consider the balance that
is to be struck between them. That balance, as most recently explained
by the Court of Appeal in Murray requires a court faced
with a question of a breach of confidence to do two things:
"... first [to assess], whether the
information is private in the sense that it is in principle protected
by article 8 (ie such that article 8 is in principle engaged)
and, secondly, if so, [then assess] whether in all the circumstances
the interest of the owner of the information must yield to the
right to freedom of expression conferred on the publisher by article
10. "[18]
These questions are questions of fact, which
require a variety of factors and circumstances to be taken account
of and weighed: a point made by Baroness Hale in Campbell
at [153] and reiterated in Murray at [41].
35.3 Third, the developments in the law expressed
in the four judgments are ones that have been brought about because
Parliament has required the courts, as public authorities, to
act consistently with the requirements of the Convention.
35.4 Fourth, the courts have not just been required
to give effect to Articles 8 and 10 by absorbing them into the
tort of breach of confidence; they have been and are required
to do so in light of Strasbourg jurisprudence per section 2 of
the 1998 Act. The leading relevant Strasbourg decision is Von
Hannover. That decision underlines two things. First, it underlines
the fundamental and essential role that a free press plays in
a democracy to impart matters of public interest. Secondly, it
underlines how that role must be balanced by the Article 8 right:
see Von Hannover at [58]ff. The balancing exercise to be
carried out in respect of the two rights which the English courts
are now required to carry out, and which was recognised by Mr
Justice Eady at first instance in Ash, is one which recognises
a much wider ambit of what is to be treated as private than was
previously understood to be the case. It is a balancing act which
is guided by the Strasbourg court's decision in Von Hannover.
That is a consequence of which the English courts (Mr Justice
Eady at first instance and the Court of Appeal in Ash and
later in Murray) had to take account given the obligation
imposed on them by section 2 of the 1998 Act.[19]
35.5 Fifth, when striking the balance between
the Article 8 and Article 10 rights neither is to be accorded
pre-eminence or precedence.
CONCLUSIONS
36. Some conclusions can be drawn from this.
36.1 First, it has been said that Mr Justice
Eady has developed or is in the process of developing a law of
privacy. This is patently not the case. No general law of privacy
has been developed. Moreover what developments there have been
of pre-existing individual torts which protect aspects of privacy
have not arisen as a consequence of a plethora of decisions by
Mr Justice Eady. Of the leading decisions in this area, referred
to above, apart from the Ash decision, only one has arisen
from a decision of Mr Justice Eady.
36.2 Second, each of the significant developments
of the legal principle in this area has arisen as a consequence
of appeals from first instance decisions to either the Court of
Appeal or the House of Lords. The appeal process exists not only
for the private purpose of ensuring the right result is reached
as between the parties. It exists for the public purpose of ensuring
that the law develops properly and is stated authoritatively and
correctly. Equally, appellate decisions bind the lower courts,
such as the High and County Courts. Mr Justice Eady in Ash
therefore had no choice, when considering the balance to be
struck between Articles 8 and 10, but to apply the law as stated
by the House of Lords in Campbell and Re S (a child)
ie, to afford neither Article precedence over the other.
36.3 Third, the principles that the Court of
Appeal and House of Lords have articulated in this area, and which
have seen developments in respect for privacy, arise from the
application of Articles 8 and 10 of the Convention consistently
with the Strasbourg jurisprudence in accordance with the 1998
Act.
37. It is more than apparent that the development
of the Article 8 right to respect for privacy and its interrelation
with the Article 10 right to free expression is one that has caused
concern. This is evident not just from media debate, but by the
very fact that the Committee is investigating the issue and has
obtained a substantial amount of evidence on the subject. It is
an issue which is properly the subject of democratic scrutiny
and debate.
38. That scrutiny and debate if it is to
be of genuine value must be conducted in the light of the facts
rather than assertion or by way of attacks on individual judges
who are doing no more than applying the law consistently with
the terms of the judicial oath. The position is that the law has
developed since 2000 through the appellate decisions of the Court
of Appeal and House of Lords. Mr Justice Eady has applied the
law as those courts have stated it, and where he has developed
it his decisions have been the subject of appellate scrutiny.
Any further developments at first instance will equally be subject
to possible appellate scrutiny, and where necessary correction,
by the Court of Appeal, the House of Lords and, if necessary,
also by the Strasbourg court. Moreover, the courts have developed
the Article 8 right and the manner in which it is to be balanced
against the Article 10 right consistently with Strasbourg jurisprudence
on the subject. Parliament requires the courts to do so. In requiring
this through the 1998 Act Parliament was fully aware of how the
law might develop. It took the step of requiring the courts to
apply and develop the law consistently with the Strasbourg jurisprudence
knowingly. The development of the law since 2000 is the product
of Parliament's decision to enact the 1998 Act. The courts have
since 2000 done no more than they are constitutionally required
to do: apply the law and, in this area, apply it consistently
with the obligations placed on them by sections 2 and 6 of the
1998 Act.
39. It is a genuine policy question as to
whether the law, as it has developed since 2000, is democratically
acceptable. It is for Parliament to review and debate that question,
as indeed it is through this Committee's current investigation,
mindful of the fact that the United Kingdom is a signatory to
the European Convention on Human Rights. The judiciary cannot
comment on that policy question. Should Parliament conclude that
the law has developed in a way that it did not intend, and it
changes the law, the courts will, as they do in all circumstances,
apply and develop the law accordingly and consistently with their
constitutional role.
COSTS AND
ACCESS TO
JUSTICE IN
RESPECT OF
DEFAMATION PROCEEDINGS
40. Litigation cost is a perennial problem
which undermines effective access to justice. It is a problem
which has been particularly acute over at least the last twenty
years and was, as is well known, one of the bases on which Lord
Woolf carried out his fundamental review of civil justice in the
mid-1990s. It is a problem that remains acute now. The issues
raised by the Committee in respect of defamation costs generally
and defamation costs where Conditional Fee Agreements (CFAs) are
used are instances of the wider costs issue.
41. There are currently two reviews being conducted
into litigation costs. The first is a consultation entitled "Controlling
costs in defamation proceedings". It is a Ministry of Justice
consultation. Copies of the consultation are available from the
Ministry of Justice, who are best placed to provide any further
information.
42. The second review is being conducted
by Sir Rupert Jackson on my behalf as Master of the Rolls and
Head of Civil Justice. It is a wide-ranging review, which is examining
litigation costs generally. Its terms of reference are to:
"Establish how present costs rules operate
and how they impact on the behaviour of both parties and lawyers.
Establish the effect case management procedures
have on costs and consider whether changes in process and/or procedure
could bring about more proportionate costs.
Have regard to previous and current research
into costs and funding issues; for example any further Government
research into Conditional Fee Agreements`No win, No fee',
following the scoping study.
Seek the views of judges, practitioners, Government,
court users and other interested parties through both informal
consultation and a series of public seminars.
Compare the costs regime for England and Wales
with those operating in other jurisdictions.
Prepare a report setting out recommendations
with supporting evidence by 31 December 2009. "[20]
43. The review is being conducting in three
stages. The first stage, which ran from January to April 2009,
involved the preparation of a working paper. Evidence was obtained
during this stage through meetings conducted by Sir Rupert and
his team with court users and professionals, through the consideration
of written submissions and information received, and through comparative
study of overseas jurisdictions. An interim report setting out
the position as it is to be published today. A copy of the report
is included with these written submissions. The second stage,
which will run from May to July 2009, will be consultative. Seminars
and road shows will take place in, for instance, Birmingham, Cardiff,
Manchester and London. The final stage of the review, to run from
September to December 2009, will be taken up with the preparation
of a Final Report. That report will set out reform proposals aimed
at tackling the costs problems identified. Publication of the
Final Report is expected to be sometime in December.
44. It is well-known that there is a good
deal of concern about the level of costs incurred by claimants
and defendants in defamation proceedings and those that give rise
to issues of privacy and press freedom more generally. It is equally
well-known that these are supplemented by concerns regarding the
use of CFAs with success fees and After the Event Insurance (ATE)
policies in such proceedings.
45. The judiciary has noted these concerns,
in court judgments, on a number of occasions. When the effect
that extending CFAs to defamation proceedings, as Parliament did
through section 58 of the Courts and Legal Services Act 1990 (as
amended by section 27 of the Access to Justice 1999) and the Conditional
Fee Agreements Order 2000 (SI 2000/823), was raised before Mr
Justice Eady in King v Telegraph Group Ltd [2003] EWHC
1312 (QB) he acknowledged that they were a matter of "genuine
concern." He accepted specifically that the introduction
of CFAs into defamation proceedings carried with it the "potential
for a chilling effect on investigative journalism and for significant
injustice. "[21]
That potential was, as he also acknowledged, one which could well
have an adverse effect on freedom of expression.
46. Mr Justice Eady's concerns were echoed and
acknowledged by Lord Justice Brooke in his judgment when that
case went to the Court of Appeal. He said this:
"It is not at all clear whether Parliament
ever turned its mind to the consequences of defamation actions
being conducted under a CFA without any ATE cover, or to the European
Convention on Human Rights article 10 considerations that were
of such concern to Eady J and Gray J... "[22]
The reference to Mr Justice Gray is to his decision
in Pedder v News Group Newspapers Ltd [2004] EMLR 19. That
was a case where an attempt to relitigate libel proceedings was
struck out. It was struck out primarily because the claimants
were funded via a CFA with no ATE policy. This was held in the
circumstances of that case to expose the defendants to too great
a costs risk, such that there was a chilling effect on the defendant's
right to freedom of expression.
47. These decisions highlight the problems
to which CFAs, with or without ATE policies, in the area of defamation
could potentially give rise. The decision to introduce CFAs, with
success fees, and ATE policies into defamation was however a policy
decision taken by Parliament. It was done in order to increase
access to justice in this area just as it was through their introduction
generally: a point made by Lord Bingham in Callery v Gray (Nos
1 and 2).[23]
Indeed in that case the potential problems that could arise from
the introduction of CFAs were noted by the House of Lords. Lord
Justice Brooke in King summarised those potential problems
as noted by the Lords in Callery as follows:
" [89] In their speeches in Callery v
Gray different members of the House of Lords expressed concern
about certain features of the new arrangements, in particular
the lack of any financial incentive for claimants to challenge
either the size of their lawyers' fees or the amount of the uplift
or the amount of the policy premiums: see Lord Bingham, at para
10, Lord Nicholls of Birkenhead, at paras 14 and 16, and Lord
Hope of Craighead, at para 54. Lord Bingham, in particular, said,
at para 10, that although the defendant's appeal in Callery v
Gray was being dismissed:
"I would not wish to discount either
the risk of abuse or the need to check any practices which may
undermine the fairness of the new funding regime. This should
operate so as to promote access to justice but not so as to confer
disproportionate benefits on legal practitioners... or impose
unfair burdens on defendants..."
[90] Lord Hoffmannn, for his part, was sceptical,
at paras 18 and 31, about the extent to which courts could effectively
police the matters that gave rise to such concern in that case.
"[24]
48. Those concerns were, Lord Justice Brooke
noted, all the more palpable where freedom of expression was in
issue. To try and square the circle, as he put it, and to do so
in an area where Parliament has decided that recoverable costs
can be of an amount that otherwise might not be viewed as reasonable
or proportionate, the Court of Appeal has developed the future
costs-capping order.[25]
This jurisdiction has recently been formalised in the Civil Procedure
Rules r. 44.18-44.20.[26]
49. While the courts have noted the potential
problems that might arise from the introduction of CFAs, with
success fees and ATE policies, and have gone some way to balance
a claimant's right of effective access to justice with that of
a defendant's right to freedom of expression, they have necessarily
done so within the framework provided by Parliament. If there
are problems arising from that framework, Parliament will have
to consider what steps it needs to take to rectify them and properly
balance the right of access to justice and the right to freedom
of expression. That is, of course, a matter of policy for Parliament.
50. There is at the present time, it is
fair to say, a considerable degree of debate as to the exact nature
and extent of the problems that have arisen as a consequence of
the introduction of CFAs both generally and specifically in respect
of claims that give rise to issues of freedom of expression and/or
defamation. The debate has been the subject of evidence to this
committee.
51. It is anticipated that Sir Rupert Jackson's
fundamental costs review will examine and analyse those issues.
As noted earlier, a copy of his Interim Report is enclosed with
this evidence. Costs in defamation proceedings are dealt with
in its chapter 37 and schedule 17. That chapter and schedule set
out the position as it is today and the evidence that lies behind
it. Until Sir Rupert has completed his review and produced his
Final Report in December it is not possible to say what remedial
steps, if any, might need to be taken either through the Civil
Procedure Rules or through legislation. Again, if problems are
highlighted that require legislative intervention that is a matter
for Parliament insofar as it raises issues of policy.
CONTEMPT OF
COURT
52. Open justice is a fundamental principle
of any society committed to the rule of law. It is a principle
that the English courts have long, and rightly, accepted. It is
a principle that can however properly and in the interests of
justice be subject to certain restrictions: see, for instance,
the House of Lords' decision in Scott v Scott [1913] AC
417. Restriction can properly be placed on it in order to secure
an equally important and fundamental principle that all societies
committed to the rule of law, and ours is no exception, adhere
to: the right to fair trial. In some ways it can be said, and
in my view rightly, that open justice secures fair trials and
should only be restricted where adherence to it would do the opposite.
53. The importance of these two principles
and their interrelation has in recent times been underlined in
respect of criminal proceedings by the Court of Appeal (Criminal
Division) in the context of contempt of court. The two principles
were given recent expression by Sir Igor Judge, President, as
he then was, in Re B [2007] EMLR 5 at 1819. He said
this:
"... in this country every defendant
who appears before the court to stand his trial, whatever the
charge, whoever he or she may be, is entitled to, and must receive,
a fair trial. That was, in the memorable epithet of Lord Bingham
of Cornhill, a `birthright'. Although the epithet is relatively
recent, the concept is of some antiquity.
An equally precious principle, hallowed by
custom and the tradition of the common law, is the freedom of
the media to act as the eyes and the ears of the public at large
and, among their other responsibilities, to observe and contemporaneously
to report the criminal proceedings involving the same defendant
whose birthright to a fair trial must be protected. The administration
of criminal justice must be open and transparent. The freedom
of the press to report the proceedings provides one of the essential
safeguards against closed justice. "
54. The Contempt of Court Act 1981 (the
1981 Act) strikes the balance between these two principles; both
of which form part of the essential foundations of our, and every,
open democratic society. It protects press freedom, not least
because as Lord Justice Lloyd put it in Attorney-General v
Newspaper Publishing Plc [1988] ChD 333 at 382 it brought
about "a permanent shift in the balance of the public
interest away from the protection of the administration of justice
and in favour of freedom of speech". It did so by protecting
fair and accurate contemporaneous, good faith, legal reporting
(see section 4 of the 1981 Act). Moreover it does so by only prohibiting
the publication of material where such publication creates a substantial
risk that the course of justice in proceedings will be seriously
impeded or prejudiced (see sections 1 and 2 of the 1981 Act).
55. The 1981 Act, specifically sections
1 and 2, also provides proper protection for the fair trial right,
which it should be stressed does not simply guarantee due process
for those accused of crimes (both innocent and guilty), but just
as importantly ensures that justice is done for the victims of
crime and for society as a whole. It provides justice for victims
through ensuring that the trial process is not compromised and
a verdict can properly be delivered. It provides justice for society
as a whole by ensuring that the guilty are properly convicted,
the innocent acquitted and the rule of law is thereby protected.
56. The 1981 Act protects the fair trial
right by prohibiting, at least in the context of jury trials,
the publication of adverse comment up until verdict, the publication
of discussions that take place in the absence of the jury or the
publication of details of excluded evidence. In this way it provides
the framework for responsible reporting, while protecting both
freedom of expression and fair trials. It prohibits what might
be called media campaigns that could undermine fair trials and
which jury directions might well be insufficient to counteract.
Standard jury directions not to engage in research, whether via
the internet or otherwise, are generally obeyed. Jurors well understand
the seriousness of the role they play. As Sir Igor Judge, President,
put it in Re B (above) at [32], the "integrity
of the jury is an essential feature of our trial process. Juries
follow the directions which the judge will give them to focus
exclusively on the evidence and to ignore anything they may have
heard or read out of court. " He went on to stress how
the court could not "too strongly emphasise that the jury
will follow them, not only because they will loyally abide by
the directions of law which they will be given by the judge, but
also because the directions themselves will appeal directly to
their own instinctive and fundamental belief in the need for the
trial process to be fair. "
57. The view expressed in Re B by
Sir Igor, now Lord Judge CJ, is one which as I see it holds true
because of the protection offered by the 1981 Act. It does so
because the Act ensures that media campaigns, the reporting of
prejudicial or excluded material, cannot take place. If such reporting
and such campaigns were to become the norm it cannot be said with
certainty that jurors would be in the position to abide by judicial
directions because of the level and nature of exposure to press
reportage. As Lord Justice Kennedy emphasised in upholding an
appeal against a contempt conviction in 1997:
"With potential jurors receiving information
in so many different ways high profile cases would become impossible
to try if jurors could not be relied on to disregard much of the
information to which they may have been exposed, but that does
not mean that they can be expected to disregard any information,
whenever and however it is received, otherwise there would be
no point in withholding from them any relevant information, however
prejudicial in content or presentation, hence the need for the
law of contempt which we are required to enforce. "[27]
58. The small number of prosecutions under
the 1981 Act is testament to the fact that it sets the balance
well between freedom of expression and the right to fair trial,
properly guides press behaviour and ensures that the jury system
that lies at the heart of our criminal justice system is not compromised.
It is perhaps equally testament to the fact that generally speaking
our press is one that acts, where criminal prosecutions are concerned,
with probity and responsibility. Generally, it ensures that it
does not publish material detailing the background history to,
or comment on, cases once criminal charges have been brought,
from then until trial or during the trial. Equally, it does not
generally publish material or report argument aired in the absence
of the jury during trials, or report material or evidence that
is ruled to be inadmissible. Without entering into the policy
debate as to whether media self-regulation should remain in place,
it seems to me that in England and Wales our self-regulating press,
operating consistently with the 1981 Act, acts as the eyes and
ears of the public at large in a generally responsible manner
in this context. Where it does not it is a matter for the Attorney-General
to take steps.
59. Concerns have however been raised as
to the effect the growth of the internet has had. Material that
UK-based media would not publish due to the 1981 Act might well
be placed on the internet by someone or some organisation based
abroad. As I understand the law, any such material if published
in the UK, via the internet, remains subject to the 1981 Act.
There may be practical problems as to enforcement where the publisher
is abroad. But any foreign-based publisher might well have a presence
in the UK, and enforcement might then be more readily taken. The
same can, of course, be said about foreign-based media organisations.
They might report matters that an English news organisation could
not. Any foreign publication, either in hard-copy or via the internet,
if published in the UK would be treated in exactly the same way
as any material placed on the internet that was published in the
UK: it would be subject to the 1981 Act. It might also, reasonably,
be added that a juror is less likely to see any foreign reportage,
unless they deliberately went looking for it. Moreover any foreign-based
media publication, or internet publication, is unlikely to carry
with it, at least at present, the same potential to undermine
the right to fair trial that an English media-based campaign or
reportage carries with it.
60. This position may well change in the
future. If it does, then to such an extent that the fair trial
right is placed in jeopardy, it is a matter for Parliament to
assess what steps it would need to take to protect it; and to
that end I note the comments made in its evidence by the Department
of Culture, Media and Sport, that it keeps the law of contempt
under review. The options that might be available to Parliament,
some of which have been canvassed by the other witnesses to the
Committee viz., the approach taken by the State of Victoria, Australia
which has rendered it illegal for jurors to conduct their own
research or the adoption of the United States' approach which
rests simply on jury directions, are not something on which I
can properly comment. They give rise to policy questions that
are properly for Parliament.
Annex A
JUDGES' MEDIA PANEL ACTIVITY
Date | Judge
| Broadcaster / programme | Subject
|
21.10.08 | HHJ Carhill
| Channel 4 News | Litigants in person
|
| 24.3.08 | HHJ Cutler | Sky News
| Witness Intermediaries Scheme |
| 15.5.08 | HHJ Cutler | Radio 4 Unreliable Evidence
| Discussion on Bail |
| 19.5.08 | HHJ Cutler | Channel 4 Dispatches
| Interview with Helen Newlove on youth crime and bail
|
| 5.8.08 | HHJ Tonking | Ram FM (Local Radio)
| High Sheriff awards |
| 19.8.08 | HHJ Tonking | Sun FM (Local Radio)
| Why juries are dismissed |
| 7.1.09 | HHJ Tonking | The TimesThe Shift
| Day in the life of a judge |
| 1.3.09 | HHJ Rook | BBC Radio 4Law in Action
| Discussion on what role summing up plays in proceedings
|
| 22.5.08 | District Judge Gold
| BBC Panorama | Credit Crunch and how the County Courts deal with repossessions
|
| 1.3.09 | District Judge Gold
| BBC Radio 4Law in Action | A day in the life of a District Judge
|
| 27.11.08 | District Judge Gold
| BBC The One Show | The process of small claims
|
| 14.1.09 | HHJ Plumstead |
Unreliable Evidence | Transparency in the family courts
|
| 27.4.09 | HHJ Plumstead |
Radio Five Live | Transparency in the family courts
|
May 2008
|
| | |
1
Regina (Animal Defenders International) v Secretary of State
for Culture, Media and Sport [2008] 1 AC 1312] at [27]. Back
2
The criticism is, for instance, set out in News International
Ltd's written submissions. The counter-argument has been put by,
for instance, the Campaign for Press and Broadcasting Freedom. Back
3
Kaye v Robertson (1991) FSR 62 at 66, "It is well-known
that in English law there is no right to privacy, and accordingly
there is no right of action for breach of a person's privacy.
" Back
4
See cited in Errera, The Twisted Road from Prince Albert to
Campbell, and Beyond: Towards a Right of Privacy?, in Andenas
& Fairgrieve (ed), Tom Bingham and the Transformation of
the Law (2009) (OUP) at 385 Back
5
(1991) FSR 62 at 71. Back
6
Lord Irvine, 583 House of Lords Official Reports (5th Series)
col 771 cited in Errera (2009) at 385. Back
7
[2006] QB 125 at [46]. Back
8
Errera, ibid at 373. Back
9
Human Rights Act 1998 s2(1). Back
10
Human Rights Act 1998 s6. Back
11
[2004] 2 AC 406 at [35]. Back
12
Ibid. at [29]-[30]. Back
13
Ibid at [31]. Back
14
Ibid. at [32]. Back
15
[2004] 2 AC 457 at [11]. Back
16
[2007] 3 WLR 194 at [8]. Back
17
Wainwright v Home Office [2004] 2 AC 406 at [18]. Back
18
[2008] 3 WLR 1360 at [27]. Back
19
See [2005] EWHC 3003 (QB) at [50]ff; [2007] 3 WLR 194 at [37]ff;
[2008] 3 WLR 1360 at [43]ff. Back
20
http://www.Judiciary.gov.uk/about_Judiciary/cost-review/tor.htm. Back
21
[2003] EWHC 1312 (QB) at [14]. Back
22
King v Telegraph Group Ltd [2005] 1 WLR 2282 at [90] Back
23
[2000] 1 WLR 2000 (HL) at [2]. Back
24
Ibid. at [90]-[90]. Back
25
Ibid. at [96]-103]. Back
26
NB: additional liabilities cannot be made subject to any costs
cap. Back
27
Attorney-General v Associated Newspapers Ltd [1998] EMLR
711 at 721. Back
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