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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 >> Campbell v Safra [2006] EWHC 819 (QB) (12 April 2006) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2006/819.html Cite as: [2006] EWHC 819 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
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Lady Colin Campbell |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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Lily Safra |
Defendant |
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Hearing date: 28th March 2006
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Crown Copyright ©
The HOD. Mr Justice Eady:
"Lily Safra's friends rage at society thriller 'based on her billionaire husband's death'
By Charlotte Edwardes
Friends of Lily Safra, the widow of Edmond Safra, the billionaire banker who died in a fire in his Monaco apartment in 1999, are furious about a novel which they claim is a thinly veiled account of her life - but in which the central character murders two of her four husbands.
Mrs Safra, a philanthropist and friend of Prince Charles and the Duchess of Cornwall, is said by her public relations adviser not to have read, or even to be aware of, Empress Bianca, the latest work by Lady Colin Campbell, who has previously written biographies of Diana, Princess of Wales, and on the Royal marriages.
Her friends are angry, however, at what they say are the 'ridiculous similarities' between the character in the novel and Mrs Safra. 'The author has just stolen her life story and then accused her of being a murderer,' said one. 'Some details are so exact that it can only be a deliberate attack.' The book, Lady Colin's first novel, is the story of a 'sugar-coated monster' whose terrifying social ambition has violent streaks. The story, which spans seven decades and several continents from 1930s Latin America to present-day London, has been described as a 'whodunnit in the Lamborghini set'.
Last night, Mark Bolland, Mrs Safra's public relations adviser, sought to play down the significance of the book, insisting that Mrs Safra did not know of its existence. Asked if she was considering legal action, he said: 'Mrs Safra has never litigated in the past, it's not like her.' He added: 'This is, remember, a work of fiction' .
The book chronicles the life of Bianca Barnett, the daughter of a Jewish mother and English father who move to Brazil to seek their fortune. Like Mrs Safra, Bianca grows up in Latin America as the daughter of an English émigré, and marries four times.
Like Mrs Safra, Bianca has three children with her first husband, whom she later divorces, and her beloved first son is killed in a car accident on a mountain road.
Mrs Safra's second husband, Alfredo 'Freddie' Monteverde, ran a multi-million pound electronics business and suffered from manic depression - as does Bianca's second husband, Freddie Piedraplata. Mr Monteverde committed suicide by shooting himself in the chest while his wife was out to lunch, leaving her with a £200 million inheritance; in the novel, Bianca receives an identical inheritance after ordering a hitman to kill her husband but make it appear suicide.
Both women - fictional and real - married their third husbands in 1972, then quickly divorced them. Like Mrs Safra, Bianca moves to New York and buys a sprawling villa in the Cote d' Azur.
Like Mrs Safra, Bianca's fourth husband, called Philippe Mahfud, is a billionaire Lebanese-Jewish banker who suffers from Parkinson's disease and becomes so paranoid about his safety he hires a security team made up of ex-members of the Israeli intelligence unit, Mossad.
In the novel, Mahfud dies in a bizarre fire in his fortified penthouse in the tax haven of Andorra; Mr Safra, who lived in the tax haven of Monaco, died along with his nurse in a fire started by Ted Maher, a member of his security team, who is serving a l0-year sentence for murder. Maher says he started the fire in a wastepaper basket in order to impress his boss by staging his rescue. In the novel, Bianca manipulates the nurse to start the fire in the wastepaper basket which is designed to kill her husband.
Mr Safra left most of his estimated £2.8 billion fortune to the wife he adored, who has since relocated to Belgravia (as does the fictional Bianca). She is a patron of the arts and a generous benefactor. Mrs Safra did not, of course, murder her husbands but Lady Colin has teasingly dedicated Empress Bianca to Christina Fanto, a niece of Freddie Monteverde, and has told interviewers that the character of Bianca was inspired by a real person.
'Bianca was brought to justice; not through the judicial system, but the social system,' she said last month. 'Many people in the upper echelons of society are very tolerant of foibles, but blood does not go down well in drawing rooms' .
Asked by The Sunday Telegraph if the book's lead character was based on Lily Safra, Lady Colin said: 'I am loath to say if it was or wasn't. I don't want to narrow the field by discounting people'.
She admitted, however, that the book, which was published by Arcadia last month, 'didn't come out of my imagination'.
Asked whether she was afraid of legal action she said: 'I have no fear of hearing from anybody'.
Gary Pulsifer, the chief executive of Arcadia, said: 'We didn't have it read for libel. It's a novel, a work of fiction' ."
The article was accompanied by two photographs. The first was of Mrs Safra, with the caption "Lily Safra: apparently unaware of the book's existence". The second was of Lady Colin Campbell, with the caption "Lady Colin Campbell says the central character in her novel is inspired by a real person, but will not say who".
"Mrs Lily Safra
In last Sunday's issue (July 3 page 13) we reported claims that the central character of a recently published novel was based on Lily Safra, the widow of Edmond Safra. It was never our intention to suggest that the actions attributed to the fictional character had been carried out by Mrs Safra in reality and readily accept that any such suggestion would be entirely untrue. We understand that our linking of Mrs Safra's name with that of the novel's central character has greatly upset her. We very much regret this and apologise unreservedly to Mrs Safra for any embarrassment caused".
"In creating the character of Bianca, it is clear that the author intends readers to understand that Bianca is Mrs Safra. The book thereupon defames Mrs Safra by asserting that, like 'Bianca', Mrs Safra murdered two of her husbands.
Publishers of books such as yours have only two defences to a libel action: (a) absence of reference to the claimant and (b) justification of the defamation. The defence that 'Bianca' is not Mrs Safra will fail because of the many parallels between the two (we attach a schedule of the more obvious parallels). The defence of justification is not available to you as Mrs Safra is not a serial murderer".
"1. Both have an English father who was an engineer/surveyor.
2. Both grew up in South Africa.
3. Both had three children by their first husband, the eldest of whom was killed in a car crash.
4. In both cases, following the death of the eldest son, the daughter raises his child as her own.
5. Both divorced their first husband in the late 1960s.
6. Both then marry millionaire businessmen who run multimillion pound companies the success of which is based on selling electrical goods.
7. In both cases, the second husband has an adopted child from a previous marriage who lives with them.
8. Neither has any children after their first marriage.
9. In both cases the second husband dies and they remarry.
10. Both third marriages end in divorce.
11. Both then marry a billionaire Lebanese-Jewish banker.
12. The fourth husband is in both cases diagnosed with Parkinson's disease and both men become increasingly paranoid about security.
13. In both cases the fourth husband dies in a fire started by a nurse and in both cases another of the husband's nurses dies with him.
14. The nurse who starts the fire is in both cases an American citizen who has previously been a green beret.
15. In both cases the wife of the nurse who started the fire travels to visit her husband, in the book the wife is detained by . the authorities. Similar allegations were made by Mr Maher's wife.
16. Both women relocate to Belgravia after their marriage.
17. Both women inaugurate public statues in a former government building in London and afterwards attend a dinner hosted by royalty".
"Lily Safra, 67, a wealthy benefactor who counts Prince Charles among her friends, claims her life has been 'stolen' in a new book by Lady Colin Campbell, 55, the best-selling biographer of Princess Diana.
Mrs Safra, thought to be worth around £650m, called in lawyers because she claimed the main character in Lady Colin's debut novel, Empress Bianca, was a defamatory, thinly disguised version of her life ....
While Mrs Safra is relying on the discreet communication skills of Mark Bolland, former PR Adviser to the Prince of Wales, Lady Colin has gone on the offensive ....
'The main character in the book is scarcely sympathetic. Bianca Barrett stops at nothing to achieve the social status she desires, even murdering two of her four husbands .... "'.
"(1) The Claimant had stolen the Defendant's life for portrayal in Empress Bianca."
(2) The Claimant had written a novel which was a thinly disguised defamatory version of the Defendant's life.
(3) The Claimant had' accused the Defendant of murdering two of her husbands".
"5. Arcadia books is a small independent publisher with limited resources. By letter dated 12 July 2005 the Defendant threatened Arcadia Books with litigation if it did not, amongst other things, withdraw Empress Bianca forthwith from all outlets and distributors, both in this jurisdiction and elsewhere and pulp, under supervision, all retrieved copies.
6. In response to the Defendant's threat of litigation, Arcadia Books agreed, amongst other things, to cease distribution of Empress Bianca and pulp all copies of the book in its possession and those returned to it. The Defendant knew or would have appreciated that by so acting, Arcadia Books would be in breach of its agreement with the Claimant and this would cause her significant loss and damage".
It is by no means obvious to me from this pleading that withdrawal of the book in such circumstances would constitute a breach of the publishing agreement - still less that Mrs Safra would have formed such a perception. There is no reason to suppose that she had seen the contract or received any legal advice about its terms.
"First it seems that I should address the primary facts relied upon by the claimant for establishing the defendant's responsibility for the publication of the 12th January letter. The burden is upon the claimant to establish those facts at trial. At this stage, I should make all assumptions in favour of the claimant so far as pleaded facts are concerned.
Again, in so far as evidence has been introduced for the purpose of the present application, I should assume that those facts will be established, save in so far as it can be demonstrated on written evidence that any particular factual allegation is indisputably false.
The next question is whether, on the facts assumed, a properly directed jury could draw the inference for which the claimant contends. In this case, of course, the inference is that the second defendant was, in some sense, a participant in the publication of the letter. I should only rule out the case against the second defendant if I am satisfied that a jury would be perverse to draw that inference ...
If the defendant's case is so clear that it cannot be disputed, there would be nothing left for a jury to determine. If, however, there is room for legitimate argument, either on any of the primary facts or as to the feasibility of the inference being drawn, then a judge should not prevent the claimant having the issue or issues resolved by a jury. I should not conduct a mini trial or attempt to decide the factual dispute on first appearances when there is the possibility that cross-examination might undermine the case that the defendant is putting forward."
"56. For present purposes what matters is that English law needs to accommodate the strand of Article 10 jurisprudence which is intended to protect libel defendants, and journalists in particular, from having to prove the unprovable. It is consistent with established English principles in drawing a clear distinction between fact and comment. There is nothing inherently inconsistent with Article l0 in a body of law which requires journalists to treat facts as sacred and to be prepared to prove them where necessary. By contrast, there would be an undesirable inhibition on the journalist's role if he were also required to justify matters which are incapable of objective verification: see e.g. Lingens v Austria (1986) 8 EHRR 407.
57.So far as opinion and value judgments are concerned, English law has long recognised, through the defence of fair comment, that in that context honesty is the touchstone provided the facts are accurately stated or sufficiently indicated ....
58.The rules were, however, more opaque, or at least less readily accessible, when it came to inferences drawn about facts, and especially facts which are in practice unverifiable. The classic example is of course inferences about a person's motives, reasoning or thought processes. That was the subject of Tom Bower's article in the Branson case. Although on one view assertions about a person's state of mind are factual in character, they are in important respects analogous to value judgments, not least because they are generally unverifiable and perceived by readers to be in their nature subjective: see e.g. De Haes and Gijsels v Belgium (1997) 25 EHRR 1; Nilsen and Johnsen v Norway (1999) 30 EHRR 878.
59. It was held, for example, in Branson that any reasonable reader of Mr Bower's piece would see straight away from the nature of the allegations, relating as they did to Sir Richard Branson's state of mind, that the author could not have direct knowledge, and that accordingly he must have been expressing his own views or inferences: [2001] EMLR 800, 805 at [8]. That is why it was held that the article was susceptible to a defence of fair comment but not one of justification. The principle was succinctly expressed in Branson v Bower (No 2) [2002] QB 737, 740 at [1]:
'A defendant should not be required to justify value judgments or opinions expressed on matters of public interest as though they were matters of objectively verifiable fact'.
See also at [27].
60. I understand it to be this point that [counsel] now prays in aid. It should perhaps be emphasised that nothing in the Branson decisions was intended to conflict with or undermine the repetition rule. They were not supposed to provide a way round the disciplines which the law imposes in respect of factual allegations which are objectively verifiable, e.g. to the effect that a claimant has committed a criminal offence. There is a fundamental difference in kind between saying, as Mr Bower did in the Evening Standard, 'Revenge rather than pure self-righteousness has motivated Richard Branson's latest bid to run Britain's lottery', and alleging that someone has been raped. For reasons of policy, as explained in the recent authorities in the Court of Appeal cited above, one is not permitted to seek shelter behind a defence of fair comment when the defamatory sting is one of verifiable fact. Depending on the meaning of the particular words complained of, a defendant has either to justify the primary factual allegation, e.g. of rape, or comply with the necessary disciplines to establish 'reasonable grounds to suspect'. Fair comment does not provide an escape route in such circumstances."
"I do not think that the court's power properly extends to denying a claimant the chance of persuading a jury, albeit against all the odds, that his account of the meeting is the truth and his adversary's is not. Were the jury in this case actually to find for the claimant, 1 do not think that this court could then strike down their verdict as perverse; and that, as 1 believe, is the touchstone by which the r.24 power falls to be exercised in a case like this ... ".
i) that there was any direct inducement;
ii) that there was indirect inducement though unlawful means;
iii) that there was an intention to cause economic harm to the Claimant (whether as an end in itself or as a means of achieving some ulterior motive).