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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 >> Hijazi v Yaxley-Lennon (Rev 1) [2020] EWHC 3058 (QB) (16 November 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2020/3058.html Cite as: [2021] EMLR 7, [2020] EWHC 3058 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
MEDIA & COMMUNICATIONS LIST
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
Jamal Hijazi (by his litigation friend Abdulnaser Youssef) |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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Stephen Yaxley-Lennon |
Defendant |
____________________
John Stables (instructed by Watson Woodhouse Limited) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 3 November 2020
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Crown Copyright ©
The Honourable Mr Justice Nicklin :
i) the First Video:
"The Claimant had (1) as part of a gang, participated in a violent assault on a young girl which had caused her significant injuries; and (2) threatened to stab another child."
ii) the Second Video:
"The Claimant had, as part of a gang, participated in a violent assault on a young girl which had caused her significant injuries."
i) the Claimant was to file and serve an Amended Particulars of Claim by 28 April 2020; and
ii) the Defendant was to file and serve an Amended Defence by 19 May 2020; and
iii) the Claimant was to file and serve a Reply by 2 June 2020.
i) amended his defence of truth to defend, as substantially true, the meanings of the two Videos found by the Court;
ii) added some further material to the Particulars of Truth; and
iii) added a new defence seeking to defend the publication of the two Videos as publications on a matter of public interest under s.4 Defamation Act 2013 ("the public interest defence").
"It is my experience that an opponent would usually agree to such additional amendments unless there was some glaring problem with them. However, if you refuse to do so then an application will be made and if successful there may be costs consequences."
"As you have now accepted, your client did not have permission pursuant to the Court Order of 18 May 2020 to plead a new public interest defence… It is disappointing that you did not raise this issue at the time you originally sought to serve the Amended Defence. Further no warning was given of the proposed amendment, which of course could have been previously pleaded at any stage. We note that even now there has been no explanation of why your client has chosen to take this course."
The solicitors sought confirmation from the Defendant's solicitors that the parts of the Amended Defence for which the Defendant had not obtained permission to amend would be removed.
i) Under the existing particulars of truth, the proposed amendments fall into two categories and can be summarised as (a) adding clarification and further details to existing incidents of alleged violent behaviour of the Claimant; and (b) seeking to add three new incidents.
ii) Under the particulars of the new public interest defence, the Defendant has relied upon the following matters (with paragraph numbers referring to paragraphs in the draft Amended Defence):
a) The Viral Video was recorded on or around 25 October 2018 and then published via social media on or around 27 November 2018 (§§13-14).
b) The appearance of a Go Fund Me page, on 27 November 2018, enabling people to donate money to the Claimant. The Defendant alleges that the Viral Video (§§15-18):
"…was made public in order to enrich the Claimant and that the Claimant had a financial interest in misrepresenting the playing ground incident as one of the racist bullying of a refugee in order to maximise his income from the Go Fund Me page. Alternatively, the Claimant was being controlled by third parties who were using him to raise these funds by misrepresenting the incident on the playing field."
c) By the time of publication of the Videos by the Defendant, the Claimant had received substantial amounts of money via the Go Fund Me page (§22).
d) The Viral Video was reported upon by national media and B, who was 15 years-old, was "universally condemned" for his racist bullying of the Claimant, a Syrian refugee. No attempt had been made to obtain B's side of the story. B had received death threats, was under police protection and he and his family had been forced to leave their home (§§19-21).
e) The Defendant was contacted by parents of children at the school attended by B and the Claimant. They told him that the allegations against B were not true. Whilst the events in the Viral Video were factually accurate, the context or background was not one of racist bullying (§23).
f) The Defendant contacted B and visited him to record an interview. B told him that he had had an argument with the Claimant, had pushed him to the ground and squirted water on him; denied that there was any racist element; explained that the media attention provoked by the Viral Video had led him to be permanently excluded from his school without proper investigation; gave details of another incident of violence involving the Claimant; explained that he had and his family had received threats of violence (and provided the Defendant with copies of the death threats made against him on social media); and asked the Defendant to tell people his side of the story (§§24-25).
g) The Defendant travelled to Huddersfield to meet the mother of another child, who gave a video interview to him and complained of verbal and physical abuse by the Claimant of her and her 12-year-old son (§27).
h) The Defendant also met the mother of another pupil who alleged that her daughter had been assaulted by the Claimant with a hockey stick (§28).
i) The Defendant "discovered" an allegation which had been made against the Claimant on social media by another parent who, "following the publicity generated by [the Viral Video]", had posted that her daughter had been bitten on the head by the Claimant. The Defendant contacted the mother, and later met with and interviewed her, and she provided further details of the alleged incident (§§29-30).
j) In the final paragraph (§31), the Defendant summarises his public interest defence as follows:
"At the time of publication of each [Video]:
31.1 B was being wrongly traduced and he and his family were suffering very badly as a result. He needed and wanted his version of events to be made public.
31.2 The Claimant was making a great deal of money out of the coordinated publication of the [Viral Video] and the deployment of the Go Fund Me page. A false image of the Claimant was being presented to the world at large in order to make money for him and/or which was incidentally but wrongly causing him to make money.
31.3 The Defendant had, as a result of the investigation outlined above, discovered that there was far more to the story concerning the [Viral Video] than had been reported.
31.4 It was in the public interest that B's version of events was publicised and the Claimant's and/or the public's and media's perception of the relevant events challenged.
31.5 The Defendant was the only person who had investigated the story from B's point of view.
31.6 There was no requirement to contact the Claimant prior to publication because his version of events had already been published. The [Videos] were reacting to that version of events and putting forward the position from B's point of view.
31.7 Therefore in all the circumstances there was a public interest in broadcasting the videos complained of and the Defendant reasonably believed in the existence of that public interest."
Application to Amend: the Law
i) The threshold test for permission to amend is the same as that applied in summary judgment applications: Elite Property Holdings Ltd -v- Barclays Bank plc [2019] EWCA Civ 204 [40]-[42] per Asplin LJ.
a) The person applying for permission to amend a statement of case must show that the amendments have a real, as opposed to fanciful, prospect of success; one that is more than merely arguable and carries some degree of conviction: ED&F Man Liquid Products Ltd v Patel [2003] EWCA Civ 472 [6]-[8] per Peter Gibson LJ.
b) A claim does not have such a prospect where: (a) it is possible to say with confidence that the factual basis for the claim is fanciful because it is entirely without substance; (b) the applicant does not have material to support at least a prima facie case that the allegations are correct; and/or (c) the applicant has pleaded insufficient facts in support of his/her case to entitle the Court to draw the necessary inferences: Three Rivers District Council v Bank of England (No.3) [2003] 2 AC 1 [95] per Lord Hope.
c) The court is entitled to reject a version of the facts which is implausible, self-contradictory or not supported by the contemporaneous documents. It is appropriate for the court to consider whether the proposed pleading is coherent, and contains the properly particularised elements of the cause of action or defence relied upon: Elite Property Holdings Ltd [42] per Asplin LJ.
ii) Amendments sought to be made to a statement of case must contain sufficient detail to enable the other party and the Court to understand the case that is being advanced and they must disclose reasonable grounds upon which to bring or defend the claim: Habibsons Bank Ltd -v- Standard Chartered Bank (HK) Ltd [2011] QB 943 [12] per Moore-Bick LJ.
iii) In an area of law which is developing, and where its boundaries are drawn incrementally on the basis of decided cases, it is not normally appropriate summarily to dispose of the claim or defence. In such areas, development of the law should proceed on the basis of actual facts found at trial and not on the basis of hypothetical facts assumed to be true on an application to strike out: Farah -v- British Airways plc, The Times 26 January 2000 [42]-[43] per Chadwick LJ.
i) was the statement complained of, or did it form part of, a statement on a matter of public interest? If so,
ii) did the defendant believe that publishing the statement complained of was in the public interest? If so,
iii) was that belief reasonable?
- Economou -v- de Freitas [2019] EMLR 7 [87].
"… The statement must be 'on' a matter of public interest, or form part of a statement that is 'on' such a matter. This is plainly an objective question. It must therefore be possible to look at the statement, and identify and describe quite shortly something the words are about - one or more topics or subjects - which is or are of public interest. The wording of the statute indicates as much quite clearly…"
[60] In [Flood -v- Times Newspapers Ltd [2012] 2 AC 273 ] ..., the defendant published an article taken to mean that there were reasonable grounds to suspect that the claimant, a police officer, had corruptly taken bribes. The allegation was false. This court held that the defendant nevertheless had a valid defence of public interest. Lord Phillips of Worth Matravers, the President of the court, said at para 26 that in that case analysis of the defence required particular reference to two questions, namely public interest and verification; at para 27 that it was misleading to describe the defence as privilege; at para 78, building on what Lord Hoffmann had said in the Jameel case at para 62, that the defence normally arose only if the publisher had taken reasonable steps to satisfy himself that the allegation was true; and at para 79 that verification involved both a subjective and an objective element in that the journalist had to believe in the truth of the allegation but it also had to be reasonable for him to have held the belief. Lord Brown at para 113 chose to encapsulate the defence in a single question. "Could", he asked, "whoever published the defamation, given whatever they knew (and did not know) and whatever they had done (and had not done) to guard so far as possible against the publication of untrue defamatory material, properly have considered the publication in question to be in the public interest?". Lord Mance at para 137, echoing what Lord Nicholls had said in the Reynolds case at p 205, stressed the importance of giving respect, within reason, to editorial judgement in relation not only to the steps to be taken by way of verification prior to publication but also to what it would be in the public interest to publish; and at para 138 Lord Mance explained that the public interest defence had been developed under the influence of the principles laid down in the European Court of Human Rights ("the ECtHR").
"I would consider a belief to be reasonable for the purposes of section 4 only if it is one arrived at after conducting such inquiries and checks as it is reasonable to expect of the particular defendant in all the circumstances of the case".
This statement was approved by Sharp LJ in Economou [101] and by the Supreme Court in Serafin [67].
[110] … This defence is not confined to the media, which has resources and other support structures others do not have. Section 4 requires the court to have regard to all the circumstances of the case when determining the all-important question arising under section 4(1)(b): it says the court must have regard to all the circumstances of the case in determining whether the defendant has shown that he or she reasonably believed that publishing the statement complained of was in the public interest. In my judgment, all the circumstances of the case must include the sort of factors carefully identified by the judge, including, importantly, the particular role of the defendant in question. The statute could have made reference to the Reynolds factors in this connection, but it did not do so. That is not to say however, that the matters identified … may not be relevant to the outcome of a public interest defence, or that, on the facts of the individual case, the failure to comply with one or some of the factors, may not tell decisively against a defendant. However, even under the Reynolds regime, as Lord Nicholls made clear, the weight to be given to those factors, and any other relevant factors, would vary from case to case. As with Reynolds therefore, with its emphasis on practicality and flexibility, all will depend on the facts."
"3. The source of the information. Some informants have no direct knowledge of the events. Some have their own axes to grind, or are being paid for their stories. 4. The steps taken to verify the information. 5. The status of the information. The allegation may have already been the subject of an investigation which commands respect."
Late or delayed amendments
[45] … In considering any application to amend a court is concerned to ensure that the case is dealt with justly and that, so far as practicable, the real issue between the parties can be adjudicated upon. However, the court is also concerned to ensure that a party faced with an amendment is not unfairly prejudiced. If an amendment is sought at any early stage in a claim, it will often be the case that any such prejudice can be adequately compensated in costs. But where an amendment is sought at a very late stage and perhaps, as here, at the trial, the position may be very different. A party faced with an application to make such a late amendment may be placed in great difficulty in giving it adequate consideration, in determining how it affects the case that has been prepared and in assessing whether, for example, it requires a corresponding amendment to its own pleading, further disclosure or fresh evidence or even an adjournment.
"…I know of no kind of error or mistake which, if not fraudulent or intended to overreach, the court ought not to correct, if it can be done without injustice to the other party. Courts do not exist for the sake of discipline, but for the sake of deciding matters in controversy, and I do not regard such amendment as a matter of favour or of grace… It seems to me that as soon as it appears that the way in which a party has framed his case will not lead to a decision of the real matter in controversy, it is as much a matter of right on his part to have it corrected, if it can be done without injustice, as anything else in the case is a matter of right."
"For my part, I doubt if [Bentley & Co. Ltd. -v- Black, 9 T.L.R. 580] does support the general proposition that fraud, if not pleaded initially, cannot be raised by subsequent amendment. No doubt it is a proposition which would apply in cases where the facts giving rise to the plea of fraud were all known at the time of the original pleading and certainly where the failure to plead such facts could amount to 'overreaching' or where the delay in pleading fraud was in connection with some tactical manoeuvre."
[12] Mrs. Talbot Rice says that the claimants made a conscious decision to only plead a contractual claim in the first instance, and then not to amend until after receipt of the witness statements, and she invited me to characterise that as an abuse of the process of the court. I do not go so far as to characterise it as an abuse, but I do regard it as misguided. Once the necessity to amend has become apparent, a party really ought to tell the other side not only of their intention to amend but, at least in outline, of what the amendment consists, so that the opposing party has sufficient advance notice in order to enable him or her to give consideration whether to oppose or consent to such an amendment. The desire to see the other side's witness statements before amending is not, I think, a good reason for holding back on a proposed amendment…"
…
[21] … Although I have accepted that this was not a conscious abuse of process, it does strike me as prima facie unfair, and the sort of unfairness that cannot readily be compensated for in costs. It creates an unlevel playing field. The modern approach in litigation is to require parties to be open, above board and cooperative. For the claimants to prepare their own evidence knowing that they might very well seek to amend to plead a proprietary estoppel claim but not telling the defendants that that was what they were going to do until after they had seen the evidence that the defendants had already prepared, strikes me as contrary to these principles.
Application to Amend: Submissions
i) The amendment seeking to add the public interest defence is not late. The amendments were raised after the Court's determination of meaning and the Claimant's resistance to the amendment is simply obstructive. Relying on observations of Moore-Bick LJ in Tesla Motors Ltd -v- BBC [2013] EWCA Civ 152 [50], Mr Stables has argued that, since the proceedings have not progressed even to the stage of close of pleadings, the action is still in its infancy and any delay that is caused by permitting the amendments will not jeopardise any trial date. No trial date has been set.
ii) Following the CCMC, the Defendant filed a witness statement dated 5 December 2019. It contained a section headed, "Interviews with parents and research prior to uploading the [Videos]", in which the Defendant described the steps he had taken to investigate what he later published in the Videos. That led Mr Stables to suggest: "On any view, therefore, the Claimant must have been aware that the Defendant believed his statements to have been properly researched and that a defence arising from the fact of that investigation was a likelihood."
iii) Relying upon the principles relevant to summary judgment applications from Easyair Ltd -v- Opal Telecom Ltd [2009] EWHC 339 (Ch) [15], the public interest defence has more than fanciful prospects of success, and the Court should not, on an application to amend, carry out a mini-trial. He submits that the Claimant's attack on the merits of the public interest defence – for example, the failure to put the allegations to the Claimant or seek his comment prior to publication – is effectively carrying out a mini-trial of the factors that ought properly to be assessed at a trial. As made clear in Economou [110] (see [22] above), the Court must have regard to all the circumstances of the case when deciding the central question of whether the Defendant reasonably believed that publishing the statement complained of was in the public interest. It is simplistic, and wrong in principle, to contend that a failure to put the allegations to the subject of a defamatory publication will inevitably prove fatal to a public interest defence: see remarks of Lord Wilson in Serafin [76].
iv) In relation to the amendments sought to be made to the defence of truth, Mr Stables submits that, by objecting, the Claimant is seeking, impermissibly, to "hobble" the defence of truth (see Mackenzie -v- Business Magazines (UK) Ltd (unreported CA, 18 January 1996) and Basham -v- Gregory (unreported CA, 21 February 1996), both referred to in the judgment of Tugendhat J in Rothschild -v- Associated Newspapers Ltd [2011] EWHC 3462 (QB) [16]-[17]). He submits, echoing a point made in the Defendant's second witness statement, that objecting to the proposed amendments to the particulars of truth is "pointless" as the same material is relied upon under the public interest defence: "the facts would be before the court in any event".
i) The evidence put forward in support of the draft amendment is patently insufficient and does not enable the Court to conclude that the public interest defence is one that has a real prospect of success.
ii) Assuming all matters in the Defendant's favour, the draft defence in any event has no reasonable prospects of success, given its limitations and the uncontested factual position.
iii) Taking into account all of the circumstances and the balance of prejudice the application should be refused as contrary to the overriding objective as a matter of the Court's discretion.
i) The Viral Video was put online on 27 November 2018. The Videos were published on the following two days; 28 and 29 November 2018 respectively. Mr Helme submits that that is a very short time in which the Defendant could have conducted his alleged 'investigations'.
ii) Further, the Viral Video did not in fact contain the allegations made in the two videos. The suggestion that the Viral Video was evidence of a racist attack by B upon the Claimant came later. The Defendant does not state when he first heard of those allegations (or from where), but Mr Helme argues it must have post-dated the publication of the Viral Video, further shortening the time available for his alleged 'investigations'.
iii) The draft Amended Defence refers to 'making contact' with B, then the Defendant visiting him and recording an interview (§24), travelling to Huddersfield to meet with the mother of another pupil (§27), and physically meeting with the mothers of two more alleged complainants (§28 and §30). Whether by oversight or design, the Defendant has not provided any information about the dates on which these interviews took place; and there is no corroborating evidence from any of these interviewees.
iv) Mr Helme contends that the evidence strongly suggests that these alleged investigations post-dated the publication of the Videos, and so cannot be relied upon.
a) In the First Video (paragraph references to Appendix 1 to the Meaning Judgment), at paragraph [4], the Defendant stated that he had "heard from the child in question"; at [5], that he "spoke[n] to the kid's mum and dad"; and, at [6], that he had "spoke[n] to other kids at the school". This is inconsistent with the details provided in the particulars of the public interest defence, but there is also no reference in the First Video to any physical meetings.
b) In paragraph [7] of the First Video, the Defendant stated that "I've been busy… today, I've literally just got onto this story, gone through my messages saying this isn't the story…". This is inconsistent with the Claimant having carried out any (or any extensive) investigations prior to the First Video.
c) In paragraph [10] of the First Video, the Defendant stated: "I'm hoping I can get an interview out of these other people, I've got all those screenshots". This strongly suggests that such interviews or physical meetings had not yet taken place.
d) In paragraph [1] of the Second Video, there is again a reference to "conversations I've had with the family of that child" without mention of a meeting. And, at [10], "I've got the mum talking to me right now. Showing me details of her son's injuries…" which appears unlikely to be a reference to a physical meeting.
e) In his first witness statement, dated 5 December 2019, the Defendant described his interview with B and exhibited a transcript. In his statement, the Defendant said:
"[B] then described what had happened to him and his family since the viral video and how he had to leave school. He explained that he was initially told that he would receive a detention as punishment, but then he was excluded for 2 days."
f) In the transcript of the interview, answering a question from the Defendant, B gave his account of what happened in the incident with the Claimant. Then the Defendant said this:
"Yes, in the first couple of days of this incident, I was contacted by parent after parent in the school. I met a parent this morning from your school, whose 12-year-old son goes [to] your school. The hockey-stick incident."
Mr Helme submits that, although the chronology is somewhat unclear, these statements strongly suggest that the interview with B (and other steps relied upon by the Defendant in relation to his pre-publication investigations) actually took place after publication of the two Videos.
v) For these reasons, Mr Helme submits, the Court cannot be satisfied that the Defendant has a real prospect of establishing that the 'investigations' relied upon in support of the public interest defence were carried out before the publications complained of.
i) The particulars pleaded in support of the defence do not address the first element required by s.4: whether the statement complained of was, or formed part of, a statement on a matter of public interest. The Videos were not concerned with public reaction to the Viral Video, or even the content and context of the Viral Video itself. Instead, in the Videos, the Defendant made a series of very serious defamatory allegations about the Claimant. The Claimant is a private figure and a child. Allegations about his conduct did not fall under any of the identified categories of public interest set out in Reynolds and applied in Doyle: e.g. matters relating to the public life of the community; the conduct of government and political life, elections and public administration; and the governance of public bodies, institutions and companies.
ii) Whilst Mr Helme accepts that the Defendant has clearly stated his belief that publication of the Videos was in the public interest, the Court can be satisfied, now, on the available evidence, and without a trial, that such a belief was not reasonable. He submits that the starting point is that the words complained of contained very serious allegations against the Claimant. The Videos alleged that, as part of a gang, he had participated in a violent assault on a young girl which had caused her significant injuries; as well as threating to stab another individual. The language used was condemnatory. It did not raise questions or suggest that there was need for an investigation. There was no suggestion of any doubt of the Claimant's guilt. As the Defendant stated in the First Video: "I now have it as absolute fact". The allegations were not put to the Claimant prior to publication and the Videos do not contain the Claimant's 'side of the story' about these allegations. The Videos did not, in any sense, put B's side of the story; B did not dispute that the events shown in the Viral Video happened. The Videos included new allegations – unrelated to the incident with B – which alleged a separate violent gang assault by the Claimant on a young girl. There was no urgency in publishing. In summary, all the Defendant had done in the Videos was unilaterally to publish serious defamatory allegations about the Claimant to the world at large.
iii) Mr Helme contends that, if the ultimate question is whether the Defendant "given whatever [he] knew (and did not know) and whatever [he] had done (and had not done) to guard so far as possible against the publication of untrue defamatory material, properly have considered the publication in question to be in the public interest?", then the Court can answer that question now, and the answer must be no.
i) In his second witness statement in support of his application to amend the Defence, the Defendant says this:
"Filing and service of the Defence was delayed by my wanting to include facts that I could obtain only from my social media accounts that had been suspended. This data needed to be obtained from the US… My Defence was filed and served on 28 June 2019 on the basis of the information that I had at that time. It was always my intention that the Defence would be amended, including to add a public interest publication defence. Later, on 3 October 2019, my solicitors sent an email to [the Claimant's solicitors] in which it was made clear that I intended to apply to amend my defence… Soon after that, on 10 October 2019, my solicitors write to [the Claimant's solicitors] again explaining why the Defence was not fully pleaded and indicated that amendments will be made… The Claimant was therefore well aware by early October 2019 at least of my intention to amend generally.
…
An Amended Defence was filed and served on 3 June 2020. The Amended Defence includes a s.4 defence. This was something I had always intended to include… I believe this is an appropriate point in the proceedings for me to plead the defence of public interest publication that I had always wished to and that had been foreshadowed to the Claimant…"
ii) The email of 3 October 2019 had been sent by the Defendant's solicitors in response to a continuing complaint by the Claimant's solicitors that the Defendants' defence of truth had failed to identify individuals towards whom it was alleged that the Claimant had been violent. It included the following:
"In a nutshell, the defendants (sic) position is that… the issues regarding anonymity will be formally addressed at the CCMC. The defendants (sic) witnesses [are] willing to provide details of identity on the basis that you provide a formal undertaking that the identity will only be revealed to your client and legal representative sin (sic) this action and that your client undertakes the same. This will also require an agreement that they are not identified in open court or mentioned in any document put before the court. However, we accept that we will have to obtain anonymity orders prior to the trial take place.
The defendant intends to apply to amend the defence and we would request that any application is postponed until after the application for the amended defence has been considered – at the latest we would ask this to be dealt with at the CCMC if the Court are (sic) unable to facilitate this before."
iii) The letter of 10 October 2019, to which the Defendant also referred, included the following in relation to the Defence:
"The suggested lack of detail provided in my client's defence is as a result of his real and genuine concern that the identity of witnesses will be misused…"
i) The Videos were published in November 2018. The claim was commenced in May 2019. There is still no date set for trial; pleadings have not even yet closed. Mr Helme lays blame for this delay principally on the Defendant. He pleaded a Defence that failed to identify the victims of the alleged incidents of violence, thereafter failed properly to engage with the Claimant's Part 18 request, refused to agree to a trial on meaning (until the 11th hour), and only revealed his intention to apply to add a public interest defence after costs budgeting had taken place and after the Court had ruled on meaning. The Claimant is seriously prejudiced because the procedural skirmishing is delaying the trial at which he hopes to obtain vindication.
ii) Mr Helme contends that the s.4 defence could and should have been pleaded at the outset. The Defence was pleaded by Leading Counsel. The Defendant's evidence is that he had "always wanted" to plead a public interest defence. In the light of what must have been a conscious decision not to do so in the original defence, the change of position cries out for explanation, but there is none. As a public interest defence is confined to material existing at the time of publication, it cannot be (and is not) suggested that it is the subsequent discovery of material or evidence that has given rise to a re-assessment of whether a public interest defence ought to be advanced. The Court has not been provided with an adequate explanation.
Application to Amend: Decision
Public interest defence
Truth