From: | Danuta Mendelson <danuta.mendelson@deakin.edu.au> |
To: | James Lee <j.s.f.lee@bham.ac.uk> |
'obligations@uwo.ca' | |
Date: | 25/11/2009 10:32:03 UTC |
Subject: | RE: Defamation in English Law |
With
regards to the speech of Mr Justice Eady
(http://www.judiciary.gov.uk/docs/speeches/justice-eady-univ-of-hertfordshire-101109.pdf), his Honour said:
‘… in Wainwright v Home Office [2004] 2 AC
406 (the case about strip searching), the House of Lords rejected an invitation
to declare the existence of “a previously unknown tort of invasion of
privacy”: see at [31]-[35]. Those are the words of Lord Hoffmann,
with whom Lords Hope and Hutton agreed.
This was not, however, to deny the judicial function anticipated
six years earlier by Lord Irvine of balancing, on the facts of individual
cases, considerations of free speech and personal privacy whenever they come
into conflict – since both reflect rights now incorporated into English
law. That there is no contradiction is perhaps highlighted by the
fact that, within months, Lord Hoffmann was also a party to the decision
in the critically important case of Naomi Campbell v MGN Ltd [2004] 2 AC
457. “
Eady
J omitted to add that Lord Hoffmann was one of the dissentients in Campbell.
With kind regards,
Danuta
Professor Danuta Mendelson
MA, PhD, LLM
Chair in Law (Research)
School of Law
Deakin University
Burwood Highway
Burwood Vic 3125
Australia
Tel: + 61 (0) 3 9244 6733/ 92446062
From: James Lee
[mailto:j.s.f.lee@bham.ac.uk]
Sent: Monday, 23 November 2009 11:53 PM
To: 'obligations@uwo.ca'
Subject: Defamation in English Law
Dear
Colleagues,
Members
may be interested to know that the Ministry of Justice in England is
undertaking a consultation on defamation and the internet, considering in
particular whether to review the “multiple publication rule”. The
consultation comes some seven years after a relevant Law Commission project
(Law Commission, Defamation and the Internet: A Preliminary Investigation,
Scoping Study No 2, December 2002) and coincides with a rise in adverse
media coverage here about libel tourism and our allegedly overly
claimant-friendly libel laws, particularly in the context of material published
on the internet but originally in another jurisdiction. It considers Berezovsky
and Loutchansky and there are also questions about the limitation
periods for such claims. There is an alternative suggestion to extend
“the defence of qualified privilege to publications on online archives
outside the one year limitation period for the initial publication, unless the
publisher refuses or neglects to update the electronic version, on request,
with a reasonable letter or statement by the claimant by way of explanation or
contradiction.” The consultation is available here: http://www.justice.gov.uk/consultations/defamation-internet-consultation-paper.htm
and is open until 16th December 2009.
On
this general theme, two recent judicial speeches may be of interest: by Lord
Judge, the Lord Chief Justice, who spoke to the Society of Editors last week (http://www.judiciary.gov.uk/docs/speeches/lcj-society-editors-nov-2009.pdf)
and by Mr Justice Eady (http://www.judiciary.gov.uk/docs/speeches/justice-eady-univ-of-hertfordshire-101109.pdf)
Best
wishes,
James
--
James Lee
Lecturer
Director of the LLB Programme
Birmingham Law School
University of Birmingham
Edgbaston
Birmingham
B15 2TT, United Kingdom
Tel: +44 (0)121 414 3629
E-mail: j.s.f.lee@bham.ac.uk