Last Updated: 23 October 2006
AUSTRALIAN BROADCASTING
CORPORATIONAPPELLANT
AND
JAMES RYAN O'NEILL RESPONDENT
1.Appeal allowed.
2.Set aside the order of the Full Court of the Supreme Court of Tasmania made on 29 August 2005 and, in its place, order that:
(a)the appeal be allowed; and
(b)Order 1 of the orders made by Crawford J on 22 April 2005 be set aside insofar as it applies to the appellant.
3.The appellant to pay the respondent's costs of the appeal to this Court.
On appeal from the Supreme Court of Tasmania
Representation:
R J Whitington QC with A T S Dawson for the appellant (instructed ABC Legal Services)
P W Tree SC with J E Green for the respondent (instructed by Hobart Community Legal Service)
Notice: This copy of the Court's Reasons for Judgment is subject to formal revision prior to publication in the Commonwealth LawReports.
Australian Broadcasting Corporation v O'Neill
Defamation - Injunctions - Interlocutory injunctions - Interlocutory injunction to restrain publication - Appellant restrained frombroadcasting documentary film making allegations including that respondent suspected of having committed notorious unsolved crime- Principles on which interlocutory injunction to restrain publication granted - Relevance of "flexible" or "rigid" approaches togranting interlocutory injunctions - Significance of value of free speech - Significance of avoiding "trial by media" - Whether relevantthat only nominal damages likely to be awarded - Significance of status of respondent as convicted life prisoner.
Injunctions - Interlocutory injunctions - Defamation - Whether general principles governing grant of interlocutory injunctions torestrain wrongs apply to interlocutory applications to restrain publication of allegedly defamatory matter - Relationship betweenBeecham Group Ltd v Bristol Laboratories Pty Ltd[1968] HCA 1; (1968) 118 CLR 618 andAmerican Cyanamid Co v Ethicon Ltd[1975] UKHL 1; [1975] AC 396 - Whether respondent had made out an entitlement to an interlocutory injunction within the principles establishedbyBeecham - Whether Full Court and primary judge shown to have erred in granting of interlocutory injunction.
Defamation - Injunctions - Jurisdiction to grant interlocutory injunction to restrain publication of allegedly defamatory matter- Nature of equitable jurisdiction to grant injunctions to restrain publication - Effect ofCommon Law Procedure Act 1854 (UK) - Effect ofJudicature Act 1873 (UK).
Appeal - Interlocutory injunction in defamation proceedings - Necessity of demonstrating error in order to justify intervention byHigh Court - Whether error shown in approach and conclusion of Full Court and primary judge.
Defamation - Defences - Justification - Whether avoiding "trial by media" relevant to determination of "public benefit" requiredbyDefamation Act 1957 (Tas) s 15.
Words and phrases - "public benefit", "public interest".
Common Law Procedure Act 1854 (UK), ss 79, 82.
Judicature Act 1873 (UK), s 25(8).
Supreme Court Civil Procedure Act 1932 (Tas),s 11(12).
Defamation Act 1957 (Tas), s 15.
The threatened publication
"The defendants rely on the fact that similar, but far more detailed, imputations to the ones of which the plaintiff complains havebeen made to the public in recent times. Copies of articles in the Hobart based Mercury newspaper on 26, 27, 28, 29 and 30 January2005, and 6, 7, 8, 11, 12, 13 and 15 April 2005, in addition to the one on 3 January 2005, to which I have already referred, weretendered. They contained many statements concerning the plaintiff, many of which are likely to have been highly defamatory. I willrefer to some of them. The Tasmanian Commissioner of Police was reported as saying that the plaintiff could be responsible for thekidnapping of the Beaumont children in 1966 and that he was convinced that the plaintiff had murdered more children than the oneof which he was convicted in 1975. The Commissioner was reported as saying: 'He's got a real lust for kiddies. He's a multiplemurderer.' It was also reported that the plaintiff was wanted in Victoria on 12 charges involving the abduction and sexual assaultof four boys in the 1970s and that the Commissioner had said that he was also a suspect concerning the disappearance and presumedmurders of several boys and girls around Australia before 1974. However, South Australian police were reported as saying that theyhad found no evidence to support the plaintiff's involvement in the disappearance of the Beaumont children and that he had been discountedfrom their inquiries. Notwithstanding those denials, the Tasmanian Commissioner was reported as maintaining what he had said andof saying 'he's killed plenty of other people', 'he's a multiple murderer' and 'he would kill other kids, there is no doubt in theworld if he gets out', adding 'we discovered that in the fortnight prior to the second boy disappearing that there were probablyfour if not five other children picked up, taken to remote locations, and had managed to escape the person who abducted them andget away relatively injury free'. He described the plaintiff as 'cold blooded, psychopathic, a prolific liar ... would seek gratificationat all costs ... no remorse, no emotion, no guilt.'Mr Davie was reported as saying 'I know O'Neill has told other people he was responsible for killing the Beaumonts', referring toa denial by the plaintiff as a refusal to confess. Mr Davie was also reported to have said that the plaintiff had murdered morechildren than the one for which he was gaoled for life in 1975. A journalist, who was said to have worked with Mr Davie on the documentary,was reported to have made similar statements, adding that she was convinced that she knew where the Beaumont children were buriedand that she wanted an investigation into the murders she believed the plaintiff had committed before being imprisoned.
Politicians became involved in the newspaper publicity. The Opposition justice spokesman called for the plaintiff to be immediatelymoved from the Gaol Farm to the security of Risdon Prison, demanding that the Attorney-General 'guarantee the safety of O'Neill'saccommodation arrangements to the people of the Derwent Valley'. The Attorney-General was reported as saying that such calls were'scandalous'. The Opposition spokesman was then reported accusing the Attorney-General of 'breathtaking arrogance and potentialrecklessness' and challenging the Attorney-General to state publicly that she was personally satisfied that housing the plaintiffat Hayes Prison Farm posed no risk to the community.
It was reported in the Mercury on 8 February 2005 that the plaintiff was prepared to meet a reporter to establish pre-interview guidelinesand to have an article based on an acceptable level for him, but the Director of Prisons prohibited the meeting. A reference wasmade in the Mercury to a political storm having erupted concerning a day-release program for prisoners which had allowed the plaintiffto fish for trout in the Derwent River accompanied only by his pet dog. The Opposition spokesman then called for a representativeof victims of crime to be a member of the Parole Board for 'appropriate balance', to which the Attorney-General retorted that thesuggestion was insulting to existing members of the Board.
On 11 April 2005, the Mercury reported a claim by a man identified as Lionel, who stated that he had been picked up by the plaintiffin a car when a 10 year old and had escaped from his clutches.
On 7 April 2005, the Mercury newspaper published having received a letter from the plaintiff's lawyer complaining that the Mercurywas attempting to keep him in custody through trial by media and that he considered it to be totally irresponsible and grossly unfairthat he was being persecuted 30 years after his conviction. His lawyer said that he believed that he deserved a second chance ifthe Parole Board deemed him suitable for release."
The proceedings in the Supreme Court of Tasmania
1.That the respondent is a suspect in the disappearance of the Beaumont children.
2.That the respondent is a suspect in the murder of the Beaumont children.
3.That the respondent was a multiple killer of children.
"My view is that, in general, it is not for the public benefit that the media should publicly allege that a person has committedcrimes of which he or she has not been convicted, whether or not there are currently proceedings afoot with respect to the crimes. It is instead in the public interest that such allegations should usually be made to the public only as a result of charges andsubsequent conviction. That the media on occasions makes such allegations is often referred to as 'trial by media', of which itappears the plaintiff complained to the Mercury. However, so far as concerns the imputation that the accused is a multiple killerof children, a more appropriate description in this case would be 'conviction by media'. No suggestion of a trial, as we understandthat word, will be involved here. Similarly, I can see no aspect of public benefit in the making public of allegations that the plaintiffwas responsible for the disappearance and murder of the Beaumont children or that he is suspected of being responsible. The responsibilityowed to the public with regard to the investigation of crime is entrusted by our society to the police and other public investigatorsand prosecutors. If there is evidence available that might assist the authorities to investigate the disappearance of the childrenin question, it should be made available to them. I have difficulty accepting that it is in the public interest that instead, suchinformation be bandied about in public. There will, of course, be cases when in the light of prior public statements by the personwho is being defamed, or the public conduct of that person, it will be for the public benefit to publish allegations of that kindto the general public, but I have difficulty seeing that this is such a case. It is sufficient to say that the claim of the defendantsto 'public benefit' may well be unsuccessful.It follows from what I have been saying that I am unpersuaded that the granting of an interlocutory injunction restraining the defendantsfrom publishing the imputations will 'restrain the discussion in the media of matters of public interest', as that expression wasused by Hunt J inChappell's case at 164, applying, of course, the law's use of the term 'public interest'."
"1.The respondent's status was that of a public persona. His conduct as a prisoner could be said to be of general interest and hispast a matter which was in the public domain.2.The fate of the Beaumont children had been and remained of community interest.
3.Issues concerning the release of prisoners have always been concerns of the community.
4.The statements, allegations or innuendoes presented in the documentary had previously been published to the community.
5.The ambit of the documentary was far wider than that portraying the activities of the respondent whilst in prison, and ... therespondent believed himself to have been betrayed [by Mr Davie who had gained access to the respondent on what the respondent saysis a false basis].
6.Notwithstanding the belief of betrayal, the respondent had previously agreed to participate in the documentary process, albeiton a differing assumption. The allegations were, on their face, defamatory although the action was subject to statutory defencesor justifications.
7.The respondent had an arguable basis for an action in defamation."
Prior restraint of publication in defamation action
"(1)Although it was one time suggested that there was no power in the court, under provisions similar to those contained in [theAct governing procedure in the Supreme Court of New South Wales] to grant an interlocutory injunction, in cases of defamation, itis settled that the power exists in such cases.(2)In such cases, the power is exercised with great caution, and only in very clear cases.
(3)If there is any real room for debate as to whether the statements complained of are defamatory, the injunction will be refused. Indeed, it is only where on this point, the position is so clear that, in the judge's view a subsequent finding by a jury to thecontrary would be set aside as unreasonable, that the injunction will go.
(4)If, on the evidence before the judge, there is any real ground for supposing that the defendant may succeed upon any such groundas privilege, or of truth and public benefit, or even that the plaintiff if successful, will recover nominal damages only, the injunctionwill be refused."
Public benefit and public interest
"15. It is lawful to publish defamatory matter if -(a)the matter is true; and
(b)it is for the public benefit that the publication should be made."
"The defence of justification rests on a different footing in New South Wales from that on which it rests in England. In Englandit is a complete answer to a civil action that the defamatory matter complained of was true. The reason upon which this rule oflaw rests, as I understand, is that, as the object of civil proceedings is to clear the character of the plaintiff, no wrong is doneto him by telling the truth about him. The presumption is that, by telling the truth about a man, his reputation is not loweredbeyond its proper level, but is merely brought down to it. The law was altered in this respect in New South Wales many years ago. It was felt that to allow past misconduct, or discreditable episodes which were dead and gone, to be revived and dragged into thelight of day at will by maliciously minded scandalmongers was too hard upon people who, whatever indiscretions they might have committedin the past, were leading respectable lives; and the Legislature, accordingly, provided that, in an action for defamation, the truthof the matters charged should not amount to a defence, unless it was for the public benefit that they should be published."
Reputation
Conclusion and Orders
The Supreme Court action
The interlocutory application
The issues
The jurisdiction of the Supreme Court
"It was settled before the Judicature Act that the Court of Chancery had no jurisdiction to restrain a publication merely becauseit was a libel."
On the eve of the introduction of the Judicature system, Lord Cairns LC, speaking for the Court of Appeal in Chancery inPrudential Assurance Company v Knott declared[49]:
"[A]s I have always understood, it is clearly settled that the Court of Chancery has no jurisdiction to restrain the publication merelybecause it is a libel. There are publications which the Court of Chancery will restrain, and those publications, as to which thereis a foundation for the jurisdiction of the Court of Chancery to restrain them, will not be restrained the less because they happenalso to be libellous."
"Prior to the [1854 Act], neither Courts of Law nor Courts of Equity could issue injunctions in such a case as this: not Courts ofEquity, because cases of libel could not come before them; not Courts of Law, because prior to 1854 they could not issue injunctionsat all. But the 79th and 82nd sections of the [1854 Act] undoubtedly conferred on the Courts of Common Law the power, if a fit caseshould arise, to grant injunctions at any stage of a cause in all personal actions of contract or tort, with no limitation as todefamation."
"Nevertheless, although the power had existed since 1854, there is no reported instance of its exercise by a Court of Common Law tillSaxby v Easterbrook[66], which was decided in 1878. In that case the injunction was not applied for, nor, of course, granted, till after a verdict and judgmenthad ascertained the publication to be a libel. That case was acquiesced in; and about the same time the Chancery Division began,and it has since continued, to assert the jurisdiction, which has been questioned before us, of granting injunctions on the interlocutoryapplication of one of the parties to an action for libel."
Interlocutory injunctions
"The first is whether the plaintiff has made out a prima facie case, in the sense that if the evidence remains as it is there is aprobability that at the trial of the action the plaintiff will be held entitled to relief ... The second inquiry is ... whether theinconvenience or injury which the plaintiff would be likely to suffer if an injunction were refused outweighs or is outweighed bythe injury which the defendant would suffer if an injunction were granted."
By using the phrase "prima facie case", their Honours did not mean that the plaintiff must show that it is more probable than notthat at trial the plaintiff will succeed; it is sufficient that the plaintiff show a sufficient likelihood of success to justifyin the circumstances the preservation of the status quo pending the trial. That this was the sense in which the Court was referringto the notion of a prima facie case is apparent from an observation to that effect made by Kitto J in the course of argument[71]. With reference to the first inquiry, the Court continued, in a statement of central importance for this appeal[72]:
"How strong the probability needs to be depends, no doubt, upon the nature of the rights [the plaintiff] asserts and the practicalconsequences likely to flow from the order he seeks."
"The purpose sought to be achieved by giving to the court discretion to grant such injunctions would be stultified if the discretionwere clogged by a technical rule forbidding its exercise if upon that incomplete untested evidence the court evaluated the chancesof the plaintiff's ultimate success in the action at 50 per cent or less, but permitting its exercise if the court evaluated hischances at more than 50 per cent."
"Sounless the material available to the court at the hearing of the application for an interlocutory injunctionfails to disclosethat the plaintiff has any real prospect of succeeding in his claim for a permanent injunction at the trial, the court should go onto consider whether the balance of convenience lies in favour of granting or refusing the interlocutory relief that is sought." (emphasisadded)
Those statements do not accord with the doctrine in this Court as established byBeecham and should not be followed. They obscure the governing consideration that the requisite strength of the probability of ultimatesuccess depends upon the nature of the rights asserted and the practical consequences likely to flow from the interlocutory ordersought.
Defamation and interlocutory injunctions
"But it is obvious that the subject-matter of an action for defamation is so special as to require exceptional caution in exercisingthe jurisdiction to interfere by injunction before the trial of an action to prevent an anticipated wrong."
His Lordship added[84]:
"The right of free speech is one which it is for the public interest that individuals should possess, and, indeed, that they shouldexercise without impediment, so long as no wrongful act is done; and, unless an alleged libel is untrue, there is no wrong committed;but, on the contrary, often a very wholesome act is performed in the publication and repetition of an alleged libel. Until it isclear that an alleged libel is untrue, it is not clear that any right at all has been infringed; and the importance of leaving freespeech unfettered is a strong reason in cases of libel for dealing most cautiously and warily with the granting of interim injunctions."
It is apparent from these remarks that the English Court of Appeal inBonnard was dealing with a defamation law where truth was an absolute defence, whereas under the 1957 Act s 15 required truth and publicbenefit[85].
"[i]f, on the evidence before the judge, there is any real ground for supposing that the defendant may succeed upon any such groundas privilege, or of truth and public benefit, or even that the plaintiff, if successful, will recover nominal damages only".
"how the exercise of such a jurisdiction can be reconciled with the trial of matters of libel and defamation by juries under the 55Geo III, c 42, or indeed with the liberty of the press. That act appoints a jury as the proper tribunal for trial of injuries tothe person by libel or defamation; and the liberty of the press consists in the unrestricted right of publishing, subject to theresponsibilities attached to the publication of libels, public or private."[95]
The reference to "the liberty of the press" reflected the statement by Lord Mansfield inR v Shipley[96] that "[t]he liberty of the press consists in printing without any previous licence, subject to the consequences of law". The statutorysystem of press licensing in England had lapsed in 1695 and 13 proposals over the next decade for its revival had come to nothing[97]. (The unsuccessful attempts by Governor Darling to institute a press licensing system are a landmark in the constitutional historyof New South Wales[98].)
The present case
"My view is that, in general, it is not for the public benefit that the media should publicly allege that a person has committedcrimes of which he or she has not been convicted, whether or not there are currently proceedings afoot with respect to the crimes. It is instead in the public interest that such allegations should usually be made to the public only as a result of charges andsubsequent conviction. That the media on occasions makes such allegations is often referred to as 'trial by media', of which itappears the plaintiff complained to the Mercury. However, so far as concerns the imputation that the accused is a multiple killerof children, a more appropriate description in this case would be 'conviction by media' ... There will, of course, be cases whenin the light of prior public statements by the person who is being defamed, or the public conduct of that person, it will be forthe public benefit to publish allegations of that kind to the general public, but I have difficulty seeing that this is such a case. It is sufficient to say that the claim of the defendants to 'public benefit' may well be unsuccessful."
"The licentiousness of the press is Pandora's Box, the source of every evil. Miserable is the condition of individuals, dangerousis the condition of the State, if there is no certain law, or, which is the same thing, no certain administration of law, to protectindividuals, or to guard the State."
As in other fields[103], the policy of the law struck here represents a particular balance between competing interests. With respect to tortious liabilityto be determined at trial, that balance for this case is struck by statute, the 1957 Act. With respect to interlocutory restraintby injunction, attention must be paid to the case law as analysed in these reasons.
"Irrespective of the import of the language when used in consideration of the tort of defamation, I do not accept, with due respectto the learned primary judge, that any synonymity, if such be the case, transfers into the principle of injunctive restraint of publication. The existence of a defence is a relevant factor, but prohibition of publication is governed by different legal principle."
Conclusion and orders
The case in context
"If the action is brought to trial, it might be held that the documentary is defamatory of the respondent, and a permanent injunctionmight be granted. If not, the televising of the documentary will have been delayed, rather than prevented. If the [ABC] has paidfor a documentary that should never go to air, the existing injunction works no injustice. If it has paid for a documentary whichshould be permitted to go to air, any injustice in delaying its transmission until this action has been determined would not be substantial,in a financial sense, in my view ... the injunction appealed against restrains the publication of material concerning the allegedor suspected criminal activities of one man; it concerns events prior to his incarceration in 1975; and it is of a temporary nature. Because of those circumstances I think that, even if the injunction does work some injustice to the appellant in a non-financialsense, any such injustice is not substantial."
"[Earlier cases] show that the assertion that news is a perishable commodity often lacks foundation[129] and the ends to which publishers may be prepared to go in pursuit of their own interests. The asserted urgency as often as not isas likely to be driven by commercial imperatives as by any disinterested wish to inform the public. It would be naive to believethat the media's priorities would be otherwise ... It will be rare in fact that the public interest will be better served by partialtruth and inaccuracy this Tuesday than balance and the truth on Friday week."
The facts and legislation
"[A] greater problem for the defendants will be to establish that the publication of the imputations will be for the public benefit. The submissions of counsel for the defendants about the matter at the hearing were slight in substance and in content. It appearsthat was due to a belief that counsel for the plaintiff had conceded the issue of public benefit. I had not understood that sucha concession had been made."
"I can see no aspect of public benefit in the making public of allegations that the [respondent] was responsible for the disappearanceand murder of the Beaumont children or that he is suspected of being responsible. The responsibility owed to the public with regardto the investigation of crime is entrusted by our society to the police and other public investigators and prosecutors. If thereis evidence available that might assist the authorities to investigate the disappearance of the children in question, it should bemade available to them."
Common ground
The issues
(1)The rigid or flexible approach issue: Whether the agreed significance for the grant of an interlocutory injunction of the values of free speech and a free press[169] was such that relief, by way of prior restraint, should virtually always be refused where the publisher indicated an intention todefend the proceedings and where such defence was not obviously futile or bound to fail? Or whether the general principle applicableto the grant of interlocutory injunctive relief, as stated inBeecham Group Ltd v Bristol Laboratories Pty Ltd("Beecham")[170] and refined in subsequent cases[171], applied to such cases so that, in each instance, the issue was whether the applicant has demonstrated that there was a serious questionto be tried and that the balance of convenience is in favour of the grant of the injunction sought?
(2)Flexible relief- error of principleissue: Whether, if the answer to issue (1) is that the "rigid rule" approach to the provision of an interlocutory injunction in advanceof the trial of an action for defamation is rejected, the judges below erred in failing to give proper weight to the considerationof the value of free speech and of a free press so that an error of principle has been demonstrated warranting the intervention ofthis Court?
(3)The bad reputation issue: Whether the courts below erred in failing to pay any, or adequate, regard to the bad reputation which the respondent already had? An adverse reputation had resulted from the respondent's conviction and sentence to life imprisonment for the murder of a youngchild, and the alleged confession in 1975 to the additional murder of another child. It was suggested that any added damage to hisreputation would be minimal, rendering it probable that, at most, he would recover only nominal damages were he to succeed in hisaction, so that an interlocutory injunction should not be granted. Was this a case where damages thus constituted an adequate andappropriate remedy for any wrong done to the respondent? Or would acceptance of that submission postulate a class of defamation-freeplaintiffs, diminishing the principle of equality before the law for all persons such that none are put beyond the protection ofthe law where they can prove that they have been defamed without the availability of an applicable legal defence?
The flexible rule for injunctions in defamation
"To justify the Court in granting an interim injunction it must come to a decision upon the question of libel or no libel, beforethe jury decided whether it was a libel or not. Therefore the jurisdiction was of a delicate nature. It ought only to be exercisedin the clearest case, where any jury would say that the matter complained of was libellous, and where if the jury did not so findthe Court would set aside the verdict as unreasonable. The Court must also be satisfied that in all probability the alleged libelwas untrue, and if written on a privileged occasion that there was malice on the part of the defendant. It followed from these threerules that the Court could only on the rarest occasions exercise their jurisdiction."
"The court will not restrain the publication of an article, even though it is defamatory, when the defendant says he intends to justifyit or to make fair comment on a matter of public interest. That has been established for many years ever sinceBonnard v Perriman[191]. The reason sometimes given is that the defences of justification and fair comment are for the jury, which is the constitutionaltribunal, and not for a judge. But a better reason is the importance in the public interest that the truth should out. As the courtsaid in that case[192]:'The right of free speech is one which it is for the public interest that individuals should possess, and, indeed, that they shouldexercise without impediment, so long as no wrongful act is done'.
There is no wrong done if it is true, or if it is fair comment on a matter of public interest. The court will not prejudice theissue by granting an injunction in advance of publication."
"A further example of the manner in which judges trained in a common law rather than an equitable tradition may misunderstand thenature of equitable discretions, and hence attempt to describe them in terms of inflexible rules ... In such cases the right to obtainan interlocutory injunction ought, on general equitable principles, to depend simply on whether, in the special circumstances inquestion, the balance of justice inclines towards the grant or refusal of relief; and such matters should be taken into account asconsiderations of hardship in relation to the parties, any special considerations of unfairness that may arise, the undesirabilitythat a defendant should be prevented from making statements the legality or illegality of which will only subsequently be establishedwith certainty, the extent to which third persons or the public generally may be interested in the truth of those statements, thedegree of probability that the alleged libel will be published and will be wrongful, the degree to which the plaintiff will be injuredin the event of its publication, and any other material considerations."
The value of free speech was respected
"The special practices adopted in such cases result from the need to protect freedom of speech and freedom of the press, and fromthe associated notion that a decision as to whether published material is or is not defamatory is properly a decision for a juryrather than a judge."
"In fact the learned primary judge did not express such a view in absolute terms, but used the adverb 'usually'. The learned primaryjudge was entitled to take into account the way our system of justice operates, the nature of the documentary in question, and thenature and extent of any benefit to the public that might result from the televising of the documentary prior to the trial of theaction. He was entitled to form and express views in relation to those matters. The view that he expressed was reasonably opento him. He did not apply a wrong principle in taking that view into account."
The respondent was not outside legal protection
"The right of a man to the protection of his own reputation from unjustified invasion and wrongful hurt reflects no more than ourbasic concept of the essential dignity and worth of every human being - a concept at the root of any decent system of ordered liberty."
"The respondent's reputation is already a bad one since it is well known that he is serving a life sentence for the murder of a child,and the Mercuryhas published material suggesting that he is suspected of involvement in the disappearance of the Beaumont children ... But it wasopen on the evidence for the learned primary judge to conclude that the televising of the documentary in question might spread therespondent's bad reputation more widely, and that members of the public might receive information injurious to his reputation thatthey had not received before. He made findings to that effect. In my view he did not err in doing so, and certainly did not acton a wrong principle."
Orders
Three key questions about free speech
Kirby J: three points
The approach of the Full Court majority
The narrowness of the Corporation's challenge
"Paragraph (d) concerns fair comment about the merits of a case. There is no reason to think that such an issue will arise at thetrial of the plaintiff's action. Paragraph (h) concerns fair comment about a communication made to the public on any subject. Idid not understand counsel to identify what the relevant communication was and I think that the defendants will have some difficultyat trial with the requirement for fairness. Counsel for the ABC said that par (a) is the most obvious paragraph that applies tothis case, but I cannot see that it would found a defence, for it brings in the provisions of s 13, none of which conceivably arisehere."
And he dealt with s 16(1)(c), (e) and (h)[260] thus[261]:
"The defendants also intend to plead qualified privilege pursuant to s 16(1)(h), but as that defence requires public benefit to beestablished, its likely success is open to doubt. Counsel for the second and third defendants said that his clients will also relyon s 16(1)(c) and possibly also (e). Paragraph (c) concerns a publication 'for the public good'. I think that a defence relyingon that may have difficulty for the reasons I expressed when dealing with the question of public benefit. I regard par (e) as likelyto be inapplicable in the circumstances of the case. Once again, it would raise the question of the public's interest or benefit."
In these passages the primary judge was courteously saying that the defences were completely baseless.
The five wrong principles alleged
(a)He conflated the requirement of "public benefit" in s 15 of theDefamation Act with the public interest in having free speech unfettered.
(b)He wrongly focused on the question whether it was satisfactory that, were the film to be broadcast, the plaintiff would facetrial or conviction "by media".
(c)He failed to take proper account of the significance of free speech.
(d)He failed to appreciate that the issue before him was whether, having regard to the nature of the rights asserted, includingthe special considerations cautioning against prior equitable restraint upon publication, and other relevant matters including theapparent weakness or strength of the proposed defence under s 15, the plaintiff's case was strong enough to justify passing on toan inquiry into the balance of convenience. This point overlaps in part with criticism (c) above.
(e)He failed to take account of the possibility that only nominal damages might be awarded in view of the fact that the plaintiffis a convicted murderer, who is serving a life sentence, and who has confessed to another murder, and in view of the fact that by28 April 2005, the date of the proposed broadcast, there had already been or would have been extensive publication of matters involvingallegations of the most serious nature about the plaintiff.
The circumstances in which judgment was delivered
Evidentiary gaps
History of the power to grant interlocutory injunctions to restrain the publication of defamatory material
"In all Cases of Breach of Contract or other Injury, where the Party injured is entitled to maintain and has brought an Action, hemay, in like Case and Manner as herein-before provided with respect to Mandamus, claim a Writ of Injunction against the Repetitionor Continuance of such Breach of Contract, or other Injury, or the Committal of any Breach of Contract or Injury of a like kind,arising out of the same Contract, or relating to the same Property or Right; and he may also in the same Action include a Claim forDamages or other Redress."
Section 82 provided in part:
"It shall be lawful for the Plaintiff at any Time after the Commencement of the Action, and whether before or after Judgment, to applyex parte to the Court or a Judge for a Writ of Injunction to restrain the Defendant in such Action from the Repetition or Continuance of thewrongful Act or Breach of Contract complained of, or the Committal of any Breach of Contract or Injury of a like kind, arising outof the same Contract, or relating to the same Property or Right; and such Writ may be granted or denied by the Court or Judge uponsuch Terms as to the Duration of the Writ, keeping an Account, giving Security, or otherwise, as to such Court or Judge shall seemreasonable and just ...".
"A mandamus or an injunction may be granted or a receiver appointed by an interlocutory Order of the Court in all cases in which itshall appear to the Court to be just or convenient that such Order should be made; and any such Order may be made either unconditionallyor upon such terms and conditions as the Court shall think just ...".
"An injunction may be granted or a receiver appointed by an interlocutory order of the Court or a judge thereof in all cases in whichit shall appear to the Court or judge to be just and convenient that such order should be made; and any such order may be made eitherunconditionally or upon such terms and conditions as the Court or judge shall think just ...".
"It is to be remembered that the jurisdiction of the Court of Chancery to grant injunctions was formerly limited; it was limited bythe practice of different Chancellors. The jurisdiction was never extended in modern times beyond what was warranted by the authorities;and in course of time various vexatious and inconvenient restrictions were adopted. The granting of an injunction was always lookedupon as an extraordinary exercise of jurisdiction, but it is not so now. One of the most useful functions of a Court of Justiceis to restrain wrongful acts; and a power of this kind was given to the Common Law Courts in the largest terms by theCommon Law Procedure Act, 1854, s 79."
He then set out and discussed parts of ss 79, 81 and 82. Referring to the words "reasonable and just" in s 82, he said[274]:
"What is reasonable and just is the only limit. No doubt the Court of Chancery was not originally limited by any other terms; butthe instances in which an injunction might be granted were decided by that Court, and there were certain well-known cases in whichit was settled that the Court ought not to grant an injunction."
He then said[275]:
"That being so, when we come to theJudicature Act, 1873, we find this: First, all jurisdiction whatever which was exercised by any of these Courts is transferred to the new Court. Next, all Acts of Parliament applying to any one of the old Courts apply to the High Court of Justice, which consequently has jurisdictionto grant injunctions whenever it may seem just."
After setting out s 25(8) of that Act, giving power to grant interlocutory injunctions in all cases where it appeared to the courtto be just and convenient, he concluded[276]:
"If this can be done by interlocutory applicationà fortiori it can be done at the trial of the action, on the principle of 'omne majus continet in se minus'. Next, by theCommon Law Procedure Act this power would have been exercised at the trial as far as it was 'just.' The only addition is that in theJudicature Act you have 'just or convenient': not that that would be convenient which was unjust; but that in ascertaining what is 'just' you musthave regard to what is convenient. All acts, therefore, which a Common Law Court or a Court of Equity only could formerly restrainby injunction, can now be restrained by the High Court.That being so, it appears to me that the only limit to my power of granting an injunction is whether I can properly do so. For thatis what it amounts to. In my opinion, having regard to these two Acts of Parliament, I have unlimited power to grant an injunctionin any case where it would be right or just to do so: and what is right or just must be decided, not by the caprice of the Judge,but according to sufficient legal reasons or on settled legal principles."
"That case does not shew that the Court can grant an injunction in a case like this, unless it could have been granted at common lawunder theCommon Law Procedure Act, 1854. Now, under sect 79 of that Act, the injunction could only have been granted at the trial."
Sir George Jessel MR said: "I am not prepared to agree to that." After further debate, he said: "There is no doubt about the jurisdiction."
"I have no doubt whatever that there is jurisdiction to grant such an injunction. It is plain that the jurisdiction conferred onthe Common Law Courts by theCommon Law Procedure Act of 1854 extended to the granting of such an injunction. The 79th section is as large in terms as can well be, and the 82nd sectionallowsex parte injunctions in every case where a final injunction could be granted under the 79th section. Of course, under the rule ofomne majus continet in se minus, if the Court can grant an injunctionex parte,à fortiori it can grant it on notice. It is, therefore, clear to my mind that the Common Law Courts had this jurisdiction in all Common Lawactions. That jurisdiction is transferred to the High Court, and that would suffice to decide this question of jurisdiction. Butby theJudicature Act of 1873, s 25, subs 8, a larger jurisdiction to grant injunctions than existed before is given in every case; and in my opinion thatenactment extends the general jurisdiction given in Common Law actions to all actions whether in Equity or at Common Law. The result,therefore, is that there is jurisdiction in a proper case upon interlocutory application to restrain the further publication of alibel."
Baggallay and Lindley LJJ spoke to similar effect. However, since the appeal was allowed and the injunction discharged on other grounds,the remarks were obiter.
"gave the courts of common law in their discretion power to grant injunctions in actions at law in cases where an injunction oughtto issue ... It is reasonably clear that this referred to cases where there ought to be an injunction on the principles of equityjurisdiction."
He drew attention toRichmond v The Dubuque and Sioux City Railroad Co[283] which, he said, held that a similar American statute "was construed not to give a court of law power to do more than a court of equitycould have done in the way of preserving thestatus quo pending the action at law"[284]. Pound said that, contrary to Sir George Jessel MR's view, the Act of 1854 could not have given the common law courts power to grantinterlocutory injunctions in defamation actions, since courts of equity could not do so. Pound continued[285]:
"Thus, we are to believe, the Act of 1854 put liberty of the press and all the common-law rights of Englishmen into the hands of thejudges, so far as injunctions may affect them, subject to no restraint beyond the judicial sense of what justice may demand. Ifthe judges had not been anxious to put equitable relief against defamation on a sound basis, we may be sure they would never havetolerated such arguments. In truth the good sense and sound instinct of the English courts led them to strain a point ... ".
Precisely what he meant by "all the common-law rights of Englishmen" is unclear. It is also not clear how what is, on his analysis,an egregious error of statutory construction can be described as putting equitable relief on a "sound basis" or as reflecting "goodsense and sound instinct". The duty of judges is to construe statutes correctly, not to substitute for the correct constructiontheir own opinions of what the legislature ought to have enacted. And Pound's words "no restraint beyond the judicial sense of whatjustice may demand" ignore Sir George Jessel MR's requirement that interlocutory injunctions only be granted "according to sufficientlegal reasons or on settled legal principles"[286].
"[T]he legislature ... gave the power by the unqualified language of its enactment to do the very thing in question wherever the Courtshould deem it just and convenient. Had it thought right to limit the exercise of such power to cases where no question should beafterwards determined by a jury, it might have limited the exercise of such a power to such cases. It cannot be assumed to be ignorantof the state of the law or the practice, and it has enacted in the widest terms the jurisdiction in question. It is not necessaryto enumerate, but there are other examples of jurisdictions where judges must exercise, in the first instance, a judgment which must,nevertheless, afterwards be submitted to a jury."
But it has been questioned whether such general words could support this particular outcome: for example, Brett LJ inNorth London Railway Co v Great Northern Railway Co[301] said that if no court had power to issue an injunction before theJudicature Act 1873, no part of the High Court had power to issue an injunction after it.
(a)whether s 79 of the 1854 Act conferred on common law courts a power to grant injunctions restraining the publication of defamatorymatter;
(b)whether, if it did confer the power mentioned in (a), s 25(8) added a power to grant quia timet injunctions;
(c)whether, if s 79 did not confer the power mentioned in (a), s 25(8) did;
(d)whether, assuming negative answers to (a)-(c), there are other possible sources of power.
The curious evolution ofBonnard v Perryman
"necessarily sufficient for a defendant to assert that it proposes to plead justification and prove the truth of its allegations atthe trial. The nature of the material which will be sufficient to deny a plaintiff interlocutory relief must vary according to thesources of the defendant's information and according to the form of discussion which the publication of the defamatory material willtake and the extent to which it may be seen to be genuine, serious and in the public interest."
Another is seen inChappell v TCN Channel Nine Pty Ltd[319], which some say marks the beginning of a more "flexible approach". Hunt J said that an inability to hold that a jury's verdict ofno libel would be set aside as unreasonable did not require the plaintiff's application for an interlocutory injunction to be rejectedon that ground alone. He also said that there was no rule that an interlocutory injunction would be refused if, on the relevantdefences being raised, the court were not satisfied that the libel was untrue or that the defendant was actuated by malice: thosewere relevant but not decisive factors. But despite these modifications, generally the tests stated inBonnard v Perryman have been adopted in Australia[320].
Application ofBonnard v Perryman to other causes of action
"If the court were to conclude that though the plaintiff had framed his claim in a cause of action other than defamation but neverthelesshis principal purpose was to seek damages for defamation, the court will refuse interlocutory relief. If, on the other hand, thecourt is satisfied that there is some other serious interest to be protected such as confidentiality, and that that outweighs considerationsof free speech, then the court will grant an injunction."
But the correctness of this reasoning has been doubted[332]. Thus the rule inBonnard v Perryman is tending to bring considerable technical difficulties in its train.
"The Court should be governed in a libel action by the same principles as in other cases in which it is asked to grant an interlocutoryinjunction; that is, it should take into consideration the balance of convenience and inconvenience."
To this Lindley LJ replied: "Libel is a new subject-matter." And Fry LJ added: "May not, therefore, new considerations arise?" What are these new considerations justifying the limitations, which are different from those governing other interlocutory injunctions?[335]
Libel as crime
"[T]he absence in this area of the procedural safeguards traditionally associated with trial for criminal defamation and the dangersinherent in enjoining conduct which may give rise to criminal liability make the remedy one fraught with potential for abuse."
This justification forBonnard v Perryman, vague as its terms are, is rarely, if at all, now employed in the authorities. It can have little force: the privilege againstself-incrimination is available in the civil proceedings, the standards of proof are different, and the civil outcome cannot affectthe criminal outcome. It has particularly little force in Australia, where the scope of civil defamation and the scope of crimesbased on defamatory publications are very far from being co-incident[338], and where there are very few prosecutions for the latter type of narrowly defined crime.
Injunctions and proprietary rights
Involvement of courts in controversial disputes
"[T]he damages remedy, applied after jury determination of the 'libel-no libel' question in favour of the plaintiff, involves thecourts only minimally in disputes which are politically or otherwise controversial, while in contrast, the availability of injunctiverelief means that they may be thrust unwillingly into such disputes, with supervision and enforcement of the equitable remedy placinga heavy burden on their officials."
This is not a justification which has been advanced in the authorities. Only a small proportion of defamation cases are so "politicallyor otherwise controversial" as to be disputes from which the courts ought to be excluded, which the courts may feel peculiar unwillingnessto decide, or in relation to which there will be difficulty in enforcing injunctive relief.
Trial of libel question on motion to commit
"It would be most inconvenient to have the question of libel or no libel tried by a Judge on motion to commit [for contempt of court]instead of being tried by a jury."
Indeed it would. But this type of reasoning is a common argument against granting injunctions in a particular form whatever the wrong. The relevant inconvenience does not turn on the difference between the determination of the issue by judge and determination ofthe issue by jury. It turns on the unsatisfactoriness of having to decide whether the defendant's conduct is in contravention ofa legal norm, not at a civil hearing, but in proceedings for such non-civil sanctions as sequestration, fines or imprisonment. Todo so converts civil wrongs into crimes. The inconvenience flows from the error of drafting the interlocutory injunction by referenceto whether the particular matter was tortious - in this instance, defamatory. A properly drafted injunction against the publicationof particular material would not lead to the question of libel or no libel being tried by a judge on motion to commit for contemptof court - only the question of publication of the material.
The importance of jury trial
"[d]oubts have arisen whether on the trial of an indictment or information for the making or publishing of any libel, where an issueor issues are joined between the King and the defendant or defendants, on the plea of not guilty pleaded, it be competent to thejury impanelled to try the same to give their verdict upon the whole matter in issue ...".
Section 1 provided that:
"[O]n every such trial, the jury sworn to try the issue may give a general verdict of guilty or not guilty upon the whole matter putin issue upon such indictment or information; and shall not be required or directed, by the court or judge before whom such indictmentor information shall be tried, to find the defendant or defendants guilty, merely on the proof of the publication by such defendantor defendants of the paper charged to be a libel, and of the sense ascribed to the same in such indictment or information."
The balance of the Act consisted of provisions saving the rights of the judge to give "his opinion and directions to the jury" (s2), of the jury to find a "special verdict, in their discretion, as in other criminal cases" (s 3), and of the defendant to movein arrest of judgment in any manner that would have been available before the passing of the Act (s 4). Contrary to what is sometimessuggested, Fox's Libel Act did not preserve to the jury only the issues of what was published and whether it was defamatory; it gavethe jury the right to find the defendant not guilty for any reason and on any issue which to the jury seemed fit.
"be reconciled with the trial of matters of libel and defamation by juries under the 55 George III, cap 42, or indeed with the libertyof the press. That act appoints a jury as the proper tribunal for trial of injuries to the person by libel or defamation; and theliberty of the press consists in the unrestricted right of publishing, subject to the responsibilities attached to the publicationof libels, public or private. But if the publication is to be anticipated and prevented by the intervention of the Court of Session,the jurisdiction over libels is taken from the jury, and the right of unrestricted publication is destroyed."
In argument he had suggested that if the court exercised the jurisdiction claimed, it would be "to exercise the powers of a censor"[350].
"[I]n all Processes raised in the Outer House of the Court of Session, by ordinary Action or otherwise, on account of Injuries tothe Person, whether real or verbal, as Assault or Battery, Libel or Defamation, or on account of any Injury to Moveables, or to Lands,where the Title is not in question; or on account of Breach of Promise of Marriage, Seduction or Adultery, or any Action foundedon Delinquency orquasi Delinquency of any kind, where the Conclusion shall be for Damages and Expences only; the Lord Ordinary of the Outer House, beforewhom such Processes shall be enrolled, do remit, and he is hereby authorised and required, after Defences are lodged, to remit thewhole Process and Productions forthwith to the Jury Court in Civil Causes; which last mentioned Court is authorised and required,according to Rules and Regulations which the said Court and the Court of Session are hereinafter empowered to make, to settle anIssue or Issues, and to try the same by a Jury to be summoned and impannelled under the Provisions now in force, or hereinafter enactedfor that Purpose."
Since the remitter was only to take place after a defence was lodged, the provision did not in terms collide with the obtaining ofurgent interlocutory relief before a defence was lodged. Indeed, where interlocutory relief of a wholly quia timet character wassought, it would seem questionable whether any action for damages in the Outer House could be commenced. It seems thatFleming v Newton itself was a case of that kind[353]. Further, theJury Trials (Scotland) Act 1819, which dealt only with civil proceedings, contains no provision equivalent to s 1 of Fox's Libel Act 1792 for criminal proceedings. TheJury Trials (Scotland) Act 1815 was amended again by theJury Trials (Scotland) Act 1837, but not in any way relevant to Lord Cottenham LC's observations. This history does not suggest that trial by jury in defamationcases was viewed as being so fundamental, integral and universal an institution of the Scottish legal system in civil proceedingsas somehow to debar the Court of Session from granting interim interdicts.
"One illustration is a defamation action where an indictable offence is imputed and justification pleaded"[361].
"... cautious in expressing an opinion lest it should influence the minds of a jury, who are supposed to be more liable to be influencedthan a judge of first instance or the Court of Appeal. Whether that be so or not is fairly open to question. But that is the principleupon which the Court is reluctant to express an opinion, or to grant an injunction, which might be equivalent to expressing suchan opinion."
This reasoning was rejected by Oliver J inBestobell Paints Ltd v Bigg[364]: the rule inBonnard v Perryman applies to applications for interlocutory injunctions against injurious falsehood and other wrongs which are not tried by jury.
Other difficulties in interlocutory hearings
Uncertainty of interlocutory hearings
"To justify the Court in granting an interim injunction it must come to a decision upon the question of libel or no libel, beforethe jury decided whether it was a libel or not. Therefore the jurisdiction was of a delicate nature. It ought only to be exercisedin the clearest cases, where any jury would say that the matter complained of was libellous, and where if the jury did not so findthe Court would set aside the verdict as unreasonable."
The primary aspect of Lord Esher MR's reasoning rests on a contrast between judicial decision and jury decision, a matter discussedabove[372]. Underlying that primary aspect may be a concern turning on a revulsion from deciding, in a hearing for an interlocutory injunction,that material is defamatory before a trial court can consider the matter after a more thorough inquiry in the less hurried atmosphereof a trial. But that is a difficulty which afflicts all hearings for interlocutory injunctions. It has not led to the developmentin any other field of any special rules of the type stated inBonnard v Perryman for defamation.
"The Court [hearing an application for an interlocutory injunction against defamation] must also be satisfied that in all probabilitythe alleged libel was untrue, and if written on a privileged occasion that there was malice on the part of the defendant."
This was reflected by the observation of the Court of Appeal inBonnard v Perryman about the common law defence of justification:
"Until it isclearthat an alleged libel is untrue, it is not clear that any right at all has been infringed ... [W]e cannotfeel surethat the defence of justification is one which, on the facts whichmay bebefore them, the jury may find to bewholly unfounded ..."[374].
Thus the rule is founded partly on the pragmatic grounds stated by Brooke LJ inGreene v Associated Newspapers Ltd[375]:
"[U]ntil there has been disclosure of documents and cross-examination at the trial a court cannot safely proceed on the basis thatwhat the defendants wish to say is not true. And if it is or might be true the court has no business to stop them saying it ... [A] court cannot know whether the plaintiff has a right to his/her reputation until the trial process has shown where the truthlies."
"The principal dilemma about the grant of interlocutory injunctions ... is that there is by definition a risk that the court may makethe 'wrong' decision, in the sense of granting an injunction to a party who fails to establish his right at the trial (or would failif there was a trial) or alternatively, in failing to grant an injunction to a party who succeeds (or would succeed) at trial. Afundamental principle is therefore that the court should take whichever course appears to carry the lower risk of injustice if itshould turn out to have been 'wrong' in the sense I have described."
Avoiding the risk of a "wrong" decision requires some attention to the strength of the defendant's defences, but it does not suggestthat the plaintiff must completely exclude them. The court does not abjure the possibility of interlocutory relief until it is certainthat the plaintiff must obtain final relief.
"[T]he decision at the hearing may turn upon the question of the general character of the Plaintiffs; and this is a point which canrarely be investigated satisfactorily upon affidavit before the trial, - on which further it is not desirable that the Court shouldexpress an opinion before the trial. Otherwise, an injunction might be granted before the trial in a case in which at the trial nothingbut nominal damages, if so much, could be obtained."
It goes without saying that at trials the issues can be much more satisfactorily examined, after proper preparation and without unduerush, than at interlocutory hearings. However, it is strange thatBonnard v Perryman proceeds on the basis of assuming that the defendant's defences are strong until the plaintiff excludes their application, whileassuming that the plaintiff has no chance of recovering more than nominal damages until the contrary is established. At the interlocutoryhearing the strength of the defendant's defences, which the defendant has the burden of proving at trial, is presumed in favour ofthe defendant; the weakness of the plaintiff's case on damages is also presumed in favour of the defendant. Why?
Free speech
"The right of free speech is one which it is for the public interest that individuals should possess, and, indeed, that they shouldexercise without impediment, so long as no wrongful act is done; and, unless an alleged libel is untrue, there is no wrong committed;but, on the contrary, often a very wholesome act is performed in the publication and repetition of an alleged libel. Until it isclear that an alleged libel is untrue, it is not clear that any right at all has been infringed; and the importance of leaving freespeech unfettered is a strong reason in cases of libel for dealing most cautiously and warily with the granting of interim injunctions."
"The freedom of the press is extolled as one of the great bulwarks of liberty. It is entrenched in the constitutions of the world. But it is often misunderstood. I will first say what it doesnot mean. It does not mean that the press is free to ruin a reputation or to break a confidence, or to pollute the course of justiceor to do anything that is unlawful. I will next say what itdoesmean. It means that there is to be no censorship. No restraint should be placed on the press as to what they should publish. Notby a licensing system. Nor by executive direction. Nor by court injunction. It means that the press is to be free from what Blackstonecalls 'previous restraint' or what our friends in the United States - co-heirs with us of Blackstone - call 'prior restraint'. Thepress is not to be restrainedin advance from publishing whatever it thinks right to publish. It can publish whatever it chooses to publish. But it does so at its own risk. It can 'publish and be damned.' Afterwards - after the publication - if the press has done anything unlawful - it can be dealtwith by the courts. If it should offend - by interfering with the course of justice - it can be punished in proceedings for contemptof court. If it should damage the reputation of innocent people, by telling untruths or making unfair comment, it may be made liablein damages. But always afterwards. Never beforehand. Never by previous restraint."
"an interference with an even more important right, the right of the community in general to discuss in public matters of public interestand concern and to be informed of the different views held by others. ... A free and general discussion of public matters is fundamentalto a democratic society."
Also in 1988 the Full Court of the Supreme Court of Victoria said[387]:
"[T]he very great importance which our society and our law have always accorded to what is called free speech, means that equity exercisesgreat care in granting injunctive relief. ... [I]t is by no means rarely a benefit to society that a hurtful truth be published. It has been felt ... that it is usually better that some plaintiffs should suffer some untrue libels for which damages will be paidthan that members of the community generally, including the so-called news media, should suffer restraint of free speech. The judgesover the centuries have also been well aware how easy it would be for a tyrant to stifle all opposition by deciding what was 'genuine'free speech, to be allowed, on the one hand and what was an unjust or unfair or dishonest taking advantage of free speech, to berepressed, on the other hand. When the court enjoins, it must be extremely clear that no unacceptable repression is taking place."
"In this country we have a free press. Our press is free to get things right and it is free to get things wrong. It is free towrite after the manner of Milton, and it is free to write in a manner that would make Milton turn in his grave. Blackstone wrotein 1769 that the liberty of the press is essential in a free state, and this liberty consists in laying no previous restraints onpublication. 'Every freeman', he said[[389]] ... 'has an undoubted right to lay what sentiments he pleases before the public: to forbid this, is to destroy the freedom of thepress.'"
"Our law, in this and many other respects, corresponds rather with the middle age of Roman jurisprudence, when liberty, learning,and humanity, were in their full vigour, than with the cruel edicts that were established in the dark and tyrannical ages of theantientdecemviri, or the later emperors."
The reference to the "middle age" is a reference to the reign of Augustus, whose love of liberty and whose humanity are, of course,both well-known. Blackstone then concluded the chapter thus[391]:
"In this and the other instances which we have lately considered, where blasphemous, immoral, treasonable, schismatical, seditious,or scandalous libels are punished by the English law, some with a greater, others with a less degree of severity; theliberty of the press, properly understood, is by no means infringed or violated. The liberty of the press is indeed essential to the nature of a freeState: but this consists in laying noprevious restraints upon publications, and not in freedom from censure for criminal matter when published. Every freeman has an undoubtedright to lay what sentiments he pleases before the public: to forbid this, is to destroy the freedom of the press: but if he publisheswhat is improper, mischievous or illegal, he must take the consequence of his own temerity." (emphasis in original)
Blackstone then put the following as his last major argument[392]:
"To subject the press to the restrictive power of a licenser, as was formerly done, both before and since the revolution, is to subjectall freedom of sentiment to the prejudices of one man, and make him the arbitrary and infallible judge of all controverted pointsin learning, religion, and government. But to punish (as the law does at present) any dangerous or offensive writings, which, whenpublished, shall on a fair and impartial trial be adjudged of a pernicious tendency, is necessary for the preservation of peace andgood order, of government and religion, the only solid foundations of civil liberty. Thus the will of individuals is still leftfree; the abuse only of that free will is the object of legal punishment."
"Our present law permits any one to say, write, and publish what he pleases; but if he make a bad use of this liberty, he must bepunished. If he unjustly attack an individual, the person defamed may sue for damages; if, on the other hand, the words be writtenor printed, or if treason or immorality be thereby inculcated, the offender can be tried for the misdemeanour either by informationor indictment."
Dicey then said[395]:
"Any man may ... say or write whatever he likes, subject to the risk of, it may be, severe punishment if he publishes any statement... which he is not legally entitled to make."
These passages repeat Blackstone's rejection of the power to impose restraints prior to publication. In that respect they do notstate the law in 1889, when the third edition of Dicey'sIntroduction to the Study of the Law of theConstitutionwas published, or 1885, when the 1st edition was published. A little later Dicey wavered[396]:
"[I]t is questionable how far the Courts themselves will, even for the sake of protecting an individual from injury, prohibit thepublication or republication of a libel, or restrain its sale until the matter has gone before a jury and it has been establishedby their verdict that the words complained of are libellous."
The extent to which the courts will restrain libels before a jury holds them to be libels may have been questionable in 1889, andindeed, in a different sense, it still is; but the postJudicature Act 1873 decisions leading up to and includingBonnard v Perryman did plainly hold that there is jurisdiction to restrain libels before trial.
"Under a legal system based on the common law, 'everybody is free to do anything, subject only to the provisions of the law', sothat one proceeds 'upon an assumption of freedom of speech' and turns to the law 'to discover the established exceptions to it'. The common law torts of libel and slander are such exceptions. However, these torts do not inhibit the publication of defamatorymatter unless the publication is unlawful - that is to say, not justified, protected or excused by any of the various defences tothe publication of defamatory matter, including qualified privilege. The result is to confer upon defendants, who choose to pleadand establish an appropriate defence, an immunity to action brought against them. In that way, they are protected by the law inrespect of certain publications and freedom of communication is maintained."
"The rationale offered for judicial caution is usually that free speech is precious beyond all other things ... To give all weightto ... free speech ... is to overlook, or to give insufficient weight to the continued hurt to a defamed person pending trial; thegreater resources generally available to a defendant to contest proceedings; the attrition by interlocutory appeals to which a plaintiffmay be subjected; the danger that by the time of vindication of the plaintiff's reputation by an award of damages not all of thosewho have read or heard of the defamation may have become aware of the verdict; the unreasonableness of requiring the plaintiff, ineffect, at an interlocutory stage, unlike in other proceedings for an interlocutory injunction, to prove his or her case; and, thefact that rarely does a publication later, rather than earlier, do any disservice to the defendant or to the opportunity to debatethe issues in an informed but not defamatory way, and therefore to free speech."
"We may use twenty-first century communication technologies, but we still cherish nineteenth century views of freedom of the press,above all those of John Stuart Mill. The wonderful image of a free press speaking truth to power and that of investigative journalistsas tribunes of the people belong to those more dangerous and heroic times. In democracies the image is obsolescent: journalistsface little danger (except on overseas assignments) and the press do not risk being closed down. On the contrary, the press hasacquired unaccountable power that others cannot match."
More particularly, attention would have to be given to whether the very narrow capacity of plaintiffs to obtain urgent relief againstthe publication of defamatory material should be widened in view of the fact, if it is a fact, that it is not only the scale andpower of the media which has increased, but its penetration, its pervasiveness, and its capacity to do harm also. Those who decidedBonnard v Perryman had lived through a time when there was no electronic media and no problem of cross-media ownership; the print organs were much morefragmented than now, were directed to a population with much lower literacy than now, were much less able to reach most of the adultpopulation, and were much less able speedily to disseminate defamatory material. In short, attention would have to be directed towhether in modern conditions the mass media are more able to inflict harm which is not also grave but irreparable, and if so, whetherit ought to be less difficult for plaintiffs to obtain urgent interlocutory relief to prevent such harm. These and other relevantmatters have not been debated in argument.
First error: conflation of "public benefit" and "public interest"?
"The learned primary judge erred in treating his consideration of whether it was arguable for the purposes of section 15 of the Actthat the publication of the imputations would be for the public benefit, as determinative of the more general question of publicinterest for the purposes of the grant of an interlocutory injunction restraining the publication of defamatory matter."
The Full Court majority revealed a sound understanding of that ground in saying[407]:
"The learned primary judge needed to consider whether it was arguable for the purposes of s 15 that the publication of the relevantimputations would be for the public benefit, and needed also to consider whether the effect of an injunction would be to restrainthe discussion of matters of public interest or concern. Those are two separate questions. Ground 14 asserts that the learned primaryjudge erred by treating the question of public benefit in relation to s 15 as determinative of the more general question."
"The learned primary judge referred to the proposition that an interlocutory injunction will not usually be granted 'where such aninjunction would restrain the discussion in the media of matters of public interest or concern'[[409]]; then proceeded to consider the strength of a s 15 defence based on truth and public benefit, paying particular attention to thequestion of public benefit; expressed the view that, in general, it was not for the public benefit that the media should publiclyallege that a person has committed crimes of which he or she has not been convicted, but that such allegations should usually bemade to the public only as a result of charges and subsequent conviction; and concluded that a claim of 'public benefit' may wellbe unsuccessful[[410]]. He then returned to the more general question. He said it followed from what he had been saying that he was unpersuaded that aninterlocutory injunction would 'restrain the discussion in the media of matters of public interest'. He said that he applied 'thelaw's use of the term "public interest"'[[411]]. He had earlier referred to a submission made by counsel for the appellant to the effect that the term 'public interest' in defamationstatutes in other jurisdictions meant the same as 'public benefit' in theDefamation Act,s 15"[412].
The Full Court majority concluded with the following summary[413]:
"[His Honour] took into account the correct principles relating to the freedom of the press, took into account separately the prospectsof a successful defence based upon truth and public benefit, and exercised his discretion in accordance with the appropriate principles. He did not apply a wrong principle."
Whatever else may be said of these passages, they do deal with the question whether the primary judge had wrongly conflated publicbenefit unders 15 with public interest. The Corporation's submission that they did not is baseless.
"[A]greeing that matters of crime are matters of publicinterest is a far cry from conceding that the public dissemination by the media of all matters relating to crime, or matters concerning crimesallegedly committed by the plaintiff, will be for the publicbenefit".
Second error: trial by media
Third error: the significance of free speech
"Much was said at the hearing by counsel for the defendants about the need to uphold and protect the freedom of the press. But likeall freedoms, it is not an absolute one."
"Whilst I do not necessarily agree that the criteria of free discussion of matters of public general interest simply substitute atest of balance of convenience in favour of the intended publisher, the reasoning that it operates against the person claiming pre-publicationrestraint accords with my approach."
Fourth error: primary judge's analysis of plaintiff's case
Fifth error: possibility of only nominal damages
"No machine should be allowed to get in between the suspect and his interrogator ... It would break that essential rapport whicha detective needs to elicit an admission of guilt legitimately."
But attitudes have changed. So, partly through legislative and partly though judicial means, has the law. As a consequence, andas a sign, of "the persistent and continuing denigration of police evidence in this country"[441], majority decisions of this Court[442] have discounted to insignificance confessions which have not been recorded on videotape or audiotape where it was technically possibleto do so. In 1975 videotaping may well have been impossible for the Tasmanian police officers concerned, and perhaps audiotapingwas too. But the fact that the confession is not mechanically recorded is not its only defect. The circumstances surrounding itare suspicious. The confession occupies only eight typed pages, but it purports to be a verbatim record of questions and answersdespite being the result of an interview which is said to have lasted three hours and 10 minutes. This raises questions, howevermany allowances are made for slow thinking, slow speaking and slow typing. Hence the "confession" is of a type which has falleninto discredit since 1975. It is also a confession which the plaintiff contests. It will not, at this stage of the proceedings,bear any useful weight.
Conclusion
Orders
[1]Bonnard v Perryman [1891] 2 Ch 269 at 284.
[2] (2001) 208 CLR 199.
[3] (2001) 208 CLR 199 at 216-218 [8]-[16], 231-232 [59]-[61], 239-248 [86]-[105].
[4] TheDefamation Act 2005 (Tas) came into force on 1 January 2006, but it was the Act of 1957 that was in force at the time of the proceedings in the SupremeCourt of Tasmania, and it was the law as stated in the Act of 1957 that governed the decisions the subject of this appeal.
[5]O'Neill v Australian Broadcasting Corporation[2005] TASSC 26.
[6]Australian Broadcasting Corporation v O'Neill[2005] TASSC 82.
[7] [1891] 2 Ch 269 at 283-285.
[8] cfPlato Films Ltd v Speidel[1961] AC 1090 at 1138.
[9] [1891] 2 Ch 269 at 285.
[10] [1961] NSWR 1043 at 1048.
[11] (1988) 14 NSWLR 153.
[12][1989] VicRp 66; [1989] VR 747.
[13][1997] SASC 6370; (1997) 69 SASR 440 at 442-443.
[14] See [65]-[72].
[15][1968] HCA 1; (1968) 118 CLR 618.
[16] See alsoFirth Industries Ltd v Polyglas Engineering Pty Ltd[1975] HCA 25; (1975) 132 CLR 489 at 492 per Stephen J;Winthrop Investments Ltd v Winns Ltd[1975] 2 NSWLR 666 at 708 per Mahoney JA;World Series Cricket v Parish(1977) 16 ALR 181 at 186 per Bowen CJ.
[17] As to the practice concerning trial by jury in various Australian jurisdictions, see George,Defamation Law in Australia, (2006) at 225-226.
[18]Bellino v Australian Broadcasting Corporation[1996] HCA 47; (1996) 185 CLR 183 at 229.
[19] [1969] 2 QB 375 at 391.
[20][1996] HCA 47; (1996) 185 CLR 183.
[21][1996] HCA 47; (1996) 185 CLR 183 at 229.
[22] (1924) 25 SR (NSW) 4 at 21-22.
[23] [1998] QB 726 at 737.
[24] Blackstone,Commentaries, (1769) bk 4, at 151-152.
[25] "The Apology of the Commons, 20 June 1604" in Stephenson & Marcham,Sources of English Constitutional History, (1972), vol 1, 418 at 422.
[26] Expressed as a right to "freedom of speech and debates or proceedings in parliament."
[27] See [80].
[28]Fleming v Newton[1848] EngR 284; (1848) 1 HLC 363 at 371 per Lord Cottenham LC.
[29]Bonnard v Perryman [1891] 2 Ch 269 at 284 per Lord Coleridge CJ.
[30]Trade Practices Commission v Milreis Pty Ltd (No 2)[1978] FCA 20; (1978) 32 FLR 234 at 241.
[31] cfDugan v Mirror Newspapers Ltd[1978] HCA 54; (1978) 142 CLR 583.
[32] The legislative history of the addition in Australian defamation law of a requirement of public benefit to the defence of justificationis traced in Mitchell, "The Foundations of Australian Defamation Law",[2006] SydLawRw 22; (2006) 28Sydney Law Review 477.
[33] (1882) 7 App Cas 741.
[34] (1882) 7 App Cas 741 at 775-776.
[35] 32 Geo III c 60.
[36]Section 16(1) of theActs Interpretation Act 1931 (Tas) provides that, unless the contrary is expressly provided, the repeal of a statute does not affect any right or liability acquiredthereunder or affect any legal proceeding in respect thereof.
[37] Section 48(3)(a) of the 2005 Act provides that the existing law continues to apply to any cause of action that accrued before thecommencement of the 2005 Act in the same way as it would have applied had the 2005 Act not been enacted.
[38] [1987] WAR 81.
[39] [1987] WAR 81 at 90-91.
[40] [1987] WAR 81 at 91.
[41][1981] HCA 39; (1981) 148 CLR 170 at 176-177.
[42] (1997) 189 CLR 345.
[43] (1999) 198 CLR 380.
[44][1998] HCA 30; (1998) 195 CLR 1.
[45] However, s 6(2) of the 2005 Act states that that statute does not affect the operation of the general law, meaning thereby "thecommon law and equity" (see s 4), in relation to the tort of defamation, except to the extent that the 2005 Act expressly or by necessaryimplication provides otherwise.
[46] SeeAustralian Broadcasting Corporation v Lenah Game Meats Pty Ltd (2001) 208 CLR 199 at 239-240 [86]-[87].
[47] (2001) 208 CLR 199 at 217 [10], 231-232 [59]-[60], 241 [91].
[48]Ashburner's Principles of Equity, 2nd ed (1933) at 341.
[49] (1875) LR 10 Ch App 142 at 144.
[50] SeeLee v Gibbings (1892) 67 LT 263;White v Mellin [1895] AC 154.
[51] [1892] 2 QB 524.
[52] SeeCollard v Marshall [1892] 1 Ch 571.
[53] [1894] 1 QB 671 at 690.
[54] (1878) 3 CPD 339.
[55] [1891] 2 Ch 269.
[56] 17 & 18 Vict c 125.
[57]1932 Act,s 2(4)(a); cfSouthern Textile Converters Pty Ltd v Stehar Knitting Mills Pty Ltd [1979] 1 NSWLR 692 at 697-698.
[58] [1891] 2 Ch 269 at 283.
[59] "Equitable Relief against Defamation and Injuries to Personality", (1916) 29Harvard Law Review 640 at 665-666.
[60] "Equitable Relief against Defamation and Injuries to Personality", (1916) 29Harvard Law Review 640 at 665.
[61] (1853) [1626] at 42-44; the Report is reprinted inBritish Parliamentary Papers, Legal Administration, General, Courts of Common Law, vol 9 at 165.
[62]Second Report of Her Majesty's Commissioners for inquiring into the Process, Practice, and System of Pleading in the Superior Courtsof Common Law, (1853) [1626] at 43.
[63]Second Report of Her Majesty's Commissioners for inquiring into the Process, Practice, and System of Pleading in the Superior Courtsof Common Law, (1853) [1626] at 43 (original emphasis).
[64] [1891] 2 Ch 269 at 283.
[65] [1891] 2 Ch 269 at 283.
[66] (1878) 3 CPD 339.
[67] "Equitable Relief against Defamation and Injuries to Personality", (1916) 29Harvard Law Review 640 at 666.
[68] (1875) LR 10 Ch App 142 at 144.
[69][1968] HCA 1; (1968) 118 CLR 618.
[70][1968] HCA 1; (1968) 118 CLR 618 at 622-623.
[71][1968] HCA 1; (1968) 118 CLR 618 at 620.
[72][1968] HCA 1; (1968) 118 CLR 618 at 622.
[73]Castlemaine Tooheys Ltd v South Australia[1986] HCA 58; (1986) 161 CLR 148 at 156 per Mason ACJ.
[74][1986] HCA 58; (1986) 161 CLR 148 at 155-156; cf the earlier assumption inMurphy v Lush[1986] HCA 37; (1986) 60 ALJR 523 at 526;[1986] HCA 37; 65 ALR 651 at 655 that "a triable issue" of invalidity was sufficient to pass to consideration of the balance of convenience.
[75] See, for example,Administrative and Clerical Officers Association, Commonwealth Public Service v Commonwealth (1979) 53 ALJR 588 at 591; 26 ALR 497 at 502;Australian Coarse Grain Pool Pty Ltd v Barley Marketing Board of Queensland (1982) 57 ALJR 425; 46 ALR 398;Tableland Peanuts Pty Ltd v Peanut Marketing Board (1984) 58 ALJR 283 at 284; 52 ALR 651 at 653;Patrick Stevedores Operations No 2 Pty Ltd v Maritime Union of Australia[1998] HCA 30; (1998) 195 CLR 1 at 24[21];Fejo v Northern Territory[1998] HCA 58; (1998) 195 CLR 96 at 122 [26].
[76][1975] UKHL 1; [1975] AC 396.
[77][1975] UKHL 1; [1975] AC 396 at 406.
[78][1968] HCA 1; (1967) 118 CLR 618 at 619.
[79][1975] UKHL 1; [1975] AC 396 at 407.
[80][1975] UKHL 1; [1975] AC 396 at 408.
[81] See the judgment of McLelland J inKolback Securities Ltd v Epoch Mining NL (1987) 8 NSWLR 533 at 535-536 and the article by Sofronoff, "Interlocutory Injunctions Having Final Effect", (1987) 61Australian Law Journal 341.
[82] [1891] 2 Ch 269.
[83] [1891] 2 Ch 269 at 284.
[84] [1891] 2 Ch 269 at 284.
[85] Section 25 of the 2005 Act creates a defence if the defendant proves that the defamatory imputations are "substantially true".
[86] [1987] WAR 81.
[87] [1987] WAR 81 at 90-91.
[88] [1961] NSWR 1043 at 1048. See alsoChurch of Scientology of California Incorporated v Reader's Digest Services Pty Ltd [1980] 1 NSWLR 344 at 349-350;Shiel v Transmedia Productions Pty Ltd [1987] 1 Qd R 199; and, in New Zealand,TV3 Network Services Ltd v Fahey [1999] 2 NZLR 129 at 133.
[89]Common Law Procedure Act 1899 (NSW), ss 176-179.
[90] (1988) 14 NSWLR 153.
[91] These includeNational Mutual Life Association of Australasia Ltd v GTV Corporation Pty Ltd[1989] VicRp 66; [1989] VR 747 andJakudo Pty Ltd v South Australian Telecasters Ltd[1997] SASC 6370; (1997) 69 SASR 440.
[92] For example, in the third edition of his work,Introduction to the Study of the Law of theConstitution, published in 1889, Dicey devoted Ch 6 to "The Right to Freedom of Discussion".
[93][1848] EngR 284; (1848) 1 HLC 363 [9 ER 797].
[94][1848] EngR 284; (1848) 1 HLC 363 at 376[9 ER 797 at 803].
[95]Fleming v Newton was an appeal from Scotland; hence the reference to theJury Trials (Scotland) Act 1815 (UK), 55 Geo III c 42. It is apparent that the Lord Chancellor was referring to the 1815 statute as it had been amended, in particular,by theJury Trials (Scotland) Act 1819 (UK) (59 Geo III c 35).
[96] (1784) 4 Dougl 73 at 170 [99 ER 774 at 824]. The earlier writings to the same effect by Blackstone influenced the initial readingof the denial by the First Amendment to the Congress of power to legislate "abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press" asimporting no more than a freedom from prior restraint: Story,Commentaries on theConstitution of the United States, (1833), vol 3, §§1874-1879.
[97] Deazley,On the Origin of the Right to Copy, (2004) at 1-29.
[98] Bennett,Sir Francis Forbes, (2001) at 83-100.
[99] 32 Geo III c 60.
[100] See the judgment of Fry J inThomas v Williams (1880) 14 Ch D 864 at 870-871 and, more recently, that of Brooke LJ inGreene v Associated Newspapers Ltd[2004] EWCA Civ 1462; [2005] QB 972 at 977.
[101] cfBashford v Information Australia (Newsletters) Pty Ltd[2004] HCA 5; (2004) 218 CLR 366 at 409[116] respectings 7A of theDefamation Act 1974 (NSW).
[102] (1784) 4 Dougl 73 at 170 [99 ER 774 at 824].
[103] SeeCattanach v Melchior[2003] HCA 38; (2003) 215 CLR 1 at 32-35[70]-[75].
[104]House v The King[1936] HCA 40; (1936) 55 CLR 499 at 505.
[105]Victorian Stevedoring and General Contracting Co Pty Ltd and Meakes v Dignan[1931] HCA 34; (1931) 46 CLR 73 at 85, 87, 109-110, 112-113.
[106] SeeAdam P Brown Male Fashions Pty Ltd v Philip Morris Inc[1981] HCA 39; (1981) 148 CLR 170 at 178;Trade Practices Commission v Milreis Pty Ltd (No 2)[1978] FCA 20; (1978) 32 FLR 234 at 241;Harrison Partners Construction Pty Ltd v Jevena Pty Ltd[2005] NSWSC 1225; (2005) 225 ALR 369 at 373-374.
[108] See egMickelberg v The Queen[1989] HCA 35; (1989) 167 CLR 259 at 269-271, 297-299; Eastman v The Queen[2000] HCA 29; (2000) 203 CLR 1 at 12-13[16]-[18], 25 [73], 35 [111], 63 [190], 96-97 [290]; cf 93 [277], 117-118 [356].
[109]Gipp v The Queen(1998) 194 CLR 106 at 116 [23], 153-155 [135]-[138];Crampton v The Queen(2000) 206 CLR 161 at 171-174 [12]-[21], 179-185 [38]-[57], 200-207 [105]-[123], 212-219 [145]-[165].
[110]Lowndes v The Queen[1999] HCA 29; (1999) 195 CLR 665 at 679[40]; AMS v AIF(1999) 199 CLR 160 at 179 [47], 222-223 [184].
[111]House v The King[1936] HCA 40; (1936) 55 CLR 499 at 504-505;Australian Coal and Shale Employees' Federation v The Commonwealth[1953] HCA 25; (1953) 94 CLR 621 at 626-628;Mace v Murray[1955] HCA 2; (1955) 92 CLR 370 at 377-378.
[112]In re the Will of F B Gilbert (dec'd)(1946) 46 SR (NSW) 318 at 323; cfQueensland v J L Holdings Pty Ltd[1997] HCA 1; (1997) 189 CLR 146 at 163-164, 173-174.
[113]Australian Broadcasting Corporation v O'Neill[2005] TASSC 82.
[114] Evans and Blow JJ; Slicer J dissenting.
[115]O'Neill v Australian Broadcasting Corporation[2005] TASSC 26.
[119]House v The King[1936] HCA 40; (1936) 55 CLR 499 at 504-505.
[120]Mace v Murray[1955] HCA 2; (1955) 92 CLR 370 at 377-378 citingClark v Edinburgh & District Tramways Co Ltd1919 SC (HL) 35 at 37.
[123] See egChappell v TCN Channel Nine Pty Ltd(1988) 14 NSWLR 153. The imputation was that a sporting identity, who was of high public profile and a member of a sporting ethicscommittee, had engaged in an extra-marital affair.
[124] See also the reasons of Heydon J at [170].
[127] (2001) 208 CLR 199 at 265-268 [159] ("Lenah Game Meats").
[128]Lenah Game Meats(2001) 208 CLR 199 at 305 [267].
[129] Contrast:The Observer and the Guardian v United Kingdom[1991] ECHR 49; (1991) 14 EHRR 153.
[130] See International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, Art 17.
[131] cf[2005] TASSC 82 [38] citingLenah Game Meats(2001) 208 CLR 199 at 285 [211] andR v Central Independent Television Plc[1994] Fam 192 at 203 per Hoffmann LJ. See also the reasons of Heydon J at [177].
[132]Theophanous v Herald and Weekly Times Ltd[1994] HCA 46; (1994) 182 CLR 104;Stephens v West Australian Newspapers Ltd[1994] HCA 45; (1994) 182 CLR 211;Lange v Australian Broadcasting Corporation[1997] HCA 25; (1997) 189 CLR 520 at 568-575.
[133] For a general comparison of approaches to defamation law, see Kenyon,Defamation: Comparative Law and Practice, (2006) at 239-280.
[134]Linn v Plant Guard Workers[1966] USSC 24; 383 US 53 at 63 per Clark J delivering the opinion of the Court (1966);Letter Carriers v Austin[1974] USSC 146; 418 US 264 at 283-284 (1974).
[135]New York Times Ltd v Sullivan[1964] USSC 40; 376 US 254 at 279-280 per Brennan J delivering the opinion of the Court (1964); Australian Law Reform Commission,Unfair Publication: Defamation and privacy, Report No 11, (1979) at 247-253.
[136]Organization for a Better Austin v Keefe[1971] USSC 92; 402 US 415 at 419 (1971);Pittsburgh Press Co v Pittsburgh Commission on Human Relations[1973] USSC 192; 413 US 376 at 389-390 (1973);Gilbert v National Enquirer, Inc43 Cal App 4th 1135 (1996); 51 Cal Reptr 2d 91 at 96 (2nd Dist);Hajek v Bill Mowbray Motors Inc645 SW 2d 827 at 831 (Texas 1982);Wilson v Superior Court of LA County13 Cal 3d 652 at 657-658 (1975); 119 Cal Reptr 468.
[137] International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, Art 17. SeeLenah Game Meats(2001) 208 CLR 199 at 282-283 [201]-[202].
[138]Theophanous[1994] HCA 46; (1994) 182 CLR 104 at 134.
[139]Reynolds v Times Newspapers Ltd[2001] 2 AC 127 at 203-204, 215; Stone and Williams, "Freedom of Speech And Defamation: Developments in The Common Law World",[2000] MonashULawRw 15; (2000) 26Monash University Law Review 362 at 364.
[140] Australian Law Reform Commission,Unfair Publication: Defamation and privacy, Report No 11, (1979) at 77-78 [146].
[141] Relevantly theDefamation Act 2005 (Tas) commencing 1 January 2006. It was common ground that the present appeal was to be determined by reference to the previousstatute.
[142] Relevantly,Defamation Act 1957 (Tas).
[143]Lenah Game Meats(2001) 208 CLR 199 at 275-276 [180]-[183].
[144]Lenah Game Meats(2001) 208 CLR 199 at 285 [212].
[145]Lenah Game Meats(2001) 208 CLR 199 at 276 [183].
[146] Reasons of Gleeson CJ and Crennan J at [3]-[8].
[147] Reasons of Gleeson CJ and Crennan J at [9]-[15].
[154] cfLenah Game Meats(2001) 208 CLR 199 at 262-263 [151].
[155] In the Full Court, Slicer J also referred to the representation. See[2005] TASSC 82 at[12]-[15]. See also the reasons of Heydon J at [179]-[180].
[156]Defamation Act 1957 (Tas), s 15(b). See[2005] TASSC 82 [25]; cfDefamation Act 2005 (Tas),s 25 which now provides a defence of substantial truth with no requirement of public benefit.
[157]Lenah Game Meats(2001) 208 CLR 199 at 216-218 [8]-[16], 231-232 [59]-[61], 239-248 [86]-[105]. See also the reasons of Gleeson CJ and Crennan J at[2].
[163][2005] TASSC 26 at[30]-[31].
[164] cfDugan v Mirror Newspapers Ltd[1978] HCA 54; (1978) 142 CLR 583 at 587, 592, 601-603; cf at 610.
[165]Prisoners (Removal of Civil Disabilities) Act 1991 (Tas),s 4(2).
[166][2005] TASSC 82 at[2] per Slicer J.
[167]Lenah Game Meats(2001) 208 CLR 199 at 218 [16] per Gleeson CJ; 232 [61] per Gaudron J; 241 [91] per Gummow and Hayne JJ; cf at 270-271 [167] of myown reasons.
[168] SeeStuart v The Queen[1959] HCA 27; (1959) 101 CLR 1; Kirby, "Black and White Lessons for the Australian Judiciary",[2002] AdelLawRw 13; (2003) 23Adelaide Law Review195. Normally, the cases have involved assertions of innocence not further guilt of the prisoner.
[169] In this context the value of a 'free press' applies equally to the value of free expression in other forms of public media includingradio and television.
[170][1968] HCA 1; (1968) 118 CLR 618.
[171]Australian Coarse Grain Pool Pty Ltd v Barley Marketing Boardof Qld(1982) 57 ALJR 425 at 425-426 per Gibbs CJ; 46 ALR 398 at 398-399;Murphy v Lush[1986] HCA 37; (1986) 60 ALJR 523 at 524;[1986] HCA 37; 65 ALR 651 at 653;Castlemaine Tooheys Ltd v South Australia[1986] HCA 58; (1986) 161 CLR 148 at 153-154 per Mason ACJ.
[172] Reasons of Gleeson CJ and Crennan J at [19].
[173][1968] HCA 1; (1968) 118 CLR 618 at 622-623. Gleeson CJ and Crennan J also refer to the reasoning of Doyle CJ inJakudo Pty Ltd v South Australian Telecasters Ltd[1997] SASC 6370; (1997) 69 SASR 440 at 442-443, which appropriately describes the three-stage test generally applicable to applications for interlocutoryinjunctions in respect of defamatory material.
[174] (1982) 57 ALJR 425 at 425-426 per Gibbs CJ; 46 ALR 398 at 398-399, where the threshold requirement of a "prima facie case" was substitutedfor the need to show there was a "serious question to be tried", applyingAmerican Cyanamid v Ethicon Ltd[1975] UKHL 1; [1975] AC 396.
[175][1986] HCA 37; (1986) 60 ALJR 523 at 524;[1986] HCA 37; 65 ALR 651 at 653.
[176][1986] HCA 58; (1986) 161 CLR 148 at 153-154 per Mason ACJ.
[177] Reasons of Gleeson CJ and Crennan J at [32].
[178] Reasons of Gleeson CJ and Crennan J at [32].
[179] Reasons of Gleeson CJ and Crennan J at [33].
[180] Reasons of Gummow and Hayne JJ at [86].
[181] Reasons of Gummow and Hayne JJ at [84]-[85].
[182][1975] UKHL 1; [1975] AC 396 at 407-408.
[183] Reasons of Gummow and Hayne JJ at [71].
[184] Reasons of Gummow and Hayne JJ at [70].
[185] Reasons of Gummow and Hayne JJ at [71]. See alsoBeecham[1968] HCA 1; (1968) 118 CLR 618 at 622.
[186]Australian Coarse Grain Pool Pty Ltd v Barley Marketing Board (1982) 57 ALJR 425 at 425-426 per Gibbs CJ; 46 ALR 398 at 398-399;Castlemaine Tooheys Ltd v South Australia[1986] HCA 58; (1986) 161 CLR 148 at 153-154 per Mason ACJ;Jakudo Pty Ltd v South Australian Telecasters Ltd[1997] SASC 6370; (1997) 69 SASR 440 at 442-443;National Australia Bank Ltd v Zollo[1995] SASC 4988; (1995) 64 SASR 63 at 70-71. See also the persuasive reasoning of Diplock J inAmerican Cyanamid v Ethicon Ltd[1975] UKHL 1; [1975] AC 396 at 407: "The use of such expressions as 'a probability,' a 'prima facie case,' or 'a strong prima facie case' in thecontext of the exercise of a discretionary power to grant an interlocutory injunction leads to confusion as to the object soughtto be achieved by this form of temporary relief".
[187]Gatley on Libel and Slander, 8th ed (1981) at [1571] cited by Olney J inLovell v Lewandowski[1987] WAR 81 at 94-95.
[188]Duncan and Neill onDefamation, 2nd ed (1983) at [19.03]. See alsoHalsbury's Laws of England, 4th ed, vol 28, para 168.
[189] (1887) 3 TLR 846 at 846.
[190] [1969] 1 QB 349 at 360-361.
[191] [1891] 2 Ch 269.
[192] [1891] 2 Ch 269 at 284.
[193]Bestobell Paints Ltd v Bigg(1975) 1 FSR 421 at 429-430;Khashoggi v IPC Magazines Ltd[1986] 1 WLR 1412 at 1417; [1986] 3 All ER 577 at 581. See alsoHolley v Smyth[1998] QB 726 at 740, 743-744.
[194]Canadian (Human Rights Commission) v Canadian Liberty Net(1998) 157 DLR (4th) 385 at 413-414 [47]; cfCanada Metal Co Ltd v Canadian Broadcasting Corporation(1975) 55 DLR (3rd) 42.
[195]New Zealand Mortgage Guarantee Co Ltd v Wellington Newspapers Ltd[1989] 1 NZLR 4;Ron West Motors Ltd v Broadcasting Corporation of New Zealand (No 2)[1989] 3 NZLR 520;Auckland Area Health Board v Television New Zealand Ltd[1992] 3 NZLR 406;TV3 Network Services Ltd v Fahey[1999] 2 NZLR 129;Hosking v Runting[2005] 1 NZLR 1 at 39 [152]-[154].
[196]Marsden v Amalgamated TV Services Pty Ltd, unreported, New South Wales Court of Appeal, 2 May 1996 at 15.
[197]National Mutual Life Association of Australasia Ltd v GTV Corporation Pty Ltd[1989] VicRp 66; [1989] VR 747 at 764.
[198]Jakudo Pty Ltd v South Australian Telecasters Ltd[1997] SASC 6370; (1997) 69 SASR 440 at 442.
[199]JDP Australasia Pty Ltd v Pneumatic Systems International Pty Ltd[1999] WASC 14 at[15]; cfLovell v Lewandowski[1987] WAR 81.
[200] egShiel v Transmedia Productions Pty Ltd[1987] 1 Qd R 199. See alsoAustralian Broadcasting Corporation v Hanson[1998] QCA 306.
[201]Beecham[1968] HCA 1; (1968) 118 CLR 618 at 622-623;Australian Coarse Grain Pool Pty Ltd v Barley Marketing Boardof Qld(1982) 57 ALJR 425 at 425-426 per Gibbs CJ; 46 ALR 398 at 398-399;Murphy v Lush[1986] HCA 37; (1986) 60 ALJR 523 at 524;[1986] HCA 37; 65 ALR 651 at 653;Castlemaine Tooheys Ltd v South Australia[1986] HCA 58; (1986) 161 CLR 148 at 153-154 per Mason ACJ.
[202][2005] TASSC 82 [57].
[203] Spry,Equitable Remedies, 6th ed (2001).
[204] Spry,Equitable Remedies, 6th ed (2001) at 20-21.
[205] This is another reason why, in addition to the difference between the modern test for the granting of an interlocutory injunctionas distinct from the historical formulation, disproportionate weight should not be given to Lord Coleridge CJ's reasons inBonnard v Perryman[1891] 2 Ch 269 at 283-285. See the criticisms of theBonnard test in Brandis, "Interlocutory injunctions to restrain speech", (1992) 12Queensland Lawyer 169. See also the reasons of Heydon J at [207]-[209], [280]; cf the reasons of Gleeson CJ and Crennan J at [16]-[18] and the reasonsof Gummow and Hayne JJ at [73]-[83].
[206]Church of Scientology of California Inc v Reader's Digest Services Pty Ltd[1980] 1 NSWLR 344 at 350 [17] but cfChappell v TCN Channel Nine Pty Ltd(1988) 14 NSWLR 153 at 161 per Hunt J.
[207][2005] TASSC 82 at[57]-[67].
[208] cfNational Mutual Life Association of Australasia Ltd v GTV Corporation Pty Ltd[1989] VicRp 66; [1989] VR 747 at 754.
[209] Reasons of Gleeson CJ and Crennan J at [32].
[211][2005] TASSC 26 at[24] citingChappell v TCN Channel Nine Pty Ltd(1988) 14 NSWLR 153 at 164;Church of Scientology of California Inc v Reader's Digest Services Pty Ltd[1980] 1 NSWLR 344 at 351-352. See also[2005] TASSC 26 at[29].
[213][2005] TASSC 26 at[25], [29]; reasons of Heydon J at [282]-[286]; cf the reasons of Gummow and Hayne JJ at [84]-[86].
[214] See also the reasons of Heydon J at [282]-[286], [289]-[294].
[215] Reasons of Gummow and Hayne JJ at [84].
[216][2005] TASSC 26 at[23]: "[b]ut as was made very clear by Hunt J inChappell, there are no rigid rules relating to the question. I have an unfettered discretion."
[218][2005] TASSC 82 at[54]-[56] citing specificallyStocker v McElhinney (No 2)[1961] NSWR 1043 at 1048 per Walsh J andChurch of Scientology of California Inc v Reader's Digest Services Pty Ltd[1980] 1 NSWLR 344 at 349-350, along with other authority.
[219][2005] TASSC 82 at[72] citingChappell v TCN Channel Nine Pty Ltd(1988) 14 NSWLR 153.
[224][2005] TASSC 82 at[38], referring to my reasons inLenah Games Meats(2001) 208 CLR 199 at 285 [211], where I citedR v Central Independent Television Plc[1994] Fam 192.
[225] Reasons of Gummow and Hayne JJ at [89].
[226] Reasons of Gleeson CJ and Crennan J at [33]-[34].
[227]Prisoners (Removal of Civil Disabilities) Act 1991 (Tas).
[228] See International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, Art 14.1.
[229]Cardillo v Doubleday & Co Inc[1975] USCA2 443; 518 F 2d 638 (2nd Cir 1975);Wynberg v National Enquirer564 F Supp 924 (CD Cal 1982). See also Kenyon,Defamation: Comparative Law and Practice, (2006) at 269-270.
[230]Liberty Lobby Inc v Anderson[1984] USCADC 425; 746 F 2d 1563 (DC Cir 1984).
[231]Masson v New Yorker Magazine Inc[1991] USSC 111; 111 SCt 2419 (1991).
[232]Jewell v NYP Holdings Inc23 F Supp 2d 348 (SDNY 1998).
[233] cfHirst v The United Kingdom (No 2)[2005] ECHR 681 at[56]-[82].
[234][1966] USSC 25; 383 US 75 at 92 (1966). See alsoR v Dyment[1988] 2 SCR 417 at 427 per La Forest J.
[235] [1995] 2 SCR 1130 at 1178 per La Forest, Gonthier, Cory, McLachlin, Iacobucci and Major JJ.
[236] [1995] 2 SCR 1130 at 1178 per La Forest, Gonthier, Cory, McLachlin, Iacobucci and Major JJ, citing Lepofsky, "Making Sense of theLibel Chill Debate: Do Libel Laws 'Chill' the Exercise of Freedom of Expression?", (1994) 4National Journal of Constitutional Law 169 at 197.
[237]Defamation Act 1957 (Tas), s 5(1)(c).
[239][1944] USSC 21; 320 US 549 at 561 (1944).
[240]Lenah Game Meats(2001) 208 CLR 199 at 272 [172], 276 [183].
[241]Defamation Act 2005 (Tas),s 25.
[242] [1891] 2 Ch 269. See pars [207]-[208].
[243] See pars [270]-[271].
[244] See par [209]. This error underlay not only the Corporation's arguments, but also, to some extent, the reasoning in the courtsbelow on issues indicated later.
[245] See pars [272]-[278].
[246] Reasons of Kirby J at pars [108]-[109].
[247] Reasons of Kirby J at pars [96] and [98].
[248] Reasons of Kirby J at pars [117]-[121]. See alsoO'Neill v Australian Broadcasting Corporation[2005] TASSC 26 at[6]-[10].
[249] See alsoEmcorp Pty Ltd v Australian Broadcasting Corporation [1988] 2 Qd R 169 (film taken by the Corporation during a trespass accompanied by harassing interrogation);Australian Broadcasting Corporation v Lenah Game Meats Pty Ltd (2001) 208 CLR 199 (accepting "video footage provided to it for nothing and surreptitiously made on private property during the courseof the commission of an offence of trespass, probably following the even more serious offence of breaking and entering, the generalnature of which" it knew: per Callinan J at 290 [225]). In the court below a different aspect of the Corporation's conduct attractedcriticism from Slicer J. Although he made orders in favour of the Corporation, he did state that its reliance against a prisoneron delay as a defence revealed "an arrogance of power":Australian Broadcasting Corporation v O'Neill[2005] TASSC 82 at[20]. No doubt he was alluding to certain words of Rudyard Kipling - once celebrated to the point of cliché, now little known. They were employed by his first cousin Stanley Baldwin against Lord Beaverbrook (owner of theDaily Express andEvening Standard) and Lord Rothermere (owner of theDaily Mail and theEvening News) on 17 March 1931. Speaking at the Queen's Hall, two days before the St George's by-election, the Leader of the Opposition said: "What the proprietorship of these papers is aiming at is power, and power without responsibility - the prerogative of the harlotthroughout the ages." See Middlemas and Barnes,Baldwin, (1969) at 600. The key passages in the speech have enduring value and modern-day application.
[250] cfAustralian Broadcasting Corporation v Lenah Game Meats Pty Ltd (2001) 208 CLR 199 at 306 [269] per Callinan J; see also Kirby J in the present appeal at par [120].
[251]Australian Broadcasting Corporation Act 1983 (Cth),s 6(2)(a)(iii), which is part of what the Corporation refers to, in the language of the marginal note tos 6, as its "Charter".
[252]Australian Broadcasting Corporation Act 1983 (Cth),s 8(1)(b).
[253]Australian Broadcasting Corporation Act 1983 (Cth),s 8(1)(c).
[254] SeeAustralian Broadcasting Corporation v Lenah Game Meats Pty Ltd (2001) 208 CLR 199 at 305 [268] n 476 (emphasis added).
[255]Australian Broadcasting Corporation v Lenah Game Meats Pty Ltd (2001) 208 CLR 199 at 306 [269].
[256]Section 15 provided:
"It is lawful to publish defamatory matter if -
(a)the matter is true; and
(b)it is for the public benefit that the publication should be made."
[257]O'Neill v Australian Broadcasting Corporation[2005] TASSC 26 at[25]-[29].
[258]Section 14(1) relevantly provided:
"It is lawful to publish a fair comment respecting -
(a)any of the matters with respect to which the publication of a fair report in good faith for the information of the public isdeclared bysection 13 to be lawful;
...
(d)the merits of a case, whether civil or criminal, that has been decided by a court of justice, or the conduct in that case ofa person as a judge, party, witness, counsel, or solicitor, or as an officer of the court, or the character of such a person, sofar as his character appears in that conduct;
...
(h)a communication made to the public on any subject."
[259]O'Neill v Australian Broadcasting Corporation[2005] TASSC 26 at[30].
[260]Section 16(1) relevantly provided:
"It is a lawful excuse for the publication of defamatory matter if the publication is made in good faith -
...
(c)for the protection of the interests of the person who makes the publication, or of some other person, or for the public good;
...
(e)for the purpose of giving information to the person to whom it is made with respect to a subject as to which that person has,or is reasonably believed by the person who makes the publication to have, such an interest in knowing the truth as to make the last-mentionedperson's conduct in making the publication reasonable in the circumstances;
...
(h)in the course, or for the purposes, of the discussion of a subject of public interest the public discussion of which is forthe public benefit."
[261]O'Neill v Australian Broadcasting Corporation[2005] TASSC 26 at[31].
[262]O'Neill v Australian Broadcasting Corporation[2005] TASSC 26 at[1] and [25].
[263]Collard v Marshall [1892] 1 Ch 571 at 577 per Chitty J.
[264]Croft v Day[1843] EngR 1231; (1843) 7 Beav 84 [49 ER 994];Routh v Webster[1847] EngR 178; (1847) 10 Beav 561 [50 ER 698].
[265]Quartz Hill Consolidated Gold Mining Co v Beall (1882) 20 Ch D 501 at 510 per Baggallay LJ.
[266]Monson v Tussauds Ltd [1894] 1 QB 671 at 693 per Lopes LJ.
[267] See pars [194]-[202].
[268] (1875) LR 10 Ch App 142.
[269] (1869) LR 7 Eq 488 at 494.
[270]Mulkern v Ward (1872) LR 13 Eq 619 at 621.
[271] (1875) LR 10 Ch App 142 at 147.
[272] (1878) 9 Ch D 89.
[273] (1878) 9 Ch D 89 at 91-92.
[274] (1878) 9 Ch D 89 at 92.
[275] (1878) 9 Ch D 89 at 92-93.
[276] (1878) 9 Ch D 89 at 93.
[277] (1882) 20 Ch D 501.
[278] (1882) 20 Ch D 501 at 506.
[279] InMonson v Tussauds Ltd [1894] 1 QB 671 at 693 Lopes LJ doubted whether the 1854 Act gave the common law courts power to grant interlocutory injunctions. On the other hand, the reference to ex parte relief in s 82 suggests that it did.
[280] (1882) 20 Ch D 501 at 507.
[281] [1891] 2 Ch 269 at 283 per Lord Coleridge CJ, Lord Esher MR, Lindley, Bowen and Lopes LJJ; at 285 per Kay LJ.
[282] "Equitable Relief Against Defamation and Injuries to Personality", (1916) 29Harvard Law Review 640 at 665.
[283] 33 Ia 422 (1871) (SC Iowa).
[284] "Equitable Relief Against Defamation and Injuries to Personality", (1916) 29Harvard Law Review 640 at 665 n 74.
[285] "Equitable Relief Against Defamation and Injuries to Personality", (1916) 29Harvard Law Review 640 at 665-666.
[286]Beddow v Beddow (1878) 9 Ch D 89 at 93.
[287] Reprinted inBritish Parliamentary Papers, Legal Administration, General, Courts of Common Law, vol 2 at 193.
[288]Third Report Made to His Majesty by the Commissioners Appointed to Inquire into the Practice and Proceedings of the Superior Courtsof Common Law, (1831) at 18; emphasis in original.
[289]Gee v Pritchard (1818) 2 Sw 402 at 413[1818] EngR 605; [36 ER 670 at 674]. The other well-known cases came after 1831:Martin v Wright[1833] EngR 785; (1833) 6 Sim 297 at 299[58 ER 605 at 606];Clark v Freeman[1848] EngR 217; (1848) 11 Beav 112 [50 ER 759];Emperor of Austria v Day (1861) 3 De G F & J 217 at 239[1861] EngR 688; [45 ER 861 at 870].
[290]Du Bost v Beresford[1810] EngR 599; (1810) 2 Camp 511 [170 ER 1235].
[291] "Equitable Relief Against Defamation and Injuries to Personality", (1916) 29Harvard Law Review 640 at 645.
[292] "Equitable Relief Against Defamation and Injuries to Personality", (1916) 29Harvard Law Review 640 at 646.
[293] "Equitable Relief Against Defamation and Injuries to Personality", (1916) 29Harvard Law Review 640 at 643: "[I]n 1818 the jurisdiction of equity to enjoin trespasses on land was not yet well developed and the whole subjectof equity jurisdiction over torts was backward because of the unsatisfactory mode of trial". See also at 644 and 646.
[294] Reprinted inBritish Parliamentary Papers,Legal Administration, General, vol 9 at 165.
[295]Babaniaris v Lutony Fashions Pty Ltd[1987] HCA 19; (1987) 163 CLR 1 at 13 per Mason J. (footnotes omitted)
[296]Hamilton v Baker (1889) 14 App Cas 209 at 222 per Lord Macnaghten.
[297]Geelong Harbor Trust Commissioners v Gibbs Bright & Co (A Firm) [1974] AC 810 at 820; see alsoGeelong Harbour Trust Commissioners v Gibbs, Bright & Co[1970] HCA 16; (1970) 122 CLR 504 at 518 per McTiernan and Menzies JJ, 518-519 per Kitto J.
[298] Being distinct from the publication that took place with the showing of the film at the Hobart Summer Film Festival in January 2005,about which there is an issue as to the involvement of the Corporation.
[299] [1894] 1 QB 671.
[300] [1894] 1 QB 671 at 688-689. The idea that s 25(8) alone was a source of power had been advanced earlier inThorley's Cattle Food Co v Massam (1877) 6 Ch D 582 at 588-590 per Sir Richard Malins V-C.
[301] (1883) 11 QBD 30 at 36-37.
[302] Many of them may be found earlier, inWilliam Coulson & Sons v James Coulson & Co (1887) 3 TLR 846.
[303] See n 335 below.
[304]William Coulson & Sons v James Coulson & Co (1887) 3 TLR 846.
[305]Bonnard v Perryman [1891] 2 Ch 269 at 284.
[306]William Coulson & Sons v James Coulson & Co (1887) 3 TLR 846.
[307]Monson v Tussauds Ltd [1894] 1 QB 671 at 690 per Lord Halsbury.
[308]Stocker v McElhinney (No 2) [1961] NSWR 1043 at 1048 per Walsh J.
[309]William Coulson & Sons v James Coulson & Co (1887) 3 TLR 846 at 846.
[310]Khashoggi v IPC Magazines Ltd [1986] 1 WLR 1412 at 1417-1418; [1986] 3 All ER 577 at 581 per Sir John Donaldson MR.
[311]Fraser v Evans [1969] 1 QB 349 at 360 per Lord Denning MR.
[312]Harakas v Baltic Mercantile and Shipping Exchange Ltd [1982] 1 WLR 958 at 960; [1982] 2 All ER 701 at 703 per Lord Denning MR.
[313]Herbage v Pressdram Ltd [1984] 1 WLR 1160 at 1162; [1984] 2 All ER 769 at 771 per Griffiths LJ.
[314]Crest Homes Ltd v Ascott,The Times, 4 February 1975 per Geoffrey Lane LJ, quoted inBestobell Paints Ltd v Bigg (1975) 1 FSR 421 at 435 per Oliver J.
[315] Little more than this appeared from the defendant's unsatisfactory affidavit inBonnard v Perryman [1891] 2 Ch 269 at 287-288. A mere announcement of an intention to justify evidently sufficed inBestobell Paints Ltd v Bigg (1975) 1 FSR 421 at 429. See alsoCrest Homes Ltd v Ascott (1980) 6 FSR 396 at 398 per Lord Denning MR;Herbage v Pressdram Ltd [1984] 1 WLR 1160 at 1162; [1984] 2 All ER 769 at 771 per Griffiths LJ;Khashoggi v IPC Magazines Ltd [1986] 1 WLR 1412 at 1416; [1986] 3 All ER 577 at 580 per Sir John Donaldson MR.
[316]Bonnard v Perryman [1891] 2 Ch 269 at 284.
[317]Stocker v McElhinney (No 2) [1961] NSWR 1043 at 1048 per Walsh J.
[318][1989] VicRp 66; [1989] VR 747 at 754.
[319] (1988) 14 NSWLR 153 at 158-163.
[320] See, for example,Wilson v Parry (1937) 54 WN (NSW) 167;Stocker v McElhinney (No 2) [1961] NSWR 1043;Gabriel v Lobban[1976] VicRp 74; [1976] VR 689;Royal Automobile Club of Victoria v Paterson[1968] VicRp 64; [1968] VR 508;Edelsten v John Fairfax & Sons Ltd [1978] 1 NSWLR 685;Harper v Whitby [1978] 1 NSWLR 35;Swimsure (Laboratories) Pty Ltd v McDonald [1979] 2 NSWLR 796;Lovell v Lewandowski [1987] WAR 81.
[321] See par [174].
[322] [1891] 2 Ch 269 at 284: it is set out in par [254] below.
[323]Bestobell Paints Ltd v Bigg (1975) 1 FSR 421;Animal Liberation (Vic) Inc v Gasser [1991] 1 VR 51.
[324]Lord Brabourne v Hough (1981) 7 FSR 79.
[325]Sim v H J Heinz Co Ltd [1959] 1 WLR 313; [1959] 1 All ER 547.
[326]Woodward v Hutchins [1977] 1 WLR 760; [1977] 2 All ER 751.
[327]Gulf Oil (Great Britain) Ltd v Page [1987] Ch 327.
[328]Femis-Bank (Anguilla) Ltd v Lazar [1991] Ch 391.
[329]Animal Liberation (Vic) Inc v Gasser [1991] 1 VR 51.
[330]Fraser v Evans [1969] 1 QB 349 at 362 per Lord Denning MR. An example isFrancome v Mirror Group Newspapers Ltd [1984] 1 WLR 892; [1984] 2 All ER 408.
[331]Microdata Information Services Ltd v Rivendale Ltd (1991) 18 FSR 681 at 688 per Griffiths LJ;Essex Electric (Pte) Ltd v IPC Computers (UK) Ltd (1991) 18 FSR 690.
[332]Western Front Ltd v Vestron Inc (1987) 13 FSR 66.
[333]Historical Foundations of the Common Law (1969) at 353.
[334] [1891] 2 Ch 269 at 281.
[335] Save on points of detail,Bonnard v Perryman has been criticised very rarely. For three exceptions to that statement, seeAustralian Broadcasting Corporation v Lenah Game Meats Pty Ltd (2001) 208 CLR 199 at 339-341 [350]-[351] per Callinan J; Spry,The Principles of Equitable Remedies, 6th ed (2001) at 20-22; Brandis, "Interlocutory Injunctions to Restrain Speech", (1991) 12Queensland Lawyer 169.
[336] (1818) 2 Sw 402 at 413[1818] EngR 605; [36 ER 670 at 674].
[337] Hayes, "Injunctions Before Judgment in Cases of Defamation", (1971) 45Australian Law Journal 125 at 192-193.
[338] The common law misdemeanour of defamatory libel has been earlier abolished or modified by legislation in all Australian jurisdictions. In lieu there are, in the three Code States, in New South Wales and South Australia, and in the Australian Capital Territory, provisionshaving the effect of rendering criminal the publication without lawful excuse of matter defaming another living person knowing thematter to be false or without having regard to whether the matter is true or false, and intending to cause serious harm to the victimor any other person or without having regard to whether such harm is caused:Criminal Code (Q), s 365;Criminal Code(WA), s 345;Criminal Code (Tas), s 196;Crimes Act 1900 (NSW),s 529;Criminal Law Consolidation Act 1935 (SA),s 257;Crimes Act 1900 (ACT), s 439. TheCriminal Code(NT), ss 203-208, renders certain types of defamation with specific intent criminal. TheWrongs Act 1958 (Vic), ss 3-13, adopts elements of both approaches.
[339] Hayes, "Injunctions Before Judgment in Cases of Defamation", (1971) 45Australian Law Journal 125 at 192; see also at 127.
[340] (1887) 37 Ch D 170 at 184. See also at 183 per Cotton LJ.
[341] (1878) 3 CPD 339 at 342.
[342] "Equitable Relief Against Defamation and Injuries to Personality", (1916) 29Harvard Law Review640 at 656 (emphasis added). It is more correct to say, as Lord Blackburn said inCapital and Counties Bank Ltd v George Henty & Sons (1882) 7 App Cas 741 at 775, that "it has been for some years generally thought that the law, in civil actions for libel, was thesame as it had been expressly enacted that it was to be in criminal proceedings".
[343] (1880) 14 Ch D 864 at 871.
[344] Stephen,A History of the Criminal Law of England (1883), vol 3 at 300-359; Holdsworth,A History of English Law, vol 10, at 672-696.
[345] 32 Geo III c 60.
[346]Parmiter v Coupland (1840) 6 M & W 105 at 108[1840] EngR 168; [151 ER 340 at 342] per Parke B;Baylis v Lawrence (1841) 11 Ad & E 920 at 924[1841] EngR 634; [113 ER 664 at 665] per Lord Denman CJ.
[347] 55 Geo III c 42.
[348][1848] EngR 284; (1848) 1 HLC 363 [9 ER 797].
[349][1848] EngR 284; (1848) 1 HLC 363 at 376[9 ER 797 at 803].
[350][1848] EngR 284; (1848) 1 HLC 363 at 371[9 ER 797 at 801].
[351] With which some have erroneously confused it: for example, Pound, "Equitable Relief Against Defamation and Injuries to Personality",(1916) 29Harvard Law Review 640 at 656; Ford, "A Note on the Protection of Reputation in Equity",(1954) 6Res Judicatae 345 at 346; Hayes, "Injunctions Before Judgment in Cases of Defamation", (1971) 45Australian Law Journal 125 at 126.
[352] 59 Geo III c 35.
[353][1848] EngR 284; (1848) 1 HLC 363 at 370-371[9 ER 797 at 800-801].
[354]Dunlop v Dunlop Rubber Co Ltd [1920] 1 IR 280 at 302-303 per Powell J.
[355] Jackson, "The Incidence of Jury Trial During the Past Century", (1937) 1Modern Law Review 132; Simpson, "The Survival of the Common Law System" inLegal Theory and Legal History: Essays on the Common Law, (1987) at 399-400.
[356]Public Service Board of New South Wales v Osmond (1986) 159 CLR 656 at 669 per Gibbs CJ;Lamb v Cotogno[1987] HCA 47; (1987) 164 CLR 1 at 11 per Mason CJ, Brennan, Deane, Dawson and Gaudron JJ;Esso Australia Resources Ltd v Federal Commissioner of Taxation[1999] HCA 67; (1999) 201 CLR 49 at 61-63[23]-[28] per Gleeson CJ, Gaudron and Gummow JJ.
[357] Occasionally this power rested on a specific legislative basis, for example, theDefamation Act 1974 (NSW),s 7A(2), between 1995 and 2005. Usually it was based on rules of court. There is also a common law basis. "Before a question of libelor slander is submitted to a jury the Court must be satisfied that the words complained of are capable of the defamatory meaningascribed to them. That is a matter of law for the Court":Stubbs Ltd v Russell [1913] AC 386 at 393 per Lord Kinnear.
[358] Initially enacted asSeat of Government Supreme Court Act 1933 (Cth), s 14.
[359] SeeCivil Law (Wrongs) Act 2002 (ACT), Sch 3, amdt [3.39].
[360] As amended byJuries Act Amendment Act 1984 (SA), s 5.
[361] Evatt,The Jury System in Australia, (1936) 10Australian Law Journal Supp 57 at 59.
[362] Initially enacted asSupreme Court Act 1970 (NSW), ss 88 and 89. These sections were omitted, and substituted s 86 inserted, by theCourts Legislation Amendment (Civil Juries) Act 2001.
[363] (1887) 37 Ch D 170 at 175.
[364] (1975) 1 FSR 421 at 431 and 434.
[365]Fraser v Evans [1969] 1 QB 349 at 360 per Lord Denning MR.
[366]Greene v Associated Newspapers Ltd[2004] EWCA Civ 1462; [2005] QB 972 at 990[57] per Brooke LJ.
[367]Davis & Sons v Shepstone (1886) 11 App Cas 187 at 191.
[368] (1882) 20 Ch D 501 at 509.
[369] See par [208].
[370] Described in pars [206]-[208] above.
[371] (1887) 3 TLR 846. The Court of Appeal quoted this with approval inBonnard v Perryman [1891] 2 Ch 269 at 284.
[372] See pars [217]-[242].
[373] (1887) 3 TLR 846.
[374] [1891] 2 Ch 269 at 284 (emphasis added).
[375][2004] EWCA Civ 1462; [2005] QB 972 at 990[57] per Brooke LJ.
[376]Beecham Group Ltd v Bristol Laboratories Pty Ltd[1968] HCA 1; (1968) 118 CLR 618 at 622 per Kitto, Taylor, Menzies and Owen JJ.
[377]Hubbard v Vosper [1972] 2 QB 84 at 96 per Lord Denning MR.
[378] [1987] 1 WLR 670 at 680; [1986] 3 All ER 772 at 780-781.
[379]Beecham Group Ltd v Bristol Laboratories Pty Ltd[1968] HCA 1; (1968) 118 CLR 618 at 623-625 per Kitto, Taylor, Menzies and Owen JJ; cfAmerican Cyanamid Co v Ethicon Ltd[1975] UKHL 1; [1975] AC 396 at 405-406 per Lord Diplock.
[380] [1891] 2 Ch 269 at 284.
[381] [1891] 2 Ch 269 at 284-285.
[382] [1891] 2 Ch 269 at 284.
[383]Fraser v Evans [1969] 1 QB 349 at 360.
[384]Schering Chemicals Ltd v Falkman Ltd [1982] QB 1 at 16-17 (emphasis in original).
[385]Herbage v Pressdram Ltd [1984] 1 WLR 1160 at 1162; [1984] 2 All ER 769 at 771.
[386]Chappell v TCN Channel Nine Pty Ltd (1988) 14 NSWLR 153 at 163-164.
[387]National Mutual Life Association of Australasia Ltd v GTV Corporation Pty Ltd[1989] VicRp 66; [1989] VR 747 at 764.
[388]Greene v Associated Newspapers Ltd[2004] EWCA Civ 1462; [2005] QB 972 at 977[1].
[389]Commentaries on the Laws of England, Book the Fourth, (1769) at 151-152. (footnote added)
[390]Commentaries on the Laws of England,Book the Fourth, (1769) at 151 (emphasis in original).
[391]Commentaries on the Laws of England, Book the Fourth, (1769) at 151-152.
[392]Commentaries on the Laws of England, Book the Fourth, (1769) at 152 (footnote omitted).
[393] As Auld LJ pointed out inHolley v Smyth[1998] QB 726 at 737-738.
[394]Introduction to the Study of the Law of theConstitution, 3rd ed (1889) at 225, quoting Odgers,A Digest of the Law of Libel and Slander, (1881) at 12.
[395]Introduction to the Study of the Law of theConstitution, 3rd ed (1889) at 225.
[396] 3rd ed, (1889) at 234, citingPrudential Assurance Co v Knott(1875) LR 10 Ch App 142,Saxby v Easterbrook (1878) 3 CPD 339 and Odgers,A Digest of the Law of Libel and Slander, (1881) at 13-16.
[397] For example,Introduction to the Study of the Law of theConstitution, 3rd ed (1889) at 235. See also the discussion of State control of the press in France at 238-244 and State control of the pressin England in the 16th and 17th centuries at 244-247.
[398]Church of Scientology of California Inc v Reader's Digest Services Pty Ltd [1980] 1 NSWLR 344 at 349-350.
[399]Church of Scientology of California Inc v Reader's Digest Services Pty Ltd [1980] 1 NSWLR 344 at 351.
[400] (1988) 14 NSWLR 153 at 164.
[401][1997] HCA 25; (1997) 189 CLR 520 at 564-565 per Brennan CJ, Dawson, Toohey, Gaudron, McHugh, Gummow and Kirby JJ (footnotes omitted).
[402] (2001) 208 CLR 199 at 341 [351] (footnote omitted).
[403]Australian Broadcasting Corporation v Lenah Game Meats Pty Ltd (2001) 208 CLR 199 at 299-309 [254]-[276].
[404] O'Neill,A Question of Trust, (2002) at 89.
[405] O'Neill,A Question of Trust, (2002) at 92-93.
[406] See par [183] above.
[407]Australian Broadcasting Corporation v O'Neill[2005] TASSC 82 at[80].
[408]Australian Broadcasting Corporation v O'Neill[2005] TASSC 82 at[81]. In the next four footnotes [nn 409-412], the particular paragraphs of the primary judge's reasons for judgment which the majorityappear to have in mind are identified.
[409] This is a reference toO'Neill v Australian Broadcasting Corporation[2005] TASSC 26 at[24].
[410] The preceding three clauses are references toO'Neill v Australian Broadcasting Corporation[2005] TASSC 26 at[28].
[411] These two sentences refer toO'Neill v Australian Broadcasting Corporation[2005] TASSC 26 at[29].
[412] This sentence is a reference toO'Neill v Australian Broadcasting Corporation[2005] TASSC 26 at[24] and [26].
[413]Australian Broadcasting Corporation v O'Neill[2005] TASSC 82 at[82].
[414]O'Neill v Australian Broadcasting Corporation[2005] TASSC 26 at[27] (emphasis added).
[415]O'Neill v Australian Broadcasting Corporation[2005] TASSC 26 at[28].
[416] The Full Court of the Supreme Court of Victoria saw it as a possible issue in some cases inNational Mutual Life Association of Australasia Ltd v GTV Corporation Pty Ltd[1989] VicRp 66; [1989] VR 747 at 765.
[417] See n 244 above.
[418]O'Neill v Australian Broadcasting Corporation[2005] TASSC 26 at[23].
[419] [1980] 1 NSWLR 344.
[420] (1988) 14 NSWLR 153.
[421]Chappell v TCN Channel Nine Pty Ltd (1988) 14 NSWLR 153 at 164.
[422]O'Neill v Australian Broadcasting Corporation[2005] TASSC 26 at[24].
[423]O'Neill v Australian Broadcasting Corporation[2005] TASSC 26 at[29].
[424]Chappell v TCN Channel Nine Pty Ltd (1988) 14 NSWLR 153 at 164.
[425]O'Neill v Australian Broadcasting Corporation[2005] TASSC 26 at[36].
[426]Australian Broadcasting Corporation v O'Neill[2005] TASSC 82 at[53].
[427]Australian Broadcasting Corporation v O'Neill[2005] TASSC 82 at[30].
[428]Australian Broadcasting Corporation v O'Neill[2005] TASSC 82 at[32].
[429]Jakudo Pty Ltd v South Australian Telecasters Ltd[1997] SASC 6370; (1997) 69 SASR 440 at 442 per Doyle CJ.
[430]Australian Broadcasting Corporation v O'Neill[2005] TASSC 82 at[33].
[431]Australian Broadcasting Corporation v O'Neill[2005] TASSC 82 at[9] and [38].
[432]O'Neill v Australian Broadcasting Corporation[2005] TASSC 26 at[23].
[433]O'Neill v Australian Broadcasting Corporation[2005] TASSC 26 at[20]-[21].
[434]O'Neill v Australian Broadcasting Corporation[2005] TASSC 26 at[22].
[435]O'Neill v Australian Broadcasting Corporation[2005] TASSC 26 at[20].
[436]O'Neill v Australian Broadcasting Corporation[2005] TASSC 26 at[25] and [28].
[437]O'Neill v Australian Broadcasting Corporation[2005] TASSC 26 at[30]-[31].
[438]O'Neill v Australian Broadcasting Corporation[2005] TASSC 26 at[33].
[439]O'Neill v Australian Broadcasting Corporation[2005] TASSC 26 at[33].
[440] Mortimer,In Character, (1984) at 82.
[441]R v Schaeffer[2005] VSCA 306; (2005) 159 A Crim R 101 at 105[12] per Ormiston JA.
[442] SeeNicholls v The Queen[2005] HCA 1; (2005) 219 CLR 196.