and Sportsman Ltd. and Joseph Mark Surtees, the sum of £3,000 for libel published in a newspaper Truth.
The Truth newspaper, which is published weekly and has a large circulation throughout New South Wales, is owned by the defendant company and is published on behalf of that company by the defendant Surtees.
The libel complained of consisted of words alleged to refer to the plaintiff contained in a somewhat lengthy article which appeared in the newspaper. This article consisted in part of references to the report of a Royal Commission and in part of references to the action taken by the Government of New South Wales in dismissing various police officers who had been adversely criticized in the report.
The defendants pleaded not guilty and in their pleas raised the following defences :-(a) the general issue; (b) as to SO much of the matter sued upon as consisted of fact, truth and public benefit; (c) as to SO much of the matter sued upon as consisted of comment, fair comment on matters of public interest; and (d) as to part of the article, which, it was claimed, did not in fact refer to the plaintiff but might have been read as doing so, privilege under sec. 29 (1) (f) of the Defamation Act 1912 (N.S.W.).
After the jury had been in retirement for about two and one-half hours for the purpose of considering their verdict, they returned into court and were informed by the trial judge, Owen J., in answer to the question, " In the event of a verdict who will pay the costs put by them to his Honour, that the parties were entitled to have their legal rights determined without regard to that question it had nothing to do with the matter they had to decide. The foreman of the jury then stated that they had decided on a verdict for the plaintiff and that they had not gone into the matter of damages.
The jury then retired from the court to consider the question of damages and returned into court seven minutes later, when the foreman announced that they found damages for the plaintiff in the sum of one farthing.
An appeal by the plaintiff to the Full Court of the Supreme Court for a new trial restricted to the issue of damages or, alternatively, for a new trial generally, was dismissed.
From that decision the plaintiff appealed to the High Court. Other material facts appear in the judgments hereunder.