Bass v McDonald and TCN Channel Nine Pty Ltd (No.4)
[2001] NSWSC 974
•2 November 2001
Reported Decision:
[2001] NSWSC 974
[2001] ACL Rep 145 NSW 49
New South Wales
Supreme Court
CITATION: Bass v McDonald & TCN Channel Nine Pty Ltd (No.4) [2001] NSWSC 974 CURRENT JURISDICTION: Common Law FILE NUMBER(S): SC 16791/90 HEARING DATE(S): 17 - 19 October 2001
22 & 23 October 2001
25 & 26 October 2001
29 - 31 October 2001
1 & 2 November 2001JUDGMENT DATE:
2 November 2001PARTIES :
Robin Bass
Thomas McDonald
TCN Channel Nine Pty LtdJUDGMENT OF: Sperling J at 1
COUNSEL : Mr T Molomby with Mr R Rasmussen for the Plaintiff
Mr B McClintock SC with Mr M Richardson for the Second DefendantSOLICITORS: William Oates Lawyers for the Plaintiff
Gilbert & Tobin Lawyers for the Second DefendantCATCHWORDS: Defamation - defence of unlikelihood of harm - no question of principle CASES CITED: Morosi v Mirror Newspapers [1977] 2 NSWLR 749 DECISION: See paragraph 6 of the judgment.
THE SUPREME COURT
OF NEW SOUTH WALES
COMMON LAW DIVISION
Defamation List
Sperling J
16791/90 Robin Bass v Thomas Mcdonald & TCN Channel Nine Pty Ltd Judgment (No.4 - Refusing application to withdraw defence of unlikelihood of harm from the jury)Friday 2 November 2001
1 His Honour: At this stage of the proceedings Mr Molomby moves for a ruling that the defence of unlikelihood of harm should be withdrawn from the jury on the basis it would not be open to the jury to find in favour of the defendant under that defence.
2 The authorities to which I have been referred relate to circumstances very different from those which arise in the present case. The assistance which I have derived from them is the legislation refers to "the circumstances of the publication" in contradistinction with an expression such as "in all the circumstances of the case". The section draws attention to those circumstances which are immediately associated with the publication, such as were mentioned by way of illustration in Morosi v Mirror Newspapers [1977] 2 NSWLR 749 at 800, namely, the manner in which the matter was published, the persons to whom it was published and the place where it was published.
3 In the present case, the defendant relies on material in the subject programme other than that giving rise to the defamatory imputations and which the defendant wishes to argue so outweighed what might otherwise have been the effect of the defamatory imputations that the plaintiff was not likely to suffer harm from the defamatory imputations themselves.
4 It seems to me that nothing could be more intimate to the circumstances of the publication of the matter complained of than that the selfsame publication, whether it be a newspaper article or a radio or television programme, itself contained countervailing material which it would be open to a jury to regard as sufficient to outweigh, in the mind of any viewer or reader, what would otherwise be the harmful effect of the defamatory imputations.
5 It is unnecessary for me in this judgment to specify with particularity the countervailing material on which the defendant would rely; it is apparent from seeing and viewing the television programme. In my view, it would be open to a jury, having regard to that countervailing material, to find, the defendant carrying the burden of proof, that the programme as a whole, and, accordingly, the defamatory imputations in it, was not likely to cause harm to the plaintiff.
6 Accordingly, the application to withdraw that defence from the jury is refused.
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