Gutnick v Dow Jones & Company Inc
[2001] VSC 305
•28 August 2001
| IN THE SUPREME COURT OF VICTORIA | Not Restricted | |
AT MELBOURNE
COMMON LAW DIVISION
No. 7763 of 2000
| JOSEPH GUTNICK | Plaintiff |
| v | |
| DOW JONES & COMPANY INC. | Defendant |
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JUDGE: | HEDIGAN J | |
WHERE HELD: | Melbourne | |
DATE OF HEARING: | 4-7 June 2001 | |
DATE OF JUDGMENT: | 28 August 2001 | |
CASE MAY BE CITED AS: | Gutnick v. Dow Jones | |
MEDIUM NEUTRAL CITATION: | [2001] VSC 305 | |
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DEFAMATION – Publication of arguably defamatory matter on the Internet – Web server in U.S.A. – Subscription Website – Downloaded by subscribers in Victoria – Whether published in Victoria – Where publication manifested – Whether published in both Victoria and New Jersey simultaneously.
SERVICE OUT OF JURISDICTION – Rule 7.01 of Supreme Court Rules – Long arm jurisdiction – Subsequent amendment as of right and by leave – Supreme Court having jurisdiction and Rule complied with.
FORUM NON CONVENIENS – Whether Victoria inappropriate or inconvenient forum – Relevant principles – Matters to be considered – Victoria appropriate forum – Application refused.
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APPEARANCES: | Counsel | Solicitors |
For the Plaintiff | Mr J. Sher, Q.C. | Clayton Utz |
| For the Defendant | Mr G. Robertson, Q.C. Mr T. Robertson | Gilbert & Tobin |
HIS HONOUR:
The defendant Dow Jones & Co. Inc. (hereinafter called “the defendant” or “Dow Jones” or “the applicant/defendant”) is the publisher of the Wall Street Journal, an internationally known and respected financial daily newspaper, much concerned with information concerning United States stocks and shares and other events that might affect their prices on the American market. The defendant is also the publisher of Barrons Magazine which, according to Mr G. Robertson, Q.C. who with Mr T. Robertson appeared on behalf of the defendant, is even more obsessively concerned with those matters. Mr Robertson also claimed that the plaintiff, Mr Joseph Gutnick, was a prominent business identity with a reputation in philanthropic, sporting and religious circles and that he was an international entrepreneur with substantial connections in the United States. The edition of Barrons of Monday, 30th October 2000 (which appears likely to have come out on Saturday, 28th October) contained an article written by a journalist working for the defendant, one William Alpert, headed “Unholy Gains” and sub-headed “When stock promoters cross paths with religious charities, investors had better be on guard.” The first page of the article also contained a large photograph of Mr Gutnick. The article of some 7,000 words contained a number of different photographs of different persons including one of Nachum Goldberg. Barrons is a weekly with a substantial circulation in the United States primarily among investors and those interested in money matters. It was claimed without objection in the hearing before me that this relevant copy of Barrons Magazine sold 305,563 copies. A very small number of the actual print copy of Barrons came to Australia, but a number of them were sold in Victoria. Barrons, however, is customarily put OnLine and this article went on the defendant’s Website on Sunday 29th October. The defendant Dow Jones operates from its so-called corporate campus in New Jersey where its Website is located. There is, as I understood it, no Website in Barrons’ name and the Website is in the name “wsj.com”. This is, however, a subscriber Website with some 550,000 subscribers. It was claimed in the opening by Mr Robertson that the defendant could not identify where they all were but it was conceded that 1700 of them paid by way of credit cards from Australia.
Ultimately (T139) the defendant made a formal admission that several hundred subscribers to wsj.com were from Victoria and that they included significant persons from finance, business and stockbroking some of whom the Court might infer, for the purposes of these interlocutory proceedings, downloaded the article. This submission was to be seen in conjunction with the admission effectively made in the opening that there were 1700 subscribers from Australia. Notwithstanding this submission, it did not obviate the necessity to call the only witness who was called on the application, Mr Robert Sichler, a Dow Jones executive to parts of whose evidence I will briefly refer.
The plaintiff commenced his proceeding in the Supreme Court of Victoria by writ on 27th November 2000. By the statement of claim endorsed on the writ, the plaintiff asserted that the defendant Dow Jones was at all times the publisher of an Internet business and financial journal and news service entitled “Barrons Online” and that it caused to be published in Victoria by means of the Internet in permanent form an article entitled “Unholy Gains” which was published on the Internet and available to all persons in Victoria connected to the Internet who could and/or did on or after 28th October 2000 obtain access to the article, including brokers, financial advisers and such persons. The claim was that the defendant published words and pictures, including a photograph of Mr Gutnick and Mr Goldberg set out in the article which was annexed to the statement of claim, as a schedule. However the words and pictures relied on and set out in that schedule are not the whole of the article entitled “Unholy Gains” but were substantially confined to that part of the article by which an allegation was made that the plaintiff was the biggest customer of the gaoled money-launderer and tax evader Nachum Goldberg and that the words relied on imputed that Gutnick was masquerading as a reputable citizen when he was a tax evader who had laundered large amounts of money through Goldberg, and bought his silence. There was also a claim for aggravated and punitive damages.
It will be necessary for me to describe the substance and subject matter of the whole of the article published in Barrons which travels considerably beyond those parts of it relied on by the plaintiff in this proceeding because there are, as will appear, issues raised as to whether or not the plaintiff may sue on part of the article only or whether the balance of the article may be used by the applicant defendant in other ways as part of the so-called Polly Peck defence, if raised, and as part of an argument relating to the appropriate forum.
The original statement of claim endorsed on the writ relied only, as my recitation of its terms indicates, the Internet publication of the relevant article in Barrons Magazine. The statement of claim was subsequently amended as of right and then by leave to add an additional claim for defamation based on the sale of the paper edition of the magazine in Victoria. There was filed on behalf of the plaintiff a number of affidavits of persons who downloaded the article from the Internet, using the entry password and being thereby responsible for the cost of the OnLine copy of the magazine to Dow Jones.
The defendant was served in the United States with the original proceeding and has made application to this Court to stay or dismiss the proceeding on a number of bases. My description now of the bases of the applications will in effect identify the issues that were the subject of argument before me and they will also identify some other submissions subsidiary to the main themes. The first issue was the issue of jurisdiction, that is the argument advanced on behalf of the applicant/defendant that the OnLine article was not published in Victoria but in New Jersey, the location of the defendant’s Web server. I will develop the arguments as presented to me at a later stage but it is sufficient to say that the argument advanced by the defendant with respect to the OnLine publication of Barrons would have no effect on the legal consequences of the sale of the hard copies, minimal as they were, in this State. However, it is likely that my decision on this aspect would, as a matter of practicality, dispose of this dispute concerning the paper sales of Barrons.
The second issue is connected with the first but it is also likely to be affected by the decision on the jurisdiction question. The second issue is the so-called “gateway” argument advanced on behalf of the applicant/defendant founded upon its argument in relation to the proper construction and application of Order 7 of the Rules of this Court which found the basis upon which “long-arm” jurisdiction is effected in relation to defendants outside the jurisdiction, without leave in some cases (as here) or upon the grant of leave in others.
The third principal issue is the issue of forum non conveniens, that is an application made on behalf of Dow Jones (on the assumption that its first two submissions were not successful) that this Court should decline jurisdiction and order a stay of the proceeding to permit the transfer of it to New Jersey in the United States, on the basis that that place is the appropriate forum to try the dispute, and that the State of Victoria is a clearly inappropriate forum for it.
Within the broad range and parameters of this dispute, there are drawn in on the following issues: whether or not the plaintiff may lawfully sue for damages for libel in respect of part only of the article (and in the defendant’s argument a minimal part of it), without having the balance of the article having to be considered as lying at the forefront of many of the questions which Barrons would wish to raise. These include whether or not the defendant is entitled to rely upon the balance of the article in order to throw light and meaning, as part of its defence, on those parts of the article relied on by the plaintiff; questions whether those parts of it chosen to be sued on by the plaintiff are part of or within the same dimension as all of the other matters concerning Mr Gutnick addressed in the article, so that they might be seen as mere variants of them, of no greater seriousness than the other matters alleged but not sued on; questions of whether or not other defences claimed as being open to the Dow Jones in the United States but not open here (if that be the case) amount to significant reason to conclude that the proceeding should be heard in the United States; issues of whether or not what was printed was reasonable, that being raised as part of an arguable defence of qualified privilege in the Lange[1] sense of reasonableness, one of the defendant’s contentions being that the reasonableness of the author of the article having regard to the U.S. journalistic standards is relevant; finally, other matters which I will address, if it becomes necessary to do so, in the context of forum non conveniens.
[1]Lang v. A.B.C. (1997) 189 C.L.R. 520.
Before embarking upon a summary, both of the article and some of the material relied on, I note certain matters which were left, in my judgment, in a state of some uncertainty. The defendant’s submissions make it clear that the copy in the print article was transferred to the wsj.com computer system at the New York headquarters where it was made into Web pages for Barrons OnLine and then sent to a computer at the Dow Jones corporate campus in New Jersey. The evidence of Mr Sichler to which I will refer does not make clear enough to me where all of the relevant Web servers are located. It was said at one point of time in the submissions that there were six Web servers in New Jersey, each of which have the function of making all of the wsj.com publications, including Barrons OnLine, available to subscribers or would-be subscribers who have previously obtained a user name and password which enables them to log on to the wsj.com Website. At some point of time later in the case however, when the issue of the convenient forum was being debated, I noted Mr Robertson referred to the proceeding being heard in New Jersey or the State of New York.
I turn to the article itself. The Dow Jones submissions were that its flavour and focus concerned the alleged misuse of U.S. religious charities and stock promotions on the U.S. market. This summation, (which appeared in paragraph 3 of the applicant/defendant’s outline of original submissions) correctly identified the substance of the article’s subject matter. No sooner was it put that that was its focus when that description was abandoned for the following as the meaning of the article (for Polly Peck purposes):
“That the plaintiff is a devious businessman who should be investigated by U.S. regulators; in any event American investors should beware of Gutnick-promoted shares in American depository receipts and his new hedge fund held by Chase Manhattan Bank. This is because the plaintiff has stated that he intends to increase his business in the U.S. and there is reason to suspect that U.S.-based religious charities have been used to manipulate the price of the stocks he has promoted in the U.S., arranging for the charities to make profits but leaving other investors to suffer losses.”[2]
[2]Submissions, para 41.
It went on to allege that the reasonableness of the suspicion that religious charities had been misused in order to manipulate stock prices derived from seven matters dealt with in the article. These included (a) irrational predictions of wealth made by religious leaders promoting the sale of shares in the plaintiff’s company; (b) profits taken by a U.S.-based charity as a result of selling its shares in a Gutnick company shortly before the price collapsed; (c) trading record of ADRs in five companies promoted by the plaintiff; (d) evidence of the plaintiff’s influence over trading in plaintiff-related stocks by Colel Chabard and another U.S. charity; (e) the plaintiff’s business association with Judah Wernick, a broker who used religious charities in stock frauds; (f) involvement of close-knit religious communities in Brooklyn (Whiting Inc.) in supporting stocks promoted by the plaintiff and manipulating the share prices of those stocks; and (g) a claim that several cheques made out to the plaintiff turned up in the account of a bogus religious charity run as a front by Nachum Goldberg who was convicted of tax evasion and the claim that in an intercepted telephone call “Goldberg referred to the plaintiff in words that were taken to mean that the plaintiff was a big customer”. I will later refer to this exposition when dealing with the issue of Polly Peck raised by the applicant/defendant and also with yet another formulation of the claimed sting and substance of the article. Thus the above is the summation of the multiple themes embraced by the article as formulated by the defendant in this case, although their place in the submission to which I have referred might be seen as by way of giving particulars of the common sting referred to. Mr Robertson was undoubtedly right when he said that those parts of the article upon which the Victorian proceeding are founded as being libellous are a relatively small part of the article as a whole. This is one of the reasons why the connection of the part of the article sued on with the balance of the article, other than to make damaging statements about Gutnick’s conduct unrelated to stock market schemes and manipulation, is doubtful. The were nearly four full pages of the article (including photographs and side bars) of a six-page examination of the plaintiff’s activities before the Goldberg connection was arrived at.
(A) Jurisdiction
I move to consideration of the jurisdiction issue. On this application, that means the question of the place of Internet publication. The physical means by which words are placed on the defendant’s Website were addressed in the affidavit of Howard Gold, the editor of Barrons OnLine, and in the affidavit and oral evidence of Mr Robert Sichler, the systems project supervisor employed by the defendant. Mr Gold’s evidence is essentially non-contentious merely describing how stories which were written and edited in New York are transmitted by a dedicated computer to the defendant’s corporate campus in New Jersey. Mr Sichler purported to explain in his affidavit how the electronic data thus transmitted was transferred from the defendant’s two computers in New Jersey on to six further computers which hold the stories or articles, known as servers. He clearly stated in the affidavit that all six servers where physically located in New Jersey.
The affidavits of Dr Clark and Mr Hammond attempted to trespass on to the area of the legal conclusion as to how and when, for the purposes of the law of defamation in relation to the Internet, publication took place or occurred. Objection was raised and the offending parts withdrawn. Their affidavits are illuminating and helpful in addressing the technical process whereby a document finds its way from one computer to another via the World Wide Web. It would appear that there are three Internet services: one the so-called push service, for example, e-mail; secondly, Usenet method whereby a person may access the service on meeting the conditions of the provider (the I.S.P., that is, the Internet Service Provider) of the information, e.g. payment coupled with a password or other matters, and, three, the World Wide Web whereby the technical process of a document finding its way is considerably expanded. The affidavits establish that the Web does comprise computers which hold and send information (using “Web server” software) and other computers which request and receive information by using “Web browser” software. Thus, according to Clark, the originator of the Web document uploads into the storage area managed by the Web server, the person who wants the document must issue a request and, in order to make a request, the requestor uses a Web browser specifying the Website address. The server then delivers the document, so that it may be finally downloaded. Thus it was put that the delivery of electronic documents will only occur if the person searching for the document sends an electronic message to locate it on the relevant Web server. This is contrasted, for example, with other Internet features such as e-mail which is not dependent upon a prior request having been made. This led to the use in those affidavits and, one may say with no offence, heavy reliance by counsel for the plaintiff on the pull-push technology differences as being critical. The purpose of all this was to provide a technical basis for alleging that the process of extracting the particular article from the Dow Jones Web server involves requests for actions by persons “over whom Dow Jones has no control”. This is by no means wholly accurate as Dow Jones has programmed its computers (see the reference to the Accrue system in Sichler’s evidence) to decline requests e.g. for Barrons in the absence of a provided password and also to dedcline even with a password if the requestor is delinquent in the payment of his or her outstanding account at that time. This is a subscription Website. The information on the New Jersey Web servers handling Barrons OnLine does not go on to the World Wide Web from that server. It is not necessary for me to refer to some of the technical explanation of the use of search engines to aid in searching out for information.
The key part of this material was to emphasize (and it was so used by Mr Robertson) that the information was obtained by the searchers’ own deliberate actions, by clicking on to request the defendant’s Web server to provide access to the relevant document. It was sought to be contrasted with persons listening to a radio or seeing and hearing a television broadcast. However, the appreciation of the contrast between push and pull technologies, claimed by the defendant to be crucial, cannot dominate the question of publication for the law of defamation. It would be otherwise just as relevant to say that a radio station has not done anything to facilitate the broadcast in the publishing sense because the listener turns the selection control to that station. The affidavits and counsel’s submissions sought to assimilate the process to taking a book out of a library in New Jersey and taking it home to Victoria to read, claiming that no action would lie in Victoria against the New Jersey library because it would not have caused any publication in Victoria. This involved, of course, counsel insisting that there was no causing by Dow Jones of publication in Victoria, merely putting Barrons on an Internet site accessible to Victoria. It was clearly stated that the article lying silent and uncalled for in the defendant’s Web server in New Jersey, did not amount to publication.
It is to be observed that this material, and the way it was used, focussed on publication in a generic way and not too much upon publication for the purposes of the law of defamation. One of the submissions was the proposition that the imposition of liability on the basis of the place of publication occurring in the place of downloading would have a serious “chilling effect” on free speech, leading to an increase in the number of actions (in itself a concession that the defendant’s proposition would limit the balancing right to sue for arguably defamatory statements). It was also put that information providers would become more cautious if this occurred thus reducing the uninhibited communication and circulation of information to an exceptionally low level. This was asserted but not established by evidence, nor, one ventures, could it be. It was also contended that the logical considerations in respect of the characterization of the place of publication, choice of forum and choice of law questions concerning the Internet all favoured the country where the Website was physically located (that is, the country where the article was written and uploaded and where the publisher conducts its business).
Mr Robertson argued that such a narrow rule was appropriate for the age of globalization. It was, of course, also appropriate for his client. I note that his submissions claimed that the choice of forum rule within the European community as adopted is to regulate cross border television communications on the basis of the jurisdiction where the broadcaster is established. However, as I will later indicate, it would appear likely that with respect to the Internet a different proposition has been embraced. It was also argued that any solution other than that the place of publication should be the place of uploading, and not downloading, would be contrary to the public interest in all countries, because Internet publishers would have to pay regard to the different defamation laws in numerous countries, with the likely effect of diminishing the amount of information made available on the Internet.
These may be matters capable of bearing on my decision. However, in respect of each one of them, there are just as sound arguments to the contrary. The submission lacked nothing on the score of boldness, it being claimed that the Internet offered Australians the greatest hope of overcoming the tyranny of distance and that it would be contrary to the national interest for a State court in Australia (he later specifically advanced an argument attacking the “parish pump” approach) to assume to exercise jurisdiction over material placed on Websites overseas by foreign publishers, in circumstances where effective and appropriate redress is available in the place where the information is up-linked. This he claimed might lead to major international publishers of informational Websites to deny subscriptions to Australians out of commercial concern that they would be dragged into this jurisdiction to fight expensive defamation actions. The suggestion that I had a national duty to decide that there was no jurisdiction in Australia even if I had a legal view to the contrary, and that it is my duty publicly to declare that Mr Gutnick’s action against Dow Jones take place in New Jersey, might be thought by some to be remarkable for its ambition. It can be said that this revolutionary technology at least notably modifies territorial boundaries. But it would seem likely that restricted material obtained on downloading could not be republished on to the World Wide Web without breaching copyright.
It also lies at the heart of the defendant’s submissions (and was so stated) that the person searching for the relevant article or information through a Web browser or search engine and on its discovery clicking on its download is really self-publishing, a phrase which was specifically used. Counsel referred to the statement in Dicey-Morris[3]:
“It has to be admitted that the place of publication approach gives rise to practical difficulties in cases where defamatory material is disseminated through the Internet, not least because of the potential number of countries in which access may be had to that material.”
The breadth of this statement fits uneasily with the facts in this case where Dow Jones charges fees and will permit access to the information in the Web server only upon compliance with its conditions. It can select who in what country will be able to get a response to the request, that is the pull technology itself is influenced by the Web server. The single defamation approach in the United States has not been accepted in this country in the case of television broadcasts, the publication in each State and Territory being a separate tort subject to local law. It has also been denied by the House of Lords in Berezovsky[4]. See Gorton v. A.B.C.[5]. It is this rule that, one surmises, led to the statements of the High Court in John Pfeiffer v. Rogerson[6],. The solution in a federation in an intra-Australian context that the law of the place where the tort was committed will be the only relevant law was a view expressed by the Supreme Court of this State even earlier.[7]
[3]13th ed. at 1568.
[4](2000) 2 All.E. 986.
[5](1973) 2 F.L.R. 181.
[6][2000] A.L.J.R. 1109.
[7]Meckiff v. Simpson [1968] V.R. 2.
For the present purpose, not yet referring to any specific authorities that bear upon the issue of jurisdiction and the place of publication, a number of suggestions were made by the defendant as to the appropriate place. The first was the place of uploading the information being the place of publication. Not surprisingly, this view was supported by the defendant on the basis that there was a single connecting factor and not hundreds of potential ones. It was also said to offer certainty, a prized quality. It certainly suits the publisher, rather than the place of residence of the downloading plaintiff, said to be very often unfair against the information supplier and lacking certainty in relation to the Internet. As to another possibility, the place where the damage was suffered, it was said that also suffered defects. As to another possible suggestion (all raised by defendant’s counsel) namely the country in which substantially the circumstances giving rise to the claim have occurred. Reference was made to Distillers case.[8] This, however, leaves the question of what the substantial event was. In this case Mr Gutnick would say the publication in the State of Victoria, the false allegation about him as a money launderer, the only remark about which he cared; or, as the defendant argues, the place of uploading, it being stored there as an article written in America for Americans “the events constituting a tort having an indelibly American complexion.” It is to be noted that none of these suggestions denoted the place of down-loading information, one which reference to the authorities might have permitted a place in the range of options. I add that Mr Robertson briefly flirted with the proposition that cyberspace was a defamation-free zone, but did not develop it. Nor shall I.
[8][1971] A.C. 458 at 468.
It is not to be doubted that the core submission of the defendant is that the Internet publication of “Unholy Gains” occurred when and where the material was uploaded in New Jersey, that is, when it was pulled from the server in New Jersey. The argument was that downloading is a result of an independent action for which the defendant cannot be held “properly responsible”. The issue here was whether “properly responsible” is used in a technical and scientific sense or as a matter of law. Mr Robertson’s case is that the publication occurs when the material which is defamatory is delivered to a third party. The plaintiff’s case is that it is only published when it is made intelligible or manifest to a third party by showing it or making it comprehensible. The plaintiff argues that that has been the law for 400 years in other contexts, claimed by the defendant to be not truly analagous to the Internet. This is, of course, why the defendant’s counsel accepted there was no publication whilst it sat in the Web server, that is, not delivered. Once Mr Robertson moved from the direct assimilation of the technical evidence to the tort of defamation he was driven to consider the elements of that tort and relate them to the steps comprising publication. His argument, and I will return to it, was that there was no publication because there was no delivery, that is, the browser knocked on the library door and having locked in the correct code, the book is sent to him. He reads it when it is downloaded but it has already been published, just like buying a book and reading it later in his contention.
Mr Sher, Q.C., for the plaintiff, in effect said, well, if one requests a book written in English and is given it wrapped up but written in a foreign language which one does not read or speak, it is absurd to contend that it is published to one by delivery, he claiming that all of the cases ran to the contrary to this proposition. It is important to keep in mind that there is a difference between “publishing” in a publishing sense and publication in the sense of actual communication, that is, that the document, in the case of a document, is in a form which is capable of being understood.
When counsel for Dow Jones finally turned to authority to support his argument that delivery constituted sufficient publication for the tort of defamation, he relied essentially on two authorities. One of them he saved up for the reply. The first case on which he relied was Duke of Brunswick and Luneberg v. Harmer[9]; the second was R. v. Burdett[10]. The irony can hardly have escaped the mind of senior counsel for the applicant/defendant in that, with respect to the unique and revolutionary Internet, he sought support for his submissions in the legal sense on two cases decided in the first half of the 19th century.
[9][1849] 14 Q.B. 184.
[10](1820) 4 B. & Ald. 115.
The defendant argued that Burdett was authority to the contrary of the proposition, espoused by the plaintiff, that publication means actual manifestation to a third party (although it may not mean necessarily that it is read so long as it is capable of being read without any other intervention). Burdett was a case of seditious libel, that is, not defamatory or civil libel. Sir Francis Burdett was charged with being a seditious person, that he unlawfully and maliciously intending to raise and excite discontent, disaffection, sedition among the King’s subjects, to that end maliciously composed, wrote and published and caused the same of a seditious libel concerning the government of the realm and the troops of the King. The libel in that case was to be found in a document containing an address to the Electors of Westminster. The evidence was that the document containing the seditious libel was delivered in an unsealed letter without seal or postmark by a person other than the accused in Middlesex. The accused at about this time was in Leicester and one of the issues at the trial was whether it was published in the County of Leicester. Seditious libel was capable of being established, as was criminal libel, without proof of publication.[11] Of the four judges, Abbott, C.J., Best, Holyrood and Bailey, JJ. two of them held that there was sufficient evidence to give rise to an inference of publication in Leicester to enable the case to be left to the jury, another, Best, J., held that if the envelope had been sealed when delivered in Leicester it was published there and another, Holyrood, J., said that the only necessary proof of publication was publication somewhere.
[11]See R. v. Paine (1695) 5 Modify. 163; R. v. Williams (1810) 2 Camp. 506.
There were statements made in some of the judgments that the publication of a libel does not mean actual communication of the contents of the paper or manifestation of the content. More significantly, however, if Burdett is capable of being applied to case of defamatory civil libel rather than being confined to seditious libel, then it runs contrary to a long line of authorities upon which the plaintiff relies and to which I will shortly refer. Gatley treats Burdett as a case concerning criminal libel, stating[12]:
“The crime must be committed within the jurisdiction which means that the communication of the libel must be made to persons in England or Wales, no matter where the author or publisher is located.” (My emphasis.)
[12]Paragraph 22(1) (9th edition).
The 1985 Royal Commission on Criminal Libel supported the view of Gatley stating that:
“The essence of the harm caused by communication of false defamatory information concerning third parties is the dissemination of that information in England or Wales. ... that damage cannot be done until dissemination is effected, that is, when communication is complete; and where that communication is completed in another country the damage with which the offence is concerned must generally take place in that country.”[13]
[13]Paragraph 7.31.
Counsel for the plaintiff argued that the judges in Burdett confused the issue of what was sufficient evidence to prove publication and what actually constituted the publication. In that way, it was argued that the sale of books or newspapers, or the delivery of a letter, constituted only prima facie evidence of publication. This was so because a sale or delivery gave rise to an inference that the matter is or would be read by the recipient and therefore communicated. Thus the contention was that the majority of the judges in Burdett fell into error in failing to appreciate that delivery of a document does not constitute publication but is merely evidence of it. It may be that this is a way of reconciling Burdett with strong authority to the contrary, that is that it is manifestation or communication which constitutes the publication, not difficult to infer from evidence of delivery. When Burdett has been cited in texts, it is for the proposition that in the case of seditious libel it is uncertain whether composition of the material with the intention that it be published, but without publication, can constitute the offence.[14]
[14]See Halsbury 4th ed. Volume 11.1 paragraph 90, Russell on Crime 9th ed. 88, Archbold 27th ed. 1113, Smith and Hogan: Criminal Law 8th edition 760.
Counsel for the defendant relied upon the Duke of Brunswick case. That case involved a case of libel in respect of a newspaper published more than 17 years before the action was brought. The statute of limitations defence was met by the argument that it was negatived by proof that a single copy had been purchased from the defendant for the plaintiff by the plaintiff’s agent within the period of six years. The relevant newspaper was the Weekly Dispatch. The report sets out the substance of the libel that supported the first count and indicates that two copies of the newspaper containing the libel set out in the first count were produced. It appeared to have been published in 1930. One copy had been obtained for the British Museum, the other had been purchased in 1848 from the newspaper office of the defendant by the plaintiff’s agent, that is, a person sent by the plaintiff to make the purchase and who had handed on the paper to the plaintiff. It had been put that those facts did not constitute a publication. Denman, C.J. did not agree and left the matter to the jury. In a motion for a new trial, the argument was advanced that the publication relied on was the sale of a copy of the paper to a person sent by the plaintiff to procure it who would have carried it to the plaintiff, this being argued to be a sale to the plaintiff himself and not a sufficient publication as to sustain a civil action for damages. The court stated:
“The defendant, who on the application of a stranger, delivers to him the writing which libels the third person publishes the libellous matter to him, although he may have been sent to procure the work by that person.”
This is the passage relied on by the defendant here. However, the Court went on to say:
“So far as in him lies he lowers the reputation of the principal in the mind of the agent, although that of an agent is as capable of being affected by the assertions as if he were a stranger.”
It seems to me that the language there used is concerned with delivery affecting the mind, that is, the inference was drawn that it was read. Having regard to the language used, and to say the least unusual the circumstances of the case, it is not a commencing authority for the proposition.
An examination of the leading texts shows that no major texts on defamation cite Burdett (or for that matter Duke of Brunswick) as authorities for the proposition advanced by the defendant with respect to publication. See Gatley[15], Tobin and Sexton: Australian Defamation Law and Practice; Duncan and Neill on Defamation; Brown: Law of Defamation, Canada; and Gillooly: The Law of Defamation in Australia and New Zealand. The last does not cite Burdett at all.
[15]9th edition.
The plaintiff claims that their researches have failed to reveal any case in which Burdett or Duke of Brunswick are cited for the proposition advanced by the defendant and I note that counsel for Dow Jones did not cite any other supporting authority for the proposition. Instead he focussed more upon the effort to distinguish the long line of authority relied on by the plaintiff. Duke of Brunswick seems only to have been cited as authority for the proposition that each separate publication is a separate wrong. Moreover, the House of Lords in Browne v. Dunn[16] (a well known case concerning the obligation to put allegations forming part of the opposite case to witnesses when being cross-examined), with respect to the evidence of one Mrs Cook who had signed a document instructing her solicitor to appear in court to seek to bind over Mr Browne to keep the peace, (Mrs Cook gave evidence she had not read the document), Lord Herschell took the view that there was no publication to her of its contents if she did not read it, but if she did read it she was in the same position as that of the other clients of the defendant who had read it and signed it.
[16](1894) (H.L.) 6 R. 67.
In this case the plaintiff complains of publication of part of the “Unholy Gains” article in Victoria only, to those of the defendant subscribers in Victoria who viewed the article on computer screens after downloading it from the Internet and also those who received and read the hard copy edition of Barrons Journal. It would not be in dispute that the number who are likely to have viewed the article on computer screens in Victoria, including persons significant in business and commerce, is probably in excess of 300 and with respect to the hard copy edition of Barrons Journal, probably about 14. The primary publication in Victoria may be relevant to the question of damages if the case proceeds. The plaintiff has confined his case of publication to the Victorian jurisdiction. Senior counsel for the plaintiff, relied on this fact to distinguish this case from Diamond v. Sutton[17] and Eyre v. Nationwide News[18].
[17](1866) L.R. IX 130 at 131
[18](1967) N.Z.L.R. 851.
The defendant has not advanced any argument to the proposition that printed copies of the article were published in Victoria, concentrating his reference to that on aspects of the “gateway” argument.
The plaintiff’s argument is that actionable publication does not occur unless and until a defamatory meaning is conveyed to a hearer or a reader. Counsel’s submission commenced its citation of authority with a reference to the statements made by Isaacs, J. in the High Court in Webb v. Bloch[19], “To publish a libel is to convey by some means to the mind of another the defamatory sense embodied in the vehicle.” See also Williams, J. in Amann v. Damm[20], citing Lord Hobart. Similar language was used in Boorman v. Hill & Co.[21] (also a libel case, as was Webb v. Bloch). I cite from the reasons for judgment of the Master of the Rolls, Lord Esher:
“The first question is, whether assuming the letter to contain defamatory matter, there has been publication of it. ‘What is the meaning of publication’? The making known of the defamatory matter after it has been written to some person other than the person to whom it is written. If the statement is sent straight to the person to whom it is written then there is no publication of it; one cannot publish a libel of a man to himself. If there was no publication, the question whether the occasion was privileged does not arise. If a letter was not communicated to anyone but the person to whom it is written, then there is no publication of it.”[22]
In the same case, Lopes, L.J. stated, “What is meant by publication? Communication of the defamatory matter to a third person.” In that case the letter was directed to the plaintiff’s firm but opened and read by a clerk.
[19](1928) 41 C.L.R. 331 at 363.
[20](1868) C.B.(N.S.) 597.
[21](1891) 1 Q.B. 524 at 527
[22]At 529.
Reliance was placed upon the decision of this Court in Beitzel v. Crabb[23]. This was a case concerning publication by the defendant by adoption and repetition outside Parliament of words spoken by him in the Parliament and published in the media. In that case, the court relied upon statements in Gatley[24] to the effect that by publication is meant the making known of the defamatory matters to some person other than the person of whom it is written and stated (this was a case of slander):
“Publication may be effected by any act on the part of the defendant which conveys the defamatory meaning of the matter to the person to whom it is communicated. The slander and damages lie on the perception of the hearer’s of such communication.”
In Jenner v. Sun Oil Company Ltd.[25] the court considered a claim for damages by a plaintiff resulting from defamatory words spoken on a broadcast originating in the United States of America and alleged to have been heard in Toronto. In allowing service out of Ontario of the relevant writ on the basis that the action (a) was for a tort committed within Ontario, the court concluded that the essential feature of the tort of defamation was the publication of the defamatory words to a person other than the plaintiff. I note that McRuer, C.J. H.C. stated that “the tort consists in making a third person understand actionable defamatory matter.” I observe that for the purposes of the forum non conveniens argument in that case and in carrying out its duty of balancing various features of the case in order to do justice, the Court concluded that the inconvenience of the defendants in coming to Ontario to defend the action could not be so great as the inconvenience of the plaintiff if he was compelled to go to the United States of America to assert his rights.
[23](1992) 2 V.R. 121 at 127.
[24]8th ed. at paragraph 222.
[25](1952) Ontario Reports 240.
Reliance was placed on a number of other cases to which I do not propose to make extended reference. See Toomey v. Mirror Newspapers Ltd.[26] (a decision of Hunt, J., a greatly experienced defamation judge), following by Webb v. Bloch[27]; Jones v. Amalgamated Television Services[28] (the same judge stating “Publication takes place where an imputation defamatory of the plaintiff has been communicated to some person other than the plaintiff himself”, not founding any part of his reason upon delivery simpliciter but upon communication); Fleetwood v. Curley[29]; Amman v. Damm[30]; Jones v. Davers[31] (slander spoken in a language unintelligible to the auditor is not actionable); Sadgrove v. Hole[32] (with respect to a postcard sent by post, it was stated by the A.L. Smith, M.R., “It is clear that he did not prove any publication of a libel on him until the postcard got into the hands of the builder, because then for the first time could any knowledge arise as to the person to whom the postcard referred.); Bata v. Bata[33] (a case of a defamatory circular letter posted abroad was addressed and published to third parties resident in London in which it was stated by Scott, L.J., citing from Lord Esher in Hebditch v. MacIlwane[34]: “The material part of the cause of action in libel is not the writing, but the publication of the libel”); Lee v. Wilson & Ors[35] per Dixon, J: “It is the publication, not the composition of a libel, which is the actionable wrong. Often the person receiving the publicity is not the writer. Injury done by libel arises from the effect produced upon its readers.”; Gambrill v. Schooley[36] (a case concerned with the dictation of a defamatory matter to a confidential stenographer where Pearson, J. relied upon statements made in the then current edition of Odgers on Libel and Slander to the effect that publication was the communication of the defamatory words to some third person going on to state that the writing of a defamatory letter coming into the hand of a third person to be read who does not understand and cannot read the language, does not constitute publication of the libel. After referring to the statements of Lopes, L.J. in Pullman v. Walter Hill[37] Pearson, J. went on to say
“Appellants' counsel, in his brief, says with equal clearness and accuracy ‘Publication, in the law of libel and slander, means the transmission of ideas and thoughts to the perception of a person other than the parties to this suit.’”
These authorities (and others not necessary for me to revisit) were relied upon by senior counsel for the plaintiff who contended, perhaps non-contentiously, that it was not the writing but the publication of the article which is actionable. He argued that merely placing the article on the defendant’s Web server and making it available for downloading did not constitute “publication” because until the article is downloaded and the defamatory meanings were conveyed to some person, the defendant was in the same position as the person “who shouts aloud defamatory words on a desert or moor when no one hears them”.[38] In the same way, he argued that no publication occurred at the point of time where the subscribers’ Web browser requested the article because at that point no defamatory meaning was conveyed to the subscriber. Thus he put it that publication only occurred once the article was displayed on the subscribers’ computer screens and it was only then that the publication was in a form which conveyed the defamatory meanings to the subscribers in Australia who downloaded the article. Other authorities referred to in respect of this proposition were Gorton v. ABC[39]; Pindling v. National Broadcasting Corporation[40]; State ex rel Advance Dictating Supply Inc. v. Dale[41].
[26](1985) 1 N.S.W.L.R. 173 at 177(f).
[27]Above.
[28](1991) 23 N.S.W.L.R. 364.
[29](1619) Hob. 267 at 268 (cited by Williams, J. in Amman v. Dunn (1860) 8 C.B. (New Series) 5497 at 600.
[30]Above at 600.
[31](1597) Cro.Eliz. 496.
[32](1901) 2 K.B. 1 at 5.
[33](1948) W.N. 366.
[34](1984) 2 Q.B. 54 at 61.
[35](1934) 51 C.L.R. 276.
[36]Court of Appeals of Maryland 1901 and 48 Atlantic Reporter 730.
[37]Supra.
[38]Citing from Odgers: Libel and Slander referred to in Gambrill v. Schooley (above).
[39](1973) 22 F.L.R. 181.
[40](1984) 49 O.R. 58 (authorities for the proposition that television broadcast is published in any place where the signals are received).
[41](1974) 524 P(2d) 1404 (a case in which a defamatory statement was made over the telephone by a person in the State of Florida and was held to be published in the State of Oregon where the other party was situated).
Causes of action involving conduct in contravention of the Trade Practices Act 1974 constituted by representations made by telephone to a person outside Australia which were heard by the recipient within Australia are representations made within the jurisdiction. See Paper Products v. Tomlinson (Rochdale) Ltd. (No. 2)[42].
[42](1993) 44 F.C.R. 485.
Counsel for the defendant dismissed these authorities as being inapplicable to the technology and wonders of the modern Internet for the reasons already adverted to by me. However the case of Digital Equipment Coroporation v. Alta Vista Technology Inc.[43] is not so easily diverted, a case dealing with Internet use in which it was stated:
“Using the Internet under the circumstances of this case is as much knowingly ‘sending’ into Massachusetts the allegedly infringing and therefore tortious uses of Digital’s trademark as it is a telex, mail or telephonic transmission; the only difference is the transmission is not singularly directed at Massachusetts, in the way that a letter addressed to this State, or telephone or fax number with a Massachusetts area code would be. But ATI ‘knows’ that its Website reaches residents of Massachusetts who choose to access it, just as surely as it ‘knows’ any lateral telephone call is likely to reach its destination. And it presumably ‘knows’ the context of its Website. ATI’s is a corporation whose primary business is providing Internet software; it is charged with the knowledge that its Website is accessible through the Internet in Massachusetts. It not only took no steps to prevent the alleged infringement for reaching this State’s residents – assuming there were steps to take – it plainly intended to market its wares here.”
[43]960F Supp. 456 (D.Mass. 1997).
Not surprisingly, Mr Sher relied upon Digital Equipment case on the basis that Dow Jones’s position was no different to Alta Vista technology in that, like that defendant, it (a) procured subscribers to its Website; (b) in relation to paying subscribers within Victoria who viewed the article, the defendant deliberately entered into contracts with them for consideration to provide them with access to the defendant’s Website; (c) in relation to trial subscribers in Victoria, the defendant voluntarily chose to give them access to its Website; (d) the defendant therefore knew its Website would reach Victoria just as much as a telex or fax would; (e) the defendant placed the words on the Web server when part of the words were intrinsically concerned with a Victorian matter, namely the Goldberg allocations.
There were also admissions made concerning any steps capable of being taken to cut off the words from reaching Victoria, the so-called “firewall”.
Mr Robertson relied on the unreported decision of Simpson, J. of the Supreme Court of New South Wales in Macquarie Bank v. Berg[44], her Honour there expressing the view that it was plain that once published on the Internet, material might be transmitted anywhere in the world as an Internet connection. It must be said there was no evidence about this before Simpson, J. and, having regard to the evidence I have heard and read, the accuracy of the statement may be doubted, although it would seem that her Honour was using the word “published” in a general way without having in mind at all the Internet subscription service here involved. As I have earlier indicated, this case is not concerned with the World Wide Web because Dow Jones only puts it on for subscribers or trial subscribers. It limits access and thereby limits it from the world. Moreover, if any contractee to Dow Jones downloads, that reader could not put the material on his, her or its Website on the World Wide Web without breach of copyright; at least it must be said that that appears to be the better view.[45] Moreover, that case was an application of an injunction, a discretionary remedy her Honour declined to grant in the circumstances prevailing. The refusal to grant an injunction which directly stifles free speech is unremarkable in the law of defamation. The claimed stifling of it by the virtue of the risk of awards for damages for defamatory statements, which is a feature, in my judgment, of the defendant’s arguments, is a very different matter. It is seems to be true that her Honour did address the undesirability by way of injunction superimposing the law of New South Wales in a case of an Internet publication in every State, Territory and country of the World. This view was warmly embraced by Mr Robertson for the defendant because it accords with the defendant’s policy imperative to have its rights determined in a United States in court and in no other place. The opinions of her Honour were not, however, necessary for her decision, which was based upon sound principles in relation to the caution with which injunctive relief should be given, particularly at an interlocutory stage. Although it is not absolutely clear, it also appears that the application for injunctive relief was made ex parte.
[44][1999] N.S.W.S.C. 526
[45]See the discussion of this aspect in the helpful and well-researched article by the Melbourne Law School academic Richard Garnett in an article published in 23 University of New South Wales Law Journal, (2000) 105: “Are foreign Internet infringements beyond the reach of the law?”
Mr Sher strongly attacked the submission of the defendant/applicant (paragraph 10) that any downloading of the article which occurred in Victoria was the result of independent actions for which Dow Jones should not be held responsible. He argued that the downloading was a calculated and intended consequence of the defendant procuring subscribers to its Website from Victoria and placing the article on its Web server. In that context, he put it, it was irrelevant whether the article was pushed or pulled because it was published to existing or new subscribers to the defendant’s Website and the defendant had the capacity to prevent publication of the matter to them.
Mr Sher appeared to agree that the position of the defendant was similar to the operator of a library, which publishes a book when it allows a member of the library to borrow the book from the library. See Vizetelly v. Moody Select Library[46], a case relied on in a related respect by the defendant. He also appeared to accept that the position of the library is an accurate analogue to the placement of files on a Website served by the defendant and making them available for downloading by its subscribers. I question, however, the potency of the library analogy. Mr Robertson had, in effect, argued that in the Internet context a customer was like a customer with a library card who went to New Jersey to borrow the book, borrowed it in New Jersey but took it home unread and read it in Victoria. This was a key element in his argument. To my mind, however, it is just as persuasive to say that in the case of the Internet the library subscriber has entered into an arrangement with the library that upon the request being made by the subscriber for the relevant book, the library agrees to send it to him in Victoria, rather like the delivery by a mobile library based in Sydney to a New South Wales country town. Within this context the plaintiff was seeking to establish that there could not be any question of innocent dissemination arising, because the Dow Jones controlled the whole process of publication from the procuration of subscribers in the composition of the article and its placement on the server. It was Dow Jones, he argued, which was responsible for composing the article, using it and making it available . The real point of this part of the plaintiff’s case was that the publication of the article to persons in Victoria who read it was the intended natural and probable consequence of all of the acts of the defendant alleged in paragraph 3AA of the further amended statement of claim and that the defendant was therefore liable for the publications which occurred in Victoria. He said it was entirely foreseeable and to be expected that the article about the plaintiff, a prominent Victorian resident, would be published in Victoria and that in publishing the article the defendant was author, editor, printer, publisher and librarian. He dismissed the attempts in the Hammond and Clarke affidavits to assert that there was no publication in Australia but publication in New Jersey (I have already indicated that those witnesses are not in a position to express opinions of that kind) as completely wrong and unsustainable because no defamatory meaning was conveyed to the minds of anyone in New Jersey and no damage occurred in New Jersey. It was also submitted by the plaintiff that the Court could infer that with respect to the print editions that they were read by the subscribers. This seems to me to be reasonable as it seems to be unlikely that anyone purchasing such a large magazine at such cost would not bother to read it. There is sufficient evidence for the present purpose of the supply of print copies to five or more subscribers.
[46][1902] Q.B. 170.
Mr Robertson’s submission was that the question of jurisdiction here raised has not been the subject of previous decision. It was this belief that presumably led him to remind me more than once that I held the fate of freedom of dissemination of information on the Internet in my hands. Mr Robertson was, however, incorrect in believing that this matter had not been addressed by other courts. In Lee Teck Chee & Anor v. Merrill Lynch International Bank Ltd.[47], in a case of a claim arising out of material placed on a newspaper Website in Singapore. The plaintiffs had obtained an ex parte order for an injunction against the defendant which the plaintiffs alleged had spoken and published in the presence of reporters of various newspapers and journals in Singapore words and statements that were defamatory of the plaintiffs. The defendant moved to have the process set aside claiming the court did not have jurisdiction over the subject matter of the plaintiff’s claim within the meaning of the relevant local Judicature Act and other grounds. Nathan, J. held that the alleged defamatory words had been spoken in Singapore and publication, being an essential ingredient of the tort of defamation, had not taken place within the jurisdiction of the Court. The alleged libel had been published in the Straits Times and Business Times and printed for publication and sale in Singapore. In the case before the Court there was no evidence that those newspapers were permitted to be imported, sold, circulated and distributed within Malaysia within the meaning of the relevant Publications Act and there was accordingly no publication in Malaysia of the impugned articles in the newspapers.
[47][1998] C.L.J. 188, High Court of Malaya (Nathan, J.
The publications had, however, been put on the Internet and it was held that there was no evidence that any person within the jurisdiction had accessed and read those publications on the Internet. Moreover, because of the inhibitions of the Printing Presses and Publications Act 1984 there was a statutory inhibition on accessing them from the Internet as they were publishing newspapers embargoed under the Act. However, setting aside of the statutory inhibition, it appears from the Court’s reasons that it viewed cases such as Gorton v. A.B.C. & Anor[48], Jenner v. Sun Oil Co. Ltd.[49] and Bata v. Bata[50] (cases referred to and relied on by the plaintiff in this proceeding) as being applicable had the facts been established, on the basis that specifically someone noted that in Bata publication was held to have taken place where the letter was read, namely in London. On the facts in this case there was no evidence of accessing the Internet in Malaysia and the words with respect to the slander allegation were not spoken to any person situated in Malaysia. Even so construed, that is drawing an inference that, had there been evidence that someone had accessed the material on the Internet there would be publication, the view, so expressed, would only have been obiter and, moreover, was controlled at the end of the day by his Honour’s construction of the statute.
[48][1973] 2 F.L.R. 181.
[49][1952] D.L.R. 526.
[50]See above.
However, in the next case Kitakufe v. Oloya Ltd.[51], the Court assumed jurisdiction in a defamation suit arising out of publication in a newspaper “The New Vision”, published in Uganda and which was republished on the Internet. The plaintiff was of African-Canadian descent having been born in Uganda, and the defendant was also African-Canadian born in Uganda. He worked as a reporter for “The New Vision” and wrote the article which was entitled “Uganda Doctor Arrested in Toronto”. It was later claimed in the proceeding that the article imputed he was fraudulent, dishonest and of bad moral character, unfit to practise medicine and not worthy of respect in his community and among his professional colleagues. There was considerable dispute between the parties about some of the substantive matters but the judge did not comment on the merits of the case when considering the motion for an order staying the proceeding which was brought on the basis that the action should have been brought in Uganda, that is, there was a forum non conveniens application made. The defendant argued that Uganda was a more convenient and natural forum, and that the proceeding had a real and substantial connection to Uganda. The judgment of Hume, J. sets out the various submissions made as to the facts said to support the proposition that the Uganda Court was better fitted to deal with the allegations, raising as they did issues of malice, ethnic rivalry, defence credibility and the expense and inconvenience involved for the defence credibility witnesses to travel to Canada. Reliance was also placed on the fact that the defendant was based in Uganda and had its assets there.
[51]Unreported, Ontario Court of Justice.
It is not necessary for me to examine in detail the arguments to and fro as to the forum, which suit had the most real and substantial connection and which was the most convenient forum, matters referred to by the judge. The Court rejected the defendant’s argument that the forum of convenience was Uganda and concluded that it was not satisfied that the plaintiff would not be deprived of a legitimate personal and juridical advantage.
My reference to this case is not to merely add yet another case concerning forum non conveniens case, which turns on its own facts to the corpus of authority, but to identify it as a case which a superior court assumed jurisdiction over a defamation suit on the basis of access to the Website and its reception (that is, downloading) in Ontario, Canada.
The third authority is one which both counsel addressed, namely the decision of Moreland, J. in Godfrey v. Demon Internet Ltd.[52]. Mr Robertson described Sir Michael Moreland as a judge of vast experience in defamation matters. This was not a case involving international Internet matters. The plaintiff was a science lecturer resident in England and the defendant was an Internet service provider carrying on business in England and Wales. His Honour identified three of the principal facilities of the Internet as e-mail, the World Wide Web and Usenet. The case was primarily concerned with Usenet. Usenet (sometimes called Newsnet) is a facility connected with submissions by authors to readers around the world. The author submits his article to the Usenet and news server based at his local Internet Service Provider (ISP) who disseminates that posting via the Internet. Ultimately, it is distributed and stored on the news services of ISPs throughout the world who offer Usenet facilities to its customers. Internet use is worldwide and therefore can read and download the posting by connecting into their local ISP news services. According to the findings of Moreland, J. a posting is readable anywhere in the world by an Internet user whose own ISP offers access to the news group in question. If one was a customer of a particular ISP, one may be able to access the posting on news groups by accessing that ISP’s News server. Internet user requests the posting from the ISP’s News server and copies are then transmitted by the News server to the user’s computer where it can be held and downloaded. Thus a posting may originate from anywhere in the world entering the Internet through the author’s own ISP through a succession of news servers, in some cases before arriving at a particular reader.
[52][1999] 4 All E.R. 343.
In this case the defendant carried a particular news group which stored postings for about a fortnight. An unknown person made a posting in that news group on an American service provider which came to Demon Internet Server in England. The posting which purported to be written by the plaintiff Godfrey, was a forgery and defamatory of him. Shortly after the posting, the plaintiff informed the defendant that the posting was a forgery and requested its removal within ten days. The defendant did not and it remained on the server until its expiry about two weeks later.
Godfrey brought proceedings for libel with respect to the period subsequent to his notification to the defendant of the fact of the forgery. The defendant relied upon a provision in the Defamation Act 1996 that it was not the publisher of the statement and it had taken reasonable care in relation to the publication, and that it had not known or had reason to believe that its action had caused or contributed to the publication of the defamatory statement. Godfrey applied to strike out that part of the defence and the defendant contended it had not published the defamatory posting and there had been no publication within the meaning of the Act.
Moreland J. held that the transmission of a defamatory posting from the storage of a news server constituted a publication of that posting to any subscriber who accessed the news group containing that posting. It was here that the library analogy found voice. His Honour concluded that the defendant was not only the owner of the device through which the postings had been transmitted, but rather had published the posting whenever one of its subscribers accessed the news group and saw that posting.
Mr Robertson was aware of this case because he addressed on it but claimed it was of no assistance because it did not involve the Internet but the Usenet. Moreland, J., stated that once publication was established the publisher was guilty of establishing the libel unless he could establish that he was an innocent disseminator. He noted that the statements of Lord Greene, L.J. in Byrne v. Dean[53] (a case relied on in a related context here by the plaintiff) that publication would depend upon the circumstances but that, by not removing the defamatory matter, the defendant made himself responsible for its continued presence in the place where it was put (in Byrne v. Dean on the notice board of a golf club). Moreland, J. (who was well aware of a number of the authorities relied on by Mr Robertson because he referred to them) stated:
[53][1937] 2 All E.R. 204 at 212.
“In my judgment the defendant, whenever it transmits and whenever there is transmitted from the storage of its news server a defamatory posting, publishes that posting to any subscriber to its ISP who accesses the news group containing the posting. Thus every time one of the defendant’s customers accesses ‘stock.culture.thai’ and sees that posting defamatory of the plaintiff there is publication to that customer.”
I note that his Honour specifically said “sees that posting defamatory of the plaintiff” which I deem to be equivalent to downloading in the analogous case.
Mr Robertson argues that the only point of issue is when, and therefore where publication occurs, he arguing that it occurs only when it is pulled off. Notwithstanding that, it seems to me that Moreland, J., even given the circumstances there prevailing, specifically found that publication occurred when the posting defamatory of the plaintiff was seen after posting.
Moreover, there have been a number of decisions in the United States which support the conclusion that jurisdiction is to be found at the place of downloading applying the Internet decision of the Supreme Court of the United States in Calder v. Jones[54] where it was concluded that jurisdiction may be exercised over a foreign defendant who directs his or her defamatory message at the forum and the plaintiff suffers harm there. Subsequently, personal jurisdiction over a defendant was exercised based on the defendant’s operation of a Website accessible in the forum where harm was caused to the plaintiff in the forum. See Edias Software v. Basis International[55], Telco Communications v. An Apple A Day[56]; Blumenthal v. Drudge[57]; Brochan v. La Fontaine[58].[59]
[54](1984) 465 U.S. 783.
[55][1996] F. Supp. 413 Arizona.
[56](1997) 977 F. Supp. 404 Virginia.
[57](1998) 992 F. Supp. 44.
[58][1999] U.S. Dist. Lexis 8253.
[59]I am indebted for these references to the article of Mr Richard Garnett previously referred to.
There appear to have been some cases to the contrary of this proposition where jurisdiction was declined because it could not be demonstrated that the defendant intended residents of the forum to be able to access the material claimed to be defamatory. However, it is be noted that if the correct view of decisions that preceded the establishment of the Internet is that the place of defamation is the jurisdiction where the defamatory material was published and received by the plaintiff, rather than where it was spoken or written, (which the reference to authorities which I have made on balance establishes), the U.S. cases to which I have referred are consistent with them, as are the three particular decisions I have specified.
I move to attempt to draw together this mass of material, voluminous authority (to a relatively modest proportion of which I have found it necessary to refer) and elaborate argument into a meaningful conclusion. The first matter to address is whether or not the pre-Internet law was that with respect to defamatory material, it was published at the time and in the place where it was made manifest in a form capable of being comprehended by a third party, or whether it was published when it was delivered “whether its contents were understood, comprehended or known notwithstanding”. I emphasize that the question is in this case not simply where was it published but was it published in the State of Victoria? Imbedded in either or both of those questions is the critical issue which is where and by whom it was published for the purposes of the law of defamation. It is not a question of where a scientist believes it was published for scientific purposes, or an executive of the defendant, nor for that matter the plaintiff himself. I have already referred to the attempt in the defendant’s experts’ affidavits to hijack the answer to the question by claiming it was published in New Jersey and not Victoria for legal purposes.
I have concluded that the law in defamation cases has been for centuries that publication takes place where and when the contents of the publication, oral or spoken, are seen and heard, (i.e. made manifest to) and comprehended by the reader or hearer. I reject the defendant’s submissions that the Duke of Brunswick case or Burdett established then or now any different rule for publication for the purposes of civil defamation. My preference is for the long and steady line of authority referred to over these errant authorities, asked by Mr Robertson to bear a greater burden than they can support alongside the mainstream of long applied and respected cases. I therefore conclude that delivery without comprehension is insufficient and has not been the law. On this basis, then, I uphold the plaintiff’s contention that the article “Unholy Gains” was published in the State of Victoria when downloaded by Dow Jones subscribers who had met Dow Jones’s payment and performance conditions and by the use of their passwords. It is also absolutely clear that Dow Jones intended that only those subscribers in various States of Australia who met their requirements would be able to access them, and they intended that they should.
With respect to the print copy sold, the same proposition must apply although none of the Internet features are relevant. Not only, in my judgment, is that the law, but I am also of the view that it is a correct and just law, and that the arguments advanced against it are primarily policy-driven, by which I mean policies which are in the interests of the defendant and, in a less business-centric vein, perhaps, by a belief in the superiority of the United States concept of the freedom of speech over the management of freedom of speech in other places and lands. It is, of all concepts, a simple and just one that no-one could be heard to complain of a publication that diminishes reputation unless its contents, the very features that lead to the arguable diminution in reputation and standing, are known and understood by readers. Publication in this context is neither a scientific proposition nor a narrow philosophical debate. It is dealing with on the ground realities or, perhaps in this case, in cyberspace realities as well.
But even if I were not of the view that publication only occurred upon the contents of Barrons Online being downloaded by readers, I believe I would be of no different opinion that there has been publication in Victoria, basing that conclusion as being one reasonably open, having regard to the way in which the defendant formulated its case.
The key submission of the defendant is that the Internet publication of “Unholy Gains” occurred when and where the material was uploaded in New Jersey, that is, when it was pulled from the server in New Jersey by the request emanating from the Victorian Web browser. I ignore for the present purposes what appears to me to be a fallacious statement that the downloading was the result of an independent action for which Dow Jones cannot, to use counsel for the defendant’s language, be “properly responsible”. The denial of the plaintiff’s case that it is only published when it is made intelligible to a third party, by showing it and making it comprehensible is managed by an analysis of the manner of function of the unique and revolutionary Internet.
I have, in the course of dealing with the arguments, made some observations about some misleading aspects of the “buying the book and taking it home analogies”, doubtless, to some extent drawn from statements which at least made an appearance in the reasons of Moreland, J. in Godfrey, that were doubtless employed to assist the mind of any judge to understand the proposition. I will not re-visit the substance of the way in which the technical steps of the operation of the Internet in this context operate. Much of it is dominated by the contrast between pull and push technology which may highlight differences between some of the features of the Internet such as e-mail and the World Wide Web but does not provide an answer to the legal inquiry as to when and where the words are published.
Mr Robertson’s argument was that the act of delivery, on which he relied, was completed without the necessity for understanding as soon as the material was uplifted as a consequence of the Web server request. He did not contend that it was published or delivered whilst quietly sitting in the Web server. Of course, neither at that time nor on the instance of uplifting was it capable of being understood, but his argument was that at that time of uplifting it was delivered. One accepts that delivery of an electronic document onto the plaintiff’s Website will only occur if the electronic request is met and the electronic message is sent. It may be that the Web server cannot distinguish between the location of the Web browser seeking to access the Web page or the search engines which were used in conjunction with the hyperlinks necessary because of the quantity of material.
I have referred to counsel’s assertion that those seeking to access the Website were “publishing it to themselves”. In one way this is always so even when one buys a book. The question is still, however, where and when is it published? The contrast between e-mail and the Web aspect of the Internet was defined as being a contrast between the absence of choice about the reception of e-mail and the situation in the case of accessing the Website in which case the choice is made not by the sender but by the one seeking the access. The claim that those pulling the Web browser publish it for themselves by seeking it out and ordering it confuses acquisition and publication. There is only publication, as I have indicated, when it is published to a third party. Moreover, I do not accept the proposition that the Web server is totally passive, as was pressed strongly by Mr Robertson. The Web server’s technology is a participant in the process. Two activities are required. The browser request and the server’s response. Moreover, in the case of Dow Jones Barrons Online site, the server’s response will be to knock you back if you use the wrong password or you have a delinquent account. It is not, as he suggested, just a repository and is not just a “pull” method. Dow Jones sets conditions specifically applicable to each client and its Web browser. The “pull” technology only operates on the defendant’s terms. When the so-called knock on the door comes it is a Web server that opens.
Without their Web servers and electronic co-operation, nothing will occur. If the computers were down or turned off nothing will occur. But assuming the request is decoded and accepted, the response in the form of electronic bursts is made. In the same nanosecond it enters into cyberspace in New Jersey and arrives in Victoria. In my view, for the law’s purposes, the operation of this phenomenon is not a divisible operation. If understanding or comprehension of the message is not a feature of publication, as the defendant claims, and that the act of delivery is the essential characteristic of publication, the better view would appear to be that the information is published in both places at the same time. Not perhaps at the same time for a scientist counting in milli-seconds but, for the law’s purposes, no distinction can be sensibly drawn. If this is correct, even setting aside the view I have expressed that publication requires manifestation and comprehension, then, on the defendant’s concept of publication, it is as much published and delivered in Victoria as it is sent for delivery from New Jersey. However, I decide this case on the basis that publication takes place on downloading.
Mr Robertson claims that the place of publication was in New Jersey and no other place, as I understood his argument, claiming that that follows from the unchallenged expert evidence. I reject this proposition. He claimed that the World Wide Web was an information repository and delivery system unlike any other and which defies traditional analysis. That may be so, but the law must nevertheless cope with it and one of the things about this is that this is an Internet publication, not a World Wide Web publication.
In my judgment, undue concentration was placed upon “the force of the searcher’s own action”, the fact that it is his click that rests on the server and brings back a copy to the screen located in Victoria, that is, that he pulls the information off the server in New Jersey. It may be that these are meaningful descriptions of what occurs but none of them produce the consequence contended for.
As I have indicated the claims of the scientific experts do not control the legal context nor the proper conclusions. Bold assertions that the Internet is unlike other systems do not lead to the abandonment of the analysis that the law has traditionally and reasonably followed to reach just conclusions. The trumpeting of cyber-space miracles does not add much to the sphere of debate here and occasionally degenerated into sloganeering, which decides nothing. Dr Clarke and Mr Hammond’s affidavits merely describe the process and do not, challenged or unchallenged, dominate the legal conclusions which must accommodate much more than the employed scientists’ assertions.
(1)The first point was that the print publication here was minimal compared with the United States. The plaintiff says that it is the quality not quantity of publications that must be examined and that in any event the issue is irrelevant since the plaintiff complains only of publication in Victoria and has given an undertaking not to sue elsewhere. Nevertheless many authorities indicate that the extent of publication in the objected to forum is a relevant matter.
(2)The same point was made in relation to the Internet publication. Of 1,700 in Australia, there were 300 or so in Victoria. The same response was given by the plaintiff. Next, that trial in Victoria is inconvenient for the defendant as (a) they are based in New York; (b) they have no operation within this jurisdiction and all of their witnesses in relation to qualified privilege are in the United States. The plaintiff’s response is there is a balancing huge inconvenience and cost to him to be forced to go to New Jersey to litigate a tort committed in Victoria which damaged his Victorian reputation.
(3)The defendant also contends that it will have no qualified privilege defence in Victoria mainly because there is no duty or common interest and the decision of the House of Lords in Reynolds (which expanded duty-interest qualified privilege to mass-media) has not been followed in Australia and will not be. Moreover the plaintiff says that if a qualified privilege arises, there is malice in the Horrocks v. Lowe sense and that Alpert would have to give evidence of his belief that the Goldberg imputations were true. There is no suggestion of this. Indeed, the plaintiff says it has never been said or stated in Court that the defendant would justify the Goldberg imputations, despite a generalized statement that everything is in issue. Moreover the plaintiff argues that there is no evidence that can be called to support the objective truth of the article and that the alleged witnesses in the first Reidy affidavit would therefore be unable to give relevant evidence.
(4)The plaintiff contends that the only excuse proffered for Alpert not coming to Australia is that he is busy, an unacceptable excuse without weight. The defendant contends the plaintiff has substantial connections with the United States. The plaintiff responds that his connections with Victoria are greater, that he grew up in Victoria. He lives here with his wife and children; his business is headquartered in Victoria and that is where his reputation is well known. Furthermore, the plaintiff does not complain of any publication in the United States, will not sue there but claims is entitled to have his reputation in Victoria vindicated by his peers in Victoria.
(5)The defendant contends that it is more convenient to have one single action and to get all the material there under subpoena. The material was not identified. Nevertheless the travelling of witnesses either way and costs are matters relevant to both sides and both jurisdictions. The plaintiff contends that with respect to his claim there were no relevant documents in the United States and that the attempted Polly Peck should not be permitted. It was also said that there is no suggestion made that the Goldberg allegations are true and, even if that were so, all the relevant documents in relation to the Goldberg allegations are located in Victoria. The plaintiff draws attention to the fact that the issues in the case in Victoria would all be very different from those in the United States.
(6)The defendant contends that the question of whether there was recklessness or dishonesty towards the truth can be “better tried” in New Jersey where issues of common law privileges, reasonableness and malice will be “better” tried. It is contended that is where the witnesses, editors, journalists and researchers are and where the jury can deal with whether or not the journalist followed professional standards. The plaintiff contends that no common law or Lange privilege arises but even if it does, it would do so in both places. In any event the only issue of reasonableness will be with Mr Alpert’s conduct and any question of the American journalistic standards could not be relevant to the reasonableness of the conduct if the statements should not have been made.
(7)The defendant says that any judgment obtained in Victoria will be unenforceable in the United States. At the least there will be some difficulty in enforcement. The plaintiff says that the main purpose of an award of damages in a defamation case is vindication and damages are secondary in this case. Moreover, the issue is only relevant if the defendant declines to honour any judgment obtained which would be an improper course and damaging to the defendant’s reputation world-wide.
(8)The defendant submits that the New Jersey Court could manage it as a Worldwide publication and it is oppressive in the Voth sense to have hanging over the defendant’s head the possibility of being sued in one place after another. The plaintiff says he has given an undertaking that no action will be brought elsewhere.
(9)The defendant contends the place where the tort was committed is the forum and that that is the law that will apply. It argues that the substance of the tort is American and if the place of publication is in New Jersey, New Jersey law applies to the Internet publication. The plaintiff simply responds that the place of publication is Victoria as it is where the tort occurred and the commencing point is at the appropriate forum.
(10)The costs and inconvenience of bringing witnesses and evidence to Australia, are identified in Mr Reidy’s affidavit, and in relation to the privilege defence and the truth defence, if they are allowed the Polly Peck. There is some substance in this matter and I take it into account. The plaintiff says that the costs and inconvenience to the plaintiff in having to litigate in the United States must be weighed against that and it contends the Polly Peck issue will not be permitted. In my view this is likely but not certain.
(11)That if the Polly Peck defence is not available here, the defendant contends it is oppressive for the defendant to have to fight this case in Victoria, contrasting this to the case of justification and in respect of the whole article which would be admitted in the United States. The plaintiff responds that the law of lex loci delicti is Victoria. Victoria must apply Victorian law. The defendant had the capacity to block publication to Victoria and did not do it.
(12)The plaintiff argues that, not only will the cost of litigating in New Jersey be much greater (contingent fees, witnesses from Australia, weak Australian dollar, etc.), it is probable that the delay in getting this case to trial will be much greater in New Jersey than in Victoria. I am not satisfied that that is so and discount it as one of the relevant features.
The defendant argued that it would be disadvantaged by trial in Victoria in respect of a defence of qualified privilege. It was not clear as to how this was finally put. Substantial argument was advanced that the decision of the High Court in Lange[96] took a broad view of what might fall within the rubric of discussion concerning government and political matters. This appeared to have been put to suggest that Simpson, J. in Vilo v. Fairfax[97] was wrong in concluding that the decision of the House of Lords in Reynolds v. Times Newspapers[98] was inconsistent with Lange. I do not find it necessary to enter into this debate. Beyond doubt, the High Court’s decision has shaped the parameters of the constitutional requirement for freedom of communication, and broadened the scope of qualified privilege. Whether or not the issue here involves a discussion about government and political matters is a matter for another day. The fact that a defamatory statement may be published in the course of that discussion does not necessarily give rise to a defence of qualified privilege[99], but the defendant appears to claim that it does have this defence in respect of the publication here. To that extent, it concedes that it has not lost the juridical advantage. The point appears to be that it is the issue of the reasonableness of the words used that draws in the U.S. jurisdiction. I have already suggested that that issue is not likely to be resolved by evidence as to U.S. journalistic standards but, even if it is, the evidence can be called here, admittedly at greater cost. But Alpert is likely to be called in any event, wherever the trial is. The issue of the defence of substantial justification under New Jersey law was briefly debated but I do not regard this aspect of major significance at this point of time. The defendant has not stated that it will justify the money-laundering claim in Victoria, or, for that matter, in New Jersey. It has not put up a draft defence. I have already indicated that it is open to the defendant to re-vamp its Polly Peck approach when it actually pleads to the statement of claim.
[96]Above.
[97]
[98](1999) 3 W.L.R. 1010.
[99]See Heypsbury Holdings Pty Ltd v. City of Subiaco (1998) 19 W.A.R. 440
The multitude of cases which exhibit the judicial process, from case to case, in determining whether or not one jurisdiction is to be preferred (having regard to the appropriate criteria) over another forbids re-visitation of them, particularly as so many were referred to me by counsel. Mr Robertson placed some reliance upon the decision of Moreland, J. in Wyatt v Forbes Inc and Anor, a case decided on 2nd December 1977, in which, by their summons, Mr Roberston's clients, Forbes applied to set aside a writ for defamation commenced by the plaintiff and to have it dismissed or stayed on the ground that the United Kingdom was not the appropriate forum for trial but that the appropriate forum was Texas. In that case, the court decided that Texas and not England was the appropriate forum for trial and stayed the proceeding. His Honour concluded that the onus lay on the plaintiff as to the issue of the appropriate forum notwithstanding that his cause of action arose out of the commission of the tort of libel by the defendants by publication of the defamatory article in England. That appeared to be a strong case of connexion with Texas. That was, however, a case in which the plaintiff was obliged, it being an Order 11 case, to persuade the Court to exercise its discretionary power to permit service on the defendant outside the jurisdiction. The contrast to the Order 7 right to do so is obvious. Thus, this aspect is not as significant as Mr Robertson contended.
However, what is perhaps a more serious question is whether or not the Court ought to put a foreigner, owing no allegiance to the forum, to the inconvenience, cost and annoyance of being brought to contest his rights in the foreign forum. In Societé Generale de Paris v Dreyfus[100], Pearson, J. drew attention to this and stated that the Court should be exceedingly careful before it allows a writ to be served out of a jurisdiction. Some of these issues are resolved by the Parliament of Victoria and the judges of the Court by Rules determining as to what the circumstances are in which process can be served out of the jurisdiction. Indeed, Moreland, J. clearly perceived a distinction between the cases where the plaintiff's jurisdiction was founded as a right. Moreland, J.'s analysis of the relevant aspects is beyond reproach, one might even say orthodox.
[100](1985) 29 Ch D 239 at 242-3.
He commenced by asking himself the question whether England or Texas was the natural forum as being that with which the action had the most substantial connection.
In the case which he considered, the libel complained of had appeared in a discrete part of an article headline "Saddam's Pal Oscar" in the business magazine "Forbes". I do not stay to examine the facts in that case although I note that it was a case in which those parts of the article which would have appeared to be most defamatory were not relied upon as part of the plaintiff's cause of action (as here). His Honour declined to comment on whether the part of the article sued on (essentially it had been suggested that the plaintiff, through his company, was responsible or involved in the destruction of incriminating documents in order to thwart a relevant inquiry involving a death) was capable of having that defamatory meaning. This is hardly an issue here as it could barely be thought that to accuse Mr Gutnick of being involved with the laundering of money through a convicted money-launderer was other than capable of being defamatory. However, it is important to note in that case the matters that influenced Moreland, J. and he detailed them. In the first place, the article made no reference to England, or the relevant company's English subsidiaries, or the plaintiff's business or personal activities in England. It was wholly concerned with the plaintiff's relationship with Saddam Hussein and Gadaffi. Moreover, the earliest defamatory part was concerned with arson in Texas, that is, involving the destruction of the relevant documents. Next, the libel action referred to in the article was brought in the Texas State Court by the plaintiff against the Texas newspaper, dealing with the very same subject matter dealt with in the article complained of. Third, the plaintiff was an American citizen and not a British citizen. He lived in Houston, Texas. He developed his personal business and his business reputation based in the United States. His company was a major American company and he was the chairman of it. He did not live and had never lived in the United Kingdom. On the other hand, he made frequent trips to the United Kingdom and, as the Judge found, had quite a considerable number of friends and acquaintances both personal and business in England. He specifically stated that the centre of his business and social life remained in the United States, principally in Texas. . In addition, Forbes was an American magazine, mainly read by Americans. It was incorporated in New York and had bureaus throughout the United States, including one in Texas. It was the one in Texas that was involved in the writing and publication. The author of the article lived and worked in Houston, Texas.
His Honour also noted that the plaintiff did derive juridical advantages by suing in England in that the burden of proving justification rested upon the defendants and in the United Kingdom he would not have to surmount a public figure defence. He was more likely to vindicate his reputation by the verdict of a jury. The defendants, who resisted the action, claimed the following juridical advantages which would be lost. The first was for the plaintiff to establish the falsity of the article. They claimed they could rely on a public figure defence and the plaintiff would thereby be required to prove actual malice, and they had a right to seek summary judgment in the United States. Weighing up those matters, his Honour concluded that notwithstanding the juridical advantages given to the plaintiff, it could not be said that the true interests of justice were better served by the English law of defamation than the American law of defamation.
His Honour accepted the submissions made that the plaintiff did not have a separate English reputation and was a typical Texas mega-tycoon whose reputation had been built in Texas and the United States and worldwide through his international oil business interests. These matters, it was argued (and they were weighty), indicated the connecting factors established that Texas was the preferred forum. Moreover, in that case, the plaintiff was an American citizen, domiciled in Texas where the headquarters of his business empire was based. There was a relatively small range of publication of Forbes in the United Kingdom.
Given that set of facts, it is not surprising that his Honour concluded that Texas was the more suitable forum for the disposition of that proceeding, and his Honour would have reached that conclusion wherever the onus lay. He stated:
"I do not consider that this American plaintiff can legitimately complain in a result whereby it is held that Texas, where he had made his name, is the appropriate place to vindicate his reputation according to American law … . The plaintiff's connection with England was limited and occasional and the contents of the article were essentially American subject matter."
I do not stay to contrast the Victorian connections of Mr Gutnick with the UK connections of Mr Wyatt. Mr Gutnick's business headquarters is in Victoria; he is a Victorian citizen; he is a Victorian resident with his family here; the article was published in Victoria; he sues only in respect of publication in Victoria and declines suit anywhere else.
One accepts that the marshalling of individual decisions on the facts of each case is no conclusive aid to a decision in other cases. Nevertheless, I refer to the case of Schapira v Jonothan Ahronson and Ors[101], in which the Court of Appeal, (Gibson and Phillips L.JJ.), examined the set of facts involving the plaintiff who was an Israeli citizen but had been resident in London and was a British citizen since 1985. He had an English wife, his children went to school in England. His father had an Israeli carpet company which, after it went into liquidation, the plaintiff worked for in Israel until 1981 to 1993. Part of that business involved distribution and marketing in the United Kingdom and Europe. The plaintiff had a wide circle of friends and business associates in England. The relevant newspaper, the article which allegedly defamed the plaintiff, had a circulation of just under 59,000 but there were only 141 subscribers in the UK. The plaintiff sued the Israeli daily newspaper for defamation, claiming that an article which reported an allegation by one of the liquidators that the plaintiff had been a party to defrauding the company by purchasing an American company cheaply. There was an associated business proceeding with the libel action. The defendants applied to stay both proceedings on forum non conveniens grounds. The judge at first instance dismissed the application. It was on the hearing of the application for leave that the Court of Appeal dismissed the appeal, enunciating the following principles: (1) the stay would only be granted where the court was satisfied that there was some other available forum having competent jurisdiction in which the case could be more suitably tried for the interests of all the parties and the interests of justice; (2) the burden rested on the defendant to show there was another available forum which was clearly or distinctly more appropriate than the English forum; (3) in considering the question of the appropriate forum the court looked for connecting factors which pointed to some other forum as being that with which the action had the most real and substantial connection for if the court considered there was no other available forum which was clearly more appropriate it would ordinarily refuse a stay. The court acknowledged the principles in Spiliada and the principle concerning foreigners owing no allegiance to the alleged forum who would be put to the inconvenience of having to defend themselves in foreign courts. But the Court reiterated the principles that the jurisdiction in which the tort had been committed was prima facie the natural forum for the determination of the dispute, applying the Albaforth. In that case the court thought justification was likely to be significant in scope, and doubted the likely success of the qualified privilege defence being raised. It also thought the issue of malice would only arise if qualified privilege was permitted to be pleaded. Perhaps more significantly it was stated that:
[101]1999 E.M.L.R. 735 and also at 1997 E.W.C.A 1163 (21/3/97).
"Where the tort of libel was allegedly committed in England against a person resident and carrying on business in England by foreigners who were aware that their publication would be sent to subscribers in England, that English resident was entitled to bring proceedings here against those foreigners and to limit his claim to publication in England even though the circulation of the article was extremely limited in England and there was a much larger publication elsewhere.”
The court applied the well-known decision in Sheville v Presse Alliance SA[102]. It concluded that:
“England, where the plaintiff lived and carried on business, and where he wished his reputation to be vindicated was the appropriate forum for the actions.” (My emphasis.)
This the court was not persuaded that Israel had been shown to be clearly a more appropriate forum.
[102](1986) A.C. 959 with its application in 1992 to 2 AC 18.
I note that Lord Justice Gibson stressed that, until the defence was filed, it was not possible to know to what claims justifications would be addressed. Although this is but another exemplar of the required balancing process, many of its features are supportive of the view which I take that on the facts in this case the Victorian forum is the more appropriate forum.
In the first place, the publication of the claimed defamatory statement was in Victoria, where it was downloaded and where the print publication was also sold. Second, the plaintiff is a resident of Victoria, has his business headquarters here, his family here, his social and business life here, and seeks to have his Victorian reputation vindicated by the courts of the State in which he lives. Third, the plaintiff is indifferent to the other substantial parts of the article and desires only that the attack on his reputation in Victoria as a money‑launderer should be repelled and his reputation re‑established. Fourth, the plaintiff has undertaken to sue in no other place in respect of the matters which found his own proceeding. This undertaking destroys at a stroke the defendant's claim that New Jersey is to be the preferred jurisdiction because of its capacity to award worldwide global damages. Quite apart from the effect of the undertaking upon this part of the defendant's case that the USA is the preferred jurisdiction, the legal assertion that worldwide damages could be awarded and would be awarded in the United States, if the plaintiff succeeded, has not been established as a matter of the law of the country to my satisfaction. Fifth, the evaluation of the plaintiff's case must be made upon the basis of the case which has been commenced. As I have indicated, the question of whether or not the defendant might mount an arguable Polly Peck defence here is to be doubted, but it would be going too far to say that one could not be successfully presented. The defence has not yet been filed and it would occasion no surprise if the defendants re‑vamped and re‑shaped the claimed common sting to fit within the Polly Peck criteria pronounced by the Court of Appeal in Hore-lacy which binds me. Sixth, the juridical advantages which the plaintiff has by suing in Victoria and which would not prevail in the United States appear to be as follows: (a) falsity is presumed in Victoria (and indeed in all Australian jurisdictions) but has to be established by the plaintiff under United States Law and New Jersey law of defamation, and all American States; (b) if it were concluded that the plaintiff was a public figure in the United States (a matter doubted, as I understand it, in the affidavit of Laura Handman but which, if one accepts the claims made by the defendant in the article about his notoriety, is at least a significant possibility), then the plaintiff would be obliged to establish in addition that the article was written maliciously i.e. actual malice as part of his own case.[103] On the other hand, the argument is advanced that the defendant would lose the advantages of those features if the proceeding is tried in Victoria. In a word, the plaintiff loses juridical advantages if he sued in the United States and the defendant would lose the United States juridical advantages if the matter were litigated here. This is not an issue as to which legal system is to be preferred, the assumption being that in both places the relevant law will be understood and applied. I note, however, that since I have determined that the article is published in Victoria, then Victorian law should apply, wherever the case is tried.
[103]See Prosser & Keeton on Torts (5th ed.) (U.S.) Ch 19, pp.802-809.
The defendant contends that the practical considerations of jurisdictional connection make it obvious that it would be more burdensome for the defendant to fight the case here, with the accompanying difficulties, so it is said, of calling witnesses, producing documents and accessing all of the material which might not be forthcoming by consent in a civil proceeding; whereas the plaintiff will not have that difficulty if his case is tried in the United States. It is not clear to me why the plaintiff would be free of those burdens, but I do not ignore the submission that has been made.
Throughout, the argument has been that the article is "indelibly American, written by Americans for Americans interested in the stock market and its affairs". The weakness in this argument is that the aspect sued on by Mr Gutnick is indelibly Victorian, connected with no other place and that any documentation or evidence concerning the matter will all be found in Victoria.
Weighing up and balancing all of these factors, I reach a clear conclusion that the State of Victoria is both the appropriate forum and convenient forum for the disposition of the litigation commenced by the plaintiff. Many of the defendant’s claimed difficulties are more imagined than real, but, at the end of the day, the most significant of the features favouring a Victorian jurisdiction is that the proceeding has been commenced by a Victorian resident conducting his business and social affairs in this State in respect of a defamatory publication published in this State, suing only upon publication in this State and disclaiming any form of damages in any other place.
In my view, it would be verging on the extraordinary to suggest that Mr Gutnick’s action in respect of that part of the publication on which he sues should be removed for determination to the State of New Jersey or the State of New York. To use the words of Lord Steyn in Berezovsky:
“This Court having jurisdiction, it is manifestly just and reasonable that this Court should be the place where the defendant should answer for its wrongdoing.”
Accordingly, for all of these reasons, I refuse the defendant’s application for a stay of this proceeding.
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