[This headnote is not to be read as part of the Judgment]
The respondents, Antonio and Benjamin Zeccola, who are associated with a company which trades as "Palace Films", brought defamation proceedings against the appellants, Fairfax Media Publications Pty Ltd, Brian Rosen and Michaela Boland, in respect of an article published in the Australian Financial Review on 15 July 2009, the online version of that article published the same day, and another article in substantially similar terms published on the website www.screenhub.com.au on 20 July 2009.
The respondents relevantly pleaded the following imputations as having been published of and concerning each of them:
"(1) that the [first/second respondent] is a hypocrite in that he purports to be the greatest supporter of Australian films while allowing Palace Films to dishonour distribution commitments by embarking upon a strategy of not returning profits to the producers of those films.
(2) that the [first/second respondent] acted wrongfully in permitting Palace Films to withhold returns due to producers of successful films.
(3) that the [first/second respondent] permits Palace Films to dishonour distribution commitments by not distributing a film despite having agreed to do so."
The appellants pleaded justification pursuant to s 25 of the Defamation Act 2005 (NSW) (the "2005 Act") to each imputation. They also pleaded contextual truth to each matter complained of, relying on nine contextual imputations including:
"the [first/second respondent] permitted Palace Films to default on its payment obligations to producers of Australian films" (the "default imputation")
and:
"there are reasonable grounds to suspect that the [first/second respondent] permitted Palace Films to trade when it was insolvent" (the "reasonable grounds to suspect imputation"),
The reasonable suspicion contextual imputations were pleaded in the alternative to the contextual imputation that:
"the [first/second respondent] acted wrongfully in permitting Palace Films to continue to trade when it was insolvent."
The respondents applied pursuant to r 14.28 of the Uniform Civil Procedure Rules 2005 (NSW) ("UCPR") to strike out the default contextual imputations and the reasonable suspicion contextual imputations on the basis that, first, the default contextual imputations did not constitute "other imputations" capable of arising "in addition to" the respondents' imputations for the purposes of s 26 of the 2005 Act, and second, that the reasonable suspicion contextual imputations were not capable of being carried by the matters complained of.
McCallum J struck out the default imputations because she was not persuaded that they were more serious, different allegations than the combination of the plaintiffs' imputations. Her Honour struck out the reasonable grounds to suspect imputations on the basis that they conflated the concept of a sting of the imputation and the force with which it was conveyed.
The appellants sought leave to appeal, and to appeal, from those orders.
The following issues arose on appeal:
(i) whether her Honour misconstrued s 26 of the 2005 Act in striking out the default contextual imputations as not being different in kind to the respondents' imputations;
(ii) whether it is appropriate to strike out contextual imputations before the tribunal of fact has determined which of the plaintiff's imputations are carried and, where relevant, defences; and
(iii) whether the primary judge correctly applied the principles concerning pleading contextual imputations in striking out the reasonable grounds to suspect imputation.
Held, per McColl, Macfarlan JJA and Sackville AJA, granting leave to appeal and allowing the appeal:
As to issue (i):
(1) Section 26 of the 2005 Act requires a contextual imputation to differ in substance from the plaintiff's pleaded imputations, but not to differ in kind. The primary judge erred in striking out the default contextual imputations because there was not a "difference in kind" from the respondents' imputations (at [73] - [74]).
Fairfax Media Publications Pty Ltd v Kermode [2011] NSWCA 174; (2011) 81 NSWLR 157 applied.
John Fairfax Publications Pty Ltd v Jones [2004] NSWCA 205; Bateman v Fairfax Media Publications Pty Ltd (No 3) [2014] NSWSC 1601; Plato Films Ltd v Speidel [1961] AC 1090 considered.
As to issue (ii)
(2) It is always a matter for the Court to determine the question of whether, as a matter of law, a pleading is capable of satisfying a statutory requirement. In such a case it will be appropriate to strike out the imputation in advance of the trial (at [89]).
As to issue (iii)
(3) It was open to the primary judge to find that the reasonable grounds to suspect contextual imputation was not capable of being carried by the matters complained of. Her Honour did not err in striking out those imputations (at [107]).
Purcell v Cruising Yacht Club of Australia [2003] NSWSC 245; Greig v WIN Television NSW Pty Ltd [2007] NSWSC 1118 distinguished.