HEADNOTE
[This headnote is not to be read as part of the judgment]
Ms Ahmed ("the plaintiff") and her husband, Mr Ahmed, ran a seafood shop at Carlingford Court. In May 2007 Mr Ahmed was convicted and sentenced for aggravated sexual assault of a young employee, Ms X; his appeal against the conviction was dismissed. Throughout the proceedings the plaintiff stood by her husband. At some time after Mr Ahmed's arrest, the plaintiff applied for an apprehended violence order ("AVO") against the father of the assault victim, Mr Y, alleging that he had been loitering around the shop in a way that made the plaintiff concerned for the safety of her and her children. The Local Court made the AVO in February 2008. These events became a topic of a broadcasts on radio 2GB on 21 May 2008, during which the presenter, Mr Ray Hadley, interviewed Mr Y and made derogatory statements about the plaintiff related to her support of her husband and the AVO application. In September 2008 the plaintiff commenced proceedings against Harbour Radio Pty Ltd (the owner and proprietor of radio 2GB) in the Federal Court of Australia; the Federal Court struck out certain claims, but ordered that the claims in defamation be transferred to the Supreme Court. A second broadcast by Mr Hadley attacking the plaintiff took place on 1 October 2009.
At trial the jury found that a number of imputations conveyed by the broadcasts were defamatory of the plaintiff. The jury rejected the defence of honest opinion pleaded by Harbour Radio Pty Ltd and Mr Hadley ("the appellants") under s 31 of the Defamation Act 2005 (NSW). The jury found that the imputations conveyed by the first broadcast were not expressions of opinion and, in relation to the second even though the relevant imputation was Mr Hadley's opinion, it was not based on material which was substantially true. Consequently judgment was entered for the plaintiff and the trial judge awarded the plaintiff damages of $240,000 for the first broadcast and $40,000 for the second.
On appeal the appellants contended that the jury's findings were unreasonable. The appellants also challenged the quantum of damages.
The Court had to determine whether:
(i) the jury's findings that imputations (a)-(g) arising from the first broadcast were not expressions of opinion were unreasonable;
(ii) the jury's findings that the expression of opinion contained in imputation (c) arising from the second broadcast was not based on substantially true material was unreasonable; and
(iii) the awarded damages were excessive.
The Court (McColl, Basten and Meagher JJA) held, allowing the appeal in part:
In relation to (i)
- The appellants' challenge to the jury's rejection of the honest opinion defences in relation to imputations (e)-(g) must fail. Even if imputations (e)-(f) (relating to the plaintiff running the seafood shop) were properly characterised as expressions of opinion, these opinions were based on the statement of fact contained in imputation (g) (that the plaintiff condoned and did not object to her husband's criminal activity), which the jury found to be not substantially true: [55]; [80].
2 The jury's findings that imputations (b)-(d) (referring to the AVO application as being false, vexatious and frivolous) were not expressions of opinion were unreasonable. These statements were evaluative in nature and it was not reasonably open to the jury to find that they were statements of fact. Rather they were opinions based on what Mr Y said about the grounds upon which the AVO application had been made: [60], [68], [71].
- As the jury did not accept that imputations (b)-(d) were expressions of opinion (other than Mr Y's statement in relation to (d)), it failed to consider whether such opinions were based on material which was substantially true. A retrial was required to address that question: [82].
- The jury's finding that imputation (a) (that the plaintiff was a low, contemptible person) was a statement of fact was not reasonably open and must be set aside. As it is not clear how the jury would have assessed the basis of that opinion, the issue must be remitted for retrial: [77], [80].
In relation to (ii)
- The opinion that the plaintiff was a "silly, silly woman" could only refer to the lack of merit or substance to the defamation proceedings instituted by her. The transcript of the second broadcast revealed no material which could provide a sufficient factual background on which such an opinion could have been based. Consequently it was open to the jury to reject the honest opinion defence: [84], [88], [89].
In relation to (iii)
- Although it is arguable that the damages awarded with respect to both broadcasts were excessive ([92]; [91]), because of the necessary retrial with respect to the honest opinion defence in relation to a number of imputations, there must be a reassessment of damages in any event: [96]; [97].