Defences to first matter complained of
26The particulars relied upon to establish the substantial truth of the "proper material" begin at paragraph 13.2(a) of the further amended defence. Those are the particulars provided in support of the defence of honest opinion pleaded in response to imputation (a) arising from the first article. Imputation (a) is:
(a)the plaintiff deliberately and ruthlessly makes false and damaging statements about seminar spruikers and real estate agents on his website to advance his own real estate business;
27The same particulars are repeated in support of the defence to imputation (b), which is:
(b)the plaintiff is a spineless bully in that he deliberately and ruthlessly makes false and damaging statements about seminar spruikers and real estate agents on his website to advance his own real estate business knowing that such people are unlikely to be able to defend themselves.
28Ms Schoff noted that each imputation has at its heart the allegation that the plaintiff has deliberately and ruthlessly made false and damaging statements.
29The plaintiff made a global objection to the inclusion in some particulars of the phrases "at the very least" and "including", evidently intended to preserve the first defendant's right to expand upon the particulars at a later point in time. I do not think those terms are appropriate in a pleading. The obligation of a party is to provide the best particulars he or she is able to at the time. If it is sought at a later time to supplement the particulars, any application to do so will be determined on its merits at that later time. The purported preservation of a future right to make such an application is neither necessary nor effective.
30The first specific objection relates to paragraph 13.2(a)(5) of the further amended defence. That paragraph asserts:
The plaintiff claimed to be a consumer advocate when he was running his seminars to feed his empire by scaring consumers to not deal with real estate agents because they are unethical.
31That allegation is expanded in the amended further and better particulars. The first part of the allegation is addressed at paragraph 1(a) of the further particulars, where the first defendant has specified where the plaintiff is alleged to have claimed to be a consumer advocate. Those particulars were included in the plaintiff's schedule of objections but no discrete argument was directed to them. In my view they are adequate.
32The principal complaint appeared to relate to the particulars at paragraph 1(b) in support of the second part of the allegation in (5) set out above, that the plaintiff scared consumers not to deal with real estate agents. The form of the particulars of that allegation is simply to list a series of documents discovered by the plaintiff in the proceedings (relying upon "the entire content and tenor of those articles").
33The plaintiff submitted that he should not have to trawl through those documents to find the relevant parts. As a counsel of perfection, further particulars of such a contention might appropriately be required in some circumstances. However, regard must be had to the nature of the contention. The first defendant relies upon the whole of each document to prove what is alleged in effect to be a concerted scare campaign. It may well be entirely appropriate to rely upon the whole of each document (and the combination of them), just as the meaning and effect of a defamatory publication is determined by reference to the whole of the words published.
34Further, the content of the plaintiff's entitlement to a clear articulation of the case he has to meet must be assessed in the context of the court's obligations under the Civil Procedure Act 2005, including the requirement that the court's procedure should be implemented with the object of resolving disputes in such a way that the cost to the parties is proportionate to the importance and complexity of the subject matter in dispute: s 60 of the Act. Having regard to the breadth of the issues raised on the pleadings viewed in the context of the relatively limited publication of the matters complained of as pleaded to date by the plaintiff, I consider that the particulars in paragraphs 1(a) and (b) of the amended further and better particulars are adequate to put the plaintiff on notice of that part of the case he will have to meet as to imputations (a) and (b).
35The next specific objection is to paragraphs 13.2(a)(5A) and (5B) of the further amended defence. Those paragraphs state:
Paragraph 5A:
While scaring consumers not to deal with real estate agents because they are unethical, the plaintiff promotes the Jenman agents, from whom he collects and has collected thousands of dollars a month in ongoing training fees.
Paragraph 5B:
The plaintiff built his multi-million dollar empire by running the consumer meetings, scaring consumers not to deal with real estate agents as they're unethical, then promoting the Jenman agents, from whom he received thousands a month in ongoing training fees.
36Ms Schoff submitted that those particulars are objectionable on the basis that they are mere assertions or argumentative and are not supported by any identification of the facts, matters and circumstances relied upon to sustain the assertion.
37A discrete complaint in respect of paragraphs 5A and 5B was the absence of any particulars to support the contention that the plaintiff promotes the Jenman agents and receives thousands of dollars a month from them in ongoing training fees.
38Mr Castelan submitted that the adequacy of those particulars must be measured in the context of the fact that there has already been extensive discovery and interrogatories in these proceedings. He noted that the plaintiff has answered interrogatories as to amounts he has received from Jenman agents. In that context, it would appear that the plaintiff's particular complaint as to the allegation that he received ongoing training fees relates to a matter better within his knowledge than that of the first defendant. I am not persuaded that the particulars are inadequate or that any further particulars should be ordered on that specific issue.
39In my view, however, there is force in the broader complaint as to 5A and 5B, which are expressed in the form of conclusions and must necessarily rest on more specific detail. The first defendant should provide further and better particulars of those paragraphs (if they are pressed).
40The next objection is to the particulars of the following allegation at paragraph 13.2(a)(7) of the further amended defence:
The plaintiff has made false and damaging statements about seminar presenters and real estate agents, including statements made of and concerning the first defendant in an article on the Jenman website entitled "Desperate Struggles of a Dying Breed".
41The first defendant has expanded that allegation in paragraph 1(c) of the amended further and better particulars. That paragraph has sub-paragraphs (i) to (v). There was no objection to paragraphs 1(c)(i) and 1(c)(iv) (see T31.26 and T33.5).
42Paragraph 1(c)(ii) relates to statements allegedly made of and concerning Mr Adam Hudson. The particulars of falsity as to those statements rely upon the fact that Mr Hudson issued defamation proceedings against the plaintiff in Queensland. Mr Castelan noted that the first defendant relies specifically upon the fact that the articles have now been taken off the website, from which he submitted it may be inferred the statements were false. The plaintiff submitted that those particulars are incapable of sustaining the allegation of falsity of the statements concerning Mr Hudson. I agree. The existence and resolution of the defamation proceedings shed no light on the case the plaintiff has to meet as to whether any statement made by the plaintiff was false. The particulars at 1(c)(ii) should be struck out.
43The same point was made in respect of paragraph 1(c)(iv) relating to allegedly false statements made by the plaintiff of and concerning Mr Kevin Young, where the only particular of falsity of the statements relied upon is the fact that Mr Young issued defamation proceedings against the plaintiff and the Neil Jenman Group Pty Ltd. The particulars assert that the first defendant infers that the statements made by the plaintiff and relied upon by Mr Young in support of his case were false. That particular should also be struck out.
44A different objection was taken to particular 1(c)(v) relating to statements made by the plaintiff of and concerning Mr Enzo Raimondo in 2003. The first defendant asserts that the article published by the plaintiff carried the following imputations:
that Enzo Raimondo was real estate's equivalent of the former Iraqi information minister;
that Enzo Raimondo as president of the Real Estate Institute of Victoria covers up behaviour among real estate agents in Victoria that is deceitful and amoral.
45In support of the plea that those imputations are false, the first defendant simply states that Enzo Raimondo is not real estate's equivalent of the former Iraqi information minister and did not cover up behaviour among real estate agents in Victoria that was deceitful and amoral.
46The plaintiff submitted that, in order to establish that the imputations were false, the first defendant had to identify the context of Mr Jenman's statement and to say why the statements were false in that context. It was submitted that, in its present form, the pleading "creates a defamation proceeding within a defamation proceeding", placing the plaintiff in an untenable situation. If that is a difficulty, it is one which flows from the imputations on which the plaintiff has chosen to sue. In essence, the plaintiff seeks to vindicate his reputation against the allegation that he has deliberately and ruthlessly defamed other people on many occasions. The content of the obligation to provide particulars of the falsity of damaging statements allegedly made must to some extent be informed by the content of the statement said to be false. In the case of the Enzo Raimondo statements, there may be little more that can be said than that the statements are false. I am not persuaded that particular 1(c)(v) is liable to be struck out.
47Separately, the plaintiff objected to paragraph 13.2(a)(6), where the first defendant asserts:
The plaintiff does not mention that the Jenman agents are simply typical real estate agents that were paying thousands per month to the plaintiff so that they could be called "Jenman agents" and could be called ethical by the plaintiff.
48Ms Schoff submitted that paragraph (6) is also in the category of being an assertion or argumentative conclusion with no supporting particulars. Whilst there is some force in that submission, the burden of the particular is to identify a matter allegedly omitted to be stated by the plaintiff. In that context, it serves the purpose of identifying one of the ways in which the first defendant will put his case. I am not persuaded that it is liable to be struck out and I am not persuaded that it is necessary to order further particulars of that contention.
49The next objection related to the particulars provided in support of the defences to imputation (g). The imputation is as follows:
(g) the plaintiff is a hypocrite in that he attacks seminar spruikers for making money by selling information on how to make more money in circumstances where the plaintiff made his first million dollars by being a seminar spruiker and he made most of his small fortune from selling his spruiking business.
50In addition to the particulars already considered above, the plaintiff objected to paragraph 13.2(e)(3) and (4). Paragraph 13.2(e)(3) is in the same terms as paragraph 13.2(a)(6) considered above. For the reasons given in relation to that particular, I am not persuaded that paragraph 13.2(e)(3) is liable to be struck out.
51Paragraph 13.2(e)(4) asserts:
The plaintiff boasted to a journalist in a newspaper article that he made a million dollars in a week many years before selling 118 tickets to his own real estate seminar for $10,000 per ticket.
52Mr Castelan identified three answers to interrogatories as the basis for that contention (exhibit 1, answers 6(h), 6(i) and 6(j))(see T 52.44). In that context, the objection to the particular must be rejected, in my view. There can be no serious suggestion that the plaintiff is not on notice of the case he has to meet in that respect.
53The particulars of honest opinion are repeated in support of the defence of justification to the first matter complained of. The plaintiff submitted that, where those particulars are insufficient to support the honest opinion defence, it must follow that they are insufficient for the purpose of the justification defence. That is plainly right.
54It was further submitted in respect of the justification defence that the first defendant has failed to provide particulars of the allegation that any false and damaging statements were made deliberately and ruthlessly. The only allegation directed to that issue appears to be paragraph 13.5(a)(4) of the further amended defence, where the first defendant contends:
The plaintiff has made the false and damaging statements on his website so that consumers are scared into the belief that all real estate agents are unethical and dodgy, and the only ethical agents are Jenman agents, from whom the plaintiff receives and has received substantial ongoing monthly fees for training and for permission to refer to themselves as "Jenman agents".
55In my view there is force in the plaintiff's complaint on this issue. As explained by Hunt J in Gross v Weston [2007] NSWCA 1, the existence of a state of mind is a fact as to which the party against whom it is pleaded is entitled to know the facts, matters and circumstances relied upon to establish it. The first defendant should provide further and better particulars in support of the contention that the statements were made deliberately and ruthlessly, including any matters from which that inference is to be drawn.