REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
1 This is an application brought by the respondent for further and better particulars of the applicants' statement of claim. The respondent is unrepresented. This proceeding has involved numerous interlocutory applications which have delayed the proceeding from coming to trial. It is important, before addressing the merits of the respondent's application, that I outline some of the rather complicated procedural history in the proceeding that has culminated in this application.
2 The applicants' statement of claim was filed on 26 May 2006. On 6 March 2007 the respondent filed a notice of motion seeking better and further particulars. On 5 April 2007 an amended statement of claim was filed. The notice of motion of 6 March 2007 eventually was heard on 17 December 2007. During the hearing the respondent indicated that a number of the particulars he sought in the notice of motion were no longer pressed. I reserved my decision on the application for those further and better particulars that the respondent indicated he continued to seek. I also granted leave for the applicants to file a further amended statement of claim. On 1 April 2008 a second amended statement of claim was filed by the applicants.
3 On 8 April 2008 the respondent filed a further notice of motion seeking further and better particulars of the second amended statement of claim.
4 On 2 September 2008 this notice of motion was heard. At this hearing the respondent indicated that in accordance with pro bono legal advice he had received since the filing of the notice of motion of 8 April 2008, he no longer wished to pursue the application for further and better particulars. Instead, he wished to press the notice of motion of 6 March 2007 and, specifically, to those requests for particulars he had identified in the hearing on 17 December 2007. Accordingly, I dismissed the respondent's notice of motion of 8 April 2008.
5 Before I turn to consider the request for further and better particulars contained in the respondent's notice of motion of 6 March 2007 which were pressed by the respondent in the hearing of 17 December 2007, it would be as well to outline the applicants' claim.
6 The first and third applicants are the registered owners of trademarks. The second and third applicants are subsidiaries of the first applicant which is in turn a subsidiary of Metcash Ltd, a public company limited by shares and listed on the Australian Stock Exchange (ASX). Prior to 16 January 2006 the first applicant itself had been listed on the ASX.
7 The applicants operate a grocery and liquor wholesale business throughout Australia. As part of their business they on-supply grocery stock and liquor products to supermarket operators and liquor retailers.
8 The respondent was, at the relevant times, the proprietor, sole director and secretary of Chadmar Enterprises Pty Ltd (in liquidation) (Chadmar) and the sole shareholder of Kayso Pty Ltd (in liquidation) (Kayso).
9 Chadmar operated supermarkets in the Australian Capital Territory (the ACT). Kayso operated a single supermarket in the ACT which was in due course sold to Chadmar.
10 Between 1997 and 2004 the applicants were suppliers of goods on credit to the supermarkets operated by Chadmar and Kayso.
11 On 7 September 2004 the second applicant issued a statutory demand directed to Chadmar in relation to a debt in the sum of $1,275,425.66.
12 The applicants' claim that the respondent has established a number of websites on the internet and, between 20 September 2005 and 10 May 2006, published a number of articles on those websites usually, but not always, in the form of a letter. It is the applicants' case that the letters which were published on the websites were intended to be read by creditors, suppliers, customers and shareholders of the applicants. It is also the applicants' case that the respondent has posted further materials on the websites and continued to make publications until about 3 October 2006.
13 The applicants' first cause of action is that the respondent threatened to disclose confidential information which had come into his possession, notwithstanding that the respondent knew the information to be confidential and subject to confidentiality obligations that prohibited the disclosure of the contents of the information. It is the applicants' case that on or around 20 February 2006 the respondent threatened to publish contracts between the applicants and their customers which were confidential.
14 The applicants' second cause of action against the respondent is that the respondent has induced suppliers and customers of the applicants to breach contractual arrangements between the applicants and themselves by breaching confidentiality agreements.
15 The third cause of action is under the Trademarks Act 1995 (Cth) (the Trademarks Act) and the applicants assert that the respondent has infringed the trademarks registered in the names of the first and third applicants.
16 Fourthly, the applicants complain that the various publications to which reference has been made were defamatory of the applicants.
17 Next, the applicants assert that the various publications constituted an injurious falsehood which has caused the applicants actual damage.
18 Lastly, the applicants complain that the respondent has contravened s 52 of the Trade Practices Act 1974 (Cth) (the Trade Practices Act) and s 56 of the Fair Trading Act 1987 (SA) (the Fair Trading Act).
19 The applicants seek damages and an injunction restraining the respondent from further publishing statements of the kind about which objection is taken in the statement of claim.
20 The respondent's notice of motion seeking particulars which was considered on 17 December 2007 was directed to the applicants' previous statement of claim. However, the paragraphs which were under consideration in the previous statement of claim have been replicated in the statement of claim filed on 1 April 2008. In those circumstances, I shall identify the request by reference to the paragraph number in the statement of claim filed on 26 May 2006, together with the paragraph number in brackets of the statement of claim filed on 1 April 2008.
21 The applicants responded to the respondent's request in a letter dated 2 May 2007. That letter provided some particulars. Annexed to the letter was a schedule. I will have regard to the letter and schedule in considering this application.
22 A pleading must be as brief as the nature of the case allows and contain only a statement of the material facts on which the party relies: O 11 r 3 and O 11 r 2 of the Federal Court Rules (the Rules). It should not contain the evidence by which those material facts are to be proved: O 11 r 2. A party, however, must include in the pleading or in some other document the particulars of the party's claim or defence: O 12 r 1. The object of requiring a party to give particulars is to limit the generality of the pleadings so as to inform the party's opponent of the nature of the case which he or she has to meet and to prevent the opponent from being taken by surprise at the trial: Spedding v Fitzpatrick (1887) 38 Ch D 410. The provision of appropriate particulars should mean that unnecessary expense to the parties will be avoided. Particulars, like material facts, should not include the evidence which the party intends to prove his or her case. Nor should particulars be used as statements of material fact because particulars are not pleaded to by the opposing party: Pinson v Lloyds and National Provincial Foreign Bank Limited [1941] 2 KB 72.
23 I will set out the request for particulars in full. With one exception it is not necessary to set out the pleading to which the request relates in full.
24 The following requests for further and better particulars are pressed:
1.4 paragraph 27 (paragraph 33): the Applicants identify the actual contracts to which they claim were referred to, and the written confidentiality obligations to which they also refer, and as to the evidence of the claimed knowledge of the respondent from 3 February 2006.
25 In paragraph 31 of the statement of claim which is in that part of the statement of claim which deals with threatened disclosure of confidential information, the applicants plead that on 15 February 2006 the respondent sent an email to the applicants' solicitors in which he stated that he had received contracts from many retail suppliers and former employees of the first applicant which he intended to publish on the websites.
26 In paragraph 33 it is asserted that the respondent knew, at least from 3 February 2006, that the contracts referred to by the respondent embodied express and written confidentiality obligations which prohibited the disclosure of the contents of the contracts without the prior written consent of the applicants.
27 As to the first part of the request for particulars seeking further particularity of the contracts, this request should be refused for three reasons. First, because paragraph 33 identifies the contracts with sufficient particularity, being those contracts which the respondent referred to in his email to the solicitors for the applicants on 15 February 2006. The respondent must know to which contracts he was referring when he sent that email. This is one of those circumstances that the party's own knowledge means that the request for particulars should be refused: Lawson v Perpetual Trustee Co Ltd (1959) 76 WN (NSW) 367. Secondly, the contracts are in fact identified in paragraph 7 of the statement of claim. Thirdly, the contracts which are referred to in the email of 15 February 2006 apparently have not been discovered by the respondent. In that case, the respondent cannot seek further particularity of documents to which he referred in his email and which he has neglected to discover in this proceeding. His failure to discover the documents makes it impossible for the applicants to better identify them.
28 As to the request for particularity of the respondent's knowledge, that request must also be refused. Order 12 rule 3 provides:
3(1) A party pleading any condition of mind shall give particulars of the facts on which he relies.
(2) In subrule (1) "condition of mind" includes any disorder or disability of mind, any malice and any fraudulent intention, but does not include knowledge.
29 The plea in paragraph 33 is confined to actual knowledge. There is no obligation on the applicants to give particulars of the actual knowledge of the respondent. That is because the respondent either did or did not have the knowledge. If as alleged he had that knowledge then, that must be proved by admissible evidence. Particulars are not required.
1.7 paragraphs 30, 30.1 and 30.2 (paragraph 36): the Applicants identify the actual written words and/or sentences on which they rely in respect of their stated allegation of solicitation, by the Respondent, of the Applicants customers and suppliers for documents embodying trading terms to which such customers and suppliers have contractually agreed to the prohibition of publication of said documents.
30 In paragraph 36 of the statement of claim the applicants plead that on or around 20 February 2006 the respondent published statements on the websites soliciting customers and suppliers of the applicants to provide the respondent with copies of documents which they identify in paragraphs 36.1 and 36.2.
31 The applicants responded to this request for particulars in the following terms:
We refer you to the statement which you published on your website (exhibited to the Affidavit of Toby Paul Moritz of 2 February 2007 as TPM11) which stated:
"This section will be active by 27 February '06 due to the fact that all contracts have been converted to PDF files. The purpose of this page is to provide a full copy of all contracts that Metcash and its units (I.G-D; A.L.M., ETC.) require its customers to execute so as to obtain supply ... It appears there could be numerous editions of each contract ... so if you have an agreement that is either not provided or is different to those on the site please contact me confidentially and I will post your copy.
32 The respondent complained at the hearing that the document to which the applicants referred does not amount to a solicitation. That may or may not be so. That, however, is the document upon which the applicants rely for the purpose of the plea. The identification of that document as the document referred to in the plea is sufficient response to the request for particulars. In any event, the respondent is not entitled to any further particulars. Order 11 rule 4 provides that where any document is referred to in a pleading it is permissible to state the effect of the document without setting out the precise terms thereof. The applicants have complied either in the pleading or in the response to the request for particulars.
1.9 paragraph 40, 40.1, 40.2, 40.3, 40.4, 40.4.1, 40.4.2, 40.4.3, 40.4.4, 40.5, and 40.6 (paragraph 46): the Applicants identify the actual words, and/or sentences on which they base their stated meanings and understandings, and on which they base their allegations contained therein on, and explain as to the context to which they refer, and on which words and/or sentences on which their stated context is based.
33 Paragraph 46 is in that part of the statement of claim which addresses the applicants' cause of action in defamation.
34 The applicants identify in paragraph 46 the imputations which they say arise both in the natural and ordinary meaning of the words complained of and by way of actual innuendo.
35 It is necessary to say something about the structure of the statement of claim to understand the request for particulars and the contentions put by the applicants' counsel in opposition to the request.
36 In paragraph 18 of the statement of claim the applicants identify 17 separate documents which the applicants say they received from the respondent between 20 September 2005 and 10 May 2006. Each of those documents is annexed to the statement of claim.
37 In paragraph 20 of the statement of claim the applicants plead that each of the separate documents referred to in paragraph 18 were published by the respondent to persons other than the applicants. Such a plea is necessary because publication to the applicants would not of itself have given rise to a cause of action for defamation whatever the content of the communication. Paragraph 20 identifies a number of different persons and groups of persons who are said to have received the 17 separate communications.
38 Paragraph 21 identifies the dates upon which it is said that those separate communications of the separate documents were made.
39 In paragraphs 22 and 23 the applicants identify three separate documents which they say were published on the respondent's website on 20 February 2006. In paragraph 23 the applicants identified two further documents which they say were published on the respondent's website on 21 February 2006.
40 The documents referred to in paragraphs 22 and 23 are also annexed to the statement of claim.
41 Paragraphs 25-28 appear under the heading in the statement of claim "Subsequent Publications". In each of paragraphs 25, 26, 27 and 28, the applicants identify a document which was sent to different persons on different dates between 3 October 2006 and 4 December 2006. The four separate documents are also annexed to the statement of claim.
42 The pleading in the statement of claim devoted to defamation commences at paragraph 40.
43 In paragraph 45 the applicants contend that publications in each of paragraphs 20, 22, 23 and 25-28 refer to and were understood to refer to the applicants.
44 It is paragraph 46 of the current statement of claim to which the request relates. It is necessary to set out paragraph 46:
46. The words contained in the publications:
46.1 referred to in paragraphs 20 and 22 herein:
(a) in their natural and ordinary meaning; or,
(b) by way of innuendo
Particulars
(i) the applicants are subject to disclosure obligations pursuant to ASX Listing Rule 3.1 and ss.674 and 675 of the Corporations Act;
(ii) the publications in paragraphs 20 and 22 would be understood in the context of the respondent's prior publications in paragraphs 20 and 22 and, in particular, in respect of each of the defamatory imputations set out in sub-paragraphs 46.1.1 - 46.1.6 inclusive herein, in the context of the publications identified in the schedule annexed to this Second Amended Statement of Claim at APPENDIX D;
(iii) in the premises, the said facts and matters would have been known to a substantial but unquantifiable number of unidentifiable readers of the publications in paragraphs 20 and 22 and these readers would have understood the publications complained of herein to bear the meanings set out in sub-paragraphs 46.1.1 - 46.1.6 inclusive herein,
meant and were understood to mean that:
46.1.1 the applicants breached their contractual obligation to supply goods to Chadmar at the prices set out in the agreements between the applicants and Chadmar;
46.1.2 by reason of the breach referred to in subparagraph 46.1.1, the respondent is currently pursuing proceedings against the applicants for the payment of the monies owing by the applicants to the respondent;
46.1.3 by reason of the breach referred to in paragraph 46.1.1, Chadmar is currently pursuing proceedings against the applicants for the payment of the monies owing by the applicants to Chadmar;
46.1.4 the applicants actively and deliberately operated in a manner calculated to destroy Chadmar, in that they:
46.1.4.1 improperly altered its trading terms with Chadmar for the purpose of punishing the respondent for expressing complaints to Metcash;
46.1.4.2 improperly used the legal system to apply financial pressure to Chadmar;
46.1.4.3 employed standover tactics with Chadmar's suppliers to force the suppliers to change their trading terms with Chadmar;
46.1.4.4 improperly applied pressure to Chadmar's creditors to force them to vote against a proposed Deed of Company Arrangement for Chadmar;
46.1.5 the applicants had and have a policy and strategy calculated to prejudice, damage or destroy the business of independent retailers;
46.1.6 the applicants have deliberately and improperly concealed the existence of substantial actions commenced by suppliers and customers and thereby caused Metcash Limited to breach its legal obligations to disclose such actions to its investors;
46.2 referred to in paragraph 25 herein:
(a) in their natural and ordinary meaning; or
(b) by way of innuendo
Particulars
(i) the applicants are subject to disclosure obligations pursuant to ASX Listing Rule 3.1 and ss.674 and 675 of the Corporations Act 2001;
(ii) Metcash/ALM had made public statements regarding their commitment to their liquor industry business evidenced by public documents issued by Metcash/ALM including the 2006 Annual Report (for the period to 30 April 2006) and the Half Yearly Results (for the period to 31 October 2006);
(iii) in the premises, the said facts and matters would have been known to a substantial but unquantifiable number of unidentifiable readers of the publication referred to in paragraph 25 herein and these readers would have understood the publication complained of herein to bear the meanings set out in paragraphs 46.2.1 - 46.2.3 inclusive herein,
46.2.1 meant and were understood to mean that: contrary to the public commitment by Metcash/ALM to the liquor industry, Metcash and/or ALM is intending to withdraw from the liquor industry;
46.2.2 in breach of disclosure and notification obligations, Metcash and/or ALM has concealed its plans to withdraw from the liquor industry;
46.2.3 Metcash and/or ALM is not committed to fulfilling its commercial obligations to suppliers, independent retailers and independent banner groups in the liquor industry.
45 In paragraph 46.1 the applicants rely on publications identified in paragraphs 20 and 22, and in paragraph 46.2 the publications in paragraph 25, as the publications which give rise to the imputations pleaded in paragraph 46. No other imputations apart from those in paragraph 46 are pleaded. In paragraph 48 the applicants roll up their earlier pleas by pleading that by reason of paragraphs 20, 21, 22, 25, 45, 46 and 47 the applicants have been injured in their trading reputation.
46 The publications in paragraph 23, 26, 27 and 28 are not relied on for the pleaded imputations. I thought that there might be a typographical error in paragraph 46 and that the pleading intended to rely on paragraphs 20 and 22 in paragraph 46.1, and on paragraph 23 in paragraph 46.2.
47 Paragraphs 25, 26, 27 and 28 are all pleaded under the heading of "Subsequent Publications". It would seem to be odd that the applicants would rely on one paragraph which refers to a subsequent publication and omit reference to one paragraph which refers to contemporary publications: paragraph 23. However, I think a reading of the publications and the imputations relied upon shows that the pleader was addressing paragraph 25. The end result is that there is no plea for defamation which relies on the publications in paragraph 23 of the statement of claim which is an odd result. Moreover, the publication in paragraph 25, which is said to be a subsequent publication, supports the imputations in paragraph 46.2.
48 As I have said, paragraph 46 identifies the imputations which are said to arise in both the natural and ordinary meaning of the words, and by way of a true innuendo. It is necessary to give particulars of the facts and circumstances which are said to support a claim of libel which relies upon the true innuendo. The applicants have given particulars of those facts and circumstances, and there is no complaint about those particulars. There was no obligation at common law to plead particular imputations where the cause of action relies upon the natural and ordinary meaning of the words. However, in New South Wales there was an obligation to plead such imputations under the Defamation Act (1974) (NSW): s 9(2). More recently, it has become the practice in this State and other States in Australia to plead the imputations which are said to arise out of publication, even if those imputations are said to arise in the natural and ordinary meaning of the words: Chapman v Australian Broadcasting Corporation (2000) 77 SASR 181.
49 In response to the respondent's request, the applicants provided a schedule which identified the particular documents in each of the paragraphs either for the plea that the imputation arises in the natural and ordinary meaning of the words or for the plea that the imputation arises by way of innuendo.
50 The applicants resist giving any further particulars as requested by the respondent on the ground that the whole of the article is defamatory and no further particulars need be given. The applicants contended that where a party asserts that the whole of an article is claimed to be defamatory of a plaintiff, the plaintiff need not give any further particulars of the words relied on for any imputation pleaded. The applicants relied upon a decision of Menhennett Jin A v Ipec Australia Ltd & Crew [1973] VR 39. In my opinion, that was a special case and does not indicate the usual rule as to pleading an imputation arising out of an article where the whole of the article is clearly not defamatory of the plaintiff.
51 The usual rule is that the respondent is entitled to particulars which require the applicants to identify the part or parts of the article which are alleged to be defamatory and which support the imputation pleaded: DDSA Pharmaceuticals Ltd v Times Newspapers Ltd [1973] 1 QB 21 at 26. In that case Lord Denning MR said:
In the second place, the pleading is defective because it throws - and I use that word deliberately - on to the defendants a long article without picking out the parts said to be defamatory. Some of the article is not defamatory of anyone at all. It describes only the method of importing drugs. Other parts of the article are defamatory of some unnamed chemists, but not of the plaintiffs at all. Yet other parts may be defamatory of the plaintiffs. To throw an article of that kind at the defendants and indeed at the court, without picking out the particular passages, is high embarrassing. Master Bickford Smith put it very sensibly:
"It is tremendously embarrassing to claim the whole of the article as a libel. There is a tremendous amount of the article which is not defamatory of your clients. You must pick out the particular bits and rely on the rest as extrinsic or surrounding facts giving a defamatory meaning to the words."
That ruling is in accord with the practice as it has been known for many years. The plaintiffs must specify the particular parts defamatory of them. For instance, in this particular case there is a reference to a "London-based operation." If the plaintiffs say that it means the plaintiffs, they should say so. They should insert "(meaning thereby the plaintiffs)." There is a reference to "the largest single network operating from a London suburb." Do they say that means the plaintiffs? If they do, they should put in "(meaning thereby the plaintiffs)."
Such an exercise will be a great advantage to the plaintiffs themselves. It will make them clear their minds: and it will help the defendants too.
52 That has been the recognised pleading practice for many years: Ron Hodgson v Belvedere Motors [1971] 1 NSWLR 472; Gatley on Libel and Slander (10th ed, 2004) (P Milmo and WVH Rogers, eds) para 26.12.
53 In Scott v Fourth Estate Newspapers Ltd [1986] 1 NZLR 336, Williamson J said at 339-340:
After considering the authorities referred to, my view is that it must be a rare case where a plaintiff can plead a whole article without particularising the passages in the article that he complains of. It may be appropriate to plead the whole article in order to claim that certain passages or libellous statements take their meaning from the article as a whole, but in order to focus the dispute it is important that the allegedly defamatory passages be sufficiently identified.
54 Indeed, so much was recognised by Menhennett J in a later decision in Kerney v Optimus Holdings Pty Ltd [1976] VR 399 at 401.
55 For the reasons which follow, in my opinion, the respondent is entitled to further particulars in respect to the plea in paragraph 46.1 but not of the plea in paragraph 46.2.
56 Six imputations are said to arise out of the publications in paragraphs 20 and 22. One of these imputations consists of four parts. It is not clear whether the pleader means that that imputation consists of all four parts or those parts are alternatives. But that is not an issue at present. The point is that six separate imputations are said to arise out of the 17 separate publications in paragraph 18 (which are incorporated into paragraph 20) and the three separate publications in paragraph 22. The 17 separate publications in paragraph 20 total 52 pages. The three separate publications in paragraph 22 consist of three pages. The Court and the respondent, at present, have to trawl through 55 pages of material to identify the six discrete imputations pleaded in paragraph 46.1.
57 The applicants have, as I have said, provided a schedule. That schedule identifies the separate publications which are said to support the pleaded imputations by first identifying the pleaded imputation and then by referring to the publications in paragraphs 18 and 22. It then discriminates between those publications which are said in the natural and ordinary meaning of the words to give rise to the imputation, and those imputations which arise by way of innuendo. I set out an example of the schedule:
Reference to Appendix number as annexed to Amended Statement of Claim How imputation arises and page and paragraph reference
46.1.1 The applicants breached their contractual obligation to supply goods to Chadmar at the prices set out in the agreements between the applicants and Chadmar
18.1 natural and ordinary meaning
18.4 natural and ordinary meaning
18.5 natural and ordinary meaning
18.6 innuendo - prior publications
18.7 natural and ordinary meaning
18.8 natural and ordinary meaning
18.9 natural and ordinary meaning
22.1 natural and ordinary meaning
22.2 natural and ordinary meaning re Metcash, innuendo re IGA and ALM as they're not mentioned - innuendo in context of prior publications