Capacity - the assertion of dishonesty in the imputations
24 The respondents' first submission was that each of the pleaded imputations involves dishonesty on the part of the applicant and that the article could not reasonably be understood as conveying such a meaning.
25 Plainly, the pleaded imputations do involve allegations of dishonesty. Imputation (a) refers to "dishonest smear tactics" and imputations (b), (c) and (d) involve the form of dishonesty in the knowing making of a false allegation or in the knowing making of a misleading submission to a court. It may be that the dishonesty to which imputation (a) refers is of a different kind from that involved in imputations (b), (c) and (d) but neither counsel sought, for present purposes, to draw such a distinction. The argument proceeded on the basis that the respondents' submissions concerning capacity either succeeded, or failed, in relation to all four pleaded imputations.
26 The articles must of course be read as a whole and both counsel addressed submissions to their entirety. It is not practical in a judgment of the present kind to set out the whole of the article so as to provide the background to the summary of the submissions which follows. I consider it is sufficient for present purposes to indicate that the article is in the nature of an opinion piece. Its principal headline is: "How lawyers use nutty labels to crack women". The sub-headline is: "Cases involving high-profile men seem to repeat the tactic of bringing down their female accusers".
27 There then followed seven paragraphs referring to cases in which males, typically males with high profiles are "pitched in a battle against a woman" and in which it is said that a particular approach is adopted by counsel for the male, namely:
Generally to strengthen the male's argument the woman is portrayed in court as either a "nut" or a "slut".
The applicant is not mentioned in any of these seven paragraphs but the article did at its centre include a large photograph of him.
28 After the first seven paragraphs, there followed eight paragraphs referring to the applicant in particular. I set these paragraphs out using the numbering in the copy of the article provided by the applicant's counsel:
[11] In recent weeks, Chris Murphy, the lawyer for "celebrity accountant" Anthony Bell has attempted to position Bell's estranged wife Kelly Landry as a "nut" by suggesting to a court that Landry's fears her estranged husband was stalking and spying on her - something that could only be possible, Murphy ventured, if Bell was a cross-dresser - were irrational, or so it was implied.
[12] On scrapper Murphy's watch, the insults didn't end there.
[13] In challenging an interim AVO put in place by police in January to protect mother of two Landry, Murphy also claimed in court that the former TV reporter had an "alcohol problem".
…
[15] His plan has been to discredit Landry and turn public sympathy against her.
[16] He's still trying. Murphy is no stranger to the "nut" argument.
[17] He used it to great success in 2011 to defend actor Matthew Newton by arguing Newton was mentally unstable when he breached an AVO relating to his ex-fiancée Rachael Taylor, who had been violently attacked by Newton in Rome in 2008.
[18] Murphy said Newton was a man with "a psychiatric illness" - not a problem with addiction.
[19] Within a year Newton had common assault charges dismissed under the Mental Health Act after punching a taxi driver in the head and was charged with battery after attacking a US hotel receptionist (the charge was later dismissed on the condition that Newton perform community service). … .
29 There then followed 15 paragraphs concerning other cases or instances (not expressed to have involved the applicant) in which it was said that a similar tactic had been adopted. The concluding paragraph of the article was:
The challenge for other women in future cases is to play men at their own game in legal matters, target their reputation - even their egos - and ultimately attempt to portray them as "nuts" and "sluts" instead.
30 Counsel for the respondents accepted that the article was disparaging of the applicant but not in the way that the applicant alleges. He submitted that the article did not make any charge that the applicant was fabricating the matters which he had submitted to a court or that he was otherwise engaging in dishonesty in the tactics which he adopted. Instead, he submitted that the article was "overwhelmingly" concerned with the language used, the labels applied and the tactics adopted by lawyers acting for males engaged in litigation with females. On this basis, counsel submitted that the article could not be understood reasonably as conveying any of the pleaded imputations.
31 I consider that there is some force in these submissions, but I am not persuaded that they should be accepted so as to justify the striking out of the pleaded imputations. More particularly, and applying the caution which is necessary on applications of the present kind, I consider that an ordinary reasonable reader could have understood the article to be conveying that the applicant had engaged in a form of dishonesty. It is possible that such a reader may have understood the article to be suggesting that the applicant was willing, as a tactic in litigation by which to advance his own client's interests, to portray a female opponent of his male client as a "nut" (ie, mentally disturbed) or a "slut" (I infer in the sense of sexually promiscuous) even when that was not accurate. Much may depend on the emphasis which the ordinary reasonable reader perceived in different aspects of the article, in particular, in the reference in [6] to lawyers "portraying" the female as "a nut or a slut", in the reference in [10] to women being "framed" as either "nut" or "slut", in the reference in [11] to the applicant's attempts to "position" Ms Landry as a "nut", in the reference in [12] to the applicant's "insults", in the reference in [13] to the applicant having "claimed" that Ms Landry had an "alcohol problem", in the reference in [15] to the applicant's "plan" to "discredit" Ms Landry, and in the reference in [30] to the "smearing of women's characters in courts of law [being] as commonplace as it is in the locker room".
32 On one view, the article's reference to the applicant's submissions concerning Mr Newton is discordant with the stated theme of the article, as Mr Newton was the applicant's own client and is in any event not female. However, in context, it is possible in my opinion that this aspect of the article could be understood by a reasonable reader as conveying that the applicant was willing to adopt the "nut" argument to advance his own client's interests even when it did not reflect the reality of the case in which he was engaged. In this way, the otherwise seemingly discordant reference to Mr Newton may have reinforced the impression drawn by the ordinary reasonable reader.
33 Counsel for the respondents may well be correct in the submission that the imputations pleaded by the applicant are not the most obvious imputations conveyed by the article. However, I do not consider that it should be concluded at this stage that the ordinary reasonable reader could not have understood the article in the way pleaded. Accordingly, this aspect of the strike out application fails.