Common law qualified privilege
10The publisher of a statement which is both defamatory and untrue may obtain protection from the civil consequences of the publication if the "occasion" of the publication is one warranting such protection. In the somewhat archaic language of Toogood v Spyring (1834) 149 ER 1044 at 1049-1050, the privilege is said to arise in respect of publications "fairly made by a person in the discharge of some public or private duty, whether legal or moral, or in the conduct of his [or her] own affairs, in matters where his [or her] interest is concerned". The respective concepts of duty and interest identify a relationship between the publisher and the recipient of the publication. Underlying the concepts of duty and interest are the purposes which permit the protection to be afforded. Abuse of the occasion by pursuit of an extraneous purpose will take the publication outside the scope of the protection.
11It is well established that "the defence of qualified privilege is generally not available where defamatory matter is published in a newspaper": Stephens v West Australian Newspapers Ltd [1994] HCA 45; 182 CLR 211 at 260 (McHugh J). To similar effect, the Full High Court stated in Lange v Australian Broadcasting Corporation [1997] HCA 25; 189 CLR 520 at 570, "[o]nly in exceptional cases has the common law recognised an interest or duty to publish defamatory matter to the general public".
12Two exceptions were identified by McHugh J in Stephens at 262-263. His Honour noted that cases such as Adam v Ward [1917] AC 309 and Loveday v Sun Newspapers Ltd [1938] HCA 28; 59 CLR 503 concerned "publications in reply to attacks on the plaintiff or some other person which had been published to the world at large": see also Trad v Harbour Radio Pty Ltd [2011] NSWCA 61.
13Secondly, McHugh J noted there were cases demonstrating that "the proprietor of a newspaper or a radio or television station is entitled to a defence of qualified privilege when it publishes statements made by a third person pursuant to or in discharge of that person's interest or duty to inform the general public about a matter": at 263. It was accepted by the appellants, however, that they could not rely upon such exceptions.
14Rather, they relied upon the proposition, derived from Lange , "that each member of the Australian community has an interest in disseminating and receiving information, opinions and arguments concerning government and political matters that affect the people of Australia": at p 571. The Court continued:
"The duty to disseminate such information is simply the correlative of the interest in receiving it. The common convenience and welfare of Australian society are advanced by discussion - the giving and receiving of information - about government and political matters. The interest that each member of the Australian community has in such a discussion extends the categories of qualified privilege. Consequently, those categories now must be recognised as protecting a communication made to the public on a government or political matter."
15Lange held that "discussion of government or politics at State or Territory level and even at local government level is amenable to protection by the extended category of qualified privilege, whether or not it bears on matters at the federal level": ibid.
16Precisely how the appellants sought to rely upon the reasoning in Lange was somewhat unclear. The expanded doctrine of qualified privilege did not provide secure protection given "honesty of purpose" or absence of malice or abuse of the privilege. Rather, the Court held that "reasonableness of conduct seems the appropriate criterion to apply when the occasion of the publication of defamatory matter is said to be an occasion of qualified privilege solely by reason of the relevance of the matter published to the discussion of government or political matters": at p 573. The Court continued:
"But reasonableness of conduct is imported as an element only when the extended category of qualified privilege is invoked to protect a publication that would otherwise be held to have been made to too wide an audience."
17Although originally the appellants pleaded both common law qualified privilege and the expanded doctrine available under Lange , the trial judge rejected the assertion that the appellants had acted reasonably, a conclusion not challenged in this Court.
18On a conventional understanding, the appellants' reliance on qualified privilege was doomed to fail because they could invoke neither the traditional doctrine under the general law, nor the expanded doctrine under Lange . They failed on the first count because they published to the public at large in a newspaper; they failed on the second count because their conduct was not reasonable. To avoid that result, they sought to construct a third category.
19For reasons which will be explained, there is no third category; nevertheless, it is appropriate to start by identifying the features relied upon by the appellants to identify their entitlement. Although differently formulated at different times, the substance of their case was that they had a duty in the following circumstances:
(a) to convey information about government or political matters;
(b) to a confined segment of the community with a particular interest in the topic;
(c) which segment lacked the ability to obtain such information from other sources.
20Flesh was put on this skeleton in the following manner. The particular subject matter of the publication was identified as allegations contained in the mainstream media which shamed, or lowered the image of, the Korean community in Australia. The particular segment of the community to which such information was addressed was the non-English speaking segment, which relied upon communications in the Korean language. Those people were, thus, unable to obtain such information directly from the mainstream media.
21The appellants' position contained a number of factual elements which were certainly not explored in submissions before the trial judge: indeed, it is doubtful whether relevant findings could be made on the evidence presented at trial. However, it is convenient to assume that the case thus presented was made out on the facts in order to test its legal validity.
22The idea that there was some third category of occasion of qualified privilege was said to derive from the manner in which the High Court reasoned to its conclusion in Lange . Thus reliance was placed on the broad statement of McHugh J in Stephens at 264 (set out in Lange at 570-571) which reads in part as follows:
"In the last decade of the twentieth century, the quality of life and the freedom of the ordinary individual in Australia are highly dependent on the exercise of functions and powers vested in public representatives and officials by a vast legal and bureaucratic apparatus funded by public moneys. ... Information concerning the exercise of those functions and powers is of vital concern to the community. So is the performance of the public representatives and officials who are invested with them. It follows in my opinion that the general public has a legitimate interest in receiving information concerning matters relevant to the exercise of public functions and powers vested in public representatives and officials. ... With the increasing integration of the social, economic and political life of Australia, it is difficult to contend that the exercise or failure to exercise public functions or powers at any particular level of government or administration, or in any part of the country, is not of relevant interest to the public of Australia generally."
23This being the foundation upon which the expanded category of qualified privilege was based, the expansion was accepted, it was submitted, quite independently of the limiting condition, namely that the conduct of publication must be reasonable. That condition was based on a different consideration, namely the consequence of expanding the area of operation of the defence. Thus, the Court in Lange stated at 572:
"Because privileged occasions are ordinarily occasions of limited publication - more often than not occasions of publication to a single person - the common law has seen honesty of purpose in the publisher as the appropriate protection for individual reputation. ... But a test devised for situations where usually only one person receives the publication is unlikely to be appropriate when the publication is to tens of thousands, or more, of readers, listeners or viewers."
24In the present case, the appellants argued, the publication was made to some 6,000 readers (being the weekly circulation figure in New South Wales) or possibly some 12,000 readers on the basis of 2 readers per copy distributed. This, the appellants argued, was a far cry from the underlying concern which led to the imposition of a "reasonableness" condition in respect of the expanded category. The Court was entitled, so the submission appeared to continue, to take into account the factors referred to above to permit a defendant to avail itself of the defence of qualified privilege, subject only to the limitations applicable under traditional general law principles, where the potential damage attending the full expanded category did not operate.
25The proposed approach is not consistent with the express reasoning in Lange , nor with a proper understanding of the historical developments of the expanded doctrine in Lange : each of these matters must be addressed briefly.
26The purpose of the expanded doctrine was to ensure that the common law rules of qualified privilege would "properly reflect the requirements of ss 7, 24, 64, 128 and related sections of the Constitution": at 571. The Court continued at 572:
"Thus, the extended category of common law qualified privilege ensures conformity with the requirements of the Constitution. The real question is as to the conditions upon which this extended category of common law qualified privilege should depend."
27This language is inconsistent with any suggestion that the expanded doctrine and the limiting condition can be decoupled so that, in some circumstances, the expanded doctrine can be invoked without the limiting condition. Nor can the rationale, referring to publication to "tens of thousands, or more" be read as excluding publications which refer, for example, to less than 10,000 readers. The Court expressly stated at 573:
"Reasonableness of conduct is an element for the judge to consider only when a publication concerning a government or political matter is made in circumstances that, under the English common law, would have failed to attract a defence of qualified privilege."
28The reference to reasonableness applying "only when" the traditional category was not available is not to be read as meaning "only when, and then only sometimes when". The language of the judgment requires that, if the appellants need to rely upon the expanded doctrine, they are subject to the condition of reasonableness.
29Secondly, some brief reference should be made to the history behind the judgment in Lange . In the previous decade, the Court had divided over whether there was an implied constitutional freedom of political communication which itself imposed a limit on the law of defamation: see generally, T Blackshield and G Williams, Australian Constitutional Law and Theory (4 th ed, Federation Press, 2006) at pp 1306-1319. In Stephens , at 259, McHugh J repeated the view he had articulated in Theophanous v The Herald & Weekly Times Ltd [1994] HCA 46; 182 CLR 104 "for concluding that the Commonwealth Constitution contains no guarantee of freedom of expression that would render the defendant immune from an action for defamation". In Lange , those members of the Court who had favoured both a constitutional immunity and an expansion of the existing common law defence united in support of the latter approach. That approach may have expanded the degree of protection accorded to publishers of defamatory material beyond a constitutional immunity: Lange at 571.
30The reasoning underlying the principle established in Lange , and further developed in relation to electioneering material in Roberts v Bass [2002] HCA 57; 212 CLR 1, demonstrates that there is no room for some third category of cases, limited only by a requirement of honesty of purpose.
31There are a number of other aspects of Lange which may be noted for present purposes. First, although Lange referred to the electioneering case, Lang v Willis [1934] HCA 51; 52 CLR 637, it was not directly concerned with electioneering material: see Roberts v Bass at [4]-[7] (Gleeson CJ) and [72]-[73] (Gaudron, McHugh and Gummow JJ); [161] and [167] (Kirby J); see also Braddock v Bevins [1948] 1 KB 580.
32Secondly, the test of reasonableness provides a flexible standard, the application of which will depend upon the circumstances of the particular case. Because the appellants did not seek to bring themselves within the scope of the expanded doctrine, there is no occasion to consider that aspect further in this case.
33Thirdly, there may be cases, like the present one and Roberts v Bass , where a defendant whose publication appears to fall squarely within the scope of the expanded doctrine, seeks to rely upon the traditional scope of the defence, thus avoiding the need to prove the reasonableness of their conduct. That there may be an area of overlap, does not, however, demonstrate that there is a third category, involving an extension of the conventional area, but governed only by an exclusion for malice or abuse of purpose.
34The issue presently raised by the appellants is not novel in this jurisdiction. In Andreyevich v Kosovich (1947) SR (NSW) 357, the Full Court considered a similar claim by the publisher of a Croation language newspaper in Sydney, having a circulation less than that of the appellants' newspaper. Jordan CJ noted that "the newspaper was intelligible only to a relatively narrow group, and the question was whether its particular contents could with propriety be communicated to that group": p 365. Nevertheless, the defence was held to be properly rejected, the Chief Justice stating at 364:
"It is true that in the case now before us the defamation of the plaintiff occurred in time of war, and that this would naturally exacerbate the feelings of Yugoslavs settled in Australia who took opposite views as to the relative merits of two antagonistic guerrilla leaders operating in Yugoslavia. But I cannot see that it was expedient, for the common convenience and welfare of the people of New South Wales, in the conditions then existing, that Yugoslavs that had made this State their home should be privileged to abuse one another within impunity because they disagreed upon those relative merits, and that one group or the other should be entitled to publish its calumnies broadcast among Yugoslavs resident here. So long as the contestants were content to express themselves in general terms no question of defamation arose; but when the defendants in their newspaper article condescended to attack particular individuals they became in my opinion subject to the general law of defamation, outside the pale of privilege."
35An appeal to the High Court was apparently dismissed, although no published version of the judgment is available: 73 CLR 665 (note) (the name of the appellant being misspelt); see Aktas v Westpac Banking Corporation Ltd [2010] HCA 25; 241 CLR 79 at [31]. The law as it stood before the constitutional developments in the 1990s, was explored comprehensively by this Court in Morosi v Mirror Newspapers Ltd [1977] 2 NSWLR 749 at 772E-790A, by Moffitt P, Hope and Reynolds JJA. Their Honours stated at 778:
"It is apparent from these decisions and dicta that, at common law, a publication in a newspaper is not the subject of qualified privilege merely because it gives the public information concerning a matter in respect of which the public is interested. Something more is needed which is said in some circumstances to constitute a duty, and in other circumstances an interest, on the part of the newspaper to communicate the information."
36More recently, Assaf v Skalkos [2000] NSWSC 418 (Carruthers AJ) involved defamatory statements contained in two publications, one being a letter addressed to the Prime Minister and the other a publication of the letter in a Serbian language newspaper, Novosti . Novosti had a similar circulation to that of The Korean Times and was described as "a special interest publication for a small section of the public, and not the public at large": at [53]. It was further contended that the Serbian community had an interest in having "information on the provision for themselves of vital government information on their rights, entitlements and obligations" which interest was said to justify publication of statements made by the defendant (Mr Skalkos) in his letter to the Prime Minister.
37Carruthers AJ referred to the passage in the judgment of McHugh J in Stephens which envisaged an extension of the occasions of qualified privilege "to protect communications made to the general public by persons with special knowledge concerning the exercise of public functions or powers or the performance of their duties by public representatives or officials invested with those functions and powers": at [200]. He concluded that Mr Skalkos was a person with such "special knowledge" and that, subject to the publication being made honestly for a legitimate purpose, the defence extended to the republication of the letter in the newspaper. Nevertheless, his Honour was satisfied that the defendants had abused the occasion of privilege and rejected the defence: at [205].
38The case came before this Court on appeal: Skalkos v Assaf [2002] NSWCA 14; (2002) Aust Torts Rep 81-644. Because Carruthers AJ held in favour of the defendant that there was an occasion for invoking the defence of qualified privilege for the newspaper, absent a notice of contention, the correctness of this approach was not in issue on the appeal. There was, apparently, no notice of contention. Accordingly, this Court was not called upon to review that conclusion. Mason P referred to the pleading of the defence of common law qualified privilege in respect of the newspaper publication, noted the finding of the primary judge that there was an occasion of privilege and stated that the finding was not challenged on appeal, referring to Lange at 571, presumably by way of explanation of the absence of challenge: at [21]. Care must be taken, however, in reading too much into a statement made in the course of noting that an issue was not in dispute. For example, the passage from McHugh J in Stephens relied upon in Lange at 570-571 did not adopt the reference to "persons with special knowledge" having a duty to communicate, which was the phrase relied upon by Carruthers AJ. Further, Lange imposed a reasonableness requirement in relation to the extended category which was not applied in Skalkos , although it would almost certainly not have been satisfied on the findings of fact.
39Giles JA in Skalkos also referred to the finding, doubting that the case involved a person with special knowledge in the sense described in Stephens : at [128]. Fitzgerald AJA did not refer to the point.
40For the reasons noted above, it appears that Carruthers AJ did not apply Lange . (Had he done so, the outcome would have been the same.) It is clear, however, that Assaf v Skalkos is inconsistent with the proposition that publication by a newspaper in circumstances not dissimilar to the present case, will give rise to an occasion of qualified privilege under the general law, putting Lange to one side. Carruthers AJ expressly relied upon the extended doctrine as identified by McHugh J in Stephens to find such an occasion.
41Much may depend upon the application of the flexible condition of reasonableness or, in respect of more restricted publications, honesty of purpose and malice. However, there is no authority for the proposition articulated by the appellants, that the established rules with respect to publication by newspapers and other media outlets have been varied as a result of recent decisions of the High Court. The language of Lange is inconsistent with such a conclusion, as are the continuing references to traditional statements of the law, such as Andreyevich , referred to with apparent approval, albeit in a somewhat different context, in Aktas at [31] (French CJ, Gummow and Hayne JJ) and in Cush v Dillon; Boland v Dillon [2011] HCA 30; 85 ALJR 865, at [40] (Gummow, Hayne and Bell JJ), adopting a reference in the judgment of McHugh J in Bashford v Information Australia (Newsletters) Pty Ltd [2004] HCA 5; 218 CLR 366 at [73].
42It follows that the appellants have failed to demonstrate error on the part of the primary judge in rejecting the defence of common law qualified privilege.
43NICHOLAS J: This is an appeal from the judgment and order of a Judge of the District Court of New South Wales (Rolfe DCJ) awarding damages in a defamation action brought by the respondent, Ms Un Dok Pak, against the appellants, the Korean language newspaper, "Hojuilbo" (the "Korean Times") and its editor, Mr Joshua Nam.
44The respondent's claim arose from the publication in the edition of the newspaper of 27 February 2009 of an article which, translated, is in the following terms:
"Political Donation Investigation into Un Dok PAK/JUDGE MP Mayor Ki Beom KWON couple donated $35,506 in total
[Photograph]
The photographs of Un Dok PAK and Virginia JUDGE MP which appeared in the Sydney Morning Herald.
According to the report of Sydney Morning Herald last Wednesday, JUDGE who is the Minister for both Fair Trading and Citizenship is being [sic] under investigation on whether she lobbied to offer a place for Un Dok PAK who donated political funds to her.
It is reported that the investigation by Independent Commission Against Corruption is focused on whether JUDGE MP lobbied to have solicitor Un Dok PAK, who has made political donations of more than $20,000 in the last 6 years, be appointed as the president of Community Relations Commission.
Solicitor Un Dok PAK, who is the wife of Ki Beom KWON, a solicitor and a Strathfield councilor [sic], was appointed as the president of Community Relations Commission in November 2007. It is also noted that councilor [sic] Ki Beom KWON has made political donations of $15,506 to JUDGE MP in the last 5 years.
As the issue is swollen, JUDGE MP issued a statement that even though she did not lobby to appoint solicitor Un Dok PAK as the president of Community Relations Commission, she had a conversation on the issue of the president of Community Relations Commission in open audience.
Spokesperson for JUDGE MP stated "at that time, solicitor Un Dok PAK showed an interest on serving the citizens of NSW state through Community Relations Commission and therefore JUDGE MP recommended solicitor Un Dok PAK to apply for the position of president of Community Relations through ordinary channels.
JUDGE MP who is currently in charge of Community Relations Commission, an ethnic community policy advisory organization under the NSW state government, is under investigation on whether she lobbied the former NSW premier Iemma in order to offer the position to solicitor Un Dok PAK. Sydney Morning Herald reported that Iemma said that he did not recall on this matter.
According to the e-mail councilor [sic] Ki Beom KWON sent to Sydney Morning Herald, an Australian daily paper, it is noted that he declared his position as "I have a good friend relationship with JUDGE MP and I feel respect for the works of JUDGE MP. I do not have any knowledge on the claim that she lobbied for me."
On 23 rd day, JUDGE MP admitted that she lobbied toward Police Minister, Tony Kelly, in relation to the proposal of installing police station at Strathfield Plaza. Strathfield Plaza is a building owned by Memo Corporation and it is noted that Memo Corporation has made political donations of more than $50,000 to JUDGE MP.
Reporter, Youn Hee JEON"
45In her further amended statement of claim the respondent pleaded that the article, in its natural and ordinary meaning, conveyed the following defamatory imputations:
"(a) The Plaintiff is being investigated by the Independent Commission Against Corruption for a political donation she made to Judge MP, the Minister for Fair Trading and Citizenship.
(b) The Plaintiff is suspected by the Independent Commission Against Corruption of improper conduct.
(c) The Plaintiff is suspected by the Independent Commission Against Corruption of soliciting Judge MP to use her influence to have the Plaintiff appointed President of the Community Relations Commission.
(d) The Plaintiff has so conducted herself by making a political donation to Judge MP the Minister for Fair Trading and Citizenship that she warranted investigation by the Independent Commission Against Corruption."
46The respondent claimed compensatory, including aggravated, damages.
47By their defence to the further amended statement of claim, the appellants denied the imputations were conveyed and were defamatory. In the alternative they pleaded defences of justification (s 25 Defamation Act 2005 (the Act)), publication of public documents (s 28), statutory qualified privilege (s 30), and common law qualified privilege, including the qualified privilege for the protection of the discussion of Government or political matters.
48In reply to the defence of common law qualified privilege, the respondent pleaded that the appellants were actuated by express malice in the publication of the matter complained of.
49On the day prior to the commencement of the hearing the appellants abandoned the defence of justification.
50The proceedings below were conducted by the trial judge sitting alone. In his judgment delivered on 19 November 2010 his Honour found that the article conveyed the pleaded imputations, and that each was defamatory of her. He rejected the remaining defences.
51The trial judge also found that the appellants were actuated by malice in publishing the article.
52His Honour awarded the respondent damages, including a component for aggravated damages, in the amount of $100,000 to which was added interest in the amount of $3,600. Accordingly there was judgment for the respondent against the appellants in the amount of $103,600.
53On 3 December 2010 the trial Judge ordered the appellants to pay the respondent's costs of the proceedings on an indemnity basis.
54The respondents appealed from the judgment and orders on the following grounds:
(1) and (2). None of the imputations was conveyed.
(3). Imputations (a) and (d), if conveyed were not defamatory.
(4). The matter complained of was published on an occasion of qualified privilege at common law.
(5). The trial judge erred in finding that the appellants were actuated by malice in publishing the matter complained of.
(6) and (7). The assessment of damages, including a component for aggravated damages, was erroneous.
(8). The trial judge erred in awarding costs on an indemnity basis.
55During the hearing of the appeal ground (3) was abandoned.