Should the injunction continue?
25 In my opinion, the plaintiff is not entitled to a continuance of the existing injunction. Further I have come to the conclusion that the plaintiff is not entitled to an order restraining the defendants from publishing or causing to be published in the Newcastle Herald the imputations set out in the amended summons filed in court. I shall state my reasons.
26 First, it is not clear to me that a jury would necessarily find that the imputations alleged would be conveyed to the ordinary reasonable reader by the publication of the draft article. I say this having regard to the article as a whole and to its individual paragraphs. The article has been "divided" into numbered paragraphs in the document marked annexure "A" to the Statement of Claim. I shall refer to the paragraphs in the article by reference to that numbering. Paragraphs 2, 8 and 9 raise the prospect of the plaintiff being placed in receivership. This is in the context of unpaid creditors, especially Mr Hepburn. Paragraphs 7 and 10 assert that the company has a number of suppliers and/or creditors whose bills have not been paid in substantial amounts, one owing since December. Paragraphs 11 and 12 etc. Paragraphs 11 and 12 refer to Mr Hepburn's son, Scott being forced to stand down as Managing Director of the plaintiff last week on proviso that the debts would be paid. This allegedly has not been done, according to the last paragraph of the article, although Mr Scott Hepburn had been unavailable for comment.
27 On the other hand para 3 of the article is favourable to Mr Blair in his capacity as new managing director of the plaintiff. It describes him as a person who is well known in Newcastle for his role in the water treatment company Hydrotech Distillation Systems, part of a group of companies trading under the umbrella of Positive Investment Concepts. The article notes that Mr Blair was unavailable for comment "yesterday" and refers to a statement issued by the plaintiff's lawyer, Mr Wayne Warwick (para 4). He is quoted as saying that the hotel was trading well and had received no formal demand from creditors. The quote continues: -
"(I have it) from the directors no formal financial demands have ever been made …. The hotel is trading to its expected percentage …. It is very prosperous, one of the most popular hotels in Newcastle". (paras 5 and 6).
28 It is not at all clear to me that a subsequent finding by a jury that the matter complained of was not defamatory of the plaintiff would be set aside as unreasonable. In so saying, I wish to make it clear that I am not asserting that a jury would necessarily find against the plaintiff in relation to the imputations. A jury may very well find in the plaintiff's favour. The point I wish to stress is that there are arguments which might reasonably be put each way and it is impossible to say that a finding against the plaintiff would be set aside as unreasonable.
29 The position is to be very much contrasted with that in Chappell (supra) where the plaintiff conceded that the proposed segment of the defendant's television programme was capable of conveying the two imputations nominated in the injunction which had been granted, and where Hunt J was himself satisfied that a jury's verdict that the proposed publication would not have been understood as having in fact conveyed the conceded imputations would be set aside as unreasonable.
30 This is very much to be contrasted with the present case where, even in the event that some of the individual paragraphs of the proposed article were capable of conveying the nominated imputations, the question would remain whether the article as a whole did so.
31 The second reason resides essentially in the fact that I am not persuaded, assuming that a jury were to find in the plaintiff's favour in relation to the imputations, that the defendants would necessarily fail in the establishment of defences to the claim.
32 Defences have not been pleaded as yet. The parties have invited me to assume such defences will, or are likely to, extend to and include defences of justification, comment and statutory qualified privilege; and perhaps common law qualified privilege.
33 Mr Evatt, on behalf of the plaintiff, argues that, whichever of these defences is pleaded, there will arise for determination the question as to whether the public interest is involved. If the defence be justification, the imputations must relate to a matter of public interest (Defamation Act s 15(2)(b)); if it be statutory qualified privilege, the defendant must show that the recipient public has an interest or an apparent interest in having the information contained in the public material (Defamation Act s 22). This interest must extend beyond curiosity and be a matter of substance (Barbaro v Amalgamated Television Services Pty Ltd (1985) 1 NSWLR 30 at 40B). If the defence be comment, the comment must relate to a matter of public interest (Defamation Act s 31).
34 In relation to the "independent and overriding consideration that an injunction will not be ordered if its effect is to restrain the public discussion of matters of public interest or concern" (Chappell at 171D), Mr Evatt submitted that the same fundamental issue is involved namely whether a matter of public interest or concern does arise in the context of the proposed article.
35 It is the plaintiff's robust submission that the subject matter of the article is not a matter of public interest. Mr Evatt maintains that what is involved is really a matter of a private feud between a dissatisfied person, who claims to be owed money by the plaintiff, and a company which says it will not, nor does it have to pay, a fee which was not earned. The imputations, he contends, relate to the private affairs of the plaintiff company. The fact that the plaintiff has failed to pay a broker's fee, the fact that the plaintiff owes monies, even substantial monies, to various creditors is not a matter of or relating to the public interest. Such matters are not "the conduct of the person engaged in activities that either inherently, expressly or inferentially, invite public criticism or discussion" (Bellino v Australian Broadcasting Commission (1996) 185 CLR 183 at 220, 211).
36 I am unable to agree that matters of public interest, necessarily, do not and will not arise in relation to either the imputations or the matters dealt with generally in the proposed article. The limited array of facts appearing from the brief and untested affidavit of Mr Blair makes this much clear, namely that this is a substantial hotel in the commercial centre of the city of Newcastle; it is a hotel which has a motel providing accommodation for the public generally, and the hotel has, as part of the commercial venture, a number of shops and a commercial property either attached to it or nearby. The scope of the venture can be appreciated when regard is had to the purchase price and extensive monies spent on renovation to this date. The size of the loan facility is a recognition of the status of this hotel/motel commercial venture.
37 The hotel itself is, it is to be inferred, an institution offering drinking, dining, gaming facilities and the like to many hundreds of members of the public, each week. It may well be its public appeal is on an even greater scale. Mr Blair said that it was "trading above expectations". It is a facility whose financial stability is likely to have a significant impact on the businesses of many of its wholesale suppliers, and in that sense, to play a part in the overall economic stability of the Newcastle central business district. Its solvency and financial stability would be a matter of interest to its patrons, the Newcastle business community generally, the Liquor Administration Board, the Australian Hotels Association and other industry groups at a more localised level.
38 At the very least, it seems to me that it cannot be said as a matter of certainty, on the facts as they are known, that the above aspects of the public interest are clearly not present as relating to the imputations or in relation to the general topic of the Star Hotel's solvency and financial stability. For the same reason, it is at least arguable on the basis of the facts known that the activities relevant to the solvency and financial stability of the Star Hotel is the "conduct" that relevantly invites public criticism and discussion. (See Bellino supra).
39 A principal problem for the continuance or grant of an injunction in the present circumstances is that the question is posed against the sketchiest factual background. When the facts are fully stated, tested and ultimately found, the position may be significantly clearer than it is. As a general rule, it is not appropriate to restrain the publication of imputations in a proposed article where the pleadings and related matters are not finalised; where the facts are largely unexplored and where the analysis of relevant legal principles, particularly where there is an ambit of contest to their application, is unable to be made against an appropriate factual context. This is so in the present case, for example, in relation to the live issue which it is said may arise concerning the question as to whether the defendants are able to show they have acted reasonably. Mr Evatt has submitted the defendants would necessarily fail on this issue because no opportunity was given to the plaintiff to respond (Lange v Australian Broadcasting Commission (1997) 189 CLR 520 at 574).
40 It is simply impossible to determine the ambit of this one aspect of a possible defence without a full appreciation of the factual situation.
41 The principles to which I have referred in Church of Scientology (supra) and Chappell (supra) make it clear that the discretion to restrain defamatory publications should be exercised with great caution and only in a very clear case. This is so because, while it may appear, prima facie, that a publication is defamatory, the resolution of the proceedings may well reside in the defences pleaded, and these cannot ordinarily cannot be determined at the stage of an interlocutory injunction application. As Simpson J observed in Macquarie Bank (above) at para 16: -
"To restrain the publication would unduly override the rights of the publisher and pre-empt the resolution of legitimate issues which arise in claims for defamation. The second reason concerns the fundamental public interest in freedom of speech and freedom of information. An injunction will ordinarily not lie where it would have the effect of restraining discussion in the media of matters of public interest or concern."
42 To the same effect are the observations of Levine J in Car Lovers Cash Wash Limited (supra) at para 33 where his Honour said: -
"It is notorious, if I might say so, that the courts are very reluctant to grant injunctive relief to restrain publication of alleged defamatory matter."
43 Two further points need to be made: first, it may well be the situation that, when the present proceedings come to ultimate hearing, it will be determined that the publication is defamatory, is not protected by any of the available defences, and warrants an award of damages. I do not intend anything I have said to represent a categorical finding that matters of public interest must arise in relation to the imputations and to the matter contained in the draft article generally. Secondly, although the principles in the authorities to which I have referred require that the power to restrain a defamatory publication be exercised with great caution, there will be occasions, perhaps infrequently, where the need to issue an injunction will properly arise. There may be cases in which the position is so clear that an injunction will be required to prevent major and irreparable damage. Chappell (supra) and Hemmes (supra) were such cases. The present proceedings, however, in my view do not present such a clear picture either in relation to the imputations themselves or the issues of public interest which have been debated in the interlocutory application.
44 Although it is not necessary to consider the balance of convenience at this stage, since I am not satisfied about those matters described, in shorthand fashion, as "threshold" matters in proceedings to restrain defamatory publications, I should say that I am not satisfied that the evidence presently relied upon by the plaintiff establishes that it has demonstrated that the publication of the draft article will necessarily result in significant and irreparable damage to it. (Chappell 163E). Mr Blair's evidence establishes that satisfactory arrangements have been made with all the plaintiff's creditors save two; that it has in place short term finance of a limited kind to meet day to day creditor demands. There is no evidence to suggest that the proposed financier, which is to provide the money to complete the purchase, would, as a consequence of the publication of the article, do other than fulfil the obligations of the commitment it has obviously made. Again, I do not wish to pre-empt the evidence that will be given at an ultimate hearing of the defamation action should it proceed. There may well be evidence of damage following publication, if publication (or re-publication) occurs. I am not satisfied, however, that the evidence placed before me establishes that matter at this interlocutory stage.
45 For these reasons I propose to order that the injunction granted on 5 February 2001 be at an end. I decline to make an order restraining the defendants from publishing or causing to be published in the "Newcastle Herald" imputations of and concerning the plaintiff to the effect of the matters stated in paras (a) to (f) in the amended summons filed on 7 February 2001.
46 Summons is dismissed. The plaintiff is to pay the defendants' costs.