Thunder Studios Inc (California) v Kazal
[2020] FCA 1636
At a glance
Source factsCourt
Federal Court of Australia
Decision date
2020-10-22
Before
Mr P, Rares J
Source
Original judgment source is linked above.
Judgment (5 paragraphs)
- Paragraph 1(a)(i), (b) and (c) of the respondents' particulars relied on in mitigation dated 22 October 2020 be struck out. Note: Entry of orders is dealt with in Rule 39.32 of the Federal Court Rules 2011.
Introduction 1 Today is the fourth day of the trial. Yesterday, during the course of the cross-examination of Rodric David (the second applicant) senior counsel for Charif and Adam Kazal (the respondents) put matters to him that provoked objection by senior counsel for the applicants that these questions went outside any scope afforded to a defendant or respondent in a defamation action in cross-examining a plaintiff or applicant where there was no defence to which such cross-examination could relate. 2 Here, the matters complained of were first published in June 2013. Thunder Studios Inc (California) and Mr David claim damages for defamation and injurious falsehood by reason of the publication of defamatory imputations conveyed in the two matters complained of, being webpages, and also for contraventions of s 18 of the Australian Consumer Law in Sch 2 of the Competition and Consumer Act 2010 (Cth) by the publication of tweets directing people to the website on which the first of the two matters complained of appeared. 3 Relevantly, the proposed particulars of mitigation seek to rely on Mr David allegedly having directly provoked the publication of the first two matters complained of in June 2013. Those matters complained of remained on the internet for several years thereafter. The asserted provocation was that Mr David allegedly: provided, or had been a source of, information for articles published in The Sydney Morning Herald on 1 September 2010 and 16 March 2013; made a complaint to the Independent Commission Against Corruption of the State of New South Wales (ICAC) that led to a public hearing, and ICAC's publication of a report in 2011 that made adverse findings about, among others, Charif Kazal; and engaged in conduct with Charif Kazal and his brother, Tarek (or Tony) Kazal, that gave rise to proceedings in the Grand Court of the Cayman Islands culminating in its decision of 23 November 2011. That decision included a finding that Mr David had been in breach of his fiduciary duty as a director of a company by participating in its board making an allotment of shares which that Court set aside. 4 The defamatory imputations relevant to the alleged provocation include that Mr David paid the journalist, Linton Besser, who wrote both of The Sydney Morning Herald articles, to smear the Kazal family in an attempt to cover up his own criminal theft, or to lie about the Kazal family and their business dealings, or to smear the Kazal family in an attempt to cover up his own corporate fraud and theft. Mr David has given evidence that all of the alleged imputations are false. 5 The respondents today sought to rely on two particulars of matters in mitigation of damages. However, neither respondent has a defence. Charif Kazal does not have a defence because it was struck out in September 2017 by operation of a self-executing order on his failure, for the third time, to answer interrogatories in accordance with his obligations to do so. I subsequently refused his application to re-instate his defence: Thunder Studios Inc (California) v Kazal (No 5) [2017] FCA 1572 (from which Bromwich J refused leave to appeal in Kazal v Thunder Studios Inc (California) [2018] FCA 593). Adam Kazal does not have a defence because he never filed one. However, about three years after the proceeding commenced, he sought to repair that position, while in prison for contempt of court in this proceeding, and I refused him leave to do so for reasons that I then gave: Thunder Studios Inc (California) v Kazal (No 3) [2017] FCA 1170. 6 Yesterday, I directed the respondents to provide a document by this morning in order to identify the matters upon which they proposed to rely in mitigation on the basis of their invocation of what have become known as the Burstein principles. That expression derives from Burstein v Time Newspapers Ltd [2001] 1 WLR 579, and in particular at 590-591 [25]-[26].