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Mediaworks TV Ltd v Staples [2019] NZCA 133; [2020] 2 NZLR 372 (3 May 2019)
Last Updated: 28 October 2022
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For a Court ready (fee required) version please follow this link
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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF NEW
ZEALANDI
TE KŌTI PĪRA O AOTEAROA
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MEDIAWORKS TV LIMITED First Appellant
KATE MCCALLUM Second
Appellant
TRISTRAM CLAYTON Third Appellant
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AND
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BRYAN DOUGLAS STAPLES First Respondent
CLAIMS RESOLUTION
SERVICE LIMITED Second Respondent
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Hearing:
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21 February 2019, further submissions received on 8 April 2019
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Court:
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Miller, Asher and Clifford JJ
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Counsel:
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J G Miles QC and T F Cleary for Appellants P A Morten and J Moss for
Respondents
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Judgment:
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3 May 2019 at 10 am
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JUDGMENT OF MILLER, ASHER AND CLIFFORD JJ
- The
application for an extension of time to apply for a review of
the Associate Judge’s decision is granted.
- We
determine the review sitting as a full court of the High Court.
- The
application to file a memorandum supporting the judgment on other grounds is
granted.
- The
review is allowed.
- The
High Court order to direct disclosure without redactions is quashed.
- The
effect of allowing this review is that the part of the High Court judgment
directing the disclosure of each of the documents in
part 3 of the schedule to
their affidavits without redactions is declined, but only to the extent that the
documents or parts of
them identify the informants who have provided the
documents to Mediaworks.
- In
all other respects issues of the adequacy of discovery remain open and are not
determined by this review. It is open to the respondents
to seek a further
hearing in relation to the discovery issues that have not been determined, or to
bring another application in relation
to discovery. In particular, the issue of
whether the documents do in fact fall into the category of protected documents
under s
68(1) remains open.
- The
respondents are jointly and severally liable to pay one set of costs to the
appellants on a 2B basis under the High Court Rules
2016 and usual
disbursements.
- The
costs orders made by the Associate Judge in the High Court are quashed. If the
parties cannot agree on those High Court costs,
the issue should be determined
in the High Court in accordance with this judgment.
____________________________________________________________________
REASONS OF THE COURT
(Given by Asher J)
Introduction
- [1] The issue
that is raised before us is whether the appellants as journalists are entitled
to invoke the statutory protection of
sources provided for in s 68(1) of
the Evidence Act 2006. The appellants are the media company,
Mediaworks TV Ltd, together with
two journalists who were employed by Mediaworks
at the relevant time, Kate McCallum as a television producer, and
Tristram Clayton
as a journalist (for convenience we will refer to all
three as Mediaworks).
- [2] The first
respondent Bryan Staples is a director of the second respondent, Claims
Resolution Service Ltd (Claims Resolution).
Mr Staples and
Claims Resolution are engaged in the business of assisting claimants in
bringing claims for those who suffered damage
to their properties in the
Canterbury earthquakes of 2010 and 2011. Mr Staples and Claims Resolution claim
they were defamed by
Mediaworks and its journalists when, in a Campbell Live
programme and subsequently, Mediaworks broadcast and published complaints
that
were very critical of aspects of their Christchurch business activities.
Mediaworks refused to discover certain documents,
claiming the protection from
disclosing the identity of informants in s 68(1) of the Evidence Act. In
the High Court Mr Staples
and Claims Resolution successfully challenged the
availability of that protection relying on s
68(2).[1]
That decision has been appealed to this Court.
- [3] Following
the delivery by the Associate Judge of the decision that is challenged,
Mediaworks proceeded by way of appeal. The
case on appeal was filed followed by
submissions, and the respondents filed a memorandum seeking to support the
judgment on other
grounds. The case was fully argued before us as an appeal
without opposition from the respondents. Subsequent to that hearing in
the
process of our deliberations, the Court became aware that the decision appealed
from was a part of proceedings governed by the
Judicature Act 1908. That being
so, any challenge to the High Court decision fell under s 26P of the Judicature
Act 1908 and should
have proceeded as a review by the High Court. The Senior
Courts Act 2016, which abolished review, did not
apply.[2] Following a minute of the
Court, that position is now accepted by the
parties.[3] For reasons that we set
out at the end of this judgment we have decided to determine the challenge to
the High Court decision as
a full court of the High Court sitting on review. We
will for convenience continue to refer to the parties as the appellants and
the
respondents.
Background
District Court proceedings
- [4] A Mr Richard
Freeman, who is not a party to this review but is a defendant in the High Court
proceedings, was a director of the
company
Ironclad Securities Ltd (Ironclad), a debt collection company,
and had an association with Mr Staples and his companies that
ended in acrimony.
In April 2014 Mr Freeman started publishing posts on a Facebook website he
administered which were highly critical
of Mr Staples and his business
operation. Mr Freeman claimed that he and his company were owed in excess
of $200,000 by Mr Staples
and his business. He did not limit his attack on
Mr Staples to just that matter. The statements about Mr Staples involved the
use
of strong language including descriptive phrases of Mr Staples and his
enterprises as “professional conmen” involved
in “dodgy
dealings” and other similar pejorative remarks. There was an accusation
of manipulation of police, media and
lawyers.
- [5] On 11 April
2014 Mr Staples issued defamation proceedings against Ironclad and its
associates. He sought an interim injunction
in the District Court at
Christchurch against Ironclad and other persons associated with Ironclad,
Mr Richardson, Mr Joseph Smith
and Mr Kane Smith. On 15 April 2014
Judge Kellar of the District Court granted a without notice application of
Mr Staples for an
interim injunction in the following terms:
(1) That the first respondent, IRONCLAD SECURITIES LIMITED, and the second
respondents, LYNDON VAUGHAN RICHARDSON, JOSEPH DENNIS
ROBERT SMITH and KANE
ARANA SMITH, immediately remove all statements and material in any way related
to the applicant and his associated
companies from the webpage on Facebook
operated by the first and second respondents at the internet address
www.facebook.com/ironcladsecurities
(2) That the first and second respondents or their employees or associates are
hereby restrained from publicising any information
in any way relating to this
proceeding pending further order of the Court.
Later Mr Freeman was joined by Mr Staples as a defendant to the District
Court proceedings. We will refer to these proceedings as
the District
Court proceedings, to distinguish them from the later
High Court proceedings which have led to this review.
- [6] Mr Staples
had also filed an affidavit in support of his
District Court application for an interim injunction. That affidavit
was responded to by statements of defence by Ironclad and the other defendants,
and supporting affidavits were also filed in the
District Court. It is alleged
by Mr Staples that Ironclad’s statement of defence and the other
supporting affidavits state
amongst other things that Mr Staples is corrupt and
a thief, has an unpaid and undisputed debt of over $170,000, with an associate
has over 24 companies struck off, is a fraudster and a conman, has committed an
unlawful act and has defrauded members of the public.
The first
Campbell Live programme
- [7] In the
statement of claim filed by Mr Staples and Claims Resolution in the later
High Court proceedings which have led to this
review, it is alleged that
after the interim injunction was granted in the District Court Mr Freeman
through a third party provided
copies of the District Court documents to
the Rt Hon Winston Peters MP. It is also alleged that
Mr Freeman spoke by telephone to
Ms McCallum about the contents of the
District Court documents and the website posts. It is pleaded that on 23 July
2014 Mr Peters
used the information that he had been given to deliver a speech
in Parliament which was highly critical of Mr Staples, accusing him
amongst
other things of:
(1) a long list of fraudulent practices;
(2) using his companies which purported to assist earthquake victims to defraud,
mislead and cheat people;
(3) carrying out technical inspections of properties for earthquake compensation
purposes which neither he, nor his companies and
the people they employed were
qualified to do; and
(4) being paid for but not actually providing genuine technical reports.
- [8] It is
alleged that on 23 July 2014 Mediaworks broadcast Mr Peters’ allegations
on the Campbell Live programme (which we
will refer to as
the first Campbell Live programme) to an audience of
hundreds of thousands of New Zealand viewers. It is also alleged
that
Mediaworks posted reports of Mr Peters’ allegations on its
website which was on the worldwide web system of the internet
and open to
general access by any user.
- [9] There is no
claim against Mediaworks for this first Campbell Live programme. The claim
arose from events that followed.
The second Campbell Live
programme
- [10] Ms McCallum
and Mr Clayton started working on a story about Mr Staples and his associated
companies. It is alleged that on about
23 July 2014 Mr Staples told Ms McCallum
and Mr Clayton that there was an interim injunction in place and that they could
not discuss
the case because of that. Mr Staples asserts that he put this
in an email of 28 July 2014.
- [11] On 30 July
2014 Mediaworks broadcast another Campbell Live programme which we will call the
second Campbell Live programme.
This was produced for Mediaworks by Ms
McCallum. Mr Clayton was a reporter and presenter on that programme. It is
this programme
and what followed which is the subject of these proceedings. It
is pleaded that various defamatory statements were made about Mr
Staples
and his companies.
- [12] Those who
spoke in the second Campbell Live programme included Mr Staples who was
asked to and did comment on some of the allegations
against him.
The programme included quotes from Mr Peters, Hon Ruth Dyson MP,
a customer of Mr Staples and a former business associate.
These were critical
both of him and his business. The programme ended with some statements by Mr
Staples.
- [13] We do not
propose setting out all the contents of what was said. It is alleged by Mr
Staples that the nature and ordinary meaning
of the words Mediaworks published
on the web were that his company defrauded, misled and cheated his clients,
rorted the system,
knowingly used unqualified people to carry out assessments of
building damage, and stole money from its clients. The allegations
extend to
what was said on the programme and what was then reported by Mediaworks
subsequently. In the course of the interview Mr
Staples had strongly
denied the allegations and asserted that his company was “part of a
solution to try and help people get
what they are fully entitled to”.
Damages were sought against the appellants.
- [14] Mediaworks
in its statement of defence plead no defamatory meaning, consent on the part of
Mr Staples, statutory qualified privilege,
common law qualified privilege, and
qualified privilege — responsible journalism and honest opinion.
The lists of documents
- [15] Lists of
documents were filed by Mediaworks, Ms McCallum and Mr Clayton. The lists
of documents accompanied a paragraph based
on a claim for confidentiality of
sources for part 3 of the schedule to the discovered documents which lists the
relevant documents.
It is stated in Mediaworks’ statement of defence, in
respect of part 3:
In Part 3 of the Schedule, I list documents that
are in the second, third and fourth defendants' control and for which the
second,
third and fourth defendants claim confidentiality. Parts of the
documents identified at Part 3 of the Schedule are subject to binding
undertakings of confidentiality given by the second, third and/or fourth
defendants. The second, third and fourth defendants propose
not to disclose
those parts of the documents identified which would cause them to breach their
undertakings of confidentiality, and
if necessary will seek an order that they
not be required to do so. The second, third and fourth defendants propose to
discover
those parts of the documents identified at Part 3 which would not cause
them to breach their undertakings of confidentiality.
- [16] Confidentiality
is no longer claimed for all the documents that were originally listed in that
schedule. There are now 11 documents
that remain subject to such claims,
described in part 3 as
follows:
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Document ID
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Parent Document ID
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Date
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Description
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From
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To
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MED_STA_100.00012
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21/07/2014
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Email
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Mediaworks
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Mediaworks
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MED_STA_100.00013
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MED_STA_100.00012
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12/05/1998
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Court Document
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MED_STA_100.00014
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MED_STA_100.00012
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5/05/2014
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Court Document
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MED_STA_100.00015
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MED_STA_100.00012
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25/07/2013
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Court Document
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MED_STA_100.00016
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MED_STA_100.00012
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5/06/2014
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Email
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Confidential
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Confidential
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MED_STA_100.00046
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21/07/2014
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Email
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Mediaworks
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Mediaworks
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MED_STA_100.00047
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MED_STA_100.00046
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12/05/1998
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Court Document
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MED_STA_100.00048
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MED_STA_100.00046
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5/05/2014
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Court Document
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MED_STA_100.00049
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MED_STA_100.00046
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25/06/2013
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Court Document
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MED_STA_100.00050
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MED_STA_100.00046
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10/03/2013
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Email
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Confidential
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Confidential
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MED_STA_100.00051
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21/07/2014
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Email
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Mediaworks
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Mediaworks
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- [17] It is
claimed by Mediaworks that to give further details of these documents would be
to reveal their source, and thereby defeat
the purpose of s 68(1). It is that
claim that has led to these proceedings.
The issue
- [18] Section
68(1) and (2) of the Evidence Act 2006 provides:
68 Protection of
journalists’ sources
(1) If a journalist has promised an informant not to disclose the
informant’s identity, neither the journalist nor his or her
employer is
compellable in a civil or criminal proceeding to answer any question or produce
any document that would disclose the
identity of the informant or enable
that identity to be discovered.
(2) A Judge of the High Court may order that subsection (1) is not to apply
if satisfied by a party to a civil or criminal proceeding
that, having regard to
the issues to be determined in that proceeding, the public interest in the
disclosure of evidence of the identity
of the informant outweighs—
(a) any likely adverse effect of the disclosure on the informant or any
other person; and
(b) the public interest in the communication of facts and opinion to the
public by the news media and, accordingly also, in the ability
of the news media
to access sources of facts.
- [19] It is
common ground that the three appellants, Mediaworks and Ms McCallum and Mr
Clayton, are journalists. It is not contested
that qualifying promises to
informants were made. Therefore s 68(1) applies.
- [20] The central
issue is whether the High Court should have ordered that s 68(1) not apply
because under s 68(2) the public interest
in the disclosure of the identity of
the informants outweighed the likely adverse effect of the disclosure on the
informant or any
other person, and the public interest in the communication of
facts and opinion to the public and the ability of the news media to
access
sources of fact.
- [21] Other
peripheral issues arose at the hearing before us. There was an application for
leave to file out of time a memorandum
supporting the decision appealed against
on other grounds made. It was argued that the descriptions of the documents
should have
been more precise. The question of whether a court should look at
the allegedly confidential documents to see whether sources were
disclosed was
raised. It was submitted that in relation to the listed court documents,
the disclosure of those documents would not
reveal the identity of the source,
and that any additions to the documents could be redacted. We deal with these
issues at the end
of the judgment.
The High Court
judgment
- [22] Having
found that s 68(1) applied, Associate Judge Matthews concluded that under s
68(2) there was a public interest in the disclosure
of the identity of the
sources of the relevant documents. He held that it would be relevant to the
ability of Mr Staples and Claims
Resolution to respond to the defence of honest
opinion, to know the sources of the
documents.[4] Their identities could
be important. There was also a public interest in ascertaining whether the
supply of the documents was in
breach of the injunction, which he thought may
have been the case.[5]
- [23] The
Associate Judge felt that the personal nature of the criticisms and the apparent
breach of the injunction were factors weighing
in favour of the identity of the
sources being
disclosed.[6]
He held that the public interest in the free disclosure of information to the
news media by protecting sources was not a major factor.
Although the conduct
of claims against insurers was of the public interest, these claims were more
extensive and were “derived
from private feuds of no public
interest”.[7] They alleged
dishonest and potentially criminal conduct. He took the view that personal
vendettas formed the basis for casting
aspersions on Mr Staples and his
company.[8]
He held:
[71] In my view, for all the above reasons, the public
interest in the disclosure of evidence of the identity of the informant
outweighs
the public interests in the communication of facts and opinions to the
public by the news media, and thus the ability of the news
media to assess
sources of fact.
- [24] In reaching
his decision he applied and followed two earlier High Court decisions of
Police v Campbell and Slater v
Blomfield.[9]
The
issues
- [25] Mr Miles QC
for the appellants argued that the High Court had set the bar too low for the
removal of source protection for journalists.
The Associate Judge had relied
heavily on Police v Campbell and Slater v Blomfield, and in so far
as he saw analogies between the present case and Slater v Blomfield, Mr
Miles submitted there was an error; the cases were very different. He argued
that unless corrected by this Court, the High Court
judgment would “serve
to chill the freedom of the media to report on matters of public
interest”.
- [26] In response
Mr Morten for the respondents argued that the Associate Judge’s assessment
of the weight to be given to the
various factors was accurate, and that the
factors weighing against protection that arose in Slater v Blomfield also
arose in this case.
Section 68 of the Evidence Act
- [27] The
principles to be applied in approaching s 68 were extensively discussed in three
High Court cases, Police v Campbell, Slater v Blomfield and
Hager v Attorney‑General,[10]
and we do not propose repeating what was said in those cases. In the first of
these, Police v Campbell, Randerson J set out comprehensively the
development of the protection of journalistic sources in England, and
the Law Commission
recommendations that led to the enactment of s 68
in the Evidence Act.[11]
We do not repeat his helpful analysis which has been adopted in the other recent
cases.[12] However, some initial
points must be made about s 68(2) of relevance to the issues in this case.
- [28] As was
stated in a different legislative context, adopting a passage from
the European Court of Human Rights decision in Goodwin v United
Kingdom:[13]
Protection
of journalistic sources is one of the basic conditions for press freedom. ...
Without such protection sources may be deterred
from assisting the press in
informing the public on matters of public interest. As a result the vital
public-watchdog role of the
press may be undermined and the ability of the press
to provide accurate and reliable information may be adversely affected.
- [29] The free
flow of information is a vital component of any democracy. In Ashworth
Hospital Authority v MGN Ltd the English Court of Appeal spoke of the
chilling effect of Court orders requiring the disclosure of press
sources.[14]
The public interest in the non‑disclosure of press sources is constant,
“whatever the merits of the particular publication,
and the particular
source”.[15]
In New Zealand in 1994 the Law Commission issued a discussion paper
entitled Evidence Law:
Privilege.[16] It noted that
the enactment of the New Zealand Bill of Rights Act 1990 arguably gave scope to
journalistic privilege arising from
the right to freedom of expression
guaranteed by s 14 of the New Zealand Bill of Rights
Act.[17] The Commission observed
that there was a case for according privilege to journalists’ confidential
sources of information.
However that had to be circumscribed with some care and
there was no room for any “absolute” privilege that would prevent
courts from looking at whether the privilege was justified.
- [30] At that
time s 35 of the Evidence Amendment Act (No 2) 1980 conferred a statutory
discretion on the court to excuse any witness
from answering any question or
producing any document on the ground that that would be a breach by the witness
of a confidence that
the witness should not be compelled to breach. Such a
confidence could arise from this special relationship existing between the
witness and the source of the information or document. The protection set out
in the section was not confined to journalists.
- [31] The Law
Commission in its 1999 Evidence report took the issue further, and
proposed a specific section to create a specific qualified privilege for
journalists’ confidential
sources.[18] The Commission stated
in its report “[t]he protection of journalists’ confidential sources
of information is justified
by the need to promote the free flow of information,
a vital component of any
democracy”.[19]
- [32] The
Commission noted that an express qualified privilege which put the onus on the
person seeking to have the source revealed
was preferable to a general
discretion. It was said that “[t]his would give greater confidence to a
source that his or her
identity would not be
revealed”.[20]
- [33] The draft
section it put forward was similar to the present s 68, and there were no
material changes when s 68(1) and (2) were
enacted.
- [34] Section 68
is in subpart 8 of the Evidence Act. That subpart is headed “Privilege
and confidentiality”. The subpart
commences with “Matters relating
to interpretation and procedure” and is then further subdivided under the
headings “Privilege”
and “Confidentiality”. Sections
68–70 come under the heading of “Confidentiality”. The
protection
of sources is therefore placed in the Act as a confidentiality rather
than a privilege issue. Effectively it provides an exemption
for journalists
from the usual procedural obligations by which in civil or criminal proceedings
persons may be required to answer
any question or produce any document. The
protection only arises when the answer or production would disclose the identity
of the
informant or enable that identity to be discovered.
- [35] Except as
specifically enacted in s 68, journalists are generally competent and
compellable witnesses who are no different from
other witnesses. It is only in
the defined circumstances of s 68(1) that they are able to take advantage of a
protection against
compellability. Section 68(1) creates a starting point
that a journalist, as defined in s 68(5), who has promised confidentiality
is
not obliged to answer questions or produce documents that will disclose the
identity of the informant or enable the identity to
be discovered. This prima
facie protection may be displaced by an order under s 68(2). The listing of
documents is the first stage
of the production of a document for inspection, and
s 68(1) can be applied to give protection at that first stage of the discovery
process. Indeed, this was not contested before us.
- [36] Consistent
with the view expressed by the Law Commission, s 68(1) sets out the protection,
and s 68(2) the circumstances when
it is not to apply. It is not to apply only
if a Judge of the High Court is “satisfied” that on the basis of the
test
in s 68(2) there should be disclosure of evidence of the identity of
the informant. Consistent with the Law Commission’s view,
this wording
makes it clear that the onus is on the person seeking to have the source
revealed. That person must “satisfy”
the Judge.
- [37] There is
nothing in the section that dictates the type of onus, other than that
the Judge must be “satisfied” that
the section should apply.
The Court therefore must approach its task from the position that under s 68(2)
a departure from the default
position as sought, with the onus being on the
person seeking to invoke that departure. We see no point in categorising the
onus,
and we agree with the comment made in Police v Campbell,
“[t]he presumptive right to the protection should not be departed from
lightly and only after a careful weighing of each of
the statutory
considerations”.[21]
- [38] We also
agree with the view expressed in that case that in carrying out a s 68(2)
exercise, a Judge is carrying out a balancing
exercise weighing stated
criteria.[22] This is an exercise
of evaluative judgment of fact and degree, and not the exercise of a
discretion.[23]
- [39] It is
relevant to note in relation to this review that the phrase “public
interest” is used in two different ways
in s 68(2). Initially in s 68(2)
it is used in the sense of a public interest in the disclosure of evidence of
the identity of an
informant. This is quite a narrow consideration, focused on
why knowing the identity of the informant is important. This use of
the phrase
“public interest” is to be contrasted with the use of the phrase in
s 68(2)(b), where it is a reference to
the public interest in the free and safe
communication of facts and opinion to the public by the news media, whereby
sources are
protected from having their identity exposed. Used in this second
way, the phrase “public interest” reflects the protection
of
journalists’ sources we referred to earlier in this section.
- [40] Therefore,
a person seeking to invoke s 68(2) must first explain how the public interest in
disclosure of an informant’s
identity bears on the case. The phrase
“public interest” in this part of s 68(2) is not defined, and
with the other
s 68(2) factors is used in juxtaposition with “having
regard to the issues to be determined in that proceeding”. It
is also
stated in s 68(5) that the phrase “public interest in the disclosure of
evidence includes, in a criminal proceeding,
the defendant’s right to
present an effective defence”. In our view, that public interest can
extend also to a plaintiff’s
right to present their claim effectively in
civil proceedings, in this case a defamation proceeding.
- [41] In
Police v Campbell the public interest identified in this first sense was
the public interest in the resolution of a widely publicised crime. The
identification
of the informant was of high relevance and significance to the
prosecution of that crime.[24] The
disclosure of the source could lead to the disclosure of the perpetrator. In
that particular situation, s 68(2) was applied.
- [42] In
Slater v Blomfield there was a defamation claim against a blogger, the
background dispute was personal between the plaintiff and the defendant and the
complainants, and was in the nature of a feud. The public interest in this
first sense was in ensuring that parties to civil litigation
have sufficient
information to enable them to fairly advance their position, and have a level
playing field in the courtroom. It
was held that in all litigation there is a
strong public interest in parties being able to present their cases
effectively.[25] This was because
the identity of those involved in the complained of actions was not known, and
the allegations arose out of a private
feud between the parties. There was no
materially countervailing public interest in the defamatory material. In that
particular
situation s 68(2) was applied.
- [43] Both these
cases where s 68(2) was applied can be seen as having unusual facts giving rise
to a public interest in disclosure.
With this background, we turn to the
question of the public interest in these circumstances in the first sense it is
used in s 68(2).
The public interest in the disclosure of
the informants’ identity
- [44] The public
interest in the disclosure of evidence of the identity of an informant will
generally be particular to the facts of
the case. As we have indicated, there
is a public interest as a general proposition in the disclosure of all material
that may assist
or hinder parties involved in civil litigation, so the parties
can present their cases
effectively.[26] In this case this
public interest is reflected in the High Court rules that require discovery
of all relevant documents, to give
parties access to all documents that can
assist or damage their case.[27]
Sometimes those documents will reveal the informants of complaints as is
claimed to be the case in this proceeding.
- [45] As was
discussed in Slater v Blomfield, in defamation cases the identity of
sources may in some circumstances assist in assessing whether statements are
true.[28] The identity and role of
a source who may obviously be deliberately seeking to hurt another party could
be relevant to the credibility
of that person’s allegations. It could be
relevant to establish truth. It could be relevant also to the defence of honest
opinion, as certain informants may be seen as so obviously unreliable, so that
no honest opinion could be held as to the accuracy
of what they say.
Conceivably the identity of an informant would also be relevant to other
defences.
- [46] Such a
personal vendetta did exist in Slater v Blomfield, the decision relied on
by the Associate Judge and the respondents. In that case it was accepted that
the sources who had provided
the defendant, Mr Slater, with the information
that he published on his blog site could be persons whose identity could be
relevant
to the defences of truth and honest opinion. There was evidence
in Slater v Blomfield that those informants were locked in a private and
vindictive feud with the plaintiff. They appeared to wish to deliberately hurt
him. Their identity was potentially very important to the plaintiff. As we
have indicated, if the source was patently vindictive
and unreliable, it would
be more difficult to run the defence of honest opinion, as the defendant
should have been on guard.
- [47] These
factors do not arise here. The Associate Judge referred to
“unsatisfactory prior relationships between those interviewed
in the
programme and Mr Staples and his associates, derived from private feuds of
no public interest”, and that “personal
vendettas form the basis for
casting aspersions of Mr Staples and Claims Resolutions in the publications in
issue”.[29] There was a
factual foundation for those statements. At least some of the complainants did
appear to have considerable personal
animosity to Mr Staples. However, the
identity of those complainants referred to is known in this case. Contrary to
the position
in Slater v Blomfield, in this case the informants do not
appear to have been the sources of the initial complaints, and have been
conduits only. Here
the actual complainants of wrongdoing by Mr Staples
and Claims Resolution were the complainants publicly named on the programme.
However, the informants are not those complainants; they are unknown
persons who passed on to Mediaworks complaints of those now
known persons. The
sources only make up a small fraction of the content of the second Campbell Live
programme
- [48] There is a
basic distinction between identifying informants who experienced the conduct
they describe, as in Slater v Blomfield, and those who are
reporting what others say about the allegedly defamatory matters, and who are
passing on those complaints of others
to the media. The informants whose
identity Mediaworks seeks to protect are in the latter category. In the second
Campbell Live
programme the persons who had experienced the bad behaviour
of Mr Staples and his associates were known.
- [49] Thus, we
are unable to see any significant public interest in Mr Staples and Claims
Resolution knowing the identity of the informants
in this case. There is
nothing to indicate that knowing their identity could help Mr Staples and Claims
Resolution disprove truth
and honest opinion or any other defence. We
appreciate we cannot dismiss the proposition that the identity of the informants
might
help in some peripheral way in the proceeding, but the possibility is
speculative. We are not prepared to make an adverse inference
of the existence
of informants whose identity is relevant in the absence of any facts or
circumstances to justify that.
- [50] The
Associate Judge also appears to have taken the view that there may have been a
public interest in knowing who the sources
were because Mediaworks may have
acted in breach of the District Court’s injunction and such conduct may
constitute contempt.[30] As we
discuss later, we accept the possibility that in some circumstances unlawful
behaviour by the informant could be relevant
to a plaintiff’s case in a
defamation proceeding. For instance, a knowing and clear breach of a court
order might be relevant
to a defendant’s defence of honest opinion or
privilege.
- [51] However
even then, the public interest in disclosing the identity of informants may be
outweighed by the public interest in protecting
sources. It will not be
uncommon that informants have breached some duty or broken some law providing
information. Many whistleblowers
who are employees or in some sort of business
relationship with the person complained about will be breaching confidence or a
contractual
obligation in disclosing information. That without more will not
create a public interest in the disclosure of their identity.
Wrongful
behaviour may, however, in some circumstances lessen the public interest in
protection, and we consider this
later.[31] In Slater v Blomfield
where unlawfulness was a factor, there was a likely inference that highly
confidential information had been stolen and then used for
malicious
purposes.[32] There may be
circumstances where unlawful acts by an informant could be relevant.
- [52] There is
evidence that Mediaworks knew about the injunction Mr Morten submits that
on the basis of this evidence it is established
that Mediaworks and
Mr Clayton did receive, and use for the purposes of the Campbell Live
programmes, documents from the District
Court proceedings. However, there is no
evidence that any of the informants for Mediaworks were parties to the District
Court proceedings.
A deponent for Mediaworks has sworn on oath that none of the
parties whose identities are known including the defendants to the
District
Court proceedings, are the source of the documents. There is no evidence that
the informants were aware or should have
been aware of any contempt of court in
publishing material. The complainants who made the statements the subject
of the proceedings
did so openly, in the full public gaze. In the first
Campbell Live programme, what they said they put in the public domain. In
the
second Campbell Live programme, when the same type of general allegations were
being made, they occurred as part of a public
process, not connected to the
District Court proceedings.
- [53] While we
cannot reach any final view on whether Mediaworks was in contempt, in all these
circumstances it has not been shown
that the existence of the District
Court injunction in any material way adds to the public interest in the
disclosure of the identity
of the informants.
The likely
adverse effect of the disclosure on the informants or any other person
- [54] This factor
can weigh against disclosure under s 68(2). For instance, the informants
might be employees of the entity that is
the subject of the complaint or a
family member. Such persons could suffer severe consequences if their identity
is disclosed.
- [55] This
circumstance does not arise in this case. There is nothing to suggest that
disclosure could have an adverse effect on these
informants. For instance,
there is no suggestion, as there was of the defendant in Slater v Blomfield
(although it was rejected) that any party is capable or would wish to do any
physical harm to the informants.
Public interest in
communication with the media
- [56] We turn to
the second type of public interest referred to in s 68(2) to be weighed against
the first. This balancing factor
reflects the policy behind s 68(1) of
protection of media sources.
- [57] There was
at the time of the second Campbell Live programme a public interest in
information being disclosed about the actions
of those involved in advocacy and
litigation for Christchurch homeowners after the Canterbury earthquakes.
Following the Canterbury
earthquakes there was a large number of homeowners in
Christchurch whose property had suffered significant damage. They needed (often
urgently) to bring claims against those who might have a legal obligation to
give them compensation, in particular the Earthquake
Commission and private
insurers. However, many lacked the financial backing and expertise to conduct
major litigation. It was of
great importance to such victims of the earthquake
that they find access to trustworthy and competent litigation help.
- [58] On the
information before us Mr Staples had been very successful in Christchurch in
attracting such claims work from these vulnerable
people. Indeed it seems clear
that he was acting for the majority of Christchurch earthquake claimants in
claims before the High
Court. His companies funded some of the costs while
charging clients for certain steps in the claims process. On the information
before us his companies would take by way of a commission a percentage of any
amount recovered. It is said that Mr Staples claimed
to be the Robin Hood
of Christchurch.
- [59] In those
circumstances there was a significant public interest in any information
indicating that Mr Staples and his companies
were not pursuing these claims in a
satisfactory manner. Further, given the vulnerability of claimants, the numbers
of them, and
the trust they gave to those who ran their claims, general
information about Mr Staples’ reputation, and that of his various
enterprises, was of public interest. The issues were of sufficient importance
to attract the attention of a senior member of Parliament
who spoke in
Parliament, attracting nationwide media coverage and interest. This was
symptomatic of the importance of the issue
to a large number of people in
Christchurch, who had the sympathy and support of the New Zealand
community. This crosses the threshold
of public interest in s 68(2)(b),
and by a significant margin.
- [60] We agree
with the submission of Mr Miles on behalf of Mediaworks that there was
insufficient recognition of this in the judgment,
and therefore insufficient
weighting of this factor. In written submissions it was suggested for the
appellants that the Associate
Judge did not address the issue of the public
interest in protecting journalistic sources. However, the Associate Judge did
make
some reference to this factor:
[68] The present issues between
Mr Staples and [Claims Resolution] on one hand, and those who participated in
the programmes aired
by Mediaworks on the other, might be similarly described
and I do not discern any significant public interest in those disputes.
In
my view, however, there is a public interest in the airing of issues which are
relevant to the very substantial exercise of resolving
people’s claims or
cover by EQC and by private insurers. That is the service offered by Mr Staples
and [Claims Resolution]
at material times. Relevantly, though, the criticisms
levelled at them were only directed in part at that activity. More
wide-sweeping accusations of inappropriate conduct were focussed on other
alleged activities of Mr Staples and others associated
with him, in other
contexts. The truth of the various alleged statements which form the basis of
the present claims, and which relate
to the provision of services relating to
earthquake damage claims, and whether those views were honestly or genuinely
held, carries
with it an element of public interest. Statements not directed at
those issues, in my opinion, do not. Apparent breach of the injunction
is a
further element of public interest, as I have already discussed.
[69] These factors weigh in favour of the identity of the informant being
disclosed.
(Emphasis added).
- [61] We agree
that some of the criticisms were of actions by Mr Staples and his company that
did not involve earthquake claimants.
But the questioning of his actions was
all in the context of his performance as a litigation funder and manager of
earthquake claims.
Thus the programme began with these words:
We
begin tonight with New Zealand First Leader Winston Peters and his accusations
that the Christchurch rebuild is being hampered
by a massive fraud, how massive?
Well Winston Peters has previously said $130m in total.
- [62] The Hon
Ruth Dyson spoke as a member of Parliament concerned about what was happening to
Christchurch claimants. The more specific
non‑earthquake complaints,
provided in the context we have set out, if true, did reflect badly on
Mr Staples’ general
business practices. They were in that sense
relevant to his earthquake business.
- [63] The
situation is in stark contrast to that which arose in
Slater v Blomfield, where the allegedly defamatory allegations
Mr Slater made against Mr Blomfield were of an intensively personal
nature and not of
general interest to the community. The defendant
Mr Blomfield, unlike Mediaworks, was not a public figure and was not
involved in
any sort of a business or operation affecting large numbers of the
public in the way that Mr Staples and his associates were. Therefore
with
respect we are unable to agree with the Associate Judge’s conclusion after
the quoted discussion, that public interest
in the free disclosure of
information to Mediaworks was “not a major
factor”.[33] We have reached
the opposite conclusion.
- [64] Under this
head, the Associate Judge diminished the weight placed on the public interest in
the communication of facts and opinions
to the public by the news media, because
of the breach of the injunction.[34]
This issue was addressed by Lord Bridge in X Ltd v Morgan-Grampian
(Publishers)
Ltd:[35]
If it
appears to the court that the information was obtained legitimately this will
enhance the importance of protecting the source.
Conversely, if it appears that
the information was obtained illegally, this will diminish the importance of
protecting the source
unless, of course, this factor is counterbalanced by a
clear public interest in publication of the information, as in the classic
case
where the source has acted for the purpose of exposing iniquity.
- [65] We accept
that there can be less public interest in the ability of news media to access
sources of facts, where the source has
acted illegally and in a manner deserving
serious opprobrium. Nevertheless we recognise even the most serious illegality
may not
disqualify protection where the public importance of the information is
high.[36]
- [66] For reasons
we have already set out, we do not consider that it has been shown, even to a
prima facie level at this point, that
Mediaworks was acting in contempt of court
when it published some of the material for which it now seeks the protection of
s 68(1).
The general complaints were already in the public domain in any event.
We do not see the possibility of contempt as a factor which
dissipates the
strength of the public interest in enabling the news media to access sources and
promise the protection of their identity.
- [67] In
assessing the public interest, it is relevant that Mediaworks is a major
New Zealand news organisation. As a mainstream media
organisation, it is
subject to the complaints procedures of the Broadcasting Standards
Authority and the Media Council. The fact
that it is an established
major media organisation is relevant because when it publishes it knows it will
be widely watched and read,
and can be held to account.
Weighing the factors
- [68] As we have
set out we are not satisfied that there is any significant public interest in
the disclosure of the identity of the
informants in this case. There was
nothing to indicate that Mr Staples and Claims Resolution will be significantly
inhibited in
conducting their claim because they do not know the identity of the
persons who sent the Court documents to Mediaworks.
- [69] We weigh
against that the strong interest we have identified in the communication of
facts and opinion to the public by the news
media, and the fact that the issue
being addressed, namely the credibility of the business operation of
Mr Staples and his associates,
was of significant interest to a
considerable number of Christchurch home owners who had suffered in the
Canterbury earthquakes.
It is in such an area, where the confidence and
trustworthiness of persons who are providing a significant service to the public
is being debated, that the news media should have the ability to access sources.
As part of that they should have the ability to
receive material from informants
and give undertakings of confidentiality in the knowledge that they and the
informants can expect
them to be upheld under s 68. We have already referred to
this factor at the outset of our discussion.
- [70] For the
reasons we have set out, we have reached the view that the weighing process
comes out firmly in favour of protection,
and against disclosure under s 68(2).
We respectfully differ from the Associate Judge on the assessment of the
considerable public
interest in disclosure, the assessment of Mediaworks
possibly being in contempt, and the assessment of the considerable public
interest
in protection. We therefore allow the review, and quash the decision
requiring the respondents to disclose each of the documents
listed in part 3 of
the schedule to their affidavits without redactions.
Other
issues
- [71] Two weeks
before the hearing the respondents applied for leave to file out of time a
memorandum supporting the decision appealed
against on other grounds. They wish
to submit that the Associate Judge should have determined that certain documents
or parts of
those documents, do not qualify as documents capable of protection
under s 68(1), an issue which was raised before the Associate
Judge but not
addressed in his judgment. The application was not determined in advance of the
hearing, and the parties were advised
that they should come to Court prepared to
argue the point.
- [72] The
substantive issue raised was in the end discussed in some detail at the hearing.
It was submitted for the respondents that
some of the documents for which
protection was sought were clearly not protected. Disclosure of some documents
would not lead to
the identity of the informant being discovered. Reference was
made to documents for which protection was claimed which were documents
from the
District Court proceedings, which would not reveal the identity of the
source.
- [73] We agree
that the Judge did not determine this issue. In our view there is some force in
the submission that the description
of some of the documents, in particular the
Court documents which are labelled “Court documents” in the list of
documents,
is inadequate. It may be that a description of such documents by
name (for instance, “list of documents”) would not
reveal the
identity of the informants. It may also be that if there are real disputes
about whether the documents do disclose the
identity of informants, that could
be addressed by a Judge looking at the documents and reaching a decision on
whether identity is
disclosed, in the way that Judges can look at documents when
privilege is claimed in them.[37]
However, it is not possible to assess this point in the absence of the documents
in question. It is possible that the documents
even if they are third party
documents, do on their face in one way or another disclose the source. That
matter could only be determined
by an examination of the documents. They are
not before us.
- [74] Thus, we
grant leave to file the memorandum out of time, but we are not able to determine
the substantive point raised, as that
would require intense factual analysis.
That point will need evidence to be determined, and that evidence was not before
the High
Court and is not before us. As we state later, it is open to the
respondents to pursue its claim that the documents do not qualify
for protection
under s 68(1) in further applications to the High Court. We will not carry out
a de novo hearing with evidence on
the point.
- [75] In reaching
this conclusion we place no reliance on the affidavit of Thomas Turton that
the appellants have filed in relation
to the memorandum.
- [76] Therefore,
we do not propose making any orders in this regard. We have allowed the review
only in relation to that part of the
judgment that directs the full disclosure
of the documents, as not falling under s 68(1). We have decided that s
68(1) applies.
We expressly leave open the possibility that an application for
further and better discovery can be further pursued in the High Court.
We
note that the Associate Judge reserved leave to seek a supplementary
order if there was a disagreement about whether disclosure
and identification
was sufficient.[38]
The respondents can avail themselves of
this.
Jurisdiction
- [77] We return
to the issue of jurisdiction. The decision appealed against was an
interlocutory decision of an Associate Judge sitting
in
Chambers.[39]
The Senior Courts Act, which abolished the right of review and
replaced it with an appellate pathway to this Court, does not
apply.[40] The decision could only
be challenged by review under s 26P(1) of the Judicature Act
1908.[41]
As we have set out, this was not the way the matter proceeded. The
challenge to the Associate Judge’s decision was by way
of
an appeal, and it was heard by us as an appeal.
- [78] After the
hearing, in the latter stages of our considerations, it was appreciated by the
Court that this was a proceeding to
which the Judicature Act 1908
applied.[42] A minute was issued to
the parties pointing this out.[43]
We stated that the Court was minded to deal with the matter by sitting as three
High Court Judges, as it was empowered to do under
s 57(4) of the Judicature
Act. Memoranda were sought as to whether it was agreed that the Court lacked
jurisdiction, and if so whether
the members of the Court ought to refuse to sit
as High Court Judges to decide the challenge.
- [79] Both
parties now accept that the Court of Appeal has no jurisdiction to determine the
challenge. They differ as to the way forward.
The appellants support the
suggestion that the members of the Court who heard the appeal should treat the
matter as an application
for review before three High Court Judges under s
57(4). The respondents oppose that course of action being adopted, and ask
for
the appeal to be dismissed for want of jurisdiction.
- [80] Section
57(4) of the Judicature Act provides “[e]very Judge of the Court of Appeal
shall continue to be a Judge of the
High Court, and may from time to time sit as
or exercise any of the powers of a Judge of the High Court.”
- [81] While not
challenging the technical ability of the Court to sit as High Court judges, the
respondents submitted that any application
for review is out of time and that if
it heard the case as High Court judges it is not in the same position as a
High Court Judge
on review. An application for review would have followed
a different course. They also argued that the course taken before the
Court was
for an appeal rather than review, and the respondents would be prejudiced by the
change. Moreover, it was submitted, there
were different thresholds for the
admission of new evidence under the two procedures, and the respondents would
have pressed for
the High Court Judge to inspect the documents on review. There
are, it is said, different standards of review.
- [82] We have
concluded that it is in the interests of justice that we determine this case as
a review application heard before three
High Court Judges. There are four
reasons for this.
- [83] First, and
most importantly, we have heard the appeal over a full day, and considered the
arguments in detail. In the absence
of prejudice, if there is a lawful and
pragmatic way forward which does not waste the time effort and cost of the full
hearing that
has taken place before us, it should be adopted. In this regard we
note that the matter proceeding before us by way of appeal without
objection
from the respondents, who took active steps in the process, and the
pro-active step of seeking to support the judgment
on other grounds.
- [84] Second, the
test applied for an appeal is by way of a
rehearing.[44] That is also the
test applied for a review of an Associate Judge’s decision given in
Chambers.[45] The case was argued
before us, therefore, on the basis of the correct test.
- [85] Third, we
do not accept that the respondents are prejudiced if we adopt this course, for
reasons that we now set out.
- [86] The key
issue before us was whether the Associate Judge was right in his application of
s 68(2). His decision was predicated
on the basis that the documents fell under
the protection of s 68(1) unless s 68(2) could be invoked. As we have set out,
during
the hearing in this Court the issue was raised by the respondents whether
the documents in question in whole or in part qualified
under s 68(1) as capable
of protection. This was not a point that was determined before the Associate
Judge, who although the s
68(1) issue was raised, does not appear to have been
asked to examine the documents in question. In this judgment we have left that
issue the s 68(1) issue open for to be further pursued in the High Court.
- [87] Indeed, the
respondents have since the hearing taken the step of making specific application
in the High Court for orders properly
identifying certain aspects of the
allegedly confidential documents, and for an order setting aside the claims to
confidentiality.
- [88] We have
found that we are not able to determine the issue of whether the documents fall
into the category of protected documents
under s 68(1). Whether the documents
qualified could only be determined following a detailed examination of the
documents in question,
and the documents were not before the Associate Judge.
To determine a dispute about whether the documents disclosed sources without
being able to look at the documents to determine what they showed as to sources,
would not have been appropriate either on appeal
or review. There is nothing to
show that the respondents made any specific application to the Associate
Judge for him to examine
the documents, but they now suggest in opposing the
matter proceeding as a review, that a Court on review could do so.
- [89] We do not
accept that if the appeal had been treated as a review from the outset, and
argued on that basis, that the result could
have been any different. If on
review the respondents had formally applied to adduce new evidence about the
documents, that application
would have been refused whether the hearing was by
way of appeal or review. It would have involved a factually intensive second
review hearing, a two stage process where the documents were first ordered
to be disclosed, and after disclosure were considered
by the reviewing Court de
novo. This should not happen for the first time on review. It should happen
during the original hearing,
so that on review the Court has the benefit of the
first instance considerations and conclusions. Importantly, we make it clear
in
our judgment that this step can still be taken before the Associate Judge.
- [90] If we sit
as High Court judges there will be no prejudice to rights of appeal. The usual
appeal provisions relating to an appeal
to the Court of Appeal from
High Court judges sitting in review, which are by leave under s 26P(1AA) of
the Judicature Act, will
apply.
- [91] Fourth, the
course of action we intend to take, while rare, has been previously adopted. In
Nottingham v Registered Securities Ltd (in liq) this Court relied on
s 57(4) to sit as High Court judges considering a review in a matter which
had wrongly come before it as an
appeal.[46] In that case the
respondent consented to that course being taken, but we do not see consent as
essential before the jurisdiction
plainly set out in s 57(4) can be exercised.
We agree with the comment of that Court that this is an exceptional course, and
that
appellate jurisdiction should be checked by the parties on every
occasion.[47] Other cases have
emphasised that it is an exceptional course, and declined to adopt the s 57(4)
course.[48] In none of those
cases had there been the various steps, including a full hearing, that have
taken place in this case.
- [92] In Young
v Police it was observed that if the Court of Appeal treated the appeal as
an application for review, if the successful party sought leave
to appeal the
Panel considering the appeal “would be required to deal with a challenge
to a decision of the present Panel (albeit
that the present Panel would be
acting, in effect as a full court of the High
Court)”.[49] We do not see
that issue as a difficulty in this case. If such a situation arose a Panel
constituted of different judges would
consider the application for leave, and
any appeal.
- [93] We conclude
that for the reasons we have given, in particular the cost and time devoted to
the issues to date and the lack of
any material prejudice, that we should take
the rare step of determining the issue before us as a full court of the High
Court rather
than dismiss the appeal for lack of jurisdiction.
- [94] The
respondents oppose the giving of an extension of time for the filing of a review
application. We can see no merit in this
opposition, given that with the
appellants the respondents have been actively complicit in proceeding on the
basis that an appeal
was the appropriate procedure. They have only adopted
their present stance following the Court drawing the jurisdiction question
to
the attention of their attention after the hearing.
- [95] Given that
there is no prejudice we grant an extension of time for review. We treat the
appellants’ memorandum as an application
that we hear the matters as a
full court of the High Court, and we determine that this is how we will deal
with the matter. It follows
that we will deal with the matters raised in the
hearing as a full court of the High Court sitting on
review.
Result
- [96] An
application for an extension of time to apply for a review of
the Associate Judge’s decision is granted.
- [97] We
determine that review sitting as a full court of the High Court.
- [98] The review
is allowed.
- [99] The
application to file a memorandum supporting the judgment on other grounds is
granted.
- [100] The High
Court order to direct disclosure without redactions is quashed.
- [101] The effect
of allowing this review is that the High Court judgment directing the disclosure
of each of the documents in part
3 of the schedule to their affidavits without
redactions is declined, but only to the extent that the documents or parts of
them
identify the informants who have provided the documents to Mediaworks.
- [102] In all
other respects issues of the adequacy of discovery remain open and are not
determined by this review. It is open to
the respondents to seek a further
hearing in relation to discover issues that have not been determined, or to
bring another application
in the High Court in relation to discovery. In
particular, the issue of whether the documents do in fact fall into the category
of protected documents under s 68(1) remains open.
Costs
- [103] The
appellants have been successful and are entitled to costs.
- [104] The
respondents are jointly and severally to pay one set of costs to
the appellants costs on a 2B basis under the High Court
Rules 2016 and
usual disbursements.
- [105] The costs
orders made by the Associate Judge in the High Court are quashed. If the
parties cannot agree on those High Court
costs, the issue should be determined
in the High Court in accordance with this judgment.
Solicitors:
Chapman Tripp, Auckland for
Appellants
Canterbury Legal Services Ltd, Christchurch for Respondents
[1] Staples v Freeman
[2018] NZHC 1604.
[2] Senior Courts Act 2016, s 27.
[3] Mediaworks v Staples
CA436/2018, 29 March 2019.
[4] Staples v Freeman,
above n 1, at [60]–[62].
[5] At [62].
[6] At [69].
[7] At [70].
[8] At [70].
[9] Police v Campbell
[2009] NZHC 2632; [2010] 1 NZLR 483; Slater v Blomfield [2014] NZHC 2221, [2014]
3 NZLR 835.
[10] Hager v Attorney-General
[2015] NZHC 3268, [2016] 2 NZLR 523.
[11] At [50]–[103].
[12] Slater v Blomfield,
above n 9, at [105]–[106]
and Hager v Attorney-General, above n 10, at [88].
[13] Goodwin v United Kingdom
[1996] ECHR 16, (1996) 22 EHRR 123 at [39].
[14] Ashworth Hospital
Authority v MGN Ltd [2001] 1 All ER 991
[15] At [101].
[16] Law Commission Evidence
Law: Privilege (NZLC PP23, 1994).
[17] At [338].
[18] Law Commission Evidence:
Reform of the Law (NZLC R55, 1999).
[19] At [301].
[20] At [302].
[21] Police v Campbell,
above n 9, at [93].
[22] At [90].
[23] For discussion of the
distinction see Taipeti v R [2018] NZCA 56, [2018] 3 NZLR 308 at
[41]–[50].
[24] At [106].
[25] Slater v Blomfield,
above n 9, at [112].
[26] Slater v Blomfield,
above n 9, at [112].
[27] See High Court Rules 2016,
pt 8, in particular r 8.7.
[28] At [115].
[29] Staples v Freeman,
above n 1, at [70].
[30] At [66].
[31] Slater v Blomfield,
above n 9, at [60]–[61].
[32] At [134].
[33] At [70].
[34] At [66].
[35] X Ltd v Morgan-Grampian
(Publishers) Ltd [1991] 1 AC 1 at 44.
[36] See the statement of Laws
LJ in Ashworth Hospital Authority v MGN Ltd, above n 14, at [101].
[37] High Court Rules 2016, r
8.25.
[38] At [85].
[39] The decision concerned an
application for an order under s 68 of the Evidence Act for further
particularisation in discovery. This
is an interlocutory order, see the High
Court Rules, r 1.3. Under High Court Rules, r 7.34(1) all interlocutory
applications are
to be heard in chambers, unless otherwise directed. The
Associate Judge was exercising his jurisdiction in chambers in deciding
this
application, see Judicature Act, ss 26IA and 26J.
[40] Under s 27 of the Senior
Courts Act any Associate Judge’s decision may be appealed to the Court of
Appeal, subject to s 56.
Section 56(3) provides that any appeal against an
order or decision of the High Court made on an interlocutory application in
respect
of any civil proceeding requires leave of the High Court to appeal to
the Court of Appeal.
[41] Nottingham v Registered
Securities Ltd (in liq) [1998] NZCA 75; (1998) 12 PRNZ 625 at 628; Young v New Zealand
Police [2006] NZCA 111; [2007] NZAR 92 (CA) at [12]–[15].
[42] The Senior Courts Act came
into effect on 1 March 2017, after these proceedings were filed. The
proceedings continue under the
Judicature Act, see the Senior Courts Act, sch 5
cl 10(1).
[43] Mediaworks v Staples
CA436/2018, 29 March 2019.
[44] Court of Appeal (Civil)
Rules 2005, r 47.
[45] High Court Rules, r 2.3(4).
[46] Nottingham v Registered
Securities Ltd (in liq), above n 41.
[47] At 628.
[48] See Young v Police,
above n 41.
[49] Young v Police,
above n 41, at [18].
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