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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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IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF NEW ZEALAND

I TE KŌTI PĪRA O AOTEAROA
CA436/2018
[2019] NZCA 133



BETWEEN

MEDIAWORKS TV LIMITED
First Appellant

KATE MCCALLUM
Second Appellant

TRISTRAM CLAYTON
Third Appellant


AND

BRYAN DOUGLAS STAPLES
First Respondent

CLAIMS RESOLUTION SERVICE LIMITED
Second Respondent

Hearing:

21 February 2019, further submissions received on 8 April 2019

Court:

Miller, Asher and Clifford JJ

Counsel:

J G Miles QC and T F Cleary for Appellants
P A Morten and J Moss for Respondents

Judgment:

3 May 2019 at 10 am


JUDGMENT OF MILLER, ASHER AND CLIFFORD JJ

  1. The application for an extension of time to apply for a review of the Associate Judge’s decision is granted.
  2. We determine the review sitting as a full court of the High Court.
  1. The application to file a memorandum supporting the judgment on other grounds is granted.
  1. The review is allowed.
  2. The High Court order to direct disclosure without redactions is quashed.
  3. 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.
  4. 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.
  5. 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.
  6. 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

Background

District Court proceedings

(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.

The first Campbell Live programme

(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.

The second Campbell Live programme

The lists of documents

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.

Document ID
Parent Document ID
Date
Description
From
To
MED_STA_100.00012

21/07/2014
Email
Mediaworks
Mediaworks
MED_STA_100.00013
MED_STA_100.00012
12/05/1998
Court Document


MED_STA_100.00014
MED_STA_100.00012
5/05/2014
Court Document


MED_STA_100.00015
MED_STA_100.00012
25/07/2013
Court Document


MED_STA_100.00016
MED_STA_100.00012
5/06/2014
Email
Confidential
Confidential
MED_STA_100.00046

21/07/2014
Email
Mediaworks
Mediaworks
MED_STA_100.00047
MED_STA_100.00046
12/05/1998
Court Document


MED_STA_100.00048
MED_STA_100.00046
5/05/2014
Court Document


MED_STA_100.00049
MED_STA_100.00046
25/06/2013
Court Document


MED_STA_100.00050
MED_STA_100.00046
10/03/2013
Email
Confidential
Confidential
MED_STA_100.00051

21/07/2014
Email
Mediaworks
Mediaworks

The issue

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.

The High Court judgment

[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.

The issues

Section 68 of the Evidence Act

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.

The public interest in the disclosure of the informants’ identity

The likely adverse effect of the disclosure on the informants or any other person

Public interest in communication with the media

[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).

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.

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.

Weighing the factors

Other issues

Jurisdiction

Result

Costs





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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