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Staples v Freeman [2021] NZHC 1308 (4 June 2021)
Last Updated: 13 November 2024
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IN THE HIGH COURT OF NEW ZEALAND CHRISTCHURCH REGISTRY
I TE KŌTI MATUA O AOTEAROA ŌTAUTAHI ROHE
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BETWEEN
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BRYAN DOUGLAS STAPLES
First Plaintiff
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AND
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CLAIMS RESOLUTION SERVICE LIMITED
Second Plaintiff
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AND
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RICHARD LOGAN FREEMAN
First Defendant
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AND
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MEDIAWORKS TV LIMITED
Second Defendant
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AND
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KATE MCCALLUM
Third Defendant
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AND
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TRISTRAM CLAYTON
Fourth Defendant
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Hearing:
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23 March 2021
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Appearances:
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P A Morten for Plaintiffs
No appearance for Defendants
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Judgment:
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4 June 2021
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Reissued:
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14 November 2022
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JUDGMENT OF DOOGUE J
This judgment was reissued by me on 14 November 2022 at
11.00 am pursuant to Rule 11.5 of the High Court Rules
Registrar/Deputy Registrar Date:
Overview [1]
Background [6]
The posts [16]
Issues for determination
[24]
Evidence on behalf of Mr Staples [28]
Were defamatory statements
made about Mr Staples? [34]
The Facebook posts
[40]
The District Court
documents [42]
Did Mr Freeman publish the
statements? [54]
The
Facebook posts [55]
The District Court
documents [56]
Defences
Absolute
privilege [57]
Remedies [60]
Declaration [61]
Damages [62]
The gravity of the defamation [67]
The extent of the publication [70]
The harm suffered by Mr Staples [79]
Aggravated damages [89]
Overall assessment
[92]
Punitive damages
[98]
Interest [101]
Costs [110]
Result [111]
Overview
- [1] Mr
Bryan Staples, the first plaintiff in the proceedings, and his company Claims
Resolution Services Ltd (CRS), the second plaintiff,
provide assistance to
homeowners with unresolved Earthquake Commission (EQC) and insurance claims for
damage caused by the Canterbury
earthquake sequence. These proceedings involve a
claim that the defendants defamed Mr Staples and CRS when they made allegations
of fraudulent and illegitimate practices by Mr Staples and CRS.
- [2] The second
defendant is Mediaworks TV Ltd (Mediaworks). The third is Kate McCallum, a
television producer. The fourth defendant
is Tristram Clayton, a journalist.
Both the third and fourth defendants were employed by Mediaworks at all relevant
times. For convenience
all three are referred to as Mediaworks.
- [3] This
application concerns only the first defendant, Mr Richard Logan Freeman (Mr
Freeman). Mr Freeman has failed to file a statement
of defence to the claims
made against him, so this claim proceeded by way of formal proof.
- [4] The
Court’s role is to establish whether Mr Staples has established the
elements of his claim and, if he has, to consider
the issue of remedies. The
standard to which I am required to be satisfied on the plaintiff’s
evidence “is much the same
as it would be if the proceeding had gone to
trial”.1 The applicable standard of proof is therefore the
balance of probabilities. In this formal proof setting I am not required to
consider
hypothetical affirmative defences.2
- [5] If I am
persuaded the elements of the claim are proven Mr Freeman will be liable for
defamation. I would then assess Mr Staples’
claims for:
(a) general damages (including aggravated damages);
(b) punitive damages;
(c) interest; and
1 Ferreira v Stockinger [2015] NZHC 2916 at [35].
2 Booth v Poplar Road Farms Ltd [2019] NZHC 807.
(d) costs and disbursements.
Background
- [6] Mr
Staples formed CRS in August 2012. The company was designed to address a
perceived need for advocacy services against EQC and
insurers. Homeowners who
wanted to challenge EQC or their insurer needed resources to engage lawyers and
experts to provide a professional
basis for that challenge. CRS provided
loss/damage assessment services independent of both EQC and insurers on a
“no win, no
pay” basis.
- [7] When a
client first met with CRS they were provided an initial damage assessment report
(IDA). The IDA consisted of a global damage
assessment and a costed scope of
works. This enabled the client to determine whether their EQC/insurance loss
assessment was fair
and accurate. IDAs were produced by contracted builders or
in-house engineers and consultants. Some residents obtained an IDA from
CRS and
then went back to EQC or their insurer themselves, but many continued with
CRS.
- [8] Those who
chose to retain CRS’s services signed a contract with CRS. CRS undertook
to fund the resolution of claims on behalf
of clients, and clients were given
access to the necessary resources to resolve their claim. The cost of those
resources was deferred
until the end of the process, with CRS taking a share of
any settlement proceeds. At this point CRS would contact the insurer and
EQC on
behalf of the client to obtain a settlement proposal. However, offers obtained
at this stage were frequently seen as unfair
and consequently
rejected.
- [9] Mr Staples
says litigation was generally the only way to progress a claim further. This
forced EQC to engage the experts necessary
to make decisions around settlement.
In his words, he “cannot overstate how difficult it was to deal with these
organisations
and how committed they were to under-settling
claims”.
- [10] To
facilitate litigation CRS generally recommended the client use one of several
affiliated lawyers. From that point CRS would
hand over all documentation to the
lawyer and take a backseat role. Their services at this point were
generally
limited to funding, usually to obtain the services of expert witnesses. Few
cases proceeded to trial and many clients received settlements
in excess of what
had been previously offered to them.
- [11] In 2013
Malcolm Gibson (Mr Gibson) was employed by CRS. He claimed to be a highly
qualified quantity surveyor. That was not true.
Mr Staples discovered this and
requested Mr Gibson instruct a suitably qualified quantity surveyor to sign off
the work he had done.
Mr Gibson refused. Consequently, CRS did not pay
outstanding fees of approximately $170,000 owed to Mr Gibson’s company as
the work he had done had no commercial value.
- [12] Mr
Gibson’s response was to assign the alleged debt for $1 to Ironclad
Securities Ltd (Ironclad) on 7 March 2014.
- [13] On the
morning of 11 March 2014 two intimidating men arrived at Mr Staples’ home
to serve him with “debt acquisition
documents”. They required him to
pay the
$170,000 within seven days and said they would kill him if he did not comply.
- [14] At this
stage Mr Staples had a high public profile. He was regularly interviewed by the
media and had gained a reputation as
someone who was providing access to justice
for people who had been neglected by EQC and insurers.
- [15] On 10 April
2014 Mr Staples discovered the following posts on Ironclad’s Facebook page
that mentioned him by name. He argues
they are defamatory.
The posts
- [16] Posted on 8
April 2014:
Another day....... Here we are serving D88 debt documents to one of the
countries most well known Conmen and the boys in blue turn up (to support
them and issue trespass orders as they don’t like us serving them debt
documents) Keep
reading and you will see.
Not only has this clown and his corrupt business partner ripped off a
client for
$170,000 over 181 invoices that are not disputed and fully audited he
has had articles written about him in main stream media warning them of his
background.
Top blogger Whale Oil has also exposed them. These two have had
over 24 companies struck off the NZ Companies register and more debt
showing up daily. They are professional conmen that manipulate
police, media, lawyers and loop holes to continue to rip Innocent people
off. We have another $50k debt reported on them too.
If you know of any other debt or dodgy dealings of the following
Conmen, please come forward as they need stopped before more people are
burnt!!
Victor Cattamole of Trade A Home Ltd (Google search this
one. he’s
something else)
Brian Staples of Earthquake Services Ltd
They have even broken the law by unknowingly taping a NZ Police officer
and attempting to use it as leverage (highly illegal). Made false statements
and continue to hide behind loop holes.
Message us with any details as they are doing their usual. Crying foul to
hide their debts......
(emphasis added)
- [17] Posted on 9
April 2014:
The infamous Victor Cattamole (Google search this man) and Bryan Staples of
Trade A Home Ltd and Earthquake Services Ltd.
These men have over 24 companies struck off the companies Register and
have had articles written about them!!!
We have uncovered over $300,000 of debt so far where these Conmen
have
ripped innocent people off!!
The pattern is always the same. Staples uses his media whistle blowing lime
light as a weapon against unassuming creditors while Cattamole
makes up stories.
They essentially bully and threaten good people out of their
debt.........
These two are the worst case we have seen and we are uncovering more
daily!!!!!!!
If you have been ripped off by these two clowns PM us, THEY MUST BE
STOPPED!!!!!
Batter up “boys” Ironclad doesn’t get bullied!! Help us
stop these men doing this to others!!!!!
Follow our page for more updates and Conmen we will be exposing!! We
have another big name going to the chopping block as well......
Some debt is plain bad luck but some is calculated and managed......
That’s who we go after.......
“You know you owe” (emphasis added)
- [18] And on 10
April 2014:
Further information sort on these two “businessmen”
The infamous Victor Cattamole (Google search these men. Unbelievable
read) and his business partner Bryan Staples.
Bryan owns Earthquake Services Ltd or EQS (funny how close that is to EQC)
They both own Trade A Home Ltd’s as well.
We now have reported debt of over $300,000.00 and growing. Both have
interesting pasts to say the least.....
Unfortunately for you guys we don’t scare or bully.
We know for a fact that both these fine upstanding men are watching our page
and making complaints. Booohooooo
Perhaps you actually address the $200,000.00 debt we are persuuing rather
than hiding and making false complaints.
Also sending emails of tape recordings around town.
We have a growing list of people coming forward now and want to hear from
anyone else these two men owe money to.
Seriously people Google search these two......
Bryan loves to threaten media etc After his EQC minute in the sun
and
Victor....... Well what to say........
We are happy to go public and expose everything we know.
Help us chch and come forward with the others who have been on the wrong end
of these guys.
We have more each day.
Share this post and like our page (emphasis added)
- [19] These posts
were shared by other individuals, and Ironclad posted comments making similar
statements. Mr Staples fielded calls
from clients who had seen the posts and
were concerned about what they had read.
- [20] Mr Staples
issued defamation proceedings against Ironclad and its associates and sought an
interim injunction. On 15 April 2014,
District Court Judge Kellar granted a
without notice application for interim injunction on 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.
- [21] Mr Freeman
filed a statement of defence on behalf of Ironclad and the other respondents who
were listed as directors of the company.
They acknowledged making the statements
and argued a defence of “truth”. As part of the statement of defence
Mr Freeman
provided an affidavit where he elaborated on his attack
against Mr Staples. He acknowledged making the statements and relied
on the
defence of truth. Affidavits were also provided by Mr Bevan Craig, Mr
Michel Pearl and Mr David Wilson.
- [22] From this
Mr Staples learnt that Mr Freeman was the manager of Ironclad and the
administrator of the Facebook page. He successfully
applied to have Mr Freeman
joined to the proceedings as a defendant on 11 June 2014.
- [23] In August
2015 Mr Staples sought and obtained restraining orders against Mr Freeman
under the Harassment Act 1997.3 Mr Freeman appeared to have developed
a grievance against Mr Staples. Ironclad appeared to be little more than
“enforcers”.
Neither Mr Freeman nor Ironclad attempted at any stage
to refer the debt to the appropriate judicial body. Instead, Mr Staples alleges
Mr Freeman sent
3 Staples v Freeman [2015] NZDC 14797.
threatening messages, told Mr Staples he had placed vehicle trackers on his
vehicle and threatened him at work. As District Court
Judge Neave
said:4
Heavy handed attempts to try and extract payment of a sum which is in dispute
and has never been the subject of judicial determination
must be deprecated in
the strongest terms.
Issues for determination
- [24] The
issues for determination in this case are whether Mr Staples has established
that:
(a) a defamatory statement has been made about him; and
(b) the statement was published by Mr Freeman.
- [25] The first
part of the claim is in respect of the Facebook posts of Ironclad.
- [26] The second
part of the claim is in respect of documents filed by Mr Freeman in the
injunction proceedings. The documents were
the statement of defence and the
affidavits of Mr Freeman, Mr Pearl, Mr Craig and Mr Wilson (the District Court
documents).
- [27] It is
immaterial that the statements in Mr Pearl, Mr Craig and Mr Wilson’s
affidavits were not made by Mr Freeman. As Lord
Denning put
it:5
Our English law does not love tale-bearers. If the report or rumour was true,
let him justify it. If it was not true, he ought not
to have repeated it or
aided its circulation. He must answer for it just as if he had started it
himself.
Evidence on behalf of Mr Staples
- [28] Affidavits
were filed in support of Mr Staples’ claim.
- [29] In his
first affidavit Mr Staples sets out the background already included in this
judgment. He also filed a brief supplementary
affidavit that clarifies certain
matters from his earlier affidavit. Mr Staples provided almost all the
supporting evidence
4 Staples v Freeman, above n 3, at [24].
5 Dingle v Associated Newspapers Ltd [1964] AC 371 (HL) at
410-411.
I refer to, including copies of the District Court documents. Several weeks
after the hearing I asked Mr Staples to file a third
affidavit clarifying the
harm caused to him by each publication. He did so.
- [30] Hong Mei
Staples (Mrs Staples), Mr Staples’ wife, provided an affidavit
corroborating Mr Staples’ account of the
“biker thugs”
threatening them and providing evidence of the effects of the alleged defamation
on Mr Staples.
- [31] Cheryl
Lauren McLeish (Ms McLeish), a client advocate for CRS, deposes CRS suffered an
immediate loss of clients after the Campbell
Live programmes aired.
Specifically, Ms McLeish says “we were heroes before the programme but
after it we were dirt”.
- [32] Jai Moss
(Mr Moss), barrister, deposes he acted for Mr Staples and CRS until 2019.
Specifically, he obtained the interim injunction
and restraining order on behalf
of Mr Staples. He says he met with Mr Freeman multiple times and exhibits two
file notes from these
meetings.
- [33] Lisle John
Hood (Mr Hood), Christchurch property investor, says Mr Staples and CRS helped
him and his sister secure settlements
they never would have achieved on their
own. Mr Hood also discussed the impact of the second Campbell Live programme on
Mr Staples
and CRS. He said people who previously admired Mr Staples
were now “permanently turned off”.
Were defamatory statements made about Mr Staples?
- [34] Mr
Staples must prove, in relation to each claim, that defamatory statements were
made about him.
- [35] In Craig
v Slater, the Court of Appeal said:6
- [15] For a
statement to bear a (defamatory) meaning alleged, two fundamental pre-conditions
must be met. First, it must be the meaning
an ordinary, reasonable person would
draw or infer from the words, taken in their context and in light of generally
known facts.
Secondly, that meaning must be pleaded.
6 Craig v Slater [2020] NZCA 305 (footnotes omitted).
- [16] Whether a
statement is capable of bearing a particular meaning is a question of law;
whether it in fact conveys that meaning
is a question of
fact.
...
- [36] The meaning
of a statement is interpreted from the perspective of an objective reasonable
person. The reasonable person is:7
... fair-minded, not avid for scandal, not unduly suspicious, nor one prone
to fasten on to one derogatory meaning when other innocent
or at least less
serious meanings could apply.
- [37] No specific
definition of defamation is contained in statute, instead the matter is left to
the courts.
- [38] The
following four definitions of a defamatory statement have achieved “fairly
common currency” across common law
jurisdictions:8
(a) a statement which may tend to lower the plaintiff in the estimation of
right-thinking members of society generally;9
(b) a false statement about a person to his or her discredit;10
(c) a publication without justification which is calculated to injure the
reputation of another by exposing him or her to hatred,
contempt or
ridicule;11 and
(d) a statement about a person which tends to make others shun or avoid him or
her.12
- [39] In general,
a defamatory statement tends to affect the claimant’s reputation adversely
and in a more than minor way.13
7 New Zealand Magazines Ltd v Hadlee (No 2) [2005] NZAR 621
(CA) at 630.
8 Stephen Todd (ed) Todd on Torts (8th ed, Thomson Reuters,
Wellington, 2019) at 846-847.
9 Sim v Stretch [1936] 2 All ER 1237 (HL) at 1240.
10 Youssoupoff v Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer (1934) 50 TLR 581 (CA)
at 584.
11 Parmiter v Coupland [1840] EngR 168; (1840) 151 ER 340 (Exch) at 342.
12 Youssoupoff v Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer, above n 10, at
587.
13 Craig v Slater, above n 6, at [44]-[45].
The Facebook posts
- [40] The
Facebook posts, in their natural and ordinary meaning, state that Mr
Staples:
(a) is a conman;
(b) rips off innocent people, his clients;
(c) owes an undisputed debt of $170,000;
(d) illegally taped a police officer;
(e) with Mr Victor Cattermole has had over 24 companies struck off;
(f) owes $300,000 in debt;
(g) bullies and threatens good people;
(h) is making false complaints; and
(i) threatens media.
- [41] These
statements contained in the Facebook posts clearly amount to an attack on Mr
Staples’ character that, if taken as
true, would adversely affect his
reputation with right-thinking members of the public. I therefore find the
Facebook posts were defamatory
of Mr Staples.
The District Court documents
- [42] The
statement of defence in the injunction proceedings at paragraph four makes the
following allegations:
- We
say:
(a) The plaintiff is corrupt and a thief;
(b) The plaintiff has an unpaid debt and undisputed debt of over
$170,000.00;
(c) The plaintiff and his associate Mr Victor Cattermole together have over 24
companies struck off;
(d) The plaintiff is a fraudster and a conman;
(e) The plaintiff is in business with Mr Victor Cattermole;
(f) The plaintiff has committed an unlawful act;
(g) The plaintiff has defrauded members of the public.
- [43] Aside from
(e), these allegations are defamatory in their natural and ordinary
meaning.
- [44] Further,
the statement of defence records the defamatory statements contained in the
Facebook posts and pleads they are true.
A fair-minded and objective reasonable
person would see this as a restatement of the allegations contained in the
Facebook posts.
If they bore a defamatory meaning, as they did, then implicitly
restating them is similarly defamatory. I therefore find the statement
of
defence contained defamatory statements.
- [45] In his
affidavit Mr Freeman similarly restated the defamatory statements contained in
the Facebook posts and pleaded they were
true. For the same reason as for the
statement of defence I find this was defamatory.
- [46] Mr Freeman
also alleges Mr Staples uses unqualified assessors; has failed to pay
subcontractors; has failed to pay the Inland
Revenue Department (IRD) for PAYE
tax for over 11 months; has failed to pay Filipino workers; has failed to pay
rent; and generally
accrues debt he has no intention of paying as common
business practice.
- [47] Similar
allegations are repeated in the affidavits of Mr Craig, Mr Pearl and Mr
Wilson.
- [48] Mr Craig
accuses Mr Staples of questionable business practices; failure to pay rent;
fraudulent alternation of a loan agreement;
conning business colleagues; and
involvement in a fraudulent re-dating of a mortgage document in Australia.
- [49] Mr Pearl
accuses Mr Staples of fraudulent withdrawal of funds from a bank account; theft;
employing people with no experience
in the building industry to carry out
earthquake reports; employing staff with serious criminal convictions; failure
to pay subcontractors;
deceitful business practices and doctoring of invoices;
non-payment of tax, rent and employees’ wages (especially to Filipino
immigrants); exploitation of Filipino workers, including bringing them to New
Zealand to work as sex workers; money laundering; being
a conman; making
unauthorised transactions as a shareholder; and lying to the Disputes
Tribunal.
- [50] Mr Wilson
accuses Mr Staples of improper business practices; responsibility for
non-payment of wages to Filipino workers; non-payment
of tax; money laundering;
a business practice of not paying bills; unauthorised private use of company
bank accounts; using untrained
labour for painting and house repair;
exploitation of Filipino workers, including bringing them to New Zealand to work
in brothels;
and theft.
- [51] These
allegations, if taken as true, would clearly bring Mr Staples into disrepute in
the eyes of right-thinking members of the
public. They represent a sustained and
comprehensive attack on Mr Staples’ character and business practices. They
would negatively
affect Mr Staples’ reputation in the eyes of an objective
reasonable person in a more than trivial or minor way.
- [52] Mr Staples
does not need to prove that the statements are false to sustain a cause of
action, he merely needs to show they are
defamatory. Truth is, however, an
affirmative defence to a claim of defamation.
- [53] I find the
statements contained in the District Court documents are defamatory of Mr
Staples.
Did Mr Freeman publish the statements?
- [54] I
now consider whether Mr Freeman published the defamatory statements or
not.
The Facebook posts
- [55] This issue
is relatively non-contentious. Mr Freeman has admitted to administering the
Ironclad Facebook page. Each Facebook
post was viewed, liked, commented on and
shared by members of the public. It is implicit in this admission and his
evidence in the
District Court documents that he made the relevant posts. I
therefore find on the balance of probabilities that it is more likely
than not
that Mr Freeman published the Facebook posts.
The District Court documents
- [56] Similarly,
the statements made in the District Court documents were published by Mr
Freeman. However, in respect of this publication,
I must consider the defence of
absolute privilege.
Defences
Absolute
privilege
- [57] Section
14(1) of the Defamation Act 1992 provides that:
(1) Subject to any provision to the contrary in any other enactment, in any
proceedings before—
(a) a tribunal or authority that is established by or pursuant to any enactment
and that has power to compel the attendance of witnesses;
or
...
anything said, written, or done in those proceedings by a member of the
tribunal or authority, or by a party, representative, or witness,
is protected
by absolute privilege.
- [58] This
privilege includes pleadings and documents from the inception of the
proceedings, briefs of evidence, affidavits and statements
made during
interviews with potential witnesses.14 The rule is founded on the
policy that witnesses should be able to “give their testimony free from
any fear of being harassed
by an action of an
14 Rawlinson v Oliver [1995] 3 NZLR 62 (CA).
allegation, whether true or false, that they acted from malice”.15
However, that principle must be balanced against the need to provide a
remedy to a citizen who has their good name and reputation
attacked by a
maliciously reproduced falsehood.
- [59] The
District Court of New Zealand is a court of record established by the District
Court Act 2016.16 It has the power to compel the attendance of
witnesses and it is an offence to fail to appear after a summons without
reasonable excuse.17 A statement of defence and accompanying
affidavit evidence filed in the District Court is something written in
proceedings by a party
or witness. The District Court documents are, therefore,
protected by absolute privilege. On that basis, to the extent the claim
relies
on these documents as a separate publication warranting damages for defamation,
the claim must fail.
Remedies
- [60] As
Mr Staples has made out the elements of his claim in respect of the Facebook
posts, I must now assess the remedies he is entitled
to. Mr Staples
seeks:
(a) a declaration that Mr Freeman is liable to him in defamation;
(b) general damages of $350,000, including aggravated damages;
(c) punitive damages of $10,000;
(d) interest from the date of the cause of action; and
(e) costs.
Declaration
- [61] I declare
Mr Freeman is liable to Mr Staples in defamation pursuant to s 24 of the
Defamation Act.
- Teletax
Consultants Ltd v Williams [1989] NZCA 23; [1989] 1 NZLR 698 (CA) at 701, citing Trapp v
Machie [1979] 1 WLR 377 (HL) at 379.
16 District
Court Act 2016, s 7.
17 District Court Act, s 102; and District Court Rules 2014, r
9.43.
Damages
- [62] General
damages in defamation are directed towards the injury sustained as a result of
the damage to the plaintiff’s reputation.18
- [63] The task of
this Court is to assess the Facebook posts in light of the gravity of the
defamation, the extent of the publication,
the harm suffered by Mr Staples and
whether there were any aggravating features justifying an award of aggravated
damages.19
- [64] Awarding
damages is always difficult when the harm is to reputation. The ordinary
principle is that damages should restore the
plaintiff to the position they were
in before the defamation occurred.20
- [65] Money
cannot restore reputation and the courts must embark upon the convoluted task of
determining what a defamatory statement
is “worth”.21 To
a large extent, the purpose of awarding money is to vindicate the defendant in
the eyes of the public.22 In that sense a symbolic element exists
alongside the compensatory.
- [66] In John
v MGN Ltd the principles relating to compensatory damages in defamation were
set out as follows:23
The successful plaintiff in a
defamation action is entitled to recover, as general compensatory damages, such
sum as will compensate
him for the wrong he has suffered. That sum must
compensate him for the damage to his reputation; vindicate his good name; and
take
account of the distress, hurt and humiliation which the defamatory
publication has caused. In assessing the appropriate damages for
injury to
reputation the most important factor is the gravity of the libel; the more
closely it touches the plaintiff’s personal
integrity, professional
reputation, honour, courage, loyalty and the core attributes of his personality,
the more serious it is likely
to be. The extent of the publication is also very
relevant: a libel published to millions has a greater potential to cause damage
than a libel published to a handful of people. A successful plaintiff may
properly look to an award of damages to vindicate his reputation:
but the
significance of this is much greater in a case where the defendant asserts
the
18 Karam v Parker [2014] NZHC 737 at [225].
- Solomon
v Prater [2021] NZHC 481 at [103], citing Williams v Craig [2018]
NZCA 31, [2018] 3 NZLR 1 at [31].
20 Solomon v
Prater, above n 19, at [99].
21 Stephen Todd, above n 8, at 886.
22 Cassell & Co Ltd v Broome [1972] UKHL 3; [1972] AC 1027 (HL) at
1070-1071.
- John
v MGN Ltd [1997] QB 586 (CA) at 607, adopted in Williams v Craig,
above n 19, at [31]; and Television New Zealand Ltd v Quinn [1996] 3 NZLR
24 (CA) at 33-38.
truth of the libel and refuses any retraction or
apology than in a case where the defendant acknowledges the falsity of what was
published
and publicly expresses regret that the libellous publication took
place.
The gravity of the defamation
- [67] Mr Morten
submitted the Facebook posts make serious allegations at the high end of the
gravity of defamation. He submitted the
Facebook posts constituted a full- scale
assault on Mr Staples’ reputation.
- [68] I agree
with Mr Morten’s submissions. The Facebook posts, in their natural and
ordinary meaning, left few aspects of Mr
Staples’ reputation unsullied. He
had a significant and positive public reputation which was called into question
by the posts,
as evidenced by the number of clients who called Mr Staples,
concerned about what they had read online.
- [69] Mr Freeman
was financially motivated to defame Mr Staples. The Facebook posts appeared to
further an extortion attempt against
him. As part of his extortion attempt, Mr
Freeman sent Mr Staples offensive emails and threats resulting in the
restraining order
made by Judge Neave in August 2015. Mr Freeman has not
publicly recanted his allegations.
The extent of the publication
- [70] The extent
of circulation of the defamatory statement is relevant to damages in defamation
as “[t]he greater the circulation
the higher the damages tend to
be”.24 Still, the courts have recognised that limited
publication can be extremely damaging.25 It is open to the Court to
infer a degree of publication where a website, or as here a public page, is
generally accessible.26
- [71] In this
case, the posts at issue were made between 8 and 10 April 2014. The District
Court issued an interim injunction on 15
April 2014 requiring the posts
be
24 Court v Aitken [2006] NZAR 619 (HC) at [40].
25 Court v Aitken, above n 24, at [40].
- Ursula
Cheer Burrows & Cheer Media Law in New Zealand (8th ed, LexisNexis,
Wellington, 2021) at 70, citing Al Amoudi v Brisard [2006] EWHC 1062,
[2007] 1 WLR 113 at [35].
taken down.27 The posts were made to a public Facebook page that was
liked by some 400 Facebook users. Each post was viewed, liked, commented on
and
shared by members of the public. This Court has also heard evidence from Mr
Staples that he was contacted by a number of his
clients who had seen the posts
and were concerned. Beyond that, it is difficult to determine how many people
viewed the posts.
- [72] Clark J, in
Solomon v Prater, referred to the following passage from the English case
of Dhir v Saddler:28
55. In my judgment, the authorities demonstrate that it is the quality
of the publishees not their quantity that is likely to determine
the issue of serious harm in cases involving relatively small-scale
publications. What matters is not
the extent of publication, but to whom the
words are published. ...
- [73] Therefore,
my assessment of the extent of publication is not merely a numerical exercise. I
must consider the effect and importance
of the publication to the people to whom
it was published and on Mr Staples.
- [74] In Lee v
Lee, the defendant wrote a defamatory article that was published in a weekly
Korean language newspaper.29 It had a print run of 3,000 copies, was
published online and targeted at the Korean community. The plaintiff was a
senior member of
the Korean community and the article defamed him primarily in
relation to his actions as part of that group. Although the article
received
limited circulation outside the community, it caused substantial harm to him
within it.
- [75] In
Solomon v Prater, the defendant wrote a letter containing defamatory
statements about Mr Solomon.30 It was distributed to a confined
Moriori community with a limited number of recipients. However, as in
Lee, Mr Solomon was a senior figure within that community, so the
publication caused him substantial harm.
- [76] In Karam
v Parker, the first defendant was the administrator of a Facebook page and
creator of a website on which he and third parties posted defamatory
- Staples
v Ironclad Securities Ltd DC Christchurch CIV-2014-009-762, 15 April 2014
[Minute of Judge Kellar].
- Solomon
v Prater, above n 19, at [111], citing Dhir v Saddler [2017] EWHC
3155 (QB) (emphasis in original).
29 Lee v Lee
[2018] NZHC 3136.
30 Solomon v Prater, above n 19.
comments.31 The defendant took special steps, including an interview
with a newspaper, to raise the profile of the Facebook page and the website,
which seriously exacerbated the damage done.
- [77] Hunter v
Ross concerned a defamation claim in respect of statements made about two
lawyers by their former client alleging dishonesty, laziness
and incompetency
that were published to the defendant’s website.32 The website
was estimated to have around 1,000 unique views per day, and the defamatory
statements were live for approximately five
days.
- [78] Here, the
extent of the publication was most similar to that in Lee and Hunter.
As in Lee, Mr Staples had a strong profile in the relevant community,
in this case the community of Canterbury. Based on the evidence available,
it
seems likely that the number of unique viewers of the Facebook posts would be
comparable to these cases.
The harm suffered by Mr Staples
- [79] Mr Staples
initially deposed the publication of the defamatory statements was extremely
damaging to his reputation but gave insufficient
information to the Court about
that. I issued a minute requesting Mr Staples provide a further affidavit
detailing his personal feelings
on the harm caused by each
publication.
- [80] Mr Staples
said this is “perhaps the most difficult thing that has ever been asked of
[him]”. He refers to his background
as a private investigator and says the
skill he held paramount was his ability to compartmentalise and sequester his
feelings.
- [81] Mr Staples
says when he first arrived in Christchurch after the September 2010 earthquake
to work for EQC he was faced with a
confused and chaotic organisation. He says
he was viewed as an outsider and recalls it was a bullying environment. However,
he says
this did not shake his determination to do a good job.
- [82] He says
when his letters to the high command of EQC about ineptitude at the organisation
fell on deaf ears he set up his own
business to offer better access to
justice
31 Karam v Parker, above n 18.
32 Hunter v Ross [2019] NZHC 2489.
for homeowners. He felt under enormous pressure from the Government, EQC and
insurers but that did not dissuade him from what he
saw as “the good
fight”. He says his customers were largely forgotten by these
organisations.
- [83] This
background is important because it sets out the pride Mr Staples had in his
professionalism and integrity. This integrity
should have been free from
unsubstantiated attack.33
- [84] Mr Staples
says everything changed when Mr Freeman and his “Headhunter
henchmen” entered his life. Mr Freeman’s
campaign against him
affected his family, reputation and mental health. Mr Staples says he was
ill-equipped to deal with the co-ordinated
attacks against him and that they
were different from anything he had experienced before. He describes five
distinct episodes of
harm and, in some cases, trauma.
- [85] Mrs Staples
gave evidence that Mr Staples became an insomniac and was prescribed with
antidepressant medication.
- [86] It is clear
that the posts were of significant enough concern to Mr Staples at the time to
motivate him to commence defamation
proceedings in the District Court. I
have no reason to doubt his evidence and that of his wife that the posts were
extremely
damaging to both his personal reputation and the reputation of his
business.
- [87] The
impairment of one’s relations with others can interfere in quite
unpredictable and unforeseen ways with the enjoyment
of
life.34
- [88] There are
two tempering factors in this case. The first is that much of the evidence
relating to the emotional harm suffered
by Mr Staples was caused subsequent to
the effect of the Facebook posts rather than what can be identified and sheeted
home to the
Facebook posts themselves. The second is that there is extremely
limited evidence relating to whether CRS suffered any tangible losses
by virtue
of the Facebook posts in isolation.
33 Siemer v Stiassny [2011] NZCA 106, [2011] 2 NZLR 361 at
[87].
34 Siemer v Stiassny, above n 33, at [48].
Aggravated damages
- [89] Aggravated
damages are awarded when the harm caused by the defamation is exacerbated by the
manner in which the defendant defamed
the plaintiff or the defendant’s
subsequent conduct.35 The Court of Appeal in Siemer v Stiassny
found that the best approach is to award an overall sum for general damages
without particularising the portion of that sum accruing
as a consequence of the
defendant’s aggravating conduct.36 That is the approach I adopt
here.
- [90] I consider
the following aggravating factors which, if considered separately, would justify
a large award of aggravated damages:
(a) Mr Freeman was financially motivated to defame Mr Staples — the
Facebook posts appeared to further an extortion attempt
against him;
(b) as part of his extortion attempt, Mr Freeman sent offensive emails and made
threats against Mr Staples, which resulted in the
restraining order made by
Judge Neave in August 2015;37 and
(c) Mr Freeman advanced the defence of truth at both sets of District Court
proceedings and has not publicly recanted his allegations.
- [91] I consider
all these factors in assessing the appropriate global award of
damages.
Overall assessment
- [92] Damages in
defamation proceedings are always fact-specific, but it is useful to refer to
comparable cases.38 In light of the extent of the publication and the
harm that can reasonably be attributed to the Facebook posts in isolation, there
are two useful comparators — Hunter v Ross and Lee v
Lee.39
35 See Siemer v Stiassny, above n 33, at [51].
36 At [73].
37 Staples v Freeman, above n 3.
38 Solomon v Prater, above n 19, at [126]; and Karam v
Parker, above n 18, at [234].
39 Hunter v Ross, above n 32; and Lee v Lee, above n
29.
- [93] Hunter v
Ross concerned a defamation claim in respect of statements made about two
lawyers by their former client alleging dishonesty, laziness
and incompetency
that were published to the defendant’s website. The website was estimated
to have around 1,000 unique views
per day. The statements were live on the
website for approximately five days. The material was plainly defamatory and
designed to
injure the plaintiffs in their professional reputation. The High
Court upheld the award by the District Court of overall damages
of $50,000 to
the first plaintiff and $34,000 to the second plaintiff, recognising additional
defamatory comments made in respect
of the first plaintiff.
- [94] The
evidence here is that some 400 people liked the page at the time the posts were
made and that the posts were shared by other
users before they were taken down.
The gravity of the allegations here is arguably more serious than in Hunter v
Ross as the posts allege criminal and intentional conduct rather than
incompetence.
- [95] In Lee v
Lee the Court awarded the plaintiff damages of $150,000. The harm done to Mr
Staples is comparable. In Mr Lee’s case the personal
harm done to him was
of greater gravity as the publication was targeted at a close-knit community of
which he was a senior member.
However, here Mr Staples and his family have
suffered from personal distress, albeit to a lesser extent, and it is clear that
some
amount of damage to the reputation of his business can be attributed to the
Facebook posts given the communications he had with concerned
clients. On
balance I consider the harm Mr Staples suffered exclusively as a result of the
Facebook posts is comparable to, but less
than, that in Lee v
Lee.
- [96] Having
regard to the evidence and the cases above, I find the following considerations
to be relevant in assessing the appropriate
level of general damages:
(a) prior to the Facebook posts Mr Staples had a high public profile and a
positive reputation;
(b) the gravity of the defamation here was high — Mr Freeman left few
aspects of Mr Staples’ reputation unsullied;
(c) Mr Staples suffered considerable personal distress and concern for the
future of his business by virtue of the posts, such that
he immediately issued
defamation proceedings to have the statements contained in them taken down;
(d) the statements were taken down as a result of the interim injunction so the
extent of their publication was limited to the five
days they were live, on a
page with around 400 likes, and some evidence of engagement from users;
(e) I accept some of Mr Staples’ clients saw the posts and contacted him
to share their concerns; and
(f) Mr Freeman’s financial motivation to defame Mr Staples and his
attempts to exhort him would justify an award of aggravated
damages.
- [97] I consider
the seriousness of the defamation here is more similar to Lee v
Lee
than Hunter v Ross and justifies an award of
$120,000.
Punitive damages
- [98] In
exceptional cases punitive damages may be ordered. They are ordered to punish a
defendant who has “acted in flagrant
disregard of the rights of the
plaintiff” rather than to compensate the plaintiff.40 In
Siemer v Stiassny, the Court of Appeal observed
that:41
... if general damages are awarded which somehow shade into aggravated
damages which in turn somehow shade into exemplary damages,
there is a distinct
possibility that there will be double or even triple compensation. The problem
is not unlike the conceptual problems
in the criminal law in sentencing: it is
the totality of the award which matters at the end of the day, not how
the individual component parts are made up.
40 Defamation Act 1992, s 28.
41 Siemer v Stiassny, above n 33, at [56] (emphasis in
original) (footnote omitted).
- [99] Punitive
damages should only be awarded “where there is a need to punish the
defendant beyond the award for general damages”.42 Mr Morten
submits I should order punitive damages of $10,000.
- [100] I decline
to order punitive damages. The aggravating factors that would justify punishment
and specific deterrence have already
been considered in reaching the
$120,000 award of general damages. That award is enough to punish and denounce
Mr Freeman and his conduct.
Interest
- [101] Perhaps
surprisingly, interest has not frequently been sought or awarded in claims for
defamation.
- [102] Mr Staples
seeks interest on the damages from the date the cause of action arose.
- [103] These
proceedings were filed prior to 1 January 2018, so interest is covered by the
Judicature Act 1908 rather than the Interest
on Money Claims Act
2016.43
- [104] Section 87
of the Judicature Act provides:
87 Power of Courts to award interest on debts and damages
(1) In any proceedings in the High Court, the Court of Appeal, or the Supreme
Court for the recovery of any debt or damages, the Court
may, if it thinks fit,
order that there shall be included in the sum for which judgment is given
interest as such rate, not exceeding
the prescribed rate, as it thinks fit on
the whole or any part of the debt or damages for the whole or any part of the
period between
the date when the cause of action arose and the date of the
judgment:
Provided that nothing in this subsection shall—
(a) authorise the giving of interest upon interest; or
(b) apply in relation to any debt upon which interest is payable as of right,
whether by virtue of any agreement, enactment, or rule
of law, or otherwise;
or
42 Williams v Craig, above n 19, at [34].
43 Interest on Money Claims Act 2016, ss 2, 5 and 7.
(c) affect the damages recoverable for the dishonour of a bill of exchange.
(2) In any proceedings in the High Court, the Court of Appeal, or the Supreme
Court for the recovery of any debt upon which interest
is payable as of right,
and in respect of which the rate of interest is not agreed upon, prescribed, or
ascertained under any agreement,
enactment, or rule of law or otherwise, there
shall be included in the sum for which judgment is given interest at such rate,
not
exceeding the prescribed rate, as the Court thinks fit for the period
between the date as from which the interest became payable
and the date of the
judgment.
(3) In this section the term the prescribed rate means the rate of 7.5½
percent per annum, or such other rate as may from time
to time be prescribed for
the purposes of this section by the Governor-General by Order in Council.
- [105] Before it
was amended as from 1 January 2018, r 11.27 of the High Court Rules 2016
stated:
11.27 Interest on judgment debt
(1) A judgment debt carries interest from the time judgment is given until it
is satisfied.
(2) The interest is at the rate prescribed by or under section 87 of the
[Judicature] Act or at a lower rate fixed by the court.
(3) The interest may be levied on the judgment under an enforcement process
(as defined in rule 17.3).
- [106] In
Solomon v Prater (decided under the Interest on Money Claims Act) Clark J
said:44
[145] As the amount on which interest is to be awarded was not quantified on
the day the cause of action arose I determine that the
date on which interest
begins to accrue is the date of this judgment as that is the day on which the
sum attracting interest is quantified.
...
- [107] In
Crush v Radio New Zealand Ltd, Doogue J ordered interest from the date of
conclusion of the trial.45
- [108] I make two
observations. First, there have been significant delays in these proceedings
that have not involved Mr Freeman as
he has not been an active participant.
Second, interest at the prescribed rate from the date the cause of
action
44 Solomon v Prater, above n 19.
45 Crush v Radio New Zealand Ltd HC Dunedin CP104/86, 20
December 1990.
arose would be a substantial sum. Given Mr Freeman’s lack of
responsibility for the delay, I find it would be disproportionate
and unfair to
award interest as claimed.
- [109] Further,
as in Solomon, the amount Mr Freeman owes on which interest is to be
awarded had not been quantified until this judgment. I find it principled
to
allow interest to accrue under r 11.27 at the prescribed rate and refrain from
ordering interest from the date the cause of action
arose.
Costs
- [110] Costs
shall be ordered against Mr Freeman on a 2B basis together with disbursements as
certified by the Registrar.
Result
- [111] Mr
Freeman is liable to Mr Staples in defamation.
- [112] I order Mr
Freeman pay Mr Staples the following:
(a) damages of $120,000; and
(b) interest from the date of the original defamation judgment, being 4
June 2021.
Doogue J
Solicitors:
Canterbury Legal Services, Christchurch CC:
P A Morten, Wellington
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