Defamation, extent of publication, twitter; Chris Lance Cairns v Lalit Modi [2010] EWHC 2859 (QB)
November 22, 2010
The High Court sitting in the Queens Bench division recently rejected an application by the defendant, Modi, to order a trial on the extent to which the tweet the subject of the action was read in jurisdiction. The Defendant applicant argued that issue was relevant to both liabilityand damages. The High Court ruled that numbers of readers alone was not decisive.
Facts
An expert giving evidence on behalf of Modi estimated that only 35 people viewed the message. The Defendant argued that, as in Yousef Jameel and Dow Jones , the damage from any libel case would be so small as to be not warrent proceeding and so any case would be an abuse of the court process.
There was conflicting evidence as to extent of publication (see [19] – [ 22]). Cairns’ expert estimated the audience for the tweet to be around 100, by looking at the number of Modi’s followers in the court’s jurisdiction. While Cairn’s counsel accepted that not all of Modi’s followers would have seen the tweet directly, it was argued that some people would have received a communication of it by other means.
Decision and reasoning
Mr Justice Tugendhat found that the number of people who saw the message was only one of a number of considerations in a defamation case. He found at [34]:
In any event, the Jameel type of abuse of process does not depend on numbers alone. [Cairns] has resided in this jurisdiction in the past, and expects to return to live here again. There have been recent cases in which the court has declined to strike out claims based on a direct communication to a single publishee.
Mr Justice Tugendhat said Read the rest of this entry »