Swan Turton Media & Entertainment Lawyers

Search:

spacer

legal services

latest news

spacer

Article

spacer
arrow

Article Story:

HOLDING CORPORATION AND LIBEL

arrow Date: 14/7/2001

In an important judgment (Multigroup Bulgaria Ltd v Oxford Analytica (2001) February 1, unreported) concerning the degree to which the exercise of forum shopping for defamation disputes will be permitted by the courts of this jurisdiction, Mr Justice Eady determined that where there was no evidence either that the claimant corporation had a trading reputation in this jurisdiction, or that the publication at issue had caused that corporation any actual loss, its action for libel was unsustainable.

The claimant was a very large Bulgarian corporation with a large number of subsidiaries. The defendants were (respectively) a specialist information and research organisation (Oxford Analytica) which provided subscribers with international economic' and industrial analysis via (inter alia) the Bloomberg system (the second defendant) and the proprietor of the first defendant.  Bloomberg had settled the action so far as it was concerned, and the remaining defendants relied at the trial on a Reynolds-type ([1999] 4 All ER 609 HL) qualified privilege defence.  However, having both during the course of the action and in the trial skeletons flagged the lack of evidence either of trading reputation or damage, an application was made at the conclusion of the claimant's case that the matter should be withdrawn from the jury on these bases. This was despite the fact that the allegations at issue were wide ranging and very serious, including bribery and extortion, leaving little doubt as to the defamatory nature of the words at issue.

In what appear to have been critical omissions, neither the managing director of the claimant company, nor any of its trading subsidiaries were joined as parties to the action. The action proceeded solely on behalf of the holding parent, and in the absence of any evidence of management control by the claimant company over its subsidiaries, or of any trading reputation in the relevant jurisdictions (including the UK), the following submissions were made on behalf of the defendants:

  1. The words complained of were incapable of defaming the claimant because it played no role in the management of its subsidiaries.
  2. The claimant could suffer no damage from publication to its 'actual and prospective clients, investors and competitors' since as a mere holding company it had none.
  3. The claimant should not be permitted to sustain an action in circumstances where it had no actual reputation within the jurisdiction sued upon.

As to the need on the part of the claimant holding company to exercise some management function for allegations of impropriety against it to garner a cause of action in defamation, Mr Eady J began with the dictum of Lord Keith in Derbyshire County Council v. Times Newspapers [1992] 1 QB 770, who in turn was referring to the well-known decision of Brown J. in Bognor Regis Urban District Council [1972] 2 All ER 61.  Lord Keith said:

'The authorities cited above clearly establish that a trading corporation is entitled to sue in respect of defamatory matters which can be seen to damage it in the way of its business.' (Emphasis added.)

Applying that test, Eady J accepted the submission on behalf of the defendants that there was no evidence that this claimant was itself engaged in trade because of its lack of management role in its trading subsidiaries. Consequently, according to Lord Keith's test, the publications at issue could not be said to have damaged it in the way of its business.

This accords with the principle set out in Prudential Assurance v. Newman Industries [1980] 2 All ER 841, and Sheville v. Presse Alliance [1995] EC 289, ECJ that a mere holding company cannot recover in respect of allegations about how their subsidiaries conduct their business.

As to the second submission, it followed from the claimant's nature as a holding company, and lack of any management role in its subsidiaries, that it could suffer no damage from publication to clients, prospective client investors etc, since it had none.

As to the third submission, Eady J appeared to accept the submissions of Andrew Caldecott QC derived from McDonalds Corp. v Steel & Morris ((1999) March, unreported), that the appropriate questions in determining whether a corporate claimant has a viable action in defamation are: (a) whether the corporate claimant has a reputation in the jurisdiction in question; and (b) whether the publication is apt to damage the reputation of the corporation.

In other words, a corporate claimant must prove that it actually has a trading reputation in its own right within the relevant jurisdiction. However, Eady J again cited the judgment in Mcdonalds to differentiate the position where a corporation does have a reputation within the jurisdiction, in which case damage is presumed:

' .... where a defamatory publication is apt to damage the goodwill of a corporation which has a reputation within the jurisdiction damage is presumed and the court does not have to inquire into the details of the likely damage. The words complained of...were, insofar as they were defamatory, obviously apt to damage the goodwill of a corporation. The corporation does not have to trade within the jurisdiction provided that it has a reputation within the jurisdiction, which in this case the first respondents [the American ultimate holding company] plainly do.'

The submission on behalf of the claimant that the publication itself gains for a corporate claimant the necessary reputation-undoubted where the claimant is an individual-appears to have been rejected by Eady J on the basis that even though the matter is not expressly addressed in the Court of Appeal judgment in Mcdonalds, that case cannot be reasonably construed as contemplating that 'the reputation in question could be acquired by the very publication complained of'.

However, Eady J appeared also to reject the proposition that the mere absence of a previous mention of a hypothetical small trader in Shanghai whose prospects of hiring bicycles to British tourists were undermined by a libel of him in this country should rob him of his right to sue here. This was based on the example given by Lord Denning in Plato Films v Speidel [1961] 1 All ER 61 of Robinson Crusoe having a good cause of action in libel in this country.  He may have been drawing a distinction between an individual and corporate claimant.

In finding that the Claimant had failed to make good its case on the grounds set out in his reserved judgment, Eady J applied what were well-established legal principles to a novel situation. The distinction which he drew between corporate and individual claimants derived from the McDonalds case seems a sensible one and may provide some balance to the decision in Beresovsky [2000] 2 All ER 986 HL, which seemed to have given the green light to any disgruntled individual with some international profile to sue in the courts of this jurisdiction.

It is also clear that where a mere holding company adduces no evidence of a management role in its subsidiaries, the court will not presume it. The better course for such a prospective claimant would probably be to sue via a subsidiary or senior member of management with suitable evidence of reference.

Jonathan Coad

This article was first published in New Law Journal.

<< back to articles