Defamation

How do Courts decide your defamation damages?

Perth Lawyer Richard Graham

Uniform defamation legislation exists across the states. In Western Australia, the relevant act is the Defamation Act 2005 (WA).

Where a person’s reputation is injured by the publication of defamatory material the matter is actionable without proof of damage (Defamation Act s 7).  

However, the cause of action is generally not available to corporations (Defamation Act s 9).

Under the uniform defamation laws the offence is actionable once a communication of a defamatory imputation about a person is made to a person other than the plaintiff. This is usually described as publication. A publication is defamatory if it tends, in the minds of ordinary, reasonable people, to injure the victims’ reputation by disparaging him/her, causing others to avoid or shun him, or subjecting him to hatred, ridicule or contempt (John Fairfax & Sons Ltd v Punch (1980) 31 ALR 624 per Brennan J; Carson v John Fairfax & Sons Ltd (1993) 178 CLR 44 at 71). 

Therefore, while the plaintiff does not have to prove any special damage to their reputation, they do carry the onus of having to prove that a defamatory imputation was published and provide particulars of the publication (Lazarus v Deutsche Lufthansa AG (1985) 1 NSWLR 188 at 192-4 per Hunt J).

What are the potential damages?

Once the plaintiff shows that they have been defamed, then unless a defence is shown, they must be awarded damages, even if only nominal (Andrews v John Fairfax & Sons Ltd [1980] 2 NSWLR 225 at 258 per Mahoney JA).

The legislation provides that the state of mind of the defendant is not relevant to damages except insofar as it affects the harm sustained by the plaintiff (Defamation Act s 36).

Damages for non-economic loss, except in circumstances of aggravation, are capped at $381,000 (Defamation Act s 35; Defamation (Damages for Non-economic Loss) Order 2016).

There must be an appropriate and rational relationship between the harm sustained and the damages awarded (Defamation Act s 34). Exemplary or punitive damages cannot be awarded for defamation (Defamation Act s 37). However, compensatory damages may be affected by circumstances of aggravation.

Factors which may mitigate damages are (Defamation Act s 38):

  1. The defendant has apologised

  2. The defendant has published a correction;

  3. The plaintiff has already recovered damages re another publication having the same meaning or effect;

  4. The plaintiff has already brought proceedings re another publication having the same meaning or effect;

  5. Plaintiff has agreed to receive compensation re another publication having the same meaning or effect.

Damages are not assessed by reference to depreciation in the value of a plaintiff’s reputation, but by what is required to compensate for injury to reputation, as a remedy for injured feelings and to vindicate the plaintiff for having been publicly defamed (Carson v John Fairfax & Sons Ltd (1993) 178 CLR 44 at 60, 61, 70). Under the uniform defamation laws. The assessment of damages is determined by the judge not jury (Defamation Act s 22).

Compensatory damages are classified as damages for:

  1. Injury to reputation, note that evidence of previous bad reputation may mitigate damages however will not prevent a plaintiff from recovering completely (see Steele v Mirror Newspapers Ltd [1974] 2 NSWLR 348 Cf. Morosi v Mirror Newspapers Ltd [1977] 2 NSWLR 749 at 806, 807);

  2. Social damage for being shunned and avoided;

  3. Injury to feelings, including grief and distress, anxiety, loss of self-esteem and outrage;

  4. Injury to health; and

  5. Special damage.

Some recent cases

In Dods v McDonald (No 2) [2016] VSC 201 the plaintiff was a police officer involved in the shooting death of a 15 year old boy. In a coronial inquest the coroner exonerated the plaintiff of personal responsibility and found that he had not contributed to the death, and had responded within the limitations of his training. The defamatory publications were made by the defendant via a website and were published from April 2012 until July 2012 when they were removed by request. They contained imputations that the plaintiff was a ‘monster’ who had ‘executed’ the teenager and committed the crime of manslaughter. Even though the scope of the publication was not large, there was no apology, and the grave nature of the defamations was reflected in the damages awarded (at [69] – [74]). The judge awarded damages of $150,000.

In Jeffrey v Giles [2015] VSCA 70 the appellants operated a quarry adjacent to the respondents’ land. The respondent created a website which contained defamatory imputations that the appellants had provided inaccurate information and given false testimony at hearing in relation to approval of the quarry. The judge at first instance found that the appellants were entitled to damages personally, distinct from the corporate entity which ran the quarry, due to the nature of the imputations. The judge awarded $12,00 and $8,000 to each of the appellants. On appeal, the Court of Appeal found that the damages were so low as to be inappropriate, and ordered damages of $75,000 and $65,000 to each appellant.

In Gacic v John Fairfax Publications Pty Ltd [2015] NSWCA 99 and online and in-print review of the appellant’s restaurant was found to be defamatory by implying it sold unpalatable food, provided bad service, and that the owner was incompetent. The three appellants were originally each awarded $160,000 plus interest. There was an appeal that the damages awarded were manifestly inadequate and a cross-appeal that the damages should be reduced for mitigation. Ultimately the Court of Appeal held that damages should be increased to $180,000 plus interest, however by virtue of the cross appeal, they should be then reduced to $175,000 plus interest to take into account the mitigation factors.

As the range of damages awarded vary widely on a case by case basis depending on the factual circumstances it is wise to obtain legal advice at the outset.

Facebook defamation

Perth Lawyer Richard Graham

Have you been defamed on Facebook?

Being defamed on Facebook is horrible.

You should consider issuing a concerns notice and commencing a Court case, in order to protect your reputation.

A previous decision

In 2014 the District Court of Western Australia handed down a decision, finding in favour of a plaintiff in a Facebook defamation case.

In Dabrowski -v- Greeuw [2014] WADC 175 the facts were that:

  1. The parties were a separated husband and wife.

  2. In December 2012 the defendant (the wife) posted on her public Facebook page an entry saying 'separated from Miro Dabrowski after 18 years of suffering domestic violence and abuse. Now fighting the system to keep my children safe'. 

  3. The Judge found she had admitted that she posted the Facebook post. 

  4. It was removed 4 months later, in February 2013.

At [183] the Judge stated:

To say that a person has for 18 years subjected their partner to domestic violence and abuse and that their children need to be kept safe from that person, tends to diminish the esteem in which that person is held by the community and/or diminish his standing in some respect and would lead an ordinary reasonable person to think lesser of that person and is defamatory.

The Judge decided that:

[248] Pursuant to s 7 of the Defamation Act, Mr Dabrowski is not required to prove special damages. Section 34 of the Act requires that any damage awarded have an appropriate and rational relationship to the harm actually suffered. The damages must be realistic.

[249] I have found that Mr Dabrowski was defamed. Mr Dabrowski has not claimed any consequential financial loss. Damages are appropriate.

The Judge award the plaintiff (the husband) $12,500, as well as interest on that money and also his legal costs.

The takeaways from the case

  1. We should not feel powerless or in a weak bargaining position when someone defames us on Facebook, because it is realistic to go to Court over it.

  2. You should hire lawyers like me, who are conscious of the realities of legal costs (and) who will manage the case so that decisions are made along the way that maximise the recovery of legal costs from the other side.

Overview of what a 'concerns notice' is in defamation law in Western Australia

Perth Lawyer Richard Graham

Uniform defamation legislation is in place across Australia to promote speedy and non-litigious methods of resolving defamation disputes (Defamation Act 2005 (WA) s 3(d)).

   The first step in a defamation proceeding is for the victim of defamation to issue what is known as a concerns notice.

   The issuing of a concerns notice provides an avenue for the parties to resolve the matter without resorting to formal legal proceedings.

   A concerns notice is the document which outlines exactly what defamatory statements are alleged to have been made, when the statements were made, who they were published to, what defamatory imputations can be drawn from the publication, and what amends are requested.

   The purpose of a concerns notice is to set in motion the offer to make amends set out in Part 3 of the Defamation Act 2005 (WA).

For a notice to be a concerns notice:

  1. It must be in writing (Defamation Act s 14(2)(a)); and

  2. It must inform the publisher of the defamatory imputations that the aggrieved person considers are or may be carried about the aggrieved person by the matter in question (Defamation Act s 14(2)(b)).

    When a person receives a concerns notice they may request particulars of the defamatory imputations if they either haven’t been provided or haven’t been provided adequately (Defamation Act s 14(4) & (5)).

    Alternatively, a statement of claim will operate as a concerns notice for the purposes of the Defamation Act if it complies with the requirements of s 14(2) (Zoef v Nationwide News Pty Ltd [2016] NSWCA 283, [92]).

   Once a person has been issued with a concerns notice then the publisher has 28 days to make an offer to make amends (Defamation Act s 14(1)(a)).

   It is implicit in the construction of s 14(1) of the Defamation Act that a person has a reasonable period of time to respond to the content of a concerns notice (Douglas v McLernon (No 4) [2016] WASC 320, [262]).

   In some cases, it may be that after the expiry of a reasonable period of time to respond, the person in receipt of the concerns notice can be taken to have been aware of the existence of the alleged publications, and the concerns notice could even function as evidence to that effect (Douglas v McLernon (No 4) [2016] WASC 320, [262]).

   If the person could put a stop to ongoing publication (by another person), then an inference may be drawn in certain circumstances that the person then either acquiesced or participated in the publication from that point on.