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9 J. Media L. 1 (2017)

handle is hein.journals/joomaw9 and id is 1 raw text is: 


JOURNAL OF MEDIA LAW, 2017
VOL. 9, NO. 1, 1-13                                                 ledge
https://doi.org/10.1080/17577632.2017.1315900                 Taylor &Francis Group




Reynolds revived and replaced

Eric Barendt

Emeritus Professor, University College London, London, UK


   ABSTRACT
   Two  recent decisions of Warby J have upheld the defence of public interest
   privilege to libel actions: the first on the common law principles established in
   Reynolds v Times Newspapers, the second on the basis of the provision in the
   Defamation  Act 2013  which  replaced  Reynolds. Though  neither decision
   resolves every question about the scope of the defence, both of them show a
   high regard for the concerns of defendants who raise this defence in libel cases.


ARTICLE HISTORY Received 3 March 2017; Accepted 3 April 2017

KEYWORDS   Reynolds; public interest; freedom of speech; reasonable belief in truth




Introduction

Initially the courts seemed reluctant to uphold  the  public interest qualified
privilege defence  to  defamation   actions, which   was  introduced   in  the
common law by the landmark decision of the House of Lords in Reynolds v
Times  Newspapers   Ltd.' They  often insisted on  strict compliance with  the
requirements  of 'responsible journalism' listed by Lord Nicholls in Reynolds
as  factors to  consider  when   determining   whether   the  defence  should
succeed.2 But the later decisions of the Lords in Jameel  and of the Supreme
Court  in Flood upheld  newspaper   reliance on the defence, emphasising   the
role of editorial discretion in deciding whether  to include defamatory   alle-
gations in a story of real public interest. The principles in these cases have
now  been  applied by Warby   J in Yeo v Times Newspapers   Ltd.4 His decision
shows  how  the requirements   of responsible journalism  can be  treated by a
court sympathetic  to investigative journalism, leading  to the successful use
of the common law Reynolds defence in the last important case to consider
it (see section on Yeo, below).

CONTACT  Eric Barendt 0 e.barendt@ucl.ac.uk ( 74, Upper Park Road, London NW3 2UX, UK
1[2001] 2 AC 127.
2See for example the judgments of Eady J in James Gilbert v MGN [2000] EMLR 680 and in Jameel v Wall
Street Journal Europe Sprl [2004] EMLR 196, applying Reynolds (n 1) 205.
3Jameel v Wall Street Journal Europe Sprl [2007] 1 AC 359; Flood v Times Newspapers Ltd [2012] 2 AC 273.
4[2015] EWHC 3375 (QB); [2017] EMLR 1.
0 2017 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group

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