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15 Comm. Law. 12 (1997-1998)
The United Kingdom Defamation Act 1996

handle is hein.journals/comlaw15 and id is 36 raw text is: The United Kingdom Defamation Act 1996
NICK BRAITHWAITE

The United Kingdom Defamation Act
1996 was conceived with the modest
aim of simplifying defamation practice
and procedure, but in the end the Act
introduced some significant new rights
for both plaintiff and defendant. Parlia-
ment missed the opportmity to intro-
duce a new public figure or public
interest defense, yet at the instigation of
a single Member of Parliament (M.P.),
it passed a measure eroding the rules of
parliamentary privilege, one of the pil-
lars of the unwritten constitution in the
United Kingdom. Useful changes have
been made at the margins, but the
media-hostile character of the U.K.'s
defamation laws remains largely
unchanged, and the Act does little to
redress the fundamental imbalance
between libel plaintiff and defendant.
The main purpose of this article is to
sketch the changes made by the 1996
Act. To set these in context, it is neces-
sary to explain a little of the constitu-
tional background and the recent libel
litigation climate in the U.K.
The U.K. has no written constitu-
tion. Libel law in the U.K. (largely a
creature of the common law) shares
antecedents with the pre-Sullivan libel
law in the United States and places
heavy burdens on the defendant. The
principal differences from the post-Sul-
livan U.S. libel law are:
* The absence of any requirement to
prove fault on the part of the defen-
dant (strict liability);
* The absence of any requirement for
the plaintiff to prove falsity; and
* The general absence of special pro-
tections for the media in reporting
matters of public concern.
Nick Braithwaite is a media lawyer
with the firm of Clifford Chance in
London and editor of The International
Libel Handbook He gratefully
acknowledges comments of Michael
Smyth, head of the firm's media litiga-
tion group, in preparing this article.

European Convention on
Human Rights
The U.K. is a signatory to the European
Convention on Human Rights, Article
10 of which provides a qualified pro-
tection for free speech, but the Conven-
tion until now has not been
incorporated into U.K. law.' Although
a broad liberty of freedom of expres-
sion is part of the common law, it is in
practice balanced with-and some-
times subordinated to--other compet-
ing rights, in particular to individual
rights to reputation. The limited protec-
tion for free speech is manifested pri-
marily in the application of the three
established defenses to a defamation
action: justification (truth), fair com-
ment, and privilege.2
In recent years, the substance and
application of the U.K.'s libel laws, in
particular English libel laws, have been
the subject of sustained criticism from
plaintiffs and defendants alike. Plain-
tiffs' principal complaint is the absence
of state legal aid for defamation litiga-
tion.3 There is no system of contin-
gency fee funding in the U.K., and the
limited version that is available4 does
not apply to libel litigation.5 Thus all
except the relatively wealthy are large-
ly excluded from redress.
Defendants, on the other hand, have
long complained that jury awards are
unpredictable and unappealable. The
media argue that the defendant's bur-
den of proving truth (without reference
to any mental element, as in the U.S.
pre-1964) has a chilling effect upon
reporting. Judges also have criticized
the level of libel awards,6 and the Euro-
pean Court of Human Rights has ruled
that the highest-ever award of £1.5 mil-
lion had infringed the plaintiff s right
of free speech.7 Although two recent
reforms8 have substantially reduced the
force of these charges, by the end of the
1980s there was a widespread view that
defamation law and practice had
reached an unsatisfactory state. As the
cost of litigation spiraled,9 the media

frequently were forced for reasons of
financial expedience to settle cases they
regarded as unmeritorious.
Neill Report and the Defamation Law
Against this backdrop, in 1990 the Lord
Chancellor requested a working group
under a senior judge, Lord Justice
Neill, to review the practice of defama-
tion law. The initial remit was primari-
ly procedural, but it soon became clear
that there was support for reform of
aspects of the substantive law. Five
years after the publication of the Neill
Report,10 Parliament passed the
Defamation Act in July 1996. Its main
reforms2 are:
* Modification of the constitutional
rules of Parliamentary privilege so
as to enable those affected, princi-
pally Parliamentarians, to waive that
privilege in defamation proceedings
(Section 13-in force);
 Extension of statutory absolute and
qualified reporting privilege to cover
a much wider range of proceedings
(Sections 14 and 15-not in force);
* Replacement of the existing unin-
tentional defamation defense under
the Defamation Act 1952 Section 4
with a new offer of amends
defense to discourage gold-digging
plaintiffs (Sections 2-4-not in force);
* A new fast-track summary proce-
dure to dispose of minor or clear-cut
cases (Sections 8-11 -not in force);
* A new test of capability, as opposed
to arguable capability, in relation to
the meaning that words can bear
(Section 7-not in force);
* A new defense for innocent distribu-
tors and disseminators (Section 1-in
force).
It is noteworthy that no public interest
or public figure defense was intro-
duced, and a proposed reform aimed at
preventing plaintiffs from recovering
damages for an undeserved reputation
was dropped. Of lesser note are:
* Reduction of the limitation period
from three years to one in England,

12 [ Communications Lawyer

Summer 1997

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