M1 In-class Test Correction : Group 2
M1 In-class test correction: Group 52
I.
Complete the following sentences:
1.
In order to establish someone’s liability in
Tort, the claimant has to prove on the balance of probabilities that the
defendant owed him a duty of care, the breach of which is the direct cause of
the harm sustained.
2.
While in a business context intention to form a
contract is presumed, in a domestic contexte the intention of the parties to be bound by contract is
reversed, although it is rabuttable which menas that the parties may provide evidence that they intenses their agreement to be binding.
3.
Unlike a bilateral contract, a unilateral
contract is an agreement whereby the promisor undertakes to do something if a
certain act is performed, but there is no obligation for the promise to
undertake performance.
4.
Although consideration must be sufficient, it
does not have to be adequate that is to say that it does it have to be of equal
monetary value to the original promise.
5.
Goods displayed in a shop window or at auctions
cannot be considered as an offer but only as an invitation to treat.
II.
Text:
1.
The parties to the litigation are, on the one
hand, a former Miss India UK (i.e. the claimant), and on the other hand three
defendants, namely the producer, the broadcaster and another housemate of the
Big Brother TV show.
The claimant brought an action for defamation against the three
defendants on account of the broadcasts of two Big Brother episodes, and also
issued a claim for breach of contract against the producer of Big Brother. That is called pleading in the alternative.
Given that county courts have no
jurisdiction over defamation cases, the case at hand was thus necessarily heard
by the Queen’s
Bench Division of the High Court.
The claimant, however, did not obtain redress.
Concerning
the first broadcast, the court ruled that contrary to claimant’s assertion, the
housemate’s comments did not have a bearing on the claimant’s social or
intellectual status. These comments had also been condemned by the broadcaster
and producer. As for the second broadcast, the court deemed that the racist
nature of S’s remark actually undermined S’s own status and credibility in the
eyes of viewers more than it affected the claimant’s reputation.
2.
Defences:
Pursuant to the Document handed out in class concerning the Defamation
Act 2013, the defences available to a defendant are:
-
Truth
(section 2) and Honest Opinion
(section 3)
-
Publications
on a matter of public interest (section 4). This defence replaces the
common law defence known as The Reynolds
Privilege.
-
Qualified
Privilege (section 6)
-
(Section 5 provides a new defence for website
operators who comply with the Defamation (Operators of Websites) Regulations
2013.
Note that since the reform, defamation
is not actionable per se. The
claimant must prove his reputation has suffered serious harm.
Similarly, defamation cases are generally not tried by jury any longer.
Please
read below the Updated Factsheet of the
Glossaire on Defamation:
Defamation can be defined as the
publication of a statement, which reflects on a person’s reputation and tends
to lower him in the estimation of right-thinking members of society generally
or tends to make them shun or avoid him. To establish defamation, three
elements must be proved: the statement made is defamatory, it refers to the
claimant and it is communicated to at least one person other than the claimant.
Defamation takes the form of two
separate torts: slander and libel. Slander occurs when the defamatory act is in
temporary form and libel when it is in permanent form. Slander
requires special damage being proved. Whereas previously libel was actionable
per se, the claimant must now show
serious harm. Libel can be prosecuted as an offence. A defamation
case was formerly tried by a judge and a jury in
the High Court. Now defamation trials are without a
jury unless the court orders otherwise. The jury will assess the quantum
of damages, which can be nominal, aggravated or contemptuous.
There are four specialised
defences: true and honest opinion (replaces common law defences
of justification and fair comment respectively), absolute or qualified
privilege, responsible publication on matters of public
interest (new defence introduced in the Defamation
Act 2013, which replaces the Reynold’s
defence) and offer of amends
under statutory provisions. If the claimant manages to prove malice, the
defendant’s defence fails. In the 2010s, the tort of defamation has been more
particularly relevant concerning the freedom of speech in relation to the
press. There have been calls for a blanket protection for the press relative to
political discussion and information. The courts try to strike a balance
between the duty and interest of members of the public to know a fact and the
defendant’s right to privacy.
- serious harm: level of the
injury sufficient to justify legal action in court under the tort of
defamation; fr: ≈ dommage/préjudice
particulier
- special damage: to establish his
claim in slander, the claimant needs to show that he was actually harmed
by the defamatory statements; fr: ≈ dommage/préjudice avéré
- true and honest opinion: statutory defence which determines whether
the opinion could be held by an honest person, based on the known facts at
the time of writing; fr: ≈ exception
de commentaire honnête
- the
claimant’s claim stands: fr: la demande en justice du demandeur est
recevable
- to be privileged: fr: jouir de l’immunité
- to be sued for defamation: fr: être poursuivi en diffamation
- to dismiss someone's claim: fr:
débouter quelqu'un de sa demande
- to make an offer of amends: fr: faire amende honorable
- to tarnish/harm someone’s
reputation: fr: porter atteinte à la reputation de quelqu’un
3.
Students’ own answers.
M1 In-class test correction: Group 52
I: Sentence Completion:
1.
Unless there is consideration … a contract will be not
be considered as legally enforceable or binding on the parties.
2.
While in a business context intention to form a
contract… is presumed, in a family (/domestic) context the presumption is
reversed so that the parties must prove they intend to be bound.
3.
Unlike a bilateral contract, … a unilateral contract
is an agreement where only one party promises to do something, in the event that
a certain act or promise is performed.
4.
Although a promise of a gift is not a contract in
English law, a deed, that is to say a written promise that derives its validity
from being intended, witnessed and signed, is a form of binding agreement.
5.
A qualified acceptance… cannot be considered as
acceptance but as a counter offer, which causes the original offer to be
revoked.
II: Document:
1.
The parties to the litigation are Richard Fowles (claimant)
and referee David Evans and the Welsh Rugby Union (defendants).
The claimant is a
rugby front row player who sustained severe injury as a result of the referee’s
negligence. Indeed, the referee should have made sure that the scrums were not
contested but passive. The referee failed to do so, and as a consequence the
scrum collapsed a number of times, eventually causing Fowles’s serious injury.
The claim is
therefore a claim in tort as Fowles brought an action for negligence. Fowles
alleges that as referee, Evans owed players a duty of care, that he had
breached his duty of care and that this breach is the direct cause of the
injury he sustained. In other words, Fowles would not have sustained his injuries but for Evans’s negligence.
2. At
first instance, given its complexity and the amount of money at stake, the case
was heard by the Queen’s Bench Division of the High Court, as it has jurisdiction over tort cases. (Develop on
the High Court: see Glossaire)
The WRU is
involved in the case because of the principle of “vicarious liability”, according to which employers are responsible
for harm caused by their employees during the course of their work.
3.
The underlined sentence refers both to the classic
defence of consent available to defendants in tort cases, as well as its
exception (i. e.) “Sciens is non volent”. The defence of consent applies for
example to cases related to sport where the defendant contends that the
claimant agreed to the risks inherent to the sport practiced (e.g. rugby). “Sciens
is non volent” on the other hand means that being aware of the risks may not mean consenting to the
risks.
In the case at hand, Fowles may have agreed to the
risks entailed by the game when played by the rules. He did not agree on the other
hand to the risks that arose from a foul or from the fact that the referee
failed to apply the rules. (The scrum in that game should not have been
contested, which means that the players should not have been allowed to both
front rows to engage and thrust forward.)