CASE OF WEGRZYNOWSKI AND SMOLCZEWSKI v. POLAND
(Application no. 33846/07)
JUDGMENT
STRASBOURG
16 July 2013
This judgment will become final in the circumstances set out in Article 44 � 2 of the Convention. It may be subject to editorial revision.
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This judgment will become final in the circumstances set out in Article 44 � 2 of the Convention. It may be subject to editorial revision.
The European Court of Human Rights (Fourth Section), sitting as a Chamber composed of:
��������� Ineta Ziemele, President, ��������� David Th�r Bj�rgvinsson, ��������� P�ivi Hirvel�, ��������� George Nicolaou, ��������� Ledi Bianku, ��������� Zdravka Kalaydjieva, ��������� Krzysztof Wojtyczek, judges, and Fran�oise Elens-Passos , Section Registrar,
The applicants sought an order requiring the defendants to take down the article from the newspaper�s website and publish a written apology for their rights having been breached by way of the article�s continued presence on the Internet. They sought compensation in the amount of PLN 11,000 for the non-pecuniary damage.
However, in the circumstances of the case the court was of the view that the defendants� arguments had to be given an equal weight. The court referred to the constitutional guarantees of free speech and noted that preventive censorship was incompatible with the Constitution. It was the journalists� right and obligation to inform the general public of matters of public interest.
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BAILII · Verbatim mirror
In the case of Węgrzynowski and Smolczewski v. Poland,
The European Court of Human Rights (Fourth Section), sitting as a Chamber composed of:
��������� Ineta Ziemele, President,
��������� David Th�r Bj�rgvinsson,
��������� P�ivi Hirvel�,
��������� George Nicolaou,
��������� Ledi Bianku,
��������� Zdravka Kalaydjieva,
��������� Krzysztof Wojtyczek, judges,
and Fran�oise Elens-Passos,
Section Registrar,
Having deliberated in private on 25 June 2013,
Delivers the following judgment, which was adopted on that date:
PROCEDURE
THE FACTS
I. THE CIRCUMSTANCES OF THE CASE
The applicants sought an order requiring the defendants to take down the article from the newspaper�s website and publish a written apology for their rights having been breached by way of the article�s continued presence on the Internet. They sought compensation in the amount of PLN 11,000 for the non-pecuniary damage.
The defendants further submitted that the applicants had referred to the publication of the article on the newspaper�s website in the first set of proceedings. They had therefore already been well aware that the article had been disseminated in that way. As they had failed to submit any specific claims in respect of the Internet publication in the first set of proceedings, it had to be inferred that they had not sought to have any measures taken in respect of the online version of the article and that they had been fully satisfied by their situation having been remedied in the manner ordered by the judgments given in the first set of proceedings.
It observed that the facts of the case were not in dispute betweeen the parties. The applicants� submissions had addressed facts - namely the article�s continued presence on the newspaper�s website five years after the publication of the article in the newspaper - which had occurred after the judgment in the first case had been given. The gist of the legal issue to be determined by the court was whether the discovery of a new source of publication - including on the Internet - provided a factual basis for a new claim for the protection of personal rights within the meaning of the Civil Code. In the court�s view, the response to such a question should be in the positive. The court was of the opinion that the discovery of a new source of publication, namely the newspaper�s website, of the defamatory article had given rise to a new claim on the applicants� part. The issues involved in the case were therefore not res judicata.
However, in the circumstances of the case the court was of the view that the defendants� arguments had to be given an equal weight. The court referred to the constitutional guarantees of free speech and noted that preventive censorship was incompatible with the Constitution. It was the journalists� right and obligation to inform the general public of matters of public interest.
The court pointed out that the applicants have already received a public apology. Allowing the applicants� claim to have a new apology published would not offer adequate protection to the applicants. Had they sought an order in the present set of proceedings that the Internet publication be supplemented by a footnote or a link informing a reader about the judgments of 8 May 2002 and 24 April 2003, or had they asked the court to order the defendants to publish an apology on the newspaper�s website, the court would have given serious consideration to such a request.
II. RELEVANT DOMESTIC LAW AND PRACTICE
�The personal rights of an individual, such as, in particular, health, liberty, , freedom of conscience, name or pseudonym, image, secrecy of correspondence, inviolability of the home, scientific or artistic works [] inventions and improvements, shall be protected by the civil law regardless of the protection laid down in other legal provisions.�
Article 24, paragraph 1, of the Civil Code provides:
�A person whose personal rights are at risk [of infringement] from a third party may seek an injunction, unless the activity [complained of] is lawful. In the event of infringement, [the person concerned] may also require the party who caused the infringement to take the necessary steps to redress the consequences of the infringement ... In compliance with the principles of this Code, [the person concerned] may also seek pecuniary compensation or may ask the court to award an appropriate sum for the benefit of a specific public interest.�
�At the request of a natural or legal person or other organisational entity, the editor-in-chief of the relevant daily newspaper or magazine is under an obligation to publish, free of charge:
1. a factually based (rzeczowe i odnoszące się do fakt�w) rectification of untrue or inaccurate statements,
2. a factually based (rzeczową) reply to any statement which might infringe someone�s personal rights.�
THE LAW
ALLEGED VIOLATION OF ARTICLE 8 OF THE CONVENTION
�1. Everyone has the right to respect for his private ... life ...
2. There shall be no interference by a public authority with the exercise of this right except such as is in accordance with the law and is necessary in a democratic society in the interests of national security, public safety or the economic well-being of the country, for the prevention of disorder or crime, for the protection of health or morals, or for the protection of the rights and freedoms of others.�
A. Admissibility
1. Alleged abuse of the right to individual petition
2. The applicants� victim status
3. The six-month time-limit and exhaustion of domestic remedies by the first applicant, Mr Węgrzynowski
4. Exhaustion of domestic remedies as regards the second applicant, Mr Smolczewski
the Government failed to adduce any case-law of the domestic courts or examples of the media�s practice to show that a rectification request under Article 31 of the Press Act has ever been successfully used to have a defamatory article present on a newspaper�s website removed from it or rectified by the addition of a reference to a judgment finding it defamatory.
As to the request to apply for an interim injunction referred to by the Government, the Court observes that the claim to have the impugned article removed from the newspaper�s website constituted the essence of the applicant�s civil claim. That claim failed. It has not therefore been convincingly demonstrated that an identical request submitted in the course of proceedings for an interim injunction and aiming at the removal of that article from the website temporarily, pending the adoption of a decision on the merits of the case, offered any reasonable prospects of success. In any event, no examples of relevant domestic practice have been adduced. This part of the Government�s preliminary objection must therefore fail.
5. Conclusion
B. Merits
1. The parties� submissions
2. The Court�s assessment
The Court has held, in the context of an Article 10 complaint brought by a newspaper, that a requirement to publish an appropriate qualification to an article contained in an Internet archive, where it has been brought to the notice of a newspaper that a libel action has been initiated in respect of that same article published in the written press, did not constitute a disproportionate interference with the right to freedom of expression. The Court was of the view that such an obligation in respect of an Internet archive managed by a publisher of a newspaper itself was not excessive. The Court also noted with approval that the domestic courts had not suggested that potentially defamatory articles should be removed from archives altogether (see Times Newspapers, cited above, � 47).
It should be further noted that the domestic courts found that the article had been published on the newspaper�s website simultaneously with the print edition in December 2000. The applicant did not challenge this finding in his appeals. Therefore the second case against Rzeczpospolita brought by the applicant in 2004 concerned the same factual circumstances.
FOR THESE REASONS, THE COURT UNANIMOUSLY
1. Declares the application admissible in respect of the second applicant and inadmissible as to the remainder;
2. Joins to the merits the Government�s preliminary objection concerning exhaustion of domestic remedies in respect of the second applicant;
3. Holds that there has been no violation of Article 8 of the Convention and, in consequence, upholds the Government�s above-mentioned preliminary objection.
Done in English, and notified in writing on 16 July 2013, pursuant to Rule 77 �� 2 and 3 of the Rules of Court.
Fran�oise
Elens-Passos ��������������������������������������������������������� Ineta Ziemele
�������� Registrar��������������������������������������������������������������������������� President
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