B e f o r e :
THE HONOURABLE MR JUSTICE TUGENDHAT ____________________
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Margaret Bowron QC (instructed by Attwaters) for the Claimant Sophie Mortimer (instructed by Kennedys) for the Defendant Hearing date: 2 March 2011 ____________________
HTML VERSION OF JUDGMENT ____________________
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Mr Justice Tugendhat :
In the course of the hearing, in which I approved the settlement of a claim by the Claimant for personal injuries, I made an order under the Children and Young Person's Act 1933 section 39 (as amended) that:
I stated that I would give my reasons later and these are they.
This case raises again the question of what, if any, order the court should make to restrict publication of the name of a claimant in circumstances where the court is asked to approve a compromise by or on behalf of a claimant who is a protected party.
The Claimant is now aged seven. Sadly the birth was mishandled by the treating staff, the birth was delayed, the Claimant was starved of oxygen and as a result the Claimant is physically very incapacitated. But the Claimant is mentally entirely, or very substantially, intact. As a result of these tragic events a very large sum of money has been agreed in settlement of the claim for personal injuries suffered as a result of the Defendant's negligence.
Fortunately the Claimant enjoys the loving care of two dedicated parents in a family in which there are other children. The need for care is constant and touches every aspect of the Claimant's life. Anything significant which affects the Claimant is likely also to affect the other members of the family.
The Claimant is intelligent and sensitive and able to communicate, albeit with difficulty. The Claimant attends school. The expert evidence is that it is difficult to predict the Claimant's future educational progress. The Claimant's ability levels and parental background suggest that the Claimant could and should progress on to tertiary education, possibly to degree level. It is too soon to say whether the Claimant will have capacity within the meaning of the Mental Capacity Act 2005, but at present it looks as if the Claimant's preserved cognitive functioning is such that the Claimant will be able to make decisions and, subject to review, may therefore have legal capacity as an adult.
In JXF (a child suing by his mother and litigation friend KMF) v York Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust [2010] EWHC 2800 (QB) I set out the legal framework in which the court approves settlements and the provisions relevant for ensuring open justice. In that case I made an anonymity order. I was not asked to make an order under the 1933 Act.
In the present case the primary application made to me was for an order under the 1933 Act, and that is the order that I have made. That Act applies to civil proceedings: see Briffett v Crown Prosecution Service [2002] EMLR 12. So far as material it provides as follows:
The editors of Arlidge Eady & Smith on Contempt 3 rd edition (2005) discuss the 1933 Act in paragraphs 8-25 and following. As they observe in paragraph 8-62, there is no clear guidance as to the criteria judges should apply when invited to make an order under section 39. As they record in para 8-57, in R v Leicester Crown Court ex p S (a minor) [1992] 2 All ER 659 at 662 Tasker Watkins LJ in the Divisional Court had said:
However, as the editors point out in paragraph 8-58, it is necessary to approach this statement with some caution because in the later case of R v Lee [1993] 2 All ER 170 the Court of Appeal drew attention to the fact that nothing in the statutory wording justified the stricture that section 39 reporting restrictions were only to be withheld "in rare and exceptional cases".
Moreover, the law has developed since then, in particular as a result of the passing of the Human Rights Act 1998, which, by section 12, requires the court to have regard to Article 10 (freedom of expression). The Act also requires the court to have regard to the requirements of open justice and respect for private life (Arts 6 and 8).
In Briffett at page 213 Newman J alluded to Art 10 by observing that the court would have to consider whether there was "a pressing social need" to make an order under section 39.
The guidance recently given by the Court of Appeal on anonymity orders applies equally to orders under s.39, as appears from sub-para (3) of the extract cited below. In JIH v News Group Newspapers Ltd [2011] EWCA Civ 42 , para 21 Lord Neuberger MR set out the following:
An order under section 39, such as I have made in this case, interferes less with the principle of open justice and freedom of expression, and is less restrictive, than an anonymity order coupled with an order restricting access to documents on the court file pursuant to CPR Part 5.4. It is therefore a more acceptable alternative to an anonymity order, if the case is one in which some protection is necessary for the child's welfare and private life, and if it is not necessary to make a more restrictive order.
In the present case I accept that an order is necessary in order to protect the rights of the Claimant and his immediate family. Although the Claimant is only seven now, time passes quickly, and in eleven years the child will be an adult. Any report of the present proceedings which identifies the Claimant in a newspaper is, with modern Internet technology, very likely to be almost as readily accessible online in eleven or twelve years' time as it would be if it were published today.
One of the purposes of the proceedings for approval of settlements is to make sure that money recovered by or on behalf of the protected party is properly looked after and wisely applied. See CPR Part 21.10 and the notes in the White Book (2010) 20.10.1 as set out in my judgment in JXF at paragraph 5.
There is a risk that that objective will be defeated if the Claimant is named. When the Claimant becomes an adult the many physical disabilities suffered by the Claimant will result in vulnerability. If the sums of money at the Claimant's disposal as a result of this settlement are readily to be found out on the internet, there will be a risk of the Claimant losing that money to inappropriate friends, fortune hunters or even thieves. It is for that reason that I am satisfied that an order restricting publication of the Claimant's name is necessary in this case.
Each case depends on its own facts. Judgments explaining why orders derogating from open justice are made cannot, in the nature of things, set out in any great detail the particular facts which give rise to the need for the order. In some cases greater protection will be needed than in others. On the particular facts of this case I took the view that Counsel was right to put an application for an order under section 39 of the 1933 Act at the forefront of her arguments, and that an order under that section is necessary but also sufficient to meet the circumstances of the case.
There is in this case no sufficient general, public interest in publishing a report of the proceedings which identifies the Claimant to justify the resulting curtailment of his right and his family's right to respect for their private and family life, and the risk of defeating the purpose of the proceedings, which is to ensure that the Claimant receives and keeps the money necessary to compensate the Claimant for the personal injuries suffered.
It is therefore for these reasons that I made the order that I did.