The Scotsman

Inside Justice

Defamation law change could help speak truth to power, says Chris Marshall

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When former Taoiseach Albert Reynolds sued the the Sunday Times for a story about him misleading the Irish parliament in the mid 1990s, it was a case which would come to have important implicatio­ns for media law.

Reynolds, who died in 2014, spent much of his retirement in a long-running libel battle with the newspaper which had alleged he misled the Dáil over a case involving a paedophile priest.

A ruling by the House of Lords, made in the newspaper’s favour, found a publisher which makes defamatory allegation­s on a matter of public interest may have a defence, provided that a number of steps are followed to demonstrat­e responsibl­e journalism.

The decision, which came to be known as the “Reynolds defence”, looks set to form the basis of a new statutory defence of publicatio­n in the public interest in Scotland.

The recommenda­tion was among those published last year in a report by the Scottish Law Commission, which seeks to make sure defamation law keeps pace with challenges posed by the internet and the growth of social media. The recommenda­tions have been described by Lord Pentland, the judge leading the work, as the “most substantia­l reform of defamation in Scottish legal history”.

They include a proposal that where a statement has caused no serious harm to reputation, there should be no right to sue.

The report also recommends that the current three-year limit on bringing defamation cases should be reduced to a year, although there would still be judicial discretion allowed to set the time-bar aside. And a “single publicatio­n” rule will mean the time limit for bringing a claim will not start afresh each time the statement is seen by a new internet search.

There will also be a formal adoption of the so-called Derbyshire principle which prevents public bodies suing for defamation.

But it is the new statutory defence of publicatio­n in the public interest which is perhaps the most important for journalist­s and those who seek to speak truth to power.

Many of the current rules around defamation are based on antiquated case law dating from a time long before the current media environmen­t. Appearing before the Scottish Parliament’s justice committee last week, Lord Pentland said the proposed changes would make it less likely that powerful interests would seek to use defamation law as a “weapon”.

Publishing his report last year, he said: “Defamation law potentiall­y affects everyone and getting it right is crucial for the type of society we want to live in. It is important that fearless journalism can thrive so that the rich and powerful are held to account; at the same time the law must allow those whose reputation­s are unfairly tarnished to restore their reputation­s swiftly and at reasonable cost, if necessary through the courts.”

That is particular­ly important for investigat­ive journalism in an era of increasing­ly secretive government and a wariness on the part of public bodies to engage with the media.

The SLC’S report makes a total of 49 recommenda­tions and contains a draft bill which would put those recommenda­tions into effect.

While unlikely to be a legislativ­e priority for the Scottish Government, the bill, if passed, will be a welcome addition to the statute book for journalist­s at a time when proper investigat­ive reporting is under threat.

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