- Morgan v Odhams Press Ltd
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Morgan v Odhams Press Ltd Court House of Lords Full case name Morgan v Odhams Press Ltd Date decided 1971 Citation(s) [1971] q WLR 1239; [1971] 2 All ER 1156 (HL) Judge(s) sitting Lord Guest, Lord Morris of Borth-y-gest The case of Morgan v Odhams Press Ltd clarified the law in England regarding identification of the plaintiff in an action for defamation.
Claim
A newspaper article in The Sun (then owned by Odhams Press[1]) reported on the kidnapping of a young woman by a dog-doping gang. The woman had been staying at the home of Mr. Morgan, a journalist,[2] at the time of her kidnap.
Morgan claimed that even though the article did not mention him in any way, it implied to those who knew that the woman was staying with him that he was a member of the gang.[3]
Judgement
Lord Morris of Borth-y-gest ruled that even though the plaintiff was never referred to by name, nor was he even directly implicated upon strict reading of the defamatory article, he was still sufficiently identified. This was because a substantial group of people who knew the plaintiff understood that it referred to him. Lord Morris held that this was sufficient, even though no-one called to give evidence in fact believed the allegations to be true.[3]
References
- ^ "1964: The Sun newspaper is born". BBC News. September 15, unknown year. http://news.bbc.co.uk/onthisday/hi/dates/stories/september/15/newsid_3068000/3068749.stm. Retrieved May 24 2009.
- ^ MacNae's Essential Law for Journalists, 17th Edition. LexisNexis. 2003. pp. 232.
- ^ a b Kevin Boone (February 23 2006). "Lawiki.org : Morgan v Odhams Press (1971)". http://lawiki.org/lawwiki/Morgan_v_Odhams_Press_(1971). Retrieved May 23 2009.
Categories:- English tort case law
- English defamation case law
- House of Lords cases
- 1971 in the United Kingdom
- 1971 in case law
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