Lange v Australian Broadcasting Corporation

Lange v Australian Broadcasting Corporation

Infobox Court Case
name=Lange v Australian Broadcasting Corporation
court=High Court of Australia


date_decided=8 July 1997
full_name=David Russell Lange v Australian Broadcasting Corporation
citations= [http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/cases/cth/HCA/1997/25.html (1997) 189 CLR 520]
judges= Brennan CJ, Dawson, Toohey, Gaudron, McHugh, Gummow and Kirby JJ
prior_actions=none
subsequent_actions=none
opinions=(7:0) The Court decided to reconsider "Theophanous" and "Stephens", and decided that those cases were incorrect. The Constitution does not confer personal rights as to the implied freedom of political communication, and the defendant was found to have defamed the plaintiff (per Brennan CJ, Dawson, Toohey, Gaudron, McHugh, Gummow & Kirby JJ)

"Lange v Australian Broadcasting Corporation" (1997) 189 CLR 520 is a High Court of Australia case that deals with the implied freedom of political communication in the Australian Constitution.

Background

The plaintiff, David Lange, who was a New Zealand Prime Minister, was the subject of a report on the Australian Broadcasting Corporation current affaits program "Four Corners". He brought defamation proceedings in respect of that broadcast.

Decision

Implied freedom of political communication

In a unanimous judgment, the Court sought to clarify the interaction between the implied freedom of political communication and defamation laws, and the applicability of the implied freedom to state as well as commonwealth matters. The implied freedom was held to be an ongoing freedom, and not limited to election periods. The freedom's purpose is grounded on the functioning of democratic and responsible government, requiring freedom of communication between the voters and their representatives. The continuous nature of the freedom is justified by the concept of representative government, requiring the freedom to operate continuously, and not merely during election periods.

The implied freedom was held to be a negative right, not grant a free-standing positive right, and operated chiefly as a restraint on executive and legislative power to the extent that such power would burden the implied freedom. The Court thus overturned its earlier decisions in "Theophanous v Herald & Weekly Times Ltd" and "Stephens v West Australian Newspapers".

The Court modified the requirements of the common law defence of qualified privilege because the existing defence did not adequately accommodate the requirements of the implied freedom of political communication. The Court suggested that qualified privilege ordinarily deals with situations where there is reciprocity between the duty of the publisher to inform and the interest of readers in receiving that information. In the context of a publication about governmental or political affairs, the Court held that all voters have an interest in receiving information about such matters. There is hence a duty on publishers to publish that information. In such situations, the Court held that the reasonableness of the publisher in all the circumstances becomes a pertinent issue. Where it was reasonable for the publisher to publish potentially defamatory information, that is a defence to defamation proceedings.

The Court developed a two-part test:
# Does the law effectively burden freedom of communication about government or political matters? The scope of political communication was narrowed from "Theophanous", to mean matters that could affect their choice at elections, or the affairs of federal ministers and the executive.
# If the law does burden that freedom, is the law reasonably appropriate and adapted to serve a legitimate end which is compatible with the maintenance of representative and responsible government? The objectives of the government in making the law are considered; in this case, the Court accepted that protecting the reputation of individuals was appropriate and adapted.

Factors which may inform the requirement of reasonableness include:
*whether the publisher had reasonable grounds to believe the defamatory matter to be true
*did the publisher take reasonable steps to verify the accuracy of the material?
*did the publisher not believe the imputation to be untrue?
*did the publisher seek a response from the person affected by the publication, or was it unnecessary or impracticable to do so?

The defendants also claimed qualified privilege under the "Defamation Act" 1974 (NSW), which the court held to be appropriate and adapted.

Reconsideration of "Theophanous" and "Stephens"

The Court was prepared to reconsider the reasoning of the decisions in "Theophanous" and "Stephens", because neither of the cases contained strong constitutional law principles; In both earlier cases, Deane J agreed with Mason CJ, Toohey and Gaudron JJ on the outcome, but he differed in the view of the scope of the implied freedom.

Common law and the Constitution

The Court held that the "common law must conform with the Constitution", and the common law cannot run "counter to constitutional imperatives". The common law and constitutional law questions differ: the common law question defines the scope of the right of the defamed, while the constitutional law question specifies the area that cannot be infringed by a Commonwealth or State/Territory law.

External matters

Although this case does not entirely clarify the issue, discussion of matters at other levels of government (such as at State or Territory level) may impact federal matters, so the fact that Lange was from New Zealand does not preclude the matter.

ee also

* Australian constitutional law

References

* Winterton, G. et al. "Australian federal constitutional law: commentary and materials", 1999. LBC Information Services, Sydney.

External links

* [http://www.austlii.edu.au/au/cases/cth/HCA/1997/25.html Full text of the decision]


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