David Allen Green

A critical and liberal look at law and policy

Syndicate contentRSS

David Beckham and a lack of malice

What this US case tells us about libel reform.

They do libel differently in the United States. The combination of the First Amendment and the hallowed case of Sullivan means that public figures have to show that the defendant was "malicious" in order to bring a claim in defamation. It has been reported that David Beckham has failed in such a claim. It was not enough that he contended that the allegations were false and were damaging to his reputation: he could not show that the publishers had been malicious in making those claims.

Is this defeat a good thing? The answer to that question goes to the heart of the current debate over English libel reform.

On the one hand, it is clear that it is currently too easy to threaten and even bring a libel claim: no damage has to be shown and once the claim is made, the costs and evidential burden instantly shift to the defendant. On the other hand, no one sensibly wants to have the casual smearing of either celebrities or non-celebrities by the tabloid press that would occur if there was no access to the courts to bring a libel case.

Getting the balance correct between the right to free expression and the ability to defend and vindicate a reputation is the key to successful libel reform.

In England, Beckham would not have to show malice unless the publishers contended that it was a fair comment or that they had some sort of qualified privilege. In respect of a sheer factual fabrication not checked with the claimant and which damaged a reputation such defences would not be any good: the defendant would be likely to lose a libel claim.

So is the US approach a bad one? Supporters of the First Amendment and Sullivan would say that public figures should not have the general right to inhibit adverse publications, unless they can show the defendant knew the fact to be false or did not care whether it was false or not. Any unfair reputational damage is thereby the cost one pays for having a society that values free expression. There is something to be said for that.

However, the notion that a person can freely say damaging and false things about another without any legal risk -- unless there is malice -- is not an attractive one. One task for libel reformers is to show that that would not be the unfortunate outcome of libel reform in England.

David Allen Green is legal correspondent of the New Statesman.

7 comments

Elethe's picture

I love David Beckham, he should have enough the freedom to criticise and question , in strong terms and without malice, is the cornerstone of argument and debate, whether in scholarly journals, on websites, in newspapers or elsewhere.

Lloyd Jenkins's picture

georgep-
I'm with you, but I'm not too happy on the cost of libel actions. They are worrying.

Andy's picture

Awesome article and food for thought over the complex issues surrounding libel reform, freedom of expression and a right to privacy.

Reginald-Fah-fah's picture

Beckham will get paid out on appeal! Only a matter of time!

georgep's picture

Agreed, the cost are crazy. Winning or losing a libel case can be make or break for a company or individual.

James Jones's picture

Georgep mentioned:
"I for one am happy with UK libel laws. I hate the idea that the tabloids can ruin my life on some scandal which may or may not be true"

The thing is that there is substantial collateral damage with the present approach.

Peter Wilmshurst is a cardiologist who has expressed an honest opinion on the efficacy of some treatment sold by a US company. He is presently facing ruin should a libel case go against him.

I would rather that doctors were free to speak out than the tabloids were shut up.

I hate the idea that people die because greedy corporations can not be challenged for the fear of libel claims.

georgep's picture

I for one am happy with UK libel laws. I hate the idea that the tabloids can ruin my life on some scandal which may or may not be true.

Latest tweets