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Damages for disclosure of intimate images: misuse of private information, breach of confidence and DPA 1998; absent defendant and bankruptcy – Reid v Price [2020] EWHC 594 (England and Wales)

Published on: 17 March 2020

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Reid v Price [2020] EWHC 594 (QB) What are the practical implications of this case?

This decision is a helpful authority on quantifying damages for claims involving disclosure of private information, breach of undertakings, breach of confidence, and the misuse of private information. It addresses how compensation should be assessed across overlapping privacy-related wrongs. The principles articulated in the judgment merit close attention by practitioners advising on likely awards in comparable situations, particularly since, in Warby J’s own phrase, ‘the authorities are not very numerous’.

Warby J held that Mr Reid succeeded on four distinct causes of action:

  • breach of contract, namely breach of express undertakings provided by Ms Price in 2011 that the relevant material would not be revealed
  • unjustified breach of Mr Reid’s confidence
  • misuse of private information concerning Mr Reid
  • breach of statutory duty under section 4(4) of the Data Protection Act 1998, being a failure to adhere to the overarching data protection principles

As many claims are advanced on the footing of several overlapping causes of action, it is valuable to record that, in Warby J’s assessment, when determining quantum across such claims and considering overlap, in a consolidated evaluation of liability issues, the breach of...

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