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Glenn v Kline (High Court of England and Wales): guidance on composite defamation/harassment damages (Vento), s 12 DA 2013 Twitter summary orders, and amending claim value post-issue

Published on: 16 March 2021

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Glenn v Kline [2021] EWHC 468 (QB) What are the practical implications of this case?

This ruling illustrates, in a straightforward way, how damages are assessed in online harassment and defamation disputes, and sets recent awards in comparable matters side by side. It further confirms that where defamation and harassment claims intersect, and the defamatory publications are themselves the harassing conduct, a single, composite sum for damages is the correct approach. As a result, claimants may sensibly question issuing both causes of action unless they relate to different timeframes. Here, the harassment claim encompassed posts that were out of time for defamation (ie before May 2019), together with publications that also featured in the defamation claim. The court also offered guidance on the likely form of relief under section 12 of the Defamation Act 2013 (DA 2013), which obliges a defendant to disseminate a summary of the court’s judgment. The aim of such an order is to bring the judgment to the notice of as many of the same individuals who viewed the original libels as possible...

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