Simon Blake v Laurence Fox

JurisdictionEngland & Wales
JudgeLord Justice Warby,Lady Justice Elisabeth Laing,Lord Justice Dingemans
Judgment Date17 October 2025
Neutral Citation[2025] EWCA Civ 1321
CourtCourt of Appeal (Civil Division)
Docket NumberCase No: CA-2024-001499
Between:
(1) Simon Blake
(2) Colin Seymour
(3) Nicola Thorp
Respondents/Claimants/Defendants to Counterclaim
and
Laurence Fox
Appellant/Defendant/Counterclaimant
Before:

Lord Justice Dingemans. Senior President of Tribunals

Lady Justice Elisabeth Laing

and

Lord Justice Warby

Case No: CA-2024-001499

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)

ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT OF JUSTICE

KING'S BENCH DIVISION

MEDIA & COMMUNICATIONS LIST

Mrs Justice Collins Rice

[2024] EWHC 146 (KB)

[2024] EWHC 956 (KB)

Royal Courts of Justice

Strand, London, WC2A 2LL

Patrick Green KC, Alexandra Marzec and Greg Callus (instructed by Gateley Legal) for the Appellant

Adrienne Page KC, Godwin Busuttil and Beth Grossman (instructed by Patron Law) for the Respondents

Hearing dates: 28 and 29 July 2025

Approved Judgment

This judgment was handed down remotely at 10.00am on 17 October 2025 by circulation to the parties or their representatives by e-mail and by release to the National Archives.

Lord Justice Warby

Introduction

1

This appeal is about proof of the fact, causation, and seriousness of reputational harm in claims for defamation.

2

At common law a published statement about a person is actionable if it has a defamatory tendency, that is to say it bears a meaning which (a) attributes to that person behaviour or views that are contrary to common shared views of society and (b) would tend to have a substantially adverse effect on the way that people would treat the person. For these purposes the law treats a statement as having only one natural and ordinary meaning: the “single meaning” which the statement would convey to a hypothetical reasonable reader. The threshold for a successful claim was raised by section 1 of the Defamation Act 2013 (“the 2013 Act”). Section 1(1) provides that “A statement is not defamatory unless its publication has caused or is likely to cause serious harm to the reputation of the claimant”. The meaning and effect of those 23 words (“the serious harm requirement”) have been the subject of a good deal of litigation in the High Court, Court of Appeal, and Supreme Court over the past decade. On this appeal we need to look at those questions again.

3

The main issue is whether decisions of the High Court on whether the serious harm requirement was met in this case were wrong in law. A particular focus of attention is the court's approach to the reputational impact of statements other than the ones complained of as libels, including the so-called “rule” in Dingle v Associated Newspapers Ltd [1964] AC 371 (“ Dingle”). The appeal also raises issues about how to assess the extent of reputational harm and the appropriate damages, if the threshold is crossed.

4

The appeal is brought by Laurence Fox against orders made by Mrs Justice Collins Rice after the trial of claims and counterclaims for damages for libel.

5

In posts on Twitter in October 2020 Simon Blake, Colin Seymour, and Nicola Thorp each called Mr Fox racist or a racist. He responded with three tweets of his own which called his accusers paedophiles. They sued him for that. So I shall refer to them collectively as “the claimants”. Mr Fox counterclaimed for their use of the word racist. Three points were decided as preliminary issues: the single meaning of each of the various tweets, whether they were statements of fact or expressions of opinion, and whether they were defamatory at common law: see the decision of Nicklin J, [2022] EWHC 3542 (KB), largely upheld on appeal ( [2023] EWCA Civ 1000).

6

The claimants' tweets were each held to mean that Mr Fox was a racist. That was identified as an expression of opinion which was defamatory at common law. At the trial, the claimants all denied that their tweets had caused serious harm. In the alternative, Mr Blake and Mr Seymour relied on the defence of honest opinion. Ms Thorp could not rely on the defence of honest opinion because her tweet did not meet the statutory condition that it “indicated … the basis of the opinion”: see s 3(3) of the 2013 Act. Her defence was that the allegation was true. Mr Fox denied that it was true or that it was or could be honest opinion. The judge held it was not necessary to resolve those issues. In her judgment on liability she held that Mr Fox had failed to prove that any of the tweets complained of had caused or were likely to cause serious harm to his reputation. For that reason she dismissed all his claims. On this appeal Mr Fox says the judge was wrong to reject his case and that on a proper application of the law the only conclusion open to her was that each of the tweets complained of did cause serious harm to his reputation.

7

The term “paedophile” was held to be a statement of fact. Mr Fox's case was that in context it was not defamatory at common law: it was a baseless allegation he had made rhetorically to highlight the baselessness of the attack on him, and this would be obvious to any reasonable reader. This court upheld that argument in respect of the tweet about Ms Thorp, given the obvious use of parody in that tweet. Her claim was dismissed. The tweets about Mr Blake and Mr Seymour were held to be defamatory at common law and their claims went to trial. Mr Fox defended those claims on the basis that his tweets had not caused serious reputational harm or alternatively were privileged as statements in reasonable defence of his own reputation. In her judgment on liability the judge held that the tweets had caused serious reputational harm and rejected the privilege defence. In a separate judgment on damages, she awarded Mr Blake and Mr Seymour damages of £90,000 each. On this appeal Mr Fox argues that the judge was wrong in law to find that his tweets caused serious reputational harm. Alternatively, he argues that the damages awards were excessive.

Factual background

The parties

8

Mr Fox is an actor by profession, best known for his role as DS Hathaway in the long-running ITV series Lewis (2006–2015) and his work in the more recent Netflix series White Lines (2020). Since 2020 Mr Fox has been active in politics. On 16 January 2020 he appeared as a panellist on BBC TV's Question Time programme and had an exchange with an audience member over allegations of racism which caused controversy. In the Autumn of 2020, prompted at least in part by these events, Mr Fox jointly formed a new political party, Reclaim, of which he became leader. Among the party's viewpoints are that freedom of speech is in grave peril and that the “woke orthodoxy” of “white privilege” and “systemic racism” must be challenged. Mr Fox stood as Reclaim candidate for London Mayor in 2021 and in a Parliamentary by-election in 2023. At the times relevant to this case he had a Twitter account in his own name with the handle @LozzaFox with about 250,000 followers.

9

Mr Blake has been active in the social sector for 30 years, working mostly with children and teenagers. He has held a variety of non-executive positions in health and education. At the material times he was a trustee and deputy chair of Stonewall, the LGBTQ+ charity and Chief Executive Officer of Mental Health First Aid England (“MHFAE”), a social enterprise supporting education, positive attitudes and action in relation to mental health. Mr Blake had a Twitter account in his own name with the handle @simonablake with a substantial number of followers.

10

Mr Seymour is a professional drag and circus-skills artist with the stage name “Crystal”. He is from Canada. He first came to prominence here in 2019 as a contestant in the TV series Ru Paul's Drag Race UK. He has since appeared regularly as Crystal on TV and at live events. He is an advocate for the gay community and racial equality, and a podcaster and media commentator focusing on drag, performance, sexuality and gender. At the relevant times Mr Seymour had a Twitter account in the name Crystal | Black Lives Matter with the handle @crystalwillseeu with a substantial number of followers.

11

Mr Thorp is a current affairs broadcaster, TV presenter and guest, and a columnist for Metro Online. She is well known for having previously been an actor, in particular for her role in ITV's Coronation Street between 2017 and 2019. At the relevant times Ms Thorp had a Twitter account in her own name with the handle @nicolathorp_ with a substantial number of followers.

The key events

12

On 1 October 2020, the supermarket chain Sainsbury's Plc (“Sainsbury's”) published two tweets on its Twitter account @sainsburys.

(1) The first tweet, at 10.11, displayed a graphic “ Celebrating Black History Month” with the words:

We are Celebrating Black History Month this October. For more information visit [website link given]. #blackhistorymonth

The hyperlink included in this tweet linked to a page on Sainsbury's website which was headed: “ Celebrating Black History Month”. Under a sub-heading, “ What we have been doing to support our colleagues”, this included: “ Recently we provided our black colleagues with a safe space to gather in response to the Black Lives Matters movement” (“the Sainsbury's Website BLM Statement”).

(2) The second tweet, at 15.22, contained a graphic with the words:

We are proud to celebrate Black History Month together with our Black colleagues, customers and communities and we will not tolerate racism.

We proudly represent and serve our diverse society and anyone who does not want to shop with an inclusive retailer is welcome to shop elsewhere.

13

On 4 October 2020, Mr Fox posted a tweet about this (“Mr Fox's Sainsbury's tweet”). This quote-tweeted the second Sainsbury's tweet and added the following:

Dear @sainsburys

I won't be shopping in your supermarket ever again whilst you promote racial segregation and discrimination.

I sincerely hope others join me. RT.

Further reading here [website link to the Sainsbury's Website BLM Statement.]

14

Each of the claimants saw and read Mr...

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3 cases
  • John Alexander Melvin Hemming v Sonia Vanessa Poulton
    • United Kingdom
    • Court of Appeal (Civil Division)
    • 20 November 2025
    ...when assessing a public interest defence or issues of malice; and it will govern the nature and scope of any remedies: Blake v Fox [2025] EWCA Civ 1321, [113]. It is for these reasons, no doubt, that “experience shows that identifying meaning at an early stage ensures that cases which shou......
  • Dr Matthew Garrett v Dr Roy Schestowitz
    • United Kingdom
    • King's Bench Division
    • 20 November 2025
    ...which may properly be drawn in any individual case depend entirely on the circumstances of that case. The Court of Appeal in Blake v Fox [2025] EWCA Civ 1321 has, however, recently indicated that if a claimant establishes a factual matrix of mass publication, grave defamatory tendency of th......
  • Jahangir Ali v Adnan Hussain
    • United Kingdom
    • King's Bench Division
    • 23 January 2026
    ...the reference to harm which is “likely” to be caused.” 31 The effect of Lachaux is summarised in the judgment of Warby LJ in Blake v Fox [2025] EWCA Civ 1321 at [32] as follows: “The statute requires a claimant to go beyond proof of a defamatory tendency and to demonstrate as a fact, on the......