The Court considered whether there could be recognition of the existence in the common law an actionable claim for invasion of privacy, in consistence with the common law method.
As the Court did not find any breach of confidence in the defendant stating that the plaintiff had apologised to him, if this tort of invasion of privacy was recognised, it could provide a remedy for the plaintiff’s hurt and distress in regard to this aspect of the case.
For decades the case of Victoria Park Racing v Taylor was viewed as excluding the recognition of a tort of invasion of privacy under Australian common law. In 2001, in Lenah Game Meats, the High Court considered this question and while no members of the Court explicitly recognised the existence of such a tort, each judgment left open the question of whether such a tort might be recognised in the future. The decision established that Victoria Park Racing does not prevent the recognition of a tort of privacy under Australian common law .7
The Court also thoroughly considered other first instance decisions since Lenah Game Meats which discussed the tort of privacy. In the decisions of Grosse and Doe v ABC, the tort of privacy had received some limited judicial recognition and that other decisions which had not recognised the tort had also not completely ruled out its existence8. The Court also had regard to the tort’s existence in the UK, NZ, US and Canada9.
In a step forward for the Australian common law, and in light of all the authorities considered, the Court held that no binding authority excludes the recognition of a cause of action for invasion of privacy, and in fact, Lenah Game Meats confirms that the development of a tort of privacy is open. However, the Court did note that “there is also a thread of caution running through each of the judgments delivered in that case – an emphasis on the need to ensure that any such development be in accordance with the common law method.”10
The Court then looked at whether the recognition of an actionable wrong of invasion of privacy could be viewed as an incremental development of the existing action for breach of confidence. The Court concluded that it was in effect just an extension of the existing tort, rather than a new cause of action. Accordingly, the Court considered that it was desirable that the common law should recognise the tort.
When articulating the difference between the new tort and the equitable remedy of breach of confidence, the Court concluded that:
“…it should be recognised that an action for invasion of privacy forms part of the common law of Australia. Although historically this action has been housed under the overarching doctrine of breach of confidence, it is better viewed as separate and distinct from the action for breach of confidence. This does not amount to the creation of a tort, but rather a recognition of the bifurcation which has developed in relation to the action known as breach of confidence, between actions which at their heart protect confidential trade information; and actions (available only to natural persons) which at their heart protect human dignity in privacy. It is proposed to elucidate that bifurcation, by renaming the latter category as an action for invasion of privacy.” 11
Somewhat unhelpfully, the Court did not attempt to state the elements of the cause of action, except for that it should provide relief “at a minimum, in the circumstances where it has been available in the past – that is, the making public of private matters in circumstances that a reasonable person, standing in the shoes of the claimant, would regard as highly offensive.” 12. The Judge also did not express any views on the question of the availability of defences, or whether this action is better viewed as an equitable or tortious cause of action 13.