CASE OF GIESBERT AND OTHERS v. FRANCE
Doc ref: 68974/11;2395/12;76324/13 • ECHR ID: 001-174314
Document date: June 1, 2017
- Inbound citations: 1
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- Cited paragraphs: 1
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- Outbound citations: 7
FIFTH SECTION
CASE OF GIESBERT AND OTHERS v. FRANCE
( Applications nos. 68974/11 , 2395/12 and 76324/13 )
JUDGMENT
(Extracts)
STRASBOURG
1 June 2017
This judgment is final but it may b e subject to editorial revision.
In the case of Giesbert and Others v. France ,
The European Court of Human Rights ( Fifth Section ), sitting as a Chamber composed of:
Angelika Nußberger, President, Erik Møse, André Potocki, Yonko Grozev, Síofra O ’ Leary, Gabriele Kucsko-Stadlmayer, Lәtif Hüseynov, judges, and Milan Blaško , Deputy Section Registrar ,
Having deliberated in private on 9 May 2017 ,
Delivers the following judgment, which was adopted on that date:
PROCEDURE
1 . The case originated in three applications (nos. 68974/11 , 2395/12 and 76324/13 ) against the French Republic lodged with the Court under Article 34 of the Convention for the Protection of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms (“the Convention”) by two French nationals, Mr Franz-Olivier Giesbert and Mr Hervé Gattegno, and a company incorporated in France which operates the weekly magazine Le Point (“the applicants”), on 28 October 2011 , 6 January 2012 and 28 November 2013 respectively .
2 . The applicants were represented by Mr R. Le Gunehec , a lawyer practising in Paris. The French Government (“the Government”) were represented by their Agent, Mr F. Alabrune , Director of Legal Affairs at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs .
3 . Relying on Article 10 of the Convention, t he applicants complained that the sanctions imposed on them by the domestic courts for publishing, in the context of two press articles, extracts from a criminal case file before they had been read out in open court, had breached their right to freedom of expression .
4 . On 15 May 2014 notice of the applications w as given to the Government .
THE FACTS
I. THE CIRCUMSTANCES OF THE CASE
5 . The first applicant , Franz-Olivier Giesbert, is the publication director of the magazine Le Point . The second applicant, Hervé Gattegno, is a journalist with Le Point . The third applicant is the company operating Le Point .
A. Background to the proceedings at issue
6 . The proceedings against the applicants which form the subject matter of the three applications are related to the events commonly referred to as the “ Bettencourt affair ” .
7 . Mrs Liliane Bettencourt, principal shareholder of the group L ’ Oréal , is one of the richest individuals in France . From the late 1990 s she made numerous gifts to her friend B., a writer and photographe r , totalling several hundred million euros in value .
8 . In December 2007 Mrs Bettencourt ’ s daughter , M s Bettencourt ‑ Meyers, filed a criminal complaint against B. , for the offence of undue influence ( abus de faiblesse ) , with the public prosecutor at the Nanterre tribunal de grande instance . A preliminary investigation was opened . In that context numerous interviews were conducted , in particular with individuals close to Mrs Bettencourt, and searches were carried out . In September 2008 B. was taken into police custody .
9 . Without waiting for the outcome of the investigation , M s Bettencourt-Meyers brought a private prosecution against B. in the Nanterre Criminal Court , on the same charge of undue influence . She sought and obtained the inclusion in the case file of material and reports from the preliminary investigation .
10 . In September 2009 the public prosecutor ’ s office decided to discontinue the proceedings based on M s Bettencourt-Meyers ’ original complaint .
11 . The case initiated by the private prosecution was first set down for hearing on 3 September 2009 , then on 11 December 2009. On that date it was decided to seek a medical assessment of Mrs Bettencourt and the hearing was deferred again to 15 Ap ril 2010 ( for the subsequent criminal proceedings , see paragraph s 52 and 53 below ).
12 . Mrs Bettencourt publicly announced that she was refus ing to undergo the assessment ordered by the court . She also filed submissions by way of voluntary intervention, including in the alternative an application to join the proceedings as a civil party in the event that the prosecution was regarded as valid by the court . She argued that the aim of her civil-party application was to persuade the court that her mental faculties were not diminished and that she had made her gifts to B. with all due lucidity.
13 . The developments in the case were widely reported in the press. The offending articles in Le Point were thus published in that context .
B. The offending articles
1. The a rticle of 10 December 2009
14 . On 10 December 2009 the third applicant published , with the second applicant ’ s byline , a four-page spread under the heading “Investigation into a very dear friend” and with the sub-heading : “ Tr ea s ure . Did he take advantage of Liliane Bettencourt ? [B.] denies it but the finger of suspicion points to him” .
15 . The article referred to various aspects of the case and in particular the very significant gifts made by “the heir of L ’ Oréal ” , for a total of one billion euros, to B. The journalist wrote, quoting the testimony of Liliane Bettencourt ’ s former accountant : “She too describes the psychological domination imposed on an elderly lady who is more fragile than she may like” . He also inserted a passage from the “ prosecution document ” which summed up the situation as follows :
“Taking advantage of his influence and Liliane Bettencourt ’ s weakness , [B.] persuaded her , at a time when her health was declining , to give him sums of money and assets going beyond tokens of friendship . ”
16 . The article was full of comments between inverted commas , pr esented as extracts from statements made to the investigators working under the public prosecutor . It pointed out that the latter had discontinued the investigation in question . Among the quotations were explanations given by B. when he was in police custody in September 2008, and it was claimed by the journalist that those explanations were often contradicted by the facts :
“He swears that Liliane Bettencourt has acted towards him ‘ like a patron ’ . Their first meeting goes back to the 70s but their friendship dates from a portrait he made of her in 1987 ... ‘ I was then sufficiently well off that I did not need financial assistance from Mrs Bettencourt ’ , he retorted to the investigators. ‘ I already owned five apartments on rue Servandoni [Paris 6 th ], a large collection of paintings and had co-ownership of the Brouzet estate [a large estate in the Gard], together with copyright dues and a commission on the sale by Dior of the perfume Poison ’ . After verif ication , this inventory seems to be somewhat overstated : in actual fact it was through a series of che que s from the billionaire and the cancellation of astronomical debts to real estate companies owned by him that B. has managed to build up his assets to the point of acquiring seven apartments in the well-to-do neighbo u rhood of Saint Sulpice. Today the whole complex forms a quaint townhouse with swimming pool, CCTV cameras and secret passages be tween the bookshelves .
Contradicted by the numbers and dates, the photographer was forced to explain , more humbly , that M rs Bettencourt wanted him ‘ to expand ’ in order to ‘ install all his works and perhaps set up a museum ’ . But curiously his benefactor did not even mention such a project during her own hearing on 13 May 2008. B ’ s e xplanation : ‘ She is a modest woman; she will not say the things that are in the depth of her heart ’ .
The police investigation also demonstrates the lavishness of his property in the Gard ... ‘ M rs Bettencourt did not contribute to its financing ’ he claimed . However, the billionaire ’ s accountant testified that ‘ numerous che ques ’ had been signed by her , made out to contractors doing work on the estate, ‘ for at least 150,000 euros, and as much as a che que of 10 million euros in December 2006 ’ .
Several employees testified that around the same time the old lady ’ s health had deteriorated .. . Herein lies t he gravamen of the whole case : was the L ’ Oréal heiress really aware of the extent of her generosity? ...
B. declared that he had ‘ never s een the slightest impairment of h er behavio u r ’ . He even went as far as attributing to the octogenarian, on record , ‘ a remarkable intellectual agility ’ ... Moreover, he willingly gave the police officer the name s of other beneficiaries w ho had received lavish gifts – but ‘ p erhaps not for the same reasons ’ , he nevertheless conceded. ...
The rest of his defence is even more audacious: if he is to be believed, Liliane Bettencourt enriched him against his will , insisting that he accept gifts which he tried to refuse. ‘ I only knew about these gifts when signing for them at the notary ’ s office ’ , he claimed in relation to the paintings she has given him. When asked by the police whether the notary had expressed any reservation he replied ‘ n o, on the contrary , t he notary told me that th e money came from M rs Bettencourt ’ s income and that she was responsible enough to be in control of what she was doing ’ .
Here again, the reality is rather less clear. The notary in question was originally introduced to Liliane Bettencourt to deal with the photographer ’ s real estate acquisitions . Then he replaced the family notary and all documents relating to life insurance were transferred to his practice . ‘ I no longer recall whether I knew him before he worked for M rs Bettencourt ’ , said B. in an embarrassed semi -confession – several employees say he was behind her choice. ...
His protest s that he was disintere sted are also at odds with a number of findings ... especially this answer Liliane Bettencourt gave herself to the police : asked if h er protégé had ever refused h er generosity, she replied ‘ no ’ . When the investigators confronted him with this answer, the photographer was forced to concede: ‘ I have never refused gifts that have already been recorded in notarial acts ’ . That ’ s a bit different ...
In addition t o these oddities , there are two damning statements in the file. ... ”
17 . Those two statements are extracts from the testimony of the “former director of L ’ Oréal once responsible for the management of Liliane Bettencourt ’ s assets” and her former accountant . The first spoke of a “hold” over Mrs Bettencourt . He had asked to be relieved of his duties because, he testified, “I ran the risk of being complicit in the misdeeds of M r [B] by my tacit consent ” . The second witness referred to “pressure” on the part of the photographer and testified that he was always “asking for money”. In late 2006 her attention was drawn to the proposed assignment of a life insurance policy ( for an amount in excess of 260 million euros). “I tried to reason with M rs Bettencourt but she was no longer her old self” , recalled the accountant . “I then bumped into B. in the house and said to him ‘ you ’ ve seen the state she is in, you know she is very ill ’ . He replied ‘ never mind , as long as she is not under deputyship she can still sign ’ ” .
18 . The article also contained comments made by Mrs Bettencourt on 13 May 2008 , in a box head ed: “ Exclusi ve : what Liliane Bettencourt told the police ”. The journalist, after quoting extra c ts from the statement showing that Mrs Bettencourt did not recall the agreements she had signed with B., wrote that “these memory lapses are clearly at odds with the picture that B. would be painting of her to the same investigators” .
19 . In another box the journalist reported on the application for “judicial protection” filed by Mrs Bettencourt ’ s daughter and quoted an extract from the “report of neurologist P.A. ” , who had been “asked by the public prosecutor to examine the billionaire ’ s medical records” , revealing “a state of vuln er abilit y rela t ed to a probable degenerative neurological condition which impaired her individual faculties” .
20 . The article stated that from this episode and many others , the financial brigade investigators , in a report of 1 December 2008, had concluded that there was “a series of sufficiently strong presumptions that the offence of undue influence [had] been committed by B. ”; and that the photographe r , for his part, had denounced an “odious attack” on a “world- famous artist”. It ended thus : “the court will rule whether the fortune passed to him by Liliane Bettencourt was a windfall or a swindle – either way, it ’ s a master stroke ” .
2. The article of 4 February 2010
21 . On 4 February 2010 the third applicant published, with the second applicant ’ s byline , an article indicate d on the full front cover of the magazine under the headline “Bettencourt affair : how to gain one billion ( without any effort ) ” . The sub headings announcing the article read : “the unbelievable story of a society photographe r who made a fortune by ‘ seducing ’ Liliane Bettencourt, the richest woman in France ” and “the accusations of Madam ’ s employees” . A photo - montage showing Mrs Bettencourt “with her friend B. ” also appeared on the cover .
22 . The subject of the article, which extended to eight pages, was indicate d as follows : “ Bettencourt affair . Has the richest woman in France been conned by the photographe r [B.] ? Some of her former employees have said as much to the police. Le Point reveals their testimony and the secrets of this incredible high-society melodrama” . The article began as follows :
“Is it about money or sentiment? A quarrel over an inheritance or a question of principle? A settling of family scores or the most perfect scam? All of these things put together, perhaps and much more, because the millions slip away by their hundreds in an atmosphere redolent of an Agatha Christie novel and a setting worthy of Scott Fitzgerald ... Even the trial – the inevitable epilogue – will resemble a high-society event: on 15 and 16 April, the court of Nanterre will look into the incredible generosity, for almost a decade, of the richest woman in France towards the person she has made her favourite , the photographer [B.].”
23 . The article continued as follows :
“Since the billionaire ’ s daughter has taken her case to the courts, accusing her mother ’ s protégé of the offence of ‘ undue influence ’ , ripples of disgust have been felt along the majestic avenues of Neuilly and beyond – the high society of Paris in finance, industry and politics – concerned that it may one day be regretted that no one had seen anything , or at least said anything .
For the investigation has revealed the existence of lavish gifts , apparently totalling around 1 billion euros. Could such riches pass unnoticed? There ’ s a d isturbing detail: the largest sums were assigned to B. in the spring of 2003 and in the summer of 2006, at a time when Liliane Bettencourt ’ s health was declining sharply ...
Guru. Much testimony has come to light since then – Le Point is exclusively publish ing several extracts (see the following pages). Housemaids, nurses, secretaries, the chauffeur , accountants, all describe ‘ the hold ’ that [B.] had over the L ’ Oreal heiress (aged 87), his own individual way of soliciting h er generosity, the equivocal aspects of his behavio ur. Before the court, the succession of these indignant employees will be reminiscent of the spectacle in the von Bülow affair – the trial of th e libertine and cynical American aristocrat who was accused, in the early 80s on Rhode Island, of poisoning his wife so that he could take over her fortune . But even that scenario would not be the worst for [B.]: convicted at first instance, von Bülow was nevertheless acquitted on appeal ...
For the time being, the photographer confronts the suspicion s with sardonic contempt. ‘ To make a work of one ’ s life, that ’ s what matters ’ , he proclaimed in Le Monde , describing the charges against him as ‘ pathetic rumo u rs ’ . His benefactor? ‘ A n intelligent woman who knows how to choose men, to take risks ’ , he told the police, sweeping a little too quickly under the carpet the doubts about h er state of health. To be sure , the heiress affirmed a year ago, in Le Journal du dimanche , that she was attached to [B.] and that she had no time for gossip. ...
She has since shut herself away , leaving her lawyers to speak in her place, refusing any medical assessment and cutting short her appearances at receptions or ceremonies. This silence has only served to reinforce the impression of a woman under influence . ”
24 . In the middle of the article , under the heading “ Exclusi ve : the women who accuse”, there were long extracts ( over three pages) from statements of employees who work ed at Mrs Bettencourt ’ s house ( accountant , secretary , chambermaid , nurse ) that had been given during the preliminary investigation . The following statements were highlighted in particular :
“It was as if [B.] had woven his web around Mrs Bettencourt. ”
“He answered me : ‘ As long as she is not under deputyship she can sign. ’ ”
“ [B.] takes advantage of Madame ’ s weakness to benefit from her generosity.”
25 . A fter referring to remarks by B. and by Mrs Bettencourt in the press , the article added: “a number of statements paint a less idyllic picture : under oath, employees and servants mentioned pressing requests for money going as far as harassment , harsh language , and various schemes bordering on the sordid. ...”
26 . Under an intermediate heading “ Strat egy” the article then mentioned and partially quoted documents that had been discovered by the financial investigators at B. ’ s home in Paris.
27 . The article ended with a small insert indicating that B. had refused to respond to Le Point, preferring to “reserve his answers for the judges” .
C. The proceedings brought against the applicants following the publication of the impugned articles
1. The urgent proceedings brought by Mrs Bettencourt ( application no. 68974/11)
28 . On 11 February 2010, following the publication of 4 February 2010, Mrs Bettencourt brought urgent proceedings against the applicants in the Paris tribunal de grande instance claiming a manifestly unlawful nuisance under A rticles 808 and 809 of the Code of Civil Procedure ... She asked the urgent -applications judge to find that the reproduction of procedural documents from the file of the preliminary investigation initiated by the Nanterre public prosecutor breached section 38 ( 1 ) of the Law of 29 July 1881 on freedom of the press ( “section 38 ”, ... ) , which prohibited the publication of documents from a criminal case file before they had been read out in open court , and A rticle 9 of the C ivil Code , guaranteeing the right to respect for private life ... She requested that a court-ordered notice be published in Le Point , on pain of a coercive fine, and that the applicants be ordered to pay her , by way of an advance , compensation for her non-pecuniary damage , on account of her portrayal as an individual with diminished intellectual faculties who had been duped .
29 . The applicants disputed Mrs Bettencourt ’ s standing to bring the proceedings, as prosecution in respect of the section 38 offence could only be initiated by the public prosecutor under section 47 of the same law ... On the merits , they claimed that it was contradictory, on the one hand, to require journalists to establish the veracity of the information that they published and, on the other, to penalise them for substantiating their investigation .
30 . In a decision of 2 March 2010, the Vice-President of the Paris tribunal de grande instance found that Mrs Bettencourt had standing in so far as she was argu ing that the publication of the impugned documents had, on the basis of that provision, caused her personal damage . The judge indicated that while section 47 of the 1881 law reserved the prosecution of the section 38 offence for the public prosecutor , an individual who claimed to have sustained pecuniary or non-pecuniary damage as a result of a publication was entitled to act as a civil party in the proceedings or to bring a case before the urgent-applications judge under A rticle 809 of the Code of Civil Procedure , in order to seek the requisite protective or remedial measures to put an end to the unlawful nuisance r e sult ing from such publication , o r to request a sum by way of an advance . The judge explained : “It suffices for the publication of the documents prior to their reading in open court to have caused the person actual and direct damage , regardless whether or not the person is a party to the proceedings in which the documents are to be presented” . He ordered the applicants jointly to pay an advance of 3 , 000 euros (EUR) and the same sum in procedural expenses under A rticle 700 of the Code of Civil Procedure .
31 . As to the application of section 38 of the 1881 Act , the judge took the view that the statements by employees of Mrs Bettencourt (paragraph 24 above ) constitu ted “procedural documents” which were part of the preliminary investigation and that, even though it had been discontinued, those documents had been joined to the criminal proceedings now pending , after their transmission ha d been sought and obtained by M s Bettencourt ‑ Meyers in support of her own private prosecution . He added that those statements all helped the case for the prosecution, as indicate d on the magazine ’ s cover, “the accusations of Madame ’ s employees” , and observed as follows:
“ ... the publication of long passages emanating from insiders helps to give the reported facts an appearance of authenticit y and objectivit y ( that the article does not seek to nuance but, on the contrary, to reinforce) ; the reader is thus led to regard those facts as proven, because they are presented through the prism of a journalist ’ s analysis , w hich is bound to contain a degree of subjectivity or opinion . For those reasons, the alleged breach of section 38 cannot be combined with the breaches under A rticle 9-1 of the C ivil Code ( presumption of innocence ) o r Article 9 of the C ivil Code ( private life ) o r section 29 of the Law of 29 July 1881 [ def amation proceedings, ... ], nor can it result in redress on the basis of those separate legal provisions . ”
The judge concluded that the publication was capable of infringing the rights of Mrs Bettencourt as it portrayed her , at a time when the Nanterre Criminal Court had not yet begun to examine the criminal cases , as a woman who was manipulated and weak , a description that she categorically denied .
32 . The judge further found that the applicants were not justified in relying on the provisions of A rticle 10 of the Convention and the necessities of information . In this connection he indicated that section 38 sought mainly to preserve the independence and orderly conduct of the judicial process , in addition to protecting the rights of the persons concerned , particularly by guaranteeing the presumption of innocence . He emphasised the limited and temporary nature of the restriction on freedom of expression , as the legislation did not prevent analysis of , or comment s on , procedural material , or the publication of information gleaned from the proceedings themselves , but only prohibited the reproduction of documents which were intended for public disclosure in the context of a judicial process surrounded by safeguards . Th ese safeguards include respect for defence rights and the princ iple of adversarial proceedings , “which could not be ensured by a prior, isolated and partial media report” . The judg e went on to explain as follows:
“... the impugned restriction can not be compared to the case of disclosure of professional secrets or of secrets from the preliminary or judicial investigation , on account of the possession by a journalist of documents covered by secrecy and used in publications imparting information to the general public, in so far as the journalist , who is not bound [ by those secrets], is required to possess such documents in order to justify the veracity of the facts reported or the seriousness of his investigation, but also to use them in compliance with the applicable legislation . ”
33 . All of the claims submitted by Mrs Bettencourt alleging a breach of her privacy were dismissed on the ground that such a breach had not been sufficiently established, having regard to the general public ’ s right to be informed, and interest in being informed, of current affairs or events in the general interest :
“... the claimant has not relied on any specific breaches of her private life which would go beyond the information that it is permitted to mention in connection with the criminal case before the court of Nanterre, as Le Point did not, in particular, provide details about any health problems she may have.”
34 . The applicants appeal ed . The y argued in particular that the procedural documents in question, which had been included in the case file solely on the initiative of the claimant , and not on that of the public prosecutor , could not be regarded as carrying the degree of authority which justified , by derogation to the principle of freedom of expression , the prohibition imposed by section 38. They further emphasised that neither Mrs Bettencourt ’ s right to a fair hearing, nor any undermining of the authority or impartialit y of the co urts, was at stake .
35 . In a judgment of 19 March 2010, the Paris Court of Appeal upheld the decision of the court below, in the main, and raised the amount of the advance to EUR 10, 000, in addition to charging EUR 5, 000 for the costs of the appeal proceedings . It confirmed that the witness statements “clearly” constituted “procedural documents” , even though the preliminary investigation had been discontinued , since they had been transmitted by the public prosecutor at the request of the civil party and thus formed an integral part of the criminal proceedings . In the court ’ s view, “the fact that they were transmitted at the request of the civil party and not on the initiative of the public prosecutor bore little relevance in this connection” . It concluded that the publication of long passages from those statements constituted a violation of section 38 and thus an unlawful nuisance within the meaning of A rticle 809 of the Code of Civil Procedure . It added as follows :
“... the r equirement for the journalist to verify his sources and to compare the various material available to him on a given subject in the context of a serious investigation , before imparting information to the public, does not mean reproducing verbatim the documents used for his investigation, where, as in the present case, such publication is prohibited under press legislation of which he cannot be unaware.”
The court concluded that the applicants ’ submission that section 38 should be declared incompatible with A rticle 10 of the Convention was unfounded . It took the view that M r s Bettencourt was entitled to claim non-pecuniary damage as she had been portrayed as:
“a woman in a weak mental state , being easy to manipula te and under the influence of [B.], which the reader is all the more likely to regard as the truth as [the observations ] are presented as emanating from individuals who have played a particular role, making them privileged observer s of her private life.”
Lastly, the Court of Appeal confirmed that there had been no breach of Mrs Bettencourt ’ s privacy in the following terms :
“... the mere mention of Mrs Bettencourt ’ s mental health in the body of the article, without any details falling within her private sphere , and in the testimony reproduced, which was mainly about the conduct and manoeuvres attributed to [B.] , does not suffice to establish any particular breach of the respondent ’ s privacy that would go beyond the limits of legitimate information that the public is entitled to expect about a case which, already being widely covered by the media , is before the courts ... .”
36 . The applicants appealed on points of law . In their grounds of appeal they argue d , under A rticle 10 of the Convention, that they had a duty to inform the public about a case pending before the courts which had been revived after a private prosecution, following its discontinuance by the public prosecutor, and which had given rise to wide media coverage especially on account of the personality and wealth of Mrs Bettencourt ; that the judgment of the Court of Appeal had found against them solely for publishing the statement extracts and not on account of their content ; that there had been no impairment of the interests protected by section 38 ( 1 ) because Mrs Bettencourt was not the defendant in the proceedings ; that there was a manifest contradiction in the Court of Appeal ’ s position , as it had declared Mrs Bettencourt ’ s action admissible on the basis of the damage sustained , while taking the view that she had not been portrayed as a weak and manipulated woman in terms of her right to respect for her private life .
37 . In a judgment of 28 Ap ril 2011 the Court of Cassation dismissed the applicants ’ appeal and ordered them to pay Mrs Bettencourt the sum of EUR 4, 000 in costs . It gave the following reasons for its decision :
“... the judgment observes that long extracts were published from the statements taken during the preliminary investigation ... , in which [ Mrs Bettencourt] was portrayed as a manipulated and weak woman ; proceeding with a correct application of A rticle 10 of the Convention ... , the Court of Appeal was able, without contradicting itself, to conclude from that publication , since the documents drawn up by the police during an investigation are procedural documents within the meaning of section 38 of the Law of 29 July 1881, that [ Mrs Bettencourt] was justified in claiming , solely on the basis of that publication, that she had sustained personal damage ... ”
2. Urgent proceedings brought by B. ( application no. 2395/12)
38 . On 11 February 2010 B. brought urgent proceedings against the applicants in the Paris tribunal de grande instance following the publication of 4 February 2010, arguing that it had caused him a manifestly unlawful nuisance , infringing both his copyright to the photographs illustrating the article and his defence rights, including his right to be presumed innocent .
39 . In a decision of 2 March 2010, the Vice-President of the Paris tribunal de grande instance , in addition to endorsing the reasoning already set out in paragraph s 31 and 32 above , took the view that the impugned publication could have the alleged effects , infring ing B. ’ s right to a fair hearing and his right to the presumption of innocence . B. ’ s claim concerning the infringement allegedly caused by the reproduction of photographs was rejected as falling outside the remit of the urgent proceedings judge . The judge ordered the publication of a notice inside the magazine together with an indication of it on the cover ( to take up one half of the page in bold type, under the heading “Judgment against Le Point in proceedings brought by [B.] ” ) and on the weekly magazine ’ s website . The applicants were also ordered jointly to pay B. an advance of EUR 3, 000 on compensation for his non-pecuniary damage , together with an equivalent sum by way of procedural expenses .
40 . The applicants appealed .
41 . In a judgment of 19 March 2010 the Paris Court of Appeal upheld the decision appealed against, mainly in the same terms as those set out in paragraph 35 above . It reiterated that the witness statements, “without engaging in any extensive interpretation of [ section 38] ” , could be characterised as procedural documents, even though the investigation had been discontinued : “the fact that they were transmitted at the request of the private prosecutor and not on the initiative of the public prosecutor is of little relevance in this connection because they support the prosecution case”. It went on to find that “consequently, the mere publication of substantial extracts from those statements, before they had been referred to or read out in open court, [had] indeed constituted a violation of section 38 of the Law of 29 July 1881 and therefore an unlawful nuisance” . The Court of Appeal further found as follows :
“... the four statements thus presented to the public portray [B.] as a devious and unscrupulous individual, using s e duction, manoeuvres and psychological pressure to persuade Liliane Bettencourt to grant him substantial and frequent gifts , at a time when she was weak and when her husband ’ s state of health had declined ;
... the reader is all the more likely to consider these statements to be true , supporting as they do the accusation against [B.] before the Nanterre Criminal Court , as they are presented as emanating from in di viduals who, as a result of the services they rendered to her ( nurse, chambermaid, secretary ), played a particular role through which they became privileged observers of her private life;
.. . the reader is thus led to believe in the accusation, even before the court hearing the case has been able to reach its decision, in conditions that breach the respondent ’ s right to be presumed innocent and his defence rights ... ”
42 . The applicants lodged an appeal on points of law .
43 . In a judgment of 7 July 2011 the Court of Cassation dismissed their appeal in the same terms as those of its judgment of 28 April 2011 (see paragraph 37 above ).
3. Proceedings on the merits brought by B. ( application no. 76324/13)
44 . On 9 March 2010, B. brought proceedings against the applicants on the merits before the Paris tribunal de grande instance seeking redress for the damage sustained on account of the publication of the articles of 10 December 2009 and 4 February 2010, in breach of section 38 ( 1 ) of the 1881 Act .
45 . In a judgment of 21 June 2010, that court dismissed all of B. ’ s claims . On the admissibility of his suit, it observed that the applicants were correct to assert that an individual who claimed to be the victim of the offence provided for under section 38 of the 1881 Act was not authorised to bring a private prosecution on that basis . It pointed out that, by contrast, the provisions of that Act did not preclude the injured party from bringing proceedings in the civil courts , as only one section of that Act ( section 46) prohibited the bringing of civil proceedings separately from a public prosecution, namely in cases of defamation against public authorities, State institutions and civil servants. A fter observing that section 38 usefully contributed to preserving the orderly functioning and impartiality of the justice system and to guarantee due process , since the full and verbatim publication of documents from a criminal file before the trial could hinder the conduct of pending investigations o r influence individuals who might subsequently be called upon to testify , or even lay magistrates who might have to adjudicate upon the case , the court gave the following reasons for its decision :
“... The prohibition that it establishes must not, however, restrict the ability of journalists to report on criminal cases, even those which have not yet been publicly examined by a court, and specifically those which , raising issues of general interest, involving significant interests , or concerning people with high-level responsibilities, especially in political, economic or artistic fields, particular ly deserve to be brought to public attention.
T he application of this legislation can not , in particular, have the effect of precluding journalists from imparting to their readers , in such a case, all or part of the documentary resources from which they d erived their information, in order to establish its credibility, or which substantiate their commentary and analy sis , in order to submit them for open discussion . This is the case here: extracts ... from reports which have been drawn up by the police acting on the instructions of the public prosecutor and which have been appended , after the discontinuance of the proce edings for which they were produced, to the file of further proceedings brought directly by a civil party in a criminal court – th o se extracts, therefore, were included by [the second applicant] in two successive articles which we re each the result of a journalistic investigation and sought to present readers with information, analysis and comments on a criminal case that would soon be adjudicated upon by a court , that involve d considerable financial interests and concern ed one of the richest individuals in Fr ance and a photographer and writer who has, as he himself boasts, ‘ unde niable success and notoriety ’ .
In the first of the impugned texts, short quot ations from procedural documents, which are reproduced in quotation marks in the body of the article and are therefore fully integrated into the journalist ’ s writing, mention certain facts and offer an analysis thereof . In the second text, the three pages of extracts from procedural documents are included in a broader editorial presentation , consisting essentially of a four-page spread and a large photograph of the person concerned , from which they are indissociable; the journalist expressly refers to those extracts in his article , analy sing them and basing his conclusions on them .
If one were to accept, in those circumstances, that these two bodies of text should be examined by this court only on the basis of the strict-liability offence under section 38 of the Freedom of the Press Act , that would lead, as the respondents rightly argue , to preventing them from initiating the debate that is warranted by the journalist ’ s work, within which the impugned extracts are merely one element; and they would be deprived, in the present case, of the defences made available by law to persons who are prosecuted for d ef amation o r for a breach of the right to be presumed innocent, in other words precluding them from proving the veracity of the allegations or, at least, the journalist ’ s good faith , and from submitting argument to the effect that the impugned texts do not contain any final conclusions expressing a biased view that the person in question is definitely guilty .
It should be noted in this connection that the claimant directs his main criticism, in his writ of summons, against the comments and analyses that the journalist has been led to write, under his own name, by the procedural documents cited .... and that he mainly reproduces in that writ only those comments and not the quotations that he is supposed to be challenging . It should be observed in particular that the claimant complains that the statements from which extracts were quoted – or in reality the journalist ’ s analysis thereof – breached his right to be presumed innocent and were presented as ‘ damning ’ and ‘ particularly incriminating ’ .
It can be concluded that B. himself admits that, absent his chosen basis of action, he had other options at his disposal: a private prosecution or civil proceedings for def amation, or a civil action for a breach of his right to be presumed innocent ; both of those courses of action would have entailed fair proceedings, ensuring respect for the equality of arms, and he was not therefore deprived of his right to have access to a court in order to secure respect for his rights .
In those circumstances, the upholding in the present case of the claims that he has submitted under 38 would constitute a restriction of freedom of expression devoid of any necessity in a democratic society . ”
46 . In a judgment of 22 February 2012, the Paris Court of Appeal overturned that judgment . It found that the impugned publications infringed B . ’ s right to a fair trial with respect for his defence rights, including the right to be presumed innocent, and breached section 38 of the 1881 Act . It ordered the applicants jointly to pay B. the sum of EUR 1 for each publication by way of compensation and EUR 6, 000 in expenses under A rticle 700 of the Code of Civil Procedure . It also ordered the publication, on pain of a coercive fine, of a notice containing the operative provisions of the judgment in Le Point and on the magazine ’ s website .
47 . The Court of Appeal explained that the assessment of the offending publication “clearly” went beyond “the framework of that of so-called ‘ procedural ’ offences” and that it would have to be carried out with regard to A rticle 10 of the Convention and to the question whether the interference with the applicants ’ freedom of expression was necessary to protect the r e putation or rights of others and to maintain the authority and impartiality of the judiciary .
48 . As regards the a rticle of 10 December 2009, the court noted that it had been published the day before B. ’ s appearance in the criminal court and that it clearly suggested that he was guilty, as he was portrayed as an individual against whom there was “a series of sufficiently strong presumptions [that he had committed] the offence of undue influence” . It took the view that the court below had wrongly regarded the aim of inform ing the public as prevailing over the means used , namely illegal methods whereby extracts had been selected from statements collected in an investigation in order to show that B . had committed the offence of undue influence , whereas there had been no judicial decision to that effect . It could be understood by the reader that B. was not telling the truth about Mrs Bettencourt ’ s mental health and that his guilt was “doubly suggested” in the introduction ( cit ing an extract from the prosecution document , which fell under section 38) and in the conclusion. It added as follows :
“... The reasoning given by the court below is tantamount to legitimising the practice , which is legally prohibited, of publishing extracts from an investigation file before they are read out in open court, first , on account of the interest of the subject, and secondly, while noting B. ’ s claim that his right to be presumed innocent was breached .
The court cannot agree with the reasoning of the court below ...
The article of 10 December 2009 , in so far as it portrays [B.] as having committed the offence of undue influence vis-à-vis Mrs Bettencourt in the above-mentioned context, clearly breaches his right to a fair trial including to the presumption of innocence .
That breach, according to the article , is exclusively based on the publication of extracts from statements which legally speaking are not addressed to journalists when they are not parties to the proceedings .
The court would reiterate that, for a reader who has an average knowledge of the courts, documents from judicial investigations take on particular credibility and an undeniable evidential value .
The court reaches the conclusion that the date of publication , the choices of quotation , and the portrayal of [B.] as guilty according to the documents from the judicial investigation, even though it had been discontinued, had the cons e quence of influencing his exercise , which was legally and conventionally guaranteed , of his defence rights , which meant that before being heard by a court he should not have been portrayed as guilty of the offence of undue influence against Mrs Bettencourt. [B.] thus finds himself required to give explanations on evidence against him which has not yet been debated in a court of law and which has been taken from an investigation , then still secret , conducted under the supervision of a judge .. .
It is not befitting to consider, as did the court below, that [B.] had other courses of action available to him . Being entitled to bring his case to the civil court under section 38, it cannot be suggested to the claimant that he should have opted for other types of proceedings on the erroneous ground that his action contravenes A rticle 10 of the Convention ... ”
49 . As regards the article of 4 February 2010, the Court of Appeal took the view that the editorial choices – front cover of the magazine, pr e sentation of whole swathes of statements , highlighting of the exclusive publication of the witness statements – constituted a communication of some importance direct ly aimed at B. who had not been able to explain before a court his position “on the accusations of the staff”. It added that the publication portrayed B. “as being accus ed by third parties in conclusive terms ” and that the article was “a repeated incrimination of [B.] two months before a hearing at which the ‘ epilogue ’ of the case was supposed to take place” .
50 . The applicants appealed on points of law . In their grounds of appeal , they argued in particular that the ban on publishing procedural documents was a matter of defence of the general interest falling within the sole jurisdiction of the public prosecutor , and that a private person could not seek redress for damage on that basis . They added that their argument was supported by the fact that B. could have, under A rticle 9-1 of the Civil C ode , used another legal remedy to ensure the protection of his interests and that the interference with freedom of expression and of information had therefore not been justified or proportionate .
51 . In a judgment of 29 May 2013 giving the following reasons , the Court of Cassation dismissed the applicants ’ appeal :
“Having found, first, that the article of 10 December 2009 was based on an analysis of extracts from various statements taken by the criminal investigation police, in order to portray [B] as having taken advantage of Mrs Bettencourt ’ s weakness, the day before his appearance before a criminal court, which was to rule on the relevance and merits of the accusations made against him by her daughter, and , secondly , that the article of 4 February 2010, based on a partial reproduction of statements taken by the criminal investigation police , seeking to portray [B.] as being accused by third parties in conclusive terms in order to lead the reader to believe that the case against him was made out , two months before a hearing which would constitute, according to the article, ‘ the epilogue of the case ’ , the Court of Appeal ... reached the conclusion that the publication had infringed [B.] ’ s right to a fair trial with due respect for his right to be presumed innocent and his defence rights; ... ”
D. Developments in the Bettencourt affair since the publication of the offending articles
52 . After June 2010 there were many developments in the case, with its various political and financial repercussions, and they were widely reported in the media . On 17 November 2010 the Court of Cassation ordered the transfer of all the aspects of the Bettencourt case to the Bordeaux tribunal de grande instance . Mrs Bettencourt ’ s daughter withdrew her claims but the criminal proceedings were later resumed , and on 14 December 2011 B. was placed under judicial investigation for the offence of undue influence .
53 . In a judgment of 28 May 2015 , B. was found guilty of that offence and sentenced to three years ’ imprisonment , of which six months were suspended, a fine of EUR 350,000 and the payment of EUR 158 million in damages awarded to Mrs Bettencourt. In a judgment of 24 August 2016, the Bordeaux Court of Appeal upheld the judgment in respect of the prosecution case and varied the sentence, giving B. a four-year suspended prison sentence, fining him EUR 375, 000 and ordering the confiscation of part of his property . The Court of Appeal also took the view that it did not need to make an award of damages on account of settlements that had been agreed between the parties.
...
III. RELEVANT EUROPEAN INSTRUMENTS
59 . The Court refers to Recomm e ndation Rec(2003)13 of the Council of Europe ’ s Committee of Ministers to the member States on the provision of information through the media in relation to criminal proceedings, adopted by the Committee of Ministers on 10 July 2003 ( see Bédat v . Switzerland [GC], no. 56925/08, § 21, ECHR 2016 ).
THE LAW
...
I I . ALLEGED VIOLATION OF ARTICLE 10 OF THE CONVENTION
61 . The applicants alleged that the civil -law sanctions imposed on them, under section 38 ( 1 ) of the 1881 Act , had entailed a violation of A rticle 10 of the Convention, which reads as follows :
“1. Everyone has the right to freedom of expression. This right shall include freedom to hold opinions and to receive and impart information and ideas without interference by public authority and regardless of frontiers. ...
2. The exercise of these freedoms, since it carries with it duties and responsibilities, may be subject to such formalities, conditions, restrictions or penalties as are prescribed by law and are necessary in a democratic society, ... for the protection of the reputation or rights of others, for preventing the disclosure of information received in confidence, or for maintaining the authority and impartiality of the judiciary.”
...
B. Merits
1. The parties ’ submissions
( a) The applicants
63 . The applicants acknowledged that the sanctions imposed on them were based on legislation, namely section 38 of the 1881 Act , but they argued, first, that this provision was not sufficiently foreseeable. As regards its wording, they claimed that the notions of “ document from a criminal case file” and “read out in open court” were not clear . Moreover, it would be impossible for a journalist to know what would be possible or impossible to reproduce , or how many lines he could publish from a document in the criminal case file without being regarded as breaching the highly formal statutory prohibition . In the applicants ’ view, it was unquestionable that the relatively brief quotation of statements in press articles on judicial proceedings was something extremely common and that this situation did not usually entail prosecution . They pointed out that journalists were justified in giving credibility to information that they imparted to the public. Paradoxically, section 38 obliged them to distance themselves from the strict reality of the judicial proceedings on which they were reporting .
64 . The applicants alleged that the impugned ban was general , form al and unforeseeable . The fact that B. had preferred to rely on section 38, which was a little used remedy , could be explained by a preference for legislation which would be applied almost automatically . In their view, this provision had enabled B. and Mrs Bettencourt to obtain the judgment against them quite easily, whereas proceedings under A rticles 9 and 9-1 of the Civil Code, protecting private life and the presumption of innocence, or a defamation suit in B. ’ s case, would have failed. Mrs Bettencourt had in deed been unsuccessful in her action under A rticle 9 of the Civil Code . Their legal actions had thus sought to circumvent any debate on the legitimacy of the information, the reality of the facts mentioned in the impugned documents, the quality of the journalist ’ s investigative work or the way in which the article had really been drafted as a whole . The applicants emphasised that they had not sought to hide the context of the case , that they had taken precautions in order to include the claimants ’ denials , and that the readers had been in a position to assess the scope and meaning of the statements in question . I t had also been pointed ou t that B. was refusing to speak to Le Point .
65 . The applicants further argued that the proceedings brought by B. illustrat ed that unforeseeability : two separate benches of the Division specialising in media law, in the urgent proceedings and on the merits , had reached diametrically opposite conclusions on the same publication .
66 . Secondly, the applicants took the view that the domestic courts had not convincingly defined the legitimate aim pursued . On the one hand, Mrs Bettencourt ’ s right not to be portrayed as a “manipulated and weak woman” was vague and her state of health was the central subject of the case , but this had not been taken into account . On the other , the right of B. to be presumed innocent had not been breached because otherwise he would have brought proceedings under A rticle 9-1 of the C ivil Code . Lastly, they claimed that section 38 did not serve to protect the authority of the courts and their acts or the impartiality of the justice system, because the right of Mrs Bettencourt and of B. to a fair hearing was not at issue; they had access to the case file and to the same documents, with all the procedural safeguards provided for by law . The applicants argued that the French legislature had sought primarily to preserve the independence of lay juries by enacting section 38 of the Press Act . In the present case, by contrast, the trial court was made up of professional judges who, moreover, were going to rule on claims submitted by a private prosecutor .
67 . Thirdly, the applicants argued that the judgment against them had been neither necessary in a democratic society nor proportionate in the light of the demands of information about a high-profile case . With reference to further developments in the case ( in particular its transfer to another region , see paragraph 52 above ), and producing a representative sample of what had been publicly disseminated , the applicants spoke of hundreds or even thousands of articles, and took the view that the case was a perfect example of the role of the press as “watchdog of democracy” . In their submission, the public debate, at that level, did not leave much room for restrictions on freedom of expression . They pointed out in this connection that the present applications were different from those in Tourancheau and July v . France ( no. 53886/00, 24 November 2005 ) , which had concerned an article on a banal criminal case before an Assize Court concerning parties unknown to the public .
68 . The applicants lastly observed that the press had a duty to report on pending court cases, with supporting evidence and documents , without having to wait for a judicial outcome which might take several more years ( in this case seven years ) ; to wait that long would not have been compatible with the necessities of information in the Bettencourt affair .
( b) The Government
69 . The Government argued that the interference was prescribed by law . Section 38 ( 1 ) of the 1881 Act was an integral part of the published and accessible legislation . Moreover, case-law had established that the impugned prohibition applied to all documents from criminal case files and had set its scope, which includ ed extracts from such documents ( they cited Tourancheau and July , cited above , § 26). Lastly, the domestic courts had examined the relevant publications in the light of A rticle 10 of the Convention ( see paragraph 47 above ).
70 . In the present case, they pointed out that the published documents were reports drawn up by investigators during a preliminary criminal investigation, the discontinuance of which was of little import , and that the applicants had been aware of their origin . They explained that the ban on the publication of documents before being “read out in open court” was clearly re ferring to the hearing , during which the parties would be able to express their views on the content of those documents in a public hearing before a court of law . The Government noted in this connection that the impugned articles had themselves made reference to the forthcoming criminal court hearings . Lastly , the difference in solution between the decision of the urgent applications judge on 2 March 2010 and that of the tribunal de grande instance on 21 June 2010 could not be interpreted as a d e monstration of the unfor e seeability of the law : a decision in urgent proceedings did not by any means prejudge the solution to be decided on the merits , on the one hand, and the use of remedies had enabled a uniform interpr e tation of section 38 in accordance with the Court ’ s case-law, on the other . The Government concluded that the interference had been prescribed by law, after stating that, in any event, the applicants were well-informed professionals who were familiar with the case- law and had access, if necessary, to appropriate legal advice .
71 . The Government further observed that the interference had pursued the aim of the “protection of the rights of others”, namely Mrs Bettencourt ’ s right to a fair hearing – as the published testimony portrayed her as a woman easy to manipulate , when she had filed a voluntary intervention with the court ( see paragraph 12 above ) – and the protection of B. ’ s defence rights and right to be presumed innocent. It had further sought to maintain the authority and impartiality of the judiciary , as the impugned articles had been capable of influencing the criminal court . They pointed out that, regardless of its composition, whether professional judges or lay jurors , the court dealing with a case had to appear impartial for the person called upon to provide explanations on the facts in question . That was not the case where a “prejudgment” on the facts had already been formed in public opinion and in the press .
72 . As to the necessity of the impugned interference , the Government observed that, on the date of publication of the first a rticle, the court was supposed to be ruling the next day on the admissibility of the relevant case , whilst at the time when the second article was published , it had still not examined the case on the merits . They took the view that the domestic courts had fully analysed the content of the articles, the choice of pr e sentation and the substance of the statements , together with the context of their publication , before finding that there had been a breach, first, of Mrs Bettencourt ’ s right to a fair hearing, and second, of B ’ s right to be presumed innocent . A fter noting the slanted nature of the pr e sentation of the statements, obviously directed in favour of the prosecution case , the courts had taken particular consid e ration of the fact that readers were likely to believe the reported facts to be true, on account of the special credibility attached to documents from criminal proceedings and the highlighting of the testimony and identity of the witnesses . In the Government ’ s view, the grounds given by the domestic courts in the three cases thus appeared “relevant and sufficient”.
73 . Unlike the applicants , the Government took the view that the choice of the course of action , namely section 38 rather than A rticle 9-1 of the Civil C ode , had been pertinent in the present case . They explained that the interests protected by the former provision were not limited to respect for the presumption of innocence and that, in the present case, the right to a fair hearing, defence rights and respect for the authority and orderly functioning of the judicial system were also at issue . The Government emphasised in that connection that it was the very publication of the statements which, through their presentation, had breached the right of Mrs Bettencourt and of B. to a fair hearing and to the impartiality of the courts . They thus took the view that the application of section 38 had been necessary and that the applicants could not complain that the domestic courts had found against them on that basis, because the aim of that provision was not to penalise acts of defamation .
74 . In the Government ’ s submission, the interest of the published information had to be assessed at the date of its publication. The prohibition of that publication remained valid for as long as the procedural documents concerned had not been examined in open court, and its duration was strictly proportionate to the aims pursued . It therefore did not matter that the parties had not ultimately been heard in court, that the case had been relocated, that Mrs Bettencourt ’ s daughter had withdrawn her claims or that the reading of the statements “in open court” had never taken place.
75 . The Government emphasised that the domestic courts had fully assessed both the implications and the imperatives inherent in freedom of expression in that context . In the present case, the permissible limits of reporting had been exceeded : the impugned articles had been manifest ly directed in favour of the prosecution case , leading the reader to believe that the facts in the published statements were true, at a time when Mrs Bettencourt and B. had not yet been heard by a judge . In addition to the damage caused to those individuals, the publications had not therefore satisfied the obligation of the press to inform the public objectively . Moreover , the accusations of undue influence made against B. had not raised a question of general interest of which the public had to be informed . It was just a banal news story . The facts bore no relation to the management of the L ’ Oréal group and therefore had no implications for the general public .
76 . The Government lastly argued that the pecuniary penalties imposed could not be regarded as excessive or as capable of having a chilling effect on the exercise of media freedom.
2. The Court ’ s assessment
77 . In the present case, the impugned decisions against the applicants could clearly be seen as an “interference” with their right to freedom of expression , and this was not in dispute between the parties . Such interference will breach the Convention if it fails to satisfy the criteria set out in the second paragraph of Article 10. The Court must therefore determine whether it was “prescribed by law”, whether it pursued one or more of the legitimate aims listed in that paragraph and whether it was “necessary in a democratic society” in order to achieve that aim or aims.
( a) Whether the interference was “prescribed by law”
78 . As the Court has already found many times in its judgments: the expressions “prescribed by law” and “in accordance with the law” in Articles 8 to 11 of the Convention not only require that the impugned measure should have some basis in domestic law, but also refer to the quality of the law in question. The law should be accessible to the persons concerned and formulated with sufficient precision to enable them to foresee, to a degree that is reasonable in the circumstances, the consequences which a given action may entail ( see, among many other authorities , Fernández Martínez v . Spain [GC], no. 56030/07, § 117, ECHR 2014). In addition , a law may still satisfy the requirement of foreseeability even if the person concerned has to take appropriate legal advice to assess, to a degree that is reasonable in the circumstances, the consequences which a given action may entail. This is particularly true in relation to persons carrying out a professional activity, who are used to having to proceed with a high degree of caution when pursuing their occupation ( see Tourancheau and July , cited above , § 56).
79 . In the present case , the parties disagree as to whether section 38 is sufficiently foreseeable . The Court has previously found that these provisions are foreseeable , as required by A rticle 10 § 2 of the Convention , and does not see any reason to depart from that analysis . It would refer to its judgment in Tourancheau and July on this point ( cited above , §§ 59 and 60). In addition , the first two applicants are well-informed media professionals and they were in a position to assess the risk that they incurred when they publi shed the articles ( ibid. , § 61). Lastly, as indicated by the Government , the differen ce in assessment between that of an urgent proceedings judge and that of a court ruling on the merits , which did not have the same function , did not demonstrate that the judicial decisions were unforeseeable or contradictory .
80 . I n conclusion, the applicants could not argue that they had been unable to foresee “to a reasonable degree” the consequences that the impugned publications might have for them judicially . The Court concludes that the interference was “prescribed by law” within the meaning of the second paragraph of A rticle 10 of the Convention.
( b) Whether the interference pursued a “legitimate aim”
81 . The Cour t observe s that the parties disagree as to the legitimate aims pursued by this interference , which according to the applicants we re not clearly defined . They claimed that the damage to Mrs Bettencourt ’ s rights was not precisely defined, that B. ’ s right to the presumption of innocence was not at issue , as the case had not been brought under A rticle 9-1 of the C ivil Code , and that the aim of protecting the orderly functioning of the justice system was not realistic in relation to a bench of professional judges .
82 . The Court takes the view that the applicants ’ arguments are to be addressed in an assessment of the necessity of the interference and are not such as to call into question the legitimate aims . It notes in this connection that the national courts contended that section 38 sought to preserve the independence and orderly functioning of the justice system , as well as protecting the rights of the individuals concerned , in particular by upholding the principle of the presumption of innocence ( see paragraph s 32, 41, 45, 48 and 49 above ). It agrees with the Government that the interference in question sought , in respect of B., to protect his right to a fair hearing with due respect for the presumption of innocence . As to Mrs Bettencourt, who admittedly was not the “accused” in the proceedings , the Court notes that , denying that she was the weak and manipulated woman portrayed by the impugned article, she had filed submissions to be joined as a civil party in the proceedings before the criminal court, whose task it had been to assess her degree of awareness at the time when she had granted her gifts to B. The purpose of the interference therefore, as far as she is concerned, was to protect her rights, while guaranteeing the proper administration of justice, in order to avoid any external influence on the judicial proceedings . Those aims correspond to the protection of the “reputation and rights of others” and the maintaining of the “authority and impartiality of the judiciary” , in so far as the latter expression has been interpreted as encompassing the rights enjoyed by individuals as litigants in general ( see Tourancheau and July , cited above , § 63).
( c) Whether the interference was “necessary in a democratic society”
83 . In the Bédat judgment ( cited above , §§ 48-54), the Court laid down criteria to guide the national authorities of the States parties to the Convention when weighing in the balance the A rticle 10 rights, on the one hand , and the public and private interests protected by the secrecy of the judicial investigation , on the other .
84 . Even though the applicants were not charged with breaching the secrecy of the judicial investigation – a charge which cannot be brought against French journalists – or with the offence of knowingly deriving an advantage from a breach of that secrecy ( see Ressiot and Others v . France , nos. 15054/07 and 15066/07 , §§ 57 and 58, 28 June 2012 ), the Cour t takes the view that the criteria set out in the Bédat judgment are applicable mutatis mutandis to the present case , since the complaints submitted by the applicants, on whom sanctions were imposed for the publication of documents from criminal proceedings before they had been read out in open court, raise similar questions relating to the competing rights under A rticles 6 and 10 of the Convention.
85 . Those criteria are as follows : how the applicant (s) came into possession of the information at issue , the content of the impugned article, the contribution of the article to a public-interest debate , the article ’ s influence on the criminal proceedings , any breach of the defendant ’ s privacy , and the proportion ality of the sanction imposed .
( i ) How the applicants came into possession of the information
86 . The Court notes , as to the question of how the impugned procedural documents came to the applicants ’ knowledge , and reiterating that this is not necessarily a determining factor in assessing whether or not a journalist complied with his duties and responsibilities when publishing the information ( see Bédat , cited above , § 57) , that it has not been alleged that they obtained the documents illegally or fraudulently . However, the applicant s could not have been unaware of the origin of the documents or of the confidential nature of the information that they were going to publish . Section 38 does not penalise or cover the conditions in which a document from a case file has been obtained, merely the publication of such a document. That being said, the applicant s must have known that the verbatim publication of parts of those documents would run counter to the prohibition in the relevant legislation .
( ii ) The content of the impugned articles
( α ) The article of 10 December 2009
87 . Reiterating that A rticle 10 covers , in addition to the substance of the ideas and information expressed, possible recourse to a degree of exaggeration, or even provocation ( see Bédat , cited above , § 58 , and cases cited therein ), the Court notes that the assessment of the content of the impugned article was not the same at first instance and on appeal. For the court below, the choice of the publication, namely short quotations from statements incorporated into the journalist ’ s analysis , and the media coverage of the case, justified the refusal to uphold B. ’ s claims under section 38, as that provision could not prevent journalists from reporting on criminal cases raising questions of general interest ( see paragraph 45 above ). The Court of Appeal took the view that the impugned article had portrayed B. as guilty of the offence of undue influence ( see paragraph 48 above ), as confirmed by the Court of Cassation ( see paragraph 51 above ).
88 . The Court, for its part, observe s that while the journalist remained prudent, not setting out any explicit conclusion in the article of 10 December 2009, the entire content of that article sought to show that B. was guilty . This is evident from the sub- heading of the publication : “Did he take advantage of Liliane Bettencourt? [B.] denies it but the finger of suspicion points to him”; but also in the slanted comments from the selected passages of the prosecution document , the extracts from B. ’ s statements in police custody and witness statements, together with the report of the financial brigade, which expressed the view that there was “a series of sufficiently strong presumptions that the offence of undue influence [had] been committed by B.” . The article u se d quotations repeatedly to highlight the contradictions and weaknesses in B. ’ s positions and conveyed information to the public in a biased manner through the choice of expressions such as “[h]ere again, the reality is rather less clear” , an “embarrassed semi-confession”, o r “two damning statements” .
( β) The article of 4 February 2010 vis-à-vis Mrs Bettencourt and B.
89 . The Cour t note s that the urgent proceedings judge examin ed the content of the article and concluded that Mrs Bettencourt was portrayed therein , even though she firm ly denied it , as a “manipulated and weak woman” with “diminished mental faculties” . The Court does not see any serious reason to call into question the d e cision of the national courts as regards the content of the article : it certainly suggests that Mrs Bettencourt, in a diminished mental state , was manipulated by B.
90 . As to B., the Court finds that the domestic courts – both the urgent proceedings judge and the trial court – took the view that the article was not neutral or nuanced, but rather slanted towards a demonstration of his guilt , in breach of his right to be presumed innocent ( see paragraph s 39, 41 and 49 above ). The Court notes that, under the head line : “ Exclusi ve : the women who accuse” , the article consists of three pages exclusive ly made up of extracts from statements that are unfavourable to B. emanating from former employees of Mrs Bettencourt.
( γ) Conclusion
91 . As regards the content of the impugned articles, the Court does not see any reason to substitute its own opinion for that of the Court of Appeal and the Court of Cassation .
( iii ) C ontribution of the impugned articles to a public- interest debate
92 . In the present case, the Cour t cannot agree with the Government ’ s submission that the impugned articles represented no more than the publication of a banal news story without making any contribution to a debate in the general interest ( see p aragraph 75 above ). The articles in Le Point were published in the context of proceedings which had begun in 2007 and had received wide media coverage . As pointed out by the tribunal de grande instance , the proceedings implicated public figures whose renown in the social and political arena was well established and the Bettencourt affair already had a high profile in public opinion at the time of the publication ( see paragraph 45 above ). Moreover, reiterating that the public have a legitimate interest in the provision and availability of information about criminal proceedings and that remarks concerning the functioning of the judiciary relate to a matter of public interest ( see Morice v . France [GC], no. 29369/10 , § 152, 2 3 Ap ril 2015 , and Bédat , cited above , § 63 ; see also Recommendation Rec(2003)13 , cited above , paragraph 59 above ), the Court observes on this point that the public ’ s interest in being informed about this case goes well beyond the context of the family conflict between Mrs Bettencourt and her daughter, or the relations between the latter and B.
93 . The Cour t therefore finds that the applicant s ’ offending remarks , which concerned public figures and the functioning of the judiciary, were part of a debate in the general interest which went beyond satisfying the mere curiosit y of a certain readership about an event or trial involving unknown parties (compare Bédat , cited above , §§ 65 and 66 , and Tourancheau and July , cited above , § 74 ; see also , mutatis mutandis , Du Roy and Malaurie v . France , no. 34000/96, § 35, ECHR 2000 ‑ X , and Dupuis and Others v . France , no. 1914/02, § 39, 7 June 2007 ). The public ’ s interest in receiving information went beyond the context of the trial , and that fact had to be taken into account when weighing in the balance the various interests involved .
94 . The Cour t observe s that the first-instance court , in the proceedings on the merits , took the view that the content of the articles of 10 December 2009 and 4 February 2010 constituted information that could contribute to a debate in the general interest, as it was a criminal case with considerable financial repercussions and concer ned public figures . The other domestic courts, ruling on the merits and in urgent proceedings, did not deny that the information in the impugned publications was such as to contribute to a general-interest debate . They took the view, however, that this debate, having regard to the provisions of section 38 of the 1881 Act , could be informed otherwise than by quoting from procedural documents to which the reader would attach “particular credibility and an undeniable evidential value” . In the Court ’ s view , the weighing in the balance of, on the one hand, the interests of Mrs Bettencourt and B. , together with those of the proper administration of justice , and on the other, the alleged general interest justification relied upon by the applicant s , could have given rise to more explicit reasoning, in the same way that the alleged breach of the right to private life was itself dealt with ( see paragraphs 33 and 35 above ). That being said, the Court cannot infer from the decisions in question that the national courts failed to take into consid e ration the fact that the publications were capable of providing clarification for the benefit of the public debate and the public interest ; their dismissal of this aspect as in sufficiently pertinent f ell within their margin of appreciation ( see Bédat , cited above , § 54).
( iv ) The influence of the impugned articles on the criminal proceedings
95 . As regards the influence of the impugned articles, the Cour t reiterates that it is important for journalist s who write articles on pending criminal proceedings not to reduce a person ’ s chances of having a fair trial , which involves respecting the defendant ’ s right to be presumed innocent , and not to undermine public confi de nce in the role played by the courts in the administration of justice, encompassing the opinion-forming and decision-making processes within the judiciary ( see Tourancheau and July , cited above , §§ 66 and 68 , and Bédat , cited above , § 68). In such matters, a mere risk of influencing the subsequent proceedings may suffice , and this risk must be assessed at the time when the authorities take the relevant deterrent measures ( see Bédat , cited above , § 70).
( α ) The articles of 10 December 2009 and 4 February 2010 vis-à-vis B
96 . The Cour t observe s that, in the proceedings on the merits, the first-instance court found that the interest in informing the public about the Bettencourt affair outweighed any other interest worthy of protection under section 38 of the 1881 Act and concerning the authority and impartiality of the judiciary under this provision. The Court of Appeal, however, stated that the bias displayed by the articles against B. had reduced his chances of a fair trial and made it necessary for him to explain his position on prosecution evidence that had not yet been debated before a court of law . That was also the position of the urgent proceedings judge (see paragraph 41 above).
97 . The Cour t has already indicated that, in the present case, the impugned articles painted a negative picture of B. , based on information from procedural documents reproduced verbatim . In the Court ’ s view , the publication of the articles – on 10 December 2009, the day before B. ’ s appearance at the Nanterre Criminal Court, and on 4 February 2010, two months before the hearing scheduled for 15 April 2010 – was liable to heavily influence the outcome of the proceedings , with potential repercussions on individuals who might subsequently be called to give testimony in court or even on the judges hearing the case . The Court reiterate s in this connection that the publi cation of a slanted article is capable of undermin ing the objectivity of the trial court, irrespective of its composition ( see Bédat , cited above , § 69). Moreover, while it is true that B. had specific remedies at his disposal to secure respect for his right to be presume d innocent , such as that provided for in A rticle 9-1 of the C ivil Code, which particularly concerns the media , the Cour t notes that B. ’ s case before the civil court was declared admissible and that the “incrimina ting” effect of the publication was emphasised by that court .
98 . In conclusion, the Court does not agree with the applicants that the extensive media coverage of the case vindicated the verbatim publication of numerous and lengthy excerpts from procedural documents. Given the complex issues before the courts, as regards both the vulnerability of Mrs Bettencourt and the material element of the offence of undue influence with which B. was charged, the publication of those documents in the framework of biased articles risked disrupting the proper conduct of the proceedings and jeopardising B. ’ s right to a fair trial. The Court confirms in this connection that the ban provided for in section 38 of the 1881 Act i s not general and absolute in nature and does not totally restrict the right of the press to inform the public, being temporary and limited (see Tourancheau and July, cited above , § 73). Consequently it takes the view that the applicant s , as media professionals, were in a position to avoid such risks without affecting the substance of the information that they wished to impart .
( β ) The article of 4 February 2010 vis-à-vis Mrs Bettencourt
99 . As regards the article of 4 February 2010 vis-à-vis Mrs Bettencourt, the Cour t observes that the urgent proceedings brought by her led to an acknowledgment of the damage she had sustained, in so far as the publication was capable of contravening her rights in portraying her, prior to the examination of the criminal case in the Nanterre Criminal Court , as a manipulated and weak woman – a portrayal which she denied ( see paragraph 31 above ). As Mrs Bettencourt had filed submissions by way of voluntary intervention, with in the alternative an application to join the criminal court proceedings as a civil party, and in view of the content of the information conveyed to the reader, the Court acknowledges that the publication was capable of having negative effects on the proper administration of justice.
( v ) Whether there was a breach of privacy
100 . The Court cannot but note that in the course of the proceedings no breach of B. ’ s privacy was found by the domestic courts . B., who was very well known, did not in fact claim such a breach in his legal actions . As to Mrs Bettencourt, the domestic courts did not find any breach of her privacy on account of her situation , which exposed her to public attention , or of the potential interest of the public in reading about her .
( vi ) Whether the sanction was proportionate
101 . In the present case, as regards the proceedings brought by B., the applicant s were ordered, in the urgent proceedings , to pay an advance of EUR 3, 000 and to publish a notice of the judgment , and in the proceedings on the merits , to pay EUR 1 in respect of the non-pecuniary damage with the publication of a further notice . In the urgent proceedings brought by Mrs Bettencourt, the applicant s were ordered to pay an advance of EUR 10, 000.
102 . The Court takes the view that those sanctions cannot be deemed excessive or capable of having a chilling effect on the exercise of media freedom .
( vii ) Conclusion
103 . The Court concludes that the reasons put forward by the domestic courts to justify the interference with the applicant s ’ right to freedom of expression as a result of the judgments against them were relevant and sufficient for the purposes of A rticle 10 § 2. In particular, the interest of the applicants and that of the public in imparting and receiving information on the subject of a question in the general interest was not such as to prevail over the consid e rations raised by the domestic courts as to the cons e quences for the protection of the rights of others and the proper administration of justice. The judgments against the applicant s met a sufficiently compelling social need to t ake precedence over the public interest in the freedom of the press, and those judgments can not be deemed disproportionate to the legitimate aims pursued.
There ha s therefore been no violation of Article 10 of the Convention .
FOR THESE REASONS, THE COURT , UNANIMOUSLY,
...
3 . Holds that there has been no violation of Article 10 of the Convention .
Done in French , and notified in writing on 1 June 2017 , pursuant to Rule 77 §§ 2 and 3 of the Rules of Court.
Milan Bla Å¡ ko Angelika Nußberger Deputy Registrar Pr esident
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