Stockdale v Hansard
Stockdale v Hansard 9 Ad & El 1 is a United Kingdom constitutional law case in which the Parliament of the United Kingdom unsuccessfully challenged the common law of parliamentary privilege, leading to legislative reform.
Facts
The Prisons Act 1835 had introduced the first national prison system in Great Britain, along with a regime of prison inspections. Whitworth Russell was one of the first inspectors and had been the reforming champion of the austere regime at the Millbank penitentiary. In Newgate prison, Russell and his fellow inspector, William Crawford, had discovered a well-thumbed edition of On Diseases of the Generative System, an 1811 book on reproductive system diseases by John Roberton, edited by Thomas Little, a pseudonym of John Joseph Stockdale. Roberton was a radical and something of an outsider to the medical profession, and Stockdale's publications were often salacious or prurient. The book had attracted some distaste on its publication for its explicit anatomical plates. As required by the 1835 act, in March 1836 Russell and Crawford submitted their report on Newgate to the Home Secretary, who laid it before both the House of Commons and the House of Lords. Then the Commons ordered the report to be printed.Publication of such parliamentary papers for circulation solely among Members of Parliament of the Commons, or peers of the Lords, was protected by absolute privilege under common law. However, a further development from 1835 had resulted from MP Joseph Hume's campaign to make better use of the mass of parliamentary papers and to improve freedom of information by publishing parliamentary papers for sale to the general public. On that basis, Messrs Hansard, publishers of the eponymous parliamentary debates, who were contracted to print papers, made 200 copies of the Newgate report. Roberton's book was mentioned in the description of Ward no. 10 in Chapel Yard:
The Court of Aldermen of the City of London Corporation, who were responsible for Newgate, were incensed. They saw Roberton's book as a scientific work, but the inspectors affirmed their original description by observing, "We also applied to several medical booksellers, who all gave it the same character. They described it as 'one of Stockdale's obscene books. Stockdale sued for £500 damages for libel, admitting that he had published the book but denying its obscenity. Stockdale sued as a pauper and Mr Justice Park assigned him counsel. Attorney-General Sir John Campbell appeared for Hansard. The first trial took place in 1837 before Lord Denman and a jury.
Denman dismissed Campbell's defence that the publication was privileged, and the jury had to consider only the defence that the published statement had been true and the book was indeed indecent. When they first returned, the jury foreman said that it found the book indecent and obscene but did not all agree that it was disgusting and that it wished to award Stockdale a farthing in damages. After a rebuke from Lord Denman on its faulty logic, the jury briefly conferred and found for Hansard.
Stockdale now found a copy of the City aldermen's response to the original report and sued again, but Hansard was ordered by the House to plead that he had acted under order of the Commons and was protected by parliamentary privilege.
Judgment
The Commons claimed that:- The Commons was a court superior to any court of law;
- Each House was the sole judge of its own privileges;
- A resolution of the House declaratory of its own privileges could not be questioned in any court of law.
In consequence, Parliament passed the Parliamentary Papers Act 1840 to establish privilege for publications under the House's authority.