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The Almighty Buck The Courts

Man To Pay $34,000 Damages Over Negative TrustPilot Review (bbc.com) 86

A man who left a negative review of a legal firm on the TrustPilot website has been ordered to pay $34,000 in libel damages. The BBC reports: Philip James Waymouth engaged London law firm Summerfield Browne online to provide advice but was unsatisfied with the service he received. He then left a review accusing the firm of being "another scam solicitor," according to court documents. The firm took legal action, stating that this was untrue and defamatory. The number of business enquiries it received had dropped since the publication of the review, Summerfield Browne said.

Mr Waymouth had not engaged with Summerfield Browne's complaints procedure before leaving the review, the High Court in London heard. He did not attend the online hearing or send a legal representative. He previously said he had offered to remove the review in exchange for a refund of the 200-pound fee (plus VAT) he had paid but claimed the firm had not responded. In the review, Mr Waymouth alleged: "I paid upfront for a legal assessment of my case. "But what I got was just the information I sent them, reworded and sent back to me." Finding for the firm, judge Master David Cook said it was "beyond any dispute" the words in the review "had a clear tendency to put people off dealing with the claimant firm." And Mr Waymouth had "never fully articulated" why he was unhappy with Summerfield Browne's work.

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Man To Pay $34,000 Damages Over Negative TrustPilot Review

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  • LegalEagle (YouTube channel) coincidentally posted a video today about the upcoming court cases regarding defamation of election machine manufacturers. He even used online reviews as examples. If you just state your opinion, that's not defamation. If you state something demonstrably and factually false, you're potentially in trouble. This guy was just unsatisfied with the service but he called it a scam which is easy to disprove by proving their firm offers a legitimate service. And if their business did dr
    • I am pretty sure that if this were in America, the judge would interpret the scam claim as clearly hyperbolic or figurative and he would not be found guilty.

      • by taustin ( 171655 )

        You are quite possibly right. Defamation laws in the UK are far more favorable to the accuser than in the US, and are regularly used to suppress criticism.

        In the US, a suit like this could possibly bring a SLAPP countersuit.

      • Most likely it would have gone the same exact way. A default judgement against the defendant. Most likely the judge would rule with the lowest side possible of what was being asked; hoping his ruling gets appealed or defendant comes in asking for a redo.

        You actually have to defend yourself if you are served. If you ignore it, you aren't ignoring the firm, you are ignoring the court and the law. Good luck with that.

        • by shilly ( 142940 )

          It's worse than that. The defendant literally wrote to the judge to say he refused to participate. He wrote: "I have already made it perfectly clear that this case should never be heard in court and I will not be giving it any credence or legitimacy by attending"

          I mean that's shooting yourself in the bollocks with the judge right there, by calling into question their own abilities as well as that of the law firm.

        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          I'm not sure he can appeal or ask for a redo now. Well, he can ask, but generally speaking unless there is some genuine reason why he didn't attend the original hearing he probably won't get another opportunity.

          "I made a mistake and should have attended" isn't a good excuse. He might convince a judge to allow it anyway, but only if he can show he had now prepared a proper defence and has some realistic chance of reducing the amount he owes.

          • In the US, it is really up to the Judge. In small claims cases, the judges are very lenient; thou you will see court fees stack up. Larger cases, I think there is a risk that the ruling moves the case out of their control or they don't have as much control on the proceeding and processes.

            I literally had a small claims example happen in front of me last year where the guy went outside to talk on his phone after waiting 2 hrs for his turn. He didn't realize the officers calling his name all over the house.

            H

    • by Cederic ( 9623 )

      I strongly urge people not to use commentary by a US lawyer on US cases to guide their understanding and approach to UK libel laws.

      • Takes a while, most people have not clue that laws are way different of laws exist in the USA.
        We have roman civil law via the Justinian Code entering in the USA British law,
        Napoleonic Code within the civil law, via the Louisiana purchase
        and then there might be even more. It's the local execution of these laws that make it even much more interesting.

  • by orlanz ( 882574 ) on Tuesday February 09, 2021 @08:19PM (#61045944)

    If you get charges or a summons on you, pretty much the worst you can do is ignore it. The only time it makes sense is when you know that court has no jurisdiction, but even then, you should respond with that if they get a summons to you.

    If you aren't in court to defend yourself, the judge uses his best judgement and has to go with what is presented... hoping his ruling gets appealed.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      The problem here is that it's very difficult to mount a defence without taking expensive legal advice, so if you can't afford it you are basically screwed.

      Turning up is a good idea but without an understanding of the law it is really down to how sympathetic the judge is, and most are not very sympathetic at all.

  • by aberglas ( 991072 ) on Tuesday February 09, 2021 @08:22PM (#61045954)

    Is to give a new small case to a junior who just responds with the facts reworded, some platitudes, no new information, and "it all depends on how a judge might view the case".

    The problem is that Waymouth was probably not too intelligent. He probably just shot his mouth off. Whereas if he had clearly said why he thought he was ripped off then there would probably be no case to answer provided he was factual. But that requires intelligence.

    And there's the rub. Half the population has below average intelligence. They say all sorts of stupid things. Traditionally that was in the pub or over the back fence, but now it is on social media. And ordinary people are being treated like publishers, and expected to know how to act intelligently. And that is not reasonable.

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • by XXongo ( 3986865 )

        Considering that "half the population has below average intelligence" you should be a little more precise with your language and use median instead of average....

        Yes, but those half the people below median intelligence don't know what a median is (much less why it's different from an average), so they wouldn't understand you if you said that.

        • by andi75 ( 84413 )

          I'm pretty sure the median intelligence and the average intelligence are roughly the same here, since we're most probably dealing with something very close to a normal distribution. The assessment that "half the population has below average intelligence" is quite accurate.

          • Yes, IQ is normal by definition.

            (with the caveat that it can't be perfectly normal, since the normal function is unbounded, but IQ is never negative.)

            Intelligence itself is not metric-- you might be able to say "person A is smarter than person B" (with sufficiently good definition of "smarter"), but it's not clear what you mean if you say "1.3 times smarter". Intelligence is ordinal, but the metric is arbitrary.

            Hence, "mean" really doesn't mean anything. "Median," however, works as long as the function

      • Well, if you are going to be pedantic then do it properly.

        Intelligent as measured by IQ is based on percentiles that are then forced into a normal curve for no particular reason. So in that sense Average == Median.

        But given that there is no upper bound on intelligence, but there is a lower bound, then there is possibly a slight right skew. So over 50 % are likely to be below average. If it turned out that 50.1% were below average, then certainly 50% were below average. Think, if about 99% of people are

    • I should start offering that service and do it with a few lines of perl. Why even go to law school?

    • by Tablizer ( 95088 )

      The problem is that Waymouth was probably not too intelligent. He probably just shot his mouth off...Half the population has below average intelligence. They say all sorts of stupid things...

      Is Waymouth a politician by chance?

  • ...it's logic conclusion is that the Judge didn't seem to have read Mr Waymouth statement at all:

    >> Mr Waymouth alleged: (after paying 200 pound+VAT) "what I got was just the information I sent them, reworded and sent back to me."

    >> Judge Master David Cook said ... Mr Waymouth had "never fully articulated" WHY he was unhappy with Summerfield Browne's work.

    (caps mine).

    Well... Mr Waymouth was WAY CLEAR on WHY he was unhappy with...

    • by taustin ( 171655 )

      ...it's logic conclusion is that the Judge didn't seem to have read Mr Waymouth statement at all

      Since he didn't respond to the suit in any way, that's not really surprising.

    • The legal opinion (which echoed what he'd said) was not worthless, it came with a guarantee backed by legal insurance. His mistake though was to offer to remove the review in exchange for a refund, which is coercion.
  • by karuna ( 187401 ) on Tuesday February 09, 2021 @08:32PM (#61045992) Homepage
    Now Summerfield Browne have hundreds of negative reviews before they were locked: https://www.trustpilot.com/rev... [trustpilot.com] This will do wonders for their reputation. I guess they are a overly litigious company who deserves what they got.
  • by I75BJC ( 4590021 ) on Tuesday February 09, 2021 @08:41PM (#61046008)
    "He did not attend the online hearing or send a legal representative." In USA law, if one fails to answer a complaint, that is, if one does not attend the hearing, one automatically loses.
    Where do you think the USA received that little gem of legal procedure?
    It sucks to be sued BUT it is a losing tactic to ignore a legal complaint.
    Mr. Waymouth hosed himself and and lost the case BECAUSE he didn't even show up at the trial.
    Dumb Move!
    Mr. Waymouth desires no sympathy because of his own stupidity.
    IMHO
  • by nukenerd ( 172703 ) on Tuesday February 09, 2021 @09:06PM (#61046098)
    FTFA :

    judge Master David Cook said it was "beyond any dispute" the words in the review "had a clear tendency to put people off dealing with the claimant firm.

    Isn't that the point of reviews? : Either to say a company is good, encouraging people to use it, or to say it is bad and thus discouraging them. If I have a bad experience with a company I certainly do want to discourage others from using it, so they do not waste their money

    Will this have a Streisland effect I wonder?

    • IANAL but I'm pretty sure that claim is about demonstrating damages.

      In civil matters, the only remedy is fiduciary. People don't go to jail as far as I know for things like defamation or for not repaying a loan.

      Thus it's not enough to just defame someone. In order to take it to court the plaintiff must show that there was quantifiable damage that occurred as result of the defamation.

      Keep in mind that truth is a defence of a defamation claim. According to Wikipedia: [wikipedia.org]

      defamation is the oral or written communication of a false statement about another that unjustly harms their reputation

      Therefore to successfully bring a defamati

      • But did the law firm demonstrate that the claim was false? What the guy said might have been true, in which case why did the law firm win the case? It sounds like they won the case because the guy did not turn up to present a defence, so the truth of whether was a scam or not did not enter into it.
    • by shilly ( 142940 )

      Yes. But if you put people off using a company on the basis of a dishonest allegation of fact, you risk being sued for libel, as happened here. He didn't just say "I thought their advice was rubbish", he called them "a scam", meaning dishonest and fraudulent. That's a very serious allegation, especially about a law firm

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      Yes, but that's only part of the ruling.

      In the UK if you say something that causes someone else a loss, and you can't back it up then it can be considered malicious and you can be liable. If this guy had gone to court and argued that it reflected his experience he might have been okay, although the fact that he apparently didn't use their complaint's process weakens his position a lot.

    • "If you can't say something nice, don't say anything at all."

      It's not just a good idea; it's the law (in some places).

  • Important to note (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Sitnalta ( 1051230 ) on Tuesday February 09, 2021 @09:38PM (#61046196)

    UK has some of the absolute worst, ass-backward libel laws.

    This is not a case of one man getting screwed over, this is a systemic failure in the UK government to protect their citizen's freedom of speech. Any criminal charlatan can simply file a lawsuit to silence their critics, because the way UK law is set up it forces the victim of such lawsuits to spend huge amounts of money to prove their innocence, rather than the plaintiff to prove that there was any wrongdoing.

    This is one example I point to when some idiot says that the US isn't a free country anymore. We may have our flaws, but even seemingly liberal countries will have weird, insane laws like this on the books that no US citizen would ever have to deal with.

    • by Cederic ( 9623 )

      Any criminal charlatan can simply file a lawsuit to silence their critics

      Not really. Without trying to defend the law, I would point out that it's been in place in various forms since 1275 and we seem to have struggled through somehow.

      Maybe this is why the British are such masters of damning with faint praise.

    • UK has some of the absolute worst, ass-backward libel laws.

      The same law here is on the books in nearly every country. Fundamentally the guy lost his case because ... he never bothered to defend it. I could sue you right now for a made up reason, if you don't even bother sending your defense on a post-it note to court, expect the judgement to come out against you.

  • Is he local? Wtf was he thinking? Over there, you can be guilty of libel for politely complaining about the amount of sugar the local barista puts in your coffee. And not defending himself? Not the sharpest knife in the drawer, obviously.
  • Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • Wow, if you go to their website https://www.summerfieldbrowne.... [summerfieldbrowne.com] you'll notice there's a tracking-cookie galore (google analytics, various others that look like advertising etc) and NO consent form! That's a textbook GDPR violation, they don't seem like they have any idea what they are doing in general...

  • You forced their hand. They have to respond to that. Dude they may give bad service. But they ARE LAWYERS ffs
  • When someone posts a review like this in the UK, it appears to me that it's taken as a factual claim. Here, in the US, we take it as just another person's opinion, which goes along with the "opinions are like assholes, everyone has one" theme.

    I'm asking, not saying...If I were to call someone in the UK a jackass, shyster lawyer, why is that not just my opinion? How have I damaged that person other than to make it known that it's my opinion, and YMMV? Is there some kind of disclaimer a person can make, an

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