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Geoffrey Rush: Sydney newspaper loses appeal over defamation payout | Geoffrey Rush: Sydney newspaper loses appeal over defamation payout |
(32 minutes later) | |
An Australian newspaper has lost its appeal against a record defamation payout awarded to actor Geoffrey Rush. | An Australian newspaper has lost its appeal against a record defamation payout awarded to actor Geoffrey Rush. |
Mr Rush was awarded A$2.9m (£1.57m; US$1.99m) last April after winning his case against Nationwide News, a publisher owned by Rupert Murdoch. | Mr Rush was awarded A$2.9m (£1.57m; US$1.99m) last April after winning his case against Nationwide News, a publisher owned by Rupert Murdoch. |
Its newspaper, Sydney's Daily Telegraph, had run stories accusing Mr Rush of behaving inappropriately towards a former theatre co-star. | |
The publisher lost its appeal against the judgement and the size of payout. | The publisher lost its appeal against the judgement and the size of payout. |
Lawyers for Nationwide News had argued the payout - the largest ever awarded to a single person in Australia - was "manifestly excessive". | |
But three Federal Court judges ruled the sum was "appropriate high" given the "extremely serious" allegations and the harm caused to Mr Rush's reputation. | |
The original front page story carried the headline "King Leer" and detailed accusations from a 2015 Sydney Theatre Company production of King Lear. | |
It alleged Mr Rush had acted inappropriately towards a co-star, later revealed to be actress Eryn Jean Norvill. | |
The Federal Court agreed with the original trial judge's assessment that Ms Norvill was "prone to exaggeration" and that her evidence was "inconsistent". | |
In doing so, it rejected the publisher's arguments that the story should be protected from defamation proceedings because the allegations were "substantially true". | |
Mr Rush was awarded A$850,000 for general and aggravated damages plus more than A$1m for past economic losses, A$919,678 in future economic losses and A$42,000 in interest. | Mr Rush was awarded A$850,000 for general and aggravated damages plus more than A$1m for past economic losses, A$919,678 in future economic losses and A$42,000 in interest. |