Case No: A2/2000/2-95 A2/2000/2095/A - IN THE SUPREME COURT OF JUDICATURE
- COURT OF APPEAL (CIVIL DIVISION)
- ON APPEAL FROM THE QUEEN'S BENCH
DIVISION
- (MR JUSTICE GRAY)
Royal Courts of
Justice Strand, London, WC2A
2LL
Date: 20 July 2001 B e f o r e : LORD JUSTICE PILL LORD JUSTICE MANTELL and LORD JUSTICE BUXTON
| David Irving | Applicant | | - and - | | | (1) Penguin Books Ltd (2) Professor Deborah
Lipstadt | Respondents |
Richard Rampton QC (instructed by Messrs
Davenport Lyons and Messrs Mischon de Reya) for the
Respondents Heather Rogers (instructed by Messrs Davenport
Lyons) for the first Respondent Anthony Julius (instructed by Messrs Mischon de
Reya) for the second Respondent Adrian Davies (instructed by Amhurst Brown
Colombotti) for the Applicant
JUDGMENT : APPROVED BY THE COURT FOR HANDING
DOWN (SUBJECT TO EDITORIAL CORRECTIONS) Lord Justice Pill: This is the judgment of the Court. Background 1. This is an application for permission to
appeal against a judgment given by Gray J on 11
April 2000 whereby he dismissed a claim by Mr David
Irving ("the applicant") that he had been libelled
in a book entitled "Denying the Holocaust -- The
Growing Assault on Truth and Memory" written by
Professor Deborah Lipstadt and published in the
United Kingdom by Penguin Books Ltd in 1994. The
applicant is the author of over 30 books and has
specialised in the history of the Third Reich.
Amongst his titles are The Destruction of Dresden
(1963), Hitler's War (1977 and 1991 Editions) and
Goebbels -- Mastermind of the Third Reich
(1996). 2. Because there is no significant dispute as to
their effect, it is not necessary to set out
extensively the passages from Denying the Holocaust
of which the applicant complains. They include, at
p 161, the statement that "scholars have described
Irving as a "Hitler partisan wearing blinkers" and
have accused him of "distorting evidence and
manipulating documents to serve his own purpose".
On the same page, it is stated that "he has been
accused of skewing documents and misrepresenting
data in order to reach historically untenable
conclusions, particularly those that exonerate
Hitler". At p 181 it is stated that "Irving is one
of the most dangerous spokespersons for holocaust
denial. Familiar with historical evidence, he bends
it until it conforms with his ideological leanings
and political agenda". 3. The trial lasted from 11 January to 15 March
2000 and judgment was given on 11 April 2000. The
applicant appeared in person. He has been
represented at the hearing of the present
application by Mr Adrian Davies of Counsel. Mr
Davies addressed the Court for 3 days and the
hearing lasted for a total of 3_ days. Both at the
trial and before this Court the respondents have
been represented by Mr Richard Rampton QC. Conclusion on Meaning 1. We refer immediately to the judge's
"Conclusion on meaning". At 2.15 the judge
stated: "Adopting the approach set out earlier, my
conclusion is that the passages complained of in
their context and read collectively bear the
following meanings all of which are defamatory of
him [the applicant]: i that Irving is an apologist for and partisan
of Hitler, who has resorted to the distortion of
evidence; the manipulation and skewing of
documents; the misrepresentation of data and the
application of double standards to the evidence, in
order to serve his own purpose of exonerating
Hitler and portraying him as sympathetic towards
the Jews; ii that Irving is one of the most dangerous
spokespersons for Holocaust denial, who has on
numerous occasions denied that the Nazis embarked
upon the deliberate planned extermination of Jews
and has alleged that it is a Jewish deception that
gas chambers were used by the Nazis at Auschwitz as
a means of carrying out such extermination; iii that Irving, in denying that the Holocaust
happened, has misstated evidence; misquoted
sources; falsified statistics; misconstrued
information and bent historical evidence so that it
conforms to his neo-fascist political agenda and
ideological beliefs; iv that Irving has allied himself with
representatives of a variety of extremist and
anti-semitic groups and individuals and on one
occasion agreed to participate in a conference at
which representatives of terrorist organisations
were due to speak; v that Irving, in breach of an agreement which
he had made and without permission, removed and
transported abroad certain microfiches of Goebbels'
diaries, thereby exposing them to a real risk of
damage; vi that Irving is discredited as an
historian. Subject to one point disputed by the applicant,
those conclusions as to meaning are accepted by the
parties. The point at issue is whether a statement
at p 213 of Denying the Holocaust bears the meaning
that the applicant approves of the internment and
the killing of the Jews in concentration camps. It
is stated that another author, "echoing David
Irving, argues that the Nazi 'internment' of Jews
was justified because of Chaim Weizmann's September
1939 declaration that the Jews of the world would
fight Nazism". The judge did not accept (2.16) that
the reference to the applicant "when read in the
context of the other references to him, bears the
meaning that he applauds the internment of Jews in
Nazi concentration camps". The judge was entitled
so to find. Moreover, the innuendo now alleged that
"internment" meant killing was not pleaded and
could not be relied on. 1. It should be said at once that the judge
found that the respondents had failed to justify
the second allegation in sub-paragraph (iv) and the
allegations in (v). The judge relied on section 5
of the Defamation Act 1952 ("The 1952 Act") to give
judgment in favour of the respondents,
notwithstanding those findings against them. The central issue 1. Both at the trial, and at the hearing of this
application, stress has been placed on the
importance of the applicant's integrity as a
serious historian. The judge drew attention (3.2)
to the applicant's statement that "for him his
reputation as a truth-seeking historian is more
important than anything else". Consideration of the
applicant's reputation as an historian was central
to the trial and is central to this application.
Indeed, the judge's conclusion (13.1), that "the
charges levelled at Irving's historiography appear
to me to lie at the heart of what Lipstadt wrote
about him in Denying the Holocaust" is expressly
adopted on the applicant's behalf though it is
strongly denied that the charges are true. The
judge recorded (5.9) that the applicant testified
"that he had never knowingly or wilfully
misrepresented a document or misquoted or
suppressed any document which would run counter to
his case". 2. The judge acknowledged (4.7) that the burden
of proving the defence of justification rested upon
the respondents. To succeed in their defence of
justification, in relation to the allegations at
(i), (iii) and (vi) above, the respondents have to
establish not only that the applicant is not a
reputable historian, to use the expression adopted
at the hearing as a form of shorthand for the
allegations about his work, but also that he had a
motive of his own in distorting the evidence. The
second limb has not however been the subject of
dispute. On behalf of the applicant, Mr Davies
accepts that if the applicant is shown not to be a
reputable historian, which is the central issue,
his motivation is not an important issue. Mr Davies
says that it is "at the margin". It is dealt with
briefly later in this judgment. Mr Davies of course
rightly adds that, if the respondents have failed
to demonstrate that the applicant is not a
reputable historian, their case cannot be made by
proving a motivation, however unattractive. The
allegation of "holocaust denial" has also been put
as a subsidiary issue. Gray J's judgment 1. The judgment of Gray J can only be admired
for its comprehensiveness and style. It has the
unusual accolade for a judgment of being published,
verbatim and without commentary, in book form, The
publishers are the Penguin group and the book runs
to 350 pages. It is not necessary, in order to
determine this application, to attempt the
comprehensiveness to which the judge aspired, and
which he attained, following a very long trial. His
conclusions on each issue are succinctly stated.
Plainly reference to his summary of evidence and
submissions is on some issues necessary to assess
the validity of his conclusions but it is not
necessary or appropriate to set out that evidence
extensively. It is for the applicant to demonstrate
that there is a real prospect of an appeal
succeeding. 2. Having set out an overview of the applicant's
claim and of the defence of justification, the
judge set out in sections (v) to (xii) of his
judgment the contentions of the parties on each of
the issues in dispute. Section (v) considers
specific criticisms made by the respondents of the
applicant's historiography under 18 headings, each
of them being concerned with a specific event or
events in the history of the Third Reich.
Auschwitz, not surprisingly, has a long section
(section vii) to itself. The judge's findings on
justification are set out in section xiii
(including findings under section 5 of the 1952
Act) and is followed at section xiv by the judge's
verdict in favour of the respondents. The applicant's case 1. The notice of appeal took the form of a
skeleton argument of 191 paragraphs, settled by Mr
Davies. Mr Davies invites the Court to approach the
application on the basis of the statement of
Baggallay JA in The Glannibanta (1876) 1 PD 283 at
287: "Now we feel
the great weight that is due
to the decision of a judge of first instance
whenever, in a conflict of testimony, the demeanour
and manner of the witnesses who have been seen and
heard by him are
material elements in the
consideration of the truthfulness of their
statements. But the parties to the cause are
nevertheless entitled, as well on questions of fact
as on questions of law, to demand the decision of
the Court of Appeal, and that Court cannot excuse
itself from the task of weighing conflicting
evidence and drawing its own inferences and
conclusions, though it should always bear in mind
that it has neither seen nor heard the witnesses,
and should make due allowance in this respect." 1. Mr Davies submits that the five expert
witnesses called at the trial on behalf of the
respondents were all motivated by ideological bias
and, particularly in the case of the historian
Professor Evans, by personal hatred. Professor
Evans denied that allegation stating that he did
not have personal feelings about the applicant and
had tried to be as objective as possible. The
attack on Professor Evans, whom Mr Davies described
as the key witness for the respondents, has been
continued at this hearing, his analysis of one
aspect of his evidence being described as
"ridiculous". It is also submitted that Professor
Evans should not have been allowed to give evidence
as to the meaning of the words "holocaust denier"
and also that Professor van Pelt should not have
been permitted to give evidence on architectural,
as distinct from historical, matters and should not
have been permitted to give evidence on the
chemistry of fumigation and gas chambers. The fees
paid to the experts were "so grotesquely large", it
is submitted, that their evidence could not be "the
independent product of the expert, uninfluenced as
to form or content by the exigencies of litigation"
(Cresswell J in The Ikarian Reefer [1993] 2
Lloyd's Rep 68 at 81. 2. Mr Davies rightly stresses that all the
individual points at issue should be considered
against the background that the respondents have to
establish not merely that the weight of historical
evidence is against the views expressed about
events by the applicant but that, on the evidence
available at the time the view was expressed, the
view was wholly unreasonable and not one which
could honestly be held. Only if no rational
historian with a general knowledge of the Third
Reich could have come to the conclusions reached by
the applicant at the material time were the
allegations against him justified. 3. It is submitted that while the applicant may
have at times shown rather poor judgment, the
position he took on issues was one of several, or a
range of, positions which could honestly be taken
on the existing evidence. It was important to keep
in mind the information available at the time the
relevant books were written, which was before much
of the present evidence had become available. We
acknowledge that it is of the essence of the
investigation of historical events, particularly
comparatively recent events, that fresh material
becomes available from time to time. It may throw
doubt on previously held views or may tend to
confirm them. The reputable historian who continues
to express views will have regard to the fresh
material when doing so. 4. Counsel submits that provided there was
evidence which entitled the applicant to reach the
conclusion which he expressed on an issue, he could
not be condemned in the manner the respondents have
condemned him. An historian who writes books for
publication must inevitably be selective in the
material included, it is submitted. Where the
applicant retained his doubts about events in the
Third Reich, the evidence was not so overwhelming
that he could not honestly persist in his doubts.
The question is whether the applicant could
honestly come to the conclusions he did. Mere
negligence on his part was insufficient to justify
the allegations made against him, Counsel
submits. 5. Mr Davies relies on admissions made by the
applicant as to events which occurred in the Third
Reich to demonstrate the applicant's objectivity.
He has never denied that the Nazis and their
collaborators murdered millions of Jews. It is
submitted that he has never tried to justify that
conduct of theirs. He accepts that at some time
after June 1941 a policy of murdering all Jews in
occupied Europe had become State policy "at
Himmler's level". By 1943, and quite possibly
earlier, that was a systematic policy. 6. Counsel also mentioned a concession made by
the applicant when cross-examining Dr Longerich
upon the possibility of Himmler conducting
operations behind Hitler's back. The applicant
volunteered the information that Himmler's brother
had told him "that Heinreich was such a coward that
he would never have done this without Hitler's
orders". 7. Reference is also made to the applicant
modifying his views when fresh evidence has become
available, for example in relation to the Leuchter
Report, and in relation to casualties resulting
from the bombing of Dresden. The applicant has also
habitually disclosed to other historians documents
which he had discovered (5.12). In some respects,
those who had taken views different from the
applicant's had had to revise them. For example, it
was until 1990 recorded on a plaque at Auschwitz
that 4 million people had died there whereas the
current estimate is very much lower, a change in
the direction of the views held by the
applicant. 8. Mr Davies urges the Court to bear in mind
that the applicant appeared in person at a long and
complex trial and allowance should be made for any
failure in his understanding of procedure and in
his presentation. The further general point is made
that the weight to be placed on statements made by
the applicant in speeches and interviews, and
relied on by the respondents to justify their
allegations, should be very limited. He had spoken
without notes and in stressful situations. He
should be judged as an historian and not as a
platform speaker. 9. Counsel relies on the favourable comments of
the judge (13.7) under the heading "Irving the
Historian". The paragraph begins with the
sentences: "My assessment is that as a military historian,
Irving has much to commend him. For his works of
military history Irving has undertaken thorough and
painstaking research into the archives. He has
discovered and disclosed to historians and others
many documents which, but for his efforts, might
have remained unnoticed for years". That assessment is now unchallenged. We also
agree with the judge that the applicant's knowledge
of World War II, his mastery of detail, along with
his ability and intelligence are not in doubt. The test to be applied 1. In stating his conclusions on the defence of
justification, the judge first set out the claims
made by the respondents, their extent and the test
to be applied. We set out the relevant paragraphs
in full. Mr Davies accepts that in paragraphs 13.3
and 13.4 the judge has correctly stated the test to
be applied. "13.1 The charges levelled at Irving's
historiography appear to me to lie at the heart of
what Lipstadt wrote about him in Denying the
Holocaust. I propose therefore to consider first
whether the Defendants have made good their claim
that, in what he has written and said about the
Third Reich, Irving has falsified and
misrepresented the historical evidence. 13.2 There are several aspects to this. The
falsification and misrepresentation alleged by the
Defendants relate to (a) the specific individual
criticisms of Irving's historiography which are
addressed in section v. above; (b) his portrayal of
Hitler, which is dealt with at section vi.; (c) his
claims in relation to Auschwitz covered in section
vii. And, finally, (d) the bombing of Dresden which
is dealt with in section xi. 13.3 The question which I shall have to decide
is whether the Defendants have discharged the
burden of establishing the substantial truth of
their claim that Irving has falsified the
historical record. In this connection I should
repeat the caveat expressed at the beginning of
this judgment: the issue with which I am concerned
is Irving's treatment of the available evidence. It
is no part of my function to attempt to make
findings as to what actually happened during the
Nazi regime. The distinction may be a fine one but
it is important to bear it in mind. 13.4 If the charge of misrepresentation and
falsification of the historical evidence is
substantially made out, there remains the question
whether it was deliberate. Irving rightly stresses
that the Defendants have accused him of
deliberately perverting the evidence. For their
part the Defendants recognize that it is incumbent
on them to establish, according to the appropriate
standard of proof, that the misrepresentation and
falsification were motivated by Irving's
ideological beliefs or prejudices. In this context,
I shall consider the submission made by Irving that
he had been guilty, at worst, of making errors in
his handling of the historical record. As I will
explain in assessing Irving's motivation, I will
also take into account the evidence of the public
statements by Irving in which he allegedly denied
the Holocaust; the evidence upon the basis of which
the Defendants accuse him of anti-semitism and
racism and the evidence of his alleged association
with right-wing extremists." The approach of this Court 1. We consider the approach which this Court
should take to the judge's consideration of the
evidence, his conclusions and verdict. By reference
to the statement of Baggallay JA in The
Glannibanta, already cited, Mr Davies invites the
Court to weigh the conflicting evidence for itself
and draw its own inferences and conclusions. We
accept that there are some issues which turn upon
the construction of documents where this Court is
in as good, or almost as good, a position to assess
the evidence as was the trial judge. We say almost
as good because the comments of witnesses upon the
documents and witnesses' assessment of the context
in which the documents came into existence deserve
weight. On the issues as a whole, the judge's
assessment of the credibility and reliability of
the historians was in our judgment a significant
factor in the case. In the end, the judge had to
consider whether the applicant was a reputable
historian. In reaching his conclusion, he would
inevitably have to assess the approach of the
applicant to the source material he had considered
and the approach of Professor Evans, the main
protagonist for the respondents. The fact that each
of the parties subjected the historian on the other
side to detailed and lengthy cross-examination
illustrates the importance of this aspect of the
trial. It may have been more a question of
reliability in terms of historiography than of
credibility but, in deciding whether the
respondents' allegations are justified, the judge
who heard the oral evidence and the manner in which
it was given was in a good position to assess it.
Having said that, this Court can be expected to
scrutinise carefully the reasoning of the judge and
submissions made as to the source material on which
it is based. Procedural issues 1. An issue also arose as to the scope of the
evidence which the respondents' expert witnesses,
and in particular Professor van Pelt, were entitled
to give. Professor van Pelt was introduced as a
Professor of the History of Architecture at a
Canadian university. It emerged that he was not a
qualified architect and it is submitted on behalf
of the applicant that Professor van Pelt should not
have been allowed to give evidence on architectural
questions, such as the design of the buildings at
Auschwitz. He described himself as a cultural
historian. It is further submitted that, even if
qualified to give evidence about the design of
buildings, he should not have been permitted, when
questions arose as to the chemistry involved in
gassing, to give evidence about that. 2. We see no merit whatever in the first of
these submissions. Professor van Pelt plainly had
considerable knowledge and expertise in the design
of buildings and the uses to which they can be put.
The absence of a professional qualification in
architecture did not preclude him from giving
evidence on architectural matters when the issues
were those in this case. One does not have to be a
qualified lawyer to express views on legal history.
There must of course be a limit to the extent to
which someone whose profession is that of historian
can express views of his own on highly technical
matters. The witness is however entitled to
consult, refer to and rely on source material in
support of an opinion. Military historians
frequently express opinions about the effectiveness
of weapons and the effect of their use in battle
and can do so without their being experts, for
example, in ballistics or metallurgy. 3. That being so, such force as Mr Davies's
second submission may have had was destroyed by his
refusal to entertain discussion of Professor van
Pelt's source material. Mr Davies stated that he
had not come to the hearing prepared to argue the
merits of van Pelt's report. He declined to
examine, for example, the documents, mentioned by
the judge at 7.124, on which Professor van Pelt had
relied in expressing the opinion that the quantity
of coke required per corpse at Auschwitz would have
been no more than 3.5 kg. Nor was he prepared to
analyse the information on the basis of which the
applicant had expressed the opinion that the
appropriate figure was 35 kgs. This was not a
subject for evidence from either party, Mr Davies
submits. We reject that submission. 4. We also mention at this point that there were
before the Court two applications to call fresh
evidence in support of the application. The first,
made well before the hearing, was to call evidence
from Mr Germar Scheerer (born Rudolf), who holds a
diploma in chemistry, and Mrs Zoe Polanska-Palmer,
who was detained in Birkenau Camp. The respondents
had prepared voluminous evidence in reply. In the
event, that application to call fresh evidence was
not pursued. We express our dismay at this
combination of events; the preparation of very
detailed evidence (exposing the respondents to
great expense in preparing a reply and the members
of the Court to considerable pre-hearing reading)
and the withdrawal of the application. 5. We were not prepared to entertain an
application made by Mr Davies in the course of the
hearing that a series of photographs, said to be
self-explanatory, dealing with the issues as to the
Prussian blue staining of fabric exposed to
hydrogen cyanide should be admitted. That was a
subject considered in the proposed additional
evidence it was decided not to seek permission to
adduce. To permit admission of photographs alone
would have been unfair and could have been very
misleading. 6. The second application was made in the course
of the hearing. It was wished to call evidence of
the contents of a book written by Professor Evans,
published early this year and known to the
applicant in March. The application was not reduced
to writing and we did not see the book but the
allegation is that the work demonstrates Professor
Evans's ill-will towards the applicant. We refused
the application first on the ground of its extreme
lateness, which was an important factor having
regard to the allegation to be made; second on the
ground that the alleged attitude of Professor Evans
had already been raised at the trial and the judge
had been in a position to assess, with that in
mind, the lengthy evidence he had given; third on
the ground that the proposed additional evidence
was not, and could not be contended to be, crucial
on the central issue having regard to all the
material available. Anti-semitism and racism as motivation and
association with right wing extremists 1. The judge recorded (9.1) that no allegation
of anti-semitism or of racism had been levelled
against the applicant in Denying the Holocaust. The
respondents claim that the applicant's alleged
racism and anti-semitism "provide a motive for his
falsification of the historical record" (9.1). No
objection is made to the body of evidence on these
subjects incorporated into the judgment (9.4 --
9.7). It is not necessary for present purposes to
set out this evidence or even to summarise it. The
judge was justified in saying (13.101) of the
statements of the applicant recorded at 9.5 that:
"His words are directed against Jews, either
individually or collectively, in the sense that
they are by turns hostile, critical, offensive and
derisory in their references to semitic people,
their characteristics and appearances." It is
common ground that the material goes "to allege
motive only" (paragraph 191 of notice of appeal).
The judge concluded that the "inference which
is clearly to be drawn from what Irving has
said and written is that he is anti-semitic."
(13.105) The judge accepted that the applicant "is
not obsessed with race" (13.108) but added that "he
has on many occasions spoken in terms which are
plainly racist". In this application, the applicant
does not seek to challenge those findings which go
to motive only. The respondents contend that they
help to explain why a military historian with much
to commend him has allegedly "falsified and
misrepresented the historical evidence". 2. The judge also found (13.115) that the
applicant had associated "to a significant extent"
with named individuals who are "all right-wing
extremists". The judge concluded that the
applicant's "association with such individuals
indicates in [his] judgment that Irving
shares many of their political beliefs". That
finding is not challenged in this application. The
main point put in issue is, I repeat, the
applicant's reputation as an historian. Events in the history of the Third Reich 1. The appellant's historiography has been
assessed by reference to a number of events in the
history of the Third Reich. The Auschwitz issue
featured prominently at the trial and in the
submissions at this hearing. Mr Davies went so far
as to say that if he failed on Auschwitz, in
failing, that is, to show an arguable case that the
applicant's views were those a reputable historian
could hold, the application failed. We do not hold
Mr Davies to that concession though it reflects the
evidence of the applicant, as recorded by the judge
(7.94), that if "anyone detected holes in the roof
[morgue 1 of crematorium 2], he would
abandon his libel action". 2. It is not to diminish the importance of the
scale and scope of the Auschwitz issue in human
terms when we say that we prefer to take a more
general view of the applicant's historiography. An
overall view must be taken and that requires
consideration of his published views in relation to
the events in issue as a whole before a conclusion
is reached. The allegation that the applicant was
an "apologist for Hitler" and had the purpose of
"exonerating Hitler" in any event requires
consideration of issues other than the extent of
gassing at Auschwitz. We concentrate on those
events which have been specifically advanced by Mr
Davies at this hearing and the conclusions the
judge had reached upon them. Auschwitz 1. A striking feature of this aspect of the case
was that evidence and submissions as to what
happened at Auschwitz included a consideration of
views currently held, that is held at the time of
the trial. It is striking because of the emphasis
otherwise placed on behalf of the applicant on the
contents of his books being assessed on the basis
of evidence available at the time of publication.
Having made that submission strongly, Mr Davies
accepts that, in relation to Auschwitz, the
respondents can succeed if they establish that, at
any point in time, including the time of the trial,
the applicant has adopted a position so contrary to
the evidence as to be perverse. On this issue,
evidence was given by both sides on the basis of
evidence currently available. It is accepted that
the applicant modified his position in the course
of the trial. 2. The judge's conclusion (13.91) was: "Having considered the various arguments
advanced by Irving to assail the effect of the
convergent evidence relied on by the Defendants, it
is my conclusion that no objective, fair-minded
historian would have serious cause to doubt that
there were gas chambers at Auschwitz and that they
were operated on a substantial scale to kill
hundreds of thousands of Jews." 1. Mr Davies submits that, having set out the
correct test at paragraphs 13.3 and 13.4, the judge
set out the wrong test at paragraph 13.70 when
considering this issue: "In these circumstances the central question
which, as it appears to me, falls to be determined
is whether or not the evidence supports the
Defendants' contention that the number of deaths
ran into hundreds of thousands or whether Irving is
right when he claims that the killing by gas was on
a modest scale." By using the expression "whether Irving is
right", the judge has wrongly stated the issue and
wrongly reversed the burden of proof, it is
submitted. The conclusion reached flows from that
misdirection. Secondly, submits Mr Davies, the
conclusion at 13.91 is not justified by the
findings at 13.71 to 13.90. 1. Until the publication of the Leuchter report,
the applicant had expressed no view, submits Mr
Davies, on Auschwitz. He was a specialist on the
military campaigns of the Third Reich and not on
extermination. Mr Fred Leuchter was expert in
execution procedures including the administration
of gas and it was what the applicant read in his
report in 1988 that convinced him that there was no
truth in the claim that Jews met their death in
large numbers in gas chambers at Auschwitz. The
judge set out Leuchter's findings in detail (7.79
to 7.89). Professor van Pelt dismissed the Leuchter
report as flawed and unreliable. As the judge noted
in his conclusions on Leuchter (13.79 and 13.80),
the applicant agreed that the Leuchter report was
fundamentally flawed. He accepted that a false
assumption by Leuchter vitiated Leuchter's
conclusion and the applicant conceded the existence
of many other factual errors in the report. 2. The applicant's case is not that the Leuchter
report can now be considered reliable but that it
had appeared reliable when brought to the
applicant's attention in 1988 and that the
applicant was acting honestly in relying on it at
that time. Moreover, on the evidence available at
the time of trial, it was still an issue for
legitimate historical debate whether Jews had been
systematically gassed at Auschwitz. The evidence
for the proposition that there was mass gassing is
nowhere near so strong, it is submitted, that it is
perverse for the applicant to entertain doubts
about it. The applicant's position is that there
were no gassings at Auschwitz 1 and only random
gassings at Auschwitz 2. There remain good grounds
for scepticism as to what had happened at
Auschwitz, it is submitted. 3. On the applicant's behalf, Mr Davies made a
sustained attack upon the reliability of the
evidence which led the judge to his conclusion
(13.91) already quoted. There were serious doubts
about the reliability of Ol_re's drawings which
showed, for example, the impossible event of flames
90 ft long emerging from a chimney. They could not
be treated as corroborating Tauber's account. The
subsequent statements of Höss, the camp
commandant, could not be relied on because of
obvious exaggeration. Broad was a man of flexible
allegiances in that he had served first the
Gestapo, and after the war the British and was
unreliable. Professor van Pelt had accepted that
the building at Auschwitz 1 now visited by tourists
had not been used as a gas chamber during the
war. 4. The judge had treated as corroboration
(13.77) what could not properly so be treated and
the applicant was entitled to his doubts about the
eye-witness evidence. Mr Davies refers to the
applicant's challenge at the trial to the evidence
of Professor van Pelt that the single air
photograph he had selected for use at the trial
"very clearly showed that there are four
introduction deliveries in morgue No 1". (Day 10, p
26, line 12). (There was an issue as to whether gas
could have been introduced into the building.) It
was but a single photograph, of unknown date and
Professor van Pelt accepted that it was impossible
to say what kind of shadow the objects cast. On the
issue of the existence of chimneys protruding
through the roof, the judge himself found the
photographic evidence hard to interpret (13.73). He
acknowledged (13.83) that the argument that there
was no evidence of the presence of chimneys or
ducts in the roof of morgue 1 at crematorium 2
"deserves to be taken seriously". 5. Mr Davies also relies, as did the applicant
at the trial, on the absence of references to
gassing in the captured records of deaths at
Auschwitz. Moreover, reports from the camp to
Berlin, in cypher, did not mention gassing. The
cypher had, unknown to the German authorities, been
broken by the British and reports were decoded at
Bletchley Park. Secrecy was not maintained with
respect to other methods of mass murder and there
was even gloating over some atrocities, for
example, by the Einsatzgruppen. A British document
prepared by a senior Foreign Office official
demonstrated that as late as August 1943 the Office
had no evidence of mass executions in gas chambers.
Had gassing occurred at Auschwitz it was surprising
that there were no better records of it. The
applicant was entitled to his genuine doubt as to
events at Auschwitz. The applicant accepted that a
very large number of people had died at Auschwitz,
by other methods of killing and as a result of
disease. His refusal to accept the systematic use
of gas chambers to kill large numbers of Jews could
not be described on the evidence as perverse. 6. That the judge considered carefully the
evidence and the submissions of the applicant at
the trial is clear: "13.73 I recognise the force of many of Irving's
comments upon some of those categories. He is right
to point out that contemporaneous documents, such
as drawings, plans, correspondence with contractors
and the like, yield little clear evidence of the
existence of gas chambers designed to kill humans.
Such isolated references to the use of gas are to
be found amongst these documents can be explained
by the need to fumigate clothes so as to reduce the
incidence of diseases such as typhus. The
quantities of Zyklon-B delivered to the camp may
arguably be explained by the need to fumigate
clothes and other objects. It is also correct that
one of the most compromising documents namely
Bischoff's letter of 28 June 1943 setting out the
number of cadavers capable of being burnt in the
incinerators, has a number of curious features
which raise the possibility that it is not
authentic. In addition, the photographic evidence
for the existence of chimneys protruding through
the roof of morgue 1 at crematorium 2 is, I accept,
hard to interpret. 13.74 Similarly Irving had some valid comments
to make about the various accounts given by
survivors of the camp and by camp officials. Some
of those accounts were given in evidence at the
post-war trials. The possibility exists that some
of these witnesses invented some or even all of the
experiences which they describe. Irving suggested
the possibility of cross-pollination, by which he
meant the possibility that witnesses may have
repeated and even embellished the (invented)
accounts of other witnesses with the consequence
that a corpus of false testimony is built up.
Irving pointed out that parts of some of the
accounts of some of the witnesses are obviously
wrong or (like some of Olere's drawings) clearly
exaggerated. He suggested various motives why
witnesses might have given false accounts, such as
greed and resentment (in the case of survivors) and
fear and the wish to ingratiate themselves with
their captors (in the case of camp officials). Van
Pelt accepted that these possibilities exist. I
agree". (We were told that the author of the letter of
28 June 1943 was Bischoff and not Muller as stated
in the judgment handed down. We were also told that
a correction was made at the time of
handing-down.) 1. The contentions of the parties, and the
evidence relied on, are fully set out both in
section (v) of the judgment and in section (xiii).
The judge summarised the respondents' case (13.73)
as being "that there exists what van Pelt described
as a "convergence" of evidence which is to the
ordinary, dispassionate mind overwhelming that
hundreds of thousands of Jews were systematically
gassed to death at Auschwitz." 2. The judge stated (13.72) that it appeared to
him to "be important to keep well in mind the
diversity of the categories [of evidence]
and the extent to which those categories are
mutually corroborative". The judge set out a
summary of the documentary evidence and the
eye-witness evidence. He stated (13.75) that "it
appears to me that the cumulative effect of the
documentary evidence for the genocidal operation of
gas chambers at Auschwitz is considerable". As to
the eye-witness evidence, he stated that while he
acknowledged "that reliability of the eye-witness
evidence is variable, what is to me striking about
that category of evidence is the similarity of the
accounts and the extent to which they are
consistent with the documentary evidence". The
judge concluded: "13.78 My conclusion is that the various
categories of evidence do 'converge' in the manner
suggested by the Defendants. I accept their
contention which I have summarised in paragraph
7.75 above. My overall assessment of the totality
of the evidence that Jews were killed in large
numbers in the gas chambers at Auschwitz is that it
would require exceedingly powerful reasons to
reject it. Irving has argued that such reasons do
exist." 1. Following that provisional conclusion, the
judge set out the reasons relied on by the
applicant, the Leuchter report, the alleged absence
of holes in the roof of morgue 1 of crematorium 2,
the case that gas chambers were required for
fumigation purposes or (on re-design) to serve as
air-raid shelters and the arguments relating to
"death books", decrypts and coke consumption. In
relation to the holes in the roof, the judge
concluded (13.83) that "an objective historian,
taking account of all the evidence, would conclude
that the apparent absence of evidence of holes in
the roof of morgue at crematorium 2 falls far short
of being a good reason for rejecting the cumulative
effect of the evidence on which the Defendants
rely". In relation to the use of gas chambers for
other purposes, he concluded (13.86) that he cannot
accept "that this argument would come anywhere near
displacing the conclusion to be drawn from the
convergent evidence relied on by the Defendants for
their contentions as to the object of the redesign
work". The other points did not impress the judge
and he added that he did not "consider that they
would have impressed a dispassionate historian
either". In relation to "death books", the judge
referred to the unchallenged evidence of a large
number of witnesses that "the books record only the
deaths of those who were formally registered as
inmates of the camp. The Jews who were selected on
arrival to die were taken straight to the gas
chambers without being registered. One would not
therefore expect to find mention of the cause of
death of those Jews in the death books".
(13.88). 2. In relation to camp reports, the judge
concluded: "13.89 Reports were sent regularly from the camp
to Berlin in cypher. They were intercepted and
decoded at Bletchley Park. Although these reports
often gave the cause of death, they did not mention
gassing. In my judgment there are two reasons why
little significance is to be attached to this: the
first is that there was a strict rule of secrecy
about the gassing and the second is that, like the
death books, these reports related to registered
inmates only". Conclusion on Auschwitz 1. Having reached those conclusions, the judge
set out his general conclusion at 13.91 already
cited. We acknowledge that important parts of the
evidence relied on by the judge were not first-hand
evidence. For example, he did not and could not
hear the "eye-witness evidence" of Tauber,
Olëre, Höss and Broad, on whom he relied.
He had to assess the value of their evidence on the
basis of statements made by them many years ago
together with the comments upon them and upon their
context by expert historians. This has two
consequences. The first is that the value of the
evidence of any individual "witness" must be less
than if he or she had given evidence orally to the
Court and been subject to cross-examination. The
second is that, as compared with the trial judge,
this Court is at less of a disadvantage in
assessing the evidence than is often the case. We
bear those considerations in mind along with the
earlier statement of the approach we proposed to
adopt. (para 21) Having considered the evidence
summarised by the judge, and the submissions of the
parties we have come to the conclusion that the
conclusion of the judge at 13.91 was a conclusion
he was fully entitled to reach. 2. We are also satisfied that the judge directed
himself correctly. At 13.70, already cited, the
judge was doing no more than identifying the
factual issue at Auschwitz, what he described as
"the central question". He needed to do so because
the applicant's position at trial on Auschwitz had
changed significantly from those he had previously
adopted. At the trial, he put in issue, as Mr
Davies had rightly acknowledged, his up-to-date
position. It was necessary for the judge to
identify the applicant's current position on the
factual issue, as he did at 13.70, by referring to
the applicant's claim "that the killing by gas was
on a modest scale". That the applicant's position
had been different at an earlier time is confirmed
by the record of his public statements set out in
the judgment (8.17). We cite three examples: Dresden, 13 February 1990: "
the holocaust
of Germans in Dresden really happened. That of the
Jews in the gas chambers at Auschwitz is an
invention. I am ashamed to be an Englishman." Toronto, 8 November 1990: "
more people
died on the back seat of Senator Edward Kennedy's
motor car at Chappaquiddick than died in the gas
chamber at Auschwitz." Calgary, 29 September 1991: "
and so are
the other eye-witnesses at Auschwitz
[liars] who claim they saw gassings going
on because there were no gas chambers in Auschwitz
as the forensic tests show." 1. The judge's self-direction as to the test to
be applied to the applicant's historiography, the
factual issue having been determined, is set out at
13.3 and 13.4, which Mr Davies accepts as an
appropriate direction, and we have no doubt that
the judge applied it when reaching the conclusion
at 13.91. The applicant's historiography 1. Under the heading "The specific criticisms
made by the defendants of Irving's historiography",
the judge set out (5.16 to 5.245) the submissions
of the parties as to views expressed by the
applicant on 18 events in the history of the Third
Reich. The 2. judge's conclusions upon the submissions are
set out at 13.9 to 13.50 of the judgment. At 13.51,
as well as 13.9, the judge expressed general
conclusions. Mr Davies has challenged those
conclusions by making submissions upon the judge's
consideration of the applicant's views upon some of
the events of greater significance. Hitler's trial in 1924 and crime statistics for
Berlin in 1932 1. Neither party was disposed to attach much
importance to the applicant's views on these events
or to the judge's conclusions. Mr Davies refers to
the judge's statement (13.12) that "Irving ought to
have appreciated that Hofmann's allegiance to
Hitler rendered his testimony untrustworthy". The
manner in which the applicant had sought to explain
his approach to Hofmann's testimony, summarised by
the judge at 5.27, certainly justifies that
finding, in our view. However, submits Mr Davies,
that was far from a finding of perversity. The same
can be said, submits Mr Davies, of the judge's
conclusion in relation to 1932 (13.13): "Whilst I
am sympathetic to Irving's handicap in being unable
to obtain access to documents in the German
archives, I am not persuaded that there exist
documents which justify Irving in quoting without
any reservation the claim made by Daluege [that
in 1930 a strikingly large proportion of offences
of fraud in Germany were committed by Jews]".
That conclusion reverses the burden of proof, it is
submitted, and in any event certainly cannot be
regarded as a finding of perversity. The events of Kristallnacht (November 1938) 1. The importance of the events on 9 and 10
November 1938 in the history of the Third Reich and
hence the importance of the manner in which the
applicant dealt with them was not disputed by Mr
Davies. As the judge put it: "13.14 It was, I believe, common ground between
the parties that Kristallnacht marked a vital stage
in the evolution of the Nazis' attitude towards and
treatment of the Jews. It was the first occasion on
which there was mass destruction of Jewish property
and wholesale violence directed at Jews across the
whole of Germany. As an historian of the Nazi
regime, it was therefore important for Irving to
analyse with care the evidence how that violence
came about and what role was played by Hitler." 1. In Goebbels, (p 276-277), the applicant
described the events in these terms: "What of Himmler and Hitler? Both were totally
unaware of what Goebbels had done until the
synagogue next to Munich's Four Season Hotel was
set on fire around one A.M. Heydrich, Himmler's
national chief of police, was relaxing down in the
hotel bar; he hurried up to Himmler's room, then
telexed instructions to all police authorities to
restore law and order, protect Jews and Jewish
property, and halt any ongoing incidents. The hotel
management telephoned Hitler's apartment at
Prinz-Regenten Platz, and thus he too learned that
something was going on. He sent for the local
police chief, Friedrich von Eberstein. Eberstein
found him livid with rage. According to Luftwaffe adjutant Nicolaus von
Below, Hitler phoned Goebbels, 'What's going on?'
he snapped, and: 'Find out!' According to Julius Schaub, the most intimate of
his aides, Hitler 'made a terrible scene with
Goebbels' and left no doubt about the damage done
abroad to Germany's name. He sent Schaub and his
colleagues out into the streets to stop the looting
(thus Schaub's postwar version). Philipp Bouhler,
head of the Fuhrer's private chancellery, told one
of Goebbels' senior officials that Hitler utterly
condemned the progrom and intended to dismiss
Goebbels. Fritz Wiedemann, another of Hitler's
adjutants, saw Goebbels spending much of the night
of November 9-10 'telephoning
to halt the
most violent excesses.' At 2.56 A.M. Rudolf Hess's
staff also began cabling, telephoning, and radioing
instructions to gauleiters and police authorities
around the nation to halt the madness. But twenty
thousand Jews were already being loaded onto trucks
and transported to the concentration camps at
Dachau, Buchenwald, and Oranienburg. Hitler made no
attempt to halt this inhumanity. He stood by, and
thus deserved the odium that now fell on all
Germany. Goebbels had anticipated neither Hitler's fury
nor, probably such an uncontrollable, chaotic orgy
of destruction. Not surprisingly he made no
reference to this unwelcome turn of events in his
diary. But perhaps this, rather than Lida Baarova,
was the reason why he would write this mea culpa to
Hitler six years later: 'In the twenty years that I
have been with you, particularly in 1938 and 1939,
I have occasioned you much private grief.'
Ribbentrop relates that when he tackled Hitler
about the damage Goebbels had done, Hitler rejoined
that this was true, but he could not let the
propaganda minister go -- not when he was just
about to need him again." 1. It is not disputed that the judge was
entitled to have regard to the contents of Goebbels
when considering whether the defence of
justification was established notwithstanding the
fact that its publication (1996) post-dated that of
Professor Lipstadt (1994). In Cohen v Daily
Telegraph Ltd [1968] 1 WLR 916, Lord
Denning, at p 919, cited Maisel v Financial Times
Ltd [1915] 3 KB 336 and Godman v Times
Publishing Co Ltd [1926] 2 KB 273 and
stated: "Those cases show that, in order to prove that
the words are true, particulars can be given of
subsequent facts which go to support the charge.
Thus, if a libel accuses a man of being a
'scoundrel,' the particulars of justification can
include facts which show him to be a scoundrel,
whether they occurred before or after the
publication." 1. Mr Davies makes the point, when dealing with
this and other events, that the relevant passage in
the applicant's publication is a very small part of
the whole. In this case, it is less than a page in
a book of over 500 pages plus over 150 pages of
"notes to sources". Notwithstanding the brevity of
the passage, the judge was entitled to hold that
the light it throws upon the approach of the
applicant to important historical events is
important. 2. In our judgment, the judge's summary of the
effect of that passage in Goebbels is apt: "13.15 Readers of the account in Goebbels of the
events of 9 and 10 November 1938 were given by
Irving to understand that Hitler bore no
responsibility for the starting of the pogrom and
that, once he learned of it, he reacted angrily and
thereafter intervened to call a halt to the
violence." 1. The judge considered the evidence on which
the applicant relied and stated that in his view
(13.17) the applicant ought to have approached the
accounts he was given by Hitler's adjutants many
years after the event "with considerable scepticism
and rejected them where they conflict with the
evidence of the contemporaneous documents both
before and after 1am on 10 November". Having made
other findings adverse to the applicant, the judge
concluded (13.18) that: "The claim that during that night Hitler did
everything he could to prevent violence against the
Jews and their property is in my judgment based
upon misrepresentation, misconstruction and
omission of the documentary evidence." 1. Mr Davies submits that it is not perverse to
prefer oral to documentary evidence. An historian
is entitled to a very broad measure of judgment.
The point at which Mr Davies attacks the judge's
analysis of Kristallnacht is in an alleged failure
by the judge to appreciate in his conclusions the
significance of a telegram emanating from Gestapo
Headquarters at 3.45am (the Bartz telegram). It is
referred to at footnote 49, one of eight footnotes
to the relevant account in Goebbels, though not in
the text. However, it emerged, that the applicant
himself had not mentioned it in the course of his
evidence, when it could have been the subject of
analysis and cross-examination, but only in his
closing submissions. Even had it been subject to
debate in the course of the trial, and having
regard to its timing, it is difficult to see what
doubt it could have cast upon the judge's
conclusions on this issue. 2. The judge analysed the evidence carefully.
His reference to documentary as against oral
evidence was not a generalisation but a view upon
the particular facts of the case. The documents
were contemporaneous; the oral account of Hitler's
adjutants were given "many years after the event".
The judge concluded (13.16) that "an objective
historian would in my view dismiss the notion that
Hitler was kept in ignorance until a relatively
late stage." He added (13.17) that "to write, as
Irving did, that Hitler was 'totally unaware of
what Goebbels had done' is in my view to pervert
the evidence." 3. Mr Davies, on this and other factual issues,
has been unable to cast significant doubt upon the
judge's conclusions on the evidence. The judge
accepted, and was entitled to accept, Professor
Evans' construction of the telex sent by Hess at
2.56am. He said that the order read (5.60): "On express orders from the very highest level,
acts of arson against Jewish shops and the like are
under no circumstances and under no conditions
whatsoever to take place." That, the judge concluded (13.18), "was not a
general instruction to 'halt the madness' [as
described in Goebbels p 277] but rather to stop
acts of arson against Jewish shops and the like, so
permitting other acts of destruction to continue
and Jewish homes and synagogues to be set on
fire." The shooting of the Jews in Riga 1. The judge concluded that a total of about
5,000 Jews were shot in Riga on 30 November 1941.
General Bruns had then been a colonel stationed in
Riga. In captivity in 1945, he was surreptitiously
recorded as saying that a junior officer named
Altemeyer had told him that the Jews were to be
shot in accordance with the Fuhrer's orders but
that Altemeyer showed Bruns another order
"prohibiting mass shootings on that scale from
taking place in future. They are to be carried out
more discreetly". In Hitler's War, (American
edition), the applicant referred to the order as
Hitler's "renewed orders that such mass murders
were to stop forthwith". No reference was made to
the words "on that scale" or to the words "they are
to be carried out more discreetly". 2. The judge concluded (13.24) that the
applicant had "perverted the sense of Bruns's
account". Mr Davies submits that the reason the
applicant treated the evidence in the way he did
was that there was contemporary corroborative
evidence, for example a signal from Himmler and the
fact that the shootings did stop for many months.
There was corroboration for the first part of
Bruns's statement but there was not a shred of
corroboration for the suggestion that "the
shootings are to be carried out [that is to
continue] more discreetly". We are entirely
unpersuaded by that argument. The judge held
(13.24) that "an objective historian is obliged to
be even handed in his approach to historical
evidence: he cannot pick and choose without
adequate reason". The alleged absence of
corroboration for one part of an account which
clearly bears upon and is related to the other part
does not justify the selectivity involved in
failing to mention the uncorroborated part at all.
Had the applicant cited the whole of the passage,
he may fairly have been able to add the comment now
relied on in expressing his overall view. To fail
to refer at all to one part is, as the judge found,
a perversion of the sense of Bruns's account. The Schlegelberger note 1. The judge introduced the issue in this
way: "5.151 One central document cited by Irving in
support of his case that Hitler consistently
intervened to mitigate the harm sought to be done
to the Jews is a note said to have been dictated by
an official in the Reich Ministry of Justice,
namely, Schlegelberger, which is undated but which
is claimed to have come into existence in the
spring of 1942, which records what he has been told
by Lammers, a senior civil servant at the
Reichskanzlerei: 'Reichsminister informed me that the Fuhrer has
repeatedly declared to him that he wants to hear
that the solution to the Jewish question has been
postponed until after the war is over'. That note, says Irving, is incompatible with the
notion that Hitler authorised or condoned the
wholesale extermination of Jewry during the
war." Mr Davies submits that the note is central to
the appeal on the facts. It is an authentic record
of Hitler's thinking on the Jewish question and so
of seminal importance. At the trial, the applicant
referred to it as a "high-level diamond document"
(13.33). 1. The respondents' case, also made by Mr
Rampton at this hearing, was that the
Schlegelberger note made no sense against the
background of the events of 1942 which included the
mass transportation of Jews from Western and
Central Europe. The respondents sought to cast
doubt upon the date of the document and the
circumstances in which it came into existence so as
to question whether any weight could be given to
its contents. Even if it did accurately record a
statement of Hitler's views in March 1942, it was
likely to be his view not on the Jewish question
generally but on the narrower issue of mixed
marriages between Jews and Gentiles and the
children of such marriages (Mischlinge) (5.155).
That question had been discussed at the Wannsee
Conference in January 1942 and again discussed at a
further conference on 6 March 1942. The allegation
against the applicant is that no reputable and
objective historian would in the circumstances
admit only one possible interpretation of the
note. 2. The judge was prepared to assume that the
note was a 1942 document but concluded (13.35)
that: "it is (to put it no higher) very doubtful if
the Schlegelberger note is evidence of a wish on
the part of Hitler to postpone the Jewish question
until after the war, that is, to take no offensive
action against them of any kind until after the
cessation of hostilities. I do not believe that
Irving was able to provide a satisfactory answer to
the Defendants' question: why should Hitler have
decided suddenly in March 1942 to call a halt to a
process which had been going on with his authority
on a massive scale for at least six months. I am
persuaded that, for the reasons advanced by Evans,
it is at least equally likely that the note is
concerned with the complex problems thrown up by
the question how to treat half-Jews
(Mischlinge)". 1. The judge went on to state that if the
respondents' explanation of the note is correct
"the note does not possess the significance which
Irving attaches to it". 2. The judge's conclusion was: "13.36 I do not regard the arguments advanced by
Irving, which I have set out at paragraphs 5.165-7,
as being without merit: they are worthy of
consideration. But I do consider the Defendants'
criticism to be well-founded that Irving presents
the Schlegelberger note as decisive and
incontrovertible evidence (see Hitler's War at p
464) when, as he should have appreciated, there are
powerful reasons for doubting that it has the
significance which he attaches to it. Irving's
perception of the importance of the note appears to
take no account of the mass murder of the Jews
which took place soon afterwards." 1. That conclusion was stated in the context of
the judge's earlier opinion (13.32) that "Irving's
treatment of the Schlegelberger note and the
importance which he attaches to it shed important
light on the quality of his historiography". It is
clear that the judge has not fully accepted the
respondents' attempt to diminish the value of the
note. The judge regarded the issues surrounding the
note as "worthy of consideration". The criticism of
the applicant's historiography is based on the
applicant having presented the note as "decisive
and incontrovertible evidence". We have been
referred, as was the judge, to the applicant's
references to the note in his books and speeches.
In Hitler's War (1991, p 18) the applicant stated:
"Whatever way one looks at this document it is
incompatible with the notion that Hitler had
ordered an urgent liquidation program". In Hitler's
War (1991), p 464, Lammers' statement in the note
is said to be "highly significant". In Goebbels
(1996), p 388: "Hitler wearily told Hans Lammers that he wanted
the solution of the Jewish problem postponed until
after the war was over -- a ruling that remarkably
few historians now seem disposed to quote". 1. In a speech to the Institute for Historical
Review in 1983, the applicant referred to the note
as "the most cardinal piece of proof in this entire
story of what Hitler knew about what was going on".
At Toronto on 13 August 1988 the applicant referred
to the note as the "most compelling document" that
Hitler did not know about the extermination of the
Jews. He added that "there is no clearer proof than
that one document". 2. The judge's use of the expression "decisive
and incontrovertible evidence" was a paraphrase of
what he considered to be the applicant's views. As
such, it was somewhat too strong, in our view. The
judge was however correct, in our judgment, both in
his view that the applicant's treatment of the note
sheds light on the quality of the applicant's
historiography and in the substance of his eventual
conclusion. A reputable historian would have let
his readers and listeners know of the problems
involved in assessing the value and effect of the
Schlegelberger note and would not have used the
language he did. The particular relevance of the
issue is that it bears upon the role in events of
Hitler himself, an important issue between the
parties. 3. Mr Davies urges us not to judge the applicant
as a "platform speaker". The fact that some of the
strong statements just cited were made in public
speeches rather than in written publications does
not, in our judgment, greatly lessen their
significance in present circumstances. Where, as in
some of the instances we have had to consider, the
charge is one of incomplete treatment of a range of
evidence, it would not be right to demand too
stringent a standard of comprehensiveness in formal
lectures. Where, however, as with the
Schlegelberger note, the charge is the promotion of
historical claims on the basis of evidence that the
applicant should have known was questionable to the
extent that it could not be used in support of
those claims without qualification, it seems to us
that the conduct is equally open to criticism
whether it takes place in a public speech or within
the confines of a work of scholarship. In the
speeches to which we have been referred, the
applicant was presenting himself as a professional
historian, entitled to speak as such and entitled
to be given credence as such. Goebbels diary entry for 27 March 1942 1. Under this heading in the judgment, two
overlapping but distinct issues arise. The first,
and it is the one which the judge identified at
5.172, is "the manner in which Irving deals with
the question of when Hitler was aware of the policy
of exterminating Jews". The judge's conclusion
(13.38) dealt with that issue but also a second
issue, whether the applicant's treatment in
Hitler's War (both editions) of Goebbels diary
entry for 27 March 1942 is misleading. The diary
entry has to be considered against the "common
ground" identified by the judge (5.172). As the
judge put it (5.171): the "Einsatzgruppen set about
the systematic killing of Soviet Jews [in
1941]. In about the autumn of 1941 the
extermination policy was extended to Jews in the
area of the General Government. The gassing of Jews
commenced in December 1941 at an extermination
centre called Chelmno in the Warthegau; the latter
being an area containing territory incorporated
into the Reich after the conquest of Poland
" 2. The respondents' case at the trial was that
the applicant's claim that Goebbels deceived
Hitler, by concealing from him the reality of what
was happening in the death camps, was wrong. The
judge concluded first (13.37) that the manner in
which the applicant dealt with the diary entry in
Hitler's War (both editions) was "misleading and
unsupported by the circumstantial evidence"
(13.37). Secondly, he did not "accept that the
evidence of the circumstances as they existed in
March 1942 lends support to Irving's claim that
Goebbels concealed from Hitler the reality of what
was happening in the death camps" (13.38). 3. The diary entry was (5.174): "The Jews are now being pushed out of the
General Government, beginning near Lublin, to the
East. A pretty barbaric procedure is being applied
here, and it is not to be described in any more
detail, and not much is left of the Jews
themselves. In general one may conclude that 60% of
them must be liquidated, while only 40% can be put
to work. The former Gauleiter of Vienna
[Globocnik], who is carrying out this
action, is doing it pretty prudently and with a
procedure that doesn't work too conspicuously. The
Jews are being punished barbarically, to be sure,
but they have fully deserved it. The prophesy that
the Fuhrer issued to them on the way, for the
eventuality that they started a new world war, is
beginning to realise itself in the most terrible
manner. One must not allow any sentimentalities to
rule in these matters. If we did not defend
ourselves against them, the Jews would annihilate
us. It is a struggle for life and death between the
Aryan race and the Jewish bacillus. No other
government and no other regime could muster the
strength for a general solution of the question.
Here too the Fuhrer is the persistent pioneer and
spokesman of a radical solution, which is demanded
by the way things are and thus appears to be
unavoidable. Thank God during the war we have a
whole lot of possibilities which were barred to us
in peacetime. We must exploit them. The ghettos
which are becoming available in the General
Government are now being filled with the Jews who
are being pushed out of the Reich, and after a
certain time the process is then to renew itself
here. Jewry has nothing to laugh about
". 1. On this issue, the judge expressed his two
conclusions in summary form. In our judgment they
are both justified. In Hitler's War (1991 p 464-5),
the applicant wrote: "Dr Goebbels, agitating from Berlin, clearly
hoped for a more speedy and ruthless solution,
although he held his tongue when meeting his
Fuhrer. On March 19 he quoted in his diary only
this remark by Hitler: 'The Jews must get out of
Europe. If needs by, we must resort to the most
brutal methods.' That Goebbels privately knew more
is plain from his diary entry of the
twenty-seventh. 'Beginning with Lublin,' he
recorded, 'the Jews are being pushed out eastward
from the Generalgouvernement. A barbaric and
indescribable method is being employed here and
there's not much left of the Jews themselves. By
and large you can probably conclude that sixty
percent of them have to be liquidated, while only
forty percent can be put to work.' Dr Goebbels
recorded further that the Trieste-born SS Brigadier
Odilo Globocnik, the former Gauleiter of Vienna,
was performing this task carefully and
unobtrusively. As fast as the ghettos of the
Generalgouvernement were being emptied, they were
being refilled with the Jews, deported from the
Reich, and the cycle started over again. 'The Jews
have nothing to laugh about now,' commented
Goebbels. But he evidently never discussed these
realities with Hitler. Thus this two-faced minister
dictated, after a further visit to Hitler on April
26, 'I have once again talked over the Jewish
question with the Fuhrer. His position on this
problem is merciless. He wants to force the Jews
right out of Europe
At this moment Himmler
is handling the major transfer of Jews from the
German cities into the eastern ghettos'." The diary entry is quoted in the context of a
passage in which the applicant stated that Goebbels
"held his tongue when meeting his Fuhrer", that
Goebbels " evidently never discussed these
realities with Hitler" and that Goebbels was "a
two-faced minister". Hitler and Goebbels had met,
the judge found, on the day before the diary entry.
(It is agreed that the date of 29 March stated at
5.174 should be 26 March.) The failure of the
applicant, in a passage the theme of which was that
Goebbels was keeping Hitler in ignorance of the
realities, to refer to the second part of the diary
entry of 27 March justified the judge's conclusion
(13.38) "that the way in which Irving deals with
this diary is tendentious and unjustified". In the
course of that passage it had been stated that
"here too the Fuhrer is the persistent pioneer and
spokesman of a radical solution". 1. The judge also considered (13.38) whether
"evidence of the circumstances as they existed in
March 1942" lent support to the claim that
"Goebbels concealed from Hitler the reality of what
was happening in the death camps". The judge
recognised that the applicant was justified in his
claim that Goebbels was often mendacious in his
diary entries and that the entries have to be
scrutinised in the light of surrounding
circumstances. It was in that context that the
judge stated that he did not consider that "Irving
was able to point to evidence which controverted
the contention of the defendants that by March 1942
the 'radical solution' favoured by Hitler was
extermination and not deportation". Mr Davies
submits that in that sentence the judge reversed
the burden of proof. It was for the respondents to
establish that it could not rationally be suggested
that Goebbels concealed the reality from Hitler and
not for the applicant to establish that Hitler did
not know. If that statement in the judgment were to
be taken in isolation, the submission would be
correct. The point arose however in the context of
whether the applicant's treatment of the diary
entry was a fair and rational one. In putting the
criticised point in the way he did, the judge was,
in the applicant's favour, expressing his
willingness to consider whether what he had found
was "misleading" treatment of the diary entry might
be rendered fair treatment by evidence of
surrounding circumstances. 2. The issues of Hitler's knowledge and of
treatment of a diary entry became intertwined in
this part of the judgment in a somewhat complex
way. We do however agree with the conclusion of the
judge, already stated, on each of them. 3. The point is fairly made that historians,
especially those as assiduous in their research as
the applicant, are constrained by space in their
citation of source documents. On an issue as
important as Hitler's knowledge of realities of the
Third Reich, however, an historian who claims that
Hitler was kept in ignorance by one of his chief
ministers whom he met regularly, was required to
place before his readers a fuller account of an
important and relevant diary entry made a day after
one of the meetings. Hitler's meeting with Antonescu and Horthy in
April 1943 1. The judge regarded this issue as important in
assessing the applicant's historiography. In 1943
there were in Hungary some 750,000 Jews. The Nazis
brought pressure on the Hungarian government to
deport them and the Hungarians were reluctant to
comply. Meetings between Hitler and Admiral Horthy,
leader of the Hungarian government took place on 16
and 17 April 1943. The Hungarians refused to hand
over the Jews and Hungary was subsequently invaded
and occupied by the Germans. 2. While the judge found that the applicant's
account of Hitler's meeting with Antonescu,
military dictator of Romania on 12/13 April 1943
was misleading we regard the judge's only relevant
finding on this issue to be that the applicant
"materially perverts the evidence of what passed
between the Nazis and Horthy on 17 April" (13.44).
There was evidence that at the meeting on 16 April
Hitler sought to persuade Horthy to agree to the
expulsion of the Hungarian Jews but reassured him
that there would be no need to kill them. On 17
April, Hitler and Ribbentrop expressed themselves
more explicitly. The judge accepted that the
minutes taken by officials at both meetings were
reliable. The judge found that, on 17 April, both
Hitler and Ribbentrop "spoke in uncompromising and
unequivocal terms about their genocidal intentions
in regard to the Hungarian Jews". Hitler is
recorded as having said (5.204): "If the Jews [in Poland] didn't want to
work, they were shot. If they couldn't work, they
had to perish. They had to be treated like
tuberculosis bacilli, from which a healthy body can
be infected. That was not cruel; if one remembered
that even innocent natural creatures like hares and
deer had to be killed so that no harm was caused.
Why should one spare the beasts who wanted to bring
us bolshevism? Nations who did not rid themselves
of Jews perished". 1. That statement is quoted in Hitler's War but
is followed by the statement: "But they can hardly be murdered or otherwise
eliminated". [Horthy] protested. Hitler
reassured him: "There is no need for that." 1. The judge stated (13.44) that he was not
persuaded "that Irving had any satisfactory
explanation for this transposition from 16 to 17
April of Hitler's comforting remark, made on 16
April, that there was no need for the murder or
elimination of the Hungarian Jews". 2. Mr Davies asks the Court to consider afresh
whether the transposition was innocent and whether,
taken in isolation, the transposition can bear upon
the applicant's historiography. The judge concluded
(13.44) that in his judgment "Irving materially
perverts the evidence of what passed between the
Nazis and Horthy on 17 April". We see no reason to
doubt that conclusion. It has a significant bearing
upon the attitude of Hitler to Jewish questions and
upon the applicant's approach to Hitler's
involvement. Deportation and murder of the Roman Jews in
October 1943 1. The issue on this point is a narrow one. The
SS Chief in Rome received an order to transfer
12,000 Roman Jews to Northern Italy where they
would be liquidated. The matter was referred to
Hitler's headquarters and the order came back that
these Jews were to be taken to a concentration camp
in upper Italy named Mauthausen to be held there as
hostages rather than be liquidated as had been
ordered by Himmler. In Hitler's War (1977, p 575)
the applicant said of this that "again Hitler took
a marginally 'moderate' line". The judge held
(13.45) that since the Roman Jews were to be at the
mercy of the SS, it was "specious for Irving to
argue, as he did, that Hitler's intervention was
for the benefit of the Roman Jews". The judge added
that it was "a culpable omission on Irving's part
not to inform his readers that these Jews were
ultimately murdered". The Court was told that a
statement that they had been "liquidated" was
included in the 1977 edition but omitted in the
1991 edition. 2. In isolation, we do not consider this finding
to be of the greatest significance but it does
assist in establishing the pattern alleged by the
respondents of the applicant portraying Hitler as
sympathetic towards the Jews. The word "moderate"
is a curious one in circumstances in which Jews
were to be held by the SS, especially in the
context of the 1991 edition in which the reference
to the liquidation of the Jews is omitted. Himmler's speeches of 6 October 1943 and 5 and
24 May 1944 1. It was common ground that in these speeches
Himmler was speaking with remarkable frankness
about the murder of the Jews and that, with effect
from October 1943, it had to be conceded that
Hitler cannot have been ignorant of the
extermination programme. In the second speech,
referring to the Jewish question, Himmler referred
to carrying out "the soldierly order" and in the
third speech to "orders" and to his "sense of
duty". The respondents' case was that the speeches
provided powerful evidence that Hitler ordered that
the extermination of the Jews should take place. In
Hitler's War (1977), the applicant commented on the
reference to a "Fuhrer Order" in the speech of 5
May and stated that "there is reason to doubt that
he [Himmler] showed this passage to his
Fuhrer". The judge described this suggestion as
"fanciful" and regarded the absence of any mention
of the speech in Hitler's War (1991) as "another
culpable omission". We agree with the judge's
conclusions on this issue. Ribbentrop's testimony 1. In an endnote to Hitler's War (1977) the
applicant stated: "Writing on Hitler in his Nuremberg prison cell,
Ribbentrop also exonerated him wholly. 'How things
came to the destruction of the Jews, I just don't
know as to whether Hitler began it, or Hitler put
up with it, I don't know. But that he ordered it I
refuse to believe, because such an act would be
wholly incompatible with the picture I always had
of him'." The following words in that record was omitted.
They were: "On the other hand, judging from his Last Will,
one must suppose that he at least knew about it,
if, in his fanaticism against the Jews, he didn't
also order [it]". 1. The applicant argued that the omitted passage
cried out to be cut out (5.239). It was mere
supposition on Ribbentrop's part or, as Mr Davies
puts it, "merely speculation". 2. Ribbentrop was of course Foreign Minister in
the Third Reich and his views were important to any
assessment of Hitler's knowledge of events in the
Third Reich. The applicant's submissions are not to
the point which is of misleading selectivity in the
context of the account in Hitler's War. We agree
with the judge (13.48) that "there is an obligation
on them [historians] not to give the reader
a distorted impression by selective quotation" and
that the applicant had failed "to observe this
duty". The suggestion that Ribbentrop "wholly
exonerated" Hitler is entirely inconsistent with
the record read as a whole. The Bombing of Dresden 1. The respondents contended at the trial that
in his book The Destruction of Dresden (1963) the
applicant has, amongst other things, distorted and
twisted historical facts and "misrepresented the
facts as they appear from the available evidence"
(11.5). A revised edition of the book appeared in
1996. The principal issue is in relation to the
number of those killed in Allied air raids on 13
and 14 February 1945. Since 1963 different figures
have been given by the applicant in his books and
speeches. 2. Mr Davies describes this issue as a
"peripheral issue" and a "side issue". It is common
ground that the evidence has nothing to do with
Hitler's policy towards the Jews. We do not propose
to set out the careful and comprehensive summary of
the evidence by the judge or his analysis. The
analysis amounts to a serious criticism of the
applicant's historiography by way of his treatment
of documents, his reliance on estimates by
unidentified individuals, his disregard for
apparently credible evidence and in continuing to
make "grossly inflated claims as to the number of
casualties" in a subsequent edition of the book and
in speeches. The judge referred (13.124) to the
accumulation of evidence that the true death doll
was within the bracket of 25-30,000 and that the
"estimates of 100,000 and more deaths which Irving
continued to put about in the 1990's lacked any
evidential basis and were such as no responsible
historian would have made" (13.126). 3. Mr Davies refers to a letter from the
applicant published in the Times on 7 July 1966. It
purported to set the record straight by reference
to reports prepared by the East German authorities.
The existence of the letter makes all the more
surprising the subsequent assertions to which the
judge referred. The applicant has failed to cast
doubt upon the judge's conclusion on this part of
the case which we regard as a significant and
warranted attack upon the applicant's
historiography. Holocaust denial 1. This issue has taken a very subsidiary place
at the hearing and in our judgment rightly so. It
can be dealt with briefly. The expression
"Holocaust denial" has achieved currency because of
claims that the Holocaust did not occur and books
written in reaction to those claims. Professor
Lipstadt's book is entitled "Denying the Holocaust"
and bears the sub-title "The Growing Assault on
Truth and Memory". The first words in the preface
to the original edition are: "When I first began
studying holocaust denial
". In his
conclusion on meaning the judge by inference
defined the Holocaust as the "deliberate planned
extermination of Jews" "embarked upon" by the
Nazis. 2. The judge was entitled to hear Professor
Evans's view upon the meaning of the expression. We
are not persuaded that the expression can be given
any precise technical meaning or that "Holocaust
denier" defines a class of persons precisely.
Having regard to the views expressed by the
applicant about a range of events in the history of
the Third Reich, we agree with the judge that the
applicant may be described as a Holocaust denier.
We acknowledge that he has over the years modified,
and in some respects significantly modified, his
views upon some of the relevant events. However,
the respondents were justified in describing him as
"one of the most dangerous spokespersons for
Holocaust denial" having regard to the views he has
expressed and in some respects persisted in, and
the manner and force with which he has expressed
them. The use of the word "dangerous" was justified
by reason of his historiographical methods
considered by the judge and in this judgment. Hitler as a friend 1. Mr Davies submits that the judge has
misunderstood the applicant's position when
attributing to the applicant the opinion that
"Hitler was a friend of the Jews" (13.11). Mr
Davies submits that the applicant has never
expressed that opinion and goes as far as to say
that no reputable historian could possibly say such
a thing. What the applicant has claimed is that
Hitler was the best friend the Jews had in the
Third Reich and that, submits Mr Davies, was to
damn Hitler with faint praise. What the applicant
was concerned to do was to distinguish, in Hitler's
favour, Hitler's position from that of Himmler and
other ministers and agencies of the state. 2. We have not found or been referred to a
statement in the terms recorded by the judge, and
proceed on the basis advocated by Mr Davies. Indeed
it was on that basis that the trial was conducted
and the application made. What the applicant has
sought to do in submissions on many of the events
considered by the judge and in this judgment is in
different ways to minimise Hitler's role in events
involving the Jews. What the respondents have
sought, successfully, to do is to attack the
applicant's historiography in the way he has
attempted to do it. Any distinction between whether
Hitler was claimed to be "the Jews' friend" or the
"best friend the Jews had in the Third Reich" is
not material to the debate on the specific issues
as it has occurred. Any misunderstanding by the
judge on this point does not affect his reasoning
or the conclusions he reached. Refusal of leave by Sedley LJ 1. Sedley LJ refused leave on paper on 18
December 2000 for the following reasons: "1. I much regret the length of time that it has
taken me to come to this decision, not least in
view of the pressure that I put on the parties to
submit their representations expeditiously.
Reaching a conclusion on the application has been
the work of days, not of hours. 2. I am prepared to enlarge time on the basis of
Mr Adams' affidavit of 16 May 2000, and to permit
amendment of the notice of appeal as asked. 3. What follow are my essential reasons for
refusing permission to appeal. They do not cover
every element advanced and contested, although I
have read and re-read both the submissions and the
judgment. They address what I consider to be the
key issues. 4. I bear in mind, as Gray J very clearly did,
that when a professional historian claims,
correctly, that he has been defamed as a falsifier
and a bigot, a defence of justification places a
heavy burden on the defendant who advances it.
There is much about which two people can
legitimately differ, and differ angrily, without
either of them meriting such a description. But by
bringing this action on the pleaded meanings the
applicant offered a challenge, and in Gray J's
judgment the defendants met it. 5. I accept that this court is probably as well
placed as Gray J to evaluate the documents and the
expert evidence. What it cannot do, and is not
asked to do, is to ignore or modify the judge's
appraisal of the applicant himself. This is not, as
the grounds suggest, peripheral. As Gray J in
Chapter XIII shows with clarity, the applicant's
disposition is the cement between the bricks. What
might in another historian have been casual
misreadings of evidence emerge in the applicant's
case as sedulous misinterpretations all going in
the direction of his racial and ideological
leanings. Hence the verdict for the defendants. 6. "Holocaust denial" may be a comprehensible
phrase, but it has a particular register about
which the judge was entitled to hear expert
evidence. With or without such evidence the meaning
he assigned to the phrase at J 8.3-4 was plainly
right. Holocaust denial means not necessarily a
blank refusal to acknowledge a Nazi policy of mass
murder of Jews and other minorities but a
systematic endeavour, by marginalising and excusing
what happened, to accuse those who insist upon it
of being Zionist propagandists. This is not the
law's concern so long as it stops short of
incitement to racial hatred: in the UK there is no
law against Holocaust denial, and it is a
fundamental liberty not only to be contentious but
to be wrong. I bear in mind too that anti-Zionism
and anti-semitism are not necessarily the same
thing. 7. Here, however, the applicant has invoked the
law by suing his antagonists. In justifying their
libel, the defendants have focused upon two
particular forms of Holocaust denial in his work:
what I will call the aberration theory, predicated
on Hitler's ignorance of and/or opposition to mass
extermination of Jews, and the exaggeration theory,
predicated on deliberate inflation of the numbers
killed at Auschwitz. The first, they say, seeks to
excuse what happened; the second to marginalise
it. 8. The Schlegelberger memorandum is the
applicant's preferred evidence for the aberration
theory. The memorandum by itself (see J 5.151-169)
might have stood simply as an example of a
controversial document about which honest
historians could differ -- indeed the judge said so
(J 13.36). But the applicant's adherence to it as a
"diamond document" came in the context of a damning
and justifiable finding (J 13.26-31) that he had
repeatedly misrepresented documentary evidence in
order to absolve Hitler of anti-semitism; and it is
against the backdrop of this ubiquitous handling of
Third Reich material that the applicant's use of
the document emerges as part of a predetermined
misreading of evidence which could not, as the
judge found, be objectively justified. 9. The Auschwitz materials are central to the
exaggeration theory. Here too the historical record
is inevitably incomplete and in places unreliable.
But here too the applicant has been betrayed by his
own method, notably his reliance on the discredited
Leuchter report. The judgment (J 8.17) sets out the
solidity of the applicant's denial of mass homicide
at Auschwitz, and sets in that context his recent
focus on the "holes in the roof" issue (J 13.81-3).
I accept readily that the latter argument may be
none the worse for coming late in the day; but the
evidence that there were no holes for the admission
of cyanide pellets is at best inconclusive against
the potent evidence that people were gassed there
in tens of thousands. The controversy about methods
and numbers may legitimately remain; but what the
applicant has done is demonstrate once again his
willingness to sacrifice objectivity in favour of
anything which will support his chosen form of
Holocaust denial. 10. Van Pelt's evidence enters into this aspect
of the judgment. Van Pelt was heard as a cultural
historian with special knowledge of Auschwitz and
its architecture (J 4.17(ii); G 30). What he said
(J 7.123-4) about the use of Zyklon-B was in part
arithmetic and in part comment; probably it was not
necessary to have an expert of any kind to put this
forward, but its acceptance by Gray J was a matter
of logic and did not depend on any expertise
professed by Van Pelt. 11. In these circumstances the applicability of
s.5 of the Defamation Act 1952 was in essence a
jury question: were the false allegations that the
applicant had agreed to share a platform with
terrorists, had a self-portrait of Hitler above his
desk and had misappropriated archive material
sufficient to damage the reputation which was not
his? The negative answer given by Gray J was
entirely open to him, and that, I apprehend, is
enough. If, however, this court were to take the
decision for itself, I see no realistic prospect of
its arriving at a different answer. The claimant
had played for high stakes on the central issue of
his entitlement to be regarded as a genuine
historian and had lost on grounds so damaging that
they left no real room for discrete damage by the
unfounded allegations. 12. The experts' fees may be thought high --
depending on how much work they did -- but the
suggestion that they were paid to testify as they
did is without visible foundation. 13. If a newspaper comments impermissibly on a
current trial the Attorney General has power to
bring contempt proceedings against it. But where
the trial is by judge alone it takes cogent
evidence to establish a sufficient risk that he has
been influenced -- especially when the suggestion
is that he has been driven by a fear of adverse
press comment. I know of nothing in the present
case which comes near this threshold. 14. (Deals with stay on enforcement of the costs
order.)" We agree with those reasons save only in our
acknowledgement that the judge was in our view in a
better position to evaluate the oral expert
evidence. On some issues, for example experts' fees
(paragraph 12 of Sedley LJ), we have not found it
necessary to revisit the question. Conclusion 1. We have expressed our views on the issues
raised by Mr Davies. Limitations of time inevitably
are such that Mr Davies did not address us on every
single piece of evidence on which the judge relied.
In rightly being selective, Mr Davies has no doubt
taken the points which he and the applicant
consider to be the best ones. He has not persuaded
us that it is arguable that the judge's general
conclusions were unjustified. Where we have been
invited to consider evidence in detail, it does not
in our judgment diminish the soundness of the
judge's conclusions. The judge expressed his
conclusion at 13.165: "My overall finding in relation to the plea of
justification is that the Defendants have proved
the substantial truth of the imputations, most of
which relate to Irving's conduct as an historian,
with which I have dealt in paragraphs 13.7 to
13.127 above. My finding is that the defamatory
meanings set out in paragraph 2.15 above at (i),
(ii), (iii) and the first part of (iv) are
substantially justified." We agree. Section 5 of the 1952 Act 1. The judge acknowledged (13.166) that "there
are certain defamatory imputations which I have
found to be defamatory of Irving but which have not
been proved to be true". With respect to those, the
respondents seek to rely on section 5 of the 1952
Act. That provides: "In an action for libel or slander in respect of
words containing two or more distinct charges
against the plaintiff, a defence of justification
shall not fail by reason only that the truth of
every charge is not proved if the words not proved
be true do not materially injure the plaintiff's
reputation having regard to the truth of the
remaining charges". 1. With respect to one charge, Mr Davies
strongly submits that the respondents are not
entitled to rely on that defence. It is the
unproved allegation that "on one occasion [the
applicant] agreed to participate in a
conference at which representatives of terrorist
organisations were due to speak". The conference
was (13.166) "an anti-Zionist conference in Sweden
in 1992 which was also to be attended by various
representatives of terrorist organisations such as
Hezbollah and Hamas". Mr Davies submits that not
only is this a very grave allegation but it is of
quite a different category from the charges against
the applicant's historiography which have been the
main issue in the case. Whatever the conclusion
upon the applicant's historiography, Mr Davies
submits, the applicant's reputation is materially
injured by the allegation that he agreed to speak
at a conference attended by terrorist
organisations. 2. The judge concluded: "The charges which I have found to be
substantially true include the charges that Irving
has for his own ideological reasons persistently
and deliberately misrepresented and manipulated
historical evidence; that for the same reasons he
has portrayed Hitler in an unwarrantedly favourable
light, principally in relation to his attitude
towards and responsibility for the treatment of the
Jews; that he is an active Holocaust denier; that
he is anti-semitic and racist and that he
associated with right wing extremists who promote
neo-Nazism. In my judgment the charges against
Irving which have been proved to be true are of
sufficient gravity for it to be clear that the
failure to prove the truth of the matters set out
in paragraph 13.165 above does not have any
material effect on Irving's reputation." 1. We agree with the judge. While the attack on
the applicant's historiography was central and
fundamental to the case, it was proved in the
context described by the judge which involved
anti-semitism and racism and association with
right-wing extremists. In that context, the
allegation that on one occasion he agreed to
participate in a conference at which
representatives of terrorist organisations were due
to speak did not materially injure his reputation
having regard to the truth of the charges
proved. Result 1. The judge was fully entitled to hold (13.168)
that the defence of justification succeeded. In our
judgment, and for the reasons we have given, it is
not arguable that an appeal against the judge's
verdict would succeed. The application for
permission to appeal is refused. |