Duchess of Sussex's court case against British newspaper begins

Meghan, the Duchess of Sussex, is suing Britain's Mail On Sunday newspaper over the publication of a letter she wrote to her estranged father.

The Duke and Duchess of Sussex.

The Duke and Duchess of Sussex. Source: AAP

The first court hearing in a privacy case brought by Meghan, Britain's Duchess of Sussex, against a tabloid newspaper for printing part of a letter to her father has begun at London's High Court.

Meghan, wife of Queen Elizabeth's grandson Prince Harry, is suing publisher Associated Newspapers over articles its Mail on Sunday newspaper printed in February last year that were based on a letter she had sent to her father, Thomas Markle.

Lawyers for the duchess say its publication was a misuse of private information and breached her copyright. They are seeking aggravated damages from the paper.
The Duke and Duchess of Sussex's relationship with the press has been difficult.
The Duke and Duchess of Sussex's relationship with the press has been difficult. Source: AAP
Given Britain's coronavirus lockdown, Friday's hearing was held by video, which the judge, Mark Warby, said was a relatively new way of conducting such cases.

"It's not a trial, there will be no witnesses and I'm not going to make any findings of fact about the underlying events," Warby said.

The hearing is one of the first stages in the legal action and a date for a full trial has not yet been set.

Meghan and Harry, who are living in Los Angeles , are expected to listen in remotely to part of the hearing, a source said.
The lawyer for the newspaper, Antony White, sought to have parts of Meghan's claim struck out, arguing they were irrelevant or impermissible, not properly pleaded or disproportionate for the court to investigate.

The case centres on articles about the rift between Meghan and her father who fell out after her glitzy, pomp-laden wedding to Harry in May the year before.

Markle pulled out days beforehand after undergoing heart surgery and following news he had staged photos with a paparazzi photographer. Speculation about his attendance dominated the build-up to the ceremony.

Documents from Meghan's lawyers this week accused the Mail and other tabloids of harassing, humiliating and manipulating Markle, and contributing towards the fallout between father and daughter.
They argue the Mail had also misquoted from the letter, which was never intended to be made public, to paint the royals in a poor light.

The Mail says unnamed friends of Meghan had put her version of events in interviews with the US magazine People and that Markle had the right to put his side.

The paper's lawyers also argue that given Meghan's royal status, there was legitimate public interest in her personal and family relationships.

The legal action is the latest step in growing hostility between the media and the couple.


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Published 24 April 2020 9:19pm


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