The publisher of The Mail On Sunday has agreed to pay the Duchess of Sussex £1 nominal damages for misuse of private information, plus an undisclosed sum for copyright infringement after a court privacy battle, a document shows.
Markle sued Associated Newspapers Limited (ANL), also the publisher of MailOnline, over five articled published that contained parts of a “personal and private” letter she wrote to her estranged father.
The duchess won the case last year without a full trial, dismissing a subsequent appeal by Associated Newspapers.
Some detail of the money the duchess will receive emerged on Wednesday, January 5, when a written case order made by appeal judges and summarises the conclusion of the Court of Appeal litigation was made public.
The document also said Associated Newspapers would pay the lawyers’ bills run up by the duchess during the appeal litigation.
Meghan’s spokesperson described the undisclosed sum for copyright infringement as “substantial” and said it would be donated to charity.
They said the duchess was clear from the beginning that this case was primarily about the difference between right and wrong.
The fact that Meghan won on privacy and copyright matters demonstrated the strength of both claims, they said.
The spokesperson added that, after winning the case on a summary judgment, Meghan chose to recover the profit the paper had made from the letter, relating to copyright, rather than a financial remedy of damages regarding the privacy part of the case.
The appeal judges’ order said Associated Newspapers had agreed to pay the £1 nominal damages for misuse of private information, and the “confidential sum” for copyright infringement by January 7.
Judges also said the company should pay £300,000 of the duchess’s legal costs, on account, by the same date.
The judges’ written order was released to journalists by lawyers representing Associated Newspapers.
A lawyer representing the duchess had said, at an earlier stage of the dispute, that she would be willing to cap damages for misuse of private information.
Ian Mill QC said, at a court hearing last year, that Meghan was willing to “cap her damages” for misuse of private information “at a nominal award”, if the court would order “an account of profits”, evidence of how much the publisher gained financially from its publication of the letter, in relation to the infringement of the duchess’s copyright.
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