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Corporate defamation: reputation, rights and remedies

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2018

Gary KY Chan*
Affiliation:
Singapore Management University
*
Gary KY Chan, Singapore Management University, School of Law, 60 Stamford Road, Singapore 178900, Singapore. Email: garychan@smu.edu.sg

Abstract

This paper examines fundamental issues concerning a corporation's right to sue for defamatory attacks on its reputation, the scope of the right and the remedies available. It first outlines the opposed positions in England and Australia, respectively. It also argues that a corporation, save for a government corporation that exercises governmental functions based on markedly different rationales, should have the right to sue in defamation premised on the concept of corporate reputation as property and for the purpose of vindicating its reputation. On the question of remedies, a corporation should be entitled to recover special damages as reparation for damage to reputation provided they are proved. This paper considers, instead of presumed damages, alternative remedies for vindicating corporate reputation. Finally, it examines the business and non-business reputations of both trading and non-trading corporations in relation to claims for damages.

Information

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Society of Legal Scholars 2013

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