Defamation that causes long-term damage, particularly if it affects your career, social standing, or personal life, will result in higher damages than something short-term that might be forgotten within a year. The more severe and lasting the harm, the greater the compensation.
If someone makes a written defamatory comment about you or your business, whether online or otherwise, there is a very limited time frame in which you can bring a claim of 1 year from the date of the initial publication. Section 4A of the Limitation Act 1980 sets this out. This is known as a “limitation period”.
First Exception. —Imputation of truth which public good requires to be made or published. —It is not defamation to impute anything which is true concerning any person, if it be for the public good that the imputation should be made or published. Whether or not it is for the public good is a question of fact.
Section 499 of the IPC provides for 10 cases which are not to be considered as defamation. An accused charged with the offence of defamation may take the resort of any of these ten exceptions as defense.
Second, libel is actionable per se (i.e. without proof of damage) whereas slander, subject to exceptions (see below), is actionable only upon proof of 'special' damage (actual damage is probably a less misleading and therefore better phrase to use though)
What Are The 5 Elements Of Defamation? Publication Of Information Is Required. The Person Being Defamed Was Identified By The Statement. The Remarks Had A Negative Impact On The Person's Reputation. The Published Information Is Demonstrably False. The Defendant Is At Fault.
The most common defenses to defamation are: 1) truth; 2) consent; 3) privilege; and 4) the statute of limitations. Perhaps the most distinct aspect of the defamation cause of action is that falsity is required. In other words, the statement publicized about the plaintiff must be false in order to prove defamation.
Burden of proof on the defendant While specific legal requirements may differ depending on local laws, the common laws of libel generally only require the claimant to prove that a statement was made by the defendant, and that it was defamatory – a relatively easy element to prove.
VMalicious defamatory Libel, by Imprisonment or Fine. And be it enacted, That if any Person shall maliciously publish any defamatory Libel, every such Person, being convicted thereof, shall be liable to Fine or Imprisonment or both, as the Court may award, such Imprisonment not to exceed the Term of One Year.