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The Telegraph
The Telegraph
26 Apr 2023


Jehovah's Witness leaders have won an appeal in the Supreme Court after judges ruled they were not "vicariously liable" for the rape of a woman by a church elder.

The woman had sued the organisation for damages after she was sexually assaulted more than 30 years ago when she went door-to-door evangelising near Cardiff.

Judges at the High Court and Court of Appeal ruled in the woman's favour after she claimed that Jehovah's Witness leaders were "responsible in law" for the rape.

But Supreme Court justices on Wednesday ruled against her and concluded that the "Jehovah's Witness organisation" was not "vicariously liable".

Trustees of the Barry Congregation of Jehovah's Witnesses, part of the Jehovah's Witness organisation, had asked the Supreme Court to consider the case.

Five justices had considered arguments at a Supreme Court hearing in London in February.

They said, in a summary of their ruling, that they had to decide whether Court of Appeal judges "wrongly" found that the Trustees of the Barry Congregation, part of the Jehovah's Witness organisation, were "vicariously liable" for a rape committed by one of their elders.

Justices said they had unanimously allowed the appeal by the trustees and concluded that the "Jehovah's Witness organisation is not vicariously liable for the rape" as the man did not commit rape while carrying out any activities as an elder. 

High Court awards £62,000 in damages

They have not named the woman - who is referred to as "Mrs B" in the ruling - and said she could not be identified in media reports of the case.

But they have named the man who raped her as Mark Sewell. He had raped her at his home after they had been out "evangelising together", justices said.

They said Sewell had been convicted of raping Mrs B - and of indecently assaulting two other people.

Mark Sewell was convicted of rape in 2014
Mark Sewell was convicted of rape in 2014

"In 2017, Mrs B brought a claim for damages against the worldwide governing body of the Jehovah's Witnesses, Watch Tower and Bible Tract Society of Pennsylvania, and the Trustees of the (Barry) Congregation," said the justices in the summary of their ruling.

"She claimed that they were responsible in law, or 'vicariously liable', for the rape, because of the nature of their relationship with Mr Sewell and because of the connection between that relationship and the commission of the rape."

A High Court judge had "found them vicariously liable for the rape" and awarded Mrs B £62,000 "general damages", justices said.

Court of Appeal judges had upheld that decision.

Justices said they had unanimously allowed an appeal by the Barry trustees and concluded that the "Jehovah's Witness organisation is not vicariously liable for the rape".

A High Court judge had made a damages award in early 2020, after considering evidence at a High Court trial in London.

Elder sentenced to 14 years in prison

Mr Justice Chamberlain heard that a "judicial committee" of Jehovah's Witnesses' elders had, in 1991, found the woman's allegations against Sewell "not proven" at an internal inquiry.

But more than 20 years later Sewell was investigated by police.

Following a trial in 2014 he was convicted of rape and indecent assault and given a 14-year prison sentence.

The woman, who is no longer a Jehovah's Witness, said she suffered depression as a result of the rape.

She said a "proper" internal inquiry had not been carried out and said leaders of the Jehovah's Witnesses were "vicariously liable".

The Watch Tower Bible and Tract Society of Pennsylvania, which is based in New York and is the worldwide governing body of the Jehovah's Witnesses, and the trustees of the Barry congregation, the congregation of which the woman was a member, did not accept that they were vicariously liable.

But Mr Justice Chamberlain concluded that her psychiatric injuries were attributable to the rape.