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England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Queen's Bench Division) Decisions >> Chambers v British Olympic Association [2008] EWHC 2028 (QB) (18 July 2008) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2008/2028.html Cite as: [2008] EWHC 2028 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand. London. WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
DWAIN CHAMBERS |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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BRITISH OLYMPIC ASSOCIATION |
Defendant |
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12-14 New Fetter Lane, London EC4A 1 AG
Telephone No: 020 7936 6000. Fax No: 020 7427 0093
Email: [email protected]
MR DAVID PANNICK Q.C. and MR ADAM LEWIS (instructed by Messrs Baker McKenzie) for the Defendant
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Crown Copyright ©
MR JUSTICE MACKAY:
"(3) The BOA, in compliance with the World Anti-Doping Code ('WADC'), recognises adjudication of competent authorities under the WADC by not selecting athletes or other individuals for accreditation to Team GB whilst they are subject to a ban from competition under such adjudications.
(4) The BOA does not regard it as appropriate to select athletes or other individuals for accreditation to Team GB who have at any point committed a serious doping offence involving fault or negligence and without any mitigating factors.
(5) The BOA regards it as appropriate to take as a starting point that any athlete or individual guilty of a doping offence at any point should be ineligible for selection for Team GB, but to provide that an athlete or individual who can establish before an Appeals Panel that, on the balance of probabilities, his or her offence was minor or committed without fault or negligence or that there were mitigating circumstances for it, may be declared eligible for selection."
"(1) Any person who has been found guilty of a doping offence, either (i) by the national governing body of his or her sport in the United Kingdom; or (ii) by any sporting authority inside or outside the United Kingdom whose decision is recognised by the World Anti-Doping Agency ('a sporting authority') shall not, subject to as provided below, thereafter be eligible for consideration as a member of Team GB or be considered eligible by the BOA to receive or to continue to benefit from any accreditation as a member of the Team GB Delegation for or in relation to any Olympic Games ...
(2) The Executive Board of the BOA shall establish an Appeals Panel made up of three individuals, two of whom shall be drawn from members of the Executive Board or elsewhere, and the third of whom, the chairman, shall be appointed by the Sports Dispute Resolution Panel to consider any appeal by a person made ineligible pursuant to paragraph (1) above."
"A person made ineligible pursuant to paragraph (1) may appeal on one or more of the following grounds (but not otherwise): (i) the doping offence was minor; or (ii) for an offence that was committed after the WADC came into force and was adopted by the relevant body that there was a finding of no fault or negligence, or of no significant fault or negligence in respect of the doping offence; or (iii) the appellant can show that, on the balance of probabilities, significant mitigating circumstances existed in relation to the doping offence. In the event of a successful appeal, the Appeals Panel shall restore eligibility for selection at such time and subject to such conditions as it considers appropriate."
The History of these Proceedings
The Form of the Relief Sought
"The defendant be restrained, whether by itself, its servants, agents or otherwise howsoever, from applying the BOA byelaw 25 ... to the claimant in respect of his eligibility and/or nomination to participate in Beijing 2008."
It is interesting to compare the relief sought in the Part 7 proceedings, which was:
"(1) A declaration that the byelaw ... is void and unenforceable against first-time offenders;
(2) a declaration that the claimant is eligible for inclusion in Team GB for Beijing 2008;
(3) an order directing the BOA to include the claimant in Team GB for Beijing 2008, subject to his achieving a first or second place at the trials event."
The BOA
"(1) Olympism is a philosophy of life exalting and combining in a balanced whole the qualities of body, will and mind; blending sport with culture and education. Olympism seeks to create a way of life based on the joy of effort, the educational value of good example and respect for universal, fundamental, ethical principles ...
(4) The practice of sport is a human right. Every individual must have the possibility of practising sport without discrimination of any kind and in the Olympic spirit, which requires mutual understanding with a spirit of friendship, solidarity and fair play. The organisation, administration and management of sport must be controlled by independent sports organisations."
"(2) Only NOCs recognised by the IOC may enter competitors in the Olympic Games. Any entry is subject to acceptance by the IOC which may at its discretion at any time refuse an entry without indication of grounds. Nobody is entitled to any right of any kind to participate in the Olympic Games.
(3) An NOC shall only enter competitors upon the recommendations for entries given by national federations. If the NOC approves thereof, it shall transmit such entries to the OCOG"
"The NOCs perform the following tasks:
2.1 They decide upon the entry of athletes proposed by their respective national federations. Such selection shall be based, not only on the sports performance of an athlete, but also on his ability to serve as an example to the sporting youth of his country."
"The World Anti-Doping Code is mandatory for the whole Olympic Movement."
"It reflects a deliberate and considered view by the BOA that it does not want any athletes who have deliberately or negligently taken a prohibited substance from representing Great Britain and Northern Ireland in the Olympic Games. There are a number of reasons why the byelaw is important for BOA, including:
(a) doping goes against the principle of fair play which is an essential part of the Olympic Movement and contravenes the fundamental principles of olympism;
(b) it serves to protect the reputation of the BOA and the athletes comprising Team GB;
(c) it serves to safeguard the health of athletes;
(d) it protects and enhances public interest in Olympic sport and makes it more likely that new entrants will participate in Olympic sports at all levels of those sports;
(e) it enjoys substantial support among the athletes themselves and protects team morale and cohesion;
(f) it tackles cheating in sport."
"That the policies and minimum standards set forth in it represent the consensus of a broad spectrum of stakeholders with an interest in fair sport."
It deals with sanctions on individuals who offend against the Code and lays down, broadly, a two-year minimum ban for a first offence in circumstances similar to those in which Mr Chambers found himself.
"(1) Any person who has been sanctioned with a suspension of more than six months by any anti-doping organisation for any violation of any anti-doping regulations may not participate in any capacity in the next edition of the Games ...
(2) These regulations apply to violations of any anti-doping regulations that are omitted as of 1st July 2008."
This rule therefore envisages, with the sanction of the IOC, an Olympic disqualification persisting for a longer period than the domestic ban.
The Legal Approach to the Issues in this Case
"It is nevertheless common ground that, even in the absence of any contractual relationship, the decision of the Appeal Board is subject to the supervisory jurisdiction of the court in accordance with the principles stated in Nagle v. Fielden [1966] 2 QB 633. For all the doubts expressed about the jurisprudential basis of Nagle v. Fielden, it has become an accepted part of the law and has perhaps assumed an even greater importance since the courts came to adopt a restrictive approach towards the application of judicial review to the decisions of sporting bodies. In Modahl v. British Athletic Federation Ltd [2002] 1 WLR 1192 Latham LJ referred to a number of the earlier authorities on the court's power to grant remedies against domestic tribunals, and continued
'However this particular debate has been resolved, certainly in this court, in Nagle v Fielden ..., in which the court unanimously held that, where a man's right to work was in issue, a decision of a domestic body which affected that right could be the subject of a claim for a declaration and an injunction even where no contractual relationship could be established.'"
"Of the further authorities on restraint of trade to which I was referred, the most interesting was the detailed exposition by Carnwath J at first instance in the Stevenage Borough Football Club case (unreported judgment of 23 July 1996). What he said was dealt with only briefly by the Court of Appeal on appeal in the same case ... For present purposes, however, I think it unnecessary to get caught up in the subtleties of Carnwath J's analysis. It is sufficient that even in the absence of contract the court has a settled jurisdiction to grant declarations and injunctions in respect of decisions of domestic tribunals that affect a person's right to work."
Later, he continued at paragraph 37:
"That brings me to the nature of the court's supervisory jurisdiction over such a decision. The most important point, as it seems to me, is that it is supervisory. The function of the court is not to take the primary decision but to ensure that the primary decision-maker has operated within lawful limits. It is a review function, very similar to that of the court on judicial review. Indeed, given the difficulties that sometimes arise in drawing the precise boundary between the two, I would consider it surprising and unsatisfactory if a private law claim in relation to the decision of a domestic body required the court to adopt a materially different approach from a judicial review claim in relation to the decision of a public body. In each case the essential concern should be with the lawfulness of the decision taken: whether the procedure was fair, whether there was any error of law, whether any exercise of judgment or discretion fell within the limits open to the decision-maker, and so forth."
"In McInnes v Onslow-Fane [1978] 1 WLR 1520 ... Megarry V-C referred to the various requirements of natural justice or fairness that have to be observed according to whether a case is a forfeiture case or an application case. He endorsed counsel's concession that in an application case the relevant board was 'under a duty to reach an honest conclusion without bias and not in pursuance of any capricious policy' ... He also expressed the view that 'the courts must be slow to allow any implied obligation to be fair to be used as a means of bringing before the courts for review honest decisions of bodies exercising jurisdiction over sporting and other activities which those bodies are far better fitted to judge than the courts ...' In the Stevenage Borough Football Club case, Millett LJ stated that those observations had won subsequent approval and suggested that the role of the court was essentially supervisory."
"Different decision-makers may come up with different answers, all of them reached in an entirely proper application of the test. In the context of the European Convention on Human Rights it is recognised that, in determining whether an interference with fundamental rights is justified and, in particular, whether it is proportionate, the decision-maker has a discretionary area of judgment or margin of discretion. The decision is unlawful only if it falls outside the limits of that discretionary area of judgment. Another way of expressing it is that the decision is unlawful only if it falls outside the range of reasonable responses to the question of where a fair balance lies between the conflicting interests."
"Richards J dealt at length with the role of the court in a case such as this and conducted a careful analysis of the relevant authorities. I would commend the entirety of his analysis."
"Equally well founded, in my judgment, is Mr Hillier's submission that the Essex County Lawn Tennis Association has no restraint of trade arrangements with the LTA or with anyone else, implementation of which might interfere with the right of a tennis professional to earn his living. No fee is paid to players who are playing in county teams. No fee is paid by the LTA to players playing in national teams. The decision of the Tennis Association to ban the plaintiff for three years from selection for county teams did not bar the plaintiff from any employment or gainful activity ...
Mr Grayson [counsel for the claimant] submitted that the ban had damaged the plaintiff's reputation and adversely affected his ability, both to obtain commercial sponsorship and attract pupils for coaching. There was no evidence that either of these consequences had in fact been caused to the plaintiff by the ban. But, even if Mr Grayson's submission had been correct, and even if those consequences had been predictable consequences of the ban, the conclusion that the rules of natural justice ought to be imported into the Committee's deliberations would not, in my judgment, be justified.
The authorities on which Mr Grayson relied establish, in my view, that observance of the rules of natural justice, the obligation to proceed fairly, may be required where an adverse decision will bar the object of the decision from some gainful activity. Where all that can be said is that reputation may be affected, I agree with Mr Hillier [counsel for the defendants] that there is no reason for importing the rules of natural justice."
"In the days when this doctrine [common law restraint of trade] was evolved, the sanctity of contract was certainly no less regarded than it is today. The courts then afforded protection to a man against an unreasonable restraint upon his right to work, even though he had bargained that right away. I should be sorry to think that since those days we have grown so supine that today the courts are powerless to protect a man against an unreasonable restraint upon his right to work, to which he has in no way agreed but which a group with no authority, save that which it has conferred upon itself, seek capriciously to impose upon him."
"I cite that passage to deal with the submission that was made that the decision to ban the appellant from playing for the Essex team was an interference with his right to work. The learned judge held there was no evidence whatever that he had suffered any financial harm as a result of this ban. It seems to me that, although the issue of damage was not before the learned judge and none of the suggested heads of damage was therefore investigated, it was not suggested the ban had any effect on his freedom to continue with his profession to coach, to be sponsored and to take part in tournaments. Those were his sources of living.
I can understand there might possibly be some diminution of his standing in the tennis world which might have been increased by being chosen, by having played, for example, for England in July 1983. I cannot see that in any way fits the language which I have cited from the judgment of Salmon LJ
In the present case I do not think one could fairly say the decision of the Committee to order the appellant should not be considered for selection for playing for the county for three years can possibly be described as affecting his livelihood in the ordinary meaning of the word."
"The policy underlying the restraint of trade law is that people should be free to exploit for their financial gain the talents and abilities that they may have. I would accept that restraint of trade law would not be applicable to activities that were undertaken for no financial reward at all (for example, school sport ...) nor is it in my opinion in point that a particular ban may deprive a would-be competitor of a chance of building up a reputation and to later exploit it for commercial gain. But in a sport which allows competitors to exploit their ability in the sport for financial gain and which allows that gain to be a direct consequence of the participation in competition, a ban on competition is, in my judgment, a restraint of trade."
i) that this law is in pursuit of a legitimate aim - the Olympic ideal and the fundamental principles in other passages which I have already cited.
ii) The system set up is rational and it is also proportionate in its effect. All athletes (and that includes the claimant) know about it. It only applies to those who cheat, either deliberately or recklessly, and it has a developed and fair appeal system, which is used.
iii) It is not a general sanction as the claimant is free to compete anywhere else at any other time, apart from these Games. Put shortly, their case is that they are entitled to exercise the authority given to them to put forward a national team and decide who is appropriate for inclusion in it at this one event. The practice of other nations is of interest, but not determinative of the approach of the British National Committee which reaches a view as to what is best for its country.
iv) They say it enjoys a wide support from the majority of British athletes. This is supported by the fact that at the last two Olympic events (Athens 2004 and Torino 2006) 90% and 96% respectively of the Olympic athletes surveyed said they supported the continued application of byelaw 25. There are also a substantial number of past Olympians who have given reasoned support for its continuance.
v) The defendant argues that a more relaxed criterion such as that contained in the 2008 code of the IOC would still have worked in such a way as to exclude the claimant from Beijing.