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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 >> Fulham Football Club v Jones [2022] EWHC 1108 (QB) (18 May 2022) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2022/1108.html Cite as: [2022] EWHC 1108 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
On appeal from Recorder Craven sitting in Swansea Civil Justice Centre
B e f o r e :
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Fulham Football Club |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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Mr Jordan Levi Jones |
Respondent |
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Mr A. Arentsen (instructed by David W Harris & Co. Solicitors) for the Respondent
Hearing date: 12 April 2022
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Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Lane :
A. THE PROCEEDINGS
B. THE TACKLE
C. CASE LAW ETC
"It is not for me in this court to attempt to define exhaustively the duty of care between players in a soccer football game. Nor, in my judgment, is there any need because there was here such an obvious breach of the defendant's duty of care towards the plaintiff. He was clearly guilty, as I find the facts, of serious and dangerous foul play which showed a reckless disregard of the plaintiff's safety and which fell far below the standards which might reasonably be expected in anyone pursuing the game".
"…the conclusion to be reached must necessarily depend, according to the concepts of the common law, upon the reasonableness, in relation to the special circumstances, of the conduct which caused the plaintiff's injury. That does not necessarily mean the compliance of that conduct with the rules, conventions or customs (if there are any) by which the correctness of conduct for the purpose of the carrying on of the activity as an organised affair is judged; for the tribunal of fact may think that in the situation in which the plaintiff's injury was caused, a participant might do what the defendant did and still not be acting unreasonably, even though he infringed the "rules of the game". Non-compliance with such rules, conventions or customs (where they exist) is necessarily one consideration to be attended to upon the question of reasonableness; but it is only one, and it may be of much or little or even no weight in the circumstances".
"In considering the circumstances, the court should not forget that football is a game necessarily involving strong physical contact between opposing players, that it is a game sometimes played at a very fast speed, and the players have to take very very quick decisions as to how to react in where's [the] situation immediately confronting them. It is easy enough for the armchair video watcher to replay the incident frame by frame and then decide how the player should ideally have reacted to the situation, but in the real world, that is to say in the agony of the moment in the heat of the game, the player has no more than literally a fraction of one second in which to make a decision. What might be considered a mistake or error of judgment on replaying a video frame by frame may be no more than the ordinary reaction of even a skilled player.
Even the very best players will not always do what in retrospect seems to have been the ideal thing to have done. Therefore, an error of judgment or mistake will certainly not always mean that the player has failed to exercise a duty of care appropriate in the circumstances."
"We are here concerned with a split-second, virtually instantaneous, decision made by professional sportsmen entrusted with powerful animals, paid and required by the rules of their sport to ride them, at speed, to victory or, failing victory, to the best possible placing: in other words, to beat all the other horses in the race, or endeavour to do so. The course has no lanes; nor is it straight. The horse, as this case demonstrated, has a will of its own. The demands on professional jockeys to ride at all are very heavy. They require skill and physical and mental courage. To win, beyond skill and courage, they need determination and concentration, the ability rapidly to assess and re-assess the constantly changing racing conditions, and to adjust their own riding and tactics accordingly—a quality that must depend in part on experience and in part on intuition or instinct." (paragraph 31).
"The threshold for liability is high and the mere error of judgment or lapse in skill is not sufficient, taken in the context of this highly competitive and inherently risky sport. In effect, while recklessness has been expressly stated not to be the test for a finding of negligence, in effect the evidential burden is such that requires a reckless disregard for the safety of others. Of course, in placing the threshold at that high level, regard is being had to all the circumstances of the sport, the inherent dangers and the high degree of competitiveness with a requirement on jockeys to win or be best placed. The fact that the threshold is high does not mean, however, that no duty of care is owed between jockeys".
"88. After that initial collision and the shout "Gibbo" from Mr Tylicki there was a further opportunity for Mr Gibbons to act in a way that may have avoided the second collision, namely by then moving out to the left away from Nellie Deen in order to give her the opportunity to progress safely. He didn't, but continued pulling across to the rail which gave Nellie Deen no space. Despite Mr Tylicki pulling hard to decelerate and bring Nellie Deen backwards as quickly as possible, the consequence of Mr Gibbons continuing with bringing Madame Butterfly into the rail, is that there was the second collision between the forelegs of Nellie Deen and the back heels of Madame Butterfly which brought down Nellie Deen and Mr Tylickil with her.
89. In my judgment, during this spell of riding between 15:27:51 through to 15:27:55, Mr Gibbons had a reckless disregard for Mr Tylicki's safety. Mr Gibbons knew, or at the very least ought to have known, that Mr Tylicki was inside on the rail and had moved up to within a half-length of Madame Butterfly. He did more than merely control Madame Butterfly to enable her to keep a racing line around a bend that had started 6 seconds before at 15:27:45. He exerted real pressure on the right hand rein of Madame Butterfly in order to bring her across Nellie Deen's racing line and did not stop bringing her in close to the rail even after the first collision on the cusp of 15:27:53/15:27:54. Even if, which I do not accept is credible, Mr Gibbons was unaware of the presence of Nellie Deen until he heard the shout of "Gibbo" from Mr Tylicki, he certainly knew of the presence of Mr Tylicki and Nellie Deen at that time and he does nothing to pull Madame Butterfly off the rail in order to give Mr Tylicki a chance."
D. THE LAWS OF THE GAME
"LAWS OF THE GAME 2016/17 Page 81
If an offence involves contact it is penalised by a direct free kick or penalty kick.
- Careless is when a player shows a lack of attention or consideration when making a challenge or acts without precaution. No discipline sanction is needed.
- Reckless is when a player acts with disregard to the danger to, or consequences for, an opponent and must be cautioned
- Using excessive force is when a player exceeds the necessary use of force and endangers the safety of an opponent there must be sent off
LAWS OF THE GAME 2016/17 Page 86/87
Sending-off offences
A player, a substitute or substituted player who commits any of the following offences is sent off:
- denying the opposing team, a goal or an obvious goal-scoring opportunity by deliberately handling the ball (except a goalkeeper within their penalty area)
- denying an obvious goal-scoring an opportunity to opponent moving towards the opponent's goal by an offence punishable by a free kick (unless as outlined below)
- serious foul play
- spitting at an opponent or any other person
- violent conduct
- using offensive, insulting or abusive language and/or gestures
- receiving a second caution in the same match.
LAWS OF THE GAME 2016/17 Page 88
Serious foul play
A tackle or challenge that endangers the safety of an opponent or uses excessive force or brutality must be sanctioned as serious foul play. Any player who lunges at an opponent in challenging for the ball from the front, from the side or from behind using one or both legs, with excessive force and endangers the safety of an opponent is guilty of serious foul play."
E. THE JUDGMENT OF THE RECORDER
"They agreed the referee gave clear signals throughout most of the match but disagreed on the one signal he made following the tackle.
They agreed the tackle was initiated when Harris was level with the Claimant but also agreed that an illegal challenge can be made can be from behind, from the front or from the side.
Mr Hackett believed the challenge was a lunge and Harris was not in control of his body when he made it; Mr Cumming disagreed and considered the challenge was a legal and skilful and successful attempt to win the ball.
They agreed that refereeing in many instances was subjective and different referees could have different views of the same incident. They agreed that the referee raised his right arm and then lowered it as Harris moved forward with the ball. Mr Hackett says he expected the referee was about to award a foul but then allowed play to continue, and he considers that the referee thereby made a mistake. Mr Cumming considers the referee raised his right arm to indicate that play should continue, which he says is a generally recognised and accepted indication, and the referee was correct.
The experts saw no indication of any reaction by the spectators near to the incident but this they say would be normal. They found it surprising that the Claimant says he heard gasps from the Swansea coaching staff who were over 50 yards away."
"56. In Basi Lord Donaldson said:
"if it is found by the tribunal of fact that the defendant failed to exercise that degree of care which was appropriate in all the circumstances, or that he acted in a way to which the plaintiff cannot be expected to have consented. In either event, there is liability.
The circumstances in which negligence is judged include the fact that association football is a contact game. It is apparent from what Tuckey LJ said at paragraph 23 in Caldwell v Maguire (and Lord Woolf CJ agreed) that the threshold of liability in negligence high. Whilst a claimant does not have to establish recklessness, there is "no liability for errors of judgment, oversights or lapses of which any participant might be guilty in the context of a fast-moving contest. Something more serious is required ." Breach of the rules is not itself determinative of liability and neither is a referee's decision one way or the other but actual serious foul play "that endangers the safety of an opponent or uses excessive force or brutality (see p.116) would very likely amount to negligence."
"I have watched I have watched the video of the incident many times including frame by frame and I have looked at the other videos and photographic evidence and considered the evidence of the witnesses. I [sic] interpreting the video I take into account (i) it is only two dimensional making it difficult to judge depth (ii) the camera appears to be at least the full width of the pitch away, (iii) the camera zooms in and out (iv) the quality is not high and the stills are somewhat blurred (v) the action happens very quickly (vi) nevertheless the whole incident is shown; (vii) the evidence of the Claimant and Mr. Harris about what happened, (viii) the evidence of the experts who may be able to see and interpret things I cannot or would not if they were not pointed out to me, (ix) the parties' submissions about what it does or does not show. I may conclude the video does not show or does not show clearly enough certain aspects of what happened and whatever I provisionally think the video shows may be outweighed by other evidence and considerations."
"So I conclude that as he drew towards the Claimant Harris launched himself off the ground, both legs coming off the ground. He could protect himself in a certain direction at project point of take-off but would not then have control over his flight except to some extent being able to move where his legs went . Though the Claimant was aware of somebody coming up behind him the precise moment of such a tackle would have come as a surprise to him. Harris could aim for the ball and I accept he did, but he could not be sure what else he might contact or do or, being a large man, with what force he might do it. He was aiming at a ball which was being played forward by the other running player and he was intending to get between that player's feet and legs and the ball."
"… was a foul which the referee should have penalised. That he did not is a puzzle, but not a sufficient one to negative my views about what actually happened. I bear in mind the risks of making judgments in hindsight, but that is not the same as carefully studying the evidence from witnesses, photographs and coming to a decision that was not made on the day. I also bear in mind the high standard of liability referred to in the authorities and that I am rejecting Mr Cumming's view, though of course accepting Mr Hackett's. What Mr Harris did was a breach of his duty to take the reasonable care for another player's safety that was appropriate in all the circumstances of a professional game of football. He was therefore guilty of negligence and therefore the defendant is vicariously liable for that negligence and for the injury to the claimant and its consequences".
F. THE HAND-DOWN
"ii) As to not perhaps analysing bit by bit why I decided in favour of one expert, Mr Hackett rather than Mr Cummings, I felt as I stated in my judgment, that having set out the various contentions, having in particular set out that on looking in detail and time after time again at the video evidence, I was bearing in mind the various other evidence, including the experts' ways of analysing it and what they said as experts they could or could not see in it and, in the end, as I had to judge, formed my own view bearing all that in mind and I feel that what I have said as to why I have reached my conclusions set against my setting out of what, in particular, Mr Cumming said is sufficient to analyse why, as I have said, towards the end of my judgment, I reject his view. It is not so much because I think he is wrong. It is because I conclude otherwise on the evidence as a whole.
iii) As to not taking into account contemporaneous reactions, I adopt what Mr Arentsen has just said. I said why I was not persuaded in the opposite direction by what the referee did or did not do.
iv) As to what the other players or crowd of spectators did or did not do, I do not feel that was weighty enough in any way to draw any conclusion and so I did not take it into account in the end."
G. DISCUSSION
Ground 1
"The standard for civil liability is set higher than the Laws of the Game. The Laws of the Game govern how a game is played and within the scope of those laws and the bodies that govern the game there are certain sanctions that can be imposed, of course the yellow card, the red card, the sending off. What is imposed within a finding of civil liability is something much more serious, as your honour will appreciate. "
"I consider what Harris did was a lunge within the meaning of the definition of serious foul play in paragraph 18 above and in any event, it endangered the claimant's safety. It does not matter that Harris did not intend to injure the claimant or that in a general sense, it can be said the tackle was made in a fast moving heat of the moment context".
Ground 2
"Where the dispute something in the nature of an intellectual exchange, with reasons and analysis advanced on either side, the judge must enter into the issues canvassed before him and explain why he prefers one case over the other. This is likely to apply particularly in litigation, whereas here there is disputed expert evidence; but it is not necessarily limited to such cases".
Ground 3
Ground 4
H. OUTCOME