![]() |
[Home] [Databases] [World Law] [Multidatabase Search] [Help] [Feedback] | |
England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions |
||
You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Commercial Court) Decisions >> Kaneria v The English & Wales Cricket Board Ltd [2014] EWHC 1348 (Comm) (06 May 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Comm/2014/1348.html Cite as: [2014] EWHC 1348 (Comm) |
[New search] [Printable RTF version] [Help]
QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
COMMERCIAL COURT
Rolls Building, Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
||
B e f o r e :
____________________
Danish Kaneria |
Claimant |
|
- and - |
||
The English & Wales Cricket Board Limited (ECB) |
Defendant |
____________________
Mr I Mill QC (instructed by Onside Law) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 11 April 2014
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Hamblen :
Introduction
The applications
Section 68
Section 69
(1) A Life Ban from cricket was a proportionate disciplinary sanction;
(2) Mr Kaneria had agreed to be subject to the Cricket Discipline Commission Regulations 2012;
(3) The principle of "lex mitior" does not apply to the Costs Orders; and
(4) Mr Kaneria was guilty of the two offences.
Section 68
The Costs Orders
"I Danish Prabhashanker Kaneria hereby undertake and confirm that I will abide by the Laws of Cricket, the present Rules, Regulations, Directives and Resolutions of the England and Wales Cricket Board (the ECB) and any further Rules, Regulations, Directives and Resolutions brought to my notice during the season 2009 and acknowledge that I have seen and read:
a) the Regulations Governing and Qualification and Registration of Cricketers for Competitive County Cricket and their Qualification for England; and
b) the Cricket Discipline Commission Regulations; and
c) the current Directives of ECB; and
d) the Playing Conditions for First Class Matches; and
e) the Anti-Doping Regulations and;
f) the Clothing and Equipment Regulations; and
g) the ECB's data protection notification for First Class and Minor County Cricketers
which are set out in ECB Rules and Regulations 2009 and more specifically I agree that this undertaking shall be deemed to incorporate the undertaking by registered Cricketers set out in Regulation 7.2 of the Regulations Governing the Qualification and Registration of Cricketers for Competitive County Cricket 2008, headed Negotiations between Counties and Cricketers.".
"the Panel is satisfied that the procedures in relation to both the Disciplinary Panel hearing and the current Appeal are governed by the Regulations in force in 2012 – at the time of the institution of the proceedings against Mr. Kaneria in 2012" because Mr. Kaneria "accepted that he was required to comply with all [ECB] Rules, Regulations and Directives "for the time being in force"".
The Life Ban
"retains the absolute discretion to impose any penalty within its general powers in respect of any proven allegation of breach of these Directives, save that the maximum penalties to be considered by the Commission in relation to an individual engaging in conduct covered by these Directives shall be as follows…"
"[24] But the issue was whether the tribunal "exceeded its powers" within the meaning of section 68(2) (b). This required the courts below to address the question whether the tribunal purported to exercise a power which it did not have or whether it erroneously exercised a power that it did have. If it is merely a case of erroneous exercise of power vesting in the tribunal no excess of power under section 68(2) (b) is involved...
[31] ...section 68(2) (b) does not permit a challenge on the ground that the tribunal arrived at a wrong conclusion as a matter of law or fact. It is not apt to cover a mere error of law...
[32] In order to decide whether section 68(2)(b) is engaged it will be necessary to focus intensely on the particular power under an arbitration agreement, the terms of reference, or the 1996 Act which is involved, judged in all the circumstances of the case. In making this general observation it must always be borne in mind that the erroneous exercise of an available power cannot by itself amount to an excess of power. A mere error of law will not amount to an excess of power under section 68(2) (b)."
Conclusion on section 68
Section 69
The Life Ban
(1) The Arbitral Panel treated Mr Kaneria inconsistently with Mr Westfield, who received a partly suspended 5 year ban. There was no justification for this inconsistent treatment, given that the Arbitral Panel found that both men acted corruptly, that both men did so willingly, that both men lied in evidence, and the nature of the offending was similar.
(2) The only available authorities and/or precedents of disciplinary sanctions in spot-fixing cases demonstrate that the Arbitral Panel's decision was entirely disproportionate. In this connection, reference was made to six month bans imposed in 2002 on Mr Herschelle Gibbs and Mr Henry Williams; a partly suspended ten year ban imposed in 2011 on Mr Salman Butt, and a partly suspended seven year ban imposed in 2011 on Mr Mohammed Asif.
(3) There was no prior authority in which a lifetime ban had been imposed on any sportsperson (let alone any cricketer) for an offence of spot-fixing.
(4) It is important that sports disciplinary panels approach similar offences in a similar manner. Like cases must be treated alike. Otherwise, there is a risk of arbitrary justice.
"Self evidently, corruption, specifically spot fixing, in cricket or any other sport for that matter, is a cancer that eats at the health and very existence of the game. For the general public, supporting the game and their team within it, there is no merit or motivation to expend time, money or effort to watch a match whose integrity may be in doubt. The consequences of the public's disengagement from cricket would be catastrophic.
Furthermore, the game of cricket simply cannot afford to have its reputation tarnished in the eyes of commercial partners. These partners could not and would not link their brand to a sport whose integrity had been so undermined.
For players who have devoted their entire careers to the pursuit of hard fought and properly competitive sport, to have those genuine achievements called into question by the corrupt actions of a tiny minority, may tend to devalue their worth.
Accordingly, we have no doubt that this is a cancer which must be rooted out of the game of cricket. As a result of this, in relation to domestic cricket, the ECB and the PCA have introduced programmes of training and education such that in 2012 there are in place for all county cricketers appropriate safeguards in the area of match fixing and corruption. These were not in place in 2009. In reaching our conclusions, we have had regard to the authorities placed before us in relation to sanctions imposed for corrupt activity in sport".
"... In particular this Panel emphasises the deliberate and planned approach, in conjunction with professional corrupters against whom Mr. Kaneria had been warned. Mr. Westfield was a young, comparatively modest paid player, on the fringes of the First Class game and, therefore, vulnerable to temptation offered to him through Mr. Kaneria, a massively experienced international player with considerable status in the Essex line-up. The Panel has taken full account of the cases drawn to its attention and, in particular, the more modest sentences imposed in the cases of [Salman] Butt, [Mohammad Asif] and others....The Panel, whilst noting the authorities which suggest that spot-fixing might be less serious than match-fixing, consider that, in the circumstances of this case, the distinction is not significant. Spot-fixing, being easier to arrange and harder to detect is an on-going evil as are recent trends further to extend corruption to less high-profile cricket. Many of the aggravating features, now enshrined in the ECB Anti-Corruption Code, are present in this case....the Panel finds that no lesser penalty than a life ban is appropriate both as a deterrent to others and also to ensure that he has no further opportunity to damage the game."
The applicable Regulations
"Lex mitior"
"… if the rules change in favour of the athlete between the time the acts in question occur and the time the hearing panel comes to determine the charge, either in terms of what constitutes a violation … or in terms of what the sanction is for a particular violation …., the CAS jurisprudence is clear that the criminal law doctrine of lex mitior applies by analogy, i.e. the athlete is entitled to the benefit of the more lenient rule".
(1) The 2012 Regulations treat and define costs as a "financial penalty".
(2) Regulation 5 of the 2012 Regulations treats "penalties and costs" under the Summary Procedure as being the same.
(3) Regulation 8 of the 2012 Regulations ("Disciplinary Panel Hearings – penalties and costs") treats "penalties and costs" in disciplinary panel hearings as part of the same regulation. Regulation 8.4 refers back to Regulation 1.1.16 and requires that an order for costs as a "Financial Penalty" is payable forthwith unless otherwise stated.
(4) This scheme of the 2012 Regulations is entirely consistent with the ECB's "Anti-Corruption Code" which also treats "costs" as a "sanction" or "penalty":
(5) An order for costs of £100,000 falls into the dictionary definition of a "sanction" or "penalty" as it is a punishment for breaking rules.
"The general principle of lex mitior is not challenged in these proceedings – the issue, however, turns on whether or not, under the terms of the ECB rules, regulations or directives, an order for costs is properly to be considered a sanction or penalty.
The Panel has considered, with care, the submissions made on Mr. Kaneria's behalf but is satisfied that the ECB Regulations, governing these proceedings clearly distinguish between sanctions/penalties which constitute a form of punishment and the costs incurred during the course of the proceedings…"
The findings of guilt
Conclusion