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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 >> Johnston v League Publications Ltd & Ors [2014] EWHC 874 (QB) (26 March 2014) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/QB/2014/874.html Cite as: [2014] EWHC 874 (QB) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
(Sitting as a High Court Judge)
____________________
DESMOND JOHNSTON |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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(1) LEAGUE PUBLICATIONS LIMITED (2) RICHARD DE LA RIVIERE (3) NEDZAD CATIC |
Defendants |
____________________
Jacob Dean (instructed by FrontRow Legal) for the First and Second Defendants
The Third Defendant was not represented
Hearing date: 28 February 2014
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Crown Copyright ©
Sir David Eady :
"BARROW STAR CLEARED OF WRONGDOING
BARROW forward Ned Catic, who is currently suspended by the club, has been cleared by police of any wrongdoing relating to an event that occurred in the club's offices in July.
Raiders Chairman Des Johnston had visited the police, claiming that the Australian had intimidated two members of staff in the club's office, before grabbing some cash, although Johnston did not claim that Catic (right) had stolen any.
Catic, 33, has not played for the Raiders since the incident, even though he was not charged. The police questioned him over the incident, but accepted his version of events. The police have since written (left) to Catic to confirm that: "There was insufficient evidence to substantiate that any criminal offence had occurred."
According to Catic, he had not been paid for three months. Johnston had withheld his salary after Catic was found guilty by the Rugby Football League of abusing a drugs tester earlier in the season, a charge Catic denied.
He said: "I got suspended for four weeks earlier in the season, and that's when things changed for me with Des. I got sent into a tribunal with the RFL with no representation. I pleaded not guilty, but the RFL found me guilty and banned me.
"Before that, Des thought what I was accused of was funny and he congratulated me for it! But he got serious when he found out I could be banned, and he spent the best part of ten weeks telling me I was going to be fined heavily. But he never did anything, it was just threats. There was nothing in my contract that would enable Des to take further action, but he told me that the RFL had fined the club £4,000 for the way I spoke to them. Then he changed his argument, claiming that my suspension was costing the club £8,000 in lost game money. It had somehow doubled!
"When I wasn't budging, he even used to threaten me with deportation. That's when I realised I needed legal advice. He owed me three months' wages. I went to his house for a meeting, but when I spoke he kept telling me to shut up because he was watching the racing on Sky. He still insists that it was an official disciplinary hearing! There wasn't even someone taking notes.
"So I thought my best bet was to get back to playing rugby and playing well. I played two games against Sheffield and Halifax.
"The following Monday, I rang the office and Marian from the shop answered and said [club secretary] Karen would ring me back. I'd heard that before, so I drove over and me and Zeb Luisi went in. Marian told me to go upstairs where Karen was. I used to go upstairs all the time – in fact earlier in the season she'd been crying on my shoulder because of the horrible situation she was always in, with players turning up for wages that weren't there. I gave her a hug and a kiss on that occasion. It's very common for players to go into Karen's office – it happened all the time.
"I went upstairs, sat in the chair that I always sat in, and started a bit of small talk. Then I told her I needed my money because it was three months overdue. She was counting the weekend's takings, but I hadn't realised that before I went in. I gave Des a call from Karen's office, but he told me to call him back because he was in a meeting. But he always fobbed us off like that. I told him I'd just take it if he didn't pay me, although I wouldn't have done and I didn't.
"We were swearing at each other. I asked him how he'd feel if I just picked up the cash I could see – see how he would feel for someone to steal off him, just like he was not paying me.
"I picked up some cash to prove the point that I could, but I wasn't going to actually take it. I was showing him how I could. At that point Karen said it wasn't my money, and she'd have to call the police. When I heard that world [sic] 'police' I just put the money back. I hung up on Des, didn't say anything to Karen, and Marian was halfway up the stairs. I explained to her he owed me three months' wages and that it had nothing to do with her – it was between Des and me. She went back and said to Zeb that she wasn't going to call the police.
"I said to Marian downstairs that she wouldn't be happy if she didn't get paid, and she agreed with me. I went for a bite to eat and rang the club. I spoke to Marian and told her I loved her and John – someone else at the club – but I explained that the club owed me three months' wages. I apologised for swearing, but pointed out again that it was best to stay out of things that didn't concern her. That was the last time I spoke to anyone at the club.
"I went to Des's workplace and once again he made himself unavailable to see me. I went home and got a phone call from the police, who wanted me to go and see them. Des had told them a pack of lies. If his version had been true, I'd have been arrested. I was in the station for three whole minutes! There was no case at all, and the police told me straightaway that I was obviously innocent of the three things Des had accused me of – forced entry, threatening behaviour and taking money – and I have the letter from the police to prove it..."."
"In their natural and ordinary and/or inferential meaning the said words meant and were understood to mean that:
7.1 the Claimant was guilty of making a malicious complaint to the police concerning the Third Defendant arising from his supposed conduct at Barrow's offices on 12 July 2011, falsely accusing the Third Defendant of forced entry, threatening behaviour and of taking money when, as the Claimant knew, the Third Defendant was obviously innocent of all three allegations and there was no case against him at all;
7.2 the Claimant, as chairman of Barrow, had behaved towards the Third Defendant, a player and an employee of the club, in a manner that was wholly at odds with basic tenets of good employment practice and employer- employee relations and had mistreated, harassed and/or victimised the Third Defendant in the following ways:
(i) he had initially reacted with amusement on being informed that the Third Defendant had been accused of behaving abusively towards a drugs tester and had congratulated the Third Defendant for his misbehaviour in this regard;
(ii) then, upon finding out that the Third Defendant could be banned from playing for the club if found guilty of such conduct by the Rugby Football League ("RFL"), with the result (as the Claimant saw it) that for the duration of such a ban the club would be getting nothing from the Third Defendant in return for paying his wages, he changed his tune and spent the best part of ten weeks repeatedly threatening the Third Defendant with the prospect of being fined heavily by the club in addition to any sanction the RFL might impose, despite the fact that the club had no contractual right to take any such further action against the Third Defendant;
(iii) when the Third Defendant was found guilty by the RFL and suspended from playing, the Claimant variously demanded, without any contractual or other lawful justification, that the Third Defendant refund the £4,000 the club had been fined by the RFL for the way in which the Third Defendant had spoken to them and/or the £8,000 it had supposedly lost in terms of game money as a result of the Third Claimant's suspension;
(iv) when the Third Defendant refused to budge and pay those sums, the Claimant without any lawful justification threatened the Third Defendant with deportation and withheld payment of the Third Defendant's salary for three months; and
(v) when the Third Defendant attempted to raise the issue of his unpaid wages with the Claimant, the Claimant responded contemptuously including on one occasion, when the Third Defendant raised the issue with the Claimant in person, by continuing to watch horseracing on television and repeatedly telling the Third Defendant to shut up while he did so; and
7.3 the Claimant had behaved in a similar manner towards other players at the club, failing duly to pay them their wages or to make them available for collection as they fell due, and had thereby put Karen, the club secretary, in a horrible situation in her dealings with the players."
"IN THE SPOTLIGHT
TRIALS AND TRIBULATIONS
RICHARD DE LA RIVIERE speaks to NED CATIC about his experiences in Barrow
You signed for Barrow in 2008. What were your early experiences of the club and its Chairman?
Des chased me for three or four weeks telling me the club was going places. We agreed a contract over the phone, and he promised me a job with his recruitment firm and a car. I got to Barrow, played in my first game and asked him about the job. He told me things were really slow with his business and that he couldn't offer me one. That's when I started thinking 'what's going on here?' I asked about the car, and he gave me a pushbike, and that me that's all I'd need in Barrow. The brakes didn't even work.
But things were OK on the field?
We had a good team, and were winning games. But midway through the year we started losing a few games, so Des decided to sack Dave Clark and he brought in Steve Deakin. Under Steve, we beat Leigh 74-6, then Doncaster 64-0, and after the game I remember Des coming up to me saying, 'this is an effing joke'. I asked him what his problem was and he said, "He's gone – who does Steve Deakin think he is?" I couldn't believe it, but Des said, "How dare he tell me who I can't put in the team" just because Jamie Rooney hadn't played – he hadn't trained all week because of injury. I found out later that he had put money on Rooney to score the most points in the game. Two weeks later, Deakin was sacked, even though he was doing a great job. Des fired him because he didn't choose the team he wanted.
Then Dave Clark came back...
I expressed my concerns to Des, although I have no problems with Dave, and I was dropped for the next game. Dave came back and we went on to win the comp, but the cracks were starting to appear. There were a few people who played for us that year who still haven't had their medal from winning that final, yet Des had three or four. We didn't even get our jerseys – he auctioned them off in 2010. The club made over £145,000 in prize money that year, but none of us got any.
What happened in 2010?
Dave left after the 2009 Grand Final, saying he didn't have the confidence to continue in the job, but I think it was Des's decision, because he wanted Steve McCormack. We started OK and were winning games, and then we had the Andrew Henderson debacle... Steve then left – sacked – and enter Dave again. It was a joke. Des's motto is once he's got everything out of you, he'll throw you to the wolves. He's preached to me "BBB – bullshit baffles brains" since the day I got here. I'd say that should now stand for "bullshit backfires badly" – as Des is now discovering.
You beat Cas in the Cup, so things can't have been too bad?
We beat Cas – one of the best wins of my career – but shortly after that he sacked Hendo. After that we drew Saints away. Des came to training and promised us all £150 regardless of the result just for getting there. To this day, we've not seen a penny of that. He also cut back on giving tickets to players for home games. We usually got two tickets for each game, but he found out that I'd given one of mine to another player because I don't have family here. He went mad, and completely cracked down on it – he cut it from two to one, and players had to specify who would get the ticket. If they weren't a direct relative, they wouldn't get in. For away games, he stopped the complimentary tickets.
Steve then left...
Just going into the semis, Steve left and Dave came back for a third time, to the surprise of every player in the joint. We got to the qualifying semi, but lost to Sheffield at home and Hendo had a great game for them. Again, Des sold our kits instead of giving them to us. At the end-of-season presentation, I picked up pretty much every award going, but then Dave decided to leave.
How was your relationship with Des at that point?
It was OK. He confided in me at the start of the year that he'd never been in such a bad position with his gambling. He told me that he was absolutely skint, and had to quit but then I'd see his car outside William Hill. I'd go in and tell him to stop, but he wouldn't. The local bookies love him because he's a hopeless gambler and they make so much money out of him.
Were you surprised when Garry Schofield was appointed your new coach?
Yes. There was a lot of speculation over the new coach. Des kept talking about Brian Noble, but he settled for Garry, who's a great bloke, a great fella and great company, but I don't think his philosophy really suited us. He believed that we should all know the basics, so didn't teach us them, but the truth is that players at this level don't all know the basics. Des thought he'd bought himself the dream team, but we were playing well under par and we went out of the Northern Rail Cup. There were also a lot of loan players at the club. We'd train three times a week, and every time there were different faces – the only time we were all together was on Saturday mornings.
How was morale?
It was a shambles. There was backstabbing left, right and centre. We had a meeting before every training session to sort out some problem Des had discovered about dramas over contracts or whatever. The whole thing was Des's fault, not the coach's. His mismanagement of the club tore the dressing room apart with so many problems cropping up.
Such as?
For instance, we got one training top. One! And that didn't even come at the start of the year. When we came to get paid, we'd often discover that we'd been fined, and when we asked why it was because we'd been seen in the wrong shirt. We only had one, so it had to be washed. One wasn't enough for three sessions a week, but if we wore last year's top, anything from £25 to £75 would be deducted from our pay.
What were you beginning to think of Des by this stage?
I've never known someone who thinks he knows so much about the game but knows so little. Never have I been to a club that mismanages money so badly, and reneges on so many agreements. You're then forced to spend the year fighting the club. He holds money as a means of control, and manipulates people. I've seen him hold money in front of a player and practically have him begging for it. I've learned that money isn't the be all and end all if you have to put up with all this shit.
What other examples do you have of his mismanagement?
Zeb Luisi went home for his granddad's funeral. Des promised to pay for his flights, that Zeb could pay him back over the year and that his wages would continue. Zeb missed the flight back and missed the Featherstone game, so Des took money from his next two wage packets and then, when Zeb was back playing, he still took money from the next payment. Zeb was sending money back home to his mum and needed every penny. When he went to ask what was happening, Des just pulled £100 out of his pocket and said, "that's all you're getting." Another thing I've heard is from a policeman who witnessed Des take money from a cash point, throw it onto the ground and saying to a player "There's your money."
How did you feel seeing players and coaches being treated like this?
I know how they feel now, because he's now screwed me over and I'm angry about it, but beforehand, my attitude was not to bite the hand that feeds you, so I would just say nothing. I regret that now and I feel bad for the players and coaches that have been shit on. I want the truth to come out so this won't happen to other players.
Back to the rugby. Garry didn't last too long with Nigel Wright taking over.
We were a laughing stock by then. Schoey got sacked because a player didn't turn up to training. Garry wanted to discipline him by dropping him, but Des wouldn't have it and wanted to deal with it himself. He didn't want the side weakened even for one game, and totally opposed Garry's suggestion. He spoke to all the players and said: "If you want to f*** around, don't do it in my town." He thinks it's his town! Anyway he and Schoey couldn't agree, so Garry got sacked. Nigel then took over and was barely at training, so Martin Clawson, the conditioner, was coaching us during the week with Nigel in charge at gamedays. He didn't turn up for one game because he got stuck in traffic and coached us over the phone.
What did the players think of Wright's attendance at training?
When he got sacked, a few players thought "serves him right, only coming up once a week." Nigel has since told me that he wanted to be up all the time by moving to Manchester, but Des kept putting him off. Nigel also wanted to get rid of a couple of players and buy a few, but Des didn't agree and sacked him. Another problem was that Des used to text the players before a game with messages like "You'd better play well today" and he once texted me to say "You owe this club big time," right before a game. Nigel went to Des and told him to stop, and they had a big blow-up about it.
You must have thought things couldn't get any worse by this time?
Yes, but they did. He even took down posters advertising the Paul Larkin Memorial Tournament. Paul was the father of Chris, who plays for us, and he died in February. We had a touch rugby tournament for Paul, but Des ordered the posters advertising it to be taken down. The response given was that Sky had requested them to be taken down because they were televising a game, but Sky have clarified to someone I know that this isn't true."
"In their natural and ordinary and/or inferential meaning the said words meant and were understood to mean that:
9.1 the Claimant, by his gross mismanagement of Barrow as its chairman, had made the club an unpleasant, unstable, disharmonious and demoralising place to work as a player or a coach, in particular by conducting himself in the following manner:
(i) by repeatedly reneging on his promises to players: (a) he reneged on a promise to and/or breached an agreement with the Third Defendant to provide him with a job at his recruitment firm and a car in return for the Third Defendant's agreement to sign for Barrow; (b) he reneged on a promise to give all the players £150 each for beating Castleford ('Cas') in the Cup in 2010, in fact giving them not a penny of this sum; and (c) he reneged on a promise made to Zeb Luisi (a New Zealand player) to pay for the player's flights to attend his grandfather's funeral, to allow Luisi to pay him back over the subsequent year, and to continue meanwhile to pay Luisi his full wages, instead deducting money from three of Luisi's wage packets, even though, as he knew, Luisi was in the habit of sending money home to his mother and desperately needed every penny of his wages;
(ii) by ruthlessly, capriciously, repeatedly and without good reason, sacking coaches, specifically: Steve Deakin in 2008, sacked at a time when the time was enjoying success; Dave Clark, sacked on two occasions during 2008 and 2009, in the latter instance just after the club had won the 2009 Grand Final; Steve McCormack, sacked at a time when the team was playing well and winning games; and also Garry Schofield and Nigel Wright;
(iii) by sacking Steve Deakin as coach, even though he was doing a great job, because Deakin would not pick the team he wanted and had ignored his demand that Jamie Rooney be played in a match in the 2008-9 season against Doncaster, a demand issued to Deakin despite the fact that Rooney, as the Claimant was aware, had not trained the week prior to the match because of injury;
(iv) by insisting that Jamie Rooney be played in the said match against Doncaster only because he had placed a bet on Rooney to score the most points in that match;
(v) by discouraging coach Nigel Wright in his plan to move to the north of England, with the consequence, as the Claimant was aware, that Wright barely undertook any coaching other than on match days;
(vi) by interfering in other ways, officiously and counterproductively, in coaching, team selection and player disciplinary matters: specifically, (a) he sacked Garry Schofield as coach when Schofield disagreed with him about how to discipline a player who had failed to turn up for training; and (b) he habitually sent threatening text messages to players shortly before matches and had a big blow-up with coach Nigel Wright when Wright asked him to desist;
(vii) by generally behaving towards players in a thoroughly ungenerous and mean-spirited way: (a) he failed, as he ought, to give each player who had played in the 2008-9 season his Cup winning medal and jersey, but instead retained three or four medals for himself and auctioned off the jerseys; (b) despite the club having won £145,000 in prize money in the 2008-9 season, he failed, as he ought, to give the players any financial reward for their success; (c) pettily, vindictively and for no good reason, he reduced players' home game complimentary ticket allowance from two tickets to one and stopped the away game allowance altogether; (d) he sold the players' kit again instead of giving it to them after the team lost to Sheffield in the Cup qualifying semi-final during the 2009-10 season; (e) he provided players with only one training top each even though there were three training sessions a week and then deducted £25 to £75 from their wages by way of a fine if they wore the wrong shirt to training; (f) he reneged on money-related promises he had made to players as described at paragraph 9.1(i)(b) and (c) above; and (g) he gratuitously took down posters advertising a touch rugby tournament being played in memory of Paul Larkin, the recently deceased father of player Chris Larkin, then sought dishonestly to explain his mean-spirited actions by claiming untruthfully that Sky, the broadcaster, had asked for them to be taken down when, as he knew, they had done no such thing; and
(viii) by habitually using money as a means of humiliating, manipulating and/or exercising control over players: (a) on one occasion he held a player's wages in front of the player in cash form and practically made the player beg for them; and (b) on another occasion he took out a player's wages from a cashpoint in the presence of the player, before throwing the cash on the ground and saying "There's your money".
9.2 The Claimant had behaved as described in paragraphs 9.1(vii) and (viii) above because he had an out of control gambling habit, such that he had continued to visit bookmakers and place bets even though, as he confessed to the Third Defendant, he was absolutely broke and had to quit."
a) to provide the Third Defendant with employment at his recruitment company and also with a car;
b) to let each of the players have £150 for beating Castleford in 2010;
c) to pay for Zeb Luisi's flights so as to be able to attend his grandfather's funeral, refundable over the following year, and to continue paying his wages in the interim (which he knew the player required in order to send money home to his mother).
a) withholding in 2008-2009 their cup winners' medals and jerseys, while selling off the jerseys and retaining some of the medals for himself;
b) failing in 2008-2009 to give the players any financial reward for their success, despite the club having won £145,000 in prize money that season;
c) pettily reducing the players' complimentary ticket allowance (from two to one) for home games and removing their away game allowance altogether;
d) in the 2009-2010 season selling off the players' kit, instead of giving it to them, after they lost to Sheffield in the cup qualifying semi-final;
e) being so mean as to allow the players only one training top each, despite the fact that they had three training sessions per week, and yet deducting a sum from their wages (between £25 and £75) if they did not wear the right shirt when training; and
f) taking down, out of meanness, some posters advertising a touch rugby tournament to be held in memory of the father of one of the players (Paul Larkin) and then pretending that this had been required by Sky television.
" … The Claimant, in seeking to ensure that Jamie Rooney be played in the match against Doncaster because he had placed a bet on Rooney to score the most points in that match, was guilty of committing an offence or offences of misconduct under the RFL's Betting Code and Operational Rules."
"It is submitted that a defendant wishing to meet this separate cause of action with a plea of justification must confine himself to the legal innuendo meaning contended for by the claimant."
What seems to me to matter primarily, however, is not the somewhat technical point as to whether the claimant happens to plead separate causes of action, but simply whether there is a defamatory meaning (not separate and distinct from that pleaded by the claimant) which the defendant would be able to justify, thereby depriving the claimant of any right to compensation in respect of that aspect of his reputation: see e.g. Polly Peck v Trelford [1986] 1 QB 1000, at 1032C-D.