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Vicarious liability and the beautiful game – liability for professional and amateur footballers?
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 21 June 2018
Abstract
Vicarious liability has a greater reach within both professional and amateur football than previously thought. The newly-expanded doctrine has opened up vicarious liability for amateur players, and within grassroots teams. A greater range of torts may also now trigger vicarious liability, such as acts of on and off-pitch violence. The Football Association will need to review the scope of the National Game Insurance Scheme, which significantly lags behind this expanded exposure to vicarious liability.
Examining vicarious liability in the context of football also reveals significant problems with the current approach to vicarious liability within unincorporated associations. This category developed in the context of institutional abuse within highly-organised religious institutions; it does not mean that this category of vicarious liability should be applied to grassroots sporting organisations in the same way. For instance there is scope to apply a different test at stage two. It is argued that the courts will need to tighten up this category so as not to unnecessarily expose members of grass roots organisations to vicarious liability which is able to be executed against their personal assets. Both amateur and professional clubs may also wish to carefully consider their selection of players.
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- Copyright © The Society of Legal Scholars 2018
Footnotes
This paper was presented at ‘The Not-So Beautiful Game’ Seminar, Newcastle University (8 May 2017) organised by Dr Christine Beuermann. The author would like to thank participants for their comments, and also the anonymous referees for their comments on this paper.
References
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44 CCWS; Cox, above n 38; Mohamud v Wm Morrison Supermarkets Plc [2016] UKSC 11, [2016] AC 677.
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54 Cox, above n 38.
55 Elliott v Saunders and Liverpool Football Club, above n 26; McCord v Cornforth and Swansea City Football Club (1997) Times, 11 February; Watson and Bradford City Football Club v Gray and Huddersfield Town Football Club (1998) Times, 26 November; Pitcher v Huddersfield Town Football Club (2001) WL 753397; Gaynor v Blackpool Football Club [2002] CLY 3280.
56 Ibid, Pitcher v Huddersfield Town Football Club and Gaynor v Blackpool Football Club.
57 Sharp v Highland and Islands Fire Board [2005] SLT 855.
58 Leebody v Ministry of Defence [2001] CLY 4544.
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60 Beloff et al, above n 25, para [5.81].
61 Racz v Home Office [1994] 2 AC 45; Makanjuola v Commissioner of Police for the Metropolis [1989] 2 Admin LR 214.
62 See above n 46.
63 Rogers v Bugden and Canterbury Bankston Club [1993] Aust Torts Rep 181.
64 [2008] EWCA Civ 689, [2008] ICR 1222.
65 Ibid.
66 Ibid, at 1231–1232.
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70 Mattis v Pollock [2003] EWCA Civ 887, [2003] 1 WLR 2158.
71 Maga v Birmingham Roman Catholic Archdiocese Trustees [2010] EWCA Civ 256, [2010] 1 WLR 1441; N v Chief Constable of Merseyside Police [2006] EWHC 3041 (QB); P Morgan ‘Distorting vicarious liability’ (2011) 74 MLR 932.
72 [2015] EWHC 2862 (QB).
73 At [136]–[141].
74 At [148].
75 [2014] EWCA Civ 116, [2014] 2 All ER 990.
76 [2015] EWHC 2862 (QB) at [149].
77 At [46].
78 At [150].
79 [2012] EWCA Civ 25, [2012] IRLR 307.
80 At [35].
81 Mohamud at [35] per Treacy LJ.
82 At [161].
83 At [161].
84 [2016] UKSC 11, [2016] AC 677.
85 At [44]–[46].
86 At [47].
87 Ibid.
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90 Bellman v Northampton [2016] EWHC 3104 (QB).
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93 Eg Mersey Docks and Harbour Board v Coggins & Griffith (Liverpool) Ltd [1947] AC 1; Viasystems (Tyneside) Ltd v Thermal Transfer (Northern) Ltd [2005] EWCA Civ 1151, [2006] QB 510.
94 Kennedy v Pender & Narooma Rugby League Football Club (2002, unreported) NSW District Court (cited by Kevan, Adamson, and Cottrell, above n 14, pp 16–17).
95 Whilst in Vowles v Evans the Welsh Rugby Union accepted that they would be vicariously liable for an amateur referee's torts, such a tactical litigation concession (as similarly made in Maga in the context of a priest/bishop relationship) is not the same as accepting that this is an employment relationship, but rather that the relationship may be sufficient to trigger vicarious liability. In the light of the subsequent case of Gravil this concession made in Vowles may have been open to question at the time of the case as a matter of law, but this concession may have been necessary to maintain the goodwill of amateur referees, and their continued volunteering.
96 Above n 64.
97 At [41].
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100 Eg Ormrod v Crossville [1953] 1 WLR 1120; and Launchbury v Morgans [1973] AC 127, but not exclusively, see for instance League Against Cruel Sports Ltd v Scott and Others [1986] QB 240; Moores v Bude-Stratton Town Council [2001] ICR 271; and S v Attorney General [2003] NZCA 149.
101 Launchbury v Morgans [1973] AC 127 at 135 per Lord Wilberforce.
102 Giliker Vicarious Liability in Tort, above n 67, p 110.
103 [1953] 2 Lloyd's Rep 613.
104 Note Judge Thomas, at 618.
105 The author is not alone in suggesting that this category may generate vicarious liability for amateur sportspersons, see Griffith-Jones and Randall, above n 22, para [H7.17].
106 Cox, above n 38; NA v Nottinghamshire County Council [2015] EWCA Civ 1139, [2016] QB 739; A v Trustees of the Watchtower Bible and Tract Society [2015] EWHC 1722 (QB).
107 See Morgan, above n 67, at 625–640.
108 [2012] EWCA Civ 938, [2013] QB 722.
109 [2012] UKSC 56, [2013] 2 AC 1.
110 At [18].
111 At [47].
112 At [49]; note Kidner, above n 92.
113 Cox, above n 38.
114 At [22].
115 At [24].
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119 Note Morgan, above n 67.
120 United States Restatement (Third) of Agency, 2006, § 7.07 (3), 82 ALR 3d 1213. See for instance Scottsdales Jaycees v Superior Court of Maricopa County (1972) 17 Ariz App 571, 499 P2d 185; Garcia v Herald Tribune Fresh Air Fund (1976) 51 App Div 2d 987, 380 NYS2d 676; Baxter v Morningside Inc (1974) 10 Wash App 893, 521 P2d 946; Trinity Lutheran Church Inc v Miller (1983) Ind App 451, NE2d 1099; South Australia Volunteers Protection Act 2001, s 5(1).
121 [1975] IR 192. Note also Hickey v McGowan [2017] IESC 6.
122 Scottish Law Commission Unincorporated Associations Scot Law Com No 217 (Edinburgh: SLC, 2009) paras [1.4], [2.2]; Stewart, N, Campbell, N, and Baughan, S The Law of Unincorporated Associations (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2011)Google Scholar para [1.09].
123 [2008] EWCA Crim 1970, [2009] PTSR 119 at [11].
124 [1973] AC 15.
125 [1986] Ch 20.
126 [2003] 2 AC 366.
127 Ashworth v Stanwix 121 ER 606, (1860) 3 El & El 701.
128 [1903] 1 KB 81.
129 Atiyah, above n 67, p 117.
130 Atiyah, above n 67, p 3.
131 Chapter 11.
132 Giliker Vicarious Liability in Tort, above n 67, p 104.
133 [2017] IESC 6.
134 Ibid, at [46] per O'Donnell J; Morgan, above n 39.
135 Bawtree, D and Kirkland, K Charity Administration Handbook (London: Bloomsbury, 5th edn, 2013)Google Scholar para [2.14].
136 See http://www.walesonline.co.uk/news/local-news/rugby-clubs-60k-appeal-crippling-2496284 (last accessed 23 May 2018); http://www.sportandrecreation.org.uk/blog/mlarsen/25-03-2014/governance-why-getting-right-legal-structure-your-club-so-important (last accessed 23 May 2018).
137 At [34].
138 At [34]–[35].
139 Atiyah, above n 67, pp 12–28. For further discussion of vicarious liability theory see Stevens, pp 257–259; Neyers; Giliker Vicarious Liability in Tort pp 227–254; Brodie, all above n 67.
140 At [21].
141 Various Claimants v Institute of the Brothers of the Christian Schools [2010] EWCA Civ 1106.
142 At [42].
143 Ibid.
144 The author briefly advanced this point in Morgan, above n 39, which has received extrajudicial support from Lord Hope in ‘Tailoring the law on vicarious liability’ (2013) 129 LQR 514 at 526.
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149 Football Association ‘Standard Code of Rules 2016–17’ Rule 22. The Rules are mandatory for all Competitions at Step 7 of the National League System and below, and the FA Women's Pyramid excluding the FA Women's Super League.
150 Football Association ‘Standard Code of Rules for Youth Competitions 2016–17’ Rule 22.
151 See https://www.theguardian.com/football/2016/feb/17/mandatory-inurance-amateur-footballers-fa-grassroots-ngis (last accessed 23 May 2018).
152 Bluefin, NGIS, ‘Group Personal Accident Insurance’ available at http://assets.bluefingroup.co.uk/media/filer_public/e5/c6/e5c628fa-4633-4a68-b3cf-29fec30bd946/1692-0217_ngis_adult_basic_and_youth_basic_pa_brochure_2017to18_final.pdf (last accessed 23 May 2018); Lancashire FA News, http://www.lancashirefa.com/news/2017/apr/mandatory-personal-accident-insurance-in-youth-football-from-201718 (last accessed 23 May 2018).
153 Ibid, ‘Group Personal Accident Insurance’, Summary of Benefits.
154 Above n 151.
155 Bluefin, NGIS ‘Legal Liability Insurance’ Countycover Policy Summary at 4, 8, see http://assets.bluefingroup.co.uk/media/filer_public/b4/f8/b4f8fa1a-27a8-49f8-9d93-28603acb6ab1/1725-0217_ngis__countycover_brochure_2017-18.pdf (last accessed 23 May 2018).
156 [1969] 2 All ER 923.
157 Bluefin, NGIS, ‘Legal Liability Insurance’ Countycover Policy Summary, Exclusions, p 6.
158 Ibid.
159 Ibid, p 7.
160 Heidt, R ‘The unappreciated importance, for small business defendants, of the duty to settle’ (2010) 62 Me L Rev 75Google Scholar at 92; Baker, T ‘Blood money, new money, and the moral economy of tort law in action’ (2001) 35 Law and Soc'y Rev 275CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Cane, above n 30, pp 224–225.
161 See generally Grey-Thompson, above n 16, at 26.
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