Lex mercatoria, lex petrolea, lex electronica and lex sportiva have gradually entered the mainstream vocabulary of legal scholarship as phenomena highlighting the functionalization and privatization of law in a globalizing world.Footnote 1 They embody what are often qualified as distinct legal orders or systems arising out of transnational communities segregated along functional lines.Footnote 2 This chapter aims to show that the work of the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS), which is often identified as the institutional centre of the lex sportiva,Footnote 3 can be understood as that of a seamstress weaving a plurality of legal inputs into authoritative awards. In other words, the CAS panels are assembling legal material to produce (almost) final decisions that, alongside the administrative practices of sports governing bodies (SGBs), govern international sports. It is argued that, instead of purity and autonomy, the CAS’s judicial practice is best characterized by assemblage and hybridity. This argument will be supported by an empirical study of the use of different legal materials, in particular pertaining to Swiss law, EU law and the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR), within the case law of the CAS. The view advanced here should not be confused with one arguing that the CAS is fully integrated into the Swiss legal order, the EU legal order or into a monistic international legal order. Its main claim is that the judicial practice of the CAS can be captured as the work of a seamstress weaving ‘different bodies of norms with one another’Footnote 4 and that lex sportiva can ‘no longer be understood without an account of the ways in which its different parts are entangled’.Footnote 5
The CAS plays a central role in the governance of international sports as the main judicial body to which athletes, clubs or federations can turn to challenge the decisions of international SGBs.Footnote 6 Its core function in global sports governance is to act as a review mechanism through its appeal procedure which is regulated by the Code of Sports-Related Arbitration (CAS Code).Footnote 7 Thus, the CAS is dealing with almost all the high-profile disputes that occupy the sports pages (and sometimes beyond) of our newspapers. It decided whether Caster Semenya or Oscar Pistorius can participate in athletics competitions,Footnote 8 it determined whether Michel Platini or Sepp Blatter can be banned from football for violating FIFA’s (Fédération Internationale de Football Association) ethics rulesFootnote 9 and it assessed whether Maria Sharapova or Alejandro Valverde have committed a violation of the World Anti-Doping Code (WADC).Footnote 10 In short, very few of the fundamental decisions that shape the way we experience international sports escape the CAS. While there is no doubt that international sports are being ruled by a transnational regime in which private associations play a fundamental role and dispose of considerable regulatory powers, this regime also provides an interesting terrain to study transnational legal entanglements.Footnote 11
To this end, I focus on the way the CAS produces its awards. I aim to show that the lex sportiva is not an isolated set of norms produced by an autonomous community but results from the blending of different laws assembled through discursive weaving by CAS panels. In this regard, not all national laws are equal at the CAS and, as we will see in Section 10.1, Swiss law is more equal than the others. In practice, the CAS panels draw heavily on Swiss law, its actors, doctrines, rules and decisions.Footnote 12 Despite being a global court, the CAS remains anchored (physically, sociologically and legally) in a local context. In addition to Swiss law, Sections 10.2 and 10.3 highlight how CAS arbitrators are also weaving references to EU law and the ECHR into their awards. This chapter is a first attempt at looking at the hermeneutic practice of the CAS from the perspective of a transnational legal pluralism that goes beyond the identification of a plurality of autonomous orders to turn its sights towards the enmeshment and entanglement characterizing contemporary legal practice.Footnote 13
10.1 The Ubiquity of Swiss Law in CAS Awards
In its awards, the CAS refers to many different national laws. However, one is clearly more present than the others: Swiss law.Footnote 14 The centrality of Swiss law at the CAS can be linked to three factors: the sociology of the CAS practitioners, the shadow of the Swiss Federal Tribunal (SFT) and the localization of the seats of the SGBs. To start with the last of these, the majority of the international SGBs, which are the primary purveyors of CAS appeals, are located in Switzerland. This means that in most appeal cases Swiss law will be subsidiarily applicable under R58 CAS Code which determines the applicable law and acts very much as a ‘reception norm’ in the sense outlined in Chapter 1.Footnote 15 Furthermore, the appeals are often based on CAS arbitration clauses enshrined in the statutes of the SGBs which can expressly provide for the application of Swiss law.Footnote 16 Second, the legal seat of the CAS is Lausanne. Hence, its awards can only be appealed at the SFT where they are reviewed, relatively leniently, on the basis of Article 190(2) of the Swiss Private International Law Act.Footnote 17 The CAS panels are naturally aware of the need for their awards to pass this (relatively low) bar and therefore pay specific attention to Swiss law in their decisions. Finally, arbitrators, lawyers or administrators active at the CAS often have a Swiss background.Footnote 18 In this section, I aim to substantiate the depth of the entanglement between Swiss law and CAS awards through a case study focused specifically on appeals against FIFA decisions.
10.1.1 Swiss Law as Applicable Law in FIFA Cases
Appeals against FIFA decisions constitute an important share of the caseload of the CAS appeal division. In particular, cases involving transfer disputes and the application of the FIFA Regulations on the Status and Transfer of Players (FIFA RSTP) are numerous and CAS panels have repeatedly been asked to determine the law applicable in these cases. In principle, as FIFA is seated in Zürich, Swiss law is subsidiarily applicable in the absence of any other choice of law as provided under R58 CAS Code. Moreover, CAS panels have regularly pointed out that the parties are, at least indirectly, affiliated to FIFA (i.e. ‘members of the FIFA family’)Footnote 19 and therefore bound by the choice of Swiss law enshrined in Article 57(2) FIFA Statutes 2019.Footnote 20
Yet, the applicability of Swiss law is not only justified by the parties’ contractual choice but also on functional grounds, that is, in order to ‘level the playing the field’ in football disputes. For example, a CAS panel concluded in 2005 that the ‘indispensable need for the uniform and coherent application worldwide of the rules regulating international football’ is secured ‘[o]nly if the same terms and conditions apply to everyone who participates in organized sport’.Footnote 21 Similarly, another panel concluded, ‘if the desired uniformity is to be achieved, also the interpretation of the FIFA rules and regulations cannot be affected by the peculiarities of the domestic legal system in which they are called to apply’.Footnote 22 Thus, appeals against FIFA decisions will necessarily trigger the application of Swiss law ‘for all the questions that are not directly regulated by the FIFA Regulations’.Footnote 23 In this context, ‘there is no place for the application of the rules of another national law, except in the case where these rules would have to be considered as mandatory according to the law of the seat of the arbitration, i.e. Swiss law’.Footnote 24
Nevertheless, based on the wording of R58 CAS Code, Swiss law should not prevail over the express choice of law of the parties.Footnote 25 Even then, recent awards determined that such cases give ‘rise to a co-existence of the applicable regulations, Swiss law and the law chosen by the Parties’, in which ‘Swiss law is confined to ensuring uniform application of the [FIFA] Regulations’.Footnote 26 In other words, in order to protect the uniform interpretation of FIFA Regulations, Swiss law is deemed to supersede the parties’ choice of law.Footnote 27 This view, first advanced by Professor Ulrich Haas, was subsequently endorsed as the ‘Haas doctrine’ by a series of CAS panels.Footnote 28 Finally, if FIFA Regulations are considered sufficiently clear and comprehensive by the CAS panels, Swiss law does not come into play, as it ‘does not supersede or supplant all aspects of the regulations of FIFA’.Footnote 29 Yet in practice, as Section 10.1.2 shows, the FIFA Regulations are often ambiguous and in need of interpretation.
10.1.2 How Swiss Law Shapes CAS Awards in FIFA Cases
The recognition of the (exclusive) applicability of Swiss law to interpretative questions related to the FIFA Regulations would, however, remain meaningless if it were not relied upon in practice. While it is in theory possible to construct the FIFA Regulations as sufficiently clear and comprehensive, in practice Swiss law plays a crucial interpretative role in CAS appeals against FIFA decisions. Indeed, many concepts that are at the heart of the FIFA Regulations have been defined and concretized with references to Swiss law, Swiss doctrine and Swiss precedents. This includes questions related to:
the method to be followed to interpret the FIFA Regulations;Footnote 30
the applicability of mandatory rules, such as EU law;Footnote 31
whether a party has standing to sue or to be sued;Footnote 32
who bears the burden of proof;Footnote 33
the calculation of time limits;Footnote 34
whether there is a contract or an offer ‘in writing’;Footnote 35
whether an offer has been received;Footnote 36
whether there is ‘just cause’ for one of the parties to terminate an employment contract between a player and a club;Footnote 37
the amount of damages that a party is entitled to in case of a contractual breach;Footnote 38
the conditions that must be met for a renunciation by a player of his outstanding wage to be valid;Footnote 39
the validity and amount of a penalty clause;Footnote 40
the validity of a waiver to the right to receive a training compensation;Footnote 41
the validity of a dual pricing method for a transfer fee;Footnote 42 and
the interest rate applicable in case of payment default.Footnote 43
These examples are a large but certainly incomplete sample of the many instances in which Swiss law has been relied on to support a specific interpretation of the FIFA Regulations. These interpretative decisions are not trivial. They affect, for example, whether a party will have standing to appeal a decision before the CAS, whether a party will be deemed to have broken an employment contract or the amount of damages a party will be able to obtain in case of breach. For each of these questions, the CAS panels have leaned on Swiss law to justify their interpretative (and therefore distributive) choices. This use of Swiss law is not limited to cases involving FIFA decisions. It is relevant to a majority of appeals against the decisions rendered by international SGBs. It shows that the CAS is not engaging in the production of denationalized awards with little connection to state law. Instead, it is weaving the local and the global, as the transnational private rules of the SGBs are being entangled with norms, case law and doctrinal authorities grounded in Swiss law. What might, from a distance, appear like a sort of global law without a state is actually intimately linked to, and reliant on, the law of the Swiss state.
The fact that Swiss law has a prominent position at the CAS is not an original claim. Scholars and practitioners had emphasized it before.Footnote 44 Yet, it raises interesting questions connected to the theme of this volume, which have so far been widely ignored. How are the CAS panels applying Swiss law? What is the purpose and effect of this entanglement between Swiss law and the private regulations of the SGBs? What is the responsibility of Switzerland with regard to the shape of the transnational sporting regime? How can Swiss law be leveraged to change the shape of this regime in one way or another? These questions can become relevant only once we perceive the lex sportiva as a transnational assemblage and see the fundamental role of Swiss law in it. This intertwining of normative material at the CAS extends, in much more limited fashion, to other types of legal filaments, such as EU law or the ECHR.
10.2 The Limited Entanglement of EU Law in CAS Awards
EU law and the private regulations of the SGBs have a long history of ‘war and peace’.Footnote 45 The famous BosmanFootnote 46 ruling of the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) constitutes the high point, in terms of public visibility, of this encounter. Despite the intense relationship between the private regulations of the SGBs and EU law, the latter was until recently quite absent from the CAS.Footnote 47 Nevertheless, in an important award dating back to 1999, a CAS panel already recognized the applicability of EU law. It found:
With regard to EC competition law, the Panel holds that, even if the parties had not validly agreed on its applicability to this case, it should be taken into account anyway. Indeed, in accordance with Article 19 of the LDIP, an arbitration tribunal sitting in Switzerland must take into consideration also foreign mandatory rules, even of a law different from the one determined through the choice-of-law process, provided that three conditions are met:
(a) such rules must belong to that special category of norms which need to be applied irrespective of the law applicable to the merits of the case (so-called lois d’application immédiate);
(b) there must be a close connection between the subject matter of the dispute and the territory where the mandatory rules are in force;
(c) from the point of view of Swiss legal theory and practice, the mandatory rules must aim to protect legitimate interests and crucial values and their application must allow an appropriate decision.Footnote 48
Thus, arguments grounded in Swiss private international law played a pivotal role in opening the possibility for the application and entanglement of EU law at the CAS. Yet, before 2010, only a few (published) CAS awards referred to EU law and even fewer were engaging with it in detail.Footnote 49 This has changed in recent years, with a couple of awards addressing at length EU law questions.Footnote 50 Such a development is potentially related to the greater sensitivity of legal counsels to EU law and to the arbitrators’ growing awareness of the considerable risk that the cases would in fine reach the European Commission or the CJEU. In general, EU law has found two main applications at the CAS: it has been mobilized to challenge the legality (even constitutionality) of the SGBs’ regulations and it has been constructed as part and parcel of the SGBs’ regulations.
10.2.1 EU Law as Constitutional Check at the CAS
EU law does not regulate transnational sports through the imposition of detailed primary rules. Instead, it imposes a duty of justification on the SGBs.Footnote 51 EU law forces, through the strength of its internal market rules, the SGBs to advance legitimate objectives for their regulations and to argue why their rules or decisions are to be deemed proportionate means to attain the set objectives. In other words, it functions analogously to a constitutional review of the rules and decisions of the SGBs. This duty of justification has been formally imported in a number of cases submitted to the CAS, in which the panels have conducted proportionality assessments of the rules and decisions challenged. In many cases, the CAS does not conduct a deep appraisal of the proportionality of a disputed measure.Footnote 52 It has, for example, regularly considered that the fact that the FIFA RSTP are based on an agreement with the European Commission suffices to guarantee their compatibility with EU law.Footnote 53 Nevertheless, in a range of recent cases, the CAS panels quite comprehensively engaged in a proportionality assessment of the reviewed regulations.Footnote 54
More precisely, in the GalatasarayFootnote 55 and SeraingFootnote 56 awards, delivered in 2016 and 2017, the CAS was asked to review the compatibility of two controversial rules introduced respectively by the Union of European Football Associations (UEFA) and FIFA. It is interesting to note that Jean-Louis Dupont, who represented Jean-Marc Bosman, was acting for the claimants in both cases. The Galatasaray case involved the UEFA Club Licensing and Financial Fair Play Regulations (UEFA FFP Regulations) and their compatibility with EU law. It is not the right place to revisit the debate on the compatibility of the UEFA FFP Regulations with EU law, but it is interesting to note that the CAS panel decided to conduct a comprehensive proportionality analysis relatively similar to the one that would have been conducted by the European Commission or the CJEU if they were asked a similar question. Likewise, the Seraing case, in which the Belgian club was challenging the validity under EU law of FIFA’s 2015 ban on third-party ownership, also led to the integration of a proportionality analysis grounded in EU law into the CAS award.Footnote 57 In both cases, the CAS concluded that the regulations were pursuing a legitimate objective and represented necessary and proportionate means to attain that objective.
It is uncertain whether the CJEU or the European Commission would reach the same conclusion, but the above awards highlight that the two CAS panels were in the position of decentralized EU law enforcers, not unlike national courts but without the obligation or capacity to refer a preliminary question to the CJEU. The question whether the CAS is applying EU law properly, for example as the CJEU would, is almost impossible to settle until a case reaches Luxembourg. A review of the CAS awards involving EU law shows that the SGBs’ regulations are very rarely deemed in contravention of EU law. In fact, there is only one example in which a CAS panel struck down an SGB regulation on this basis.Footnote 58 It involved the Romanian Football Federation (FRF) and its home-grown players regulations, which imposed a fixed quota of locally trained players in the teams of Romanian clubs participating in national competitions. The panel was not convinced that the FRF had demonstrated that its regulations were necessary and proportionate. In any event, the use of EU law as a vehicle to conduct a constitutional check of the SGBs’ regulations constitutes another (rare) form of legal entanglement at the CAS. Additionally, beyond this constitutional role, EU law is also directly interwoven in the genome of the FIFA RSTP.
10.2.2 Interpreting the FIFA RSTP with a Little Help from EU Law
After the Bosman ruling, FIFA devised a new transfer system regulating the transnational movement of football players between clubs.Footnote 59 This new system, however, was quickly challenged at the European Commission on the basis of EU competition law and a protracted negotiation started between the European Commission, FIFA, the players’ union FIFPro, the European Club Association and UEFA.Footnote 60 It concluded with the adoption of the general principles upon which the FIFA RSTP is officially grounded.Footnote 61 This peculiar transnational genealogy of the RSTP became relevant at the CAS because panels have considered that, insofar as the statutes of large entities are concerned, ‘it may be more appropriate to have recourse to the method of interpretation applicable to the law’ and therefore adopt a ‘contextual approach’ that entails reviewing the legislative history and purpose.Footnote 62
The first case involving an interpretive use of EU law was the Mexès case which concerned the interpretation of Articles 21(1) and 23(1) FIFA RSTP 2001 edition.Footnote 63 The key question was whether the prolongation of the contract of a professional football player would trigger an extension of the stability period – a period during which the player could not leave the club without risking a sporting sanction. To answer this question, the Panel analysed the question in light of EU law as it decided to go back to the ratio legis of the provisions to determine their concrete meaning.Footnote 64 The text of the award refers to the Bosman ruling as well as to the decision of the European Commission in the competition law case opened against FIFA.Footnote 65 Hence, to support its decision, the CAS panel felt that it had to grapple with EU law requirements, although whether it did so in an orthodox fashion is another matter. This first example of recourse to EU law as part of the relevant context for a proper interpretation of the RSTP was endorsed in following awards.Footnote 66 Most prominently, in a case pitching the Italian football clubs Juventus F.C. and A.S. Livorno Calcio against the English club Chelsea F.C., the CAS provided an extensive analysis of this interpretive link between EU law and the RSTP.Footnote 67 The case was related to the legal saga surrounding Chelsea’s 2005 dismissal of Adrian Mutu over his consumption of cocaine. The CAS panel considered it necessary to do an in-depth review of the legislative history of the FIFA RSTP in order to determine whether Article 14(3) FIFA RSTP 2001 edition applied, and therefore whether Juventus and Livorno jointly owed a considerable transfer fee to Chelsea. In doing so, it carefully scrutinized the case law of the CJEU and the decisions of the European Commission.Footnote 68 This led the arbitrators to reject the interpretation advanced by Chelsea as contrary to the EU law foundations of the RSTP and to conclude that Livorno and Juventus were free to recruit Adrian Mutu without compensation after his dismissal.Footnote 69
As demonstrated, EU law finds its relatively narrow way at the CAS. This limited enmeshing of EU law in CAS awards is most likely driven by external challenges to the SGBs’ regulations and decisions in national courts or before EU institutions. In fact, EU law’s capacity to disrupt the authority of CAS is certainly a (rational) pathway to drive the entanglement of EU law into its awards.Footnote 70 However, by harnessing EU law, the CAS panels might also be betraying it. The CAS is not referring questions to the CJEU and CAS awards are, for reasons of costs and time, rarely challenged in national courts on EU law basis. In the absence of systematic control of CAS awards, the panels’ approach to EU law escapes the possibility of direct oversight by EU institutions. In other words, CAS might be speaking an EU law dialect that is primarily fitted to the needs and power structure of its social context, while at the same time formally proximate to and at a substantial distance from the EU law of the EU institutions.Footnote 71
10.3 The Influential Use of the ECHR in CAS Awards
While EU law has been dancing a slow-moving tango with the SGBs’ regulations since the 1970s, the ECHR was, until very recently, almost entirely foreign to the world of sport.Footnote 72 The European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR) only started to indirectly scrutinize the practice of the CAS and the world anti-doping regime in 2018 and has done so in a relatively restrained fashion.Footnote 73 In spite of this, the ECHR has been regularly mentioned in CAS awards.Footnote 74 Even though some panels expressed ‘serious doubts’Footnote 75 regarding the applicability of the ECHR to the SGBs’ private regulations or even sometimes squarely denied it,Footnote 76 when confronted with claimants invoking the ECHR most CAS awards at least considered its application. This inconsistency can be traced back to the unstable composition of CAS panels and non-binding nature of CAS precedents. In any event, most panels at least emphasized the need to respect the procedural rights enshrined in Article 6(1) ECHR.Footnote 77 Indeed, a panel ‘should nevertheless account for their [the provisions of the ECHR] content within the framework of procedural public policy’.Footnote 78 In a more direct language, a sole arbitrator found ‘rather obvious’ that ‘a federation cannot opt out from an interpretation of its rules and regulations in light of principles of “human rights” just by omitting any references in its rules and regulations to human rights’.Footnote 79 In this latter version, the ECHR seems to be even assimilated to an ‘overarching norm’.Footnote 80
10.3.1 CAS Jurisdiction and the ECHR
Among the many legal questions that have triggered references to the ECHR, some are connected to the jurisdiction of the CAS. For example, the CAS faced a case in which an athlete was challenging the validity of the arbitration clause on the basis of the ECHR.Footnote 81 In order to allow the case to proceed, the CAS had to determine whether the clause was compatible with the ECHR. The main argument advanced by the claimant was that the unequal bargaining power between the parties to the arbitration (i.e. the athlete and the SGB) threatened the validity of the arbitration agreement. The panel considered that ‘[i]f – according to this jurisprudence of the ECtHR – the right of access to the courts enshrined in Art. 6.1 ECHR can be subject to a weighing up in the event that arbitral jurisdiction is prescribed by statute, then the same must apply also in a case of unequal bargaining power’.Footnote 82 Therefore, it concluded: ‘only if there were no reasons in terms of “good administration of justice” in favour of arbitration a violation of article 6.1 ECHR could be acknowledged’.Footnote 83 As the panel, maybe unsurprisingly, identified some reasons which justified that CAS arbitration was linked to the ‘good administration of justice’, it decided that the arbitration agreement was valid under the ECHR.Footnote 84
Furthermore, the CAS jurisdiction in appeal cases is dependent on the conditions enshrined in statutory arbitration clauses enshrined in the SGBs’ regulations. This has led in particular to challenges, on the basis of the ECHR, against a ten-day time limit to request a decision from FIFA’s dispute resolution bodies in order to lodge a CAS appeal. While the CAS panel recognized ‘that the time limit of ten days is short’, it concluded: ‘the provision serves a legitimate purpose i.e. to cope with the heavy caseload of FIFA and contributes to the goal of an efficient administration of justice’.Footnote 85 To support this conclusion, the panel invoked the fact that ‘even’ the ECtHR ‘has all along allowed the right of access to the courts to be limited “in the interests of the good administration of justice”’.Footnote 86 However, this does not extend automatically to any other statutory limitation to the scope of the review of the CAS.Footnote 87 Indeed, the CAS also invoked the ECHR to remind that ‘[r]estrictions to the fundamental right of access to justice should not be accepted easily, but only where such restrictions are justified both in the interest of good administration of justice and proportionality’.Footnote 88 In this latter case, the sole arbitrator failed ‘to see why a restriction of his mandate – contrary to the clear wording of the Art. R57 of the CAS Code – would be in the interest of good administration of justice’.Footnote 89
As one can gather from these examples, the ECHR and its interpretations by the ECtHR are used by CAS panels to justify fundamental choices regarding their scope of jurisdiction. The entanglement is complex as the ECHR is both used against an athlete, who is challenging the validity of a CAS arbitration clause, and SGBs, who are trying to reduce the scope of the CAS review of their decisions. It highlights the importance of references to the ECHR as legitimating devices to support the CAS’s interpretation of its jurisdictional space.
10.3.2 Challenging the Compatibility of the SGBs’ Regulations with the ECHR
Like EU law, the ECHR can also be used to impose a form of constitutional review upon the rules and decisions of the international SGBs. In that framework, it operates as a kind of cosmopolitan constitution that would extend beyond the state parties to private entities engaging in transnational regulation. Yet, in practice, such a use of the ECHR as a constitutional check remains relatively rare at the CAS.
10.3.2.1 The ECHR Compatibility of the WADC
One of the vexing questions of international sports law is whether the current world anti-doping regime based on the WADC is infringing on the human rights of athletes subjected to it.Footnote 90 Many commentators have raised this issue and it is therefore unsurprising to see the validity of the WADC being tested on the basis of the ECHR.Footnote 91 As a consequence, the World Anti-Doping Agency (WADA) has along the years requested a number of opinions from respected scholars and practitioners to certify the compatibility of the WADC with human rights, and the ECHR in particular.Footnote 92 Numerous CAS panels have religiously invoked these opinions as authoritative material supporting the compatibility of the WADC with the ECHR.Footnote 93 Jean-Paul Costa, the former president of the ECtHR, concluded in his 2013 expert opinion that the WADC is ‘in harmony’ with ‘the accepted principles of international law and human rights’.Footnote 94 Based on this conclusion, one Panel noted that ‘the previous President of the European Court of Human Rights’ had ‘vouched for’ the proportionality of the WADC.Footnote 95 More broadly, with regard to the fixed minimum sanctions in doping cases, a CAS panel concluded ‘that legal scholars, CAS panels and the Swiss Federal Tribunal seem to concur that the current sanctioning system based on the WADA Code does not conflict with fundamental human rights’.Footnote 96 Finally, an award endorsed the compatibility with Article 8 ECHR of the long-term storage of samples (for up to eight years).Footnote 97 In all these cases, the panels did not engage in deep proportionality assessments of the compatibility of the WADC with the ECHR but merely invoked the (scholarly or professional) authority of expert opinions to reject the challenges.
10.3.2.2 The ECHR Compatibility of Other Disciplinary Rules and Decisions of the SGBs
The ECHR could naturally also find an application with regard to other types of disciplinary proceedings in the sporting context. In fact, CAS panels have recognized that SGBs must comply with the nulla poena sine lege principle enshrined in Article 7 ECHR.Footnote 98 In other words, ‘before a person can be found guilty of a disciplinary offence, the relevant disciplinary code must proscribe the misconduct with which he is charged’.Footnote 99 However, challenges on the basis of Article 6(2) ECHR to the widespread use of strict liability in sports regulations have not been successful.Footnote 100 More specifically, clubs and athletes argued that strict liability runs contrary to the presumption of innocence guaranteed in Article 6(2) ECHR. One award referred to ECtHR case law to support the claim that the recourse to strict liability is not per se contrary to the ECHR.Footnote 101 In another more recent case, the panel rejected Article 6(2)’s applicability to the disciplinary sanctions of SGBs ‘as Article 6(2) is only applicable to criminal proceedings and the present proceedings are not of a criminal nature’.Footnote 102 Furthermore, the CAS also touched upon whether disciplinary proceedings run counter to the privilege against self-incrimination recognized by the ECtHR,Footnote 103 rejected on the basis of the ECHR the retroactive application of a longer statute of limitation to a case that was already time-barred at the time of the entry into force of the new provisionFootnote 104 and invoked the lex mitior principle and its interpretation by the ECtHR.Footnote 105 In short, while disciplinary sanctions have a direct and profound effect on those subjected to them, the CAS has been quite reluctant to engage in a constitutional review of the SGBs’ decisions on the basis of the ECHR.
10.3.3 The CAS and the Procedural Guarantees of Article 6(1) ECHR
The procedural rights guaranteed by Article 6(1) ECHR, and in particular their interpretation by the ECtHR, are more present in CAS awards. The ECtHR’s case law plays a fundamental role in defining the intensity of procedural review exercised by the CAS with regard to the decisions of the SGBs, as well as in justifying the key procedural constraints applicable to the CAS itself.
10.3.3.1 The ECHR and Due Process Inside the SGBs
The internal disciplinary bodies of the international SGBs are taking most of the disciplinary decisions affecting international sports. In fine, only a small share of these decisions is subsequently appealed at the CAS. Yet, the CAS has consistently refused to assess the compatibility of these first instance proceedings with Article 6(1) ECHR, relying instead on the curative quality of an appeal before the CAS.
Sometimes awards simply exclude the applicability of the ECHR to internal proceedings of the SGBs, such as when a panel noted that it ‘does not see any reason in the present case to depart from the line established in earlier jurisprudence, namely that the ECHR is not applicable to disciplinary proceedings before a Sport association’s jurisdictional bodies’.Footnote 106 In other words, ‘procedural fundamental rights protect citizens against violations of such rights by the State and its organs and are therefore only applicable to a jurisdiction established by a State and not to legal relationships between private entities such as associations and their members’.Footnote 107 The panel would only consider otherwise if the SGB had ‘inserted into its Constitutional Rules and Regulations procedural rights based on the ECHR or if it had referred to the ECHR as applicable to disciplinary proceedings before its jurisdictional bodies’.Footnote 108
Many panels, however, do not share this view. Contrariwise, another panel recognized that ‘there are more and more authorities in legal literature advocating that the ECHR also applies directly to sports associations’.Footnote 109 Yet, CAS panels have also long held that ‘if the hearing in a given case was insufficient in the first instance […] the fact is that, as long as there is a possibility of full appeal to the Court of Arbitration for Sport, the deficiency may be cured’.Footnote 110 This curative ability has been supported with references to the case law of the ECtHR.Footnote 111 Awards claim that this jurisprudence is ‘in line’Footnote 112 with the Bryan v. The United Kingdom ruling of the ECtHR and the Wickramsinghe decision of the European Commission of Human Rights. The latter held, citing the former, that ‘even where an adjudicatory body determining disputes over civil rights and obligations does not comply with Article 6(1) [ECHR] in some respect, no violation of the Convention will be found if the proceedings before that body are subject to subsequent control by a judicial body that has full jurisdiction and does provide the guarantees of Article 6 (1)’.Footnote 113
This position of the CAS has fundamental consequences for those going through the internal judicial systems of the SGBs, as it basically endorses, with the (alleged) blessing of the ECtHR, any type of procedural wrongs at the level of the internal adjudicative bodies of the SGBs.
10.3.3.2 The ECHR and Evidence at the CAS
The CAS has also leveraged references to the ECtHR case law to justify allowing certain types of evidence in CAS proceedings. First, the CAS has had to decide whether recourse to anonymous witnesses infringes the right to be heard under Article 6(1) ECHR.Footnote 114 In particular, the CAS referred to the jurisprudence of the SFT drawing on the case law of the ECtHR which allowed the recourse to anonymous witnesses if necessary for the personal safety of the witness.Footnote 115 Nevertheless, the Panel also relied on the ECtHR’s jurisprudence to nuance this conclusion by highlighting that the right to be heard must be guaranteed by other means such as ‘by cross examination through “audiovisual protection” and by an in-depth check of the identity and the reputation of the anonymous witness by the court’.Footnote 116
Second, the CAS has had to decide whether the use of illegally obtained evidence in disciplinary proceedings is contrary to the ECHR.Footnote 117 For example, a panel refused to draw an analogy between the Texeira de Castro decision of the ECtHR, which found that Portugal contravened the ECHR in a case in which the police had gathered evidence through illegal means, and the reliance by FIFA on evidence gathered illegally by an English newspaper.Footnote 118 This led the arbitrators to deny the claimant the right to rely on the ECtHR’s case law to challenge the admissibility of evidence obtained indirectly through unlawful wiretapping by the press. In support of this conclusion, the panel referenced the ECtHR’s case law on freedom of expression insofar as it protects the intrusion of the press in a person’s private life.Footnote 119 In a subsequent award, the CAS panel went further by invoking the ECtHR’s finding that ‘the courts shall balance the interest in protecting the right that was infringed by obtaining the evidence against the interest in establishing the truth’.Footnote 120 While another panel concluded that ‘the interest underlying the fight against doping can be preponderant over the individual’s interest, whether an athlete or athlete support personnel, in not having an illicitly obtained evidence admitted in an arbitral procedure concerning an alleged anti-doping rule violation’.Footnote 121 The arbitrators insisted that this balancing test is ‘in line’Footnote 122 with the jurisprudence of the ECtHR.
The question of the admissibility of evidence is crucial in determining the outcome of any judicial process. Instead of relying on self-made principles, it is interesting to note that the CAS has borrowed from the ECtHR’s jurisprudence to support its relatively liberal view regarding the admissibility of evidence. The latter can be traced back to the difficult position in which SGBs are placed when enforcing their regulations, as they do not enjoy the police powers (or the capacity) to conduct typical investigatory measures and are mostly reliant on indirectly (and often illegally) obtained information.
10.3.3.3 The ECHR and Due Process at the CAS
Lastly, one case has led the CAS to evaluate the compliance of its own procedures with Article 6(1) ECHR, with the panel concluding, perhaps unsurprisingly, that the CAS Code was compliant.Footnote 123 Based on a number of ECtHR decisions, the panel held that ‘in compliance with the constant jurisprudence of the ECtHR’ the athlete had freely consented to the jurisdiction of the CAS and that, therefore, ‘the guarantees required by Article 6 para. 1 ECHR do not have to be fulfilled by the CAS’.Footnote 124 In spite of this preliminary conclusion, the CAS Panel went on to argue that, in any case, it was fully compliant with Article 6(1) ECHR.Footnote 125 In particular, the need for both parties to agree for a hearing to be held in public was deemed to ‘not constitute a violation of Article 6 para. 1 of the ECHR as this provision allows, in its second sentence, restrictions with regards to the publicity of the hearing’.Footnote 126 More precisely, it held that disputes ‘relating to doping controls very often give rise to numerous questions concerning, on the one hand, the private life of the parties involved and, on the other hand, sophisticated technical mechanisms and data especially developed in order to establish anti-doping rule offences’, and, therefore, it found that ‘publicity of the hearing would have prejudiced the interests of justice’.Footnote 127 In addition, it insisted that ‘confidentiality of hearings is very common in private arbitration and no judicial precedent has to date stated that such confidentiality would violate Article 6 para.1 ECHR’.Footnote 128 Ironically, a few years later, the ECtHR itself would reach the exact opposite conclusion on both the free consent of athletes to CAS arbitration and the need for the publicity of CAS hearings in doping cases.Footnote 129 This fundamental divergence highlights the potential gap between the CAS’s application of the ECHR (or Swiss law and EU law) and the ECtHR’s own interpretation (or the SFT’s and the CJEU’s interpretation). This situation of interpretive pluralism is not dissimilar to the interaction between national courts and the CJEU or the ECtHR. Thus, this entanglement opens up a field of dialectical play between textual proximity and interpretative distance which will never be entirely bridged.
In different ways, and for different purposes, CAS arbitrators have weaved the ECHR into their judicial reasoning. Such intertwinement is never anodyne, however. It supports important substantial and procedural choices with clear distributive consequences for the parties to CAS arbitration.
10.4 Conclusion
The CAS is a special place. It is not really an arbitral tribunal, nor is it a proper international court, but it stands as a living embodiment of the ‘unidentified legal objects’Footnote 130 that proliferate in transnational legal practice. It is often presented as necessary to the transnational governance (and mere existence) of international sports. Important CAS decisions, such as the recent Semenya award, are subjected to global attention and intense scrutiny. This chapter portrays the CAS as a judicial site where awards are being produced through a process of legal weaving that enmeshes different types of legal material. Its practice is not a solipsistic work based only on the denationalized law of an autonomous transnational community but rather an artistic mélange of styles producing a textual assemblage that is tailored to each case. In the context of the lex sportiva, entanglement is undoubtedly the ‘normal state of the law’Footnote 131 and the CAS represents a striving ‘Inter-Legality Hub’.Footnote 132
Nevertheless, it is true that not all legal texts are equally present in CAS awards. As we have seen, Swiss law is much more present than, say, French law (or any other national law for that matter). Similarly, EU law and the ECHR are regularly invoked while there are very few mentions of other sources of international law. One should not lose sight of the fact that the CAS is not an a-national construct hovering above our heads, but is embedded (like many international SGBs) in the territorial and legal context of Switzerland. Furthermore, entanglements cannot be severed from the actors.Footnote 133 Many of the professionals active before the CAS as arbitrators or lawyers are Europeans or even Swiss. Finally, the main avenue to challenge CAS awards is the SFT (and, to a much lesser extent, other European courts and administrative bodies). It is thus quite logical that when CAS panels are called to assemble an award, they draw on both what they know and what they want to assuage. Thus, the CAS works not so much as an autarkic judicial machinery reliant on its own supply of power and inputs but rather as a transnational legal assembly line importing various parts of its awards from different suppliers on a case-by-case basis. Hence, the judicial practice of the CAS can help us move beyond the billiard ball model of autonomous transnational legal orders or systems in order to perceive the hybridity of transnational legal practice.Footnote 134 At the CAS, Swiss law, EU law and the ECHR are not so much clashing with the lex sportiva as they are entangled within it. They become an integral part of the lex sportiva. This conclusion does not imply that the ECtHR or the CJEU should defer to the CAS, to the contrary. It means that they should scrutinize closely the way it speaks ‘their’ language, like they assess the way national courts are speaking it. In a world where nobody is in a position to impose top down a single set of global rules applied in a uniform way, transnational legal practice is bound to be the result of strange loops and contextual assemblages.
The complex beauty of these rhetorical entanglements should not hide the fact that the CAS is taking distributive decisions which are very hard (i.e. costly) to challenge. This chapter has not focused on the politics lurking behind these entanglements. In other words, what are their underlying drivers or unspoken purposes? In order to answer this question, one would need to carefully investigate who does the entangling and why. There is no reason to believe that these entanglements are per se fair or just. Therefore, the ethics of those producing legal entanglements must be subjected to strict scrutiny.Footnote 135 In fact, the dark face of the ubiquity of transnational legal entanglements might be that ultimate political accountability becomes difficult to locate as decisions are enmeshed in a plurality of political and legal contexts. Who should be blamed for a particular interpretation of the FIFA RSTP? Is it the responsibility of FIFA, the European Commission, the CAS or the SFT? Where can we ask to change it and how? The risk is that entanglements lead to a form of organized irresponsibility, as if the legal assemblages of the CAS were not the result of deliberate choices but natural reflections of what a patchwork of laws say. Hence, the age of entanglements calls for a relentless critique of the politics lurking behind the textual assemblages. If legislators are found simultaneously in multiple places and levels, inside the SGBs, at the Swiss parliament or in Brussels, we need to think about how to recreate a transnational democratic space (and process) adapted to this multiplicity. Similarly, if the CAS is in a position to assemble its awards relatively freely, in light of the extremely limited control exercised by the SFT and the high costs of challenging a CAS award elsewhere, then we must seriously consider those who are doing the assembling. Who are they? How is their legitimacy and authority justified? Are they sufficiently impartial and independent from the SGBs? How are they selected? What are the mechanisms in place to prevent the rise of conflicts of interests? Once we recognize that the assembling or entangling of transnational law is the new normal, we must urgently grapple with these questions. The hybridization and pluralization of transnational legal practice might be a necessary consequence of the liquefaction of our transnational lives, but it raises fundamental problems for the way in which political agency is exercised and decision-makers are held accountable. One answer to this conundrum could be to move towards entangling our politics and accountability mechanisms, meaning that the citizenry has to exercise agency at multiple levels (e.g. through social movements, consumer boycotts or simply voting at the European Parliament elections) and to move strategically between different accountability fora (e.g. the European Commission, national competition authorities, national courts, Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development contact points or the ECtHR).Footnote 136 In the context of the CAS and the lex sportiva, Claudia Pechstein has shown the way, even though it came at great personal costs,Footnote 137 by challenging her doping ban before the SFT, the German courts and the ECtHR. To initiate these critical shifts in the way we engage in politics and law, it is first essential to grasp the ubiquity of legal entanglements in the operation of transnational law. The aim of this chapter was to contribute to this prise de conscience by exposing how the CAS transforms transnational sporting disputes into legal gold: authoritative awards.