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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> High Court of Ireland Decisions >> O'Donohoe v. O'Baroid [1999] IEHC 148 (23rd April, 1999) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ie/cases/IEHC/1999/148.html Cite as: [1999] IEHC 148 |
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1. The
Plaintiff is now twenty years of age, and his family home is in Clonmel County
Tipperary, although he now works in Limerick. He has played both hurling and
gaelic football since he was nine or ten years old with Clonmel Óg Club,
which caters for both games. There was also a considerable family connection
with the Club, and his father in fact assisted in coaching for some time. In
early 1997 the Plaintiff, who was then eighteen years of age, wished to
transfer to two other clubs in Clonmel, which were in fact associated in some
way, namely Clonmel Commercials which catered for gaelic football and St.
Mary's, which catered for hurling. He applied on a standard form to the South
Division of the Tipperary County Board of the Gaelic Athletic Association,
which approved his transfer on 5th March 1997. The matter then came before the
Tipperary County Committee, and on 8th April 1997 they refused to permit the
transfer. In these proceedings the Plaintiff challenges that decision and
seeks various declarations and an injunction. The first named Defendant is the
Secretary of the Tipperary County Board of the G.A.A., and the second named
Defendant is the Secretary of the Clonmel Óg club.
2. The
history of the Clonmel Óg club is of considerable relevance in these
proceedings. It's origins arose out of the increase in the population of
Clonmel, and the perception that the facilities of the existing clubs were not
sufficient to cater for the needs of all the school children in the town who
wished to play gaelic games. The club originally centred around St. Peter and
Paul's Primary School, and indeed still retains close connections with that
school. It was affiliated to the Tipperary County Board in 1986, and initially
fielded teams at under twelve and under fourteen level. In 1990 it had grown
from becoming a schoolboy club to fielding adult teams, but initially these
teams only played at a junior level, and as I understand it the adult teams are
now in the intermediate grade. They have no adult teams playing at senior level.
3. Both
Clonmel Commercials and St. Mary's have for many years fielded senior teams in
gaelic football and hurling respectively. Understandably, they have tended to
attract promising young players from junior teams who wish to have an
opportunity to play at senior level. In particular, over the years, they have
attracted a number of players from Clonmel Óg.
4. In
1993 matters came to a head when over twenty players left Clonmel Óg,
with many of them going to Clonmel Commercials or St. Mary's. Clonmel
Óg brought the matter before the County Board that year and before the
County Convention in 1994, and the then Chairman of the County Board requested
Mr. Seán Nugent, who was Chairman of the Southern Division at that time,
to try to negotiate some agreement between the parties. He held a number of
meetings with the clubs in Clonmel and put forward certain proposals which
became known as the Nugent Plan. On 14th December, 1994 a meeting of all the
Clonmel clubs was held, and his proposals were accepted. In relation to
players from minor level upwards, it provided:-
6. Unfortunately
the meeting of 14th December, while approving the proposals, did not determine
whether they would be in place on a trial basis for a year or whether they
would be for a period of years.
7. In
1995 the matter came before the Tipperary County Board, and on 14th February
1995 the County Board accepted the Nugent Plan in its entirety. Again, they
did not say whether they were accepting it on a trial basis or for a period of
years. The Plan in fact operated in 1995 and 1996, and there were no transfers
between Clonmel clubs, but in 1997 Clonmel Commercials purported to opt out of
the Plan, and asserted that from that time players could transfer to them and
they were free to accept players from other clubs in the town. However, when
the Plaintiff applied for approval of his transfer to Clonmel Commercials, the
Tipperary County Committee refused to approve it.
8. The
Nugent Plan was clearly a well intentioned effort to solve a difficult problem
which possibly threatened the existence of Clonmel Óg club. Obviously
their opportunities to attain senior status was seriously hampered by the loss
of good players to the senior clubs, but on the other hand the Nugent Plan
prevented ambitious young players from attaining senior status. This was a
serious dilemma for both clubs and players.
9. Whatever
may have been the good intentions of the Nugent Plan, it was in reality merely
an agreement between the clubs in the town, and furthermore an agreement which
contained a highly ambiguous phrase in relation to its duration. The fact that
it may have been accepted by the Tipperary County Board did nothing more than
to indicate the Board's approval of the terms of the agreement, but it did not
and could not govern the rules of the Gaelic Athletic Association in relation
to transfers.
10. Those
rules are contained in the Gaelic Athletic Association Official Guide, and the
relevant rules appear to be:-
11. In
fact the Plaintiff's original application for a transfer in this case was not
made to the County Committee pursuant to Rule 36, but was made to the South
Division. Under the Tipperary County Board bylaws, the County was divided into
four divisions, and it is provided that each division should have power to
control all affairs of the Association within its jurisdiction, although it
does not refer specifically to transfers. However, it also provides that each
division shall be subject to the County Committee, and accordingly I do not
have to decide whether the original application was correctly made to the South
Division, as their decision was clearly overruled by the County Committee. The
Plaintiff argues that Rule 36 does not in fact state that the County Committee
has the right to refuse a transfer, and indeed, even if such right can be
inferred, it gives no guidelines for such refusal. He also seeks to argue that
the effect of Rule 57, which is stated not to apply to cities or towns of more
than one parish, is that an application for a transfer within a city or town
must be granted. I cannot accept this interpretation, and in my view the
wording of Rule 36 is quite clear. A player wishing to transfer must apply to
the County Committee for a transfer, and the use of the word
"apply"
seems to me to imply with it that the County Committee has a discretion whether
to allow such transfer. If the rule had not intended there to be such a
discretion, it would simply have stated that a player who wished to join
another club must notify the County Committee of his transfer. As far as the
guidelines as to when a County Committee may refuse a transfer, in my view this
is a matter for the determination of the individual County Board in accordance
with the circumstances then pertaining within that County.
12. The
Plaintiff further argues that he is only bound by the rules insofar as this
does not affect his constitutional right of association, and that such right
cannot be waived without a deliberate decision made with full knowledge of that
right. In support of this argument, Counsel for the Plaintiff cites a passage
from the Judgment of Murnaghan J. in
Murphy
-v- Stewart
[1973] I.R. 97, and it undoubtedly is a principle which in general I would
accept. However, in the same case, which related to the refusal of a trade
union to allow a member to transfer to another trade union, the Supreme Court
held that such refusal did not infringe any constitutional right of the
Plaintiff. Walsh J. said at page 117:-
13. In
the present case, as in that case, the Club which the Plaintiff seeks to join
is not prepared to accept him unless in doing so it will not infringe the rules
of its governing body. The Plaintiff has no right, either under the
Constitution or otherwise, to join Clonmel Commercials or St. Mary's or any
other specific club in such a way as to cause that club to breach the rules of
an association of which it is a member, nor has he a right to have the rules of
any such association set aside to enable him to join any specific club.
14. The
Plaintiff makes several other points which I will deal with briefly. It was
contended, although I think not very strongly, that in fact he was not a member
of Clonmel Óg or of the G.A.A. It is true that, on attaining eighteen
years of age during the year before this dispute arose, he did not formally
apply to join Clonmel Óg, nor did he pay a subscription. However, he
was registered by them with the G.A.A. as a player, and until that time had
been a member because there was a family membership comprising his parents and
all minor children. In any event, he had played for the club in G.A.A.
competitions for some years, and in my view is clearly estopped from saying
that he is not bound by the rules of the G.A.A.
15. It
is also contended that a letter of complaint written by his Solicitor to the
County Committee ought to have been read to that Committee before they made
their decision in relation to him. The first Defendant makes the rather
unusual answer to this that it was not the policy of the County Committee to
consider Solicitor's letters at their meetings, but the letters would simply be
passed to the County Board's Solicitor. While I find this a strange attitude,
and in certain circumstances I think it could work an injustice, I do not think
that can be said of the present case. The County Board were well aware of the
Plaintiff's position, and indeed of the fact that Clonmel Commercials and St.
Mary's would have accepted him as a player and wish to have him as a player,
provided the County Board approved. In particular, they had debated the
position of players in Clonmel Óg on a number of occasions, and had
clearly taken a policy decision that they had an obligation to protect the
junior club against a haemorrhaging of its members, so as to enable it to have
some opportunity to attain senior status. This was an entirely reasonable
approach to take, whether one agrees with it or not. In my view the
Plaintiff's Solicitor's letter would have made no difference whatever, because
the refusal to allow the Plaintiff to transfer was a policy refusal, which
policy was not unreasonable and in fact the Plaintiff's application was not the
only one before the County Committee, and similar refusals took place in
relation to several other Clonmel Óg players at the same time.