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Non Raceday Inquiry – NZGRA v SC Mann 3 March 2011 – Decision March 2011

ID: JCA10752

Applicant:
Mr TR Carmichael

Respondent(s):
Mr SC Mann - Licensed Handler

Information Number:
68916 and 68917

Hearing Type:
Non-race day

Rules:
881(g), 88.1(o) and 89.1 (Penalty Rule)

Decision:

That on the 24th day of December 2010, at Cambridge Raceway, Stephen Cecil Mann committed a breach of rule 88.1(g) in that he verbally threatened Michael Austin, a Deputy Stipendiary Steward, during a verbal altercation following the abandonment of race 10; and that Stephen Cecil Mann is therefore liable to the penalty or penalties that may be imposed pursuant to rule 89.1.

That on the 24th day of December 2010, at Cambridge Raceway, Stephen Cecil Mann committed a breach of rule 88.1(o) in that he misconducted himself following the abandonment of race 10, in that he verbally threatened Michael Austin, a Deputy Stipendiary Steward; and that Stephen Cecil Mann is therefore liable to the penalty or penalties that may be imposed pursuant to rule 89.1. (as amended)

PRELIMINARY MATTERS:
1) On 3rd March 2011 after considering the evidence we gave a brief oral decision on the charges. The following is our full decision on the charges.
2) “Misconduct” is not defined in the rules. We adopted the following interpretation – “conduct which is either (a) improper – not in accordance with accepted rules / standards of behaviour OR (b) unprofessional – contrary to professional standards of behaviour.
3) Information 68917 was amended to include what conduct on the part of Mr Mann is alleged to constitute “misconduct”.
4) Mr George confirmed the charges were in the alternative.
5) Mr George produced a copy of GRNZ documentation showing the defendant is a licenced handler.

EVIDENCE:
Mr Austin said he was on duty at the meeting in question on the 24th December 2010. He said he was standing on the hill at the start of race 10 and the defendant was standing nearby. The dog MORE PORK trained by the defendant’s wife Michelle Mann, was a starter in the race. Mr Austin said the lure broke down after about 150metres, he heard the defendant swear and the defendant then ran across the tracks to where Mrs Mann had retrieved MORE PORK. Mr Austin said he went to the area where the dogs were retrieved. The defendant and his wife were arguing – the defendant took control of the dog. Mr Austin said he twice ordered the defendant to give the dog back to Mrs Mann because he thought there might be a rerun. The defendant refused to do so and said words to the effect “I am going to do you after the last race and I know where to find you”. Mr Austin said the defendant was angry and aggressive towards him. He radioed Mr Quirk, reported the threat made and requested Mr Quirk’s assistance. Mr Austin said he was concerned for his safety – he felt very scared – he thought the defendant might attack him and cause serious damage. He said after finishing duty, he was escorted to his car by Mr Quirk for safety reasons.

In cross examination Mr Austin denied that all that happened was a heated dispute between himself and the defendant. A DVD produced by Mr Ryan was played. It showed the prestart, start, lure breakdown, the defendant running across the infield and the retrieval of the dogs.

Mr Quirk said he was the Stipendiary Steward in charge at the meeting. After the lure broke down he was told there was no power for it and he then declared the race to be “abandoned”. He said he received a radio call from Mr Austin who said he had been abused by the defendant. He said Mr Austin sounded scared. He went to the track and spoke to Mr Austin who said he had been threatened by the defendant. Mr Quirk said he spoke to the defendant, told him about Mr Austin’s complaint and told him his behaviour was unacceptable. He said the defendant said he “would get him (Mr Austin) as soon as he leaves the track”. He said the defendant was very angry. He said he later escorted Mr Austin to his car because he was concerned the defendant might carry out his threat.

In cross examination Mr Quirk confirmed the defendant was angry and upset. He denied that his evidence regarding the threat to Mr Austin by the defendant was only his interpretation of what the defendant said.

Mr George gave evidence responding to some matters that had arisen earlier in the hearing; however this evidence was not directly related to the facts in issue.

The defendant gave evidence. He said he was a licenced handler and MORE PORK was “my dog”. He said he ran across the track when the lure broke down because MORE PORK was temperamental and aggressive and he wanted to avoid trouble. He said he took hold of the dog and then had an argument with Mr Austin about the handling of the dog. He denied threatening Mr Austin. He said as a result of two major head injuries he is hot headed and gets “angry without too much provocation”.

In cross examination the defendant agreed he was angry when the lure broke down and angry when talking to Mr Austin. He acknowledged saying to Mr Quirk “I’ll sort him out outside afterwards” (referring to Mr Austin). He said he meant he would talk to Mr Austin and ask him what his problem was – it was not a threat. He agreed that he wanted to “take it outside” so that he would not be bound by the rules. The defendant’s response to some other questions was that “I can’t remember due to my medical problem”. He produced two documents relating to his medical problem.

In re-examination the defendant said he did not intend to sort out Mr Austin physically. Mrs Mann gave evidence. She said she was a licenced trainer and trained MORE PORK. She confirmed the defendant has a “short fuse” as a result of head injuries. She did not hear the defendant abuse Mr Austin. After race 10 was abandoned she and the defendant attended to the four dogs they had raced and then left the course.

In summing up Mr George suggested the committee should accept the evidence of the two Stipendiary Stewards as to what the defendant said. He referred to the defendant’s general acceptance of the evidence of Mr Quirk regarding him (the defendant) saying he “would get him as soon as he leaves the track” and the evidence of the defendant that he did not think the rules would apply to conduct by him outside the track.

Mr Ryan said the defendant was justifiably upset and acted in what he thought was the best interests of the dog. He said there was a verbal dispute and the defendant wanted to sort it out later – not sort out Mr Austin. Mr Ryan said the standard of proof was on the balance of probabilities. He said that standard had not been reached – there was a conflict of evidence between the prosecution and defence – the charges should be dismissed. He said if the committee found that a threat had been made it was an empty threat. He suggested it would be more appropriate to find the misconduct charge proven rather than the other charge on the basis the defendant had refused to follow a direction.

REASONS FOR DECISION:
The basis for both charges is that the defendant verbally threatened Mr Austin. The charges are in the alternative. We have considered all of the evidence, some of which had little or no relevance to the basic allegation. There is no dispute the defendant was upset and angry when the lure broke down. There is no dispute he was upset and angry when Mr Austin directed him to hand control of MORE PORK to his wife. There is no dispute the defendant is prone to being readily upset and angered. Mr Austin was clear in his evidence that the defendant verbally threatened him. He immediately reported the threat to Mr Quirk and requested assistance. He impressed us as being a truthful and reliable witness. He responded professionally to robust cross examination. Similarly Mr Quirk impressed us as a truthful and reliable witness. Overall his evidence is confirmatory of the evidence of Mr Austin. Both Mr Austin and Mr Quirk obviously believed the defendant had made a serious threat – Mr Quirk escorted Mr Austin to his car when he was ready to leave the course.

The defendant’s evidence is that he wanted to sort out the problem Mr Austin had – not sort out Mr Austin. Given all of the circumstances, including the defendant’s anger, the clear and consistent evidence of Mr Austin and Mr Quirk and the defendant’s evidence that he believed he was not bound by the rules in relation to what happened outside the course, we reject the defendant’s explanation. We accept Mr Austin’s account of what the defendant said to him and accept that the defendant’s words constituted a threat to Mr Austin. Mr Ryan said the standard of proof is on the balance of probabilities. We can find no reference to standard of proof in the rules.

In reaching our decision we are satisfied beyond reasonable doubt.
 

Penalty:

For the above reasons we find the charge under rule 88.1(g) proven. Having reached that decision we are not required to make a finding in relation to the other charge which is therefore dismissed.

Submissions on Penalty and Costs:
1) Mr George is to file with the Executive Officer of the JCA his submissions on penalty and, if he considers it necessary, costs, by 17th March 2011. If an order for costs is sought he is to itemize the costs involved. He is also to forward a copy of his submissions to Mr Ryan so as to be received by Mr Ryan by 17th March 2011.
2) JCA costs are $900 made up of Committee fees and travelling expenses.
3) Mr Ryan is to file his submissions on penalty and costs (including JCA costs) with the Executive Officer of the JCA by 24th March 2011.

 

Appeal Decision: NO LINKED APPEAL DECISION

Decision Date: 24/02/2011

Publish Date: 24/02/2011

JCA Decision Fields (raw)

Dmitry: This section contains all JCA fields migrated from the raw data.

Data from these fields should be mapped appropriately to display amongst the standard fields above; please make note of any values below that are missing in the above standard fields but should be there.

hearingid: 0af879ff979e03d25331688e5b00e2ed


informantnumber: 68916 and 68917


horsename:


hearing_racingtype:


startdate: no date provided


newcharge:


plea:


penaltyrequired:


decisiondate: 24/02/2011


hearing_title: Non Raceday Inquiry - NZGRA v SC Mann 3 March 2011 - Decision March 2011


charge:


facts:


appealdecision: NO LINKED APPEAL DECISION


isappeal:


submissionsfordecision:


reasonsfordecision:


Decision:

That on the 24th day of December 2010, at Cambridge Raceway, Stephen Cecil Mann committed a breach of rule 88.1(g) in that he verbally threatened Michael Austin, a Deputy Stipendiary Steward, during a verbal altercation following the abandonment of race 10; and that Stephen Cecil Mann is therefore liable to the penalty or penalties that may be imposed pursuant to rule 89.1.

That on the 24th day of December 2010, at Cambridge Raceway, Stephen Cecil Mann committed a breach of rule 88.1(o) in that he misconducted himself following the abandonment of race 10, in that he verbally threatened Michael Austin, a Deputy Stipendiary Steward; and that Stephen Cecil Mann is therefore liable to the penalty or penalties that may be imposed pursuant to rule 89.1. (as amended)

PRELIMINARY MATTERS:
1) On 3rd March 2011 after considering the evidence we gave a brief oral decision on the charges. The following is our full decision on the charges.
2) “Misconduct” is not defined in the rules. We adopted the following interpretation – “conduct which is either (a) improper – not in accordance with accepted rules / standards of behaviour OR (b) unprofessional – contrary to professional standards of behaviour.
3) Information 68917 was amended to include what conduct on the part of Mr Mann is alleged to constitute “misconduct”.
4) Mr George confirmed the charges were in the alternative.
5) Mr George produced a copy of GRNZ documentation showing the defendant is a licenced handler.

EVIDENCE:
Mr Austin said he was on duty at the meeting in question on the 24th December 2010. He said he was standing on the hill at the start of race 10 and the defendant was standing nearby. The dog MORE PORK trained by the defendant’s wife Michelle Mann, was a starter in the race. Mr Austin said the lure broke down after about 150metres, he heard the defendant swear and the defendant then ran across the tracks to where Mrs Mann had retrieved MORE PORK. Mr Austin said he went to the area where the dogs were retrieved. The defendant and his wife were arguing – the defendant took control of the dog. Mr Austin said he twice ordered the defendant to give the dog back to Mrs Mann because he thought there might be a rerun. The defendant refused to do so and said words to the effect “I am going to do you after the last race and I know where to find you”. Mr Austin said the defendant was angry and aggressive towards him. He radioed Mr Quirk, reported the threat made and requested Mr Quirk’s assistance. Mr Austin said he was concerned for his safety – he felt very scared – he thought the defendant might attack him and cause serious damage. He said after finishing duty, he was escorted to his car by Mr Quirk for safety reasons.

In cross examination Mr Austin denied that all that happened was a heated dispute between himself and the defendant. A DVD produced by Mr Ryan was played. It showed the prestart, start, lure breakdown, the defendant running across the infield and the retrieval of the dogs.

Mr Quirk said he was the Stipendiary Steward in charge at the meeting. After the lure broke down he was told there was no power for it and he then declared the race to be “abandoned”. He said he received a radio call from Mr Austin who said he had been abused by the defendant. He said Mr Austin sounded scared. He went to the track and spoke to Mr Austin who said he had been threatened by the defendant. Mr Quirk said he spoke to the defendant, told him about Mr Austin’s complaint and told him his behaviour was unacceptable. He said the defendant said he “would get him (Mr Austin) as soon as he leaves the track”. He said the defendant was very angry. He said he later escorted Mr Austin to his car because he was concerned the defendant might carry out his threat.

In cross examination Mr Quirk confirmed the defendant was angry and upset. He denied that his evidence regarding the threat to Mr Austin by the defendant was only his interpretation of what the defendant said.

Mr George gave evidence responding to some matters that had arisen earlier in the hearing; however this evidence was not directly related to the facts in issue.

The defendant gave evidence. He said he was a licenced handler and MORE PORK was “my dog”. He said he ran across the track when the lure broke down because MORE PORK was temperamental and aggressive and he wanted to avoid trouble. He said he took hold of the dog and then had an argument with Mr Austin about the handling of the dog. He denied threatening Mr Austin. He said as a result of two major head injuries he is hot headed and gets “angry without too much provocation”.

In cross examination the defendant agreed he was angry when the lure broke down and angry when talking to Mr Austin. He acknowledged saying to Mr Quirk “I’ll sort him out outside afterwards” (referring to Mr Austin). He said he meant he would talk to Mr Austin and ask him what his problem was – it was not a threat. He agreed that he wanted to “take it outside” so that he would not be bound by the rules. The defendant’s response to some other questions was that “I can’t remember due to my medical problem”. He produced two documents relating to his medical problem.

In re-examination the defendant said he did not intend to sort out Mr Austin physically. Mrs Mann gave evidence. She said she was a licenced trainer and trained MORE PORK. She confirmed the defendant has a “short fuse” as a result of head injuries. She did not hear the defendant abuse Mr Austin. After race 10 was abandoned she and the defendant attended to the four dogs they had raced and then left the course.

In summing up Mr George suggested the committee should accept the evidence of the two Stipendiary Stewards as to what the defendant said. He referred to the defendant’s general acceptance of the evidence of Mr Quirk regarding him (the defendant) saying he “would get him as soon as he leaves the track” and the evidence of the defendant that he did not think the rules would apply to conduct by him outside the track.

Mr Ryan said the defendant was justifiably upset and acted in what he thought was the best interests of the dog. He said there was a verbal dispute and the defendant wanted to sort it out later – not sort out Mr Austin. Mr Ryan said the standard of proof was on the balance of probabilities. He said that standard had not been reached – there was a conflict of evidence between the prosecution and defence – the charges should be dismissed. He said if the committee found that a threat had been made it was an empty threat. He suggested it would be more appropriate to find the misconduct charge proven rather than the other charge on the basis the defendant had refused to follow a direction.

REASONS FOR DECISION:
The basis for both charges is that the defendant verbally threatened Mr Austin. The charges are in the alternative. We have considered all of the evidence, some of which had little or no relevance to the basic allegation. There is no dispute the defendant was upset and angry when the lure broke down. There is no dispute he was upset and angry when Mr Austin directed him to hand control of MORE PORK to his wife. There is no dispute the defendant is prone to being readily upset and angered. Mr Austin was clear in his evidence that the defendant verbally threatened him. He immediately reported the threat to Mr Quirk and requested assistance. He impressed us as being a truthful and reliable witness. He responded professionally to robust cross examination. Similarly Mr Quirk impressed us as a truthful and reliable witness. Overall his evidence is confirmatory of the evidence of Mr Austin. Both Mr Austin and Mr Quirk obviously believed the defendant had made a serious threat – Mr Quirk escorted Mr Austin to his car when he was ready to leave the course.

The defendant’s evidence is that he wanted to sort out the problem Mr Austin had – not sort out Mr Austin. Given all of the circumstances, including the defendant’s anger, the clear and consistent evidence of Mr Austin and Mr Quirk and the defendant’s evidence that he believed he was not bound by the rules in relation to what happened outside the course, we reject the defendant’s explanation. We accept Mr Austin’s account of what the defendant said to him and accept that the defendant’s words constituted a threat to Mr Austin. Mr Ryan said the standard of proof is on the balance of probabilities. We can find no reference to standard of proof in the rules.

In reaching our decision we are satisfied beyond reasonable doubt.
 


sumissionsforpenalty:


reasonsforpenalty:


penalty:

For the above reasons we find the charge under rule 88.1(g) proven. Having reached that decision we are not required to make a finding in relation to the other charge which is therefore dismissed.

Submissions on Penalty and Costs:
1) Mr George is to file with the Executive Officer of the JCA his submissions on penalty and, if he considers it necessary, costs, by 17th March 2011. If an order for costs is sought he is to itemize the costs involved. He is also to forward a copy of his submissions to Mr Ryan so as to be received by Mr Ryan by 17th March 2011.
2) JCA costs are $900 made up of Committee fees and travelling expenses.
3) Mr Ryan is to file his submissions on penalty and costs (including JCA costs) with the Executive Officer of the JCA by 24th March 2011.

 


hearing_type: Non-race day


Rules: 881(g), 88.1(o) and 89.1 (Penalty Rule)


Informant: Mr TR Carmichael


JockeysandTrainer:


Otherperson:


PersonPresent: Mr C George - Prosecutor Racing Integrity Unit, Mr R Quirk - Stipendiary Steward - Prosecution Witness, Mr M Austin - Assitant Stipendiary Steward, Mr T Ryan - Counsel for the Defendant, Mrs M Mann - Defence Witness


Respondent: Mr SC Mann - Licensed Handler


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