sure it wasn't from banging kok in bangkok?
That won't be an option. I'm 99% sure that you can't file an injunction to prevent someone from plying their trade. They can sue him for contract violation, but can't prevent him from playing overseas.
I'M NOT A LAWYER, SO THIS MAY NOT BE 100% CORRECT.
that's the one
Well another caller saying they were a barrister stated that if the Bulldogs tried to take out an injunction it would only be valid on Australian soil so it'd be useless overseas.
I'M NOT A LAWYER, SO THIS MAY NOT BE 100% CORRECT.
You aren't a lawyer. But you are 100% correct.
The Supreme Court of NSW, Federal Court of Australia or High Court of Australia has jurisdiction over Australian/NSW Sovereignty only.
The Court of Cassation would have difficulty in recognising Australian law.
:lol:
and you are a lawyer?
:lol:
Normal civil action, such as the avenue for the Bulldogs to sue SBW has no standing internationally, as no body exists to seize assets or call in debt as long as he's already left the country. There's no question of the illegality of his walking out on the Dogs. He has committed a fundamental breach of contract, which allows both the Bulldogs and the NRL with whom his contract is actually registered (and potentially News Ltd.) to take the case before court.
You'd have to think in this situation that the Court of Arbitration for Sport would have jurisdiction. The upside is the Court of Arbitration has dealt with this sort of matter at great length in the past, with European soccer disputes. Also, there is an arm of this court in Sydney as well as it's European headquarters, so there's not really any danger of Eurocentrism.
Presuming the NRL know what they're talking about in saying that the contract had no get-out clause whatsoever, SBW could well look like being excluded from professional sport for breach of contract and illegal negotiation. The court has powers of exclusion, suspension and seizing of assets. The biggest point of the matter is, though, the agent who negotiated the matter is not only breaching contract but committing fraud by misrepresentation. It's tantamount to bigamy, say. As far as the law and the COA is concerned, SBW has promised his exclusive services to the Bulldogs until 2011. Another contract promising exclusivity CANNOT be signed under any circumstances without a release, which SBW cannot enable on his own, apparently, where Mark Gasnier could.
The Court of Arbitration for Sport has very little jurisdiction in this matter. Whilst it relates to sport it moreso relates to contract law associated with the laws of Australia and the laws of France.
This is not about someone's eligibility for some Olympic event. It is a bit deeper than that.
You aren't a lawyer. But you are 100% correct.
The Supreme Court of NSW, Federal Court of Australia or High Court of Australia has jurisdiction over Australian/NSW Sovereignty only.
The Court of Cassation would have difficulty in recognising Australian law. I don't think the French like being interfered with by "smaller" nations such as Australia.
Thanks for the heads-up about the Olympics. Look into your jurisprudence and common law relevant to the subject before you write that rubbish.
Here, sport is more or less superfluous to the issue. But it has to be remembered that Contract Law is a civil breach and there is no single body that has an umbrella jurisdiction internationally on civil crimes barring extradition. However, this court can provide for SBW to be excluded from playing with Toulon (or whoever), as well as any other recognised competition in any sport, and provides a tribunal for the matter to actually be ajudicated on at this point in time, and order payment to the NRL & Canterbury some form of damages. It's not conclusive, but no court is given the nature of transnational, not international as you seem to think, law.
"Any individual or legal entity with capacity to act may have recourse to the services of the CAS. These include athletes, clubs, sports federations, organisers of sports events, sponsors or television companies."
-- Court of Arbitration for Sport
The matter of bilateral agreements for dispute resolution refers only to immediate jurisdiction by a particular court. Read that to mean in one of these particular agreements, the Court of Arbitration for example is the only manner of recourse. In this situation, there are numerous avenues, and of course no agreement exists. It's still a matter of sporting contract law and this is the judiciary for it -- particularly so because the Sydney arm exists and so can apply Australian Law by way of domicile.