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Libel Lawsuit Over Investigation of Alleged Slur at Polo Match Dismissed
The U.S. Polo Association investigation exonerated the plaintiff, but the plaintiff still sued the USPA for libel.
From Judge Leonie Brinkema's opinion yesterday in Gaebel v. U.S. Polo Ass'n:
Gaebel is a 73-year-old retired United States Naval Commander and a senior level executive with a federal government contractor. He is a registered member of the USPA. On the evening of July 10, 2021, Gaebel was playing in a series of exhibition polo matches. Although the polo matches were not organized by the USPA or held at a USPA member club, a USPA member club-Twilight Polo Club-organized the event and rented a location for it….
During the match, Siddiqui, a 14-year-old who played for a team opposing Gaebel's team, caused his horse to collide with-or as the Complaint states, "T-boned"-Gaebel and his horse, hurting plaintiff. Gaebel claimed that he bent over in pain and exclaimed "motherfucker" at the ground, but Siddiqui claimed that Gaebel called him a "motherfucking nigger." After the match, Siddiqui immediately told his coach, Delora Burner, and his mother what he claimed Gaebel said. Burner then told the event's manager, John Gobin, who walked over to Gaebel and asked Gaebel to apologize to Siddiqui. Gaebel claims that he approached Siddiqui and his family, "vehemently denied the accusation," and told plaintiff that he has never used a racial slur. Burner and Siddiqui's mother claim that instead of apologizing, Gaebel bullied Siddiqui by pushing his shoulder and repeatedly saying, "Didn't we already settle this kid?"
The next day, July 11, 2021, Burner and Siddiqui's mother each emailed the USPA to complain about the in-game and post-game incidents…. On July 14, 2021, the USPA informed Gaebel that Burner filed what the USPA Disciplinary Procedures Policy ("DPP") refers to as a "Conduct Violation Complaint" against him. On July 23, 2021, the USPA emailed plaintiff a formal "Notice of Alleged Conduct Violations, Issuance of USPA Charges and Notice of Hearing" ("Notice"). The Notice charged Gaebel with violations of the USPA's Code of Conduct, informed him of "The Alleged Conduct Violations," and stated that a hearing would take place on Friday, August 6, 2021, over Zoom, during which plaintiff"will be entitled to present evidence, defend against the charges, and cross-examine witnesses." The Notice also informed plaintiff of the evidence that may be used against him….
The hearing, which occurred on August 6, 2021, over Zoom, lasted eight hours and was judged by two USPA Hearing Officers…. The USPA issued a Final Order on August 20, 2021, in which, after finding that it had jurisdiction to consider Burner's Conduct Violation Complaint for at least two reasons, it found in favor of Gaebel …:
After hearing all the testimony and considering all of the evidence in this matter, which they and the [Executive Committee] take very seriously, the Hearing Officers have concluded that there is not sufficient evidence to find that Mr. Gaebel directed a racial slur at Aleem Siddiqui. In reaching this decision, the Hearing Officers do not reject Aleem's testimony. Rather, as the appointed representatives of the EC, they are obligated to apply the DPP's requirement that "[t]he burden of proof necessary to sustain a charge against a charged party shall be met if the [EC] reasonably believes, after hearing the evidence presented, that a Conduct Violation has occurred." Here, although Aleem testified that Mr. Gaebel directed the slur at him, Mr. Gaebel firmly denied doing so. Notably, the Umpire, Mr. Krabbe, testified that he heard Mr. Gaebel utter a vulgarity immediately after the collision, but he did not hear Mr. Gaebel use the racial slur. Additionally, Brock Bromley testified that he too heard Mr. Gaebel utter a vulgarity immediately after the collision, but he did not hear Mr. Gaebel use the racial slur. Given the contradictory testimony of the parties, and the presumably unbiased testimony of Mr. Krabbe, the Hearing Officers, acting for the EC, do not have a basis to reasonably believe that Mr. Gaebel directed a racial slur at Aleem Siddiqui, and therefore that a Conduct Violation occurred….
Gaebel then sued "Burner, Siddiqui, and Siddiqui's parents for defamation and intentional infliction of emotional distress, seeking roughly $8 million in damages and fees" and separately sued the USPA for, among other things, libel; Judge Brinkema's opinion deals with the USPA case:
Count I alleges that defendant defamed plaintiff in three ways: (1) by republishing the allegation that plaintiff used a racial slur in the Notice, which informed plaintiff of the charges and evidence against him; (2) by conducting a public disciplinary hearing without jurisdiction and with "reckless disregard" for the veracity of the charges; and (3) by issuing a public Final Order implying that, based on the evidence presented during the hearing, defendant considered the allegation of plaintiffs use of a racial slur to be true. Plaintiff alleges this conduct harmed his reputation, caused him mental anguish, and forced him to incur attorney's fees to defend himself at the USPA hearing….
[T]he Notice does not create any liability for defamation, regardless of whether it was published or not, because it does not contain any actionable statements. It neither stated nor implied that Gaebel actually used a racial epithet or actually bullied Sidiqqui; it only stated that it was alleged that he had done so. All the Notice does is give the plaintiff very clear notice of the charges he faced, the names of witnesses who might testify, and copies of Burner's and Siddiqui's mother's complaints.
Although plaintiff argues that the Notice adopted Burner's allegations as true, no plausible reading of the Notice supports that conclusion. For example, the subject line states, "Notice of Alleged Conduct Violations," the first section is called "the Alleged Conduct Violations," and the Notice explicitly states that Gaebel's conduct would amount to violations only "if proven to be true." Nonetheless, plaintiff argues that the Notice mischaracterized the evidence against him by implying that there were multiple witnesses with "first-hand knowledge of the incident at issue"; however, that is not a mischaracterization, because multiple witnesses observed the in-game collision, and Burner and Siddiqui's mother claimed that they observed plaintiff bully Siddiqui first-hand.
What the Notice shows was defendant's effort to ensure that plaintiff was fully advised of the charges against him. To hold this type of notice defamatory would deter private adjudicatory bodies from advising people of the allegations which they need to resolve.
Second, plaintiff argues that the hearing itself defamed him because it "contributed to, furthered, perpetuated and gave credence to the defamatory statements against [p]laintiff; however, the USPA never made any actionable statements during the hearing. None of defendant's officials ever said or implied that the allegations were true, and the hearing actually gave defendant the opportunity to show that they were false. Moreover, plaintiff has not cited any caselaw supporting his claim that holding a hearing to determine whether allegations are true is tantamount to stating that those allegations are, in fact, true. And although plaintiff argues that defendant adopted the allegations by calling the minor and his family and allowing them to state their allegations, plaintiff does not offer any caselaw to support that argument.
Third, plaintiff argues that defendant defamed him in its Final Order by implying that it believed the allegations when it stated, "In reaching [its] decision, the Hearing Officers do not reject Aleem's testimony." Defendant argues that plaintiff ignores the end-result, which is an exoneration of plaintiff. In fact, the Final Order clearly states, "Given the contradictory testimony of the parties, and the presumably unbiased testimony of Mr. Krabbe [the umpire], the Hearing Officers … do not have a basis to reasonably believe that Mr. Gaebel directed a racial slur at Aleem Siddiqui, and therefore that a Conduct Violation occurred."
From these words, a reasonable person could not interpret the Final Order as implying that Gaebel actually directed a racial slur at Siddiqui. A far more likely interpretation was reluctance by the hearing officers to label a 14-year-old as a liar. This common-sense reading is reinforced by a summary that was published and made publicly available after the hearing. The summary states, in full:
The USPA received a Conduct Violation Complaint on July 11, 2021, alleging that USPA member Darrell Gaebel used offensive language when addressing a minor USPA member during a game played at the Great Meadow polo facility under the auspices of Twilight Polo Club on July 10, 2021. On July 20, 2021, the USPA Executive Committee issued charges against Mr. Gaebel for violating the USPA Code of Conduct. A hearing was held on August 6, during which Mr. Gaebel, the minor USPA member, and fifteen other witnesses testified. The Hearing Officers rejected Mr. Gaebel's jurisdictional objections, but concluded that there was not sufficient evidence to find that Mr. Gaebel used the offensive language alleged in the Complaint. Accordingly, the Conduct Violation Complaint was dismissed in a Final Order dated August 20, 2021.
This published summary clearly shows that defendant did not find that Gaebel used the alleged slur.
{Because Count I fails for lack of actionable statements, the Court has not addressed defendant's alternative argument that its statements were privileged because they were made in furtherance of a common interest in resolving a dispute; however, that argument also provides a separate meritorious basis for dismissal of the defamation claim.}
The court also rejected Gaebel's claim that the USPA violated its internal procedures and thus breached its contract with Gaebel, as well as Gaebel's intentional infliction of emotional distress claim:
Although Count V fails to allege sufficient facts to support any element of an IIED claim, the simplest element to focus on is the element of outrageousness. The Supreme Court of Virginia has held that to satisfy this element, a defendant's alleged behavior must be "so outrageous in character, and so extreme in degree, as to go beyond all possible bounds of decency, and to be regarded as atrocious, and utterly intolerable in a civilized community." The behavior plaintiff claims was outrageous was (1) holding a hearing without jurisdiction and (2) holding a hearing based on false allegations.
Plaintiff offers no caselaw to suggest that such conduct exceeds "all possible bounds of decency." Moreover, as discussed above, the USPA had jurisdiction to charge plaintiff and conduct the hearing, and the hearing afforded plaintiff full fair process, resulting in his favor. When defendant held the hearing, there was no indication whatsoever that the USPA knew or had reason to know the allegations against plaintiff were false. What the USPA did in this case was not outrageous. To the contrary, it was responsible: upon receiving allegations that one of its members used a racial slur against a minor, it held a hearing to get to the bottom of the allegations, and after finding insufficient evidence for the charges, dismissed them. To find such conduct outrageous would deter the USPA and any other private organization from investigating complaints made against its members….
Congratulations to Heather M. Fields of Nelson Mullins Riley & Scarborough and Ian M. Dumain and Mary Kate George of Cyrulnik Fattaruso LLP on the goal.
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Are we in some bizarro world where a person who believes he was purposefully attacked may exclaim "M--F--er," but he if he says "M--F--er, N---r" then he is an evil racist?
Newsflash: when people are hurt and injured, especially when they believe it is the malfeasance of others, they blurt out things they do not mean.
You figure pain would cause a decent person (rather than a bigot) to scream a vile racial slur?
You belong at this blog.
What evidence inclined a reference to a belief by plaintiff that plaintiff was purposefully attacked?
Pain causes people to say all kinds of things. As an obvious Jew, I have been called many vile names, or had vile things said about me. Much worse than the N-word. Like, "Jews into the ovens" or "Heil Hitler." By people who were acting deliberatly, not in pain. I don't freak out about it. I have contempt for them. (As I do for a certain prominent black leader who has called my people termites.)
I certainly would not freak out if someone who, say, I hit with a car came out and called me an anti-semitic slur.
Sorry, the world is not divided into "decent people" and "bigots." The plaintiff here is a 73-year-old Navy veteran. He heard a lot of salty language in his day. The N-word was more than acceptable when he was growing up. That he might have blurted it out in the moment does not make him a bigot.
As for your second question, from the article:
"During the match, Siddiqui, a 14-year-old who played for a team opposing Gaebel's team, caused his horse to collide with-or as the Complaint states, "T-boned"-Gaebel and his horse, hurting plaintiff."
(For the record, as a libel suit, this sounds asinine.)
More than that, there is positive evidence that profanity actually reduces perceived pain. Here is one of many articles on the topic.
So maybe you should consider cutting the person that you (or your son) just physically injured a little slack before starting quasi-jusidicial proceedings. (But, yeah, the libel suit after winning the quasi-judicial proceeding was stupid.
"this sounds asinine."
You mean: "this sounds equine."
The rear-end of equine.
This reminds me of attempts to evade accountability for misconduct with "I was drunk."
My experience (including as president of a large fraternity, addressing the occasional drunken episode), indicates alcohol does not cause substandard character so much as it reveals it and does not cause misconduct so much as it gets out of the way.
I similarly doubt pain would incline exclamation of a vile racial slur from someone who wasn't already quite comfortable with usage of that term, any more than it would incline a random scream of 'purple rutabaga enchiladas' or 'I molest my children.'
I imagine you would, however, conclude that they were anti-semitic.
(For the record, as a libel suit, this sounds asinine.)
Well, maybe equine.
gormadoc beat you to that. Or, as the old saying goes, that horse already left the barn.
Newsflash: they do not. Pain and anger may cause one to lose inhibitions; they do not cause one to express things the opposite of what they believe.
The statement made is an outburst, not an expression of what he believes.
Do you use curse words regularly? If your car was hit while your were in it, might you do so, even though that is not what you would do, and might even be embarrased to do?
Note his defense was, all he said was "M--F--er." I doubt he uses that normally or in polite company. Yet no one seemed to have an issue with that.
Normal, non-racist people may find themselves provoked by stress into using a vulgar word. A person who can be "provoked" into using a racist insult was, in fact, racist before that provocation.
I use profanity and vulgarity judiciously. Yes, I would use them if my car was hit while I was in it. I would not be the least bit embarrassed about having done so, if it was proportionate to the situation.
I do not use the n-word, at all. I would not use it if my car was hit when I was in it, because it's not a word I ever use. There are many epithets I might call the other driver. But none of them would be a racial/ethnic/etc. slur, because those aren't words I think at people either.
it can't "slip out" no matter how angry one gets unless it's a word one considers using.
If I were black I'd call him the word multiple times, but as a caucasian I'd limit myself to insults like "insolent puppy," "cad," and "bounder."
If I were really in a purple-faced rage, I'd accuse him of loudly slurping his tea when he drinks it.
(PS - can non-white people get purple-faced with rage? I haven't attempted to find out.)
Did neither the plaintiff nor his lawyer hear of the Streisand Effect before filing this suit?
That's something that happens to other people, not them.
Looks like a silly case that the plaintiff deserved to lose. All the same :
plaintiff argues that defendant defamed him in its Final Order by implying that it believed the allegations when it stated, "In reaching [its] decision, the Hearing Officers do not reject Aleem's testimony." Defendant argues that plaintiff ignores the end-result, which is an exoneration of plaintiff.
Ahem. It is not clear whether “which is an exoneration of the plaintiff” is the Judge’s conclusion, or her report of the Defendant’s lawyer’s conclusion. Either way it is obviously wrong, and if the Judge chooses to report it without pointing that out, she must take responsibility for it.
The plaintiff was not exonerated :
The Hearing Officers rejected Mr. Gaebel's jurisdictional objections, but concluded that there was not sufficient evidence to find that Mr. Gaebel used the offensive language alleged in the Complaint.
Getting off on "not sufficient evidence" is not exoneration. The onus was not ex-ed. The plaintiff remains under the shadow of the accusation. His name was not cleared. He knows it. The world knows it. That's why the guy was in court suing for libel.
I'm still stuck on this mental image of a 73 year old and a 14 year old playing polo.
Polo is mighty expensive. Sounds like neither side is poor.
Both Fauquier County and Loudoun County in Northern Virginia are full of folks -- some polo players, others not -- pursuing litigation of this quality.
An eight hour hearing with two Hearing Officers to determine whether he fired two insults or only one.
This is the US Polo Association. Probably took them six hours just to make sure everyone had their tie on right.
I am surprised nobody has noticed that this recreates the greatest Fawlty Towers episode of all time (just substitute cricket for polo):
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GZY0SdiNzfw
"From these words, a reasonable person could not interpret the Final Order as implying that Gaebel actually directed a racial slur at Siddiqui. A far more likely interpretation was reluctance by the hearing officers to label a 14-year-old as a liar."
Also a likely interpretation, the old fart did use a racial slur and his polo buddies covered for him...
Perhaps, or maybe this was an unfortunate dispute between two rich families and they wanted to contain the damage by refusing to call either side a liar?
(Note to their lawyers - this is pure speculation, and I'd totally accept your denials)
There's a person named "Brock" involved. How deliciously on brand.
And where are the Roman numerals after his name?
Prof. Volokh: your link to the case is broken.
Whoops, fixed, thanks!
So… this case was obviously ridiculous. But the attorney who filed it is old enough to know better (9 years out of law school). I assume this was a "Gotta keep a rich client happy" lawsuit.
A polo club member thinks that club officials insulted his honor - yet no mention of a duel?
I don't mean a duel with the teenager - I mean a duel between the member and the official(s) who held the hearing.
I mean, they should simply have accepted his word as a gentleman and established member that the charges were false, and they would have refused to even mention it again.
He should have sent the demand for satisfaction the moment the officials told him the case was still open despite his gentlemanly denial.
/sarc /sarc /sarc
"Congratulations to Heather M. Fields of Nelson Mullins Riley & Scarborough on the goal."
Congratulations to Eugene for the pun, and congratulations to the firm and Ms. Fields for having a polo association as a client.