Auckland Trotting Club Inc and Television New Zealand Ltd - 1997-015
Members
- J M Potter (Chair)
- A Martin
- L M Loates
- R McLeod
Dated
Complainant
- Auckland Trotting Club
Number
1997-015
Programme
HolmesBroadcaster
Television New Zealand LtdChannel/Station
TVNZ 1Standards
Standards Breached
Summary
The Auckland Trotting Club was mentioned in items on TV One's Holmes programme
broadcast at 6.30pm on 11 and 19 June 1990. The item on 11 June was introduced
with references to drug abuse, race horses and people in high places. The item's
visuals included Alexandra Park which the reporter described as the home of the
Auckland Trotting Club. The item focussed primarily on Mr Terry Quinn, then
President of the Auckland Trotting Club, and no allegations were made about the Club
itself.
The item on 19 June, which referred back to the 11 June programme, included
interviews with some dissatisfied members of the Auckland Trotting Club who alleged
a number of wrongdoings in the Club's administration. One of the four members
interviewed was a member of the Club's Management Committee and the other three
were former Committee members.
The Auckland Trotting Club, through its solicitors, complained to Television New
Zealand Limited about both items. The complaint acknowledged that the 11 June item
made no allegations in regard to the Auckland Trotting Club. However, by virtue of the
item's introduction and references, the complainant asserted that viewers might have
been left with the impression that the Club was in some way associated with the
allegations about the misuse of drugs. Asserting that the item was unbalanced, the
complainant requested a public explanation distancing Mr Quinn from the Club, and an
apology to the Club.
The item of 19 June, it said, was poorly presented and had made a number of
allegations but had presented no evidence in support of them. The Club demanded an
urgent and extensive public apology. The Club also complained that it had not been
given an adequate time to respond to allegations.
TVNZ declined to uphold the complaint and the Club referred it to the Broadcasting
Standards Authority under (then) s.8(a) of the Broadcasting Act 1989.
For the reasons below, the Authority upholds the complaint that the item broadcast on
19 June 1990 was unbalanced.
Decision
History of the Complaint
The present members of the Authority have viewed the two items complained about and
have read the extensive correspondence (summarised in the Appendix). The Authority
has dealt with the complaint on the basis that the earlier consideration given to this
complaint by a differently constituted Authority, is of no relevance to the current
findings. As is its practice, the Authority has determined the complaint without a
formal hearing.
The programmes complained about were items broadcast by TVNZ on the Holmes
programme on 11 and 19 June 1990 which was then screened between 6.30–7.00pm.
The solicitors for the Auckland Trotting Club complained formally to TVNZ about both
items in early July 1990. Both substantive and procedural matters were contentious at
the time and the Authority did not complete its information gathering process until late
in 1991.
The then President of the Auckland Trotting Club, Mr Terry Quinn, also complained
about both items. He later referred the complaints to the Authority as he was
dissatisfied with the responses he received from TVNZ. Before the Authority began its
review of those complaints however, Mr Quinn issued defamation proceedings against
TVNZ in respect of each broadcast.
In early November 1991, the Authority received the decision of the High Court in the
case Eveready v TV31.11 MB (CP No 527/91, Wellington HC) where McGechan J ruled, in
regard to that complaint, that the Authority's determination would be stayed until the
concurrent defamation proceedings were determined, settled or discontinued.
Taking the principles enunciated in the Eveready ruling into consideration, and after
consulting with the parties to the Auckland Trotting Club's complaint, in February 1992
the Authority advised the parties:
Because of the extensive overlap between the [Auckland Trotting] Club's
complaint and the issues raised by Mr Quinn in his defamation action, and in view
of the Eveready decision, the Authority decided that it must defer action on the
Club's complaint until the resolution of the defamation action or until it is
confirmed that the defamation action will proceed without a jury.
The solicitors for the Auckland Trotting Club, on behalf of their client, have expressed
an ongoing interest in the complaint and, late in 1996 in view of the recent media
reports that the amount of damages to be awarded to Mr Quinn had been finalised,
TVNZ's comments were sought on the state of the defamation proceedings. TVNZ
advised in January 1997 that the judgment of Anderson J in the Auckland High Court
on 29 November 1996 had completed Mr Quinn's defamation action, and it did not
object to the Authority proceeding to deal with the Auckland Trotting Club's complaint.
Because the tape of the items complained about had been retained, together with all the
correspondence received between July 1990 and February 1992, the Authority decided
it was able to determine the Club's complaint de novo. The Authority records that the
standards cited in the complaint have been renumbered since 1990. The standards are
recorded in the Appendix by the numbers cited at the time the correspondence was
received. The current numbering system is used however in this decision. In no case
has the substance of the standard cited been altered. The slight changes have taken
place to ensure comprehensibility.
Following the conclusion of his defamation case, Mr Quinn advised that he has
withdrawn his complaints to the Authority about the items.
The Items
The item broadcast on Holmes on 11 June 1990 focussed on Mr Terry Quinn, and it
was reported in passing that he was then the President of the Auckland Trotting Club.
The item also included pictures of some racing at the Club. The 19 June broadcast was
divided into an investigation of some of the Club's actions and a further account of
some of Mr Quinn's activities.
The Club's major concern was directed at the item broadcast on Holmes on 19 June
1990, part of which involved interviews with some dissatisfied club members and
former office holders. The complainant said the format involved the reporter reporting
an allegation and then interviewing one of the members "and that person presumably
was to support" the reporter's statement. The complainant noted seven specific
allegations by the reporter which, it complained, were not supported by the comments
made by the members. In addition, the Club complained that it was given insufficient
opportunity to respond to the claims. The items on 11 and 19 June, the Club added,
breached standards G1, G4, G6, G7, G11(i), G14 and G19.
The Standards
Standards G1, G4, G6 and G11(i) require broadcasters:
G1 To be truthful and accurate on points of fact.
G4 To deal justly and fairly with any person taking part or referred to in any
programme.
G6 To show balance, impartiality and fairness in dealing with political matters,
current affairs and all questions of a controversial nature.
G11 To refrain from broadcasting any programme which, when considered as
a whole:
(i) simulates news or events in such a way as to mislead or alarm
viewers.
Standards G14 and G19 provide:
G14 News must be presented accurately, objectively and impartially.
G19 Care must be taken in the editing of programme material to ensure that the
extracts used are a true reflection and not a distortion of the original event or
the overall views expressed.
Misleading viewers – standard G11(i)
TVNZ denied that either item breached any of the standards listed by the complainant.
In regard to the 11 June item, it believed that it was valid to establish the link between
Mr Quinn, the proprietor of Vetmed Laboratories Ltd on which the item focussed, and
his then position as President of the Auckland Trotting Club. Once that had been
established, it continued, there had been no further reference to the Club. In TVNZ's
opinion that did not constitute a breach of standard G11(i) which prohibits a broadcast
which may mislead viewers.
The Authority agrees with both the complainant and TVNZ that it was valid to draw a
link between Mr Quinn's business and his position in the Club. Further, it agrees with
TVNZ, but not with the complainant, that the item did not place an unnecessary
emphasis on the link in such a way as to mislead viewers. Accordingly, the Authority
concludes that the broadcast of the Holmes item on 11 June did not breach standard
G11(i).
Deceptive practices and editing which distorts – standards G7 and G19
In regard to the 19 June item, the Auckland Trotting Club detailed seven points where,
it complained, the reporter's summary was not substantiated by the interviews. In
response, TVNZ said that the complainant had displayed a misunderstanding of basic
journalistic practice. It advised the Authority:
The recognised procedure, (which is international), is for a reporter to paraphrase
the general thrust of what the interview subject may have to say, and then take an
interview segment in which the subject is seen to enlarge or pertinently comment
on that position. In fact, it would be regarded as poor television practice were a
reporter's summation of a situation to be followed by an interview in which the
information was tediously repeated. Viewers would be fully justified in
questioning the professional competence of the company if it did.
It continued:
In the case of the broadcast in question the statements made by the reporter wereaccurate summations of what the four disaffected members had to say. They
were not the views of the reporter and they were not in any way distortions of
what he had been told by the four men concerned.
The complainant did not contest, correctly in the Authority's opinion, the validity of that
journalistic practice but considered it would be "improper" if the reporter's broadcast
allegations were not supported by the interviewees. While the Authority does not agree
with that comment – as it does not show a complete understanding of the role of a
journalist – it accepts that the reporter's broadcast statements must be an accurate and
balanced summary of the information gathered.
Therefore, on the issue of the use of a reporter's summation of an interview, the
Authority accepts TVNZ's argument that the practice is professional journalism.
Accordingly, the Authority concludes that the item did not use a deceptive practice in
contravention of standard G7, or involve editing which distorted in transgression of
standard G19.
Requirement for accuracy – standard G1
The Club complained that the item was inaccurate on seven matters when the club
members interviewed raised a number of concerns. In summary these matters were
the alleged wrongdoings in the Club; that some members sought an inquiry into the
Club's administration; that some members had reservations about the Club's
administration; that some members believed that they had not been sufficiently
informed about the costs of the new grandstand; that questions were being raised
about the disposal of some carpet and appliances; that some committee members were
deposed in a "controversial" ballot; and that McKendrick's Paddock was sold without
the knowledge or approval of the committee members being interviewed. On this
final point, one of the interviewees described the sale as a "fait accompli".
Given, first, the length of time since the item was broadcast, and secondly, that these
matters have been canvassed in the defamation proceedings brought by Mr Quinn, the
Authority declines to determine the aspect of the complaint which alleged factual
inaccuracies.
Requirement for fairness and balance – standards G4 and G6
Having viewed the programmes and read the correspondence, the Authority is of the
view that the standard G6 requirement for balance is the issue which should be
considered further. The complainant also referred to standard G4 which requires that
people referred to be dealt with fairly. As standard G6 also refers to "impartiality and
fairness", the Authority has on this occasion subsumed the standard G4 aspect under
standard G6.
In its complaint about not having an adequate opportunity to respond to TVNZ's
request for information before the item's broadcast on 19 June, the Club said that it did
not receive notice of the impending broadcast of the allegations on the Holmes
programme planned for 6.30pm on 19 June until approximately 3.30pm that day. That,
it wrote, was a totally inadequate time frame in which to respond.
TVNZ responded that its staff had spent a considerable part of that day trying to contact
Mr Quinn. Mr Quinn was then President of the Club and the item, as well as containing
the allegations about the Club's administration, dealt with some of Mr Quinn's other
activities. TVNZ continued:
Mr Quinn was eventually contacted in mid-afternoon and a list of questions was
faxed to him, together with a request that he, or an appointed spokesperson for
the Club, appear in an on camera interview as part of the programme.
TVNZ said that Mr Quinn faxed a reply requesting more time and another message was
received from the Club's solicitors. The contents of both messages were included in a
statement read by the presenter at the conclusion of the item on 19 June.
In view of the earlier item on Mr Quinn's professional activities, the Authority can
understand why the Holmes programme sought Mr Quinn's response personally. The
Authority can also understand why the Club felt that the programme was being unfair to
it. The Club has full-time staff who could have been contacted directly and asked to
supply a spokesperson. That spokesperson could have responded to the allegations
made by the members interviewed and would have been able to describe the processes
involved in the club's administration and, specifically, the procedures involved in the
sale of McKendrick's Paddock. The spokesperson would have had an opportunity thus
to provide a detailed balancing account to the "fait accompli" allegation.
In its determination of the Club's complaint, the Authority considers that the issue for
resolution is whether, given the range of allegations of wrongdoings, the Club was
given a sufficient opportunity to respond to comply with the requirements of standard
G6.
The Authority acknowledges that the item concluded with the presenter reading a letter
from the club's solicitors which said that the matters had been considered and resolved
at the club's annual meeting. This point has been taken into account in reaching the
following decision.
However, the Authority does not consider that the presenter's reading of the Club's
letter was sufficient. The items on 11 and 19 June raised serious matters about Mr
Quinn. In the Authority's opinion, the allegations about the Club's administration were
raised by TVNZ during the second item in order to expand on the matters to which Mr
Quinn would be required, and expected, to respond. In other words, the interviews
with the dissatisfied Club members and their views on the Club's administration were
somewhat peripheral to the principal focus of the item. In the Authority's opinion, the
interviews with the members were mainly directed to question further Mr Quinn's
veracity and competence, both specifically as a supplier of veterinary products, and
generally as a person whose interests included the position as President of the Auckland
Trotting Club.
This focus gave rise to proceedings which have been dealt with elsewhere. Because the
allegations about the Club, in addition to raising questions about Mr Quinn, brought the
Club's administration into serious question, the Authority considers that the broadcaster
had an obligation to obtain, in addition to Mr Quinn's response, a reply from the Club's
administration. Because of TVNZ's persistent focus on Mr Quinn, the Authority is of
the view that the Club was not given an adequate opportunity to respond to the claimed
wrongdoings. As a consequence, the Authority concludes that the broadcast of an item
on 19 June resulted in an item which was both unbalanced and unfair to the Club.
For the above reasons, the Authority upholds the complaint that the
broadcast by Television New Zealand Limited of an item on Holmes on
19 June 1990 breached standard G6 of the Television Code of
Broadcasting Practice.
As noted above, the Authority declines to determine the complaints
which allege a breach of standards G1 and G14 and it subsumes the
complaint under G4 into standard G6. It declines to uphold the alleged
breach of standards G7, G11(i) and G19.
Having upheld a complaint, the Authority may impose an order under s.13(1) of the
Broadcasting Act 1989. The Authority is somewhat critical of the apparently cavalier
approach taken by TVNZ in its efforts to comply with the requirements in the standards
for balance and fairness in respect of the alleged wrongdoings at the Auckland Trotting
Club. However, it stops short of imposing an order in all the circumstances.
Signed for and on behalf of the Authority
Judith Potter
Chairperson
27 February 1997
Appendix
Auckland Trotting Club's Formal Complaint to Television New Zealand
Limited – 3 July 1990
The solicitors for the Auckland Trotting Club made a formal complaint to Television
New Zealand Ltd about items on TV One's Holmes programme broadcast at 6.30pm on
11 and 19 June 1990.
The item on 11 June was introduced with references to drug abuse, race horses and
people in high places. The item's visuals included Alexandra Park which the reporter
described as the home of the Auckland Trotting Club. The item focussed primarily on
Mr Terry Quinn, then President of the Auckland Trotting Club, and no allegations were
made about the Club itself.
The item on 19 June, which referred back to the 11 June programme, included
interviews with some dissatisfied members of the Auckland Trotting Club who alleged
a number of wrongdoings in the Club's administration. One of the four members
interviewed was a member of the Club's Management Committee and the other three
were former committee members.
The complainant acknowledged that the 11 June item made no allegations in regard to
the Auckland Trotting Club. However, by virtue of the item's introduction and
references, the complainant asserted that viewers may have been left with the mistaken
impression that the Club was in some way associated with the allegations about the
misuse of drugs. Asserting that the item was unbalanced, a public explanation
distinguishing Mr Quinn from the club and an apology to the Club was requested.
The item of 19 June, the complainant continued, was poorly presented and had made
the following allegations:
1) of wrongdoings in the Club;
2) of deposal of members in a controversial ballot;
3) of members seeking an enquiry into the Club's administration;
4) of reservations among some members about the Club's administration;
5) of members being kept in the dark about the costs of the new grandstand;
6) that carpet and appliances may have been stolen; and
7) that the sale of McKendrick's Paddock occurred without the prior
knowledge and approval of the then Committee members.
The Club asserted that the item had presented no evidence in support of these
allegations and, if there was no basis for them, it demanded an urgent and extensive
public apology.
In a letter dated 10 July, the Club's solicitors complained that the programme by
requesting a response at 3.30pm on 19 June, had not given the Club an adequate
opportunity to respond to the allegations.
The Club was advised in a letter from TVNZ dated 31 July that the complaint did not
indicate any broadcasting standards which had been breached. In a letter in response
dated 7 August 1990, the Club's solicitors associated its complaint with the following
standards:
1) The inadequate time in which the Club was asked to respond breached
standard 4 of the Television Code of Broadcasting Practice.
2) The item on 11 June breached standard 11(i) which prohibits the broadcast
of a programme which may mislead viewers.
3) The broadcast of the 19 June programme which gave rise to the complaints
listed 1–7 above breached standards 1, 4, 6, 7, 11, 12 and 15. The letter
repeated the point made in the 3 July letter of formal complaint that the
allegations broadcast on the 19 June item were not supported with evidence.
The letter continued:
(c) In so doing, the programme has failed to deal truthfully with the
facts and has been inaccurate. Since those allegations related to
our client, the programme failed to deal justly and fairly with
our client. There was an absence of balance, impartiality and
fairness;
(d) To state a fact which, upon close analysis of the supporting
material is not then substantiated, is a deceptive programme
practice taking advantage of the confidence viewers have in the
integrity of broadcasting. It further, when considered as a
whole, simulated news or events in such a way as to mislead
viewers;
(e) It was not presented accurately, objectively or impartially.
Further Correspondence
The complainant, by letter dated 28 September 1990, referred the complaint to the
Authority under s.8(b) of the Broadcasting Act 1989 as TVNZ had not responded
within the statutory time limit of 60 working days. Following correspondence between
the Authority, the complainant and TVNZ, TVNZ's Complaints Committee dealt with
the complaint on 17 October 1990.
In a letter to the Authority dated 26 October 1990, TVNZ explained that there were a
number of unsatisfactory aspects of the complaint - including the wording of the
relevant legislation. Further, not until the complainant's letter of 26 July was there any
reference to the legislation and only in its letter of 7 August was the complainant explicit
about the alleged breaches of the standards.
In these circumstances, TVNZ argued, the statutory time limit of 60 working days
should have begun on 7 August and its response was within this limit.
TVNZ's Response to the Formal Complaint – 17 October 1990
TVNZ began by explaining that the first item, on 11 June, focussed on the operation of
the firm Vetmed Laboratories Ltd and the company's governing director, Mr Terry
Quinn, who at the time was President of the Auckland Trotting Club. The 19 June
item, TVNZ continued, was divided into two parts. The first segment featured four
dissatisfied members of the Auckland Trotting Club who made the allegations noted and
the second segment dealt with the activities of the Club president, Mr Quinn.
In relation to the complaint that the 11 June item associated Vetmed's activities with
those of the Club, the introduction of the script was quoted in full. The letter explained:
The Complaints Committee was of the view that from a journalistic point of view
it was both legitimate and necessary to establish Mr Quinn's links with one of the
country's leading trotting clubs in order to properly place the story in context.
Further, it was recorded, allegations about the improper use of animal medicines
directed at Mr Quinn increased in importance when the person involved was a trotting
club president. The Committee believed a viewer would distinguish between the Club
and Mr Quinn's company and, as the complainant noted, no allegations were made in
respect of the Club. Consequently, although the Club's image risked being tarnished
by its President's activities, as the programme did not mislead, it did not breach
standard 11(i).
With regard to the 19 June item, by way of introduction TVNZ said that the suggestion
that all was not well with one of the country's biggest racing clubs was a valid topic for
investigation. It then dealt with points 1–7 raised by the complainant.
1) The item did not allege wrongdoings – it reported the concerns of four
club members.
2) The club members raised the point that the ballot was controversial. As the
four were the first members not to be re-elected in 100 years, that would
suggest an unusual situation.
3) The members who appeared on the item were seeking an urgent inquiry into
the club's administration.
4) As the item noted, lack of accountability by the club's administration was
one of the issues about which the members interviewed were concerned.
5) The four members were adamant that they had not been kept informed about
some matters such as the grandstand's cost and, further, believed that
information had been deliberately withheld from them.
6) The reporter had investigated thoroughly the disappearance of the carpet and
the electrical appliances and felt justified in asking whether they were stolen.
7) The members interviewed insisted that they had not been kept informed
about, nor had they approved of, the sale of McKendrick's Paddock.
Regarding the complaint that the Club had an inadequate opportunity to respond, the
Committee noted that extensive efforts had been made on the day to locate Mr Quinn.
When contacted he had been faxed a list of questions for both himself personally and as
Club spokesperson. A summary of the replies in response from Mr Quinn and the
complainant's solicitors was read by Mr Holmes at the conclusion of the item.
Accordingly, the TVNZ concluded, the programme had acted properly.
The Complaints Committee then dealt with the alleged breaches of the standards. No
evidence was found to justify a breach of standard 1 which requires factual truth and
accuracy. The item, it was added, was the messenger for some members' concerns.
The item had dealt justly and fairly with people referred to (standard 4) as both the
President and the Club were given a fair opportunity to respond.
Further, the Committee did not find any breaches of standards 6, 7, 11, 12 and 15.
Auckland Trotting Club's Complaint to the Broadcasting Standards
Authority – 24 October 1990
As the Club was dissatisfied with the decision of TVNZ's Complaints Committee, it
referred the complaint to the Broadcasting Standards Authority under s.8(a) of the
Broadcasting Act 1989. Following correspondence in which the parties agreed to
accept that TVNZ's response was within the statutory time limit, in a letter dated 25
January 1991 the Club's solicitors explained the reasons for the Club's dissatisfaction
with TVNZ's decision.
In regard to the 11 June item the complainant accepted that the reference to Mr Quinn's
position as Club President was appropriate. However, the Club maintained that the
item's unnecessary emphasis on the connection between Mr Quinn and the Club may
have well misled a viewer into believing that the Club was significantly involved in the
allegations made against Mr Quinn.
Regarding the 19 June item, the club repeated its complaint that the interviewees did not
support the reporter's statements made on the item and it expanded a little on the seven
points made in its letter of complaint.
It concluded on this point:
There is accordingly a trend within the programme whereby statements and
allegations are made by the reporter or presenter which statements and allegations
are unsupported by the persons interviewed.
The letter repeated the complaint that the items breached standards 1, 4, 6, 11, 12 and
15 of the Television Code of Broadcasting Practice. In dealing with the point
concerning inadequate time to respond, the Club noted that it was not concerned with
Mr Quinn. It queried at what time the decision had been made to broadcast the show on
19 June in view of the fact that it appeared that TVNZ had been investigating the story
for some days.
The complainant finished by responding to each of TVNZ's findings about the
standards which were allegedly breached by the broadcast.
Regarding factual truth and accuracy, the complainant stated that the:
... complaint remains that statements were made by the Show which were
stronger and different to the content of the interviews with the persons concerned
which interviews presumably were intended to support the statements that have
been made by the programme;
It continued by stating that the Club was not given a reasonable opportunity to respond;
that the Complaints Committee did not respond properly to the complaint about balance,
impartiality and fairness; that the item was deceptive when the reporter extended the
interviewees' remarks; that the entire item was simulation of news or events which
misled viewers; that the news was not presented accurately, objectively and impartially
and, with regard to the item's editing, the complainant asked:
If those extracts were truly a true reflection of the views of the persons
interviewed then why is it that they did not support the statements made by the
presenter and the reporter?
The complainant's solicitors, upon completing the Authority's Complaint Referral
Form, requested that they present their complaint orally because this was the best way
to consider a complicated and important issue.
TVNZ's Response to the Authority – 9 May 1991
TVNZ was invited by the Authority on 29 January 1991 to respond to this referral. It
did so in a letter dated 9 May 1991.
It began by commenting that the complaint covered two distinct items on the Holmes
programme broadcast eight days apart. The first programme focussed on a veterinary
supply company called Vetmed Laboratories Ltd of which Mr Terry Quinn, the then
President of the Auckland Trotting Club, was the managing director, and the second
dealt with the allegations by four dissatisfied members about the administration of the
Auckland Trotting Club. Although the two separate complaints had been "rolled into
one" by the complainant's solicitors, the only common links were the horse racing
industry and Mr Terry Quinn.
The introduction to the 11 June item, TVNZ wrote, explained clearly the item's focus.
With regard to the reference to the Auckland Trotting Club, TVNZ recorded:
It is submitted that it was desirable and legitimate to identify Mr Quinn's position
in the trotting industry. The information that was to be conveyed was clearly
much more newsworthy because it involved – not an anonymous veterinary
warehouse proprietor – but the top office holder in the country's largest trotting
club.
The link with the Auckland Trotting Club needed to be made to give the itemrelevance, and once that link was established there was no further reference to the
Club.
TVNZ recalled that the Club originally complained specifically that the reference to the
Club breached standard 11(i) which prohibits the simulation of views which might
mislead or alarm. TVNZ argued that in view of the item's contents and script it was
difficult to accept that the public would have been either misled or alarmed.
In regard to the complaint about the item broadcast on the 19 June, TVNZ explained the
journalistic process involved and maintained that the reporter's statements were accurate
summaries of the comments from the dissatisfied Club members.
TVNZ then dealt with the seven specific points first raised in the Club's letter of
complaint dated 3 July 1990:
1) Regarding the allegation about wrongdoings, TVNZ emphasised that the
allegations were stated to be in the Club, not by the Club, and they were of
concern to the four members interviewed.
2) The members' defeat in a controversial ballot, TVNZ stated, was an
indisputable fact – not an allegation. It added that they were apparently the
first members in the Club's 100 year history not to be re-elected to the
management committee.
3) The reporter had referred to the members' desire for an inquiry as this point
was established as a fact. This point had been confirmed by the members'
solicitor.
4) It was also stated as a fact that these members had reservations about the
Club's administration as the reporter was told of this by them.
5) The reporter had also said that the members had been deliberately kept in the
dark as this summarised what he had been told by the men and their
solicitor.
6) The reporter's comment about the possibly stolen carpet and appliances
paraphrased the comment from the members and their solicitor.
7) The comments about the sale of McKendrick's Paddock was also a
summary of the members' comments to the reporter.
In summary, TVNZ wrote:
In essence none of the material constituted the opinion of the reporter. All of itwas an accurate summation of the views held by the four men involved. The
interview extracts were, without exception, designed to enlarge on the position
the four men were seen to be taking.
In regard to the complaint about the absence of a reasonable opportunity to respond,
TVNZ stated that Mr Quinn was, at the time, the Club President and the obvious
spokesperson. Further TVNZ wondered why the club now took the attitude of being
unconcerned about Mr Quinn.
TVNZ submitted that as Mr Quinn had issued defamation proceedings about the two
items on Holmes and that as the proceedings traversed similar matters, the Authority
should either defer the determination of the concerns until the conclusion of those
proceedings or decline to determine the complaint.
Auckland Trotting Club's Final Comments to the Authority – 12 July
1991
Observing that the item involved a journalist reporting an allegation followed by
comment from a Club member in support, the Club noted:
On numerous occasions the content of the interview did not support the extentor more serious nature of the allegation raised by the reporter/presenter.
In the Club's opinion, that was improper.
The sale of McKendrick's paddock was used as a specific example. Where the
reporter's summary said that the land had been sold without the committee members'
knowledge and approval, the interviews referred to the approval of the sale at a
committee meeting. There the members approved the sale, although they felt that the
sale was a fait accompli. The Club recorded:
The public perception of the land having been sold without their knowledge or
approval as against their having had knowledge of the sale and having approved
the sale, but in circumstances where they felt they had no other option are quite
different.
Further Correspondence
The Authority requested further information from the complainant about the Club's
processes leading to the sale of McKendrick's Paddock. In a letter dated 27 August,
1991, the Authority was sent a copy of the minutes of the Club's Committee Meeting
for 2 June 1989.
The minutes record that a subcommittee had earlier been established to finalise the sale
of the paddock for a sum not less than $3.8 million. The subcommittee's report was
considered "in committee" at the meeting on 2 June and it was resolved to sell the
paddock for not less than $3.75 million and another subcommittee was given the
authority to negotiate the sale.
The complainant stated in the accompanying letter:
Accordingly, in response to the TVNZ contention (that the sale was not approved
at the meeting but the decision had already been taken), clearly this is quite
inaccurate. The meeting was called to approve the sale and authorise a
subcommittee to negotiate the same.
When asked to comment on the Club's letter in a reply dated 6 September 1991, TVNZ
began:
[T]here is clearly a conflict of facts and a serious question as to the veracity of the
racing club's minutes.
First, two of the dissatisfied club members who appeared on the Holmesprogramme said that the meeting on 2 June had been held at extremely short
notice and without the seven days notice required by the Club rules.
Secondly, the dissatisfied members stated that the proposal to sell the land had
failed to obtain the best price, that they regarded their role as merely being to
rubber stamp the proposal, and that their opposition to the sale was not recorded
in the minutes. The letter added that the Club minutes at the time were frequently
inaccurate.
In view of these allegations, the Authority requested the Club to confirm, preferably by
affidavit, that the minutes of the 2 June 1989 meeting were a true and correct record.
The Club, in a letter dated 7 October 1991, provided affidavits from seven of the eleven
members present at the meeting. The other four were the dissatisfied members
interviewed by TVNZ. Each affidavit attested to the veracity of the affidavit provided
by the Club's Chief Executive who had also attended the meeting. In addition, the Club
provided a separate record of the "in committee" discussion at the meeting and recorded:
It is evident that there was open debate on whether the sale should be approved or
not. In the end the majority approved the sale and that became the decision of the
committee.
As an exhibit to the affidavit, the Chief Executive also provided minutes of the
Committee meeting held on 20 June 1989 at which the 2 June minutes were confirmed.
In addition, an extract of the Club rules were attached which disclosed that there was no
time requirement in the calling of Committee meetings.
The Club provided the following summary of events:
7. You will appreciate from the contents of the various affidavits that
those persons present have absolutely no doubt about the manner in which the
sale of McKendrick's Paddock was advanced. The position quite simply is that
the Club had been considering selling McKendrick's paddock. Various
subcommittees of the committee had been assigned the responsibility of
advancing the sale in a preliminary way. Just prior to the meeting of 2 June it
was the finance subcommittee of which Mr McLean was a member which had
then been responsible for reporting back to the committee with recommendations.
That subcommittee had discussions with the One Tree Hill Borough Council and
had received an indication from the Council that it would pay a certain figure for
the land provided any agreement for such purchase was entered into as a matter of
urgency.
8. The finance subcommittee resolved to put a recommendation to the
committee that it sell to the Council and it was primarily for the purpose of
considering this recommendation that the meeting of 2 June was called.
9. At the meeting there was a full debate as to whether a sale to the Council
should be entered into. It is abundantly clear at that time that there were no
obligations arising in respect of the parties and further, the entire issue as to
whether to sell the paddock or not was debated at the meeting. If the committee
had decided not to proceed then that would have been an end to the matter. The
record reflects and it is the case that the majority approved the sale and this
became the resolution of the committee.
10. There can be absolutely no justification for the assertion that the land
was sold without the knowledge or approval of those committee members who
spoke against the resolution.
While waiting for the Club's response to its request for confirmation that the minutes
were accurate, the Authority received a letter from TVNZ dated 8 October 1991 in
which it advised that the dissatisfied members interviewed on the Holmes programme
reiterated their point that no minutes had been taken at the 2 June meeting and that the
minutes presented to the Authority were not a true representation of the meeting's
events.