This scenario's idea comes out of an email dialog I was having with forum member.
Scenario
Boats A, B, C and D competed in a [multi-race] regatta, finishing placing in that order. The protest time limit passed an hour prior and the skippers were in line for beers after the race [regatta]. Boats A and B were talking ahead in line of Boats C and D.
Boats C and D overhear Boat A and B talking about an incident between them in today's regatta (neither Boat C or D saw this incident). Boat B asks Boat A if she knew she (Boat A) broke a rule (Part 2 or 31) and if so, why didn't Boat A take a penalty like she should? Boat A clearly states that, yes, she knows she broke the rule at that time, but since Boat B didn't protest her on the water, Boat A figured Boat B didn't care and so Boat A didn't do her turns or take a penalty.
Boats C and D are pretty disgusted by this and confirm with each other what they heard. A few moments later, after they get their beer and are away from the beer line, Boat C approaches Boat A telling her that she overheard the conversation, that Boat A knew she broke a rule in a race today and did not take a penalty and therefore Boat C is going to protest her for breaking Rule 2.
Boat C emails a written protest [for a breach of Rule 2] to the email address provided in the SI's within 90 min's of when she overheard the conversation. The protest filing describes Boat C and D overhearing the conversation where Boat A admits breaking a rule and not taking a penalty because Boat B did not protest her. Boat C lists Boat D and Boat B as witnesses.
Q1: Is the protest valid? Why/Why-not?
Q2: If the protest is valid ...
- What limits if any are there on the PC?
- What is the "incident"?
- May/must/should the PC take evidence about the rule breach on the water?
- Based on information learned in the hearing of the valid protest, may a PC protest Boat A regarding the alleged rule breach on the water?
- If so, are there special conditions for the qualifying "information learned"?
Q3: What if Boat A refuses to attend the hearing and the PC proceeds under 63.3(b) where Boats B, C and D attend and confirm the content of the conversation?
1. No mention of a red flag. This was an incident in the racing area.
2. Within 90 minutes of the conversation indicates it's likely not sent quickly. If it was sent 10 or 15 minutes after learning of the incident, I would be ok extending the PTL. This is clearly a judgement call, but if it took 85 minutes, I don't see good reason to extend the PTL.
To the other points
a. I think the incident is the incident in the racing area, A's statement she knew she broke a rule.
b. If valid, the PC should take evidence about the rule breach on the water. - my opinion
c. If valid, the PC may protest boat A for the rule breach if the testimony is from boat A. I think A breaking rule xx and rule 2 is a fair outcome.
d. I don't think this is misconduct (yet).
e. Whether or not A attends, the PC needs to get to "clearly established" for rule 2.
Look at 60.1 (a):
A Boat may
(a) protest another boat, but not for an alleged breach of Part 2 or 31 UNLESS SHE WAS INVOLVED IN OR SAW THE INCIDENT.
Not valid.
This would be a good one for the Club Judge seminar.
I guess I'm slightly confused by how quickly and certainly this is being dismissed by some.
John F and Edith earlier stated:
While Angelo didn't say specifically what was in the emailed protest, the discussion that C had with A said that they were protesting for Rule 2. That's not in Part 2 ...
John F further stated it's invalid due to the "time limit RRS 61.3".
61.3 states "Other protests shall be delivered to the race office no later than two hours after the protestor receives the relevant information."
So ... what in 61.3 so clearly makes the protest invalid that it needs no explanation since the protest was turned in less than 2 hours after the party was informed of the incident?
Will
P1: Boat C's protest is a breach of Rule 2, NOT a rule of Part 2/31.
P2: Can't Boat A take the "retire" penalty at any time? Yes, turns-penalties are "at the time of the incident" but can Boat A retire after racing? Therefore, isn't the potential Rule 2 breach (lack of taking a penalty when a boat knows they broke a rule) "on going"?
P3: Since Boat C's protest is for Rule 2 and not for a breach of Part 2/31, why isn't this protest an "other protest" as detailed under 63.1 and therefore given a 2hr limit after "the protestor receives the relevant information"?
If not, then we have a bar talk, that is all.
Kim
PS .. I added some text to the OP to make that more clear.
Said Created: Today 21:03
This is not the same as RYA Appeal 1981/7, where the protesting boat observed the incident on the water and had the opportunity to hail and flag but did not do so.
I think that is permissible.
Sorry for that confusion . .I see where that wasn't clear. I added some text to make it a multi-race regatta. - Ang
I think, overall, Boat A is at risk of being found to have broken rule 2. I'm not sure this would rise to the level of misconduct though.
If, on the other hand the protest committee went the RRS 69 route they have a wider range of actions lesser than DNE.
But I tend to agree with Kim, this would be best resolved in the bar rather than the protest room.
Rule 63.1 “[…] The protest committee shall hear all protests and requests for redress that have been delivered to the race office …”
The PC received a written protest and so it shall be heard. It’s not up to the PC to decide what would have been better or to dismiss the filing out of hand as bar talk.
The OP question is not “what should Boat C do’? The OP questions are how should a PC proceed given the facts in the OP that they have received a written protest to the race office.
I think that's a stretch.
The fundamental principle of sportsmanship is that when a boat breaks a rule and is not exonerated, she will promptly take an appropriate penalty.
So the incident occurred 'promptly' after the Part A/rule 31 breach.
Absolutely it's hearsay. Hearsay is words spoken or written by a person other than the witness appearing. What you describe is 'second-hand hearsay', which the better textbooks describe as an oxymoron.
But this is irrelevant. RRS 63.6(a) requires a protest committee to take hearsay evidence, and give it the weight it deserves.
And by the sound of the OP, it's pretty good hearsay evidence, although I would be very very strict in getting out the precise words and corroboration between C, D, and B that were said to amount to an admission by A that the knew she broke a rule.
I'm inclined to think this, but I'd like to see a bit more discussion about it.
I'm also inclined to think that if the protest committee was minded to find the protest invalid they should proceed under RRS 69.
Once the hares start running about RRS 2/69, I think the protest committee will do well to take the matter to a conclusion.
Agree
Agree
Under the old RRS it wouldn't be 'gross misconduct'. See Case 138 and the Misconduct Guidance: it's certainly misconduct, at whatever low level the protest committee might think it to be.
The incident in question was an upwind crossing. A (on port) didn't quite make the cross, and B (on starboard) ducked by a few inches to avoid. A looked back at B, and B hailed "sail on." A did not take a penalty.
At the bar, after the protest deadline, A brings B a beer and says "I really thought I was going to make that cross, but you had me there if you wanted to protest. Thanks for letting it slide."
B responds: "No worries, we've all been there. You were sailing a great race and I wasn't about to tank that over a couple inches. You would have still beaten me if you'd lee-bowed instead of trying to cross, and I could tell you thought you were crossing clean going into it. I'll beat you on the water in the next one. Thanks for the beer - next round's on me."
C overhears. C is not particularly disgusted - C has been on both sides of similar scenarios over the years, as such things are not particularly uncommon in this fleet. But C is just a bit less than a DNE's worth of points behind A, and C really wants to move up in the standings. C promptly files a protest for a Rule 2 violation.
At the hearing, A admits: (1) that A fouled B; (2) that A knew that A fouled B; and (3) that A probably should have taken a penalty. A says that A thought we were all friends here and it wasn't a big deal, but A will be more careful next time.
Does the PC have discretion to do anything other than find a Rule 2 violation and score A DNE? Does the outcome change if A retired immediately after learning of C's protest?
Has B also broken Rule 2 by encouraging A to sail on when B knew that A broke a rule?
I know there are some who think A and B are behaving badly, and I understand the the arguments for that. Mostly I'm just curious about whether the rules compel a particular outcome here. (And I'm not suggesting that the same outcome is necessarily appropriate here as in the original post.)
To decide whether A was in breach of RRS 2 we need her understanding of the rules. If the conversation makes it clear that A knew she was in breach of a rule and she decided to not take a penalty, then they maybe have enough for a hearing. But the defence for A would be very easy, because she could just say that it was a grey area call between breach or not. Even a prior admission of guilt can be reversed.
We would need to protest everyone for RRS2 after a valid protest if the mental image of the protestee isn't the deciding factor. That's why I would be uncomfortable continuing under 63.3b without really good evidence on hand. "clearly established that these principles have been violated" This demands a higher burden of proof than normal cases.
Retiring is an appropriate action if A comes to the conclusion that their actions broke a rule. This retirement need to be taken promptly after A comes to the realisation. Which maybe hours or days after the competition. If she doesn't, then she is in breach of RRS2.
Good question. I certainly think there's no foul if B hails "cross" before A commits to the crossing. But let's say B hailed "starboard" leading up to the crossing, indicating that B would prefer that A tack. B holds course long enough to make clear that the boats would collide if B did not alter course. B states at the hearing that B intended to assert right of way and did to wish to allow A to cross, that B believed A fouled B, and that B held course to be sure that A knew that A would not have crossed cleanly, but that B did not want to pursue a protest after the incident occurred.
I think that the rule writers understood the issues that are coming up in this forum.
I don't want to get into the moral minefield about 'tack or cross'.
EDIT: John C beat me to it.
But I think there's a 'rules' solution to this.
IF B changes course before she 'needs to take avoiding action' RRS 16.1 requires her to give A room to keep clear, and the following cases tell us that when a right-of-way boat is giving room to keep clear and the other boat does not keep clear, the other boat is exonerated for failing to keep clear. See the bolded last sentences in the US Appeals. Authorities:
Case 146
USA Appeal US119
If, OTOH, B needs to take avoiding action before she changes course, the A has already broken RRS 10, BUT, that depends on the reasonable apprehension of B (Case 50), and how is a third party going to prove that?
Please, let us not tweak the scenario here. We’ve had several other posts about boats waving others thru. The OP has plenty to discuss.
The conversation was Boat B asking Boat A why they didn’t take a penalty. That is inconsistent with your “tweak”. Also, I purposely did not state the rule breach.
Apologies to all. - Ang
Thanks for a great topic.
Created: Today 00:44
Said the arch-tweaker <g>.
C is the one that takes the bait.
P.S. As I said earlier, this should have been just a bar talk over a beer.
Are you, by any chance , saying that a protest alleging that A broke RRS 2 by not taking a penalty when she knew she had broken a Part A rule necessarily includes an allegation that she broke the Part A rule?
If it is valid, how does the PC properly proceed?
It’s an interesting question I think.
Just because you got dinged for tweaking doesn't mean you don't get an answer.
No. Once the protest committee has proof, in the form of A's admission that
That's proof that she broke RRS 2 and the protest committee must penalise her DNE.
Not unless A can convince the protest committee that she didn't know she had broken a rule at the time of the incident, only realised it afterwards, and then promptly took a penalty.
What recognized principle of sportsmanship do you say B failed to comply with?
Sam Wheeler
RRS 60.1 says a boat may protest a boat... .
No rule requires a boat to protest. Ever.
What I’m saying is that 60.1 is a pretty black letter piece of the RRS. I think the bar is very high for a PC to allow the hearsay to bring them down the path to a Rule 2 conclusion. There are many valid reasons why a competitor might choose not to protest a boat that they feels fouled them. One is contained in the premise to this senario. Boat D I think is close to them in points and keeping boat B in the game puts an additional point between them. Many situations are close and a simple statement in the bar of an accusation and an admission from the keep clear boat doesn’t get me too exercised.
I sailed for many years with a gentleman who refused to protest. He wouldn’t even keep a flag on the boat. I don’t agree with that but was his right.
As far a process is concerned, a PC has to have a hearing. If, In the Validity phase the protestor told me that they were not involved and did not directly witness the incident I would be hard pressed to allow the hearing to go forward if Rule 2 were not in play. Bullying or coercing a competitor to not protest might be the only way I would find the protest valid.
The PC may not protest the boat on its own at that point as 60.3a does not allow a PC to protest a boat as a result of information learned in an invalid protest.
Agree.
Those facts don't go to validity. If there's a valid protest there's no question about whether to hold a hearing or not.
How?
OK, the words of the admission in evidence may be weak or doubtful, but that would go to what exactly was originally admitted.
I don't see how any later argument can 'reverse a plain admission if it was made (in a conversational context).
RRS 63.3(b) is about proceeding with a hearing at the very start before there is any evidence.
OK, I think it might be open to a protest committee, having initially decided to proceed in the absence of the protestee, to stop in the course of the hearing, decide that because of the seriousness of the breach it was no longer appropriate to proceed in the absence of the protestee, and change its initial decision and not not proceed with the hearing.
Another approach would be to finalise the hearing in the absence of the protestee and if the decision was adverse, to deal the attention of the protestee to the possibility of reopening the hearing under RRS 63.3(b) if the protestee demonstrates unavoidable absence (and not be too hard to convince about 'unavoidable').
You getting into deep deep waters of legal philosophy there. But you're talking about 'standards of proof, not 'burden' of proof.
Given RRS 64.1(a) the standard of proof even for RRS 2 is balance of probabilities. Only for RRS 69 is it any different, that is 'comfortable satisfaction'
I think 'principles', 'recognised' and 'clearly establish' are just element that have to be proved.
In the OP scenario A know she broke the rule at the time.
Generally I agree with your statement.
Maybe not half way through a RRS 2 protest hearing.
Could the PC penalize A for her Part 2 breach with a DSQ but let her off the hook for Rule 2 (if they conclude that A didn’t have "guilty knowledge" of her breach?
I had said in the OP that Boat A “refuses to attend the hearing”. I meant that to convey that Boat A is not going to attend no matter any accommodation by the PC.
Pay at the door as you come in.
No contribution, no conclusions for you <g>.
I would start by warning Boat A of the following, in hope that she decides to 'take a penalty' by retiring before any hearing is set up.
Q1: Is the protest valid? Why/Why-not?
Yes. The protest is valid.
The protest meets all the requirements of Rules 60.1(a), 61.1, 61.2 and 61.3. It does not conflict with any of the restrictions.
Since this is not a protest about the Part 2 rule or Rule 31, the limit of 60.1(a) doesn't apply.
Q2: If the protest is valid ..? What limits if any are there on the PC?
There are no special limits on the PC. The question is 'has Boat A broken a fundamental principal of fairness and sportsmanship?'.
What is the "incident"?
The incident is "failing to take a penalty in keeping with the fundamental principals of fairness and sportsmanship".
May/must/should the PC take evidence about the rule breach on the water?
The Part 2 breach must be stated as a fact in order to logically support the breach of Rule 2 based on a failure to take a penalty. However, an admission of guilt can essentially be given 100% weight (unless there is any intimidation or foul malice at play or the testimony is so clearly flawed, it can't be true), so facts need only be something like:
Facts Found
Once again, the rule alleged rule broken is Rule 2, not the Part 2 rule breach. The Part 2 breach is given.
Based on information learned in the hearing of the valid protest, may a PC protest Boat A regarding the alleged rule breach on the water?
Yes. 60.3(a) says the protest committee may protest a boat. There is no limit to a protest committee protesting a boat if the information is learned at a valid protest. But doing so separately is moot.
The fact and conclusion that Boat A broke a Part 2 rule is a requirement in a Rule 2 'failing to take a penalty for breaking a rule' conclusion. Anyway, rule 64.2 requires that when the PC decides that a boat that is a party to a protest hearing has broken a rule and is not exonerated, it shall disqualify her.
So the Part 2 breach would be rolled into the same conclusion for the Rule 2 breach.
Conclusions
If so, are there special conditions for the qualifying "information learned"?
The phrase 'Information learned' (from 60.3(a)) is not relevant. The protest is made per 60.1(a). "A boat may protest another boat."
Q3: What if Boat A refuses to attend the hearing and the PC proceeds under 63.3(b) where Boats B, C and D attend and confirm the content of the
63.6(d) says the protest committee shall base its decision on the evidence presented. If Boat A does not attend, then no evidence from her side is presented. The absent boat will surely lose.
-------------------------------------------
Now, down to whether Boat A broke Rule 2. This is tough.
I would draw from RYA here. Case RYA 1990/8
There is no obligation on a right-of-way boat to protest when another boat has not kept clear. That she did not protest in
no way diminishes the fact that the keep-clear boat has broken a rule. Likewise, the intentions of the right-of-way boat
have no bearing on the matter.
The appellant should note that the Basic Principle, Sportsmanship and the Rules, says that when a boat knows that she
had broken a rule, she must take a penalty, whether or not the right-of-way boat intends to protest. The appellant therefore
broke a principle of sportsmanship, and is to be penalised further with a non-excludable disqualification (DNE) for
breaking rule 2
Additionally, Case 138 says:
However, when the port-tack boat realizes that she has failed to keep clear, she has knowingly broken a rule and must take the appropriate penalty. Otherwise she has broken a recognized principle of sportsmanship (see the first Basic Principle, Sportsmanship and the Rules).
(I thought there was a Case or Q&A somewhere which basically concluded that despite a protest was invalid, since the boat herself learned she had the sailed the course wrong, the PC threatened her with Rule 2 hearing. Can anyone remember that?)
So in OP, Boat A admitted that she knew she broke the rule at the time of the incident. So there doesn't seem to be any discussion to have. She admitted she broke a rule and didn't take a penalty. She broke Rule 2
Just like we would expect a boat who knows she touched a mark to do a penalty even if no one saw her (that's what we teach our kids, right?), or a boat who learns after the Coastal race that she didn't sail the course to retire, Boat A should retire or face DNE.
-----------
Let's not extrapolate OPs scenario until we have satisfactorily solved OPs scenario.
Having looked at the various responses, and thought carefully about it, I'm going to change my ground on 'incidents' and validity.
I now think C's protest is straight up invalid for non-compliance with RRS 61.1(b).
Here are my reasons.
RYA 2003/3
The alleged breach is that A did not take her penalty promptly after the Part 2 breach. She can't remedy that by retiring later on.
I've concluded above that the protest is invalid because, RRS 61.1(a) requires, for an incident in the racing area, even though it was not observed by C, that C shall hail 'protest' and display a red flag. The exceptions to the early informing of the protestee for incidents the protestor did not observe in the racing area available to committee protest in RRS 61.1(b) are not available to protesting boats. C did not comply with this requirement.
Agree.
I don't get what Angelo was driving at with this question.
See my discussion above. There are 2 incidents. C hasn't validly protested either of them.
The protest committee certainly has to conclude that A broke a Part 2 rule before it can find that she was required to take a penalty.
Mmmm. Certainly if the admission was made in the protest hearing, or the hearsay admission was put to the protestee in the hearing and not denied.
I wouldn't be so definite about relying on the hearsay evidence alone: As I've said previously, I'd be listening quite carefully to the evidence of C, D, and B about the exact words used by A.
Agree, but could we not use 'moot'. It is an American legal term of art with a quite specific meaning that is really only understood by American lawyers.
But they've already DNE'd her. You can't be killed twice.
I think Angelo had in mind a protest by the protest committee, but I don't understand what problems he had in mind.
The usual purpose of a protest committee protest is to get a boat into the protest hearing as a party: If C's protest is valid A is already a party. Why would the protest committee want to protest her again?
So it's not tough at all.
Well anyone that refuses to come into my warm, welcoming protest room isn't starting out by attracting my sympathy.
Flat out refusal to come to a hearing of a sportsmanship protest looks a little like an evasive tactic, and might encourage me to proceed with the hearing in the party's absence.
I wasn’t attempting to drive at anything really. “No” are perfectly acceptable answers to both those questions.
In formulating the OP, I tried to anticipate questions a PC might ask themselves as they approached the issues inherent in this scenario.
On reflection … I was probably thinking a PC might recognize that it was the boat’s representative admitting to braking a rule and not taking a penalty, but then realize that the report of what was said (Boat C’s protest) came from a source with a conflict of interest. Therefore the PC couldn’t protest Boat A under 60.3(a) based on the information learned in Boat C’s protest filing.
I thought a PC might pause quickly to examine that question and once satisfied, move on.
I'd ask John Allan to again describe why he feels the RRS 2 violation is only brief and on the water, and where the word "promptly" comes into play. I understand that the Part 2 violation happens on the water, as does the failure to take a two turn penalty. However the boat is not suddenly sailing fairly once they pass the opportunity to take a 2 turns penalty. They could make the situation fair by retiring. From what I see at the moment (and I don't have much experience with RRS 2 or the relevant cases), this is an ongoing issue, and likely one that could be corrected by A retiring from that race.
Two more points: 1) as a PC, I'd want to see A retire rather than a DNE, as that's a heavy penalty for a relatively minor infraction and (2) As stated before I'd work really hard to be sure A in fact KNEW they had broken a rule and chose not to take a penalty, as opposed to say knowing that B ducked, but assuming they ducked because they felt it was a better tactical choice than forcing a lee-bow.
One more question that someone sorta brought up... what if the leeward jib trimmer (for example) knew that A fouled, but the helmsperson and tactician never fully understood this? Related, what if there was disagreement on the boat whether there was an actual infraction? The latter seems clear to me that they didn't "know", but in the former case, if one person on the boat KNOWS this to be the situation, does that mean the boat knows?
Does this partial rewording of RRS RRS 60.3(a) help:
While I thoroughly dislike this protest, I'm not grasping at technicalities to avoid hearing it. I'm just trying to apply the rules with precision.
A fundamental principle of sportsmanship is that when a boat breaks a rule and is not exonerated she will promptly take an appropriate penalty or action, which may be to retire.
The OP specifically refers to 'turns'
It may depend on the precise wording of the written protest including time and place of the 'incident' being alleged.
If the written protest alleged that the boat did not take a penalty at a time and place, being the time and place of the substantive incident, then that's the incident being protested and it's in the racing area and requires a hail and flag.
If the written protest expressly alleged that the boat did not comply with the fundamental principle that includes the 'promptly' requirement, then, likewise, I would take that to mean an incident in the racing area requiring a hail and flag.
If the written protest alleged more generally that the boat did not take a penalty, in a more open ended time frame, then I could be persuaded that the protest included a breach of RRS 2 other than in the racing area, in which case, I'd have to flip-flop my opinion about validity once again.
We don't get to make that choice
Once a written protest is delivered the protest committee must hear it.
If the protest committee finds that a boat broke RRS 2 The penalty shall be a disqualification that is not excludable.
We tried allowing protest committees discretion about DSQ/DNE for RRS 2 in the 2017 RRS, and promptly removed the discretion in 2021.
I don't agree that this, or any other breach of RRS 2 is a 'relatively minor infraction'. It's a breach of the one and only fundamental principle contained in the RRS, and it's a breach of sportsmanship which by the provision of only the DNE penalty in RRS 2, it implied to be a serious breach in any case.
I don't agree that a protest committee should be considering whether rules breaches are minor, major or anywhere in between, unless they are considering a DP, or a RRS 69 hearing.
You and I agree that the protest committee should be very careful about 'knowingness'
The RRS do not use the word 'know'.
Boat is defined as A sailboat and the crew on board.
Cases 47, 65, and 138 refer to boats 'knowing' things, so the concept of a boat corporately knowing something is abroad, and in common usage.
I agree that where one member of a crew 'knows' something and other members of the crew don't have that knowledge, then the boat 'knows' that thing, but that where there is direct disagreement between members of the crew of a boat, then the boat cannot be said to 'know' that thing.
However, bear in mind that knowledge is a mental state, and in the absence of admissions from crew of the boat, and lacking the trusty Brain-o-Scope may be very hard to prove.
In the OP scenario, however, there was a direct admission that she knew she broke a rule from Boat A.
There I was trying to be helpful.
Does the last line help?
In other words, a protest committee may not use its power to protest a boat to extend the scope of a protest to which that boat was already a party to another related incident.
A boat calls the RC and tells them they are retiring after racing or tells the PC that they are retiring, does the PC interrogate the boat and if they say they are retiring because they broke a rule of Part 2 or 31, the PC rejects the request to retire and tells the boat their only recourse now is to accept a DNE because they did not retire promptly?
PS: This goes to the on-going nature of Boat A’s breach of Rule 2.
But if a PC decides that a retired boat has broken Rule 2 it may decide that retirement is not the applicable penalty & further penalize her with a DNE.
I think a PRP under RRS T1 is even more to the point.
A boat can take a Post-Race Penalty at any time after the race until the beginning of a protest hearing involving the incident.
That is somewhat in tension with the 'promptly' requirement of the fundamental principle, but it's a well considered rule and I think the principle of 'up to the beginning of the hearing' should be applied to RET as well.
You said
The reason why a boat is retiring is nobody's business but her own. That's different from a PRP where a boat is required to identify the relevant incident, because a boat may need to take more than one PRP for different incidents, but she can only RET once
A boat does not 'request to retire': she just retires. A protest committee has no power to 'reject' anything about a boat retiring. A protest committee, having concluded, for example, that a boat broke RRS 2, can and should then conclude that RET is not an applicable penalty and that the boat is DNE.
And boats do not get to 'accept' a DNE.
A point of admin first.
The last line of my last post says... "Let's not extrapolate OPs scenario until we have satisfactorily solved OPs scenario."
The meaning is as John says to Nicholas, "We don't get to make that choice", and "In the OP scenario, however, there was a direct admission that she knew she broke a rule from Boat A."
In other words, all this talk about what Boat A really meant, or what his crew members know or don't know and all this guess work can be left out of this discussion.
If we all stick to what is given in the information in the Original Post (OP) for now, things will be easier.
------------------------------------
Since my last post, I have been mulling over John's disagreement with me on the one single but critical factor. The validity of the Rule 2 case. (I don't concur that the protest is the Part 2 bit, by the way.) It all boils down to this line in John's response to my last post.
I have considered a few aspects trying to identify why deep down, I feel this protest should be valid, but why John's very solid points and literal interpretations say otherwise.
1. I didn't use the word 'promptly' in my description of the incident being protested. I mentioned the incident being a more general failure of the application of the principals of sportsmanship and fairness.
2. I do think that retiring may be a valid penalty. (In fact, I've never really thought about rule 44.1 this deeply, but this raises a whole new discussion whether retiring for a breach other than 'damage or injury' or black-flag is considered taking a valid penalty! I've always thought so, but rule 44.1 could be interpreted as not saying that... well, we can discuss that another day.) Let's presume that retiring is a penalty a boat can impose on herself. It may not be ideal, but at least its better than not retiring. At least a boat's retirement after the race, could be thought of as bringing her breach of sportsmanship below the standard of 'a clearly established breach'.
3. When does the 'incident' of poor sportsmanship for not taking a penalty by retiring happen? Is it possible to interpret the 'incident' as being the on-going continuous situation all the while that Boat A has not taken a penalty. This would allow us to interpret that the incident was still happening at the bar when Boat C heard of Boat A's continuing failure to take a penalty.
4. It made me wonder if the word 'incident' in 61.2(b) is really simply only meaning 'What was the situation/occurrence/case of affairs leading to allegation of a rule breach?'
Then John mentioned his flip-flops.
Bingo. John had his first scenario in his mind as he responded to me. In my mind, this is a case of the latter scenario. (See my 1 above.) Hence our disagreement.
Here's how I see it:
The 'incident' of 'failing to comply with the principals of sportsmanship' can be considered to be ongoing while it is possible for the boat to retire. Thus, the requirement of 61.1(a) would be reduced to "The protesting boat shall inform the other boat at the first reasonable opportunity", that being based on when the boat learns of the rule breach. Thus, in my mind I see the Rule 2 protest as valid.
I think that the PC must present a rule 69.
And i think about these two pionts:
69.2 Action by a Protest Committee
(b) When a protest committee, from its own observation or from
information received from any source, including evidence taken
during a hearing, believes a person may have broken rule
69.1(a), it shall decide whether or not to call a hearing.
63.6 Taking Evidence and Finding Facts
(a) The protest committee shall take the evidence, including hearsay
evidence, of the parties present at the hearing and of their
witnesses and other evidence it considers necessary. However,
the committee may exclude evidence which it considers to be
irrelevant or unduly repetitive.
I think the last person who tried to prevent thread drift was King Canute.
And nobody has been more successful than he was since.
I haven’t chimed-in much with my opinions … just focused on kicking the ball back in play here and there, but I do think that acknowledging a boat’s ability to retire after racing is key here.
Before 90.3(e) was added in the last quad, we had a Q&A (can’t put my finger on it) that basically said that there was no time limit for a boat to acknowledge a breach of the rules and to retire. This left us open to standings changes long after the event.
90.3(e) closed that open door.
Back to our scenario … Boat C goes to Boat A and tells Boat A they are going to protest. But this time Boat A says, “You know what?… you are absolutely right … I should have taken a penalty. No need to protest me because I’m going to retire” .. and Boat A does exactly that.
As you say Ben, (and IMO) the rule 2 violation ceases at that moment, because I think in the broader sense most sailors would say that Boat A “did the right thing by retiring” at that point.
Ben, I wonder if you think maybe you’ve uncovered a “difference in kind” that my OP facts were insufficient to resolve?
You mention retiring bringing her breach below “clearly established”, but maybe the more effected phrase in Rule 2 is “recognized principles of sportsmanship and fair play”.
This goes to my last comment that I think most sailors would say that if Boat A retired, “she did the right thing”. That feels like Boat A is meeting a “recognized principle” to me.
So, now to my “difference in kind” comment …
In the OP, I purposely did not detail the incident. One could infer from the cordial tone between A and B in the beer-line, that Boat A’s breach wasn’t intentional or malicious. In our OP discussions, it was the lack of a penalty-taken which was the root of the Rule 2 breach, not the nature of the Part 2 or 31 breach itself. Though it is not stated as such in the rules (or any Cases that I’m aware), I believe it is common practice to accept retiring after finishing as “an appropriate penalty” and within the “recognized principles of sportsmanship and fair play” for a run of the mill Part 2/31 breach.
That said, there are Cases which detail Rule 2 breaches where the intent and character of the Part 2 breach itself, not the lack of a penalty-taken, is the root of the Rule 2. In those cases, retirement after finishing is insufficient because taken together (the breach + retire) does not meet “recognized principles of sportsmanship and fair play”.
PS: The above brings in Tim’s recent comment.
I essentially agree with you in a practical sense. In this case, by retiring, Boat A acted 99% within “recognized principles of sportsmanship and fair play”. That's good enough for me and most people.
However, there's a niggling 1%. It's the underlying fact that;
From OP:
At the end of the day Boat A should have exonerated 'promptly' on the water. Hence my careful wording to ensure that Boat A doesn't come out a saint!
This is different to say, a boat who learns after the race that she accidentally sailed the wrong course, so took a penalty. She is a saint. This Boat A knew at the time of the incident that she broke a rule and didn't take a penalty. So 1% badness remains on her rap sheet!
--------
Yes - there are (often) occasions when even retiring after the finish is an insufficient penalty.
If Boat A’s rule breach was run of the mill Part 2/31 and she took her penalty promptly, the worse she could score would be last place in the race (assuming she finishes).
On the other hand, Retiring will be scored either:
However, a Part 2/31 rule breach whose character breaks rule 2 faces a DNE regardless if she took a penalty promptly. Therefore retiring would be less of a penalty in a multi-race regatta.
Anyway … maybe that’s a way to put meat on the bones (and explain the “practical” application).
Rule 69, Misconduct
Generally, an action by a competitor that directly affects the fairness of the competition or failing to take an appropriate penalty when the competitor is aware of breaking a rule, should be considered under rule 2. Any action, including a serious breach of rule 2 or any other rule, that the committee considers may be an act of misconduct should be considered under rule 69.
Not taking a RRS 44 penalty or retiring directly affects the fairness of the competition by affecting the place or score of the boat and other boats.
It should be dealt with under RRS 2.
IMHO the breach described is not a serious breach deserving any greater penalty than DNE, so there is no need to go to RRS 69.
Said Created: Fri 01:18
IF the protest form did not identify a particular time during the race, then that's the second type of breach, it's ongoing and no hail and flag is necessary., but the protestee can avoid DNE by taking a PRP up to the time of the start of the protest hearing or RET at any time before the protest is decided. (unless the protest committee decided that that also was unsportsmanlike).
Let's see if this has legs Here's an updated scenario.
What should the protest committee's decision be?
Q&A 2017-007, still on RRS.org
https://www.racingrulesofsailing.org/cases/1702?page=15
My answer is based upon my personal internalized notion that A’s retirement before the hearing (assuming that the Part 2/31 breach itself did not violate Rule 2) is what most racing sailors would described as falling within those “recognized principals”.
“Recognized principle” contains a qualitative nature. In my 2nd post to Ben, I tried to maybe explore quantifying why A’s post-race retirement might seem to many/most that her actions meet that recognized principle by showing that A’s score is worse for her delay by at least +1, but maybe much more depending upon Appx A’s application in the SI’s and how many boats entered or started.
Given all the above, I think I’d put to my panel-pals that A’s action of retiring before the hearing meets that principle (assuming no aggravating facts are found in the hearing) and therefore didn’t not beak rule 2 … and see what my other judge-buddies think.
Q&A 2017-007 has expired.
I can't understand why you are introducing your 'personal internalised notions' into this analysis and I think it is misleading. I think this scenario is solvable on the plain words of the RRS, without the need for subjective opinion.
Basic Principles Sportsmanship and the Rules says (emphasis added)
A fundamental principle of sportsmanship is that when a boat breaks a rule and is not exonerated she will promptly take an appropriate penalty ...
RRS 2 says
A boat and her owner shall compete in compliance with recognized principles of sportsmanship and fair play. A boat may be penalized under this rule only if it is clearly established that these principles have been violated. The penalty shall be a disqualification that is not excludable.
In what way do you say that:
On the other hand, Q&A 2019-006 (which is retained into 2023) kinda blast a hole in the entire idea that “retire” is available, thus torching all this possibility.
I guess Boat A’s only option is to write a confession note to the PC and ask the PC to protest her for Rule 2 (since as you say, a boat can’t take a DNE herself). That in my scenario where Boat A tells C that she’ll retire.
FWIW, taking away the ability to have a talk with a boat after racing and convincing them to take a penalty/retire .. is an important tool that this Q&A seems to negate. That’s unfortunate IMHO.
Then I think you're applying 'recognised' to the wrong thing. It's the principle [that a boat shall promptly take a penalty] that has to be a recognised principle, not some other action such as taking a penalty after it is made clear that the boat faces a protest hearing and DNE.
Yes.
A can, if she wishes, after a conversation with C, retire, in which case C may, if she shares your value judgement that retirement is enough, ask to withdraw her protest, and the protest committee, if they do not share C and D's disgust at A's not taking her turns on the water, allow the protest to be withdrawn. Otherwise the protest goes ahead and A is DNE.
If A had some good reason not to attend the protest hearing, a note, email, SMS, whatever acknowledging the facts and that she broke RRS 2 would be courteous and helpful to the protest committee in deciding to hear the protest in A's absence and reaching a decision.
I don't think the Q&A is that wide. It addresses the case where was known, we don't know how, to be 'aware' that she broke RRS 31, didn't take a RRS 44 penalty, and thus broke RRS 2. It doesn't say anything about PRP for rules other than RRS 2.
I'm not keen on judges having 'little talks' with competitors. I think it opens up possibilities of allegations about 'deals' from competitors not parties to the conversation or about 'improper pressure' from the protestee. Maybe I would have a discrete conversation with a respected 'elder statesman' or flag officer who might miraculously later have a conversation with a competitor.
What should the protest committee's decision be?
I’m taking about competitor to competitor. I’ve been in many of these talks. A boat comes up to me after racing and says, “Hey Ang, that was a real bone head move .. I thought I could make it but i definitely fouled you and hosed you in the process”.
That’s when the talk starts to happen. I tell them that if they were aware … blah blah … what would you do if you hit a mark alone when nobody can see … blah blah … then at somepoint suggest that it’s not too late. They can take a penalty (retire, Appx T or Appx V).
It’s not just a teaching opp … but offering that last step is huge part of pushing the bolder up the mountain of getting people to be more penalty-taking/sportsmanship-obligation aware.
I read the Q&A to say that retiring is only available to a boat if they do it promptly after they are aware (know) they broke a rule. So if they become aware 5 mins later on the water, they can’t wait until they come to shore. I think the implications of the Q&A are clear.
Personally, I hope that this non-authoritative interpretation does not graduate to a Case in its present form, though it did survive forward from the last quad, so it looks like it might have legs.
It is clear to me (maybe not to others) that the Q&A is saying that not taking a penalty promptly after the boat is aware, “which may be to retire”, breaks rule 2 (can’t wait until ashore if this awareness happens on the water). The applicable penalty for a breach of rule 2 is DNE. Therefore such a boat that retires when they know (they are aware) the appropriate penalty is DNE could be argued is a 2nd unsportsmanlike act .. trying to slip a fast-one by race officials and competitors … to retire (excludable) when a DNE is appropriate.
As you say, a boat can not “take” a DNE, but a PC can protest a boat based on information from the boat’s representative. Therefore, the boat-rep has to get this info to the PC (doesn’t have to be a note, but if verbal, the PC would likely ask for it in writing). Once this info is in hand, the PC can quickly protest the boat, call a hearing and give the boat the appropriate DNE.
I don’t think this is the way I’ve seen this applied in practice … with or without Appx T or V.
Angelo Guarino
OK. I understand. Personally I believe in protest or STFU.
I don't think you can extend the Q&A that way.
It very specifically addresses PRP under Appendix T. It doesn't mention retiring.
If it did it would directly contradict the fundamental principle which says, emphasi added, 'when a boat breaks a rule and is not exonerated she will promptly take an appropriate penalty or action, which may be to retire.'
You've got access to the yellow book haven't you?
Procedurally i see where you are coming from.
I agree that if the protest committee is told that A broke a rule and did not take a penalty by the representative of A they may validly protest A.
I think it is completely unjust to say that A is obliged to put her her head in a noose by making such a statement to the protest committee.
So A retires, but makes no statement to the protest committee, and there is no other valid protest.
The protest committee can't penalise A without a hearing.
I think it stops, or stalls at A scored RET.
Q&A 2019-006 "By knowingly breaking a rule and not promptly taking a penalty, the boat violated a fundamental principle of sportsmanship, therefore she also broke rule 2."
Both boats knowingly took insufficient penalties for their breach hoping nobody will notice. Both actions walk and quack like an unsportsmanlike act to me.
PS:I looked at the Yellow Book and did a search for "2019.006" (they usually ref the Q&A # when converting) and didn't see it.
It looks to me like A refraining from self-incrimination. I believe that there's something in the US Constitution with a number 5 about that. It's a pretty fundamental principle of common law or Brrrrrritish justice.
Otherwise it might look like A, without a detailed understanding of the rules, by retiring, took a substantial penalty in good faith.
Where did G come from?
Whoever G was, what evidence do you have about her knowledge or hopes?
I'm not sure that walking and quacking 'clearly establish' anything.
John, I'm looking at the internal obligation here. The principal of sportsmanship that we are discussing is a personal one. It is ... if you are aware, you will take an appropriate penalty. It IS a form of self-incrimination by definition. I know I am guilty of a breach of the rules, I take this penalty because it is my sportsmanlike obligation to take an appropriate penalty.
RET is not an appropriate penalty for Rule 2.
One thing is clear to me though .. I've never seen PRP's treated this way. I've never seen someone hand in a PRP and be asked when they became aware that they broke the rule and then have an time analysis done to see if it is accepted as "prompt" or not.
I think we've made minced meat out of this topic at this point. Q&A 2019-006 says what it says.