The View From The Stalls
Oct. 21, 1998
By Naomi Colvin
"Its good that
youre here Mr Morrissey, exercising your rights to the full and so on... "
I was surprised too. I had thought that the man at the other end of the corridor leaning
against the wall a la the "Introducing Morrissey" video, looked a bit like him
from the back. But, no, he was too young, surely, and his haircut too boyish (with silly
spikey bits at the back)... and isnt he meant to be taller than that anyway? Then I
caught him turning his head. The profile, the eyebrows, the eyes. In that order.
Palpitations.
Here, for those that care (all of us, basically) are those vitally unimportant sartorial
details. Morrissey was wearing a black suit (one that fitted him properly, somewhat
shockingly), white shirt and some sort of tie which Im afraid I cant describe
to you fully on account of spending most of the time looking at the back of his head. He
was wearing a silver ring - middle finger, right hand - and a bracelet made of separate
pieces of amber. I think we can take it as read that he was wearing a watch, although I
cant actually recall seeing one. He looked in rather better shape than recent
photographs would have you believe. Accompanying him was (I assume) the same "mystery
brunette" as last time. She wore pinstripes, sunburn and a low-cut blouse. Not much
of a catch, to be blunt.
Anyway, back to the scene set in the first paragraph if you can cast your minds back to
that. Moz, Ms Dannell (more assumptions) and another woman I could not identify (part of
the legal team?), were chatting with Morrisseys QC. The conversation was quite
instructive, touching as it did on the following topics:
a) The "snappy" moments in
Morrisseys testimony at the December 1996 hearing:
"I dont remember those bits..."
b) Luxury hotels. Morrissey was heard to comment on one particularly salubrious
establishment:
"It used to be lovely, but now its gone a bit... continental."
c) "Mr Rourke"s forthcoming tome (terminology Morrisseys own).
At this point my notes become
bespattered with mild expletives, so I shall leave what happened then to your imagination.
Next to it Ive written, "Ill have to nab him at recess" which gives
you a rather unfair inkling of whats going to happen several paragraphs on.
Just to keep you up-to-date with this recollection (and what an odd idea that is), we have
now entered to courtroom. Moz is sitting on the back row of benches, in between the two
women mentioned earlier. I am sitting on the front row of the public gallery (actually
just two extra rows of seats), about one metre away from Morrissey, at a bit of an angle.
Nice view. I did briefly think about drawing him but no-one deserves that sort of
treatment. You know what he looks like anyway.
There now follows a brief synopsis of the first part of the appeal. This was quite
interesting, but I had trouble keeping awake through what followed it (about 4 hours in
all). Incidentally, just how imagine how dull something must be if youre falling
asleep despite the fact that Morrissey is sitting in front of you, within grabbing
distance.
Primarily, Morrisseys QC alleged that the original judgement had lacked objectivity,
and was swayed by the personal feelings of the judge towards the personalities concerned,
which he summarised as:
"Im going to take the oral evidence of Rourke or Joyce as against
Morrisseys denial because Morrisseys character is X."
It was claimed that Judge Weeks poor opinion of Morrissey was formed as a result of
his testimony, finally manifesting itself in the "highly damaging and completely
unjustifiable" description used in his summing-up. This, incidentally, was apparently
graffiti-ed onto Morrisseys walls at some point.
In addition, it was argued that the evidence of several accountants had been ignored
relating to the period 1986/7, when the profit split had been clearly shown. The so-called
"Wool Hall meeting" of May 1987 (i.e. when the band were recording at the Wool
Hall), was referred to quite frequently, the point being that Mike Joyces failure to
protest at this point implied that he agreed with the share of the profits he was being
given. It was also held that there was a principle of inequality in the band (not just in
financial matters) which had been evident to all from the very beginning:
"Without Morrissey and Marr there would have been no Smiths"
Throughout the time in court, I was painfully aware that the entire situation could be
divided into two parts: that which the law student sitting next to me was taking notes on,
and all the extraneous rubbish that had my pen dashing across the tatty notepad. Here,
then, for your delectation, is some of the information my neighbour went home without:
Morrisseys mannerisms: The man is a complete fidget. Throughout the hearing he was
observed to be doing the following: umming, ahhing, pouting, fiddling with his pen (which
looked like a �2.50 job from Menzies), resting his head on an arm, messing about with his
ear and rubbing his eyes. Plus several variations on these themes. At one point he even
stuck his tongue out... in the direction of the judge (Morrissey? Hello?).
The court adjourned (probably just as well considering the last paragraph). I seized my
opportunity as best I could, walking beside Morrissey as he strolled off for lunch. The
usual pathetic subterfuge ensued, and I shall try not to bore you with too much of it. I
apologised for disturbing him off-duty, as it were, "but Albuquerques just too
far away." He smiled gently with the infinite patience of a man who has to put up
with this sort of nonsense every day of his life and signed the piece of card at the back
of my uber-tatty A4 pad. By the time Id started wondering what the hell "good
wishes" was supposed to mean ("... they make me suspicious"), he was long
gone.
[Pause]
Against my better judgement, I went back to the court at 2pm. There was a mist of
weariness about the proceedings (or it might have been just me, I suppose), relieved only
by the brief visitation of Morrisseys "snappy" moments is Part I of this
saga ("Mr Morrissey did not find giving evidence very easy..."). You really need
to imagine this read out in a dead-pan Oxbridge accent:
1.)
[when asked about his business arrangements with Johnny Marr]
M: Could you define partnership?
QC: There are a number of books which do that Mr Morrissey, but I dont intend to go
into that now.
M: I havent read them.
2.)
QC: I dont want you to think Im tricking you.
M: I think you are.
3.)
QC: Could I finish my question please?
M: Its too time-consuming.
QC: Its more time consuming if you dont allow me to finish the question.
M: I dont agree.
The last one actually elicited chuckles
from various parts of the court room; I shall spare you the rest.
I should put a nice conclusion on this now, but since I left suddenly at 4pm in a
last-ditch attempt to prevent my getting thrown out of LSE in my first term, it might be
more faithful to leave this feeling unfinished. Ive already achieved an ambition
today: I can learn to write tomorrow.
return to Morrissey-solo
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