Marsden v Amalgamated Television Services Pty Limited

Case

[2000] NSWSC 629

4 July 2000

No judgment structure available for this case.

CITATION: Marsden v Amalgamated Television Services Pty Limited [2000] NSWSC 629
CURRENT JURISDICTION: Common Law
FILE NUMBER(S): SC 20223 of 1995; 20592 of 1996
HEARING DATE(S): 4 July 2000
JUDGMENT DATE: 4 July 2000

PARTIES :


JOHN MARSDEN
(Plaintiff)

v

AMALGAMATED TELEVISION SERVICES PTY LIMITED
(Defendant)
JUDGMENT OF: Levine J at 1
COUNSEL :

M R Hall
(Plaintiff)

W H Nicholas Q.C.
R Stitt Q.C.
J S Wheelhouse
(Defendant)
SOLICITORS:

Phillips Fox
(Plaintiff)

Mallesons Stephen Jaques
(Defendant)
CATCHWORDS: Objection to evidence of Ferdinando Dominelli - relevance - T7876
DECISION: See paragraph 7

DLJT: 182
(Ex Tempore - Revised)
[2000] NSWSC 629

    THE SUPREME COURT
    OF NEW SOUTH WALES
    COMMON LAW DIVISION
    DEFAMATION LIST

No. 20223 of 1995
No. 20592 of 1996

JUSTICE DAVID LEVINE

TUESDAY 4 JULY 2000

    JOHN MARSDEN
    (Plaintiff)

    v

    AMALGAMATED TELEVISION SERVICES PTY LIMITED
    ACN 000 145 246
    (Defendant)
    JUDGMENT (Objection to evidence of Ferdinando Dominelli - relevance - T7876)

1    HIS HONOUR: Briefly stated, the issue in relation to Mr Kinchela is an allegation that on about four occasions certain conduct took place between him and Mr Marsden. On one occasion reference is made to him having been driven in a white car, query whether or not it was a Toyota (T3940; 3968). 2    In relation to Mr Kinchela, the plaintiff's position is a complete denial: no meeting, no car, no nothing. 3    The plaintiff seeks to lead evidence from Mr Dominelli in relation to what I understand to have been a transaction, whereby the ownership of a Monaro of a design referred to in the course of questioning, took place between Dominelli and Mr Marsden. 4    It is suggested for the defendant, that the question of ownership is one quite distinct from possession. That cannot be disputed as a general proposition. 5    The situation, briefly, is not dissimilar to a denial of an event having taken place, accompanied by objective evidence that could affect in a rational way, when one considers the terms of s 55 of the Evidence Act, the existence of particular facts in issue. 6    A denial of the participation in an event, broadly speaking, would not preclude the leading of evidence of not only did it not happen, but that the alleged participant was elsewhere at the time it was said to have happened. This evidence falls into that general sort of category. 7    To the extent that objection has been taken to it on those bases, I will allow the evidence to be led.
    ***********
Last Modified: 09/26/2000
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