AGL Sales Pty Limited v Diamond Venues Group Pty Ltd
[2024] NSWDC 397
At a glance
Source factsCourt
District Court of NSW
Decision date
2024-08-27
Before
Mr J
Source
Original judgment source is linked above.
Judgment (13 paragraphs)
JUDGMENT
- The plaintiff, AGL Sales Pty Limited (AGL), supplied electricity to premises at 21 Canterbury Road, Punchbowl (the supply premises) from 10 September 2021 to 22 May 2024 (the supply period). There was no written agreement with the customer. AGL says that the defendant, Diamond Venues Group Pty Ltd, was the customer and, pursuant to invoices rendered to it by AGL for the supply period, the defendant is indebted to it in the sum of $311,358.30. In the alternative to its claim on the invoices, AGL contends that it is entitled to recover on a quantum meruit or quantum valebat basis.
- The premises are a wedding reception and function venue. The defendant denies that it was the customer, that it ever occupied the premises or that it used or consumed the electricity the subject of the invoices. The issue before the Court, therefore, is whether AGL has established that the defendant was the user or consumer of the electricity for the supply period.
- AGL relies on affidavits of Angela Limnios, Courtney Muir and Fareed Soudagar. Each was cross-examined and each gave their evidence honestly and conscientiously. No submission adverse to the credit of any of them was made.
- The defendant did not rely on any affidavit evidence. It made an application under s 63(2) of the Evidence Act 1995 (NSW) to rely on two affidavits by its director, Christopher Drivas, sworn in these proceedings. Mr Drivas was not available for cross-examination, it was said, because he is currently undergoing treatment for bowel cancer.
- The Court is sympathetic to Mr Drivas in his current predicament and wishes him a speedy and complete recovery. However, protection of the present hearing date had been one of the bases relied on by the defendant in resisting an amendment application heard by Dicker DCJ on 21 August 2024. Further, Mr Drivas was not undergoing any treatment on the hearing day but, it was stated from the bar table, had an appointment the following day with a specialist. This did not establish that he was unavailable within the meaning of s 63 of the Evidence Act. Further, I asked counsel whether the defendant wished to seek an adjournment of the proceedings part-heard to enable Mr Drivas to attend and indicated that I would be sympathetic to such an application, however, this was not taken up. Finally, as Mr Munro, counsel for the plaintiff, pointed out, the notice provisions under s 67 of the Evidence Act had not been complied with and there was no affidavit in support of the application.