Pi v Zhou
[2017] NSWCA 16
At a glance
Source factsCourt
Court of Appeal (NSW)
Decision date
2017-01-30
Before
Basten JA, Payne JA, Gleeson JA, Adamson J
Catchwords
- PROCEDURE - review of single judge of Court of Appeal
- [2004] NSWCA 136 Tyneside Property Management Pty Ltd v Hammersmith Management Pty Ltd [2014] NSWCA 417
Source
Original judgment source is linked above.
Catchwords
Judgment (14 paragraphs)
Background facts
- In June 2010, Jian Cheng Zhou and Christine Zhao, the respondents, leased a one-bedroom flat to the applicant, Guang Hua Pi. The flat was located at the rear of a property in Lakemba. During the period of the lease Mr Zhou and Mrs Zhao resided in the house at the front of the property. Another tenant, Ms Gu, also resided in the house.
- Following a complaint in late 2010 by Ms Gu to the respondents about alleged inappropriate behaviour by the applicant, Mr Zhou remonstrated with the applicant. Ms Gu subsequently complained that the inappropriate behaviour had again occurred and she gave notice and moved out of the house in late December 2010. The relationship between the applicant and the respondents deteriorated thereafter. In early January 2011, the applicant complained that the internet connection he alleged he had been promised was ineffective. The applicant demanded a reduction in his weekly rent. There was an angry exchange of electronic messages and the respondents say that a threat of violence was made towards them by the applicant. On or about 9 January 2011, Mr Zhou gave Mr Pi two weeks' notice to vacate the property. The primary judge accepted evidence that on that day the applicant said to the respondents that "I will send these photos [of the respondents] to someone who will kill you".
- On 12 January 2011, a physical altercation occurred between Mr Zhou and Mr Pi in the yard of the property. The applicant was charged by the police with assault arising out of the incident. The magistrate who ultimately decided the assault charge (which, for reasons which presently do not matter, was decided on the papers), held that the prosecution had not proved to the requisite standard that the applicant had not acted in self-defence.