Injunctions
5 ASIC initially proposed, but did not pursue, the issue of an injunction restraining Mr Kobelt from engaging in credit activity as defined in s 6(1) of the NCCP Act unless he held a licence permitting him to do so. It is not necessary to consider that proposed injunction further.
6 The parties were in disagreement, however, as to the form of the rest of the injunctions sought by ASIC.
7 ASIC seeks the issue of an injunction pursuant to s 12GD(1) of the ASIC Act which would have the effect of restraining Mr Kobelt from receiving and retaining any customer's debit card or retaining any customer's personal identification number (PIN) in relation to a customer's debit card.
8 In addition, ASIC seeks an injunction requiring that Mr Kobelt cease immediately using the customers' debit cards which remain in his possession so as to withdraw funds from the customers' accounts, and an injunction of a mandatory kind requiring Mr Kobelt to deliver any remaining customers' debit cards in his possession to ASIC's employees who will attend at the Nobbys Mintabie General Store for the purpose of receiving those cards. It also seeks a consequential injunction directed to the informing of the Indigenous customers of what has happened to the debit cards.
9 Mr Kobelt, on the other hand, submits that an injunction in more limited and general terms would be appropriate, namely, an injunction pursuant to s 12GD(1) of the ASIC Act that he, his employees and agents be restrained from engaging in a system of conduct declared to be unconscionable by the Court's earlier order. By that I understood Mr Kobelt to mean a system having all the features to which the Court's declaration refers. ASIC made a number of criticisms of the form of the injunction proposed by Mr Kobelt, including that it lacked the precision and certainty with which Courts endeavour to express injunctions so that those who are bound by them know precisely what it is that they are permitted to do and restrained from doing; that it lacks certainty because of its reference to the declaration by which a number of aspects of Mr Kobelt's conduct were found to warrant the characterisation that his conduct was unconscionable; and that it would create difficulties of enforcement.
10 I consider that there is force in ASIC's critique of the injunction proposed by Mr Kobelt. In particular, I consider it inappropriate that the terms of the injunction be framed by reference to all aspects of Mr Kobelt's conduct which were found to contribute to the unconscionability of the conduct. To do so would mean that all of those aspects were essential to that finding, in the sense that without those aspects, the finding would not have been made. Plainly, some aspects were at the heart of the conduct found to be unconscionable and others were more peripheral. Accordingly, I do not accept that the form of the proposed injunction put forward by Mr Kobelt is appropriate.
11 During the course of his submissions on behalf of Mr Kobelt, Mr Trim QC referred to the orders of Rares J in Australian Competition and Consumer Commission v Ozdirect Online Brands Pty Ltd [2009] FCA 1604 as an example of the kind of specificity with which courts should endeavour to express injunctions. For the reasons I have already mentioned, I accept that it is appropriate for courts, and for the Court presently, to attempt to be as specific as possible in its expression of the injunction. However, Mr Kobelt did not put forward any alternative formulation of an injunction which would identify with the desired specificity the restraint which would be appropriate in order to give effect to the Court's orders. I accept, as discussed with Mr Trim, that it would be difficult to do so in the manner contemplated by Mr Kobelt.
12 ASIC recognises that in some respects the terms of its proposed injunctions go beyond the precise limits of the conduct found by the Court to be unlawful. That is because its proposed injunctions will relate to all of the debit cards held by Mr Kobelt irrespective of the literacy, education and general awareness of the customers who provided the debit cards and PINs, and whether or not they provided the debit cards to Mr Kobelt in circumstances in which they were fully informed and fully aware of the implications in doing so.
13 I accept that, as a matter of general principle, unless there are particular features of a case warranting a different course, it is desirable for the terms of a restraint to be limited to the conduct which the Court has found to be unlawful. So much is evident from a number of the authorities to which the parties referred me: see, e.g., Foster v Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (ABN 83 975 695 966) [2006] FCAFC 21, (2006) 149 FCR 135 at [35]; Australian Competition and Consumer Commission v Fisher & Paykel Customer Services Pty Ltd [2014] FCA 1393 at [60]-[61].
14 In the present case, I am satisfied that the form of injunctions proposed by ASIC is appropriate, even though, as I have said, they will have an effect in some respects on every customer who has provided a debit card and PIN to Mr Kobelt. A number of features suggest to me that that is appropriate.
15 First, I refer to an admission made by Mr Kobelt in correspondence to ASIC. Mr Kobelt filed an affidavit in connection with today's hearing on 5 December 2016. On the following day, ASIC wrote to Mr Kobelt's solicitors informing them that they required Mr Kobelt to attend for cross-examination on his affidavit but, at the same time, indicated that it would not press for him to attend if "your client agrees that he has continued to withdraw money from some or all of the debit cards which remain in his possession since the date of the Court's judgment on 9 November 2016". Mr Kobelt's solicitors responded by letter dated 9 December 2016 saying, relevantly:
We are instructed to advise that our client has continued to withdraw money for some or all of the debit cards which remain in his possession since the date of the Court's judgment on 9 November 2016.
16 Some debate occurred in the submissions today as to the extent and effect of that admission. Mr Trim acknowledged that the admission had been made in the terms just recited, but indicated that his instructions were that Mr Kobelt had done so only in the presence of the customers. I proceed on two bases in considering the submissions. First, that the effect of the admission and, in particular, the use of the words "has continued to withdraw money", was that Mr Kobelt was admitting that he has continued to withdraw monies in the way which was the subject of the evidence at trial, namely, he is using the customers' debit cards and PINs on the day upon which money was paid into their accounts so as to withdraw the money and transfer it to his own account. The use of the word "continued" in its natural ordinary meaning gives rise to that impression. The second feature is that the "qualification" to which Mr Trim referred in the submissions amounts, on my assessment, to a significant modification of the admission because it would mean that Mr Kobelt is not continuing to make the withdrawals but is instead engaging in a different form of conduct. Given that ASIC did not press for Mr Kobelt to attend for cross-examination in the light of the original admission, I consider that, in assessing whether or not the kind of injunction which ASIC seeks is appropriate, it is appropriate to take into account the effect of the admission made.
17 I am nevertheless satisfied that Mr Trim would not have made the modification to the admission without proper instructions and that those instructing Mr Trim would not have given those instructions unless they understood that to be the position. Nevertheless, I consider it appropriate to proceed on the basis of the admission originally communicated.
18 The second feature is that it is probable that there are relatively few, if any, customers in respect of whom Mr Kobelt's conduct would not be characterised as unconscionable. It is possible that there are some who are sufficiently educated and literate and had in a fully informed sense provided their debit card and PIN to Mr Kobelt. However, I think it appropriate to proceed on the basis that there would be relatively few, if any, customers in that category, especially as none has been identified for the purposes of today's hearing.
19 The next feature is that the conduct of Mr Kobelt in taking the customers' debit cards and PINs and using them in the absence of the customer to withdraw money is at the heart of the conduct found by the Court to be unconscionable. ASIC's proposed injunction goes to that conduct.
20 The next feature is the desirability of the Court's injunction being expressed in a way which is effective and enforceable, so as to achieve the protection of the customers for which it is designed.
21 Finally I take into account that the injunction will not preclude customers with debit cards attending at the Nobby's General Store and making use of their debit cards and PINs in a conventional way. In other words, it will not impinge upon conventional retail activity.
22 The parties differed as to whether or not Mr Kobelt should be permitted to continue doing that which he deposes to having done since 9 November 2016, namely, returning customers' debit cards to them as and when they attend at Nobbys General Store or whether the process should be brought to a conclusion by Mr Kobelt handing over the debit cards to ASIC's officers who will then attend to returning the cards to the customers. On Mr Trim's instructions today, there might be relatively few cards remaining in Mr Kobelt's possession, perhaps of the order of 20 to 30, and I am prepared to proceed on the basis that that is so. It may be also the case that the 20 to 30 cards includes cards belonging to customers who live in more remote locations from Mintabie and in respect of whom it will be difficult for the ASIC officers to return the cards. This will be so especially if the officers attend only at Indulkana or Mimili as is ASIC's proposal.
23 I accept that these are factors which count against ASIC's proposal. On the other hand, I do think there is force in ASIC's submission that the matter should not be able to drift on. That is especially so given that it appears that, on the face of the admission, Mr Kobelt is continuing to make withdrawals from customers' accounts. It is desirable that the position be brought to an end and the ASIC proposal provides a means by which the Court can have some confidence that that will occur in the relatively near future at least in respect of most of the customers whose cards remain at the store.
24 For these reasons, I propose to issue injunctions in the terms proposed by ASIC subject to some editing.