Accessorial liability
14 The first category is about the pleas in relation to accessorial liability, in paragraphs 33-38, 131-135, 144-148, 156-160, 169-173, 195-201, 236-243, 265-271, 292-296 and 297.
15 ASIC's case in this (remitted) proceeding is for relief under s 1101B(1) of the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth) against Mr Mawhinney in respect of alleged contraventions of the Corporations Act and the Australian Securities and Investments Commission Act 2001 (Cth) committed by certain companies.
16 Before the Full Court, Mr Mawhinney argued that an order could not be made against him under s 1101B(1) based on the contravention of another person. See Mawhinney v Australian Securities and Investments Commission (2022) 294 FCR 375 (Jagot, O'Bryan and Cheeseman JJ) (J).
17 The Full Court rejected that argument, and Mr Mawhinney accepts that the trial of the proceeding must be conducted on the basis that the Full Court's decision on that point is correct (although he reserves the position to argue otherwise, should the matter end up in the High Court).
18 Section 1101B(1) relevantly provides that the Court "may make such order, or orders, as it thinks fit if: (a) on the application of ASIC, it appears to the Court that a person: (i) has contravened a provision of this Chapter, or any other law relating to dealing in financial products or providing financial services …"
19 The Full Court relevantly said this about the connection between the contravener and the contravention, and the person in respect of whom an order under s 1101B(1) may be made, at J [116] and [158]:
Finally, despite it being clear from what we have said above, we should record our view that this is a very exceptional case in which ASIC should be permitted to depart from the legal and evidentiary position it adopted below. In order to ensure procedural fairness, and given the nature of the permanent injunctions which ASIC seeks, the case requires ASIC to give clear notice and proper particulars of each contravention it alleges and of the connection between Mr Mawhinney and each such contravention, either by way of his involvement in the contravention (in the sense described in Yorke v Lucas) or otherwise. Beyond saying this, the proper case management of the remitted matter is for the relevant judge to decide.
…
… In its terms, s 1101B contains no express limitation on the categories of persons in respect of whom an order may be made. The only express limitation is that the Court must be satisfied that the order would not unfairly prejudice any person. It may be accepted that there is an implicit limitation that the power to make an order under the section is confined by the scope and purpose of the power, which includes an implication that there is a sufficient nexus between the relevant contravention and the order made: cf, ICI Australia Operations Pty Ltd v Trade Practices Commission (1992) 38 FCR 248 at 258 per Lockhart J and at 267 per Gummow J and Australian Competition and Consumer Commission v Z-Tek Computer Pty Ltd (1997) 78 FCR 197 at 202 per Merkel J.
20 It will suffice to set out one example, because the same pattern repeats itself in the impugned paragraphs. Paragraphs 33-38 of the statement of claim are as follows:
B.2 Mr Mawhinney
33. Mr Mawhinney participated in the operations or management of IPO Capital.
Particulars
(a) Mr Mawhinney interacted with staff about IPO Capital's dealings.
(b) Mr Mawhinney interacted with investors and potential investors on behalf of IPO Capital.
(c) Mr Mawhinney could access, and execute, transactions on IPO Capital's bank accounts.
(d) In July 2016, Mr Mawhinney sought advice on whether IPO Capital required an AFSL.
(e) Between September 2016 and March 2017, Mr Mawhinney (personally or through Don Christie of Astuto Lawyers) corresponded with ASIC about IPO Capital's non-compliance with s 911A of the Corporations Act.
(f) Mr Mawhinney was the sole director and secretary of IPO Capital.
(g) Further particulars may be provided prior to trial.
34. Mr Mawhinney held himself out as participating in the operations or management of IPO Capital.
Particulars
(a) Mr Mawhinney used the james@ipocapital.com.au email address and IPO Capital signature block.
(b) Mr Mawhinney was listed on page 11, entitled "Experienced & Professional Team", of a PowerPoint presentation about IPO Capital.
(c) Mr Mawhinney provided quotes for a media publication that associated him with IPO Capital.
35. At all material times, by reason of the matters alleged in paragraphs 27 to 34 above, Mr Mawhinney was involved in IPO Capital carrying on a financial services business in this jurisdiction without an AFSL.
36. From 2016 to at least December 2017, Mr Mawhinney knew that:
a. IPO Capital was carrying on a financial services business in this jurisdiction.
b. IPO Capital did not hold an AFSL.
Particulars
Mr Mawhinney's knowledge is to be inferred from the following:
(a) Mr Mawhinney was the sole director and secretary of IPO Capital.
(b) Mr Mawhinney's business experience.
(c) Mr Mawhinney was involved in the day-to-day operations of IPO Capital as alleged at paragraphs 33 and 34.
(d) In July 2016, Mr Mawhinney sought advice on whether IPO Capital required an AFSL.
(e) Between September 2016 and March 2017, Mr Mawhinney (personally or through Don Christie of Astuto Lawyers) corresponded with ASIC about IPO Capital's non-compliance with s 911A of the Corporations Act.
37. By reason of the matters alleged in paragraphs 33 to 36 above, Mr Mawhinney was directly or indirectly, knowingly concerned in, or party to, IPO Capital's contraventions of s 911A of the Corporations Act.
38. Further or alternatively, by reason of any combination of the matters alleged in paragraphs 33 to 36 above, Mr Mawhinney was associated with IPO Capital's contraventions of s 911A of the Corporations Act.
21 ASIC pleads at paragraph 297 of its statement of claim that:
In the premises of …
b. Mr Mawhinney's involvement in [the companies' contraventions] as alleged in paragraphs:
i. paragraph 37 in respect of the contraventions by IPO Capital;
ii. paragraphs 134, 147, 159, 172, 200, 242, 270 and 295 in respect of the contraventions by Australian Income Solutions;
iii. paragraphs 134, 147, 159, 172, 200 and 295 in respect of the contraventions by M101 Nominees;
iv. paragraphs 134, 147, 159 and 200 in respect of the contraventions by M101 Holdings;
v. paragraphs 134 and 159 in respect of the contraventions by Online Investments;
vi. paragraph 270 in respect of the contraventions by Mainland Property Holdings;
c. in the alternative to paragraph 297.b above, Mr Mawhinney's association with [the companies' contraventions] as alleged in paragraphs:
i. paragraph 38 in respect of the contraventions by IPO Capital;
ii. paragraphs 135, 148, 160, 173, 201, 243, 271 and 296 in respect of the contraventions by Australian Income Solutions;
iii. paragraphs 135, 148, 160, 173, 201 and 296 in respect of the contraventions by M101 Nominees;
iv. paragraphs 135, 148, 160 and 201 in respect of the contraventions by M101 Holdings;
v. paragraphs 136 and 161 in respect of the contraventions by Online Investments;
vi. paragraph 271 in respect of the contraventions by Mainland Property Holdings;
d. Mr Mawhinney's involvement in launching Australian Property Bonds after Anderson J made orders on 16 April 2020 in relation to M+ Fixed Income Notes and M Core Fixed Income Notes;
Particulars
(a) On 16 April 2020, Anderson J made orders which:
(i) restrained Australian Income Solutions (then trading as Mayfair Wealth Partners Pty Ltd), M101 Holdings, M101 Nominees and Online Investments from:
(A) using the phrases "bank deposit", "capital growth", "certainty", "fixed term", "term deposit" and "term investment" in any advertising, promotion or marketing; and
(B) advertising, promoting or marketing the M+ Fixed Income Notes and the M Core Fixed Income Notes.
(ii) required those entities to publish a notice on the websites www.mayfair101.com and www.mayfairplatinum.com.au and to provide a copy of the notice to each prospective new investor in either the M+ Fixed Income product or the M Core Fixed Income product.
(b) Australian Property Bonds were launched on 20 April 2020.
(c) Mr Mawhinney's involvement in the launch of Australian Property Bonds is to be inferred from the following:
(i) Mr Mawhinney was the managing director of the M101 Group of companies;
(ii) Mr Mawhinney was the sole director of Australian Income Solutions;
(iii) Mr Mawhinney was the sole director and shareholder of Online Investments, which was the sole shareholder in Australian Income Solutions;
(iv) Mr Mawhinney's final sign off was needed on marketing materials;
(v) Mr Mawhinney was actively involved in the business affairs of Australian Income Solutions; and
(vi) Mr Mawhinney sent the email announcing the launch of Australian Property Bonds and other emails about this product.
e [sic]. any loss or risk of loss to investors with IPO Capital and investors in M Core Fixed Income Notes, M+ Fixed Income Notes and/or Australian Property Bonds; and
f [sic]. the absence of any unfair prejudice to any person affected by the relief sought by ASIC,
ASIC is entitled to the injunctive relief under s 1101B(1) of the Corporations Act sought in the Amended Originating Application filed on 15 November 2023.
22 Senior counsel for Mr Mawhinney, Mr M R Pearce SC, who appeared with Mr A Aleksov and Mr P Donovan of counsel, submitted that a line of authorities to which he took me stands for the proposition that it is not open to ASIC to plead "conventional accessorial liability" under consideration in Yorke v Lucas (1985) 158 CLR 661 as the connection between Mr Mawhinney and the contraventions alleged against the various companies. To do so, it was contended, would be contrary to the cases that say that accessorial liability under provisions like s 79 of the Corporations Act is available only where express provision is made for it, such as in s 1101B(4)(c)(ii) and s 1324(1)(e). See Australian Securities and Investments Commission v Maxwell (2006) 59 ACSR 373; [2006] NSWSC 1052 at [104], [110] (Brereton J); Australian Securities and Investments Commission v Mariner Corporation Ltd (2015) 241 FCR 502 at [444] (Beach J); Australian Securities and Investments Commission v Dover Financial Advisers Pty Ltd (No 2) (2019) 140 ACSR 635; [2019] FCA 2151 at [18] (O'Bryan J); and Cassimatis v Australian Securities and Investments Commission (2020) 275 FCR 533 at [179]-[180] (Greenwood J), [235] (Rares J).
23 But, in this proceeding, ASIC does not seek any finding that Mr Mawhinney was accessorily liable for the companies' alleged contraventions of the Corporations Act or the ASIC Act.
24 And ASIC agrees that if it did seek such relief, it would run afoul of the cases referred to above at [22].
25 ASIC says that in pleading the case on accessorial liability the way that it has, it is doing precisely what the Full Court effectively directed it to do in its reasons, in order to accord procedural fairness to Mr Mawhinney.
26 Mr M Borsky KC appeared for ASIC, with Mr N I Congram and Ms J Nikolic of counsel. He put the submission on those points this way in his oral submissions:
[W]e don't seek any finding in this proceeding that Mr Mawhinney was accessorily liable for contraventions of the misleading or deceptive conduct provisions in the Corporations Act or the ASIC Act. We don't seek a declaration or orders that he was an accessory within the Yorke v Lucas sense to contraventions of [sections] 1041H or 12DA of the ASIC Act and cognate provisions.
If we were seeking such … relief, then our friend's submissions and our friend's references to various decisions [listed at [22] above] would be on point, but they're not. Rather, what we are doing is precisely what the Full Court directed us to do … [O]ur learned friend quite properly took your Honour to the passages in the Full Court's judgment which set the scene for this argument. Your Honour may not need to go back to it, but paragraph 116 in the Full Court's judgment records that a price ASIC was required to pay, amongst others, … for the remitter in this very exceptional case was that, contrary to the position as it had been before Anderson J, and to that point in the Full Court, where there was no statement of claim, no clear statement of the case at all, their Honours made plain that ASIC was required to give clear notice and proper particulars of each contravention and of the connection between Mr Mawhinney and each contravention. That's what [paragraph] 116 [of the Full Court's reasons] says. And their Honours went on to say either in the sense described in Yorke v Lucas or otherwise … We read that carefully. And then the pleading, which ASIC delivered for the first time in this matter, that's what ASIC has done.
…
[T]heir Honours accept [at paragraph 158 of their reasons] that there is an implicit limitation that the power to make an order under the section [1101B] is confined by the scope and purpose of the power, which includes an implication that there is a sufficient nexus between the relevant contravention and the order made. So that is to say - and their Honours … make the same point in subtly different terms in paragraph 116 - it's incumbent on ASIC to establish a contravention by a person, not Mr Mawhinney - and we plead our case in relation to that in quite some detail - and to establish that there was a connection between each contravention and Mr Mawhinney.
27 Once so much is accepted, as it must be, then Mr Mawhinney's contention that the accessorial liability pleas should be struck out because they are bound to fail must be rejected, because ASIC does not, contrary to Mr Mawhinney's contention "plead conventional accessorial liability as the connection between the contraventions alleged and Mr Mawhinney so as to justify an order against him under s 1101B(1)". It only seeks relief under that provision, and not s 79 (for example).
28 At trial, the issue to be decided will be whether each of the factual matters pleaded in relation to Mr Mawhinney's involvement is sufficient to establish, whether in the "Yorke v Lucas sense" or otherwise, the requisite nexus between the relevant contravention and the orders sought against him under s 1101B(1), such that the Court should in the exercise of its discretion grant the injunctive relief ASIC seeks.
29 I should make brief mention of the decision of Brereton J in Re Vault Market Pty Ltd (2014) 32 ACLC 14-069; [2014] NSWSC 1641, because both parties claimed that the decision supported their opposing positions. In my view, the following passage from his Honour's reasons, which the Full Court adopted (J at [163]), is entirely consistent with the approach described by the Full Court and adopted by ASIC in this case, as follows (at [70]):
… However, there are other indications that the broadly expressed power in s 1101B(1) may authorise an order against a person other than the contravener. While satisfaction that a person has contravened a provision of Chapter 7 is a jurisdictional prerequisite, the only limitation on the order that can be made, once that requirement is satisfied, is that "the Court is satisfied that the order would not unfairly prejudice any person". While the example in s 1101B(4)(a) refers to an order restraining a person from carrying on a business ... if the person has persistently contravened a provision or provisions of Chapter 7, it is an example only. More significantly, the example in s 1101B(4)(b) includes an order to the directors of a body corporate, where the body corporate was the contravener, and the examples in s 1101B(4)(c) and (d) expressly refer to a person who was involved in a contravention; these examples demonstrate that the general power in s 1101B(1), of which they are but illustrations, extends to authorise an order against a person other than the contravener - provided that the order would not unfairly prejudice any person. That power does not depend on establishing that the person against whom the order was made was "involved", within the meaning of s 79, in the contravention, although the degree and nature of the relationship between the person and the contravention would no doubt be highly relevant to the exercise of the discretion to make such an order.
(Emphasis added).
30 I should also note that the question of the nature of the knowledge necessary for someone to incur liability as an accessory is currently the subject of a judgment reserved in the High Court. As Jackman J explained in Australian Competition and Consumer Commission v Master Wealth Control Pty Ltd [2024] FCA 344 at [40], the question involves an issue that is one of longstanding controversy:
It is well established that in order for a person to be "knowingly concerned" in a contravention within the meaning of s 75B of the Competition and Consumer Act 2010 (Cth), the person must have actual (not imputed or constructive) knowledge of the essential facts constituting the contravention, although it is not necessary for the person to know that those facts constitute a contravention: Yorke v Lucas (1985) 158 CLR 661 at 667 and 670 (Mason ACJ, Wilson, Deane and Dawson JJ); Rural Press Ltd v Australian Competition and Consumer Commission [2003] HCA 75; (2003) 216 CLR 53 at [48] (Gummow, Hayne and Heydon JJ). In Anchorage Capital Master Offshore Limited v Sparkes [2023] NSWCA 88; (2023) 111 NSWLR 304 at [329], the New South Wales Court of Appeal (comprising Ward P, Brereton JA and Griffiths AJA) referred to a longstanding controversy as to whether, in order to incur liability as an accessory, knowledge that the representation is false is required (the narrow view), or knowledge of facts which would have falsified the representation if they had been adverted to suffices (the wider view). Their Honours referred to a large number of authorities supportive of the two views, but held that the narrow view was the correct one on the basis that "Where the contravention is the prohibition on engaging in misleading or deceptive conduct, one can be 'knowingly concerned' in it only if one knows that the conduct is misleading or deceptive": [330] and [342]. However, a month before that judgment was given, the Full Court of the Federal Court gave judgment in Productivity Partners Pty Ltd v Australian Competition and Consumer Commission [2023] FCAFC 54; (2023) 297 FCR 180, in which the reasons of Wigney and O'Bryan JJ at [297]-[314] appear to accept the wider view. An appeal to the High Court in that case was heard in February 2024, and judgment is reserved. The New South Wales Court of Appeal recently noted that a live debate remains about the wider view: Care A2 Plus Pty Ltd v Pichardo [2024] NSWCA 35 at [120]-[122] (Bell CJ, with whom Stern JA and Basten AJA agreed).
31 In any event, paragraphs 38, 135, 148, 160, 173, 201, 243, 271 and 296 plead in the alternative to the relevant paragraphs that precede them, that Mr Mawhinney was "associated with" the primary contraventions, and that the requisite nexus was thus established. Those paragraphs do not rely on the concept of involvement in contraventions in the sense described in Yorke v Lucas.
32 It follows that the application to strike out paragraphs 33-38, 131-135, 144-148, 156-160, 169-173, 195-201, 236-243, 265-271, 292-296 and 297 is refused.