Background facts
9 I accept the factual matters set out in the SOAF and make findings to that effect. The following is a summary of the key facts.
10 At all material times PayPal was authorised under s 9(3) of the Banking Act 1959 (Cth) to carry on banking business in Australia confined to providing purchased payment facilities within the meaning of s 9(1) of the Payment Systems (Regulation) Act 1998 (Cth): SOAF [6]. PayPal was also licensed as an Australian Financial Services Licensee pursuant to s 913B of the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth) and was authorised to deal in non-cash payment products to retail and wholesale customers.
11 Under these authorisations PayPal provided online payment services by which consumer and commercial customers were able to send and receive payments online using linked credit cards, debit cards and bank accounts. Customers could store a balance in their PayPal account, withdraw that balance to their linked bank account, or transfer that balance to a different PayPal account within the PayPal network. For the provision of some of these services PayPal charged a fee.
12 During the Relevant Period, PayPal issued financial products described as Business Accounts. Persons who acquired Business Accounts from PayPal were called Users: SOAF [7].
13 The terms governing a User's Business Account were set out in a contract between PayPal and the User (Business Account Contracts) consisting of, relevantly:
(a) the PayPal User Agreement (User Agreement) published by PayPal on its website (including policies and applicable agreements incorporated into that User Agreement by reference);
(b) a Combined Financial Services Guide and Product Disclosure Statement (PDS) published by PayPal on its website; and
(c) an online registration form completed by the User.
14 Each of the Business Account Contracts was a financial product by reason of s 12BAA(1)(c) of the ASIC Act: SOAF [9]. This was because they were an arrangement (and therefore a "facility") through which a person made non-cash payments: s 12BAA(1)(c) of the ASIC Act; ss 9 and 762C of the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth) read with s 5(2) of the ASIC Act (as to the meaning of "facility").
15 As at 30 June 2023, there were approximately 608,375 Business Account Contracts on foot between PayPal and Business Account Users: SOAF [10].
16 Some of the Business Account Contracts (Small Business Contracts) were both:
(a) standard form contracts within the meaning of s 12BF(1)(b) of the ASIC Act; and
(b) small business contracts within the meaning of s 12BF(4) of the ASIC Act: SOAF [11].
17 The Users who were party to the Small Business Contracts are referred to in these reasons as Small Businesses. As at 30 June 2023, there were approximately 606,930 Small Business Contracts on foot between PayPal and Small Businesses: SOAF [12].
18 For the purpose of the proceedings, and in the originating process, ASIC identified 10 Small Businesses which were parties to Small Business Contracts. These are referred to in these reasons as the Individual Contracts. The Individual Contracts are listed in Annexure B to the SOAF.
19 During the Relevant Period, the Small Business Contracts (including the Individual Contracts) contained the Fee Error Term in both the User Agreement (under the heading "Your responsibility to notify PayPal of pricing or fee errors") and the PDS (at clause 18.25 in the version of the PDS dated 21 September 2021, and clause 18.26 in subsequent versions).
20 Under each Small Business Contract:
(a) a Small Business was obliged to pay various fees to PayPal in stipulated circumstances: see SOAF [15(a)] and clauses 16.2, 16.6, 16.8, 17.1, 18 and 19 of the PDS and the passages of the User Agreement referred to at items 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15 and 16 of Annexure A to the SOAF;
(b) PayPal was entitled to deduct such fees from the Small Business's Business Account (including from amounts credited to the Small Business's Business Account): see SOAF [15(b)] and clauses 16.2, 16.6, 16.8, 17.1, 18 and 19 of the PDS and the passages of the User Agreement referred to at items 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15 and 16 of Annexure A to the SOAF; and
(c) each Small Business had the right to receive an account statement showing the activity on their Business Account: see SOAF [15(c)] and the passage of the User Agreement at item 17 of Annexure A to the SOAF.
21 The standard pricing and fees (referred to together as "fees" in these reasons) applicable to a Small Business's Business Account from time to time were mainly set out at clause 18 of the PDS under the heading "Fees and Charges". Other references to fees were contained in clauses 16.2, 16.6, 19 and 22 of the PDS; and parts of the User Agreement including the passages referred to at items 7-16 of Annexure A to the SOAF: SOAF [16].
22 The applicable fees varied depending upon the circumstances of each transaction; for example, whether the transaction was a domestic transaction or cross-border transaction, the payment type, the total transaction amount, whether micropayment pricing applied, whether the transaction involved a currency conversion, or was a chargeback, was sent to multiple recipients or was a refund and whether the User was withdrawing a balance to a linked debit card or bank account: SOAF [17].
23 For various types of fees set out in clause 18 of the PDS, the account statements and other account activity information accessible by a User did not describe the fee or the manner in which it was calculated in a way that was readily reconcilable with how the fee was described in clause 18 of the PDS: SOAF [19].
24 On 8 November 2023, PayPal removed the Fee Error Term from the PDS and User Agreement. On the same date, PayPal published on its website, on pages titled "Policy Updates" and "Past Policy Updates" (Policy Updates Pages) the fact that PayPal had removed the Fee Error Term from the PDS and User Agreement.
25 On 12 March 2024, PayPal amended the Policy Updates Pages of its website and stated:
(a) "That clause should be treated as though it had never formed part of the PayPal User Agreement" in respect of the Fee Error Term in the User Agreement; and
(b) "That clause should be treated as though it had never formed part of the CFSGPDS [Combined Financial Services Guide and Product Disclosure Statement]" in respect of the Fee Error Term in the PDS: SOAF [27] to [28].
26 PayPal has co-operated with ASIC in its investigation and in resolving this proceeding: SOAF [29] to [30].