Should Block Earner fairly be excused?
13 Section 1317S(2)(b)(ii) expressly requires that this question be addressed "having regard to all the circumstances of the case". The breadth of the expression "ought fairly to be excused" is capable of incorporating reasonableness as a consideration: Australian Securities and Investments Commission v Cassimatis (No 8) [2016] FCA 1023; (2016) 336 ALR 209 at [810] (Edelman J). Block Earner relies upon the following seven matters as the basis for it being excused from liability under s 1317S in respect of a pecuniary penalty order.
14 First, Block Earner submits that its conduct should not be characterised as a serious departure from the requirements of the Act, and should be seen as arising from an honest view about the application of technical definitions of financial products in the Act to the Earner product. I deal below with the question whether the contravention of s 601ED(8) (and also s 911A(5B)) was "serious" (as to which I find that it was serious), and I have already found that Block Earner acted honestly. Importantly, as I have said above, Block Earner formed the unchallenged view, after obtaining legal advice from a leading law firm, that there was no identified risk that the Earner product would breach any laws or regulations.
15 Second, Block Earner relies on the proposition, which ASIC accepts, that no loss or damage was suffered by investors by reason of the provision of the Earner product without an AFSL or without registration as a managed investment scheme. The lack of consequences of the contravening conduct in the nature of harm to investors is a material factor weighing in favour of relief from liability: ASIC v Vines at [52]. By 7 December 2022, a few weeks after the Earner product was discontinued voluntarily by Block Earner, Block Earner had returned to users all of the cryptocurrency that had previously been lent as part of the Earner product (Mr Karaboga's third affidavit at para 26). Block Earner submits that, in circumstances where the terms and conditions of the Earner product provided customers with a contractual right to a fixed rate of return, the potential risk for loss to investors from the operation of the Earner product was relatively low, as the Earner product did not expose investors to the underlying risk of the performance of the cryptocurrency which was on-lent by Block Earner, and investors were also able to withdraw their funds loaned to Block Earner at any time, further limiting risks associated with fluctuations in the underlying value of the cryptocurrency. However, in my view, there was a real risk that Block Earner potentially may not have been able to repay its customers in the event that it was unable to recover amounts from defaulting counterparties. ASIC submits, and I accept, that investors were exposed to a risk of loss by Block Earner not meeting the requirement of $10 million in net tangible assets in order to be a responsible entity of a managed investment scheme (as set out in ASIC Regulatory Guide 166: see RG166.215 as issued in April 2021, and RG166.227 as issued in July 2022).
16 Third, Block Earner submits that the benefit obtained by it from the operation of the Earner product was modest, being a total profit of $21,309.60 for the period 17 March 2022 to 16 November 2022 (Mr Karaboga's third affidavit at para 30). Most of that profit, namely an amount of $14,573.97, was generated by the fees charged for the conversion of AUD to cryptocurrency and cryptocurrency to AUD (Mr Karaboga's third affidavit at [30(a)]). That conversion process was not an element of my reasons for finding that the Earner product was a managed investment scheme or investment facility, and the same conversion process formed part of the Access product, which was found not to have contravened the Act. I accept ASIC's submission that the fact of that profit is relevant to the grant of relief under s 1317S. But in light of the relatively small amount of the profit and the fact that most of it derived from the lawful activity of currency conversion, I do not regard the profit as a matter of substantial weight in the circumstances of the present case.
17 Fourth, Block Earner submits that the Contraventions arose in an uncertain regulatory environment where government bodies were unsure as to the extent to which the financial product regime in the Act applied to cryptoasset service providers such as Block Earner. In this regard, Block Earner relies on various consultation papers released by the Department of Treasury in 2022 and 2023. For example, the consultation paper issued by the Department of Treasury on 21 March 2022 entitled "Crypto asset secondary service providers: Licensing and custody requirements" referred to the definition of "financial product" in s 763A of the Act and said (p 7):
The current definition of a financial product, which was written prior to the invention and proliferation of crypto assets, does not provide sufficient clarity as to the intended regulatory treatment of a wide variety of novel crypto assets."
18 Block Earner also referred to a media release by the Australian Law Reform Commission dated 18 January 2024, referring to its Final Report entitled "Confronting Complexity: Reforming Corporations and Financial Services Legislation" (Report 141, 2023) which stated (p 1):
The report found that the legislation governing Australia's financial services industry is a tangled mess - difficult to navigate, costly to comply with, and unnecessarily difficult to enforce.
Judges have described the current laws as being like "porridge", "tortuous", "treacherous", and "labyrinthine".
19 The recommendations in the Final Report included making it easier to tell when something is a "financial product" or "financial service" by introducing a single, simplified definition of both terms (p 2). Mr Karaboga gave evidence that he perceived, based on the release (among other things) of the consultation paper issued by Treasury on 21 March 2022, that there was significant uncertainty as to whether Australia's existing financial services laws applied to products like the Earner product (third affidavit at para 36). However, this perception must be read in light of Mr Karaboga's evidence that Block Earner concluded in effect that there was no identified risk of the Earner product breaching any laws or regulations, and the documentary evidence shows that that conclusion was formed after obtaining legal advice from a leading law firm.
20 Fifth, Block Earner submits that it has received adverse media coverage as a result of these proceedings and the Contravention Judgment that has affected its legitimate and lawful business. In referring to "adverse publicity", Block Earner means unfair or incorrect reporting, consistently with the relevant authorities. While adverse publicity in a general sense is often an inevitable consequence of wrongdoing and in most cases does not influence the assessment of the appropriate penalty, adverse publicity of an unfair or incorrect kind initiated by the prosecuting authority itself goes beyond the natural and probable consequences of the relevant wrongdoing, and may be taken into account in mitigation of penalty: Eva v Southern Motors Box Hill Pty Ltd (1977) 15 ALR 428 at 437 (Smithers J); Cousins v Merringtons Pty Ltd (No 2) [2008] VSC 340 at [61] (Hansen J); New Image Photographics Pty Ltd v Fair Work Ombudsman [2013] FCA 1385 at [67] (Collier J). In my view, such unfair or misleading reporting is relevant also to whether a person ought fairly to be excused under s 1317S, given the likely detriment already suffered by reason of that reporting.
21 On the day that I delivered the Contravention Judgment, on 9 February 2024, ASIC issued a media release, which was available to members of the public through ASIC's website, with the title or headline: "Court finds Block Earner crypto product needs financial services licence". The text of the media release began as follows:
The Federal Court has found fintech company Block Earner engaged in unlicensed financial services conduct when offering its crypto-backed Earner product.
From March 2022 to November 2022, Block Earner offered consumers the Earner product which allowed them to earn fixed yield returns from different crypto-assets.
In one of the first decisions on the application of the financial services law to crypto-backed products, today the Court found that Block Earner provided unlicenced [sic] financial services and operated an unregistered managed investment scheme when offering Earner. This is because the Earner product met the definition of the managed investment scheme and a facility for making a financial investment under the law.
22 The media release later stated that ASIC had been unsuccessful in its allegation that Block Earner's "Access" product was a financial product, stating that "Block Earner markets this product as giving consumers access to decentralised finance (DeFi) lending protocols." Later in the media release, ASIC said the following:
Block Earner has been an authorised representative of Flash Partners Pty Ltd since 1 August 2022. This authorisation does not relate to the Earner or Access Products.
23 Block Earner submits that the title or headline was unfair to Block Earner (although not deliberately so) because it was apt to lead a reader to form an inaccurate view or understanding of the outcome of the proceeding, as:
(a) it failed to make any mention of the fact that the Access product was found not to require an AFSL, which formed half of ASIC's case against Block Earner and which is the product currently being offered by Block Earner; and
(b) it suggested that Block Earner currently "needs" a financial services licence for a crypto product, when in fact Block Earner ceased offering the Earner product on 16 November 2022 and it does not require an AFSL for its Access product.
24 Following ASIC's media release, a number of articles were published reporting the findings of contravention in relation to the Earner product. There are seven such articles in evidence. One of those articles was published by "cryptonews" on 9 February 2024 with the headline "Australian Federal Court Rules Against Block Earner for Unlicensed Financial Services Conduct". It reproduced a Twitter post by ASIC Media which displayed the title or headline of the ASIC media release.
25 Mr Karaboga gave unchallenged evidence that he is "incredibly concerned" that such articles, along with the findings of contravention, will have devastating business and reputational consequences for the services that Block Earner continues to offer, including the Access product which was found not to have contravened the law (third affidavit at para 42). Mr Karaboga said that, in his professional experience, these kinds of business and reputational consequences can be particularly severe for new companies like Block Earner, which do not have significant cash reserves or are dependent on future fundraisings (in that potential investors may consider the adverse news coverage and the Contravention Judgment when making investment decisions) (third affidavit at para 43). Mr Karaboga is also concerned that the adverse media publicity will result in existing business partners deciding no longer to work with Block Earner, which could have severe consequences for Block Earner's operations (third affidavit at paras 44-50). Mr Karaboga refers to one of Block Earner's service providers deciding to terminate its agreement due to the potential for these proceedings to cause it reputational damage, but ultimately being persuaded not to do so (paras 45-48). Another service provider has terminated its arrangement with Block Earner concerning a product which is unrelated to Earner and Access (paras 49-50). Mr Karaboga refers to the adverse media coverage as one of the factors which led to Block Earner being unsuccessful in obtaining new equity funding in the second half of 2023 (third affidavit at para 57). I note, however, that Mr Karaboga's evidence appears to refer to the media publicity generally, rather than unfair or inaccurate reporting in particular.
26 ASIC disputed in its written submissions that its media release of 9 February 2024 was unfair or inaccurate, and submitted that it was inappropriate to refer only to the heading of a media release and not the text which followed. However, during the hearing before me, senior counsel for ASIC accepted that the headline of ASIC's media release was wrong, and that the media release as a whole had a tendency to mislead, and on that ground was unfair (T21.21-42).
27 In my view, Block Earner is correct to submit that ASIC's media release was unfair and misleading. The title or headline clearly stated that, according to the Court, Block Earner's crypto product "needs" a financial services licence. Using the present tense, ASIC was conveying that there was a need as at 9 February 2024 for Block Earner to hold a financial services licence in order to provide its crypto product. That was false. The crypto product offered by Block Earner which needed an AFSL was the Earner product which had not been offered since November 2022. The product which is still provided by Block Earner, namely the Access product, does not require an AFSL. Although the text of the article did refer to Block Earner having offered the Earner product from March to November 2022, many readers would not have been sufficiently astute to realise that there was no finding by the Court that Block Earner "needs" an AFSL to offer the crypto product that it was offering as at 9 February 2024. Indeed, the finding was that the crypto product which was on offer as at 9 February 2024 did not require an AFSL. At the very least, ASIC's media release had a "tendency to lead into error" in the sense discussed in Australian Competition and Consumer Commission v TPG Internet Pty Ltd [2013] HCA 54; (2013) 250 CLR 640 at [39] (French CJ, Crennan, Bell and Keane JJ). While most of the published articles reported fairly on the Contravention Judgment, ASIC's media release was available to members of the public through ASIC's website, and one of the articles showed the headline of the ASIC media release.
28 Sixth, Block Earner relies upon the fact that it has never previously been found by a court to have engaged in similar conduct. However, Block Earner was founded only in November 2021 and its platform was launched in March 2022 (third affidavit of Mr Karaboga at para 5). Accordingly, I do not regard this as a matter of any real significance.
29 Seventh, Block Earner relies on the unchallenged evidence of Mr Karaboga (third affidavit at para 9) to the effect that it has been actively involved in policy discussions with key industry participants and regulators concerning crypto-related products, and has actively sought to engage with the government on proposals relevant to the impact of cryptocurrency and related services on the existing financial services, including through its membership of representative bodies concerning the fintech and blockchain industries. Block Earner submits, and I accept, that its active participation in these industry bodies demonstrates a willingness on its behalf to engage with government and regulatory bodies on effective ways to regulate crypto-related products and services. Block Earner submits, and I accept, that this participation supports a finding that Block Earner has, at all times, sought to conduct its business in a lawful manner and has not consciously sought to provide cryptocurrency services in a way that contravenes the Act. Further, Mr Karaboga refers to two instances in which Block Earner determined that it did require a licence, whether an AFSL or an Australian Credit Licence, and ensured that it obtained one (third affidavit at para 49; fourth affidavit at para 12).
30 I accept that the first, second, fourth, fifth and seventh matters relied on by Block Earner favour Block Earner's application for relief from liability, except that: (a) in relation to the first matter, I find below that Block Earner's contravention of s 601ED(8) was serious, and I would have made the same finding in relation to the contravention of s 911A(5B) if it were necessary to do so; and (b) in relation to the second matter, I regard the potential risk of loss to customers as real and significant.
31 ASIC submits that the provisions which Block Earner contravened are important in terms of public policy: see ASIC v Vines at [52] (Austin J). I accept that submission, which I regard as a significant matter against the grant of relief from liability.
32 ASIC also submits that the questions whether or not the Earner product was a regulated financial product and involved a managed investment scheme are quintessentially legal questions, involving complex and technical questions of statutory construction and the application of judicial reasoning from other cases. ASIC submits that there is no evidence that Block Earner's personnel held sufficient qualifications and experience for Block Earner reasonably to have relied on its own resources. Although ASIC accepts that Block Earner obtained legal advice before launching the Earner product, ASIC submits that there is no evidence that the legal advice dealt with the question whether Earner involved a managed investment scheme, and no evidence that the advice was relied on by Mr Karaboga or others.
33 While there is no express evidence to the effect that the legal advice extended to whether the Earner product involved a managed investment scheme, that is readily explained by reference to the fact that ASIC's notice of 11 April 2022 did not refer to any such issue, and was said to be issued in relation to an investigation of suspected contraventions of ss 911A, 1041E and 1041H of the Act. In light of Block Earner having "no appetite for breaches in laws and regulations" (as stated in its ERMF), it is more likely than not that the advice which was sought and obtained from Gilbert & Tobin was directed generally to whether Block Earner's products and services complied with all relevant laws and regulations. There would have been no practical point in Block Earner confining its request for legal advice more narrowly at a time before ASIC had raised any particular potential contraventions with Block Earner. Further, I reject ASIC's submission that there is no evidence that Block Earner considered and relied on the legal advice from Gilbert & Tobin in concluding that the Earner product did not involve any contravention. Such consideration and reliance are obvious inferences to draw from the direct evidence that the legal advice was obtained, particularly when it was obtained by a company whose personnel were apparently not legally qualified. The inference is reflected in ASIC's notice of 11 April 2022, which asks whether legal advice was obtained, without adding superfluous questions as to whether it was considered and relied on.
34 ASIC further submits that if the Court were to grant Block Earner relief from liability in the present circumstances, then it may convey an impression to promoters of financial products, including those related to cryptoassets, that they need not rigorously evaluate whether their offerings are regulated financial products, and even that they may be better off by not obtaining legal advice on the question. ASIC submits that such a scenario risks creating a perception that the uncertainty inherent in a lay person's understanding of the Act will give rise to successful defences of an honest misapplication of a complex law, or a misapplication of the technical definitions of financial products and managed investment scheme in the Act.
35 I reject ASIC's submission that granting relief from liability in the particular circumstances of the present case may convey false impressions as to the standards which are expected of promoters of financial products. I accept that the complexity and uncertainty of much of this area of law heightens the imperative that such promoters obtain legal advice from experienced and competent lawyers before launching their products and services, but that is what Block Earner did in the present case.
36 I note that Mr Entwisle, counsel for Block Earner, properly drew my attention to Visy Paper Pty Ltd v Australian Competition and Consumer Commission [2005] FCAFC 236; (2005) 224 ALR 390 at [18]-[22] and [46]-[49], in which Stone and Allsop JJ referred to Universal Music Australia Pty Ltd v Australian Competition and Consumer Commission [2003] FCAFC 193; (2003) 131 FCR 529 at [306]-[310] (Wilcox, French and Gyles JJ). In Universal Music the Full Court regarded the fact that the contravener had received favourable and relevantly unqualified legal advice as a matter which, if relevant at all, was entitled to minimal weight in the assessment of a penalty: at [306]-[307]. The Full Court said that giving a substantial discount by reason of such legal advice would send the wrong signal to the commercial community, in particular by encouraging risk-taking and pushing the boundaries of anti-competitive conduct: at [310]. However, the Full Court's reasoning was made in the context of the finding in that case that the contravening conduct was "plainly and deliberately anti-competitive in its intent" and thus "ran a serious risk" of breaching the Trade Practices Act 1974 (Cth) (at [308]). In my view, no comparable finding as to Block Earner's intention is appropriate in the present case. In light of the fact that Block Earner obtained legal advice from a leading law firm and concluded that its appetite for no risk of breaches of laws or regulations was satisfied, I do not think that granting relief from liability is likely to send the wrong signal to other industry participants. The Full Court has confirmed that Universal Music and Visy Paper do not set down an "inflexible rule": Flight Centre Limited v Australian Competition and Consumer Commission (No 2) [2018] FCAFC 53; (2018) 260 FCR 68 at [64] (Allsop CJ, Davies and Wigney JJ).
37 The present case is also distinguishable from the circumstances considered in Mayfair Wealth Partners Pty Ltd v Australian Securities and Investments Commission [2022] FCAFC 170; (2022) 295 FCR 106 at [235]-[236] (Jagot, O'Bryan and Cheeseman JJ), where the defendant's argument was merely that statements had been "reviewed and approved" by solicitors. Here, by contrast, the defendant adduced unchallenged evidence to the effect that, after taking legal advice, there was no identified risk of a breach of any laws.
38 This issue raises a deeper question concerning the rule of law, being the state of affairs in which
a legal system is legally in good shape. Among the desiderata of the rule of law are that the rules of the legal system are promulgated and clear. These qualities of predictability in the legal system, among others, generate what Professor Lon L Fuller described in The Morality of Law (Yale University Press, rev ed, 1969) as "a relatively stable reciprocity of expectations between lawgiver and subject" (p 209). The lawgiver expects that subjects will comply with the laws that have been previously announced to them, and the subjects expect to be able to go about their lives by way of self-directed conduct in the knowledge that they are the laws which will be applied: see to similar effect Professor John Finnis, Natural Law and Natural Rights (Oxford University Press, 1980), pp 272-3. These are, of course, matters of degree, and I have already referred to the views of Commonwealth government bodies as to the lack of clarity and predictability in the law applicable to the present case. Importantly, Professor Finnis says of the promulgation of laws that it is "not fully achieved by printing ever so many legible official copies of enactments, decisions, forms and precedents; it requires also the existence of a professional class of lawyers whose business it is to know their way around the books, and who are available without undue difficulty and expense to advise anybody who wants to know where he stands" : Natural Law and Natural Rights, p 271. Before engaging in conduct in an area where the law is complex or otherwise uncertain, a person who is acting responsibly will consult a member of that professional class of lawyers to ascertain where he or she stands. As Lord Diplock asked rhetorically of the local council accused of negligence and other wrongs in Dunlop v Woollahra Municipal Council [1982] AC 158 at 171: "What more could the council be reasonably expected to do than to obtain the advice of qualified solicitors whose competence they had no reason to doubt?" A person who acts in that manner in obtaining the advice of a competent lawyer is entitled, as a general matter, to be accorded the dignity of responsible self-direction and autonomy which the rule of law is designed to secure, even though a court may ultimately find that the law was breached, and should not be treated censoriously.
39 Accordingly, subject to the circumstances of the particular case, a person who perceives there to be legal uncertainty in a proposed course of conduct, who then obtains legal advice from a person who is qualified to give it competently, and who then genuinely concludes that there is no identified risk of breaching the law, ought fairly to be excused from liability for a civil pecuniary penalty for later engaging in that conduct and thereby breaching the law, at least in circumstances where the person does not thereby derive a substantial profit or cause substantial harm. It is not necessary in the present case to consider other scenarios, such as where legal advice leads the person to conclude that the conduct is probably lawful but that the question is relatively finely balanced and carries a substantial risk of contravention, or where the person derives a substantial profit or causes substantial harm by virtue of the contravention. It should also be noted that I am not dealing here with the issue whether the law was contravened (as to which a belief that the conduct would not contravene the law is no defence), but whether in all the circumstances the defendant ought fairly to be excused for the contravention.
40 This reasoning must be read consistently with the Full Court's statement in Flight Centre at [63] that "It is misconceived to extrapolate from [Kiefel J's judgment in Australasian Meat Industry Employees' Union v Australia Meat Holdings Pty Ltd [1998] FCA 664; (1998) 82 IR 76], as Flight Centre does in its submissions, a proposition that if one reasonably misunderstands one's liability position in circumstances that give rise to a civil penalty, one should be relieved of the penalty or one should receive a light penalty." As I have sought to make clear in the preceding paragraph, the particular circumstances of the case remain paramount.
41 It is also worth clarifying that the general proposition set out in paragraph 39 will not be applicable merely because the defendant asserts that it concluded, after receiving competent legal advice, that there was no identified risk of breaching the law. The more unreasonable the conclusion, the more will be required from the defendant: see Times Travel (UK) Ltd v Pakistan International Airlines Corporation [2021] UKSC 40; [2023] AC 101 at [118] (Lord Burrows). In the present case, Mr Karaboga's evidence of his conclusion was unchallenged and does not appear to be unreasonable.
42 ASIC also relies on the lack of contrition by Block Earner in relation to the Contraventions. However, I do not regard that as a significant matter on the question of relief from liability under s 1317S, unless in the particular circumstances of the case a lack of contrition can be treated as indicating a propensity to contravene the law in a similar way in the future. I do not regard that as a realistic possibility in the present case, particularly having regard to the first and seventh matters relied on by Block Earner as discussed above.
43 In my view, despite the importance of the provisions which Block Earner contravened, the seriousness of the Contraventions and the small profit which was made, in all the circumstances of the case Block Earner ought fairly to be excused for the Contraventions. I accept ASIC's submission that the issues involved in the Contraventions were complex and technical legal questions, but it is clear that Block Earner obtained legal advice from a leading law firm before launching the Earner product and genuinely concluded that there was no identified risk in implementing the Earner product.