75 The Explanatory Memorandum for the Futures Industry Bill 1986 provided the following explanation for cls 130 and 131 which became ss 130 and 131:
"Cl. 130 : Futures market manipulation
284. Cl.130 prohibits a person from effecting or taking part in one or more transactions (whether involving futures contracts or not) that have or are intended to have or are likely to have the effect of creating an artificial price, or maintaining at an artificial level the price, for dealing in futures contracts on a futures market within the Territory.
285. The two main forms of manipulation are "squeezing" and "cornering" which involve attempts to manipulate futures prices by manipulating supply and demand for the physical commodities that are deliverable under futures contracts so that available supply is exceeded and artificial prices are created.
Cl. 131 : False trading and market rigging
286. False trading and market rigging will be prohibited. A person will be prohibited from creating a false or misleading appearance of active trading, or creating a false or misleading appearance with respect to the market for futures contracts (s‑cl.131(1)).
287. A person will also be prohibited from maintaining, inflating, depressing or causing fluctuations in the price for dealing in futures contracts on any futures market in the Territory by any fictitious or artificial transactions or devices (s‑cl.131(2)).
288. For the purpose of determining whether a transaction is fictitious or artificial within the meaning of s‑cl. 131(2), the fact that the transaction is, or was at any time, intended by the parties who entered into it to have effect according to its terms will not be conclusive (s‑cl. 131(3)) - cf North v Marra Developments Ltd (1981) 56 ALJR 106 at 112 per Mason J.)"
That reference in North is found in (1981) 148 CLR 42 at 58‑59.
76 Chapter 8 of the Corporations Act 1989 (Cth) related to the Futures Industry. Section 1259(1) provided:
"Where a person takes part in, is concerned in, or carries out, whether directly or indirectly:
(a) a transaction (whether a dealing in a futures contract or not) that is, is intended to have, or is likely to have; or
(b) 2 or more transactions (whether any of them is a dealing in a futures contract or not) that have, are intended to have, or are likely to have;
the effect of:
(c) creating an artificial price for dealings in futures contracts on a futures market within Australia; or
(d) maintaining at a level that is artificial (whether or not it was previously artificial) a price for dealings in futures contracts on a futures market within Australia;
each of the succeeding subsections has effect without prejudice to the effect of any of the others."
77 The 1989 Corporations Act ultimately became the basis for the Corporations Law which the states adopted as their Corporations Acts so as to provide a uniform Corporations Law throughout Australia. The Corporations Legislation Amendment Act 1990 (Cth) implemented that purpose. Amongst the amendments to the Corporations Act 1989 (Cth) to enable the Corporations Law to be applied as a law of each State and Territory, ss 1259 and 1260 were repealed and there was substituted:
"1259. A person must not, in this jurisdiction or elsewhere, take part in, be concerned in, or carry out, whether directly or indirectly:
(a) a transaction (whether a dealing in a futures contract or not) that has, is intended to have, or is likely to have; or
(b) 2 or more transactions (whether any of them is a dealing in a futures contract or not) that have, are intended to have, or are likely to have:
the effect of:
(c) creating an artificial price for dealings in futures contracts on a futures market in this jurisdiction; or
(d) maintaining at a level that is artificial (whether or not it was previously artificial) a price for dealings in futures contracts on a futures market in this jurisdiction.
1260. (1) A person must not, in this jurisdiction or elsewhere, create, cause to be created, or do anything that is calculated to create, a false or misleading appearance:
(a) of active dealing in futures contracts on a futures market in this jurisdiction; or
(b) with respect to the market for, or the price for dealings in, futures contracts on a futures market in this jurisdiction.
(2) A person must not, in this jurisdiction or elsewhere, by any fictitious or artificial transactions or devices, maintain, inflate, depress, or cause fluctuations in, the price for dealings in futures contracts on a futures market in this jurisdiction.
(3) In determining whether a transaction is fictitious or artificial for the purposes of subsection (2), the fact that the transaction is, or was at any time, intended by the parties who entered into it to have effect according to its terms is not conclusive."
78 Sections 997 and 998 of the Corporations Law which came into operation on 1 January 1991 and was adopted by the States and Territories as their Corporations Act, provided relevantly:
"Stock market manipulation
997(1) A person shall not enter into or carry out, either directly or indirectly, 2 or more transactions in securities of a corporation, being transactions that have, or are likely to have, the effect of increasing the price of securities of the corporation on a stock market, with intention to induce other persons to buy or subscribe for securities of the corporation or of a related body corporate.
…
(4) A person shall not enter into, or carry out, either directly or indirectly, 2 or more transactions in securities of a corporation, being transactions that have, or are likely to have, the effect of reducing the price of securities of the corporation on a stock market, with intent to induce other persons to sell securities of the corporation or of a related body corporate.
…
False trading and market rigging transactions
998(1) A person shall not create, or do anything that is intended or likely to create, a false or misleading appearance of active trading in any eligible securities on a stock market or a false or misleading appearance with respect to the market for, or the price of, any eligible securities.
…
(3) A person shall not, by means of purchase or sales of any securities that do not involve a change in the beneficial ownership of those securities or by any fictitious transactions or devices, maintain, increase, reduce, or cause fluctuations in, the market price of any securities."
79 Sections 1041A and 1041B were introduced into the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth) by the Financial Services Reform Bill 2001 which was enacted as the Financial Services Reform Act 2001 (Cth). The Revised Explanatory Memorandum for that Bill explained that the proposed s 1041A would replace ss 997 and 1259 of the Corporations Act, that it was based on s 1259 but it would apply to all financial products traded on a financial market and that, as was currently provided in s 1259, it would apply to a transaction or two or more transactions with the effect of creating or maintaining an "artificial price".
80 Section 1041A was derived from s 997 of the Corporations Law but unlike s 997, the proscription in s 1041A does not contain any "intention" or "intent" on the part of the relevant person as a necessary integer or element of the offence. That was a deliberate legislative change. The commentary on the draft provisions of the Financial Services Reform Bill 2000 issued by Treasury in February 2000 set out in par 11.10
"Section 997 currently contains an 'intention' element. Civil contravention of the new provisions will not require that element of intention to be established."
81 ASIC submitted that although ss 1041A and 1041B do not require proof of any particular intent, the existence of an intention such as to increase the price of the shares being purchased, was sufficient to satisfy the requirement of an "artificial price" for the purposes of s 1041A(c) and a "false or misleading appearance … with respect to … the price" in s 1041B(1)(b).
82 It is important to note that ASIC submitted that what occurred on 31 December 2007 was a genuine transaction which nevertheless contravened the legislation because of the purpose actuating the trade by the purchaser. ASIC submitted that an "artificial price" is a price which is created when a transaction is undertaken for the sole or primary purpose of setting the market price. ASIC eschewed the proposition that what occurred was a fictitious transaction. It submitted that the price was "artificial", that is, a price that was constructed or contrived, because the transaction itself which created the price was undertaken for the sole or primary purpose of setting the price rather than the sole or primary purpose being that of a genuine purchaser to have those shares at that price. ASIC submitted that the transaction was proscribed because it was not a transaction that resulted from the interplay of the forces of genuine supply and demand because on one side the sole or primary purpose was to set the price, not to acquire the shares.
83 ASIC relied upon the reasoning of Mason J in North v Marra Developments Ltd (1981) 148 CLR 42 at 58‑59:
"In terms the statutory prohibition [s 70 of the Securities Industry Act 1970 (NSW)] is directed against activity which is designed to give the market for securities or the price of securities a false or misleading appearance. In this setting, 'calculated' means 'designed' or 'intended' rather than 'adapted' or 'suited'. It is not altogether easy to translate the generality of this language into a specific prohibition against injurious activity, whilst at the same time leaving people free to engage in legitimate commercial activity which will have an effect on the market and on the price of securities. Purchases or sales are often made for indirect or collateral motives, in circumstances where the transactions will, to the knowledge of the participants, have an effect on the market for, or the price of, shares. Plainly enough it is not the object of the section to outlaw all such transactions.
It seems to me that the object of the section is to protect the market for securities against activities which will result in artificial or managed manipulation. The section seeks to ensure that the market reflects the forces of genuine supply and demand. By 'genuine supply and demand' I exclude buyers and sellers whose transactions are undertaken for the sole or primary purpose of setting or maintaining the market price. It is in the interests of the community that the market for securities should be real and genuine, free from manipulation. The section is a legislative measure designed to ensure such a market and it should be interpreted accordingly.
I agree with Hope and Samuels JJ.A. in rejecting the suggestion that the section strikes only at fictitious or colourable transactions. Transactions which are real and genuine but only in the sense that they are intended to operate according to their terms, like fictitious or colourable transactions, are capable of creating quite a false or misleading impression as to the market or the price. This is because they would not have been entered into but for the object on the part of the buyer or of the seller of setting and maintaining the price, yet in the absence of revelation of their true character they are seen as transactions reflecting genuine supply and demand and having as such an impact on the market."
84 These observations were adopted and followed by the majority of the New South Wales Court of Appeal in Fame Decorator Agencies Pty Ltd v Jeffries Industries Ltd (1998) 28 ACSR 58. Gleeson CJ (with whom Powell JJA agreed), cited the passage in North v Marra Developments Ltd (supra)to which I have referred in par [83] above and at 62 continued:
"This approach accords with United States authority on similar legislation, where a price reflecting basic forces of supply and demand working in an open, efficient and well-informed market, is contrasted with an artificial price resulting from manipulative conduct: see eg, Cargill Inc v Hardin; Freeman v Laventhol & Horwath.
Section 998 aims to preserve the integrity of the share market. Markets, in reflecting the interaction of forces of supply and demand, may suffer from a variety of imperfections, including mismatches of information, without such imperfections destroying their integrity. However, the conduct of a seller of thinly traded shares, calculated to effect sales at the lowest, rather than the highest, obtainable price, and timed so as to deflect the possibility of some purchasers bidding up the price, had both the purpose and effect of creating, temporarily, an artificial market and price.
There is a difference between the market and the individual buyers who had current bids immediately before the close of trading on 28 April 1995. The effect of Fame's conduct upon the market for shares in Jeffries, and the market price, was not merely incidental. The central object of such conduct was to influence the market price."
(Citations omitted)
85 ASIC submitted that the present case was a mirror image of what Gleeson CJ had referred to. Rather than a seller who was going to enter the market and ask or transact a sale at the lowest price, there was a buyer willing to pay a price well above the other bids that had been entered in the market at that time which was the bid that was entered to deflect the possibility of selling or transacting a trade which may affect the market price.
86 ASIC also relied upon the observations of Heerey J in Donald v Australian Securities and Investments Commission (2000) 104 FCR 126 where his Honour in considering s 998(1) of the Corporations Act said at 134:
"This was plainly an artificial or managed manipulation of the price. In his own words, the applicant wanted to give the Burswood shares 'a bit of a nudge upwards' so that the price appeared higher than it would if the market had operated in accordance with the normal expectations of participants, with buyers buying for the lowest price obtainable and sellers selling for the highest."
87 The defendant submitted that the observations of Mason J in North v Marra Developments (supra) were not determinative of the issues in the present case because the facts were quite fundamentally different and that the distinctions between the facts in that case and the present were important. It is true that the facts in North v Marra Developments Ltd (supra) were quite different but the observations of Mason J (with whom the other members of the Court agreed) provide substantial support for the submissions of ASIC as to the proper interpretation and construction of ss 1041A and 1041B(1)(b).
88 I note that the defendant's submissions are supported by the reasoning of Priestley JA in Fame Decorator Agencies Pty Ltd v Jeffries Industries Ltd (supra). However, Priestley JA was in dissent in that case, Gleeson CJ and Powell JA comprised the majority of the Court.
89 The fundamental issue to address is what is meant by an "artificial price". The expression "artificial price" is defined in the Shorter Oxford English Dictionary as "constructed, contrived", "not natural though real" and "not real". The expression "natural" is defined as "in the usual or ordinary course of things" or "in the usual course of nature".
90 Having regard to the context in which the expressions "artificial price" and "false or misleading appearance" appear, I consider that the expression "artificial price" in s 1041A connotes a price created not for the purpose of implementing or consummating a transaction between genuine parties wishing to buy and sell securities, but rather for a purpose unrelated to achieving the outcome of the interplay of genuine market forces of supply and demand. I consider that the reasoning of Mason J in North v Marra Developments Ltd (supra) (par [83] above) in relation to the creation of a false or misleading appearance of active trading and the creation of a false or misleading appearance with respect to the market for, or the price of, securities is equally applicable to the creation of an artificial price for trading in securities. That is to say, the reasoning applies to ss 1041A and 1041B(1)(b).
91 It is fundamental to the working of the free market forces of securities exchanges such as the ASX that buyers are concerned to buy securities at the lowest possible price and sellers are concerned to achieve the highest possible price. Any different approach to the price for which securities are traded is a distortion of the interplay of the open market forces of supply and demand.
92 A consideration of the scope of s 1041A is complicated by the fact that the section has a heading "Market Manipulation". Section 13(3) of the Acts Interpretation Act 1901 (Cth) provides that headings to sections do not form part of the Act. It is therefore necessary to be careful in equating the act of creating an artificial price for shares or securities with manipulation of the market.
93 A guide as to the legislative intention enshrined in the expression "artificial price" is found in the Explanatory Memorandum for the Futures Industry Bill 1986 (par [75] above). It is apparent from par 288 of that Memorandum (par [75] above) that the draftsman and the Parliament had in mind the observations of Mason J in North v Marra Developments Ltd (supra) at 58‑59 (par [83] above). Although Mason J was analysing s 70 of the Securities Industry Act 1970 (NSW) which proscribed the creation of "a false or misleading appearance of" trading in shares, I consider that his observations are equally applicable to the interpretation of "artificial price" in s 1041A. Mason J focussed on the intention or purpose of the conduct of a relevant buyer or seller in market. His Honour was concerned to ensure that market prices reflected the operation of the genuine forces of supply and demand.
94 The defendant's submissions proceed on the basic assumption that so long as there was a seller in the market with a posted or "ask" price who was independent of, and not connected or associated in any way with, a person such as the defendant who was wanting to buy at that price to achieve his purpose of increasing the price of Select Vaccines shares on the market there was no creation of an "artificial" price for those shares, nor was there the creation of a false or misleading appearance with respect to the price for trading in them.
95 This assumption is misplaced. It places emphasis only on the existence of a genuine seller and fails to take into account that there also needs to be, as Mason J observed in North v Marra Developments Ltd (supra), a genuine buyer whose purpose in buying the shares is to achieve a genuine purchase at the lowest possible price and thereby reflect the forces of genuine supply and demand. The defendant was not such a genuine buyer. His purpose in buying the shares was rather to set the market price. Mason J excluded such a buyer from the equation of the interplay of the forces of genuine supply and demand.
96 The defendant did not wish to acquire or own shares in Select Vaccines on 31 December 2007. Further, there was no evidence that his mother wished to do so. Indeed, the defendant knew, because of Select Vaccines' Share Trading Policy, he was prohibited because of his role as a director in Select Vaccines from acquiring shares in Select Vaccines on 31 December 2007. What he wanted to do was to have the share price in Select Vaccines increase at the close of the trading for the 2007 year. He was not intending or proposing to buy shares in Select Vaccines at the lowest price which he could on the market. He could only achieve his object, that is to qualify for the bonus, by ensuring that the price for trading in Select Vaccines shares increased.
97 Because of the defendant's familiarity with "market depth" information about Select Vaccines shares, he knew that by placing the order to purchase the Select Vaccines shares at market price he would thereby be able to move the share price up to 2.4 cents per share and then 2.5 cents per share by placing an order to purchase $2,550 worth of shares, having regard to the number of shares offered for sale at those prices.
98 I am therefore satisfied that at the time the defendant spoke to Bell Potter at 1.45 pm on 31 December 2007 and gave instructions to purchase the Select Vaccines shares on market he took part in, and carried out, a transaction that had the effect of creating an artificial price for trading in Select Vaccines shares on the ASX. This resulted in a contravention of s 1041A(c) of the Act.
99 I am further satisfied that by giving this instruction to Bell Potter the defendant committed an act which had the effect of creating a false and misleading appearance with respect to the market for and the price for trading in Select Vaccines shares on the ASX. This resulted in a contravention of s 1041B(1)(b) of the Act.
100 I therefore propose to make a declaration of such contraventions in accordance with s 1317E of the Act.
101 I am further satisfied that by undertaking that course of conduct on 31 December 2007 the defendant contravened ss 181(1) and 182(1) of the Act.
102 ASIC submitted that the transaction undertaken by the defendant on 31 December 2007 resulted in a contravention by the defendant of his obligations under ss 181 and 182 of the Act. Section 181 provides:
"(1) A director or other officer of a corporation must exercise their powers and discharge their duties:
(a) in good faith in the best interests of the corporation; and
(b) for a proper purpose.
(2) ..."
103 Section 182 of the Act provides:
"(1) A director, secretary, other officer or employee of a corporation must not improperly use their position to:
(a) gain an advantage for themselves or someone else; or
(b) cause detriment to the corporation.
(2) A person who is involved in a contravention of subsection (1) contravenes this subsection."
104 Not only did the defendant, a director of Select Vaccines, consciously and deliberately contravene the Select Vaccines' Share Trading Policy, he deliberately and consciously lied to the other members of the Board of Directors about what he had done on 31 December 2007 and embarked on a deliberate course of conduct to conceal what he did. The severity of his conduct and the egregious nature of his conduct was exacerbated by the preparation of the Q&A document around 26 June 2008.
105 The share trade which the defendant initiated and implemented on 31 December 2007, which I have found was carried out on his own behalf and not on behalf of anyone else, was a clear breach of Select Vaccines' Share Trading Policy. The end result of his conduct was that Select Vaccines suffered a financial loss. Had the share trade not been undertaken and completed, Martin Soust & Co would not have received the bonus which was available to it under the Executive Service Agreement in the event of an increase relevantly in the share price. Further, the defendant concealed from the other directors of Select Vaccines the true situation in relation to the share trade. If he had been honest with his fellow directors, they would not have approved or resolved to grant the bonus.
106 As I have found earlier, the defendant lied to Mr Wadley when he told him after the inquiry from the ASX that it was his mother who had purchased the shares. He consciously and deliberately concealed from Select Vaccines and its directors that he was the true purchaser of the shares. When the matter of the bonus was discussed at the meetings of the Remuneration Committee and the Board he continued to conceal the true position. What is more, he signed the cheque that effected the payment of the bonus. I have no doubt that the defendant's course of conduct on and after 31 December 2007 in relation to the share trade on that day was such that in contravention of s 181(1) of the Act the defendant did not exercise his power and discharge his duty as a director of Select Vaccines in good faith, in the best interests of Select Vaccines or for a proper purpose. Indeed, he did so for an improper purpose. Further, by initiating and implementing the share trade on 31 December 2007 and ultimately signing the cheque that effected payment of the bonus, the defendant made improper use of his position as a director of Select Vaccines and its Chief Executive Officer to gain an advantage for himself or at least for Martin Soust & Co and to cause detriment to Select Vaccines.
107 The defendant contravened ss 181(1) and 182(1) of the Act not only by placing the order to purchase $2,550 worth of shares in Select Vaccines at market on the ASX, but also by contravening Select Vaccines' Share Trading Policy and failing to inform his fellow directors of his involvement in the purchase and deliberately concealing that involvement from them.
108 Sections 1041A and 1041B are "civil penalty provisions" which are defined in s 1317E(1) of the Act. So are ss 181(1) and 182(1) of the Act. I am therefore required by s 1317E to make a declaration as to the contravention of those sections. Section 1317G of the Act empowers the Court to order the defendant to pay the Commonwealth a pecuniary penalty of up to $200,000 if a declaration of contravention has been made under s 1317E in the circumstances there referred to.
109 A contravention of ss 181(1) and 182(1) of the Act is by virtue of s 1317D also a corporation/scheme civil penalty provision whereas a contravention of ss 1041A and 1041B are contraventions only of a financial services civil penalty provision.
110 The pecuniary penalties which the Court is empowered to order in respect of these contraventions are found in s 1317G(1) in relation to corporation/scheme civil penalty provisions and s 1317G(1A) in respect of financial services civil penalty provisions.
111 The power to disqualify a person from managing a corporation pursuant to s 206C of the Act is enlivened where the Court has made a declaration under s 1317E of the Act that the person has contravened a corporation/scheme civil penalty provision.
112 I propose therefore to make the declarations sought by ASIC and otherwise adjourn the proceeding to enable the parties to make further submissions as to whether any, and if so what, orders should be made under s 1317G of the Act that pecuniary penalties be paid by the defendant and whether any, and if so what, order should be made under s 206C(1) of the Act disqualifying the defendant from managing corporations for such period as the Court considers appropriate.