The relationship between s 13 and s 16 of the ASIC Act
32 Provide's application is based on the following premises which are set out in its Concise Statement:
8. By reason of the contravention consequences referred to in [4] and [7] above [relating to, among other things, maximum penalties], a contravention of ss 911A, 1041E, 1041F, and 1041H of the Corporations Act and ss 12DA, 12DB and 12DF of the ASIC Act is a serious contravention within the meaning of that expression as found in s 16(1)(a) of the ASIC Act (s 16 serious contravention).
9. It follows that, as at 29 March 2022 and 5 August 2022 respectively, ASIC must have commenced and amended the investigation on the basis that it had reason to suspect that Provide may have committed s 16 serious contraventions of the Corporations Act or the ASIC Act, which s 16 serious contraventions are denied.
10. By email dated 2 November 2023, the Australian Government Solicitor, acting for and on behalf of ASIC, stated "we are instructed that ASIC has not prepared an interim report pursuant to section 16(1)(a) of the ASIC Act in respect of its investigation of Provide Nominees".
11. Pursuant to s 16 of the ASIC Act, where, in the course of an investigation under Division 2 of Part 3 of the ASIC Act, ASIC forms the opinion that a serious contravention of the Corporations Act or the ASIC Act has been committed, ASIC must prepare an interim report that relates to the investigation and set outs its findings about the contraventions and the evidence and other material on which those findings are based.
12. It follows that, in the period 29 March 2022 to 2 November 2023, ASIC, in consequence of its conduct of the Investigation, was not able to and did not form an opinion that Provide has committed a s 16 serious contravention of either the Corporations Act or the ASIC Act.
13. By reason of the matters set out in [12], by no later than 2 November 2023 and at all material times thereafter, ASIC did not have reason to suspect, as is required by s 13 of the ASIC Act, that Provide may have committed a contravention of ss 911A, 1041E, 1041F, and 1041H of the Corporation Act, nor a contravention of ss 12DA, 12DB and 12DF of the ASIC Act.
14. Further or alternatively, by no later than 2 November 2023, ASIC did not have reason to suspect that Provide may have committed a contravention of the Corporations Act or the ASIC Act.
33 Provide's primary cause of action is disclosed at [13]. The basis for its claim is that because ASIC had not prepared an interim report (required by s 16(1)(a) of the ASIC Act if, in the course of an investigation, ASIC "forms the opinion that a serious contravention of a law … has been committed"), then it follows that from at least that time ASIC did not have "reason to suspect that there may have been committed a contravention of the corporations legislation" as required by s 13(1)(a).
34 Provide also contends that an alternative cause of action, not based on the bare fact that no s 16 interim report has been prepared, is pleaded at [14] which relies upon the pleaded facts in the Concise Statement. This will be addressed below.
35 Sections 13 and 16 sit within Div 1 ("Investigations") of Pt 3 of the ASIC Act.
36 Section 13 empowers ASIC to investigate suspected contraventions of the ASIC Act and Corporations Act. Section 13 relevantly provides:
13 General powers of investigation
(1) ASIC may make such investigation as it thinks expedient for the due administration of the corporations legislation (other than the excluded provisions) where it has reason to suspect that there may have been committed:
(a) a contravention of the corporations legislation (other than the excluded provisions); or
…
(6) If ASIC has reason to suspect that a contravention of a provision of Division 2 of Part 2 may have been committed, ASIC may make such investigation as it thinks appropriate.
(Emphasis added.)
37 Section 16 is "directed to ensuring that discovered violations of legal rules and prohibitions are drawn to the attention of appropriate authorities": Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu v Australian Securities Commission (1994) 54 FCR 284 at 291 (per Lindgren J) which was approved by the Full Court in Australian Securities Commission v Deloitte Touche Tohmatsu (1996) 70 FCR 93 at 106 (per Beaumont, Drummond and Sundberg JJ).
38 Section 16 relevantly states:
16 Interim report on investigation
(1) Where, in the course of an investigation under this Division, ASIC forms the opinion that:
(a) a serious contravention of a law of the Commonwealth, or of a State or Territory in this jurisdiction, has been committed;
…
it must prepare an interim report that relates to the investigation …
(Emphasis added.)
39 Drummond J set out the well-established principle in Australian Securities Commission v Lucas (1992) 36 FCR 165 at 178 that:
Far from there being a principle that, once there is an assertion that a statutory power has been used for an improper purpose, there is a burden on the authority exercising the power to prove propriety, the cases I have referred to show that there is a well-established principle applicable in a variety of situations that it is the person asserting impropriety in the exercise of a statutory power who has the burden of making out that challenge, difficult though that task will generally be.
40 The principle that a person impugning the exercise of statutory power has the burden of establishing impropriety extends to where the power is exercisable upon the existence of reasons for a specified belief, such as s 13 of the ASIC Act: see Little River Goldfields NL v Moulds (1991) 32 FCR 456 at 466 (per Davies J).
41 ASIC says that Provide has failed to discharge its onus to establish that ASIC did not, as at 2 November 2023, hold a suspicion that Provide may have contravened the corporations legislation such as to justify continuing its investigation pursuant s 13 of the ASIC Act.
42 Provide's argument that ASIC's failure to form the state of mind required by s 16 means that ASIC did not form, and could not have formed from 2 November 2023, a different state of mind pursuant to s 13 is illogical and therefore Provide's application has no reasonable prospect of success.
43 Sections 13 and 16 of the ASIC Act contemplate distinct states of mind and serve different purposes. The phrase "forms the opinion" in s 16 contemplates a belief or conclusion that a contravention has been committed. A "reason to suspect" in s 13 is a state of mind that falls well short of a belief or a conclusion. ASIC may have "reason to suspect" that a contravention "may have been committed" (s 13(1)(a) and s 13(6)) without ever having "form[ed] the opinion" that a contravention "has been committed" (s 16(1)(a)). It does not follow as a matter of logic that if ASIC has not formed an opinion that a serious contravention of a law has been committed, then ASIC could not have, and does not continue to have, a reason to suspect that a contravention may have been committed. That is to say nothing at this stage about the distinction between "contravention" and "serious contravention" which is discussed below.
44 Further, that an investigation is occurring and continues is a predicate of s 16. That must include a s 13 investigation. Whether or not ASIC formed the opinion set out in s 16 in the course of an investigation cannot establish that ASIC did not hold and could not hold, or was without basis for holding, another prior state of mind required by s 13 to make an investigation. ASIC not forming the s 16 opinion in the course of an investigation cannot have the result that it no longer has the power to conduct the investigation at all.
45 Provide did not seek to rebut, either in its written or oral submissions, the illogicality of its argument that the lack of a s 16 opinion equals a lack of s 13 state of mind. As Provide's cause of action disclosed in the pleadings fails as a matter of logic, the defect cannot be cured by any amendment to the pleading or the production of evidence. Therefore, Provide has "no reasonable prospect of successfully prosecuting the proceeding" within the meaning of s 31A(2) of the FCA Act and r 26.01(1)(a) of the Rules based on its primary cause of action.
46 That is sufficient to deal with the Summary Dismissal Application. However, as ASIC put an additional case for summary dismissal based on the distinction between "contravention" in s 13 and "serious contravention" in s 16, I will also deal with that in the next section.