INSIGHT

Class action funding revisited – litigation funding schemes held to not be Managed Investment Schemes

By Belinda Thompson, Andrew Burns
Class Actions

Brookfield Multiplex was 'plainly wrong' 5 min read

The Full Federal Court has held that litigation funding agreements are not 'managed investment schemes' (MIS), overturning its own more than decade-old decision in Brookfield Multiplex.1

The 2009 decision of Brookfield Multiplex held that litigation funding arrangements were MISs for the purposes of the Corporations Act 2001 (Cth) (the Act), however the then-Labor Government quickly moved to exempt funders from the MIS regime.

In mid-2020, the then-Liberal Government reinstated the MIS obligations as part of a range of additional regulations for litigation funders, including a requirement to hold an Australian financial services licence (AFSL). The reinstatement of the MIS obligations created significant uncertainty and regulatory burden for the funding industry.

We recently reported that the new Labor Government would likely wind back the application of the MIS regime to litigation funding schemes – the Federal Court's decision makes this unnecessary. Litigation funding schemes no longer constitute a MIS for the purposes of the Act.

Recent comments from Assistant Treasurer Stephen Jones suggest the requirement for funders to maintain an AFSL might also soon be scrapped.

Questions remain as to the appropriate level of regulation of the litigation funding industry. The ALRC and Parliamentary Joint Committee on Corporations and Financial Services Inquiry have each recommended reforms directed at litigation funding. As previously reported, we expect the new Labor Government to revisit the ALRC's recommendations on class actions and litigation funding. Those recommendations included a number of recommendations to increase the court's supervisory powers over litigation funders.

The decision

The Full Federal Court in LCM Funding Pty Ltd v Stanwell Corporation Limited [2022] FCAFC 103 allowed an appeal brought by LCM Funding Pty Ltd (LCM), finding that the litigation funding scheme relating to a class action does not fall within the description of a MIS.

Justice Anderson, with whom Justices Middleton and Lee agreed, held that the text, context and general purpose and policy of the MIS regime 'plainly does not have the features set out in the definition of "managed investment scheme"'.


Background

Stanwell Corporation Limited (Stanwell), the first respondent in the underlying class action proceeding, alleged that the litigation funding scheme relating to the class action constituted a financial product for the purposes of the Act, and was an unregistered MIS.

In response, LCM contended that:

  • the scheme was not a financial product or a MIS, by operation of the 'grandfathering' provisions inserted by the Corporations Amendment (Litigation Funding) Regulations 2020 (Cth); and
  • in any event, the scheme was not a MIS and LCM was not operating a MIS. In this regard, LCM argued that the majority decision in Brookfield Multiplex was plainly wrong.

The primary judge, Justice Beach, agreed that the grandfathering provisions applied. While his Honour concluded it was not necessary to decide whether the scheme was an MIS (and that, in any case, he was bound by Brookfield Multiplex), his Honour nevertheless expressed considerable doubt as to its correctness, suggesting there was 'a strong case for arguing that it is appropriate for a Full Court to reconsider the majority decision'.2

Brookfield Multiplex plainly wrong 

The Full Court in LCM Funding v Stanwell did just that. Justice Anderson, with whom Justices Middleton and Lee agreed, held that the majority decision in Brookfield Multiplex was plainly wrong.

At first instance, Justice Beach observed that the majority in Brookfield Multiplex:

  • arguably took an overly technical approach to each element of the managed investment scheme definition instead of an orthodox purposive approach; and as a result,
  • construed the definition as 'capturing an arrangement that could not realistically have been within the legislature's contemplation and which shares little with the kinds of schemes understood to constitute managed investment schemes'.3

Additionally, his Honour noted that the statutory regime applying to MISs in Chapter 5C of the Act was simply 'unfit for purpose' to be applied to litigation funding schemes.

The Full Court agreed with this analysis, and said further aspects of the MIS regime are incapable of application to a typical litigation funding scheme, including the inability to value a member's interest and issues with identifying the responsible entity operating the scheme.

Justice Anderson ultimately concluded that:

[c]onsidering the text of s 9 of the Act itself, as well as its context and general purpose and policy of the managed investment scheme regime under Chapter 5C of the Act, we are of the view that the present Scheme (which is relevantly identical to the scheme under consideration in [Brookfield Multiplex]) plainly does not have the features set out in the definition of "managed investment scheme"…

Regulatory reforms

In its December 2018 final report4 on class action litigation funding the ALRC included six recommendations directed at increasing court oversight and supporting the court to protect the interests of group members, including that:

  1. solicitors should be prevented from seeking to recover unpaid legal fees from plaintiffs or group members in funded class actions;
  2. there should be a statutory presumption that funders will provide security for costs;
  3. the court should be empowered to award costs against funders and insurers who fail to comply with the overarching purposes of the Federal Court Act;
  4. the court should be given greater supervisory powers over funding agreements, to ensure they are only enforceable with the court's approval and for the court to be able to reject, vary or amend their terms;
  5. ASIC should amend Regulatory Guide 248 to require funders to report annually to ASIC on compliance obligations and conflicts of interest; and
  6. the Corporations Regulations should be amended to include 'law firm financing' and 'portfolio funding' within the definition of 'litigation funding scheme', to ensure emerging funding models are brought within the regulations.

We support each of these recommendations as sensible steps towards increasing the court's powers to scrutinise the conduct of funders and the reasonableness of commission rates.

In late 2020, the Parliamentary Joint Committee on Corporations and Financial Services Inquiry published its final report5, with similar recommendations directed at increasing court guidance and supervision of litigation funding arrangements.

Our thoughts on the likely priorities of the newly elected Labor Government can be found here.

Footnotes

  1. Brookfield Multiplex Ltd v International Litigation Funding Partners Pte Ltd (2009) 180 FCR 11 (Brookfield Multiplex).

  2. Stanwell Corporation Ltd v LCM Funding Pty Ltd [2021] FCA 1430 at [175].

  3. Ibid at [18].

  4. ALRC: Integrity, Fairness and Efficiency – An Inquiry into Class Action Proceedings and Third-Party Litigation Funders, December 2018.

  5. Parliamentary Joint Committee on Corporations and Financial Services: Litigation funding and the regulation of the class action industry, December 2020.

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