Category: Austria

  • Commission Proposes New Directive to Step Up Fight Against Corruption

    While allegations of corruption continue to make headlines in Austria, the Ministry of Justice responded in January with draft legislation on the Corruption Law Amendment Act 2023.

    Now, the Commission is proposing a new directive to update and harmonise the EU rules on how to define and punish corruption offences. While the proposal aims to create a level playing field in all Member States in the fight against corruption, mainly by requiring Member States

    • to put or have in place bodies in their national law specialised in preventing and repressing corruption;
    • to ensure the liability of legal persons, while excluding that such liability is alternative to that of natural persons;
    • to regard certain circumstances as aggravating, i.e. if the crime is committed by a high-level official; and
    • to regard certain circumstances as mitigating, for instance where offenders provide information or collaborate with authorities, or in the case of legal persons, to have effective internal controls in place,

    it also contains several provisions that go beyond Austria’s Corruption Law Amendment Act 2023. As a reminder: Besides introducing a stricter regime for “candidates for office” and the prohibition to purchase mandates, i.e. by demanding/offering a fee for the allocation of a mandate for oneself or a third party, the Austrian Corruption Law Amendment Act 2023 also amends the law on the Responsibility of Legal Entities (Verbandsverantwortlichkeitsgesetz; “VbVG“). Under this law, a legal entity can be held criminally liable for criminal acts committed by its current or former employees and decisionmakers in their capacities as employees and/or decisionmakers of the company.

    The maximum fine can range from 40-180 daily rates based on the maximum imprisonment sentence for the offence in question. Currently, the maximum daily rate is capped at EUR 10,000. With its new Act, the Ministry of Justice wants it raised to EUR 30,000, meaning that the maximum fine for a corruption offence in Austria could amount to EUR 4.65m. If the Commission’s proposal becomes law, this will not be sufficient. The

    Commission is proposing fines “which should not be less than 5 % of the total worldwide turnover” and other harsh sanctions, including temporary or permanent disqualification of that legal person from the possibility to engage in commercial activities.

    The proposal will have to be negotiated and adopted by the European Parliament and the Council before it can become EU law. If it does, it will not only affect the new Austrian Corruption Law Amendment Act 2023 but will have a significant impact on enforcing anti-corruption law violations across the EU.

    We will keep you posted about any new developments.

    By Klara Kiehl, Partner, and Katharina Mydza, Associate, Schoenherr

  • Brandl Talos and WMWP Advise on Creandum’s USD 20 Million Investment in Prewave

    Brandl Talos has advised Creandum on its USD 20 million investment in Prewave. Act Legal WMWP advised Prewave.

    “In the fall of last year, Prewave announced its EUR 11 million Series A investment led by Kompas VC which has now been extended by another USD 20 million,” Brandl Talos informed. “Besides the lead investor Creandum, certain existing investors of Prewave joined this Series A+ round.”

    Brandl Talos and, reportedly, Act Legal WMWP were among the advisors on that initial Series A round as well (as reported by CEE Legal Matters on September 28, 2022).

    Vienna University of Technology spin-off Prewave was founded in 2017. The company uses an artificial intelligence-powered platform to analyze online sources in more than fifty languages to find, categorize, and directly address the risks that might impact supply chains. The Prewave client portfolio includes companies such as BMW, Lufthansa, and PwC.

    Creandum is a venture capital fund investing in early-stage technology companies in Europe and has offices in Stockholm, Berlin, London, and San Francisco.

    The Brandl Talos team was led by Partner Roman Rericha and included Attorney-at-Law Adrian Zuschmann and Associates Julia Strimitzer and Elena Ciresa.

    The WMWP team included Attorney-at-Law Paul Koppenwallner.

  • Brandl Talos Advises Climentum Capital on EUR 4.5 Million Seed Round for Fermify

    Brandl Talos has advised European climate technology-focused fund Climentum Capital on leading a EUR 4.5 million seed investment round for Fermify.

    Fermify is an Austrian food technology company that provides a solution for the in-house production of casein proteins, based on precision fermentation, with the aim to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.

    According to Brandl Talos, “the funding round was led by Climentum Capital as lead investor besides Auxxo Female Catalyst Fund, Fund F, Clima Now, Satgana Ventures, and Triple Impact Ventures. These join the existing pre-seed investors Ubermorgen Ventures, Backbone Ventures, PUSH Ventures, and Simon Capital, who also contributed to the funding.”

    The Brandl Talos team included Partners Roman Rericha and Stephan Strass and Associates Elena Ciresa and Celine Dobnikar.

    Brandl Talos did not respond to our inquiry on the matter.

  • Wolf Theiss Advises Hospitality Software Solutions on Acquisition of SiTec

    Wolf Theiss has advised hospitality sector software provider Hospitality Software Solutions on its acquisition of SiTec. 

    According to Wolf Theiss, “this transaction allows the holding company, Hospitality Software Solutions, to further enhance its product portfolio with an award-winning hotel, restaurant, wellness, and cinema management software. Hospitality Software Solutions provides professional all-in-one software solutions for the hospitality sector.”

    SiTec is the provider of a cloud solution called Front Office Cloud, which combines a hotel program, restaurant cash register, marketing, and employee communication tools. 

    The Wolf Theiss team included Partners Sarah Wared and Matthias Unterrieder, Counsel Paulina Pomorski, Senior Associates Lukas Ploesch and Magdalena Ziembicka, Associates Nikolaus Wollner and Pascal Gstoettner, and Consultant Karin Spindler-Simader.

    Wolf Theiss was unable to disclose further information on the deal.

  • Nicole Daniel Makes Partner at DLA Piper in Vienna

    Former Counsel Nicole Daniel has been promoted to a Partner position in DLA Piper’s Austrian office.

    Daniel is a member of DLA Piper’s Litigation and Regulatory group in Vienna. She first joined the firm in 2010 as an Intern and was promoted to Senior Associate and Counsel in 2018 and 2021, respectively. Between 2012 and 2018, Daniel was also a Research Fellow at Stanford Law School.

    “We’re delighted to see Nicole appointed partner and offer our warmest congratulations,” DLA Piper Country Managing Partner Christoph Mager commented. “Nicole has been a great professional and human asset to our Litigation and Regulation practice and to the entire firm for many years. As a multi-admitted lawyer who values interaction with international clients and colleagues, she exemplifies DLA Piper’s values.”

    “I’m very happy to have been appointed partner at DLA Piper,” Daniel added. “The firm has been my professional home since I started as an intern in the fall of 2010. I’m looking forward to further developing together. I would like to pay particular attention to the promotion of young talent as well as to the topic of diversity – two areas in which our firm is increasingly perceived as a role model and which are very important to me personally.”

    According to DLA Piper, the move wraps up the firm’s CEE Partner promotion round, with a total of six appointed partners. CEE Legal Matters also covered the firm’s other May 2023 partner appointments, in Poland, Hungary, and Romania. “Altogether, DLA Piper has 62 partners and 300 lawyers in six CEE offices: Bratislava, Bucharest, Budapest, Prague, Vienna, and Warsaw. The six CEE Partner promotions are part of a larger intake of 72 lawyers promoted to partnership across all of the firm’s practice areas, spanning 43 offices in 20 countries,” the firm announced.

  • Wolf Theiss Advises on BehaviorQuant Seed Funding Round

    Wolf Theiss has advised financial technology start-up BehaviorQuant Behavioral Finance Technologies and its US and French investors on a seed funding round.

    “The capital injection represents a major step for the start-up’s future growth,” Wolf Theiss informed.

    BehaviorQuant is an Austrian company that developed a digital web platform aimed at optimizing decision-making for investment professionals by means of the systematic quantitative analysis of behavioral characteristics and risks.

    The Wolf Theiss team included Partner Peter Oberlechner, Counsel Michael Kienzl, Senior Associate Marion Schimboeck, and Associate Nikolaus Wollner.

  • Schoenherr and Cerha Hempel Advises on Voestalpine EUR 250 Million Convertible Bond Issuance

    Schoenherr, working with Linklaters, has advised joint global coordinators and joint bookrunners BNP Paribas and Citigroup Global Markets Europe and joint bookrunner UniCredit Bank on the oversubscribed EUR 250 million issuance of convertible bonds by Voestalpine AG. Cerha Hempel advised Voestalpine.

    Voestalpine is an Austrian steel and technology group listed on the Vienna Stock Exchange. Its main fields of activity are the production and processing of materials supplying the automotive and consumer goods industries as well as the aerospace and oil and gas industries.

    According to Schoenherr, “the bonds can be converted into new and/or existing Voestalpine shares at a conversion price of initially approximately EUR 40.89 per share. The convertible bonds pay semi-annual interest at a coupon of 2.75% per annum. They have a term of five years, are divided into bonds with a denomination of EUR 100,000 each, and are admitted to the Vienna MTF of the Vienna Stock Exchange.”

    Schoenherr’s team included Partners Christoph Moser and Sascha Schulz, Attorney at Law Angelika Fischer, and Associate Daniel Gritsch.

    Cerha Hempel’s team included Partner Volker Glas and Senior Associate Christian Aichinger.

  • EU: CJEU Lowers Threshold for GDPR Damages

     

    Last Thursday the Court of Justice of the European Union (“CJEU”) issued a long awaited ruling on damages resulting from a data protection infringement (C-300/21). Since the Regulation (EU) 2016/679 (General Data Protection Regulation; “GDPR”) came into force on 25 May 2018, claims for damages under Art 82 GDPR due to alleged data protection violations like unlawful data processing or incompliance with the GDPR as well as in the context of data breaches or leaks have been steadily increasing. The CJEU’s recent ruling clarifies essential issues but raises just as many questions.

    The CJEU decision relates to a dispute before the Austrian Regional Court for Civil Law Matters Vienna (Landesgericht für Zivilrechtssachen Wien), where the claimant (data subject as per the GDPR’s definition) requested EUR 1,000 damages as compensation. The claimant allegedly suffered harm, because the defendant generated upon statistical extrapolation a prognosis of the claimant’s willingness to receive marketing materials of certain Austrian political parties. This information was not passed on to third parties, but the claimant had not consented to such data processing and felt offended.

    The Austrian courts have dealt with an increasing number of cases where claimants asserted annoyance, offence, or discomfort about alleged unlawful data processing or loss of control of their data and requested compensation under Art 82 GDPR. Art 82 GDPR provides that any person who has suffered material or non-material damage as a result of an infringement of the GDPR shall have the right to receive compensation from the controller or processor for the damage suffered.

    Austrian and German courts, in particular, have always been reluctant to award compensation to data subjects for non-material damages, since by their nature such claims are often not easy to verify and also bear a significant potential of misuse. Therefore in both countries non-material damages are only awarded rather restrictedly in specific cases, e.g. compensation for pain and suffering in case of bodily injury, mourning loss or loss of enjoyment of a holiday.

    Notably, the Austrian courts, specifically the Higher Regional Court of Innsbruck (Oberlandesgericht Innsbruck) and the Austrian Supreme Court (Oberster Gerichtshof), issued contradictory decisions in proceedings for non-material damages resulting from alleged GDPR infringements prior to the referral for a preliminary ruling to the CJEU.

    CJEU referral for a preliminary ruling
    In the present case the Austrian Supreme Court submitted three questions to the CJEU and asked the CJEU to clarify

    · whether an individual shall be entitled to receive compensation under Art 82 GDPR from a GDPR infringement alone or whether such a claim requires the individual to have suffered harm from that infringement;

    · if so, whether harm suffered must exceed a certain degree of seriousness;

    · if so, the methods of assessing the amount of damages.

    Mere GDPR violation is not enough for compensation
    The CJEU’s response clearly provides that the fact that the provisions of the GDPR had been violated is insufficient for compensation claims. In other words, the CJEU does not see Art 82 GDPR as an entitlement for punitive damage claims. Rather, the CJEU rebuffed any thoughts of Art 82 GDPR conferring punitive damages and followed the Advocate General’s Opinion. The court also mentions that liability under Art 82 GDPR requires three conditions: (i) an infringement of the GDPR, (ii) damage suffered by the data subject and (iii) a causal link between the unlawful processing and the damage.

    These three conditions conform with national tort law, however, there is one missing. Whereas in Austria the conditions for a tortious claim are (i) damage, (ii) causal link between damage and infringement of the law, (iii) infringement of the law and (iv) fault, the CJEU has not made any mention at all with respect to fault.

    Up until now, the vast majority interprets Art 82 (3) GDPR, exempting a controller or processor from liability if proven they were not responsible for the event giving rise to the damage, as a reversal of the burden of proof on fault. This means that the controller or processor must prove that they did not act culpably. Since Art 82 (3) GDPR does not use the term fault, Verschulden or faute in English, German or French, the following questions remain: Does the controller have to be at fault for the data subject to receive damages? How does not being responsible differ from not being at fault?

    The CJEU did not address Art 82 (3) GDPR at all. It might be argued that the CJEU thus has not decided whether fault is required as a condition for damages. However, the wording of Art 82 (3) GDPR is ambiguous at best, and the CJEU did state that damage, causal link and infringement are required to establish a right to compensation – with no mention of a fourth condition. A clear ruling of the CJEU on these questions would be highly welcome, not least because, unlike Art 82 GDPR, Art 83 GDPR addresses the concept of fault and even differentiates between intentional and negligent behaviour. Further, the practical implications of the difference between responsibleness and fault are unclear.

    Reliance on national law to assess damages
    One of the questions of Austrian Supreme Court also aimed at clarification whether the assessment of the compensation shall be governed by EU law requirements. In response, the CJEU pointed out that the GPDR and EU law do not provide for rules on assessment of damages. Therefore, the national courts shall apply domestic law to assess damages, complying with the EU principles of equivalence and effectiveness.

    The response is not unexpected but may increase the number of claimants or claimant groups trying out different EU courts to find out where the highest damages are awarded (forum shopping).

    No threshold of seriousness
    With respect to a threshold for immaterial damages, the CJEU did not follow the Advocate General’s opinion, who demanded an infringement of at least some weight. Instead, the CJEU found that Art 82 GDPR does not mention any threshold of seriousness, which is in the view of the court supported by the objectives of the GDPR. Further, a threshold of seriousness of harm suffered would risk the coherence of the GDPR; meaning that the threshold could then vary from member state to member state, from court to court.

    Therefore, even minor (emotional) grievances following a GPDR violation could technically lead to an award of compensation for non-material damages. However, the CJEU points out that the data subject claiming compensation would still need to prove that negative consequences after a GDPR violation are a consequence of a non-material damage. It goes without saying that this caveat is not helpful in practice as the most convenient evidence would be the data subject’s own testimony.

    It is straight forward and rather simple that claimants do indeed require proof that they suffered harm – even when asserting non-material damage like annoyance, anger or the like. The questions are: Will judges believe it? How can the temptation of misuse reasonably be balanced against legitimate interferences in peoples’ personal spheres? How much is an hour of annoyance over a data breach worth in monetary terms? How much a week of feeling slight discomfort?

    It is regrettable that the CJEU did not follow the Advocate General and German (and Austrian) courts, who required a certain degree of seriousness of the damage suffered.

    Way forward?
    This will certainly not be the last case for the CJEU on compensation for (non-material) damages resulting from data protection violations. An increase in claims is expected, with privacy groups celebrating the CJEU decision, especially as claimants do not need to demonstrate that the non-material damage suffered has reached a certain degree of seriousness. However, it certainly paints a picture that a decision acknowledging compensation for personal “distress” gets instantly hailed by organisations that cannot suffer any but rather earn their living with large scale distressed individuals.

    Even more so in light of the Directive (EU) 2020/1828 on Collective Redress, which member states should have implemented at the end of 2022. Austria, like most EU member states, has failed to do so, but this will certainly make class action-style litigations easier for any group of claimants. Damages claims of countless data subjects could be bundled and filed in one court.

    By Sara Khalil, Counsel, Schoenherr

  • Schoenherr Advises Banks on EUR 1.7 Billion Financing for Wiener Stadtwerke

    Schoenherr, working with Linklaters, has advised sole coordinator, documentation agent, bookrunner, and mandated lead arranger UniCredit Bank Austria, facility agent ING Bank, bookrunners and mandated lead arrangers Erste Group Bank, Raiffeisenbank International, and Commerzbank, as well as other banks on the EUR 1.7 billion revolving syndicated facility for Wiener Stadtwerke.

    According to Schoenherr, “Wiener Stadtwerke’s debut in the international syndicated loan market was significantly oversubscribed compared to the target volume of EUR 1.7 billion. The new credit facility serves to finance general corporate purposes and is available to Wiener Stadtwerke also for very short-term liquidity requirements, if necessary.”

    Schoenherr’s team included Partner Martin Ebner, Attorney at Law Mate Kovacs, and Associate Nikolaus Muellner.

    Linklaters’ team in Germany included Partner Michal Hlasek and Associates Lasse Petersen and Martin Reschke.

    Schoenherr was unable to disclose additional information on the deal.

  • Binder Groesswang, SCWP Schindhelm, and CMS Advise on Semperit’s Acquisition of Rico Group

    Binder Groesswang has advised Semperit Aktiengesellschaft Holding on its acquisition of the Austrian Rico Group. SCWP Schindhelm advised the seller. CMS advised a consortium of banks led by UniCredit Bank Austria and UniCredit Bank on providing EUR 250 million in financing for Semperit.

    “For Semperit, the acquisition represents an expansion in terms of product portfolio, processing technologies, automation, and materials,” Binder Groesswang announced. “This acquisition should open up further markets, especially in North America, and generate additional growth.”

    The Rico Group is a silicone injection molding tools supplier and liquid silicone components producer. The Rico Group includes companies in Austria, Switzerland, and the US.

    Publicly listed company Semperit Holding develops and produces polymer products for the industrial and medical sectors, including hydraulic and industrial hoses, conveyor belts, escalator handrails, construction profiles, cable car rings, products for railway superstructures, and examination and surgical gloves.

    The Binder Groesswang team was led by Partner Florian Khol and Attorney-at-Law Christoph Schober and included Partners Clemens Willvonseder, Ivo Rungg, Markus Uitz, Regina Kroell, and Christine Dietz, Counsels Hellmut Buchroithner and Alexander Kramer, Attorney-at-Law Felix Fuith, Associates Christopher Marchel, Sung-Hyek Hong, Larissa Wagner, Florian Defrancesco, David Schneebauer, Lisa Jost, Magdalena Schachinger, Raphael Dorda, and Stefanie Syrch, and Lawyers Florian Gruber, David Roetzer, Sabine Apfl-Trompeter, and Christoph Raab.

    The SCWP Schindhelm team included Partner Gerald Schmidsberger and Lawyer Bernhard Gonaus.

    The CMS team was led by Partner Stefan Paulmayer and included Attorney-at-Law Wolfgang Hellsberg and Associates Ramona Mujanovic and Mark Timar.