Category: Lithuania

  • Cobalt Successful for East West United Bank in EUR 44 Million Claim

    Cobalt Successful for East West United Bank in EUR 44 Million Claim

    Cobalt has successfully represented Luxembourg-based East West Bank S.A. in a civil case against AB Bank SNORAS for termination of contracts, refund, and damages.

    According to Cobalt, Lithuanian courts of all instances supported the position of Cobalt and East West Bank that the dispute was not properly heard in Lithuanian courts and that the case should be heard in the courts of Luxembourg.

    East West United Bank S.A. is a Luxembourg bank specializing in private and business banking for over 40 years.

    AB Bank SNORAS is a Lithuanian commercial bank which belonged to the Konversbank financial group and which went bankrupt in 2011.

    The Cobalt team was led by Partners Elijus Burgis and Paulius Markovas and included Attorney-at-Law Modestas Petrauskas.  

  • New Managing Partner and New Partner at AAA Law in Lithuania

    New Managing Partner and New Partner at AAA Law in Lithuania

    The Vilnius office of AAA Law has selected Giedre Domkute as its new Managing Partner and brought former Sorainen Senior Associate Jonas Sakalauskas on board as partner.

    Domkute, who joined AAA Law in 1999 and was made partner in 2005, has over 15 years of experience in the field of intellectual property and contract law. According to AAA Law, “she specializes in licensing, franchising, contracting, real estate sales and leasing, [and] mergers and acquisitions … [and] also advises clients on labor law, company law, bankruptcy and restructuring issues, [and] represents Lithuanian and foreign companies in litigation.”

    Sakalauskas, who began his career in 2010 with Nordia Baublys & Partners before moving two years later to Sorainen, specializes in Litigation and Trade & Customs law. According to AAA Law, he “has accumulated significant experience in representing clients in litigations involving corporate law, real estate and construction, energy and environmental protection. His expertise in public administration disputes is particularly valuable to the companies operating in the highly regulated sectors: trade, energy, alcohol production and others. Jonas participates successfully in the arbitration disputes also. Likewise, [he] is one of the few customs experts with well-rounded experience in Lithuania. He advises export and import companies on commodity supply and customs law issues, as well as helps them resolving customs related disputes. 

  • “Viso Gero” in Vilnius: Five Partners to Split from Valiunas Ellex

    “Viso Gero” in Vilnius: Five Partners to Split from Valiunas Ellex

    Five of Valiunas Ellex’s 19 partners have announced that they will be leaving the highly-regarded Lithuanian firm.

    The five are Head of Finance Gediminas Reciunas, Dovile Burgiene, Joana Baublyte-Kulviete, Head of Industry and Regulatory Laura Ziferman, and Head of Tax Aiste Medeliene.

    Details about the official date the five will conclude their association with Valiunas Ellex and their future plans are not available at the current time, but should be coming soon

  • Sorainen Successful in Defense of Former Kedainiu Aruodai Director in Claim by Company

    Sorainen Successful in Defense of Former Kedainiu Aruodai Director in Claim by Company

    Sorainen has successfully defended Valdas Sarunas, a former director of Lithuania’s Kedainiu Aruodai grain producer and seller, against a claim for damages brought by the company.

    According to Sorainen, “last year Kedainiu Aruodai blamed the former manager for a bad harvest and related losses and claimed more than EUR 1 million in the Kaunas Regional Court. On October 11, 2018 the Court rejected the claim by Kedainiu Aruodai and ordered payment of almost EUR 15,000 by the company to Mr. Sarunas. The decision of the Kaunas Regional Court may still be appealed to the Lithuanian Court of Appeal within thirty days.”

    “The case is quite unique and significant as Kedainiu Aruodai was trying to prove a manager’s personal liability for loss suffered by a legal entity,” explained Sorainen Partner Laurynas Lukosiunas, who represented Sarunas in court. “The claimant asserted that the company manager should be liable for the entire loss suffered by the company, regardless of the reasons for loss. If such a precedent were to be set, it would eliminate the legal distinction between the responsibility of a legal entity and its manager, which would greatly complicate doing business in Lithuania. Working as a professional hired manager would carry immeasurable risk.”

    The Sorainen team led by Lukosiunas included Associates Vita Sabalyte and Indre Peledaite.

  • Tokenized Assets in Lithuania’s Legal Environment

    In recent years, blockchain technology has offered the business world a variety of new and innovative ways to improve and grow. Starting with initial coin offerings, blockchain technology has found its way into the financial services industry and many other fields of business in Lithuania. The trend of “asset tokenization” has recently become popular among companies seeking to adopt innovative modern technologies and create novel ways to apply blockchain technology when doing business. However, as convenient and simple as it may seem, asset tokenization is an extremely complicated business model, challenging not only the traditional approaches to the sale and purchase of assets, but also raising questions about the relevance of applicable laws and regulations currently in effect.

    Tokenization of assets can essentially be described as the conversion of property and/or other ownership rights into digital tokens in a system based on blockchain technology. This is usually achieved by issuing a quantity of asset-based digital tokens, each representing a fixed portion of the asset. This model allows people to invest large or small sums of money to acquire significant or insignificant parts of a particular asset, and thereby spread their investments across a number of objects. Furthermore, due to its nature, the tokenization model can be applied not only to material objects, but also to immaterial assets such as knowledge, ideas, and so on.

    This application of blockchain technology provides undoubted advantages to both businesses and consumers. First, tokenization ensures the liquidity of normally highly illiquid assets such as real estate objects, making it possible to own a token that represents a very small portion of a particular real estate object, and enabling that token to be easily sold and/or purchased on a secondary market. Second, the use of blockchain technology in the sale and purchase of various assets via tokenization eliminates the need for intermediaries when executing transactions, as the transactions are carried out effortlessly via self-executing “smart contracts,” ensuring the more efficient use of time and resources in comparison with traditional methods of sale and purchase of assets. Finally, each blockchain transaction is automatically recorded together with the complete history of and information about a particular asset – delivering a system that offers both clarity and reliability. 

    The legal basis of this blockchain-based asset tokenization model is, however, not always clear and/or properly developed. Even though the utilization of blockchain technology in the purchase and sale of assets via tokenization is becoming increasingly popular, legal problems related to it are not uncommon. In its position on virtual currencies and initial coin offering of October 10, 2017, the Bank of Lithuania – the supervisory authority of financial market participants in the Republic of Lithuania – stated that tokens that have characteristics of securities (i.e., that grant ownership rights and/or can be transferred to other persons as well as traded on secondary markets) are subject to the provisions of the Law on Securities of the Republic of Lithuania. As a result, due to the fact that many asset tokenization models involve investing in objects via special-purpose vehicles in the hope of gaining future profit, the sale of such tokens may be interpreted as an issue of securities and therefore fall under strict regulations of securities.

    What is more, the purchase of an asset-based token does not provide the same outcome as the actual purchase of an asset or part thereof. In accordance with the laws and regulations of the Republic of Lithuania currently in effect, strict requirements must be met and procedures must be followed when selling or purchasing certain assets – for example, real estate objects. The issue of real estate object-based tokens is usually not performed in compliance with these requirements and therefore is modelled as a sale of shares or loans, etc. Sales of shares or loans, however, are separately regulated by specific laws and other legal acts, in some cases requiring companies to gain licenses or fulfill other mandatory legal requirements. As a result, even though not exactly securities, real estate objects, or loans, but possessing certain features of each of them, asset-based tokens often end up falling under strict legal requirements which are either very inconvenient or impossible to fulfill. 

    All things considered, the legal environment in Lithuania has, in many cases, not yet fully developed to accommodate the market of tokenized assets, resulting in innovative asset tokenization models being non-compliant with current legal regulations. However, because of the nature of blockchain technology, tokenization is deemed to provide not only greater convenience, but also greater clarity and order in the process of sale and purchase of assets.

    By Daina Senapediene, Partner, and Snaige Zidonyte, Junior Associate, CEE Attorneys Lithuania  

    This Article was originally published in Issue 5.8 of the CEE Legal Matters Magazine. If you would like to receive a hard copy of the magazine, you can subscribe here.

  • TGS Baltic Lithuania Announces New Practice Structure and Team Leaders

    TGS Baltic Lithuania Announces New Practice Structure and Team Leaders

    TGS Baltic has announced that it has reformed its corporate structure and created a new team to lead its structural units. From now on, the law firm will organize its activities on nine “main market industries,” each led by a specific partner.

    The nine industry groups are: energy, finance, production, life sciences, technology, retail and wholesale, property development and investments, private equity funds, and transport.

    “Almost a year ago, we took the decision to organize the management of firm according to the principles of a business company with institutions and processes characteristic of a business,”  explained TGS Baltic Managing Partner Vilius Bernatonis, who will head the firm’s Energy practice. “First, we agreed among the partners that the head would be re-elected every four years, that teams of lawyers would be formed from experts with different competences, able to look with fresh eyes at business problems. Starting in October, the internal units of our law firm shall be formed according to the main areas of business. The units pool experts who have experience working with clients in a specific industry in different fields of law.”

    The Finance team is now headed by Associate Partner Ieva Dosinaite; the team covering the Production Industry is headed by Partner Vidmantas Drizga; the Life Sciences team is led by Senior Partner Eugenija Sutkiene; the Technologies team is led by Partner Mindaugas Civilka; the Retail and Wholesale team is led by Partner Lina Daruliene; the Property Development and Investments team is led by Partner Dainius Stasiulis; the Private Equity Funds team is led by Associate Partner Aurimas Pauliukevicius; and the Transport team is led by Partner Gytis Kaminskas.

    According to TGS Baltic, “the heads of these industry-based groups will be responsible for client care, and the improvement of multi-disciplinary competences. Executive Partner Marius Matonis will be responsible for quality of the services.”

    What the firm describes as its “specialist legal groups” will remain as they were before. The Dispute Resolution group will be headed by Partner Valentinas Mikelenas, the Corporate Law group by Partner Agnius Pilipavicius, the Real Estate and Transactions group by Partner Dalia Tamasauskaite-Ziliene, and the Regulatory Law group by Partner Lauras Butkevicius

  • Ellex Valiunas and Cobalt Advise on Reitan Acquisition of Lithuanian Coffee Shop Chain

    Ellex Valiunas and Cobalt Advise on Reitan Acquisition of Lithuanian Coffee Shop Chain

    Ellex Valiunas has advised the shareholders of Caffeine on the sale of 100% of the company’s shares to Norway’s Reitan Convenience, which operates the Narvesen and Lietuvos Spauda chains of convenience stores and news agents in Lithuania. The buyer was represented by Cobalt.

    According to Cobalt, “the coffee shop chain Caffeine was founded by four Lithuanian entrepreneurs in 2007 who will continue to manage the company after the close of the transaction.”

    “Caffeine is one of the strongest coffee shop brands in the Baltics and is known for its quality coffee and excellent service,” said Johannes Sangnes, head of Reitan Convenience AS. “The company’s coffee shops are located at the best locations in the largest cities. We are planning to grow our business in the Baltics, and believe that Caffeine will give us new opportunities for expansion in other countries.“ 

    The Reitan Group consists of five business units: REMA 1000, Reitan Convenience, the Uno-X Group, Reitan Properties, and Reitan Capital. The turnover of the Norwegian group of companies, which employs 37,000 people, exceeds EUR 9 billion. Reitan Convenience has 2,250 stores in seven countries (Lithuania, Latvia, Estonia, Finland, Norway, Sweden, and Denmark) where it operates Narvesen, 7 Eleven, Northland, Pressbyran, R-kioski, R-kiosk, and Lietuvos Spauda.

    According to Cobalt, “BaltCap made investments in the Caffeine coffee shop chain in 2012. Since then, the chain has grown to more than 60 shops across Lithuania, Latvia, and Estonia.”

    Ellex’s team included Associate Partner Robertas Ciocys and Senior Associate Povilas Junevicius.

    The Cobalt team was led by Managing Partner Irmantas Norkus and included Senior Associate Inga Mazvilaite.

  • Sorainen and Adlex Advise on PPI Group Property Acquisition in Vilnius Old Town

    Sorainen and Adlex Advise on PPI Group Property Acquisition in Vilnius Old Town

    Sorainen has advised the PPI Group on its approximately EUR 20 million acquisition of a site in Vilnius old town from Mikotelgroup to develop residential buildings with commercial premises. Adlex advised the sellers on the deal.

    The PPI Group and the Lithuanian Union of Architects are currently conducting a closed architectural tender to select the best architectural and urban solution.

    “Taking into consideration that this is an old town site that everyone values and is concerned about – we seek transparency,” said Dominykas Jasilionis, the PPI Group’s General Manager. “We want to make sure that all parties express their opinion and that representatives from the municipality as well as specialists from the Department of Cultural Heritage take part in the commission.“

    The PPI Group is controlled by Stichting North Europe Equity Fund Management, registered in the Netherlands. 

    The Sorainen team consisted of Partner Ausra Mudenaite and Senior Associate Simonas Skukauskas.

    Adlex says further information about the deal is confidential.

  • Ellex Valiunas Helps Mano Bankas Obtain Specialized Bank License in Lithuania

    Ellex Valiunas Helps Mano Bankas Obtain Specialized Bank License in Lithuania

    Ellex has helped Mano Bankas obtain a specialized bank license to operate in Lithuania.

    According to Ellex, “the issuance of specialized bank license is the first of its kind in Lithuania and has a great significance for Lithuania’s financial system. Without any doubt, this is another step turning Lithuania into one of the most attractive jurisdictions for banks and finance institutions in the European Union and European Economic Area.”

    Ellex’s team included Partner Gediminas Reciunas and Associate Partner Ausra Brazauskiene.

  • Deloitte Legal Advises Aurora Cannabis on Acquisition of Agropro and Borela

    Deloitte Legal Advises Aurora Cannabis on Acquisition of Agropro and Borela

    Deloitte Legal Lithuania has advised Aurora Cannabis Inc. on its acquisition of 100% of the issued and outstanding shares in Agropro UAB and Borela UAB for approximately EUR 5.5 million. PwC Legal advised Agropro and Borela.

    In addition, Aurora Cannabis will also refinance existing debt for about EUR 2 million and provide executive compensation and retention for EUR 1.5 million.

    Aurora Cannabis is a Canadian-licensed medical marijuana producer and distributor, headquartered in Edmonton, that trades on the Toronto Stock Exchange. Aurora Cannabis has eight licensed production facilities, five sales licenses, and operations in 14 countries.

    Agropro is a hemp seed contracting and processing company, and its sister company, Borela UAB, is a processor and distributor of organic hulled hemp seeds, hemp seed protein, hemp flour and hemp seed oil. It currently has 1,600 hectares under contract, potentially yielding more than 1 million kilogram of organic hemp with additional contracts available to expand to more than 3,000 hectares across Lithuania, Latvia, Estonia, and Poland.

    Borela owns and operates a hemp grain processing facility. According to Deloitte, on February 1, 2018, Borela became the only European hemp company to receive a BRC quality certificate, enabling Borela to supply its product to supermarkets.

    Deloitte reports that, in Agropro and Borela, Aurora Cannabis has acquired a substantial supply of organic hemp seed products, as well as the capacity to process the raw material into products, along with the international distribution channels to sell.

    The Deloitte Legal team consisted of Associate Partner Simas Gudynas, Managing Associate Tomas Mieliauskas and Senior Associate Agne Vanagiene.

    Editor’s Note: After this article was published, CEE Legal Matters learned that the PwC Legal team was led by Partner Rokas Bukauskas, who was assisted by Senior Associates Justina Kaledaite and Evelina Kisieliute.