Category: Russia

  • Dentons Advised CarPrice on Mitsui Investment Into Japanese Subsidiary

    Dentons Advised CarPrice on Mitsui Investment Into Japanese Subsidiary

    Dentons Moscow has advised CarPrice on a minority investment into its Japanese subsidiary from Mitsui.

    According to Dentons, CarPrice is “the leading online used car broker and auctioneer headquartered in Moscow, Russia. Baring Vostok is the company’s lead investor. In 2015 CarPrice was named as one of the hottest European startups by Wired UK.” The firm describes Mitsui as “one of the largest general trading companies in Japan,” and reports that “its business area covers energy, machinery, chemicals, food, textile, logistics, finance, and more.”

    The firm’s team was led by Partner Christopher Rose.

  • Dentons Represents Rosgosstrakh on JV with Chinese Partners to Create New Chinese Insurance Company

    Dentons Represents Rosgosstrakh on JV with Chinese Partners to Create New Chinese Insurance Company

    Dentons is representing Rosgosstrakh in its USD 300 million joint venture with Guohe Life (China), Anxin Trust & Investment, and other investors involving the creation of a new Chinese insurance company.

    Dentons’ role includes the structuring of the joint venture, drafting and negotiation of all joint venture documentation between Rosgosstrakh and its Chinese partners, and advising on relevant Chinese insurance regulatory, licensing, and corporate requirements. 

    The Dentons team includes Moscow-based Partner Tim Stubbs and Shanghai Partner Adam Chen, Moscow-based Associate Konstantin Nazarov, and Shanghai-based Associates Samantha Zhu, Sophia Yu, and Will Zhou.

  • Eversheds Sutherland Takes Over Moscow and St. Petersburg Offices from Hannes Snellman

    Eversheds Sutherland Takes Over Moscow and St. Petersburg Offices from Hannes Snellman

    Eversheds Sutherland has announced the opening of three new offices, extending its geographic footprint to 66 offices in 32 countries. The new offices are in Luxembourg, Moscow, and St Petersburg. 

    Eversheds Sutherland takes over the entire Russian operations of Hannes Snellman, which entered the Russian market in 2006 by acquiring ETL Law Offices. The Russian offices will be led by former Hannes Snellman St. Petersburg Managing Partner Victoria Goldman, who is joined by four additional partners and 17 lawyers. The firm reports that “a full range of corporate law services will be offered, with a particular emphasis on real estate, litigation, corporate and M&A, and corporate crime & investigations advice.”

    The firm reports that Managing Partner Victoria Goldman, “has over 20 years of experience in corporate law and has successfully advised on numerous major investment projects and complex international transactions. Victoria will be supported by Partners Yury Pugach (real estate, litigation and dispute management), Luke Wochensky (litigation and dispute management, corporate crime and investigations), Anu Mattila (corporate and M&A), and Mikhail Timonov (corporate and M&A).”

    Hannes Snellman Senior Partner Johan Aalto explained the decision to sell its offices and withdraw from Russia. “After more than a decade of serving esteemed clients with a very experienced and proficient team in the Russian market, it is time for Hannes Snellman to hand over the reins to Eversheds Sutherland, a firm which is more than well equipped to further develop the solid practice at hand. We are confident that both clients and staff will be pleased with the opportunities that this new chapter brings. The team in Russia is very well functioning and delivers high quality. We will recommend the team to clients going forward and look forward to co-operating on joint assignments in the future as well,”

    Lee Ranson, Eversheds Sutherland Co-Chief Executive, commented: “The strategic expansion of our global platform is a key element of our 2020 vision, and one which continues to gather real momentum. Luxembourg and Russia are both a natural fit for us in terms of our client base, practice strength and geography. I’m delighted to welcome the new teams to Eversheds Sutherland.”

  • Nadmitov, Ivanov & Partners Launches Tax Practice with New Partner

    Nadmitov, Ivanov & Partners Launches Tax Practice with New Partner

    The Nadmitov, Ivanov & Partners Law Firm has launched a tax practice and appointed Victor Arkhipov a new partner of the firm.

    According to Nadmitov, Ivanov & Partners, “Mr. Arkhipov has wide experience in advising on tax law matters and presenting clients’ interests in tax disputes.”

    Prior to joining the NIP, Arkhipov worked in the tax practices of Pepeliaev Group (from 2006-2017) and FBK (from 2002-2004). He obtained his Master’s in 2002 from the Russian School of Private Law after receiving his Diploma in Law in 2000 from the Faculty of Law of Moscow State University.

  • Electronic Documents in Employment Relations

    The development of modern technologies and the growing role of electronic documents in commercial relations influence the employment sphere, among others. Companies increasingly use electronic employment agreements and electronic policies, which increases the efficiency of employment paperwork turnaround. However, the positions of Russian employment law and the courts on electronic employment documentation are not uniform. 

    According to Article 6 of Russia’s Federal Law No. 63-FZ on Electronic Signature, dated April 6, 2011, an electronic document signed by a qualified digital signature is considered equal to a manually signed hard copy and can be used unless a hard copy is expressly required by law or regulation. Although the Russian Labor Code does not directly prohibit the use of electronic employment documents, it expressly permits their use only for remote work, which is defined as the performance of a labor function without a permanent work place where the employer and employee communicate with each other on employment-related matters via the Internet. An employment agreement with a remote employee shall provide terms and conditions for electronic document exchange between its parties, regarding, in particular, the use of a qualified digital electronic signature and the sending of receipt confirmation in respect of electronic documents. Parties to remote work agreements shall use only qualified digital electronic signatures, as other types of electronic communication (e.g., e-mails from an authorized e-mail address) cannot ensure the proper identification of a sender. 

    The Russian courts’ position varies on the use of electronic documents for employment relations not connected with remote work. Russian courts are not unanimous in either permitting or prohibiting electronic employment documents exchange in employment relations. Some courts take the conservative approach and apply the provisions of the Labor Code literally, holding that the its requirement for a written form of a document or for familiarization of an employee with a document per his signature refers only to a hard copy and to manual signature, respectively. Other courts are more liberal in their interpretation of the Labor Code provisions and find either equality between hard copies and properly signed electronic documents or the absence of restrictions on the use of electronic document exchange in the Labor Code. 

    In the absence of direct provisions prohibiting or allowing the use of electronic documents in employment relations and uniform court practice on this issue, failure to maintain hard copies of employment documents carries a risk of adverse consequences. For example, if an employer and an employee signed only an electronic employment agreement, a Russian regulator or court may conclude that employment relations were not formalized properly and that the employee was admitted to work without an employment agreement. In this case, employment not established on the basis of actual admittance to work and any special arrangements (such as a fixed term of employment or probation period) will become invalid. In addition, an employer may be subject to an administrative fine for the failure to properly conclude an employment agreement, ranging up to RUB 100,000 (approximately USD 1,783) for a legal entity and up to RUB 20,000 (approximately USD 357) for its officers. Additionally, a court or regulator may not accept electronic documents as evidence of facts that they establish and, consequently, an employer may find itself, e.g., in breach of termination procedure and forced to reinstate the dismissed employee. 

    Russian authorities understand the trend towards electronic document exchange in employment relations and the Russian Ministry of Economic Development has proposed a bill directly qualifying electronic documents in employment relations as documents in written form.  According to the bill, an employer and an employee will be able to use digital signatures if the employer adopts a policy to that effect. However, the sphere of electronic employment document exchange remains limited: Employment agreements, apprenticeship agreements, agreements on full material liability, and collective bargaining agreements remain valid only in hard copy; employees may demand the use of paper employment documents instead of electronic ones; and familiarizing new employees with an employer’s policies shall be established by manual (and mutual) signatures. Nonetheless, the bill is a significant step towards state acknowledgement of electronic document exchange in employment relations. The government’s next step should be gradual transfer to electronic employment books. 

    By Dmitri Nikiforov, Partner, Anna Maximenko, International Counsel, and Elena Klutchareva, Associate, Debevoise & Plimpton Russia

    This Article was originally published in Issue 4.6 of the CEE Legal Matters Magazine. If you would like to receive a hard copy of the magazine, you can subscribe here.

  • Alrud Promotes Petrachkov to Partner

    Alrud Promotes Petrachkov to Partner

    Alrud has announced that Sergey Petrachkov has been promoted to Partner and Head of the firm’s Dispute Resolution and Restructuring and Insolvency groups.

    According to Alrud, “Petrachkov’s core specialization is supporting on complex domestic and international disputes. He has a considerable experience in representing client interests in state courts in business and corporate disputes and in insolvency proceedings. He successfully represented client interests before the Supreme Arbitrazh Court and Supreme Court of the Russian Federation in a number of cases. Sergey also participates in matters relating to international commercial arbitration.”

    Petrachkov joined Alrud in 2009 as a trainee immediately after graduating from the Faculty of Law of Russia’s National Research University Higher School of Economics. In 2012 he received his PhD in Law. In 2015-2016 he was seconded at Slaughter and May in London.

    “We are glad to welcome Sergey as one of our firms’ partners,” commented Alrud Senior Partner Vassily Rudomino. “Sergey has been a member of our team in Dispute Resolution and Restructuring and Insolvency groups for more than eight years and he has passed through all main steps of the job ladder within the firm. Sergey’s colleagues as well as partner law firms point out his broad experience, and clients appreciate his ability to come up with effective and unconventional solutions for any challenges. We are sure that this promotion will lead Sergey to even greater success and will strengthen our position in these practice areas on the competitive legal market.”

  • Goltsblat BLP Advises on ICO of Atlant

    Goltsblat BLP Advises on ICO of Atlant

    Goltsblat BLP and its colleagues in the London office of Berwin Leighton Paisner have advised Atlant on its Initial Coin Offering in connection with EU regulatory issues. 

    According to Goltsblat BLP, “Atlant is real estate platform built on blockchain, specializing in tokenization of real estate and decentralized P2P rentals, and is one of the first projects globally in this space. The pre-sale ICO raised USD 1.5 million in cryptocurrency equivalent and the main ICO opens on September 7, 2017.”

    The deal was led by Moscow Partner Oleg Khokhlov and London Partner Matthew Baker.

  • EPAM Uses New Mechanisms to Advise on Sale of National Media Group Company Shares

    EPAM Uses New Mechanisms to Advise on Sale of National Media Group Company Shares

    Egorov Puginsky Afanasiev & Partners has advised the National Media Group on the sale of shares in one of its companies to an unspecified buyer.

    According to EPAM, “the project was unique in that the firm’s associates successfully used a new transactional mechanism for legal support that was recently introduced into Russian legislation – irrevocable power of attorney – and engaged the depositary as an escrow agent. The team also made use of the recently reformed legislation on securities.”

    The firm’s St. Petersburg-based team included Head of Corporate and M&A Elena Agaeva, Senior Associate Evgenia Evdokimova, and Associate Elena Kvartnikova.

  • Clifford Chance Moscow Successful for Sberbank on Appeal in Derivatives Case

    Clifford Chance Moscow Successful for Sberbank on Appeal in Derivatives Case

    Clifford Chance is reporting that the Russian Appellate Court has found the firm’s arguments for firm client Sberbank persuasive and overturned the judgment of the court of first instance in the case of Transneft vs Sberbank.

    According to Clifford Chance, “having considered the dispute on the merits the Appellate Court has ruled in favor of Sberbank and overturned the decision of the court of the first instance in full, thereby confirming the validity of the derivative trades contested by Transneft on the pretext of alleged miss-selling and claiming approximately USD 1.1 billion from Sberbank.”

    The firm describes the ruling as “a landmark decision with significant ramifications for the development of derivatives in Russia.”

    The Clifford Chance Moscow team was led by Partner Timur Aitkulov, supported by Tax Partner Alexander Anichkin and Senior Associates Dmitry Malyukevich and Mikhail Batsura.

  • Andrey Gorodissky & Partners Represents Sberbank CIB in Mezzanine Financing for Mcapital

    Andrey Gorodissky & Partners Represents Sberbank CIB in Mezzanine Financing for Mcapital

    Andrey Gorodissky & Partners has advised Sberbank CIB on its RUB 20 million contribution to a RUB 20 billion mezzanine financing for the Mcapital group of companies.

    The AGP team consisted of Partner Alexey Gorodissky and Lawyer Jose Tobar.