Christoph Lindinger is a Partner with Schoenherr in Vienna, where he heads the firm’s Dispute Resolution practice. His practice focuses on arbitration and corporate litigation matters, including post-M&A arbitrations according to a variety of arbitration rules. Lindinger has also been the Managing Partner of the firm since 2001. Under his leadership, Schoenherr has expanded into one of the top law firms in Central and Eastern Europe, covering the region with a network of offices in 13 CEE jurisdictions, plus one in Brussels.
CEELM:
What is Schoenherr, and how is it different than other firms in Austria and the region?
C.L.: We were once referred to in one of the Austrian weeklies as “high level understatement,” as opposed to another firm, which they described as “new kids on the block.” And I think that describes us quite well and gives you a sense of the flavor, instead of just saying “the culture” – every firm has a culture.” Also, I think that our geographic coverage is unique. There is no other firm with this kind of coverage.
CEELM:
Does the firm reflect your own personality and efforts over the years? How?
C.L.: I’ve been with Schoenherr for nearly three decades and have been its managing partner since 2001, so I think it’s safe to say that some of my personality has rubbed off on the firm’s overall culture. What once might have been a pretty traditional law firm culture has developed into an environment in which people are open-minded, dynamic, and dedicated to moving things ahead – and having fun while doing so!
I think I also happened to be lucky in the sense of being at the right place at the right time – the firm was open for changes, the Iron Curtain fell, the CEE markets beckoned, a new, more internationally-oriented generation of lawyers was rising, and so on.
CEELM:
Was that development toward a more dynamic and fun-filled environment a deliberate choice of yours, or are you simply a fun person to work with?
C.L.: I think both. If I say it was only a deliberate choice, that would be too flattering of my capabilities, but I truly believe that works need to be fun, because whatever you do, you spend most of your time working. More than sleeping, more than anything else. It had better be fun.
CEELM:
Under your management the firm has opened 11 offices, namely in Croatia, Slovenia, Serbia, Bulgaria, Ukraine, Hungary, the Czech Republic, Poland, Slovakia, and most recently Moldova and Istanbul. That’s a truly impressive list. Is that process over, or do you have more expansion planned? Perhaps the Baltics, or Belarus, or Albania, or Azerbaijan?
C.L.: No, we are set. That’s an easy one. No.
CEELM:
How do you balance the substantial demands on your time as a Managing Partner of one of the largest firms in Central and Eastern Europe with client-related work? Are you able to do both?
C.L.: Actually, this year I just fully jumped back into client work by taking up the role as the Head of Dispute Resolution at the firm. And the reason why I can combine both roles is because we appointed Gudrun Stangl Lutz as Chief Operating Officer about a year and a half ago. Basically, Gudrun takes a lot of work off my shoulders. And not only day-to-day operational tasks, but also strategic tasks, because she used to be an M&A lawyer in Christian Herbst’s team, so she knows the shop inside out. She also used to run our Bratislava office as office Managing Partner. Because of Gudrun, I’ve regained 70% of my capacity for client-related work.
CEELM:
So you have time to appear in Court?
C.L.: Well I do mainly arbitration, so I also appear before tribunals, but yes.
CEELM:
What do you consider the most challenging part of your job – and the most rewarding?
C.L.: I can give the same answer to both questions. The most challenging part is to keep this bunch of egos together – and that is also the most rewarding. Why is that challenging? Because they are all egos. My partners and fellow-lawyers in the firm have quite unique personalities, each of them, and each of them has a more or less distinct view of what we should do and what we should not do. And those views rarely overlap. So that’s the challenge. And the reward is what you see: we are the top firm in the region.
CEELM:
Moving to Arbitration: How many Arbitrations does the firm handle a year?
C.L.: Currently, the Dispute Resolution practice in Vienna has 3 ongoing investment arbitrations, and 5 quite substantial commercial arbitrations, so we are handling about 8 a year – and here I’m talking about the substantial ones. There are more that start with the request for arbitration, and then get settled, but those 8 involve the ongoing, substantial, work-creating matters.
And I think this workload will increase in the coming years, because our profile is growing, we are better exploiting opportunities on the market, and the opportunities on the market are growing.
CEELM:
Does the firm mainly work on domestic arbitrations, or arbitrations involving one or more foreign clients?
C.L.: Well, each arbitration has an international angle. There are usually Austrian parties involved – but not always. Commercial arbitrations mainly result from international transactions, and investment arbitrations are international matters by definition. We advise both Austrian and international parties.
CEELM:
How do you get those clients, those matters?
C.L.: I think on the commercial side it mainly comes from the firm’s activity, because we are known as the Corporate powerhouse in the region. This means we do a lot of Corporate transactions, which in turn means that in those where there is a subsequent dispute, we are the natural choice of the client involved. So that’s the Commercial part of it. In the Investment arbitration part, I think the reason why we do many of those cases compared to the size of our firm is that we have a strong footprint in a region in which you find jurisdictions that are quite prone to many kinds of investment arbitration. Think about Turkey, and from Turkey to the east, including all the ‘stans – that is quite a fruitful area in which to find unhappy investors.
CEELM:
And how do they know to come to you?
C.L.: Well, I think we are known in the community, and we also market ourselves.
CEELM:
Does the firm have a particular specialization in arbitration or traditional dispute resolution you’re particularly proud of?
C.L.: We are particularly proud of our post-M&A dispute resolution capabilities. We have a fairly unique experience in M&A transactions, and that gives us a distinct advantage over other dispute resolution practitioners. I’m also particularly proud of our Investment arbitration practice, because if you look at the number of cases that are newly filed with the fora that normally see these kind of cases, you’ll see that our peers are Freshfields, King & Spalding, Weil Gotshal, and those big shots, mainly from the UK and the US. In this sort of community, we’re a bit of a newcomer, and for a newcomer, we’re quite successful.
CEELM:
As for the post-M&A transactions, with your experience in structuring deals, that presumably makes you especially able to defend them, and to defend the structures you created, right?
C.L.: Exactly. That’s also true if we are disputing a post-M&A transaction which we did not structure immediately. We still know how it should have been structured, or how it likely was structured, and what routes of attack you can find into those not-always immediately visible structures.
CEELM:
Is Arbitration a growing practice in the firm in terms of the team?
C.L.: Yes. We plan to grow the team. The team is fairly sizable already, because we look at it as a completely international and integrated team over our 13 CEE jurisdictions. So there’s been growth and there still is growth potential, including in Vienna.
CEELM:
So it sounds like you think there will be more clients and more business – it’s only going to grow in the years to come?
C.L.: Yes, absolutely.
CEELM:
Now that the 2006 changes to the Austrian Arbitration Act are no longer so new, do you think they’ve achieved the goals for which they were designed? Do you see other or remaining problems you think need to be addressed?
C.L.: First of all, I think that although it’s been 8 years now, it’s still early to tell. People in the arbitration community are very happy that there’s now a one-stop shop for annulment procedures. But believe it or not, in the last 8 years there have been only 3 annulment cases in Austria – and those have involved quite low amounts in dispute. And out of those three cases, one was withdrawn. So the 2006 changes have not really been something that has triggered an avalanche of cases coming in. Secondly, the court fee structure is still a bit on the high side. From a competitive viewpoint in this respect, Austria is probably not as good as – for instance – Switzerland, because there is no cap on court fees for annulment procedures for arbitrations, while in Switzerland there is such a cap.
Finally, there are couple of smaller things we have wanted to see rectified for years and years, and they are still there. For instance, there is a fairly old-fashioned provision in our Civil Code that specifies the need to have a special power of attorney that also encompass the submission for arbitration or election of an arbitrator. If you don’t get that right in this power of attorney, then you are left in the dark. So that should be removed. But other than that, we are fairly happy with how the arbitration environment in Austria has developed.
This Article was originally published in Issue 5 of the CEE Legal Matters Magazine.