Flux européens

Heller v Uber at the Ontario Court of Appeal: arbitration clause requiring arbitration in the Netherlands of disputes between drivers and Uber invalid.

GAVC - Tue, 01/08/2019 - 08:08

Thank you Christopher Burkett for alerting me to Heller v. Uber Technologies Inc., 2019 ONCA 1.  The case is reminiscent of California’s Senate Bill 1241 (review here) and of an article that I co-authored with Jutta Gangsted [‘Protected parties in European and American conflict of laws: a comparative analysis of individual employment contracts]. The starting point of the California, the EU rules, and the Canadian judgment is the same: employees cannot be considered to really consent to either choice of law or choice of court /dispute resolution hence any clause doing same will be subject to mandatory limitations.

Here, an arbitration clause requiring arbitration in the Netherlands of disputes between drivers and Uber was held to be invalid and unenforceable, because it deprives an employee of the benefit of making a complaint to the Ministry of Labour under relevant Ontarian law.

Of note is that the judgment applies assuming the contract is one of employment – which remains to be determined under Ontarian law. Of note is also that the Court of appeal rejected Uber’s position that the validity is an issue for the arbitrator to determine because it is an issue going to the jurisdiction of the arbitrator. Uber invoked the “competence-competence” /kompetenz kompetenz principle in support of its position.

Geert.

(Handbook of) European Private international law, 2nd ed. 2016. Chapter 2, Heading 2.2.8.3, Chapter 3, Heading 3.2.5.

Territoriality and delisting. Google score (cautious) French points ahead of Thursday’s AG Opinion in CJEU case.

GAVC - Mon, 01/07/2019 - 14:02

On Thursday the Advocate-General will opine in C-136/17 G.C. e.a. and  C-507/17 Google (FR) – on which I reported ia here. The issue is, in the main, the territorial scope of EU data protection laws.

X v Google LLC at the Tribunal de grande instance de Paris on 14 November 2018 is a good warm-up, forwarded to me (for which many thanks) by Jef Ausloos (I have copy for those interested). The case concerns an article in Le Monde linking a French resident, active in international hotel management, to a Moroccan enquiry into pedophilia. The court’s review of the facts suggests an unsubstantiated link between X and the case – yet the damage to claimant’s reputation evidently is done nevertheless. Claimant requests delinking not just for searches performed in France on all Google extensions, but rather for all searches performed globally.

The court first of all observes that for searches performed in France, delisting of many of the identified urls has already happened – and orders on the basis of French law (which it applies, it suggests, per the GDPR) Google LLC to carry out delisting for the others in as far as searches are carried out from French territory. X’s privacy is given priority over freedom of expression and Google LLC’s US domicile is not mentioned as being relevant (no verbatim discussion of same is recorded in the judgment. X’s French nationality and domicile however, are, hence presumably it is the infamous Article 14  Code Civil which is at play here). Google’s argument that the as listed urls link to articles in languages other than French and relating to facts taking place outside of France is dismissed as irrelevant.

Claimant however had requested global delisting, regardless of the user’s geographical location. That, the court holds, is a request it cannot grant. Its refusal is justified in one sentence only: a global delisting order would be disproportionate in the case of a French national and resident, simply because his employment record is international:

‘une telle mesure apparaît ici disproportionnée, s’agissant d’un résident français, le seul caractère international de ces démarches d’emploi ne pouvant justifier d’une telle restriction, qui conduirait in fine à soumettre le réseau internet à une injonction de portée globale.’ 

The judgment therefore does not tackle the conceptual issues surrounding jurisdiction (which the Belgian courts, for instance, have been tempted into in the Facebook case), neither does it rule out global injunctions in cases which have more than just a fleeting international element.

Happy 2019.

Geert.

 

 

Draft European ethics guidelines for trustworthy artificial intelligence.

GAVC - Fri, 12/21/2018 - 08:08

An ethics-related posting seems apprioprate as last before ‘the’ season.

The relevant European expert group seeks feedback on draft ethics guidelines for trustworthy artificial intelligence.

Chapter I deals with ensuring AI’s ethical purpose, by setting out the fundamental rights, principles and values that it should comply with.
From those principles, Chapter II derives guidance on the realisation of Trustworthy AI, tackling both ethical purpose and technical robustness. This is done by listing the requirements for Trustworthy AI and offering an overview of technical and non-technical methods that can be used for its implementation.
Chapter III subsequently operationalises the requirements by providing a concrete but nonexhaustive assessment list for Trustworthy AI. This list is then adapted to specific use cases.

Of particular note at p.12-13 are the implications for the long term use of AI, on which the expert group did not reach consensus. Given that autonomous AI systems in particular have raised popular concern, most of which predicted in the longer term, it is clear that this section could prove particularly sticky as well as interesting.

For me the draft is a neat warm-up for when the group’s co-ordinator, Nathalie Smuha, returns to Leuven in spring to focus on her PhD research with me on the very topic.

Geert.

 

Caribonum Pension Trustee v Pelikan. Ability of foreign defendant to satisfy a judgement is not a pre-requisite to a claimant obtaining a judgement.

GAVC - Thu, 12/20/2018 - 17:05

Facts in [2018] EWHC 2321 (Ch.) Caribonum Pension Trustee v Pelikan are summarised by Anthony Garon here. A suggestion of abuse of process /Fraus was rejected by Clark M. Of interest to the blog is the suggested reason for abuse: Pelikan AG argued that the claim was an abuse of process because a relevant guarantee would not be enforceable in Switzerland and that there were insufficient non-Swiss assets to satisfy the claim.

At 40 however Master Clark holds that the ability of a defendant to satisfy a judgement is not a pre-requisite to a claimant obtaining a judgement. Claimant’s counsel convincingly submitted that it was pursuing the claim for the simple and appropriate purpose of securing payment of the sums due under a holding structure-related Guarantee; and that that was not an abuse of process.

Geert.

Almazeedi v Penner. Independence of the judiciary in international commercial courts.

GAVC - Thu, 12/20/2018 - 08:08

[2018] UKPC 3 Almazeedi v Penner at the Privy Council was recently brought to my attention by Christopher Grout. The case concerns a challenge to the independence of a judge sitting in the Financial Services Division of the Grand Court of the Cayman Islands.

Judge in the present case was Cresswell J, former judge of the High Court of England and Wales from 1991 to 2007. Following his retirement from that position, he became in 2009 an additional judge of the Financial Services Division of the Grand Court, sitting ad hoc from time to time as required. The Division consisted of the Chief Justice and two other full-time judges, together with three additional judges sitting part-time, one of whom was Cresswell J. From a time late in 2011, he also became a Supplementary Judge of the Civil and Commercial Court, Qatar Financial Centre (although he was not in the end instructed or renumerated there).

Cresswell J was the judge assigned with the conduct of a winding-up petition and associated applications and thereafter with the winding-up of BTU Power Company (“BTU”). The entire economic interest in BTU was held by its preference shareholders who were in the main Qatari interests with strong state connections, and to a minor extent Dubai Islamic Bank. The present case involves a challenge to all aspects of Cresswell J’s activity. The challenge is made having regard to Cresswell J’s position as a judge in Qatar and to the involvement in the proceedings before him of these Qatari interests and of Qatari personalities representing or interested in them.

No suggestion of actual bias at any time in either court was ever made. The question relates rather to whether the fair-minded and informed observer would discount the risk of unconscious bias. The Privy Council held such observer would not so discount: at 34: ‘with some reluctance, [we have] come to the conclusion that the Court of Appeal was right to regard it as inappropriate for the judge to sit without disclosure of his position in Qatar as regards the period after 26 June 2013 and that this represented a flaw in his apparent independence’.

Note the dissenting opinion by Lord Sumption at 36 ff, who notes ‘Sir Peter Cresswell is not alleged to have done anything which could raise doubts about his independence. The case against him rests entirely on the notion that he might be influenced, possibly unconsciously, by the hypothetical possibility of action being taken against him in Qatar as a result of any decision in the Cayman Islands which was contrary to the Qatari Government’s interests. Hypothetical possibilities may of course found a case of apparent bias, but since there are few limits to the possibilities that can be hypothetically envisaged, there must be some substance to them.’

‘The notional fair-minded and informed observer whose presumed reaction is the benchmark for apparent bias, has only to be satisfied that there is a real risk of bias. But where he reaches this conclusion, he does so with care, after ensuring that he has informed himself of all the relevant facts. He is not satisfied with a look-sniff impression. He is not credulous or naïve. But neither is he hyper-suspicious or apt to envisage the worst possible outcome.’

I believe Lord Sumption’s approach is the better one. Yet it was not carried hence in international commercial courts the standards have become very exacting indeed.

Geert.

 

 

206/2018 : 19 décembre 2018 - Conclusions de l'avocat général dans l'affaire C-40/17

Communiqués de presse CVRIA - Wed, 12/19/2018 - 11:53
Fashion ID
PDON
Selon l’avocat général Bobek, le gestionnaire d’un site Internet ayant inséré le plugiciel d’un tiers, tel le bouton « j’aime » de Facebook, qui collecte et transmet des données à caractère personnel de l’utilisateur, est responsable conjointement de cette phase du traitement des données

Categories: Flux européens

207/2018 : 19 décembre 2018 - Conclusions de l'Avocat général dans les affaires C-202/18,C-238/18

Communiqués de presse CVRIA - Wed, 12/19/2018 - 11:42
Rimšēvičs / Lettonie
Droit institutionnel
L’avocate générale Kokott propose à la Cour de constater que, en suspendant le gouverneur de la banque de Lettonie de ses fonctions, la République de Lettonie a manqué à ses obligations

Categories: Flux européens

205/2018 : 19 décembre 2018 - Arrêt de la Cour de justice dans l'affaire C-219/17

Communiqués de presse CVRIA - Wed, 12/19/2018 - 11:11
Berlusconi et Fininvest
Liberté d'établissement
La Cour de justice de l’UE est seule compétente pour apprécier si la légalité de la décision de la BCE s’opposant à l’acquisition d’une participation qualifiée dans Banca Mediolanum par Fininvest et M. Berlusconi est affectée par d’éventuels vices entachant les actes préparatoires de la Banca d’Italia

Categories: Flux européens

The Hague Judgments project rolls on. And a quick note on [2018] FCA 549 Kraft Foods v Bega Cheese.

GAVC - Wed, 12/19/2018 - 08:08

Kraft Foods v Bega Cheese [2018] FCA 549 was signalled to me by Michael Mitchell back in early May – now seems a good opportunity briefly to report on it. The Federal Court of Australia issued an anti-arbitration injunction to restrain a multinational food conglomerate from pursuing arbitration in New York. Kraft had pursued litigation in Australia which not only sought to restrain the respondent from certain radio and television advertising, but also sought final relief including damages.

Parties had agreed to mediate and arbitrate under the dispute resolution provisions of a Master Agreement for licensing of IP. Bega had acquired certain rights from Mondelez (a company in the Kraft group), including certain trademark rights that Kraft had licensed to Mondelez pursuant to the Master Agreement.

Of interest to the blog is the myriad number of issues that led the Court to issue the injunction, among others the fact that what was sought included interim relief, the position of which when it comes to enforcement is not entirely clear in the New York Convention. Throw intellectual property, mediation as well as arbitration, common law doctrine principles such as the Aldi rule in the mix, and the jurisdictional soup becomes quite attractive as well as complex. Precisely why intellectual property is hotly debated in the Hague Judgments project and likely to be excluded from it.

That latter brings me to the second part of the blog title: the HCCH have issued a Revised Draft Explanatory Report, and a document on the possible exclusion of anti-trust matters from the Convention as reflected in Article 2(1)(p) of the 2018 draft Convention. Both signal the continuing difficulty of the roll-out of the Hague Process, as well as continued intent to let the train roll into its end destination; although one wonders how many wagons will have been left behind en route.

Geert.

(Handbook of) EU Private International Law, 2nd ed. 2016. Chapter 2.

Protection of privacy and private international law. Interim ILA report.

GAVC - Tue, 12/18/2018 - 08:08

A short post effectively to deposit relevant documentation on the issue of privacy and private international law – which I frequently report on on the blog (e.g. use tag ‘rtbf’, or ‘internet’, or ‘privacy’, ‘Facebook’, or ‘Google’; see i.a. my recent posts re Facebook, Google , Schrems, etc.

Max Planck Luxembourg have the interim report on the International Law Association’s draft guidelines on jurisdiction and applicable law re privacy on their website, featuring many of the cases I have reported on over the years.

Happy reading.

Geert.

 

204/2018 : 17 décembre 2018 - Ordonnance de la Cour de justice dans l'affaire C-619/18 R

Communiqués de presse CVRIA - Mon, 12/17/2018 - 17:38
Commission / Pologne
Principes du droit communautaire
La Pologne doit suspendre immédiatement l’application des dispositions nationales relatives à l’abaissement de l’âge de départ à la retraite des juges de la Cour suprême 

Categories: Flux européens

Floating/Invalid Choice of Law Clauses. The Singapore High Court in Shanghai Turbo.

GAVC - Sat, 12/15/2018 - 08:08

Marcus Teo has excellent analysis of Shanghai Turbo Enterprises Ltd v Liu Ming [2018] SGHC 172. The issue is well-known in contract law as such and takes one or two special forms in conflicts: what is the fate of a contract as a whole, and /or of contractual clauses individually, when part of a clause is defective.

In the case at issue, the relevant contractual clause read

This Agreement shall be governed by the laws of Singapore/or People’s Republic of China and each of the parties hereto submits to the non-exclusive jurisdiction of the Courts of Singapore/or People’s Republic of China.”

As far as the choice of court part of this clause is concerned, non-exclusive choice of court comes with strings attached, depending on the laws of the States concerned: under the editorship of Mary Keyes, Michiel Poesen and I have contributed to an extensive comparative volume on same wich is forthcoming. However for choice of law one need not look at the specific laws of a State to appreciate that this clause thus formulated is simply a lame duck. No clear choice of law is made at all. The pragmatic solution is to ignore the useless clause and determine the proper law of the contract in the absence of a valid expression of parties’ autonomy. Yet conceptually an argument can, and has been made that to do so ignores the very high relevance of the lex contractus in the very contract formation – a conceptual quagmire which in EU law is addressed by Rome I’s ‘bootstrap’ principle.

In the case at issue, the High Court follows a pro-validation approach (favor contractus): the invalidity of the choice of law clause does not affect the formation of the main contract. A commercially sensible solution which Marcus analysis critically in excellent detail.

Geert.

(Handbook of) EU Private international law, 2nd ed. 2016, Chapter 3, Heading 3.2.7.

 

 

203/2018 : 14 décembre 2018 - Arrêt du Tribunal dans l'affaire T-400/10 RENV

Communiqués de presse CVRIA - Fri, 12/14/2018 - 09:58
Hamas / Conseil
Relations extérieures
Le Tribunal rejette le recours formé par le Hamas contre les décisions de maintien du gel de ses fonds en tant qu’entité impliquée dans des actes de terrorisme

Categories: Flux européens

Publish and rule. The Belgian Supreme Court on scholarship and the judiciary.

GAVC - Fri, 12/14/2018 - 08:08

Thank you Jelle Flo for alerting us to the succinct Belgian Supreme Court ruling of 21 November 2018. A judge had published a scholarly piece on an issue of law, in tempore non suspecto, expressing a point of view which the Advocate General at the Court (here effectively acting as an amicus curiae) in a later specific case, agrees with.

The judiciary does publish regularly-ish. As do solicitors and barristers. For those of us who teach as well as practice, this at most leads to interesting times when opposing counsel or the bench points out a scholarly piece seemingly expressing a different point of view than our submissions; ordinarily, things are distinguishable…

For the judiciary, the Supreme Court sees no issue as long as the piece meets with scientific standards: ‘Le fait qu’un juge ait adopté un point de vue sur une question juridique dans une publication scientifique n’implique pas qu’il ne dispose plus de l’impartialité requise pour connaître d’un litige abordant ce sujet, pourvu qu’il ait développé sa pensée dans le respect des règles de la science du droit.’

The Court does not express guidance on what such standard might be – peer review perhaps comes to mind.

Geert.

202/2018 : 13 décembre 2018 - Arrêt de la Cour de justice dans l'affaire C-492/17

Communiqués de presse CVRIA - Thu, 12/13/2018 - 10:28
Rittinger e.a.
Aide d'État
La contribution audiovisuelle allemande est compatible avec le droit de l’Union

Categories: Flux européens

201/2018 : 13 décembre 2018 - Arrêt de la Cour de justice dans l'affaire C-385/17

Communiqués de presse CVRIA - Thu, 12/13/2018 - 10:27
Hein
DFON
Pendant son congé annuel minimal garanti par le droit de l’Union, un travailleur a droit à sa rémunération normale malgré des périodes antérieures de chômage partiel

Categories: Flux européens

199/2018 : 13 décembre 2018 - Arrêt de la Cour de justice dans les affaires jointes C-138/17 P,C-146/17 P,C-174/17 P,C-222/17 P

Communiqués de presse CVRIA - Thu, 12/13/2018 - 10:26
Union européenne / Gascogne Sack Deutschland et Gascogne
Droit institutionnel
La Cour annule les dommages et intérêts infligés à l’Union européenne par le Tribunal de l’UE en raison de frais de garantie bancaire exposés par plusieurs entreprises dans le contexte d’une durée excessive de la procédure devant le Tribunal de l’UE

Categories: Flux européens

198/2018 : 13 décembre 2018 - Arrêts du Tribunal dans les affaires T-339/16,T-352/16,T-391/16

Communiqués de presse CVRIA - Thu, 12/13/2018 - 10:14
Ville de Paris / Commission
Environnement et consommateurs
Le Tribunal de l’Union européenne accueille les recours introduits par les villes de Paris, Bruxelles et Madrid et annule partiellement le règlement de la Commission fixant des limites d’émission d’oxydes d’azote trop élevées pour les essais des véhicules particuliers et utilitaires légers neufs

Categories: Flux européens

197/2018 : 13 décembre 2018 - Conclusions de l'avocat général dans l'affaire C-299/17

Communiqués de presse CVRIA - Thu, 12/13/2018 - 10:12
VG Media
Rapprochement des législations
L’avocat général Hogan invite la Cour à juger que les nouvelles règles allemandes interdisant aux moteurs de recherche de fournir des produits de la presse sans l'autorisation préalable de l'éditeur ne doivent pas être appliquées

Categories: Flux européens

196/2018 : 13 décembre 2018 - Arrêts du Tribunal dans les affaires T-827/14,T-851/14

Communiqués de presse CVRIA - Thu, 12/13/2018 - 10:11
Deutsche Telekom / Commission
Concurrence
Le Tribunal annule partiellement la décision de la Commission relative aux pratiques anticoncurrentielles sur le marché slovaque des télécommunications

Categories: Flux européens

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