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Rethinking COMI in the Age of Multinational, Digital and Glocal Enterprises

Conflictoflaws - Thu, 06/20/2019 - 12:29

Written by Renato Mangano, Professor of Commercial Law at the University of Palermo (Italy).

Regulation (EC) No 1346/2000 of 29 May 2000 on insolvency proceedings failed to provide a definition of COMI (centre of main interests), either in Article 2, which was specifically devoted to definitions, or in Article 3, which regulated international jurisdiction.

For its part, Article 3(1) merely provided that “the courts of the Member State within the territory of which the centre of a debtor’s main interests is situated shall have jurisdiction to open insolvency proceedings”. Article 3(1) further stipulated that “in the case of a company or legal person, the place of the registered office shall be presumed to be the centre of its main interests in the absence of proof to the contrary.”

Recital 13 specified that “the ‘centre of main interests’ should correspond to the place where the debtor conducts the administration of his interests on a regular basis and is therefore ascertainable by third parties”, but different views have been expressed as regards, in particular, the relation between the concept of ‘administration’ and the concept of ‘ascertainability by third parties’.

As a result, Article 3 of Regulation No 1346/2000 gave rise a number of disputes and was the object of several requests to the European Court of Justice (ECJ) for preliminary rulings, with Eurofood being the first case in point.

Eventually, Regulation (EU) 2015/848 of 20 May 2015 on insolvency proceedings (Recast) laid down new rules on COMI — a definition of COMI was introduced; the presumption aiming at better ascertaining COMI was extended to individuals as well; the judicial rule of thumb that evaluated negatively a debtor who had moved his/her/its COMI shortly before the request to open insolvency proceedings was incorporated into a mandatory rule; and eleven recitals, aiming at making this framework clearer and more easily applicable, were introduced (Recitals 25 to 34, and 53).

However, one may doubt whether these efforts have succeeded. The many disputes involving NIKI Luftfahrt GmbH are illuminating. NIKI was an insolvent company under Austrian law incorporated in Austria. However, NIKI was also a subsidiary of the Air Berlin PLC & Co. Luftverkehrs KG, better known as Air Berlin. This is a company under German law incorporated in Germany.

Therefore, the crucial question was: which Member State had jurisdiction to open main insolvency proceedings against NIKI? Did Austria or Germany have jurisdiction? The question was clear-cut but the answers to this question were various and contradictory. The NIKI dispute has at long last been settled, but the dynamic of the NIKI case is intriguing because it demonstrates that the new COMI rules still give rise to doubts as regards both the relation between the two elements constituting the COMI definition (i.e.between “the place where the debtor conducts the administration of its interests on a regular basis” and the place “which is ascertainable by third parties”), and the relation between the definition of COMI and the presumptions that are provided to make it easier to apply this definition.

Moreover, some legal counsels maintain that the new COMI rules could facilitate fraudulent COMI relocations. A company could move its registered office to another Member State which is less favourable towards its creditors; make the transfer public,e.g.by using the new address in correspondence; await the expiration of the three-month period laid down by the time limit to the presumption; and apply for a fraudulent, but a ‘legally authorized’ opening of insolvency proceedings in the new jurisdiction.

Mutatis mutandis, a similar idea is proposed as regards individuals. To our knowledge there is no evidence of cases where these proposals have facilitated fraudulent COMI relocations. However, the proposal to circumvent the new COMI rules deserves attention because it leverages some prescriptions which were conceived precisely to prevent a debtor from circumventing the COMI rules.

The problems with the new COMI rules do not end here, as I have demonstrated in a recent paper titled The Puzzle of the New European COMI Rules: Rethinking COMI in the Age of Multinational, Digital and Glocal Enterprises.

In fact, sometimes the investigation about ‘ascertainability by third parties’ could prove problematic. The more complex a business organization is, the more often this situation arises. This is because the more complex a business organization is, the easier it becomes for a firm to be split into many ‘units’ (the term is intentionally non-technical) which, on the one hand, are located in different countries and, on the other hand, are in contact with different groups of creditors: case by case, these groups of creditors may have differing perceptions as to where the firm is located.

Undoubtedly, problems of this nature may arise when insolvency occurs within a group of companies – Recital 53 of Regulation 2015/848 allows one single court to open one single set of insolvency proceedings concerning several companies belonging to the same group. But the investigation about ‘ascertainability by third parties’ could prove equally challenging when a firm conducts its relationships with suppliers and customers through digital networks, and even more so if this firm runs a business which is glocal, in the sense that it is characterized by both global and local considerations. The domain name “.com” gives no indication as to where a business is located and, even where the domain name uses a country code such as “.de” or “.fr”, there is no guarantee that the firm is established in that country, since it is relatively common practice to keep web servers geographically separated from the actual location of the enterprise.

It is highly probable that these shortcomings will result again in requests for preliminary rulings; it is also highly desirable that the ECJ provide an interpretation of the COMI rules which would prove crucial in resolving those specific issues that gave rise to such requests.

Arguably, this situation is less serious as regards the flaw affecting the rules which lay down the time limits to the applicability of the COMI presumptions – this flaw could probably be fixed by means of interpretation. However – as regards the flaw concerning the prerequisite of ‘ascertainability by third parties’– it is highly improbable that the ECJ will be able to solve this problem at the roots and, consequently, prevent subsequent litigation.

Even the most enthusiastic supporters of ECJ activism must admit that the European Court is not allowed to interpret the new COMI rules in a way that proves to be against both the letter and the spirit of the legal framework, for this power belongs to the regulator alone. To be more precise, this statement implies that the ECJ will be unable either to rule that the prerequisite ‘ascertainability by third parties’ would be unnecessary whenever this presence was de facto incompatible with that of ‘administration on a regular basis’, or to rule that the application of the COMI presumptions might disregard the COMI definition. Both rulings would infringe not only the letter of the new COMI rules but also the clearly traceable intention of the regulator.

Further, the ECJ might certainly rule that the COMI of a company X is located in a country Y by putting the COMI of that company into a system of relations with some elements which are considered as relevant to the case. However, since ascertainment of the COMI is case-sensitive and since the one-to-one relation between these factors and the debtor’s exact location cannot be established in a universal way, this ruling will not provide the interpreter with a general criterion that would hold good for any future cases.

80/2019 : 20 juin 2019 - Arrêt de la Cour de justice dans l'affaire C-100/18

Communiqués de presse CVRIA - Thu, 06/20/2019 - 10:07
Línea Directa Aseguradora
Rapprochement des législations
Une situation dans laquelle un véhicule stationné dans un garage privé d’un immeuble depuis plus de 24 heures a pris feu, provoquant un incendie dont l’origine se trouve dans le circuit électrique du véhicule, et causé des dommages à cet immeuble relève de la notion de « circulation des véhicules » au sens de la directive sur l’assurance de responsabilité civile automobile

Categories: Flux européens

80/2019 : 20 juin 2019 - Arrêt de la Cour de justice dans l'affaire C-100/18

Communiqués de presse CVRIA - Thu, 06/20/2019 - 10:07
Línea Directa Aseguradora
Rapprochement des législations
Une situation dans laquelle un véhicule stationné dans un garage privé d’un immeuble depuis plus de 24 heures a pris feu, provoquant un incendie dont l’origine se trouve dans le circuit électrique du véhicule, et causé des dommages à cet immeuble relève de la notion de « circulation des véhicules » au sens de la directive sur l’assurance de responsabilité civile automobile

Categories: Flux européens

79/2019 : 20 juin 2019 - Arrêt de la Cour de justice dans l'affaire C-72/18

Communiqués de presse CVRIA - Thu, 06/20/2019 - 10:06
Ustariz Aróstegui
SOPO
Selon l’accord-cadre sur le travail à durée déterminée, les professeurs agents contractuels de droit public ont droit au même complément de rémunération pour grade que les professeurs fonctionnaires disposant de la même ancienneté si l’accomplissement d’une certaine période de service constitue la seule condition d’octroi de ce complément

Categories: Flux européens

79/2019 : 20 juin 2019 - Arrêt de la Cour de justice dans l'affaire C-72/18

Communiqués de presse CVRIA - Thu, 06/20/2019 - 10:06
Ustariz Aróstegui
SOPO
Selon l’accord-cadre sur le travail à durée déterminée, les professeurs agents contractuels de droit public ont droit au même complément de rémunération pour grade que les professeurs fonctionnaires disposant de la même ancienneté si l’accomplissement d’une certaine période de service constitue la seule condition d’octroi de ce complément

Categories: Flux européens

78/2019 : 20 juin 2019 - Conclusions de l'avocat général dans l'affaire C-192/18

Communiqués de presse CVRIA - Thu, 06/20/2019 - 10:05
Commission / Pologne (Indépendance des juridictions de droit commun)
Principes du droit communautaire
L’avocat général Tanchev propose à la Cour de juger que les nouvelles règles polonaises concernant la retraite des juges sont contraires au droit de l’Union

Categories: Flux européens

78/2019 : 20 juin 2019 - Conclusions de l'avocat général dans l'affaire C-192/18

Communiqués de presse CVRIA - Thu, 06/20/2019 - 10:05
Commission / Pologne (Indépendance des juridictions de droit commun)
Principes du droit communautaire
L’avocat général Tanchev propose à la Cour de juger que les nouvelles règles polonaises concernant la retraite des juges sont contraires au droit de l’Union

Categories: Flux européens

Déconstruire le fantasme Balkany pour le juger avec mesure, plaide sa défense

La 32e chambre du tribunal correctionnel, qui juge l’affaire Balkany depuis quatre semaines, a mis sa décision en délibéré au 18 octobre après les plaidoiries des avocats de Jean-Pierre Aubry et Patrick Balkany. Les conseils du premier ont plaidé la relaxe quand ceux du second ont demandé au tribunal une peine juste.

en lire plus

Categories: Flux français

Brussels Court of Appeal rejects jurisdiction against Facebook Inc, Facebook Ireland in privacy, data protection case.

GAVC - Wed, 06/19/2019 - 10:10

The Brussels Court of Appeal held early May in a lengthy and scholarly judgment that it sees no ground in either public international law, or European law, for jurisdiction of the Belgian courts against Facebook Ireland and Facebook Inc (Palo Alto, California). I reported on the litigation inter alia here. I believe the Court is right, as readers of the blog know from my earlier postings.

Belgium’s Data Protection Authority (DPA) does not signal the rejection of jurisdiction against FB Ireland and FB Inc in its press release, however even its 3 page extract from the 121 page judgment clearly shows it (first bullet-point).

The questions which the Court of Appeal has sent up to Luxembourg concern Facebook Belgium only. The Court in the full judgment does not qualify FB Belgium’s activities as data processing. However it has very specific questions on the existence and extent of powers for DPAs other than the leading authority under the GDPR, including the question whether there is any relevance to the fact that action has started prior to the entry into force of the GDPR (25 May 2018). The Court is minded to interpret the one-stop shop principle extensively however it has doubt given the CJEU’s judgment in Fanpages

Crucial and so far, I believe, fairly unreported. (My delay explained by the possibility for use as an essay exam question – which eventually I have not).

Geert.

(Handbook of) EU private international law, 2nd ed.2016, chapter 2, Heading 2.2.8.2.5.

77/2019 : 19 juin 2019 - Arrêts du Tribunal dans les affaires T-353/15, T-373/15

Communiqués de presse CVRIA - Wed, 06/19/2019 - 10:01
NeXovation / Commission
Aide d'État
Le Tribunal de l’Union européenne confirme la décision de la Commission relative à l’aide d’État accordée par l’Allemagne en faveur du Nürburgring

Categories: Flux européens

77/2019 : 19 juin 2019 - Arrêts du Tribunal dans les affaires T-353/15, T-373/15

Communiqués de presse CVRIA - Wed, 06/19/2019 - 10:01
NeXovation / Commission
Aide d'État
Le Tribunal de l’Union européenne confirme la décision de la Commission relative à l’aide d’État accordée par l’Allemagne en faveur du Nürburgring

Categories: Flux européens

76/2019 : 19 juin 2019 - Arrêt du Tribunal dans l'affaire T-307/17

Communiqués de presse CVRIA - Wed, 06/19/2019 - 10:01
adidas / EUIPO - Shoe Branding Europe (Représentation de trois bandes parallèles)
Propriété intellectuelle et industrielle
Le Tribunal de l’UE confirme la nullité de la marque de l’Union d’adidas qui consiste en trois bandes parallèles appliquées dans n’importe quelle direction

Categories: Flux européens

76/2019 : 19 juin 2019 - Arrêt du Tribunal dans l'affaire T-307/17

Communiqués de presse CVRIA - Wed, 06/19/2019 - 10:01
adidas / EUIPO - Shoe Branding Europe (Représentation de trois bandes parallèles)
Propriété intellectuelle et industrielle
Le Tribunal de l’UE confirme la nullité de la marque de l’Union d’adidas qui consiste en trois bandes parallèles appliquées dans n’importe quelle direction

Categories: Flux européens

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