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Timothy C. Smith Managing Partner – Europe Lungershausen & Smith lspdi

EU Class Action Law - Recent Developments. Timothy C. Smith Managing Partner – Europe Lungershausen & Smith www.lspdi.com. Germany. Germany – New Class Action Acts (GVMuG). Class action act (GVMuG) effective 01 Nov 2005 for competition, antitrust, and consumer disputes

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Timothy C. Smith Managing Partner – Europe Lungershausen & Smith lspdi

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  1. EU Class Action Law - Recent Developments Timothy C. Smith Managing Partner – Europe Lungershausen & Smith www.lspdi.com

  2. Germany

  3. Germany – New Class Action Acts (GVMuG) • Class action act (GVMuG) effective 01 Nov 2005 for competition, antitrust, and consumer disputes • First time introduction of group actions for more than 20 plaintiffs • Similar facts or questions of law involved

  4. Germany – New Class Action Acts (GVMuG) • Opt-in required within 3 month period • Qualified institutions, chambers of commerce, and consumer organizations also have standing to sue

  5. Germany – New Class Action Acts (GVMuG) • New “skimming off” actions • Intentional or gross-negligent violation of consumer protection provisions • Damage less than €25.00 • Violators pay pecuniary advantage (wrongful profits) into state fund • Loser pays • No contingency fees Michael Ballack, German Football God(image not class action law related, but inserted here solely to irritate British football fans)

  6. Germany – New Class Action Acts • Decision to pass group litigation acts influenced by recent litigation, such as Telekom shareholder lawsuit

  7. Germany – New Class Action Acts (KapMuG) • Shareholder class action act effective 01 Nov 2005 • Capital Markets Model Case Act (KapMuG) • Only applicable to shareholders claiming compensation for false, misleading or omitted information • Breach of duty to inform • Common issues of law decided if at 10 similar lawsuits are joined

  8. Germany – New Class Action Acts (KapMuG) • Shareholders file separate claims and then declaratory class action motions • Complaints published in court complaint register • If 9 other motions filed within 4 months, court will initiate class action process

  9. Germany – New Class Action Acts (KapMuG) • Other plaintiffs have right to actively participate in class action as part of due process • Class action decisions binding on all parties in separate complaints • Cost splitting among plaintiffs • Loser pays; no contingency fees

  10. United Kingdom

  11. UK – Group Litigation Orders • Group Litigation Orders (GLO) introduced into part 19 CPR on 02 May 2000 • Involve common or related issues of fact or law • Up to plaintiffs to inform other potential claimants and include them until court cut-off date

  12. UK – Group Litigation Orders • Claimants do not have to opt-in or out • Individual claims still possible, but no cost sharing • Loser pays; no contingency fees, but capped “success fee” agreements on top of ordinary fees (if won)

  13. UK – Group Litigation Orders • GLOs have been used against corporations mostly in personal injury cases • Recently also used by corporations e.g. to claim tax refunds against U.K. authorities

  14. UK – Group Litigation Orders • Latest list of current GLOs available at:http://www.hm-courts-service.gov.uk/cms/150.htm

  15. Sweden

  16. Sweden – Introduced Class Action Act • New class action act in effect since 01 Jan 2003 • Group actions on similar and common circumstances • Organization action by on-profit consumer protection organizations

  17. Sweden – Introduced Class Action Act • Public group action by authority on behalf of class members • Only plaintiffs can bring group action • Once court granted class action application, potential members need to be notified • Opt-in process within period set by court

  18. Sweden – Introduced Class Action Act • Court may grant inclusion of further plaintiffs or claims at later time • Loser generally pays costs and fees • Plaintiff is primarily responsible for costs and fees if he is unsuccessful; needs to turn to group members for partial reimbursement • Contingency fee agreements possible with approval from court

  19. The Netherlands

  20. The Netherlands – Proposal for Class Action Act Revisions • Since 1994, limited group litigation rules exist • sec. 3:305a Dutch Civil Code • Instead of a lead plaintiff, an association or entity acts as representative of the class

  21. The Netherlands – Proposal for Class Action Act Revisions • Association‘s right to claim for damages on behalf of members can be assigned • Current class action settlements are not binding on all class members

  22. The Netherlands – Proposal for Class Action Act Revisions • As of end 2005, Dutch parliament still reviewing class actions act in “final round” • Proposed law will make settlements binding for all group members who do not opt-out • Loser pays; no contingency fee agreements

  23. France

  24. France – Debating Initial Law • January 2005: French President Chirac announces introduction of class actions to strengthen consumer rights • April 2005: Minister of Economic and Financial Affairs creates „commission“ of consumer protection groups and trade and bar associations to prepare class action recommendations to introduce class actions • Recommendation (still expected) will form the basis for a draft bill • Draft bill will then be debated in French Parliament French President Jacques Chirac

  25. France – Debating Initial Law • Mid-2005: French lawyer Jean-Marc Goldnadel startedwww.classaction.fr • Website is, inter alia, a client recruiting tool for lawsuit against movie distributors re copy-protecting DVDs • Website tells visitors „you have suffered prejudices for which we are demanding damages in court on your behalf“ • Invites visitors to click on a flashing red button to „sign up“ and enter credit card details. • Fees start at €12.00 in exchange for promise to take part in lawsuit demanding €1,000 per plaintiff • Goldnadel also seeking clients to sue for allegedly mislieading financial information given to Vivendi Universal SA shareholders • Website has aroused widespread French and EU discussion about this issue • Debate largely re lawyer advertising v. ethical standards Screen shot of www.classaction.fr

  26. France – Debating Initial Law • Goldnadel says his website is justified because it „gives citizens direct access to Justice“ and „fights for particular interests whereas the associations fight for general interests • The Paris bar association filed a formal objection re this type of lawyer advertising • The Union Fédéral de Consummateurs (UFC) (the biggest consumer protection association in France) favors US-style class action procedures that cover potential victims unless they opt out • Opponents of the government plan (i.e., Mouvement des Enterprises de France (Medef)) have seized on www.classification.fr as evidence that a new French class action law would encourage the kind of „excesses“ that the United States is now trying to curb with CAFA • „This is exactly what we don´t want. We have no desire to see this kind of practice become widespread“ Jean-Marc Goldnadel and his website

  27. France – Debating Initial Law • French government so far has not formally participated in the discussion • Silence order in place – there have been no public statements by anyone in government pending the commission‘s formal Recommendation • Minister of Economical and Financial Affairs Thierry Breton „informally“ says: • France is keen to avoid class action „abuse“ as seen in the United States • If class action laws come, they will be introduced „in a French context and in a more controlled way“ French Minister of Economic and Financial Affairs Thierry Breton

  28. Thank You for Your Attention! Michael Ballack, German Football God (these additional images included here again solely to taunt English football fans) www.lspdi.com

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