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Legal news [April 2025]: Compensation for unreasonable length of proceedings will not ‎increase

This time, April's Legal News presents four important court decisions. The Supreme Court has ‎opined on the adequacy of the reasoning for not distributing profit; rejected the increase in ‎compensation for delays in proceedings; clarified the rules for executives' liability for unsuccessful ‎disputes; and confirmed that the statute of limitations on electricity support is governed by private ‎law.‎

  • The Supreme Court in its decision Ref. No. 27 Cdo 173/2024 dealt with the extent to which specific ‎justification must be provided in the invitation to the general meeting regarding the proposal ‎for a resolution on (non-)profit distribution. The subject justification was as follows: “The ‎company continues with its chosen basic development strategy, which is to increase the intrinsic ‎value of the company (shares) by means of both organic and acquisition development, with the aim ‎of continually increasing the EBITDA indicator. The company is preparing acquisitions of two Slovak ‎companies that will strategically complement and strengthen the company’s position in waste ‎recycling and processing. The expected total acquisition price is approximately 23,500,000 EUR, ‎which is approximately 600,000,000 CZK.” The appellate court concluded that it is necessary to ‎specify individually determined concrete investment intentions with corresponding economic ‎calculations and a time horizon with justification. The Supreme Court rejected the appellate court’s ‎decision, referring to its earlier case law, considering this justification sufficient and stating that it is ‎not possible to demand the invitation contains all the information shareholders would like to know.‎
  • In decision Ref. No. 30 Cdo 2356/2024, the Supreme Court addressed the valuation of appropriate ‎satisfaction for the unreasonable length of proceedings. Unfortunately, the Supreme Court did ‎not proceed with increasing the basic amounts for the unreasonable length of proceedings and ‎maintained the viewpoint Cpjn 206/2010, which it deems still in accordance with the case law of the ‎European Court of Human Rights (ECHR). The Supreme Court stated in the justification that at the ‎time of adopting the viewpoint, it set a very generous general range for compensation for one ‎duration of delay. Hence there is no need to increase this range, even considering economic ‎development. It concluded that the reasons for an increase may be: a) the need for a fair decision ‎justified by the circumstances of the case, b) shifts in ECHR case law, c) amounts awarded by ‎domestic courts for other types of non-property damage.‎
  • In the resolution Ref. No. 27 Cdo 1261/2024, the Supreme Court dealt with damage caused to the ‎company by its statutory body. The damage was allegedly caused by the former executive director ‎who entered into a contract for legal services. The company pointed out that at that time, the dispute ‎over the protection of good reputation was lost by the company. The Supreme Court dismissed the ‎appeal but noted that the outcome of a specific dispute does not reflect on the usefulness and ‎necessity of legal services. If, at the time of the dispute, the company needed legal services and ‎the services were not unusual in scope and price, the company could not incur damage. The ‎Supreme Court also stated that, ad absurdum, even in the currently addressed case, the costs were ‎not purposeful.‎
  • In a recent decision Ref. No. 33 Cdo 2190/2024, the Supreme Court addressed the statute of ‎limitations for claims related to the costs associated with electricity support. Although the ‎relationship between the producer and the operator of the electricity distribution system is based on ‎public law regulations, it is a relationship between entrepreneurs, i.e., a private-law relationship. In ‎matters not regulated by specific provisions, general private-law provisions such as the Civil Code ‎or, according to the temporal wording, also the Commercial Code or the old Civil Code apply. This is ‎precisely the case for the statute of limitations.‎
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