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Austrian VwGH: No Fees Exemption for Hotel Leases

Administrative Law 

The exemption from fees for residential leases pursuant to Section 33 TP 5 (4) no. 1 of the Austrian Fees Act (Gebührengesetz, hereinafter GebG) does not apply to the lease of hotel buildings. The Austrian Administrative Court (Verwaltungsgerichtshof...

Austrian OGH on Service Fee for Food Delivery Services

Civil Law 

The Austrian Supreme Court (Oberster Gerichtshof, hereinafter OGH) had to decide whether a food delivery service can charge a service fee. The defendant operates a delivery platform, consisting of a mobile app and a website. Through this platform, co...

Austrian VwGH: Tax Exemption Limit Is at 1,000 m2

Administrative Law 

The tax exemption for the sale of a house including the plot of land according to Section 30 (2) of the 1988 Austrian Income Tax Act (Einkommensteuergesetz, hereinafter EStG) only applies to plot sizes ‘as would normally be required for a building s...

GER: BGH on Consumer Protection and GDPR Breaches

Competition Law 

A breach of data protection obligations to inform users of social networks about the scope and purpose of collection as well as use of their personal data by the operator of that network justifies claims for injunctive relief under competition law an...

Consumer Protection in Pro Sports: Basketball Player to Pay 1.6m?

European Law 

A contract clause that obliges a young athlete to pay a portion of his earnings if he becomes a professional athlete is clearly abusive. In the case at hand, the parents of the athlete, who had been a minor at the time, signed a contract with a compa...

Austrian OGH Bans Unlawful Loan Fee Clauses

Civil Law 

The Austrian Supreme Court (Oberster Gerichtshof, hereinafter OGH) has ruled several of a bank’s fee clauses invalid, including handling, reminder, and account management fees. In the case at hand, a consumer protection organisation, an association ...

Austrian VwGH: Double Jeopardy for Being both Vehicle Driver and Holder?

Administrative Law 

Is it permissible to impose two penalties on the same person at the same time, one for a violation of Section 102 of the Austrian 1967 Motor Vehicles Act (Kraftfahrgesetz 1967, hereinafter KFG) as the driver and one for a violation of Section 103 of ...

GER: Pharmacy Shop Opening Hours: Sunday Delivery Unlawful

Civil Law 

The German Federal Court of Justice (Bundesgerichtshof, hereinafter BGH) has ruled that it is unlawful for pharmacies to circumvent German shop opening laws by using a delivery service. In the case at hand, a pharmacist had closed his pharmacy to the...

Austrian OGH: Several Proceedings, One Insurance Payment

Civil Law 

If insured events are connected in time and causation, the sum insured is only payed out once. This has been clarified by the Austrian Supreme Court (Oberster Gerichtshof, hereinafter OGH). In the case at hand, the plaintiff sought coverage under his...

Austrian OGH on Apartment Furnishing-Categories

Civil Law 

Tenants can have the original furnishing category of their apartment officially evaluated even after the legal three-year preclusion period as stated in Section 16 (8) of the Austrian Tenancy Act (Mietrechtsgesetz, hereinafter MRG) has expired. This...

BGH: Insurer May not Unilaterally Lower Coverage

Civil Law 

The German Supreme Court (Bundesgerichtshof, hereinafter BGH) court has determined that insurance companies providing daily allowance benefits cannot unilaterally lower the insured per-diem rate in the event of a decrease in the policyholder’s net in...

ECJ Allows National Restrictions on Pharmaceutical Advertising

European Law 

The European Court of Justice (ECJ) has ruled that Member States may, under certain conditions, allow or prohibit advertising for the purchase of prescription medicines. The case arose from a complaint by a Dutch mail-order pharmacy which offered var...

Austrian OGH on Misleading Price Advertising

Competition Law 

In the case at hand, the Austrian Supreme Court (Oberster Gerichtshof, hereinafter OGH) was called upon to determine whether the defendant company’s practice of advertising smartphones as costing ‘EUR Zero’ was permissible, despite the fact that the ...

Austrian OGH: Classification Changes of Co-Owned Properties

Civil Law 

A condominium owner who arbitrarily makes changes to the condominium without obtaining prior consent from the other owners and without the ruling of a judge in non-litigious procedure acts can be ordered in a litigious procedure to reverse the change...

GER: Travel Agencies Must Inform about Transit Visas

Civil Law 

Online travel agencies must inform consumers about requirements for transit visas or other transit permits, the Higher Regional Court of the German city of Frankfurt am Main (Oberlandesgericht, hereinafter OLG) has ruled. If an online travel agent fa...

Austrian OGH: Does Windstorm Insurance Cover Landslides?

Civil Law 

The Austrian Supreme Court (Oberster Gerichtshof, hereinafter OGH) clarified which earth movements fall under the term ‘landslide’. In the case at hand, a homeowners insurance contract between the plaintiff and the defendant had been concluded, which...

Austrian OGH on Price Reductions in Real Estate Purchases

Civil Law 

The Austrian Supreme Court (Oberster Gerichtshof, OGH) has ruled on a claim for price reduction in a real estate transaction. In the case at hand, the plaintiffs had been the purchasers of the defendants’ basement premises in a 1915 building for the ...

OGH: Part-Time Reintegration v. Continued Employment

Labour Law 

The Austrian Supreme Court (Oberster Gerichtshof, hereinafter OGH) has ruled that an agreement to return to work on a part-time basis does not automatically constitute a continuing employment relationship as defined by Section 24(9) of the Austrian C...

OGH on Securing Administrator Costs in Restructuring Proceedings

Procedural Law 

The Austrian Supreme Court (Oberster Gerichtshof, hereinafter OGH) has made it clear that paying or securing the costs of proceedings is a mandatory requirement for confirming a restructuring plan as part of insolvency proceedings. A mere deferral is...

Austrian Supreme Court (OGH) on Irregular Easements

Civil Law 

A servitutem usus (right of use) can be established as an irregular easement, as can a servitutem fructus (right of fruition), provided that it is also connected with a more advantageous or convenient use of a property owned by the beneficiary and th...

GER: Negative Interest on Bank Deposits

Civil Law 

In the past, customers at German banks had to pay interest for funds they kept in their bank accounts. Was this lawful? The German Federal Court of Justice (Bundesgerichtshof, hereinafter BGH) has now clarified in a landmark ruling: No, actually not....

Austrian VwGH on Updating eNotification Addresses

Administrative Law 

The Austrian Administrative Court (Verwaltungsgerichtshof, hereinafter VwGH) has dealt with the question of the legal consequences with regard to official notifications if an individual’s email addresses for electronic notifications are not updated i...

VwGH: Unemployment Benefits Despite Marginal Employment

Administrative Law 

The Austrian Administrative Court (Verwaltungsgerichtshof, hereinafter VwGH) has ruled on whether an employee who continued to work for another employer on a marginal basis in addition to a fully insured job that had been terminated was entitled to u...

OGH on the Limits of Freedom of Expression

Civil Law 

Satire presupposes that the audience can understand that the object of parody did not originate from the producer of the parodied work but is a product of the parodist’s freedom of opinion. In the case at hand, the plaintiff, an Austrian political pa...

GER: Banks not Liable in Grandparent Scams

Civil Law 

In grandparent scams, banks are not liable. This has been decided by the Higher Regional Court of Nuremberg, Germany. Only if there is massive suspicion of a risk to customers’ assets are banks obliged to warn and inform them. In the case at hand, wi...

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