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CZECH REPUBLIC DEVELOPMENTS 2010/2011
Zeiner & Zeiner v.o.s.
From the international
perspective year 2011 is important for the Czech Republic mainly due to
completion of the next important step of the European integration process. On
May 1st 2011 the last seven year provisional restrictions concerning
protection of the local labor markets in Austria and Germany expired. Despite
the fact that no major impact to the German and Austrian labor market is
expected, removal of labor market restrictions is, from the Czech perspective,
considered to be an important stage in European integration. At the same time
however, the Czech Republic, along with other three EU member states, decided
not to join the Pact for the Euro originally aimed to act as a "debt brake" and
open the way for tax harmonization.
The Czech l egislative
agenda in 2010/2011 was primarily focused on harmonization of domestic law with
that of the EU. The most significant changes were achieved in the area of unfair
competition, data protection, insolvency proceedings and consumer protection.
Unfair Competition
A 2010 amendment to the
Commercial Code (Act.No.152/2010 Coll.)
implemented legislative changes related to
unfair competition. The amendment classifies the practices of so
called “catalogue companies” as a type of misleading conduct. During
recent years businesses were offered “free” unsolicited entries in various lists
or catalogues and were usually required to send their address details in a
confirmation of interest document. However, based on the fine print contained in
the confirmation, a contract of advertisement was concluded. The payment for
such advertisement was typically several times higher than the price of a
similar advertisement in other media. Resolution of subsequent disputes was
complicated due to the fact that disputes between the parties to such agreements
were to be resolved before authorities or an Arbitration court in the state
where the office of the catalogue company was located. However, with effect of 1
July 2010, all the advertising materials of such catalogue companies must
contain clear and unambiguous information that the material is an offer to
conclude an agreement and not an offer for a free of charge advertisement. Any
contract concluded without complying therewith will be deemed invalid and
disputes between the parties to the contract must be resolved exclusively before
Czech courts.
Since a competitive
relationship between companies offering catalogue advertising and parties
suffering detriment did not normally exist, the Commercial Code amendment
extends the general definition of unfair competition and also the respective
specific definition of unfair advertisement by including conduct in “standard”
business transactions, as well as competitive conduct.
The amendment provides a
significant new general provision, applicable to any type of unfair conduct. The
provisions set forth that any agreement shall be held
null and void if the ban on unfair
competition is breached upon the execution thereof pursuant to the applicable
provisions of the Commercial Code. This new special provision of Commercial Code
therefore nullifies agreements, their parts or individual provisions, which do
not respect the prohibition of unfair competition.
Consumer Credit Act
The new
Consumer Credit Act (Act No. 145/2010 Coll.) came into effect on 1 January of
this year. The act introduces new obligations for banks and financial
institutions granting loans, credits or similar financial services. The act
implements the EU Consumer Credit Directive (No. 2008/48/EC). Among other
things, financial institutions are required to provide more information about
credit conditions and will bear more responsibility for assessing the
creditworthiness of persons applying for loans. Page
Content
The act aims at remedying the information
asymmetry between creditors and debtors
In the case of consumer
credit, the added protection is motivated by asymmetry regarding information and
expertise, which put consumers at a disadvantage compared to financial service
providers. Strict sanctions introduced by the new legislation should now
regulate some non-banking institutions which had been granting loans quite
wildly and were subject to almost no regulation.
According to the new
legislation, a creditor is obliged to provide to consumers more advance
information in the agreement as such and during the performance thereof. If the
agreement does not contain information required by the act, the consumer has the
right to notify this fact to the creditor. If the consumer uses of its right,
the consumer credit shall be subject to interest equal to discount rate of Czech
National Bank valid on the day of conclusion of the agreement and provisions of
the agreement which concern other payments shall be considered invalid.
The act introduces an
obligation of the creditor to consider the ability of the consumer to pay-off
his/her credit. The goal is to protect consumers against risky loans. The act
further regulates conditions for premature pay-off of consumer credits and
states that a consumer is obliged only to reimburse necessary and objectively
incurred costs connected to the premature pay-off of the credit.
Further, consumers have the
right to withdraw from an agreement without giving a reason in the period of 14
days after its conclusion. The creditor, in this case, may not claim any penalty
from the consumer for withdrawing.
Amendment to Insolvency Act
A 2010 amendment to the
Insolvency Act (Act 182/2006 Coll.) is a reaction to a judgment of the
Constitutional Court by which it declared as unconstitutional the principle that
the right to deny the validity and value of filled insolvency claims belonged
only to the debtor and the bankruptcy administrator and not to individual
creditors. The authorization of a creditor to deny a claim of another creditor
in form of a court motion has been introduced by new legislation. A motion must
be filed in form of a standard document available on the Ministry of Justice web
pages. The new provisions of the Insolvency Act also removed the suspension of
voting rights of a creditor as an automatic consequence of a petition for denial
of his claim having been filed. This modification was implemented in order to
prevent abuse of such claims by other creditors during insolvency proceedings.
Storage of data on e-mails
and calls
The Czech
Constitutional Court has cancelled a law ordering that internet providers and
telephone operators retain data on internet and phone communications and hand
them to the police and state intelligence authorities upon their request. The
complaint against the controversial law on electronic communication was filed by
a group of Parliament deputies. The law was criticized for inadequately
protecting people´s privacy and that it did not set clear rules for the use of
the gathered data. The stored data did not concern the actual contents of the
communication, rather the traces of the electronic communication that show who
communicated with whom and when they communicated. Under the concerned law
telephone operators and internet providers were required to store all the data
on phone calls, SMS messages, faxes, e-mails, visits to websites and the use of
some internet services for a minimum of six months and obliged to delete the
data after twelve months. The law on electronic communication was enacted as
result of an EU directive with the intent to fight terrorism. Critics of the
law say it turned into an instrument routinely used in police work where
investigators asked for the data automatically and even in trivial cases.
Tax changes to solar power stations
The recent boom of
photovoltaic power stations in Czech Republic has been confronted with an
important change in tax law related to this field. Under a new 2010 tax
amendment entrepreneurs in the solar power station sector are now subject to a
new 26 % tax on solar power stations. In the past this sector became very
attractive for businessmen because it guaranteed a high return on investment for
reason that they were exempt from income tax for the year when the power station
was put into operation and for the following five years. This exemption was
canceled by new legislation. This tax is not imposed on small private power
installations on roofs of private houses.
As a reaction to the newly
imposed tax and the cancellation of the tax exemption, a large number of law
suits and international arbitrations have already been filed against the Czech
state by power station owners.
Czech drug-related
legislation
Partly as the reaction to the widely criticized 2010 amendment liberalizing drug
legislation, a new amendment to the Act on Addictive Substances (Act. No
167/1998 Coll.) was adopted (Act. No 106/2011 Coll.) The new amendment provides
for a ban of 33 new synthetic drugs in order to prevent their free sale in shops
and on the Internet. The 30 substances to be banned include butylone,
flephedrone, mephedrone, methylone, naphyrone and salvinorin A. So far these
drugs have been legally available in shops on the Czech/Polish border in so
called Amsterdam Shops. The new law has been criticized for the fact that
no fixed date was set for the introduction of the new rules so as to enable
people to get rid of these substances.
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