Wednesday, December 25, 2024

European Union inches closer to alternative business structures

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External ownership of law firms across the European Union moved a small step closer on Thursday with the latest development in a landmark dispute involving a German practice.

An advocate-general for the Court of Justice of the European Union recommended that the court reject Germany’s current ban on non-lawyer investors owning stakes in firms.

The plaintiff in the case is Halmer Rechtsanwaltsgesellschaft UG, a law firm founded by Dr Daniel Halmer. After receiving its licence to practise law from the Munich Bar Association (RAK) in 2020, the Halmer firm assigned 51 of its 100 shares to an Austrian limited liability company. The RAK, defendant in the case, then revoked the plaintiff’s licence to practise, because the Austrian LLC was not licensed to practise law either in Germany or in Austria and, under the German Federal Lawyers’ Act (BRAO), was not allowed to be a shareholder in a law firm as an investor.

Halmer UG challenged the constitutionality of Germany’s third-party ownership ban before the Bavarian Lawyers’ Court (BayAGH), as well as the ban’s compatibility with EU law. The BayAGH then requested the CJEU to review the German ban on third-party ownership.

Advocate general Manuel Campos Sánchez-Bordona today said he considers the restrictions imposed by the BRAO on shareholdings in law firms to be inconsistent with EU law. In particular, certain professionals from outside the law are allowed to hold shares in law firms – including tax advisers, accountants and even pharmacists –  but not other parties.

Although the ECJ is not bound by advocate-general opinions, the court follows them in most cases.

Writing for the Gazette in May, Jonathan Goldsmith, former secretary general of the Council of Bars and Law Societies of Europe, said the Halmer case could ‘decide the question of alternative business structures in Europe for a long time’.

Progress will not be swift, however. If the court finds for Halmer the matter will be remitted to the Bavaria court, which could appeal. 

 

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