After the Higher Regional Court (OLG) Frankfurt had already ruled in 2016 on the facts of the challenge of advisors’ fees in the case of a failed restructuring attempt (specifically “QCells“,see here for further details), the German Federal Supreme Court (“Bundesgerichtshof”, “BGH”) took more than five (5!) years to decide on the appeal. This fact alone is astonishing. Moreover, the decision, with its 49 pages, seems to be part of a growing series of decisions that are difficult to implement in practice (see earlier here). The following is an attempt at an initial assessment.
Dawn of a new era at the BGH?
The change in jurisprudence of the German Federal Supreme Court (“Bundesgerichtshof“, “BGH“), may – after previous decisions regarding avoidance in insolvency that were initially difficult to interpret (here) – now actually turn into a true “dawn of a new era”: Germany’s highest civil court realignes areas such as avoidance law, the appointment of administrators and … more