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The Global Legal Monitor is an online publication from the Law Library of Congress covering legal news and developments worldwide. It is updated frequently and draws on information from official national legal publications and reliable press sources. You can find previous news by searching the Global Legal Monitor.

Sweden: Animal Protection Ordinance Takes Effect, Prohibiting Circus Animals

(Jan. 9, 2019) On January 1, 2019, a new Animal Welfare Protection Ordinance took effect in Sweden. (Djurskyddsförordning Svensk författningssamling [SFS] 1988:539, as amended by SFS 2018:1204, Riksdagen (Parliament) website.) Under the new rules circuses may no longer include elephants or sea lions in their performances. (35 § 2 st Djurskyddsförordning.)

Other animals that were already previously prohibited in traveling shows include apes, rhinos, hippos, deer, giraffes, kangaroos, predator birds, ostriches, and crocodiles. (Id.)

The changes come as part of a larger amendment of the Animal Welfare Act. (SFS 2018:1192; see also proposition [Prop.] 2017/18:147.) The new Animal Welfare Act takes effect April 1, 2019. The Committee report on the Act had suggested including the traveling show prohibition in the Animal Protection Act instead of the Animal Welfare Ordinance. (Prop. 2017/18:147 at 142.) However, because of the detail of the prohibition, the government chose to continue to regulate the enumerated list of animals in the Ordinance. (Prop. 2017/18:147 at 142–43.)

Moreover, the Swedish government determined that the prohibition on elephants and sea lions at circuses may constitute a new requirement that must be reported to the European Commission in accordance with EU Directive 2006/123/EC on services in the internal market. (Prop. 2017/18:147 at 143; Directive 2006/123/EC of the European Parliament and of the Council of 12 December 2006 on Services in the Internal Market art. 15.7, 2006 O.J. (L 376) 36, EUR-Lex website.) Thus, the European Commission must examine the compatibility of the prohibition with EU law. (Directive 2006/123/EC art. 15.7.)

The Animal Protection Act includes several new provisions, including an explicit prohibition on abandoning domesticated animals, such as dogs and cats. (2 kap. 8 § Djurskyddslag; Prop. 2017/18:147 at 113.)

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France: National Medication Safety Agency to Consider Experimenting with Legalized Medical Cannabis

(Jan. 8, 2019) The French agency in charge of evaluating the efficacy and safety of pharmaceutical products, L’Agence nationale de sécurité du médicament (ANSM) (National Agency for the Safety of Medication), announced on December 27, 2018, that it would consider experimenting with cannabis-based preparations for medical purposes. (L’ANSM souscrit aux premières conclusions du CSST sur la pertinence de l’usage du cannabis à visée thérapeutique [The ANSM Endorses Preliminary Conclusions of CSST on Appropriateness of Use of Cannabis for Therapeutic Purposes], ANSM (Dec. 27, 2018).)

On September 10, 2018, the ANSM created the Comité Scientifique Spécialisé Temporaire (CSST) (Temporary Specialized Scientific Committee) to assess the appropriateness and feasibility of allowing medical cannabis in France. (Cannabis thérapeutique en France : l’ANSM publie les premières conclusions du CSST – Point d’Information [Information Point – Medical Cannabis in France: ANSM Publishes CSST’s Preliminary Conclusions], ANSM (Dec. 13, 2018).) The Committee’s preliminary conclusions, which the ANSM endorsed, are that it would be appropriate to authorize the use of cannabis for (1) patients suffering from pain that is not alleviated by currently accessible therapies, (2) certain forms of epilepsy, (3) certain cancer patients, (4) palliative care, and (5) painful spasms related to multiple sclerosis. (Id.) The Committee recommended that patients who are prescribed medical cannabis be monitored to study and evaluate its risks and benefits. (Id.)

The Committee is scheduled to meet again five times between January and June 2019 to consider the practicalities of experimenting with cannabis, including modes of supply and distribution, doses and concentration levels, and modes of administration. (L’ANSM souscrit aux premières conclusions du CSST sur la pertinence de l’usage du cannabis à visée thérapeutique, supra). The Committee has already recommended against smoking cannabis as a means of administration due to related health risks, but other methods will be considered, such as capsules or sprays. (L’agence du médicament souhaite expérimenter le cannabis thérapeutique d’ici fin 2019 [The Medication Agency Wishes to Experiment with Medical Cannabis by the End of 2019], LE FIGARO (Dec. 28, 2018).)

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European Union: European Court of Justice Rules on German Public Broadcasting Contribution

(Jan. 7, 2019) On December 13, 2018, the European Court of Justice (ECJ) held that a “contribution” required to be paid by all German households to public broadcasters is compatible with European Union (EU) law, in particular with the rules on preferential state aid. The request for a preliminary ruling was submitted by a judge from the Regional Court of Tübingen (Landgericht Tübingen). He asked that the ECJ determine, among other things, whether the broadcasting contribution represents preferential state aid that benefits public broadcasters to the exclusion of private broadcasters, which infringes EU law and thus must be notified to the Commission. (Case C‑492/17, Südwestrundfunk v. Tilo Rittinger and Others, Dec. 13, 2018, ECLI:EU:C:2018:1019, InfoCuria website; Consolidated Version of the Treaty on the Functioning of the European Union (TFEU) arts. 107–109, 2016 O.J. (C 202) 1, EUR-Lex website.)

Background

In Germany, enacting broadcasting legislation falls within the jurisdiction of the individual German states. It is mostly regulated in the Interstate Broadcasting Treaty. (Staatsvertrag für Rundfunk und Telemedien [RStV] [Interstate Broadcasting Treaty], Aug. 31, 1991, as amended, Media Authorities website.) The power to regulate broadcasting includes making decisions on the financing of public broadcasting corporations. Broadcasting fees are used to ensure that public broadcasters are able to “meet the public’s essential needs.” (Bundesverfassungsgericht [BVerfG] [Federal Constitutional Court], Nov. 4, 1986, Docket No. 1 BvF 1/84, DFR website.)

In 2013, the German states changed the fee structure and introduced a “broadcasting contribution” per household (Rundfunkbeitrag) that replaced the previous broadcasting fee. Every household currently pays a monthly fee of €17.50 (around US$19.91) no matter how many TVs, radios, or internet-enabled computers exist in the household. The fee also covers private-use vehicles. Different rules exist for businesses and their premises. (For an overview of the German broadcasting fee system, see Kelly Buchanan, Jenny Gesley, Sayuri Umeda, Funding Public Broadcasting: Should Households Pay a Fee for Owning a Television?, IN CUSTODIA LEGIS (Jan. 18, 2018).)

Facts of the Case

The applicants in the main proceedings in Germany either did not pay or did not pay in full the required broadcasting contribution. The competent state broadcasting institution in the German state of Baden-Württemberg instituted enforcement proceedings against them to collect the unpaid amounts for the years 2013–16. (Case C‑492/17, at 13–15.) The debtors filed suit against the actions. The court that referred the questions to the ECJ stated that the questions on the enforcement of unpaid debt were closely related to the applicable substantive law, which it considered contrary to EU law. It argued that the broadcasting contribution was contrary to EU law because it constitutes state aid, is used to finance the establishment of a new terrestrial digital broadcasting system, gives public broadcasters several advantages over private broadcasters—for example, with regard to enforcement powers—and infringes the freedom of information, freedom of establishment, and principles of equal treatment and nondiscrimination. (Id. at 21–27.) The ECJ restricted its ruling to the questions of state aid and whether the change in the fee structure constitutes existing aid or new aid, and found the other questions inadmissible as primarily matters of German rather than EU law. (Id. at 52.)

Ruling

The ECJ held that the change in the fee structure did not constitute a substantial alteration to the system of financing public broadcasting that required notifying the European Commission. The Court recalled that EU law provides that an increase in the original budget of an existing state aid scheme by up to 20% is not to be considered an alteration to existing aid and therefore the Commission does not need to be notified. (Id. at 55; Commission Regulation (EC) No. 794/2004 of 21 April 2004 Implementing Council Regulation (EC) No. 659/1999 Laying Down Detailed Rules for the Application of Article 93 of the EC Treaty, art. 4, para. 1, sentence 2, 2004 O.J. (L 140) 1, EUR-Lex website.) In the case at issue, the change in the fee structure did not substantially change the system of financing German public broadcasting because the objectives, beneficiaries, public tasks assigned to the public broadcasters, and compensation the public broadcasters receive remained essentially the same. (Case C‑492/17, at 59–65.) The ECJ pointed out that the change in the fee structure was aimed at “simplifying the conditions of levying the broadcasting contribution, in a context of evolving technologies for receiving the public broadcasters’ programmes.” (Id. at 64.)

Finally, the ECJ stated that the enforcement powers that the public broadcasters enjoy were not altered when the new broadcasting contribution was introduced. They had therefore already been taken into account by the European Commission in a prior decision in 2007 on whether the financing of public broadcasters in Germany is compatible with EU law. Such powers are inherent in the public tasks of public broadcasters and comply with EU law. (Id. at 70–72; Commission Decision on State Aid E 3/2005 (ex- CP 2/2003, CP 232/2002, CP 43/2003, CP 243/2004 and CP 195/2004) – Financing of Public Service Broadcasters in Germany, C (2007) 1761 final (Apr. 24, 2007).)

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Japan: Supreme Court Decides Registered Owner of Car Responsible for Damages Caused by Actual Owner

(Jan. 3, 2019) On December 17, 2018, the Supreme Court of Japan held the registered owner of a car liable for the personal injury caused by the car’s driver, who was the actual owner of the car. (Sup. Ct., 2018 (ju) 16 (Dec. 17, 2018) (in Japanese, click characters besides PDF icon).)

The Act on Securing Compensation for Automobile Accidents (Act No. 97 of 1955, amended by Act No. 66 of 2015, Japanese Law Translation website) established a system to guarantee compensation for damage in the event of a person’s death or bodily injury due to the operation of an automobile. (Id. art. 1.) The Act obligates “a person that puts an automobile into operational use for that person’s own benefit” to bear strict liability. Article 3 of the Act states as follows:

A person that puts an automobile into operational use for that person’s own benefit is liable to compensate for damage arising from the operation of the automobile if this results in the death or bodily injury of another person. …

Who the “person that puts an automobile into operational use for that person’s own benefit” is, depends on the situation, and there have been many court decisions in this regard. A 1975 Supreme Court decision is regarded as presenting general standards in cases of persons who lend their names to be registered as owners of cars to others who actually own and use the cars. The decision stated that article 3 of the Act applies to the person who controls and manages the car and is in a position to monitor and supervise the operation of the car to prevent harm through its operation in accordance with social norms. (Takayuki Kitagawa et al., Chikujo Kaisetsu Jidosha Songai Baisho Ho [Article-by-Article Commentary on the Act on Securing Compensation for Automobile Accidents] 38–40 (2017).)

In this case, the registered owner was a younger brother of the driver. When the car was bought, the driver was a welfare recipient. She thought her welfare benefits might be suspended if she bought and owned a car. The Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare website states that, in principle, in order to receive welfare payments, car owners must sell their cars and use the money for their essential living expenses because a car is an asset. (Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare, Q & A on the “Welfare System,” Q. 7, Ministry of Health, Labour and Welfare website (in Japanese).) Therefore, she asked her brother to let her use his name as the owner and driver on the car’s registration, and he accepted her request.

At the time in 2014 when the driver bought the car and then had an accident, the brother and sister were not close and mostly did not communicate with each other. They lived separately, and the brother did not financially contribute toward the purchase of the car or pay for its maintenance.  Nor did he ever drive the car or know the car’s location. When the case came before the lower court, the court decided that the brother was not liable because he did not control or manage the operation of the car.

The Supreme Court, however, overturned the lower court decision, stating that the brother’s lending his name for his sister to register the car made her de facto ownership and use of the car possible, and thus contributed to any dangerous situations that might arise when his sister drove the car. The Court stated that the brother could have controlled the use of the car and was in the position to supervise its use to prevent harmful situations from occurring. Accordingly, the Court held that the brother is liable under the Act on Securing Compensation for Automobile Accidents.

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United States: Federal Appellate Court Rejects Suit to Hold Bank Liable for Soldier’s Death by Iranian Explosive in Iraq

(Jan. 2, 2019) The US Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit recently affirmed a lower court’s decision to dismiss plaintiff Rhonda Kemper’s complaint against Deutsche Bank (the Bank) for failure to state a claim under 18 U.S.C. § 2333, commonly referred to in judicial opinions as the Anti-Terrorism Act (ATA). (Kemper v. Deutsche Bank AG, No. 18-1031 (7th Cir. 2018) (Kemper), US Court of Appeals for the 7th Circuit website; 18 U.S.C. § 2333; see also Wultz v. Islamic Republic of Iran, 755 F. Supp. 2d 1, 19 n.1 (D.D.C. 2010).)

Background

Plaintiff’s son, US Army Specialist David Schaefer, Jr., was killed by a roadside explosive device in Iraq in 2009. (Kemper at 1.) The explosive device was distinctive and could be traced to those supplied by Iran to Iraqi agents. (Id. at 3.) The Court stated, “[b]ut for Iran, the technical sophistication and explosive power found in [such devices] would be unavailable to Iraqi militias.” (Id.)

The US had long imposed sanctions prohibiting nearly all trade with Iran because of Iran’s sponsorship of terrorism. (Id.; see also Kenneth Katzman, Cong. Research Serv., RS 20871, Iran Sanctions (2018).) However, until 2008, legitimate Iranian entities could partially access the US financial system through an exception to the sanctions called the “U-Turn” exemption. (Kemper at 3; see also Press Release, U.S. Dep’t of the Treasury, Treasury Revokes Iran’s U-Turn License (Nov. 6, 2008), Treasury Dept. website.) Iranian entities could use a non-Iranian bank (such as Deutsche Bank) with a corresponding US bank account to process transactions that passed through the US. (Kemper at 4.) Importantly, banks servicing a U-Turn transaction were required to identify and disclose the involved parties to confirm that the transaction would not benefit a sanctioned entity. (Id.)

The Bank skirted US sanctions by offering “premium” banking services to certain Iranian clients, including Iranian banks and government entities concurrently engaged in both legitimate and terroristic activities. (Id. at 6, 10.) In exchange for concealing the entities’ names from U-Turn transactions, the Bank charged sanctioned or potentially-sanctioned entities higher processing fees. (Id. at 4­­–5.) After its sanctions-avoiding activities were discovered, the Bank agreed to pay a multimillion dollar civil penalty in a settlement with the New York State Department of Financial Services. (Id. at 5; see also Consent Order, Deutsche Bank AG, NYS Dep’t of Fin. Serv. (Nov. 3, 2015).) The Bank’s improper activities were described in great detail in the consent order, which provided many of the facts for the Kemper complaint. (Kemper at 6.)

Lower Court Proceedings

Plaintiff brought an action under the ATA, alleging that the Bank’s sanctions-avoiding practices were part of a larger conspiracy to fund terrorism. (Id.) She alleged that the Bank’s activities on behalf of sanctioned Iranian entities enabled the entities to directly perpetrate terroristic acts, and that the Bank knew about—or was deliberately indifferent to—the terroristic aims of its clients. (Id. at 6–7.) The complaint implicated the Bank, the state of Iran, and sanctioned Iranian banks and businesses in the conspiracy. (Id. at 6.)

The district court granted the Bank’s motion to dismiss the complaint for failure to state a claim. (Id. at 7–8.) The lower court found that there were “too many steps in the hypothesized causal chain” between the Bank’s actions and the act of terrorism that killed plaintiff’s son. (Id.) Further, to the extent that plaintiff pleaded a conspiracy, her facts supported only a conspiracy to circumvent US sanctions, not to engage in terroristic activities. (Id. at 8.) Plaintiff appealed the dismissal to the Seventh Circuit.

Applicable Law

The ATA sets forth that any US national may sue for injuries caused by an act of international terrorism. (18 U.S.C. § 2333(a).) Any person who aids, abets, or conspires to commit an act of international terrorism is liable for damages under the ATA. (18 U.S.C. § 2333(d).) An act of international terrorism is defined in the statute as an act that is violent or dangerous to human life and intended to intimidate or coerce civilians, influence a government’s policy, or affect a government’s conduct. (18 U.S.C. § 2331(1)(A)–(C).) In addition to showing the occurrence of an injury and an act of international terrorism, a plaintiff bringing an ATA action must also prove fault, state of mind, causation, foreseeability, and intentional misconduct. (Kemper at 9.)

Appellate Decision

In dismissing the complaint for failure to state a claim under the ATA, the Seventh Circuit first addressed whether the Bank’s acts could be considered acts of international terrorism. The court determined that while the Bank’s business interactions on behalf of Iranian entities violated US sanctions, this violation did not convert the business interactions into terrorist acts, particularly where the “great majority of these business interactions did not actually violate any sanctions, and the sanctions at issue cover more than terrorism-related transactions.” (Id. at 10.) Nor were the Bank’s actions violent, dangerous, or designed to intimidate, coerce, or influence a civilian population or government. (Id.) Accordingly, the appellate court found that plaintiff failed to plausibly allege that the Bank’s acts were acts of international terrorism as defined by the ATA.

The Seventh Circuit also found that plaintiff failed to sufficiently allege that the Bank’s actions caused the ultimate terrorist act. Plaintiff claimed that the Bank provided financial services to Iranian entities, which in turn provided both legitimate services and services to terrorist groups. (Id. at 15.) The court focused on plaintiff’s assertions that the Bank’s Iranian clients provided a variety of nonterroristic services in addition to supporting terrorism. (Id. at 15.) Plaintiff’s facts failed to support a claim that the Bank’s acts were in furtherance of funding terrorism as opposed to increasing the Bank’s profits. (Id. at 19.) The court found that there were too many “criminal intervening acts” between the Bank’s acts and the attack that killed plaintiff’s son to support causation. (Id. at 16.)

Moreover, the court found that the complaint did not set forth the requisite elements of a conspiracy. A conspiracy requires an agreement. (Id. at 19.) The facts in the complaint did not support plaintiff’s claim that the Bank agreed to provide material support for terrorism. (Id. at 20.) At most, the Bank was apathetic to how its Iranian clients spent funds processed through the improper U-Turn transactions. (Id.) Plaintiff’s facts indicated that the Bank may have “incidentally assisted” a conspiracy to commit acts of terrorism, but not that it agreed to join the conspiracy. (Id.) Therefore, the complaint failed to sufficiently set forth the required elements of a conspiracy claim.

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