A few weeks ago, the Hig­her Regio­nal Court (OLG) of Colo­gne rejec­ted an appli­ca­ti­on for preli­mi­na­ry injunc­ti­ve reli­ef filed by the Con­su­mer Pro­tec­tion Asso­cia­ti­on of North Rhi­ne-West­pha­lia (VZ NRW). The full text of the decis­i­on has sin­ce beco­me publicly available in Ger­man. A detail­ed case note will fol­low short­ly on this blog, but some initi­al pro­ce­du­ral aspects are worth high­light­ing at this stage.

Relationship Between Private and Public Enforcement of the DMA

The con­su­mer asso­cia­ti­on based its request on the Ger­man Act on Injunc­ti­ve Reli­ef (UKlaG), a sta­tu­te gran­ting stan­ding to qua­li­fied asso­cia­ti­ons. Coll­ec­ti­ve redress mecha­nisms are in prin­ci­ple com­pa­ti­ble with pri­va­te enforce­ment under the Digi­tal Mar­kets Act (DMA).

In the pro­cee­dings befo­re the OLG Colo­gne, Meta argued that pri­va­te enforce­ment should be con­side­red sub­or­di­na­te to the Commission’s enforce­ment powers. In other words, it posi­ted a hier­ar­chy whe­re pri­va­te claims must give way to public action by the Euro­pean Commission.

The court did not fol­low this view. It reli­ed on Artic­le 42 DMA in con­junc­tion with the Repre­sen­ta­ti­ve Actions Direc­ti­ve (EU) 2020/1828, not­ing that the inter­pre­ta­ti­on of the DMA must be gui­ded by its tex­tu­al wor­ding alo­ne. If pri­va­te enforce­ment were limi­t­ed by public enforce­ment mecha­nisms, this would under­mi­ne the effec­ti­ve appli­ca­ti­on of the DMA. Such a limi­ta­ti­on can­not be infer­red from the regulation’s lan­guage or structure.

International Jurisdiction in DMA Private Enforcement Cases

The OLG Colo­gne found that it had inter­na­tio­nal juris­dic­tion pur­su­ant to Artic­le 7 No. 2 Brussels Ia Regu­la­ti­on (Regu­la­ti­on (EU) No 1215/2012). This pro­vi­si­on appli­es to tort claims and deter­mi­nes juris­dic­tion at the place whe­re the harmful event occur­red or is likely to occur.

While the legal basis is cor­rect, the court’s reaso­ning appears fla­wed. The OLG sta­ted that juris­dic­tion was estab­lished becau­se the “data pro­ces­sing in ques­ti­on con­cerns users loca­ted in Ger­ma­ny.” Howe­ver, the alle­ged inf­rin­ge­ment under Artic­le 5(2) DMA is not about the mere pro­ces­sing of user data. Rather, it con­cerns the com­bi­na­ti­on of per­so­nal data across ser­vices, which is a distinct issue under the DMA’s com­pe­ti­ti­on-focu­sed framework.

As a result, the case should have been clas­si­fied under the prin­ci­ple of ubi­qui­tous juris­dic­tion (flie­gen­der Gerichts­stand), as the unlawful com­bi­na­ti­on of data is inten­ded to affect a multi­tu­de of users and does so simul­ta­neous­ly in seve­ral juris­dic­tions. In other words even forum shop­ping of Digi­tal Mar­kets Act is possible.

This distinc­tion reve­als a con­cep­tu­al misun­derstan­ding by the court. By con­st­ruing Artic­le 5(2) DMA nar­row­ly as a data pro­tec­tion rule, the court over­loo­ked its mar­ket regu­la­to­ry func­tion and the broa­der com­pe­ti­ti­on impli­ca­ti­ons of a gate­kee­per’s data aggre­ga­ti­on prac­ti­ces. The real con­cern lies in the uncon­test­a­ble data advan­ta­ge crea­ted by such prac­ti­ces, not the data pro­ces­sing of indi­vi­du­al users.

Preliminary Injunctive Relief Also Available in Representative Actions

Whe­re pri­va­te enforce­ment is per­mit­ted, inte­rim reli­ef must also be available — this includes actions brought under the DMA. In this case, the appli­ca­ti­on for a preli­mi­na­ry injunc­tion was made on the basis of UKlaG, which in turn refers to Sec­tion 12(1) UWG (Act Against Unfair Com­pe­ti­ti­on). That pro­vi­si­on faci­li­ta­tes the demons­tra­ti­on of urgen­cy and impli­cit­ly con­firms the admis­si­bi­li­ty of inte­rim measures.

From a doc­tri­nal per­spec­ti­ve, this inter­pre­ta­ti­on ali­gns with the Cou­ra­ge juris­pru­dence of the CJEU. It would be incom­pa­ti­ble with the objec­ti­ve of EU com­pe­ti­ti­on law to deny effec­ti­ve redress through inte­rim reli­ef to tho­se har­med by regu­la­to­ry vio­la­ti­ons. The right to app­ly for pro­vi­sio­nal mea­su­res is thus a logi­cal exten­si­on of the DMA’s prin­ci­ple of effec­ti­ve enforcement.

About the author

Porträtbild von Dr. Sebastian Louven

Dr. Sebastian Louven

I have been an independent lawyer since 2016 and advise mainly on antitrust law and telecommunications law. Since 2022 I am a specialist lawyer for international business law.

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