Private Enforcement of Competition Law in Polish Courts: The Story of an (Almost) Lost Hope for Development
Private Enforcement of Competition Law in Polish Courts: The Story of an (Almost) Lost Hope for Development
Author(s): Agata Jurkowska-GomułkaSubject(s): Business Economy / Management, Commercial Law
Published by: Wydawnictwo Naukowe Wydziału Zarządzania Uniwersytetu Warszawskiego
Keywords: antitrust damage; collective redress; evidence; nullity; private enforcement of competition law; Poland; public enforcement of competition law
Summary/Abstract: The article reviews judgments of Polish courts on private enforcement of competition law between 1993 and 2012. A quantitative analysis of this jurisprudence shows that very few cases of that type exist at all. Their qualitative characteristics illustrate that: none of them referred to consumers; none of the claims was a ‘pure’ damage claim; all of these cases focused on partial or general nullity of contracts concluded as a result of an anticompetitive practice; almost all of them concerned an abuse of a dominant position; only one referred to competition-restricting agreements. The relevant jurisprudence largely focused on the binding force of a prior decision of the Polish competition body upon civil courts. Even if the fact that some cases of this type were at all record might suggest that there is a potential for developing private enforcement of antitrust in Poland, nothing like this actually happened. Unfortunately, the Act on Collective Redress (in force since July 2010) has not contributed to a growth in the number of consumers (or any other entities) engaging in court disputes with undertakings restricting competition
Journal: Yearbook of Antitrust and Regulatory Studies (YARS)
- Issue Year: 6/2013
- Issue No: 8
- Page Range: 107-128
- Page Count: 22
- Language: English