{"id":4781,"date":"2023-02-27T11:47:20","date_gmt":"2023-02-27T11:47:20","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/jhcolorpowdercoating.com\/?p=4781"},"modified":"2023-03-31T15:52:11","modified_gmt":"2023-03-31T15:52:11","slug":"compliance-liability-and-damages-from-a-lawyer-s","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/jhcolorpowdercoating.com\/compliance-liability-and-damages-from-a-lawyer-s.html","title":{"rendered":"Compliance, liability and damages from a lawyer’s perspective"},"content":{"rendered":"
The term compliance has long been a fixed part of business language. Literally, it refers to compliance with rules and laws.<\/p>\n
It means that a company consistently complies with legal regulations, but also with standard specifications, ethical maxims and rules from voluntary commitments and ensures internally that compliance is part of the corporate culture and is not based solely on good will or coincidence.<\/p>\n
As a lawyer I regularly deal with compliance violations and their consequences. In such a situation I can help to ensure that the consequences are kept to a minimum.<\/p>\n
A compliance violation means<\/p>\n
A compliance violation can therefore involve breaches of compliance with rules and laws at several hierarchical levels. Central to management is the task of establishing an internal security and control system within the company. If it is missing, or if the installed compliance system is not functional, claims for damages are imminent.<\/p>\n
A compliance system is an organizational concept (usually software-based) that defines control procedures and communication processes to ensure that actions are in compliance with obligations.<\/p>\n
It is designed to protect the company from violations of the law by its own management and employees. If it works, it thus provides protection against fines and claims for damages as well as other consequences of violations such as loss of image or contractual penalties.<\/p>\n
Depending on the sector, size of the company and positioning, the focus may be on different regulations: for example, tax regulations, BaFin requirements, criminal law provisions against corruption, data protection law, procurement regulations, waste legislation and environmental requirements, as well as balance sheet and accounting regulations under commercial law. But it can also be about requirements from standards such as ISO\/IEC 27001 or voluntary commitments such as for quality seals that signal supply chains without child labor.<\/p>\n
Which compliance system is the right one depends on the industry, the size and other factors. In any case, the market is large.<\/p>\n
There are different requirements for a compliance system depending on the size of the company, its business activities and the industry in which it operates. This includes, for example, requirements from the following sources:<\/p>\n
A few highlights show how closely compliance and corporate law are related:<\/p>\n
In 2013, the Munich Regional Court ordered a Siemens board member to pay the company damages of. Euro (Munich Regional Court I, judgment of 10.12.2013, 5 HK O 1387\/10). The background was a system of slush funds from which bribes had flowed to initiate business abroad.<\/p>\n
The Siemens board members were subsequently accused of not having set up a functioning compliance management system in the company. Nine out of ten board members agreed to a settlement. The tenth one let it come to a judgment – and was indirectly held responsible for the black accounts, even though they were by no means in his area of responsibility and he had no idea of what was happening.<\/p>\n
Nevertheless, the judges said, it would have been part of his management and organizational duties to ensure compliance with the relevant regulations pertinent to the company, both by the company itself and by its employees. Since he had violated this duty, he was liable for damages even without personal involvement.<\/p>\n
On the other hand, there are also judgments that give hope. For example, the BGH has confirmed that the establishment of a compliance management system can reduce the fine against the company – even if proceedings have already been initiated.<\/p>\n
A properly functioning compliance management system set up in response to a breach of duty thus has a mitigating effect on punishment. This is true even if compliance violations occur again later, despite the system in place, and management decides to make adjustments to avoid future violations. The decisive factor is the active effort to achieve functioning compliance.<\/p>\n
If a compliance violation may have occurred, I as a lawyer for business law and business criminal law can quickly tell you what you or your company may face. I will also give you specific advice on how to proceed. As a specialist in tax law and commercial and corporate law, I am very familiar with compliance.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"
The term compliance has long been a fixed part of business language. Literally, it refers to compliance with rules and […]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":2,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":[],"categories":[9],"tags":[],"yoast_head":"\n