Insight

Thinking beyond M&A litigation risks: quasi-judicial mechanisms and human rights

Anna Triponel

June 12, 2019

This article was first published on Thomson Reuter’sPractical Law In-House Blog here.

M&A lawyers are well aware of the importance ofassessing the possibility of litigation when their companies (or clients in thecase of external lawyers) are acquiring new companies. No company likes to getsued, and even less so when this relates to actions taken by a predecessor.

We have discussed elsewhere thatanticipating and quantifying litigation risks is increasingly challenging to dowhen it comes to a target company’s human rights-related actions: we now have asurge in human rights-related litigation and law suits against companies forallegations of past human rights violations, resulting in acquisitions that canend up costing significantly more than anticipated.

At the same time, it is noeasy task for plaintiffs to bring these kinds of law suits. They costmoney, they are lengthy, and they give rise to a whole host of important legalquestions. Plaintiffs are therefore increasingly turning to other mechanisms toshine a spotlight on companies’ human rights-related conduct overseas. Enterquasi-judicial mechanisms.

Quasi-judicial mechanisms are not courts per se. Rather thanapplying legislature-approved rules and procedures, they follow their ownpre-established rules and procedures. Rather than relying on state-sponsoredenforcement, they rely on other methods of enforcement. However, they aregenerally viewed as similar to law suits. Investors, governmental authoritiesand business partners pay attention to them, and therefore so too do companiessubject to them.

These quasi-judicial mechanisms are not looking at whethercompanies have complied with the law: instead, they are looking at whethercompanies have met human rights-related standards, which may or may not becaptured in law. Some examples of quasi-judicial instances are as follows:

  • National Contact Points (NCPs) are     government-supported offices whose core duty is to advance the     effectiveness of the OECD Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises (the     Guidelines). These Guidelines provide for a specific responsibility on     companies to seek to respect human rights, including in their extended     value chain. This means that plaintiffs can resort to NCPs to hold     companies to account for their activities impacting upon human rights     taking place in far-flung places.
  • The Compliance     Advisor Ombudsman (CAO) receives complaints from     people affected by projects in which the International Finance Corporation     (IFC) and the Multilateral Investment Guarantee Agency (MIGA) play a role.     Rather than relying on applicable national laws, the CAO reviews companies’     conduct against the IFC Policy and Performance Standards on Environmental     and Social Sustainability.
  • Quasi-judicial     mechanisms also include complaint mechanisms of other multilateral     financial institutions such as the European Bank for Reconstruction and     Development, the Inter-American Development Bank and the European     Investment Bank.

M&A activity and quasi-judicial mechanisms areincreasingly intertwined. Quasi-judicial mechanisms can be used to bringcomplaints against a company for activities previously undertaken by a companyit has acquired. Quasi-judicial mechanisms can also play a role in a company’sdecision to divest of a business. Here are four examples:

  • POSCO’s     purchase of Daewoo International: In the 1990s, Korean trading company     Daewoo International expanded its purchasing of Uzbekistan’s cotton. In     2010, South Korean steel producer POSCO acquired Daewoo. Four years later,     a number of civil society organisations lodged an     instance at the Korean NCP against Daewoo alleging that the     company had breached the Guidelines by purchasing cotton produced in     Uzbekistan, despite its awareness of on-going state-sponsored forced     labour in the country. While not accepting the specific instance, the Korean     NCP recommended that the company continue to monitor the situation and     engage in dialogue and co-operation with the government of Uzbekistan and     other stakeholders. This led to pension funds from a range of countries     (e.g., Sweden, UK, Denmark, Poland) engaging with     Daewoo to encourage the company to contribute to improved labour     conditions in the cotton industry.
  • Sale     of the Westin Hotel coordinated by Natixis: In 2015, workers of the     Westin Long Beach Hotel in California informed their managers that they     wished to launch an organizing campaign to join a Californian trade union     called UNITE HEREThe hotel was owned by a public pension     fund in Utah and managed by French management company Natixis (through its     American subsidiary, AEW Capital Management). The trade union brought an     instance with the French NCP against Natixis for the hotel’s violation of     freedom of association and the right to collective bargaining of workers.     Although Natixis did not own the Westin hotel, the hotel was in its value     chain and therefore it had a certain responsibility for human rights under     the OECD Guidelines. The French NCP conducted mediation between the     companies and the workers. The public pension fund decided     to sell the hotel, with AEW Capital Management’s support. A new     buyer was selected that made a commitment to social dialogue and allowed     the workers to unionise immediately post-sale.
  • Sale     of Wilmar’s Indonesian subsidiary: The IFC had made a number of     investments in the Asian agribusiness group Wilmar International. In 2011,     the IFC Compliance Advisor Ombudsman received complaints from     communities in Indonesia related to land disputes with a fully owned     subsidiary of Wilmar, palm oil company PT Asiatic Persada. The CAO     proceeded with mediation between Wilmar, its subsidiary and the     communities, resulting in mediation agreements between the companies and     the communities. Two years later, Wilmar sold its subsidiary and the new     owners decided to withdraw from the mediation agreements. The CAO     strongly condemned Wilmar     for selling its subsidiary amidst mediation discussions, without seeking     to put a contingency plan in place for affected communities as part of the     sale.
  • Sale     of G4S’ US subsidiary: British security company G4S had a US     subsidiary, G4S Government Solutions division, that ran facilities at the     Guantánamo Bay US naval base. In March 2013, British security company     G4S announced     its decision to sell this division, noting that a significant     part of the rationale was due to the fact that, as a non-American company,     the US government had prohibited it from having any control or influence     over this American division. In between the announcement and the sale     (that took place in 2014), civil society Reprieve brought an instance     against G4S in front of the UK NCP noting that the provision of these     support services was inconsistent with the Guidelines. In particular,     Reprieve pointed to the human rights violations taking place at Guantanamo     Bay. The UK NCP reviewed the instance and recommended that     the complaint be submitted to the US National Contact Point since the     subsidiary had been sold to a buyer based in the US.

More than ever, civil society organisations areseeking to hold companies to account for the adverse impacts on human rightsconnected to their business, including where the activities took place underprior management and in far-flung places. They increasingly resort toquasi-judicial mechanisms to do so, and this trend is set to continue.Understanding how these mechanisms work and how companies can meet theexpectations of these mechanisms will in turn help M&A lawyers betteradvise their companies.

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