Two more Spanish court rulings have gone in favour of claimants in cases brought against the Anfi Group, adding to the growing number of Anfi contracts declared illegal.
Case one: floating week agreement
In the first matter, the judge found that the timeshare agreement operated as a floating week contract rather than allocating a fixed week and specific accommodation. On that basis, the court declared the contract null and void and ordered Anfi to pay £17,958.
Case two: contract in perpetuity
In the second ruling, the court concluded the contract was in perpetuity, meaning it had no end date. The judge again declared the agreement null and void and ordered Anfi to pay £13,665.
Together, these two decisions are worth £31,623 and provide further examples of Spanish judges finding certain Anfi agreements unlawful, including situations where an Anfi floating week contract or an Anfi contract in perpetuity is deemed invalid.
These outcomes represent two further strong results in the Spanish courts for M1 Legal, reinforcing the direction of travel in recent litigation involving Anfi timeshare agreements.