Marta Pasztaleniec

Attorney-at-lawSenior Associate

Bio

Marta is an attorney-at-law specializing in IT, intellectual property, and public procurement law. At TKP, Marta deals with TMT practice, as part of the IT-Tech and Public Procurement law team. Marta is experienced in advising the broad IT industry on issues including negotiating and performing agreements for the implementation, development, and maintaining of computer systems, and copyright agreements, and implementing Financial Supervision Authority guidelines on cloud computing outsourcing. Marta is also experienced in handling public tender proceedings, including representation vis-à-vis the National Appeals Chamber, acting for both contractors and contracting authorities, and advising Polish and international firms on a full range of issues.

Marta has authored publications on practical issues concerning new technologies, intellectual property law, and public procurement law. She studied at the Faculty of Law and Administration at the Maria Curie-Skłodowska University in Lublin, did postgraduate studies in new technologies law at the Koźmiński University in Warsaw, and studied intellectual property law at the Jagiellonian University in Kraków.


Related news

News 1
11 Jan 2024

Promotions to Senior Associate, Senior Accountant and Specialist for Sales and Receivables Management

We are pleased to announce that Marta Pasztaleniec, Bartłomiej Żeromski, Katarzyna Stopka and Klaudia Gofron have been promoted.

Marta Pasztaleniec has been promoted to the position of Senior Associate.

Blog 1
03 Apr 2024

The Public Procurement Office confirmed the possibility of the contracting authority's possibility to transfer receivables due to a subcontractor

The contracting authority awards the public contract to a specific contractor selected through a tendering procedure. Consequently, the contractor’s ability to assign the rights and obligations that arise from the contract with the contracting authority to another entity is significantly limited. However, the transfer of a monetary claim under the contract does not lead to a change in the parties to the concluded contract – the contractor selected in accordance with the law remains obliged to perform the public contract. To date, however, there has been no clear position from the Public Procurement Office confirming this possibility, with the result that contracting authorities may have been reluctant to make payments to subcontractors.

On 22 January 2024, the Public Procurement Office posted an opinion on its website[1] , in which it clearly indicated that:

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