Hi, ads,
In fact, the appeal before SC was admited, then BBVA had to formalise their appeal, and in that step is when they abandoned, failing to submit the relevant writing. They were not prohibited to submit, and they could have gone forward.
We ignore at all the reason why BBVA abandoned some appeals submitted to the SC. I guess it has something to see in saving legal costs once the ruling has been executed.
We don't thnk they really wanted to obstruct. On the contrary, we giess they really had faith in their previous appeal before the SC to be resolved in their favour, and wanted to "keep alive" for free as many cases as possible just in case they won SC appeal. And when I say "for free" I mean that, once they had to formalise appeal before SC and incur in higher expenses iwthout being sure of the result of the previous one, and having paid to the buyers on provisional execution, they decided to "minimize the damage" (I hope you understand what I mean) and save legal costs from their part and from the part of the buyers.
In summary, I believe they have delayed thinking in the best defense of the ones they considered their rights, but not tried really a bad faith obstruction.
The obbligation of a lawyer is doing his/her best in fighting for the rights of his/her client. We do this with the rights of our clients and the bank's lawyers will do the same for their clients. And, at the time we were fighting for the inalienable rights of the buyers, BBVA lawyers were fighting for what they considered were their rights.
It's fair that each part makes as much as possible in Law to defend what they consider their rights. And you must remember that, at least in our case, they had paid the deposits back as consequence of the provisional execution.
Well, at the end we won, they lost. Courts are intended for that: stating who is right. And the SC has stated the banks liable.
We miss in our system any kind of addtitional punishment (as the "punitive damages" of the saxon legal systems), but actually there's nothing further than the obbligation to respond of all interests of the deposits since they were paid and for legal costs.
Anyway, I'm sure banks are still not happy and will try to avoid paying any time they can.