Rio court confirms suspension of Valeu app and orders funds returned

The Rio de Janeiro Court of Justice confirmed the suspension of the Valeu app, launched by the city government in 2022 to compete with delivery platforms like iFood. The ruling, issued on April 29, 2026, also ordered the return of public funds invested in the project.

The hearing took place on Wednesday, April 29, 2026, by the 3rd Public Law Chamber of the Rio de Janeiro Court of Justice. The court rejected an appeal from the municipality and IplanRio, the city-owned company handling technology management and platform administration. This ended a public interest lawsuit claiming violation of private market competition rules.

The court ruled that the project constituted undue public intervention in a private economic activity, without evidence of significant public interest. The initial unfavorable decision against Valeu came in February 2025. "The creation and implementation of a digital delivery services platform reveals a deviation of purpose and inadequacy to the institutional duties of Public Administration," wrote rapporteur Judge Rogério de Oliveira Souza.

The lawsuit was filed by councilor Pedro Duarte (PSD), represented by BBL Advogados firm. The ruling comes amid rising competition in delivery services, with Chinese platforms 99Food and Keeta entering Brazil in 2025, following iFood's dominance and Rappi's smaller share.

مقالات ذات صلة

Brazilian Deputy Augusto Coutinho requests postponement of app work regulation bill vote in Congress, amid protests by delivery workers and drivers.
صورة مولدة بواسطة الذكاء الاصطناعي

Lawmaker requests postponement of app work regulation bill vote

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي صورة مولدة بواسطة الذكاء الاصطناعي

The rapporteur of PLP 152/2025, Deputy Augusto Coutinho (Republicanos-PE), requested the postponement of the vote on the bill regulating app-based work, scheduled for Tuesday (April 14) in the Chamber's special committee. The request followed a government plea from then-leader José Guimarães (PT-CE). The government withdrew support due to rejection by delivery workers and drivers.

São Paulo's Court of Justice second instance reversed, on Thursday 19, the condemnation of iFood Benefícios, Caju, Flash, and Swille for unfair competition in the meal voucher sector. The lawsuit was filed by the Brazilian Workers' Benefits Association (ABBT), representing Alelo, Ticket Edenred, and VR. The ruling states there was no explicit ban on open arrangements before the deadline.

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي

Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva's government has withdrawn support for a bill regulating deliveries and rides via apps like iFood and Uber, jeopardizing the vote in the Chamber of Deputies scheduled for next week. Deputy Augusto Coutinho's new report removes the minimum fee per trip and proposes a basic pay of R$ 8.50 for deliverers. The move follows negative fallout at the Planalto.

Desembargador Roberval Belinati of TJDFT suspended on March 17 an injunction blocking the use of public properties as collateral for BRB loans to cover Banco Master losses. This follows the DF Assembly's approval on March 3 and Governor Ibaneis Rocha's sanction on March 10 of a law authorizing up to R$ 6.6 billion in operations. The ruling responds to an appeal by the Distrito Federal government, BRB's majority shareholder.

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي

Brazil's Parliamentary Commission of Inquiry (CPI) on Organized Crime rejected Senator Alessandro Vieira's (MDB-SE) final report on Tuesday (April 14), which proposed indicting three Supreme Federal Court (STF) justices and the Attorney General. The report was defeated 6-4 after changes in the commission's composition. The substitutions favored government-aligned members, swaying the vote outcome.

STF Minister Flávio Dino suspended, on a preliminary basis, the breach of bank and fiscal secrecy for a businesswoman close to Lulinha, son of President Lula. The ruling prompted the defense of Fábio Luis Lula da Silva to seek the same protection and drew criticism from the INSS CPI, which sees it as an affront to Parliament.

من إعداد الذكاء الاصطناعي

The STF's Second Panel ruled 4-0 to uphold the preventive detention of Banco Master owner Daniel Vorcaro on Friday (March 20). Justice Gilmar Mendes sided with rapporteur André Mendonça but criticized the reasoning as using 'porous and elastic' terms. The ruling comes amid Operation Compliance Zero probing financial frauds.

 

 

 

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