Vodafone and Finetwork escalate their judicial war to the Constitutional Court

Published on May 24, 2026 | Translated from Spanish

The battle for control of Finetwork is intensifying. The Provincial Court of Alicante has dismissed the motion for annulment filed by the former Vodafone subsidiary, now under Zegona's control, to regain power over Wewi Mobile. The conflict, which pits Vodafone Spain against Finetwork's former shareholders, will now reach the Constitutional Court, marking a new chapter in this corporate dispute.

two corporate lawyers in dark suits facing each other across a polished wooden table, one holding a smartphone displaying a network signal icon, the other pressing a gavel onto a stack of legal documents, a holographic flowchart of corporate ownership lines breaking apart between them, dramatic courtroom lighting, photorealistic technical illustration, intense negotiation atmosphere, legal documents with visible contract clauses, digital interference glitches on the hologram, deep shadows and highlights on suits, ultra-detailed textures of wood grain and paper fibers

Mobile technology as a judicial battlefield 📡

At the center of the litigation is the control of Wewi Mobile, a mobile virtual network operator that uses Vodafone's network to offer services. The court ruling not only affects the company's governance but also impacts the management of technical infrastructure and network access agreements. The final decision could redefine how these contracts are negotiated in the sector, where the separation between ownership and operation is key to competition.

From missed calls to judicial appeals 📞

While lawyers sharpen their arguments for the Constitutional Court, Finetwork users only hope the coverage doesn't drop out. Because, let's be honest, when two companies fight for control, the one who always ends up without a signal is the customer. Maybe they should settle it with an operator duel: whoever offers the best speed wins. But no, they prefer the courts.