Court of Appeal of Brussels - 2021/AR/205: Difference between revisions

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The Court of Appeal annulled the DPA's decision.   
The Court of Appeal annulled the DPA's decision.   


It held that, despite the termination of the management agreement, the music company still had a legitimate interest to manage the fanpage. This is because, according to an artist agreement of 26 July 2008, a license agreement of 20 November 2015, and in line with the rights of the music producer pursuant to Article XI.209 of the Belgian Code of Economic Law ('Wetboek van Economisch recht', 'WEB'), the music company is exclusively entitled to use the name and image of the music artist of the musical works which are the subject matter of those agreements, for the duration of the copyright rights (70 years from the first recording). The complainant is paid royalties in return. In this context, the Facebook page was set up and used, among other things, to promote the artist's name and promote the sale of the relevant music works.    
It held that, despite the termination of the management agreement, the music company still had a legitimate interest to manage the fanpage. This is because, according to an artist agreement of 26 July 2008, a license agreement of 20 November 2015, and in line with the rights of the music producer pursuant to Article XI.209 of the Belgian Code of Economic Law ('Wetboek van Economisch recht', 'WEB'), the music company is exclusively entitled to use the name and image of the music artist of the musical works which are the subject matter of those agreements, for the duration of the copyright rights (70 years from the first recording). The complainant is paid royalties in return. In this context, the Facebook page was set up and used, among other things, to promote the artist's name and promote the sale of the relevant music works. The Court stated that the personal data on the fanpage are in any case very limited, and that the legitimate interest of the defendant in processing this data, which helps the complainant grow in outreach, is more important. No violation of Article 21(1) read in conjunction with Article 12(3) could therefore be shown by the DPA.    
 
No violation of Article 21(1) read in conjunction with Article 12(3) could therefore be shown by the DPA.  
 
With regard to the balancing act set out in Article 6(1)(b) GDPR, the Court stated 
 
The Court personal data are in any case very limited and the exploitation is a legitimate interest of the defendant. In addition, the exploitation helps the complainant grow in outreach.
 
 


== Comment ==
== Comment ==

Revision as of 09:26, 21 July 2021

Hof van Beroep - 2021/AR/205
Courts logo1.png
Court: Cour d'appel de Bruxelles/ Hof van beroep Brussel (Belgium)
Jurisdiction: Belgium
Relevant Law: Article 6 GDPR
Article 20 GDPR
Article 21 GDPR
Art. 209 WER
Decided: 26.05.2021
Published:
Parties:
National Case Number/Name: 2021/AR/205
European Case Law Identifier:
Appeal from: APD/GBA (Belgium)
02/2021
Appeal to: Not appealed
Original Language(s): Dutch
Original Source: Arrest van 26 mei 2021 van het Marktenhof AR 205 (in Dutch)
Initial Contributor: Enzo Marquet

The Court of Appeal of Brussels held that a music company could continue to manage the social media fanpage of a music artist following the termination of a management agreement. The company has a legitimate interest to process the personal data on the fanpage, so long as this processing is in line with the right of reproduction, and the original contract.

English Summary

Facts

After a contractual relationship with the music company who owned the Facebook fanpage of the musician (including their full name), the latter wanted to get back control of this page. The DPA issued an order to transfer the page (APD/GBA - 14/2020) on the basis of data portability, but this order was annulled by the Court of Appeal. The litigation chamber of the DPA then issued a second decision (APD/GBA - 02/2021) which imposed a fine of €10,000 on the music company for not transferring the fanpage of the musician to them, for not transferring the fanpage of the musician to them, after they had exercised their right to data portability and right to object. The DPA imposed this second decision based on the lack of consent from the artist to use its name and the termination of the management agreement. The defendant has now appealed this decision.

According to the defendant, the DPA was incorrect to find that the lawfulness of the processing of the complainant's personal data under Article 6(1)(b) stopped on 3 November 2019, when the management agreement between the artist and the defendant was terminated. The defendant argues that the termination of the management agreement has no affect on its rights to manage the Facebook page. Its right to maintain the Facebook page was not based on the management agreement. Instead, the intellectual property rights to the musical works of the artist are relevant. As the exclusive licensee of certain musical works of the artist, the defendant is entitled to use the name and image of the performing artist of these musical works for the purpose of marketing and commercialisation of the music. These rights derive from various agreements between the company and claimant (not including the management agreement) which also involve a third party music producer.

Holding

The Court of Appeal annulled the DPA's decision.

It held that, despite the termination of the management agreement, the music company still had a legitimate interest to manage the fanpage. This is because, according to an artist agreement of 26 July 2008, a license agreement of 20 November 2015, and in line with the rights of the music producer pursuant to Article XI.209 of the Belgian Code of Economic Law ('Wetboek van Economisch recht', 'WEB'), the music company is exclusively entitled to use the name and image of the music artist of the musical works which are the subject matter of those agreements, for the duration of the copyright rights (70 years from the first recording). The complainant is paid royalties in return. In this context, the Facebook page was set up and used, among other things, to promote the artist's name and promote the sale of the relevant music works. The Court stated that the personal data on the fanpage are in any case very limited, and that the legitimate interest of the defendant in processing this data, which helps the complainant grow in outreach, is more important. No violation of Article 21(1) read in conjunction with Article 12(3) could therefore be shown by the DPA.

Comment

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English Machine Translation of the Decision

The decision below is a machine translation of the Dutch original. Please refer to the Dutch original for more details.