APD/GBA (Belgium) - 73/2024
APD/GBA - 73/2024 | |
---|---|
Authority: | APD/GBA (Belgium) |
Jurisdiction: | Belgium |
Relevant Law: | Article 6 GDPR |
Type: | Complaint |
Outcome: | Rejected |
Started: | |
Decided: | 13.05.2024 |
Published: | |
Fine: | n/a |
Parties: | n/a |
National Case Number/Name: | 73/2024 |
European Case Law Identifier: | n/a |
Appeal: | n/a |
Original Language(s): | Dutch |
Original Source: | APD/GBA (in NL) |
Initial Contributor: | nzm |
The DPA considered that its intervention in a case regarding the installation of surveillance cameras in the common areas of a co-owned building was not strictly necessary, as it was an ancillary to a broader dispute. Therefore, the DPA dismissed the case.
English Summary
Facts
The data subject owned a flat and was a member of the co-owners’ association. Following multiple incidents, several co-owners requested the installation of a security system with cameras in the entrance hall and garage. In January 2018, a general meeting was held and the installation was unanimously approved, not including the abstention of some owners, including the data subject. In 2018, the cameras were installed, and sticker icons were placed to indicate that the building was surveilled. The data subject allegedly removed these stickers because they were bilingual and they claimed that this was not allowed. The data subject also allegedly cut several signal cables and threatened the installer of the cameras.
In July 2019, the data allegedly rendered one of the cameras unusable using an alcohol marker. Additionally, the data subject filed a complaint with the Belgian DPA (‘APD’) against the installer of the cameras and the representative of the co-owners’ association for installing the cameras without the data subject’s consent, and claiming that the images were kept in an unknown location for an unknown duration.
The aforementioned incident and the complaint made the representative to disable the cameras. Therefore, since July 2019, the cameras had allegedly stopped filming. The representative also argued that the decision to install cameras was taken by a vote and not individually. Additionally, there was a 4-month appeal period against the decision. The data subject did not challenge the decision, which made it binding under Article 557-9 of the Belgian Civil Code.
In July 2020, August 2020, May 2021, December 2022 and February 2022, the data subject inquired about the progress of the case and urged that the complaint be dealt with promptly.
Holding
First, the DPA explained that due to a lack of shifts in the staffing of the Disputes Chamber of the DPA, insufficient progress was made on this case. Due to the complexity of the case, the APD decided not to include this case in the Tabula Rasa of May 2023 in which it dismissed a large number of cases at once.
Second, the DPA found that the complaint was an ancillary dispute to a broader dispute for which other courts, tribunals or jurisdictions have jurisdiction, pursuant to the APD’s dismissal policy. Indeed, the dispute concerned, in particular, neighbor quarrels, vandalism, threats and language used in camera pictograms.
Therefore, the APD considered that its intervention in the dispute was not strictly necessary nor did it have visibility over most elements of the dispute. Therefore, the APD dismissed the case.
Comment
The justification of the Belgian DPA in this case is quite peculiar as they invoke a lack of staff, but they also mention the 'Tabula Rasa' they did in May 2023 during which they dismissed a large amount of cases all at once.
This practice does not seem in line with the recent Schufa judgement. Indeed, the CJEU stressed that DPAs are required to deal with data subject complaints with all due diligence, and must react appropriately in order to remedy GDPR violations. The DPAs maintain a margin of discretion as to the choice of the appropriate means. Therefore, there is a choice of appropriate means, not a choice of (in)action.
In the present case, the DPA dismissed the complaint considering that its intervention was not strictly necessary as the compöaint was an ancillary to a broader dispute. Nonetheless, the 'Tabula Rasa' applied by the Belgian DPA does not seem to comply with this requirement of dealing with complaints with all due diligence.
This case also illustrates the difficulties complainants have to obtain a response from the DPA: the data subject in the present case asked for updates on their complaint five times in the span of two years. The complaint was lodged in July 2019, and the decision was published in May 2024, only for it to be a dismissal of the complaint.
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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.
1/9 Dispute Chamber Decision on the merits 73/2024 of May 13, 2024 File number: DOS-2019-02880 Subject: a complaint against the installation and use of surveillance cameras in the common parts of an apartment block The Disputes Chamber of the Data Protection Authority, composed of Mr Hielke HIJMANS, chairman; Having regard to Regulation (EU) 2016/679 of the European Parliament and of the Council of 27 April 2016 on the protection of natural persons with regard to the processing of personal data and regarding the free movement of such data and to the revocation of Directive 95/46/EC (General Data Protection Regulation), hereinafter “GDPR”; Having regard to the law of 3 December 2017 establishing the Data Protection Authority, hereinafter “WOG”; In view of the internal rules of order, as approved by the House of Representatives Representatives on December 20, 2018 and published in the Belgian Official Gazette on January 15, 2019; Considering the documents in the file; Has made the following decision regarding: Complainant: X, hereinafter “the complainant”; Defendant 1: Y1, hereinafter “defendant 1”; Defendant 2: Y2, hereinafter “defendant 2”, hereinafter jointly referred to as “the defendants”. Decision on the merits 73/2024 - 2/9 I. Facts and procedure 1. The subject of the complaint concerns the installation and use of surveillance cameras in the common parts of an apartment block. 2. On 21 May 2019, the complainant filed a complaint with the Data Protection Authority against defendant 2. The complainant is the owner of an apartment and a member of the association of fellow owners. In the common areas of the building where the apartment is part of, cameras were installed by defendant 1 without the complainant having given individual consent. Both the defendant 1 (installer) and defendant 2 (syndic) would have access to the images. These images are kept in an unknown location for a unknown duration. 3. On 12 June 2019, the complaint was declared admissible by the First Line Service on the basis of Articles 58 and 60 WOG and the complaint is based on Article 62, § 1 WOG transferred to the Disputes Chamber. 4. On 26 June 2019, the Disputes Chamber decided on the basis of Article 95, § 1, 1° and Article 98 WOG that the file is ready for substantive treatment. 5. The parties involved will be notified by registered mail on June 28, 2019 of the provisions stated in Article 95, § 2, as well as those in Article 98WOG. Also they are informed of the deadlines for their payment on the basis of Article 99 of the WOG to submit defenses. The deadline for receipt of the defendants' response was set recorded on July 29, 2019, this for the conclusion of the complainant's reply on 29 August 2019 and this for the conclusion of the defendants' reply on September 30 2019. 6. On July 17, 2019, the Disputes Chamber received the response statement defendant 1. Defendant 1 pointed out to the Disputes Chamber that certain documents were included in the inventory, were not attached to the registered item shipment. She still asked to receive these documents. Defendant 1 stated that the installation was installed on behalf of the defendant 2, who represented the association of co-owners. She did not consider itself responsible for the processing of the images of the cameras. She did not know whether these cameras were recording and there would be no maintenance or decision on the merits 73/2024 - 3/9 be a service contract. Nor did she have an account to access the images consult. However, Defendant 1 also cited that the Complainant had several signal cables damaged, had removed the stickers regarding the camera surveillance and the defendant 1 had threatened. She wished to be compensated for the damages suffered. 7. On July 22, 2019, defendant 2 also pointed out to the Disputes Chamber that certain documents were missing in the registered letter of June 28, 2019. 8. On July 29, 2019, the Disputes Chamber received the notice of intervention from the representative of the complainant. On August 22, the complainant entered the Litigation Chamber pointed out that he had not received any conclusions from the defendant 2 and that the Defendant 1's allegations were “completely irrelevant”. 9. Due to the absence of some documents in the file that was transferred to the parties on June 28, 2019, the Disputes Chamber decided on September 18, 2019 to set conclusion deadlines so that the parties could rely on all documents File. 10. On September 19, 2019, the parties involved will be notified again by registered mail informed of the provisions stated in article 95, § 2, as well as those in article 98WOG. They are also informed of the deadlines on the basis of Article 99WOG to submit their defenses. The deadline for receipt of the defendants' response was set recorded on October 18, 2019, this for the complainant's response November 4, 2019 and this for the defendants' response on 18 November 2019. 11. On September 19, 2019, defendant 1 replied that he understood the intention of writing earlier that day, he did not understand that the complainant no longer lived at the address in question and that he some requested compensation for “our costs incurred and reckless, exasperating clause”. Op On September 23, 2019, defendant 1 also stated that the address of his company was not was correct. 12. On October 17, 2019, the Disputes Chamber will receive the response statement defendant 2 with regard to the findings relating to the subject matter of the complaint. Defendant 2 stated that the complainant had an apartment, a car box and a owned a parking space in the building, but the complainant did not live in it building. Decision on the merits 73/2024 - 4/9 Following several incidents due to “mutual feuds”, the request came from several co-owners for a safety system with install cameras in the entrance hall and garages. The placement of the cameras was decided at the General Meeting of submitted on January 22, 2018, where the placement was unanimously approved, the abstention of some owners, including the complainant, is not taken into account. This approval was demonstrated by respondent 2 with a copy of the report of this General Meeting. The respondent 2 clarified that such decisions within the association of co-owners were taken by vote and therefore not individually, which the complainant raised as a counterargument. In addition, the complainant would 4 months appeal period against a decision of the association of fellow owners if he did not agree with the decision. The complainant had the decision to install the cameras was not challenged, which meant that the decision according to Article 577-9 §2 of the Dutch Civil Code would have become final and binding. At the end of 2018, the cameras were installed and the sticker icons became placed. The complainant allegedly removed these stickers several times because they would be bilingual, which according to the complainant was not allowed. The defendant 2 stated that the plaintiff also allegedly cut several signal cables and the defendant 1 would have threatened. The cameras would not have been in continuous use and would have been in use for some time be out of action for months. The images would be automatically deleted after 48 hours and defendant 2 had never consulted the images. The Defendant 2 was convinced in this respect that it was in compliance with the applicable regulations legislation regarding cameras. In July 2019, the complainant allegedly made a screen on one of the cameras unusable using an alcohol marker. Together with the complaint, this incident caused the Defendant 2 decide to deactivate the cameras. Since July 10, 2019 the cameras would no longer have captured images. In order to comply, defendant 2 filed a report on October 16, 2019 removed the cameras from the local police, despite the fact that they already have some were out of action for months. Defendant 2 showed this to him with a copy of it the declaration. Decision on the merits 73/2024 - 5/9 Defendant 2 had final removal or reinstatement of the cameras on the agenda of the General Meeting of January 2020 placed. 13. On November 1, 2019, the Disputes Chamber received the complainant's response. The complainant noted that the respondent 2 unequivocally admitted that the applicable legislation was violated by the placement and use of the cameras, whereupon the complainant requested that an administrative sanction be imposed on the defendant 2. The complainant read this admission of defendant 2 in the following section: “If the general meeting decides at that time to return the cameras into effect, then [defendant 2] will absolutely monitor and take care of it to ensure that this is done entirely in accordance with the applicable regulations relevant legislation”. Needless to say, the complainant disputed the defendant's factual arguments 2 which he considered to be irrelevant. • The complainant was not officially registered at the address in question, but stayed there regularly and did indeed live at the address at the time of the placement of the cameras. • Regarding the alleged feud between owners, it would only be allegations of 1 co-owner, who would have been labeled 2 by the defendant like a scammer. The complainant also alleged that this co-owner would also have had access to the images taken. • Regarding the approval of the cameras at the general meeting of January 22, 2018, the complainant was of the opinion that the approval was only a a decision in principle, as quotations still had to be submitted applied for and subsequently approved. These quotations were never fulfilled presented to residents. During the general meeting of January 21 In 2019, the complainant had made a comment about this, which became demonstrated with a copy of the report of the general in question meeting: “[the complainant] indicates that the installation of the camera is unlawful for her given the lack of basis, especially the individual one permission from each owner separately.[defendant]adds that only the decision to install the cameras was made on the previous one general meeting and not the modalities. Decision on the merits 73/2024 - 6/9 [the defendant] adds that the decision to install cameras and putting into service were carried out before the entry into force of the new GDPR legislation. [the defendant] will obtain information on how to do this can be sorted out. [the defendant] will inform the internal DPO officer.” The complainant would not have been informed of the DPO's findings, nor residents would have been informed of the implementation of the cameras. The modalities of the placement were also not disclosed recorded. • The complainant alleged that an icon was not placed on every camera and that these stickers were only removed once in the presence of the defendant 1 because of non-compliance with the legislation. Complainant also denied damaging any cables or having the defendant 1 threatened. • The complainant also questioned the non-functioning of the cameras as the diodes on the cameras still function and one more monthly subscription is charged to Proximus. • The complainant stated that the fact that the defendant 2 knew that he was with a alcohol marker had made the screen of a camera unusable that the camera still worked and that the images were indeed were viewed. Finally, the complainant asked who was responsible for the actual processing was responsible for these cameras, which was also a requirement of the law of 21 March 2007 regulating the installation and use of surveillance cameras 1 (hereinafter: the camera law). 14. On November 15, 2019, the Disputes Chamber received the response statement defendant 2. Regarding the feud among the co-owners, 3 co-owners have already filed a complaint filed with the police against the complainant. Defendant 2 demonstrated this with 3 PVs from the police. Regarding the quotations for the decision to install the cameras during the general meeting of January 22, 2018, the fact that this has not yet occurred were available at that meeting are irrelevant as this is only the financial effect of the decision. 1 Official Gazette 31 May 2007. Decision on the merits 73/2024 - 7/9 The defendant established 2 regarding the removal of the sticker pictograms that the complainant admitted this for 1 time. However, the respondent 2 alleged that the complainant had done this several times. Regarding cutting the signal cables, removing the sticker icons and the threats to the defendant 1, the defendant 2 to demonstrate this with e-mail correspondence between defendant 1 and defendant 2. In this communication, defendant 1 confirmed the facts as proposed by the defendant 2. With regard to a co-owner who would have had access to the images, the Defendant 2 firmly stated that this was not the case. Regarding the vandalism on a camera screen, the defendant noted 2 thatthecomplaint.sinceJuly10,2019,thecamerasnomoreimages to withdraw. Finally, the defendant requested to take the one-off into account mistake and the absence of any intent with regard to the recognized infringement the camera legislation. Defendant 2 also asked that this be taken into account “the people who were filmed by the cameras all agree had stated with the cameras and their location […]”. To demonstrate this Respondent 2 referred to the approval for the installation of the cameras in the report of the general meeting of January 22, 2018. 15. On July 22, 2020, August 16, 2020, May 25, 2021, December 14, 2022, December 19, 2022 and On February 6, 2024, the complainant inquired about the progress of the file and insisted for the complaint to be handled quickly so that it could be closed. II. Justification 16. First of all, the Disputes Chamber would like to note that the current dispute dates from 2019. Due to a lack of and shifts in staffing of the Dispute Chamber was closed after the defendant's response had been submitted insufficient progress has been made on this file, despite the various reminders of the complainant. Considering the procedure on the merits, in which the parties already had conclusions exchanged and the prima facie complexity of this file, it was decided to not to include the complaint in the so-called Tabula Rasa exercise of the Disputes Chamber of May 2023, in which a large number of cases were dismissed on a one-off basis, with a view to the management of backlogs. 17. The recent recruitment of staff within the Disputes Chamber has allowed this file should still be treated as a priority with the necessary attention. Decision on the merits 73/2024 - 8/9 18. On the basis of the elements in the file that are known to the Disputes Chamber, and on the basis of the powers granted to it by the legislator on the basis of Article 100, § 1 WOG assigned, the Disputes Chamber will decide on the further follow-up of the file; in this case the Disputes Chamber will dismiss the complaint in accordance with Article 100, § 1, 1° WOG, based on the following justification. 19. The Disputes Chamber establishes in its conclusions that the complaint submitted to it is a secondary dispute to a broader dispute for which other courts or tribunals, administrative courts or authorities are competent. In the conclusions the After all, the Disputes Chamber has a dispute regarding: a. Neighborhood disputes – defendant 2 speaks of “mutual feuds” and in the documents 3 Police reports can be found in which 3 residents testify against the complainant. The complainant then stated that it only concerned 1 co-resident and that he would have been labeled as a scammer by defendant 2. b. Vandalism – the defendants claim that the signal cables belong to the cameras cut by the complainant, which the latter denies. A camera screen was also disabled using an alcohol marker, which the complainant does not deny. c. Threats – the defendants claim that the complainant has the defendant 1 threatened, which the complainant denies. d. Decision-making procedure within the general meeting of the association co-owners – the defendant 2 states that the decision is for placing the cameras were installed in accordance with the legislation, even though the complainant voted against. The the complainant disputes this and states that he never gave permission for the installation of the cameras. e. Compensation for damage suffered – the defendant 1 wishes to be compensated for the damage suffered, although this does not make it clear what exactly the damage is. f. Language associated with the camera icons – these icons were, according to the defendants, removed several times because of the bilingualism of the icons. The complainant confirms that he has once has removed pictograms because they would not comply with the legislation are. The Disputes Chamber judges that its intervention in this dispute is not strictly necessary and that, moreover, it has neither insight nor authority over most elements in it the dispute. In addition, there is an intervention by the Disputes Chamber in the specific case circumstances of this file are not the most suitable. After all, the Disputes Chamber can 2Cf. criterion B.3 in the dismissal policy of the Disputes Chamber.