CJEU - C-231/22 - Belgian State (Données traitées par un journal officiel): Difference between revisions

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|Date_Decided=11.01.2024
|Date_Decided=11.01.2024
|Year=2024
|Year=


|GDPR_Article_1=Article 4(2) GDPR
|GDPR_Article_1=Article 4(7) GDPR
|GDPR_Article_Link_1=Article 4 GDPR#2
|GDPR_Article_Link_1=Article 5 GDPR#2
|GDPR_Article_2=Article 4(7) GDPR
|GDPR_Article_2=Article 5(2) GDPR
|GDPR_Article_Link_2=Article 4 GDPR#7
|GDPR_Article_Link_2=Article 4 GDPR#7
|GDPR_Article_3=Article 17(1) GDPR
|GDPR_Article_3=Article 17(1) GDPR
|GDPR_Article_Link_3=Article 17 GDPR#1
|GDPR_Article_Link_3=Article 17 GDPR#1
|GDPR_Article_4=
|GDPR_Article_4=Article 26(1) GDPR
|GDPR_Article_Link_4=
|GDPR_Article_Link_4=Article 26 GDPR#1
|GDPR_Article_5=
|GDPR_Article_5=
|GDPR_Article_Link_5=
|GDPR_Article_Link_5=
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The CJEU clarified that a controller, as defined by [[Article 4 GDPR|Article 4(7) GDPR,]] can be determined implicitly from national law.
The CJEU clarified that a controller, as defined by [[Article 4 GDPR|Article 4(7) GDPR,]] can be implicitly determined by national law. Implied controllership under national law also extends to the concept of joint controllers.  


==English Summary==
==English Summary==


=== Facts ===
=== Facts ===
The articles of association of a company were changed by a natural person who was the majority shareholder. The new articles mistakingly included the names of two partners of the company along with the name of the majority shareholder, the money they received from changing the articles and their bank account details.  
The statute of a company was changed by a natural person who was the majority shareholder. As a consequence of the changes, some personal data of him and the other company's partners were wrongly included. Among such data, there were names, monetary amounts and bank account details. As per national law, the new articles were prepared by the notary of the majority shareholder, and sent to the the registry of the court (Companies Court) and then forwarded by the court to the Office of the Moniteur belge for publication.  


As per national law, the new articles were prepared by the notary of the majority shareholder, sent to the the registry of the court (Companies Court) and then forwarded by the court to the Office of the Moniteur belge for publication.  
After the publication, the notary, having realised the mistake, was authorised to request the deletion of the above sensitive data on behalf of the data subject (the majority shareholder) under [[Article 17 GDPR]]. The Moniteur Belge refused and the data subject filed a complaint with the Belgian DPA. The Belgian DPA reprimanded the Moniteur Belge and ordered them to comply with the erasure request within 30 days.  


The notary, upon realising the mistake, requested the deletion of the above sensitive paragraphs, invoking the majority shareholder's (whom the notary represented) right to erasure under [[Article 17 GDPR|Article 17 GDPR]]. The Moniteur Belge refused, motivating the majority shareholder to file a complaint with the Belgian DPA. The Belgian DPA reprimanded the Moniteur Belge and ordered them to comply with the erasure request within 30 days.
The Belgian State appealed this decision to the Brussels Court of Appeal seeking an annulment of the DPA's decision. Specifically, they argued that it was uncertain whether the Moniteur Belge was a controller as per [[Article 4 GDPR|Article 4(7) GDPR.]] The passage had been processed by several 'successive controllers' (the notary who drew up the extract, the registry of the Court and the Moniteur Belge, who published the extract as it stood due to national law requirements). Moreover, since the parties did not claim joint controllership, it was also uncertain whether the Moniteur Belge was solely responsible for compliance with the GDPR.  
 
The Belgian State appealed this decision to the Brussels Court of Appeal seeking an annulment of the DPA's decision. Specifically, they argued that it was uncertain whether the Moniteur Belge was a controller as per [[Article 4 GDPR|Article 4(7) GDPR]] given that the passage has been processed by several 'successive controllers' (the notary who drew up the extract, the registry of the court and the Moniteur Belge who published the extract as it stood due to national law requirements). Moreover, since the parties did not claim joint controllership, was the Moniteur Belge therefore, soley responsible for complaince with the GDPR.  


With this in mind, the court referred two questions to the CJEU:
With this in mind, the court referred two questions to the CJEU:


1) Does [[Article 4 GDPR|Article 4(7) GDPR]] mean that a Member State's official journal responsible for publishing official documents under national law (such as the one in the case), has the status of data controller?
1) Does [[Article 4 GDPR|Article 4(7) GDPR]] mean that a Member State's official journal, responsible for publishing official documents under national law (such as the one in the case), has the status of a data controller?


2) If so, does [[Article 5 GDPR#2|Article 5(2) GDPR]] mean that only that journal in question need to comply with the data controller's responsibilities? Or are the responsibiltiies incumbent cumulatively on each successive controller?
2) If so, does [[Article 5 GDPR#2|Article 5(2) GDPR]] mean that only that journal in question need to comply with the data controller's responsibilities? Or are the responsibilities incumbent cumulatively on each successive controller?


=== Holding ===
=== Holding ===
The CJEU held that the journal was a data controller under as defined by [[Article 7 GDPR#4|Article]] [[Article 4 GDPR|4(7) GDPR]] and that, unless joint responsibilities arise, they were soley responsible for compliance under the principle of accountability arising out of [[Article 5 GDPR|Article 5(2) GDPR,.]]  
First, the CJEU held that the journal (the Moniteur belge) was a data controller as defined by [[Article 7 GDPR#4|Article]] [[Article 4 GDPR|4(7) GDPR]]. Second, unless joint responsibilities arise, they are solely responsible for compliance under the principle of accountability arising out of [[Article 5 GDPR|Article 5(2) GDPR.]]
 
'''On the first question:'''
 
Article 4(7) GDPR defines a controller as the: natural or legal person, public authority, agency or other body which, alone or jointly with others, determines the purposes and means of the processing of personal data; <u>where the purposes and means of such processing are determined by Union or Member State law, the controller or the specific criteria for its nomination may be provided for by Union or Member State law.</u> (Underline emphasis added).
 
As this case involved national law, the Court used the second part of Article 4(7) (underlined) to determine whether the Moniteur belge was a controller. In doing so, it looked at whether Belgian national law determined a controller. Moniteur belge is not ''explicitly'' vested by national law with the power to determine the purposes and means of data processing operations. However, the Court determined that national law ''implicitly'' did so and that this was sufficient to make the Moniteur belge a controller under [[Article 4 GDPR|Article 4(7) GDPR.]] The Court justified this broadened scope by stating that definition of controller must be read broadly to determine effective and complete protection of data subjects (see [[CJEU - C‑131/12 - Google Spain|C‑131/12 Google Spain]]).
 
To be ''implicitly'' a controller under national law, three positive criteria must be fulfilled:
 
1) There must be no apparent designation of powers under national law. In this case, not only was the Moniteur belge under national legislation not vested with explicit powers to determine the purpose and means of processing, but neither was the public entity in charge of it (FPS Justice).
 
2) The law must implicitly determine the purpose of the controller's processing. In this case, Moniteur belge's role under national law is to publish the documents as received from the companies court. This publication serves the purpose of informing the public of the existence of those acts as to make them enforceable against third parties.
 
3) The law must implicitly determine the means of the controller's processing. In this case, Moniteur belge's must publish these cases to the public. The processing is therefore performed by automated means. Both a paper and electronic copy is produced for citizens to access.
 
The Moniteur belge, therefore, fulfilled the criteria needed to be an implicit controller under Belgian national law. Nonetheless, the court went further to identify two factors that do not exclude an entity from being an implicit controller under national law:
 
1) The entity in question does not need to have legal personality. This is because the wording of [[Article 4 GDPR|Article 4(7) GDPR]] makes it clear that a controller can be a natural person as well as a public authority. These do not have legal personalities, meaning that this is not a limiting factor when determining implied controllership.
 
2) The entity in question does not need to check the data before publishing it. This is because the Moniteur belge, under national law, is confined to the role of publishing the data as it stands.<ref>This is the case in many civil law countries where laws, company constitutions etc. are often published automatically. </ref> If [[Article 4 GDPR|Article 4(7)]] would be applied literally, it would contradict its objective and exclude Moniteur belge as a controller simply because it cannot exercise control over the personal data contained in its publications. Ex-post control and discretion over the content of the data is, therefore, not essential for implied controllership.
 
'''On the second question:'''


On the first question the court decided that Belgian national law determined, at least implicitly, the purposes and means of the processing of personal data performed by the Moniteur belge. Thus, making it a controller as per [[Article 4 GDPR|Article 4(7) GDPR.]] The court justified its decision by noting that the definition of controller must be read broadly to determine the effective and complete protection of data subjects. Moreover, excluding the Moniteur belge as a controller would be contra to previous case law ([[CJEU - C‑131/12 - Google Spain|C‑131/12 Google Spain]]) which has also followed this broad approach. As Article 4(7) asks whether the entitiy determines the purposes and means of the processing, the CJEU questioned  whether those purposes and means are in this case determined by national law. While the Moniteur belge is not vested by national law with the power to determine the purposes and means of the data processing operations that it performs, the court upon hearing orally the duties of the Moniteur belge determined that national law ''implicitly'' gave the Moniteur belge the power to determine the purposes and means of processing. This was because, on the facts, Moniteur belge automatically produces a printed and electronic copy of the data and further provides these to citizens. While it is true that the Moniteur belge must publish the document in question as it stands, it is the Moniteur belge alone that undertakes that task and then disseminates the act or document concerned to the public. The fact that the Moniteur belge cannot ammed this content is linked to the purposes and means of processing, which is in this case determined by national law.
The Court determined that the Moniteur belge is classified as a controller within the meaning of [[Article 4 GDPR|Article 4(7) GDPR]]. [[Article 5 GDPR|Article 5(2)]] limits the principle of accountability to the controller. In this case, the Moniteur belge is solely responsible for compliance with the GDPR as Belgian law has implicitly designated only it as the controller.  


On the second question the court determined that [[Article 5 GDPR|Article 5(2) GDPR]] when read in conjunction with [[Article 4 GDPR|Article (4)7]] is limited to only apply to the entity classified as the 'controller'. However, should the reffering court or national law determine that there is joint responsibility for processing, then [[Article 5 GDPR|Article 5(2)]] will apply to all the controllers responsible. First, the court viewed the processing activities of the Moniteur belge to be different from those of the notary and court.  The operations performed by the Moniteur belge are entrusted to it by national legislation, ivolve inter alia the digital transformation of the data contained in the acts submitted to it and their publication. The Moniteur belge is soley responsible for compliance because this is what Belgian national law has outlined. As the court noted, Article (4)7 also permits national law to itself determine those purposes and means and nominate the controller or provide for the specific criteria for its nomination.  Second, the concept of joint controllership is extremely broad. [[Article 26 GDPR|Article 26(1) GDPR]] provides for joint responsibility where two or more controllers jointly determine the purposes and means of the processing of personal data and the responsibilities of joint controllers of personal data does not depend on the existence of an arrangement between the various controllers ([[CJEU - C-683/21 - Nacionalinis visuomenės sveikatos centras|C‑683/21 Nacionalinis visuomenės sveikatos centras]]). A person can have joint responsibility/joint controllership simply by exerting influence over the processing of personal data, for his, her or its own purposes. Moreover, joint responsibility of several actors for the same processing does not require each of them to have access to the personal data concerned. Should national law imply or state joint responsibility, then [[Article 5 GDPR|Article 5(2)]] will extend to all those jointly responsible controllers, who will all be responsible for complaince with the GDPR.
The court, however, went further and applied the concepts it developed in the first question to joint controllers. National law can determine/nominate a sole controller under [[Article 4 GDPR|Article 4(7) GDPR.]] The Court utilised this reasoning to point out that national law can likewise determine a chain of processing operations involving numerous joint controllers. This interpretation is supported by [[Article 26 GDPR|Article 26(1) GDPR]] which states that joint controllers must arrange their responsibilities ''unless'' national law determines this for them. This is also supported by case law [[CJEU - C-683/21 - Nacionalinis visuomenės sveikatos centras|C‑683/21 Nacionalinis visuomenės sveikatos centras]] where the arrangement between various controllers was determined by national law and it was held that joint controllership does not require each responsible entity to have access to the personal data concerned. The combination of [[Article 4 GDPR|Article 4(7)]] and [[Article 26 GDPR|26(1),]] therefore, means that national law can determine joint controllers. Since (as reasoned above) the concept of controllership can be implicitly determined, this also means that national law can also implicitly determine joint controllers. The court noted that when this is the case, [[Article 5 GDPR|Article 5(2) GDPR]] will apply and make all controllers jointly responsible for compliance with the GDPR.  


However, whether joint controllership is implied by national law is for national courts to determine. Therefore, in its answer, the CJEU sent the question back to the referring court. Should they determine that there is no implied joint controllership, the Moniteur belge will be solely responsible for compliance with the GDPR under [[AN - 578/2021|Article 5(2) GDPR.]]   
== Comment ==
== Comment ==
This is a very practical judgement and extends the concept of controllership as need be within the limits of legal certainity to ensure a high level protection of fundamental rights.  
This is a very practical judgement and extends the concept of controllership as need be within the limits of legal certainity to ensure a high level protection of fundamental rights.  

Latest revision as of 08:54, 30 January 2024

CJEU - C-231/22 Belgian State (Données traitées par un journal officiel)
Cjeulogo.png
Court: CJEU
Jurisdiction: European Union
Relevant Law: Article 4(7) GDPR
Article 5(2) GDPR
Article 17(1) GDPR
Article 26(1) GDPR
Decided: 11.01.2024
Parties: LM
Belgian State (Données traitées par un journal officiel)
Case Number/Name: C-231/22 Belgian State (Données traitées par un journal officiel)
European Case Law Identifier: ECLI:EU:C:2024:7
Reference from:
Language: 24 EU Languages
Original Source: Judgement
Initial Contributor: sh

The CJEU clarified that a controller, as defined by Article 4(7) GDPR, can be implicitly determined by national law. Implied controllership under national law also extends to the concept of joint controllers.

English Summary

Facts

The statute of a company was changed by a natural person who was the majority shareholder. As a consequence of the changes, some personal data of him and the other company's partners were wrongly included. Among such data, there were names, monetary amounts and bank account details. As per national law, the new articles were prepared by the notary of the majority shareholder, and sent to the the registry of the court (Companies Court) and then forwarded by the court to the Office of the Moniteur belge for publication.

After the publication, the notary, having realised the mistake, was authorised to request the deletion of the above sensitive data on behalf of the data subject (the majority shareholder) under Article 17 GDPR. The Moniteur Belge refused and the data subject filed a complaint with the Belgian DPA. The Belgian DPA reprimanded the Moniteur Belge and ordered them to comply with the erasure request within 30 days.

The Belgian State appealed this decision to the Brussels Court of Appeal seeking an annulment of the DPA's decision. Specifically, they argued that it was uncertain whether the Moniteur Belge was a controller as per Article 4(7) GDPR. The passage had been processed by several 'successive controllers' (the notary who drew up the extract, the registry of the Court and the Moniteur Belge, who published the extract as it stood due to national law requirements). Moreover, since the parties did not claim joint controllership, it was also uncertain whether the Moniteur Belge was solely responsible for compliance with the GDPR.

With this in mind, the court referred two questions to the CJEU:

1) Does Article 4(7) GDPR mean that a Member State's official journal, responsible for publishing official documents under national law (such as the one in the case), has the status of a data controller?

2) If so, does Article 5(2) GDPR mean that only that journal in question need to comply with the data controller's responsibilities? Or are the responsibilities incumbent cumulatively on each successive controller?

Holding

First, the CJEU held that the journal (the Moniteur belge) was a data controller as defined by Article 4(7) GDPR. Second, unless joint responsibilities arise, they are solely responsible for compliance under the principle of accountability arising out of Article 5(2) GDPR.

On the first question:

Article 4(7) GDPR defines a controller as the: natural or legal person, public authority, agency or other body which, alone or jointly with others, determines the purposes and means of the processing of personal data; where the purposes and means of such processing are determined by Union or Member State law, the controller or the specific criteria for its nomination may be provided for by Union or Member State law. (Underline emphasis added).

As this case involved national law, the Court used the second part of Article 4(7) (underlined) to determine whether the Moniteur belge was a controller. In doing so, it looked at whether Belgian national law determined a controller. Moniteur belge is not explicitly vested by national law with the power to determine the purposes and means of data processing operations. However, the Court determined that national law implicitly did so and that this was sufficient to make the Moniteur belge a controller under Article 4(7) GDPR. The Court justified this broadened scope by stating that definition of controller must be read broadly to determine effective and complete protection of data subjects (see C‑131/12 Google Spain).

To be implicitly a controller under national law, three positive criteria must be fulfilled:

1) There must be no apparent designation of powers under national law. In this case, not only was the Moniteur belge under national legislation not vested with explicit powers to determine the purpose and means of processing, but neither was the public entity in charge of it (FPS Justice).

2) The law must implicitly determine the purpose of the controller's processing. In this case, Moniteur belge's role under national law is to publish the documents as received from the companies court. This publication serves the purpose of informing the public of the existence of those acts as to make them enforceable against third parties.

3) The law must implicitly determine the means of the controller's processing. In this case, Moniteur belge's must publish these cases to the public. The processing is therefore performed by automated means. Both a paper and electronic copy is produced for citizens to access.

The Moniteur belge, therefore, fulfilled the criteria needed to be an implicit controller under Belgian national law. Nonetheless, the court went further to identify two factors that do not exclude an entity from being an implicit controller under national law:

1) The entity in question does not need to have legal personality. This is because the wording of Article 4(7) GDPR makes it clear that a controller can be a natural person as well as a public authority. These do not have legal personalities, meaning that this is not a limiting factor when determining implied controllership.

2) The entity in question does not need to check the data before publishing it. This is because the Moniteur belge, under national law, is confined to the role of publishing the data as it stands.[1] If Article 4(7) would be applied literally, it would contradict its objective and exclude Moniteur belge as a controller simply because it cannot exercise control over the personal data contained in its publications. Ex-post control and discretion over the content of the data is, therefore, not essential for implied controllership.

On the second question:

The Court determined that the Moniteur belge is classified as a controller within the meaning of Article 4(7) GDPR. Article 5(2) limits the principle of accountability to the controller. In this case, the Moniteur belge is solely responsible for compliance with the GDPR as Belgian law has implicitly designated only it as the controller.

The court, however, went further and applied the concepts it developed in the first question to joint controllers. National law can determine/nominate a sole controller under Article 4(7) GDPR. The Court utilised this reasoning to point out that national law can likewise determine a chain of processing operations involving numerous joint controllers. This interpretation is supported by Article 26(1) GDPR which states that joint controllers must arrange their responsibilities unless national law determines this for them. This is also supported by case law C‑683/21 Nacionalinis visuomenės sveikatos centras where the arrangement between various controllers was determined by national law and it was held that joint controllership does not require each responsible entity to have access to the personal data concerned. The combination of Article 4(7) and 26(1), therefore, means that national law can determine joint controllers. Since (as reasoned above) the concept of controllership can be implicitly determined, this also means that national law can also implicitly determine joint controllers. The court noted that when this is the case, Article 5(2) GDPR will apply and make all controllers jointly responsible for compliance with the GDPR.

However, whether joint controllership is implied by national law is for national courts to determine. Therefore, in its answer, the CJEU sent the question back to the referring court. Should they determine that there is no implied joint controllership, the Moniteur belge will be solely responsible for compliance with the GDPR under Article 5(2) GDPR.

Comment

This is a very practical judgement and extends the concept of controllership as need be within the limits of legal certainity to ensure a high level protection of fundamental rights.

There has been some debate (see Peter Craddock) over whether legal bases (Article 6) can therefore, also be implied according to national law. However, there is little indication that this would be the case. The the aim of closing gaps in accountability does not de facto lead to broadening legal grounds for processing activities.

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  1. This is the case in many civil law countries where laws, company constitutions etc. are often published automatically.