Minister van Financiën – Court Ruling (Netherlands, 2024)

Court Ruling
DPA RbRotterdam6 November 2024Netherlands
final
Court Ruling

General GDPR enforcement action

This case relates to broader data protection obligations, not specifically to cookie or consent banner compliance. It is not included in cookie statistics or the Risk Calculator.

A Dutch court ruled that the Tax Administration must provide a victim of the benefit scandal access to her personal data. The court found that the Tax Administration did not give enough reasons for denying her request. This decision highlights the importance of transparency in how government agencies handle personal data.

What happened

The court ruled that the Tax Administration must allow a victim of the benefit scandal to access her personal data.

Who was affected

A woman in the Netherlands who was a victim of the benefit scandal and requested access to her personal data.

What the authority found

The court decided that the Tax Administration failed to justify its refusal to grant access to the woman's personal data, violating her rights under GDPR.

Why this matters

This ruling emphasizes the need for government agencies to be transparent about personal data processing. It sets a precedent for individuals seeking access to their data, encouraging other victims to assert their rights.

GDPR Articles Cited

AI-verified

Art. 15(GDPR)
Art. 23(1)(i) GDPR
View original scraped data
Art. 15(GDPR)
Art. 23(1)(i) GDPR

Original data from scraper before AI verification against source document.

National Law Articles

AI-identified

Artikel 41 UAVG
Decision AuthorityRb. Rotterdam
Source verified 20 March 2026
articles corrected
national law identified
Full Legal Summary
Detailed

The data subject lives in the Netherlands and was a victim of the so-called "benefit scandal". The latter involved the usage of a discriminatory algorithm by the Dutch Tax Administration in order to detect frauds by families claiming childcare benefits (see AP (The Netherlands) - 25.11.2021). Since she wanted to know what personal data of her the Tax Administration (Belastingdienst, the controller) was processing, she filed an access request with the Tax Administration. More specifically, she requested the respective minister to access and list her personal data contained in the Fraud Alert Facility (Fraude Signalering Voorziening - FSV), a system used to detect possible frauds in an automatic way. The controller rejected the access request. It argued that the processing at hand fell within the scope of Article 23 GDPR. More specifically, the controller referred to [https://wetten.overheid.nl/jci1.3:c:BWBR0040940&hoofdstuk=4&artikel=41&z=2021-07-01&g=2021-07-01 Article 41(1)(i) of the Dutch GDPR Implementation Act] (Uitvoeringswet Algemene verordening gegevensbescherming - UAVG), stating that the controller can limit data subjects' rights (in this case, the right of access) in view of the protection of the rights and freedoms of others. The controller took the position that it could not comment further on this, as this would prejudice the purpose of the restriction. The controller, therefore, did not specify how the balancing of interests entailed on the basis of [https://wetten.overheid.nl/jci1.3:c:BWBR0040940&hoofdstuk=4&artikel=41&z=2021-07-01&g=2021-07-01 Article 41(2)(h) UAVG] was carried out. On these grounds, the data subject appealed the controller's decision before the District Court of Rotterdam (Rechtbank Rotterdam - Rb. Rotterdam). The court ruled that the controller did not give sufficient reasons for reject the data subject's access request. The court referred to the [https://zoek.officielebekendmakingen.nl/kst-34851-3.html Explanatory Memorandum of

Outcome

Court Ruling

A ruling by a national court on a data-protection matter.

Details

Ruling Date

6 November 2024

Authority

DPA RbRotterdam

About this data

Data: GDPRhub (noyb.eu)
Licensed under CC BY-NC-SA 4.0
AI-verified and classified

Cite as: Cookie Fines. Minister van Financiën - Netherlands (2024). Retrieved from cookiefines.eu

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