Court case 2-03 O 6/19 – Court Ruling (Germany, 2019)

Court Ruling
DPA LGFrankfurt19 December 2019Germany
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 German court ruled that a magazine must stop publishing a photo of a well-known presenter's wife without her consent. The court balanced her privacy rights against the magazine's freedom of the press. This decision highlights the importance of obtaining consent before using someone's image in publications.

What happened

A court ruled that a magazine must stop publishing a photo of a presenter's wife without her consent.

Who was affected

The wife of a well-known German presenter, whose photo was published without her consent.

What the authority found

The court decided that the woman had a right to prevent the publication of her image, which she had not consented to.

Why this matters

This ruling underscores the importance of respecting individuals' privacy rights and obtaining consent before using their images. It serves as a reminder to media outlets to carefully consider privacy laws when publishing personal images.

National Law Articles

Article 1(2) Basic German Law
Article 2(1) Basic German Law
Article 5(1) Basic German Law
Article 8(1) ECHR
Article 10(1) ECHR
Decision AuthorityLG Frankfurt
Full Legal Summary
Detailed

Τhe wife of a well-known German presenter had filed an action for injunction against the publication of the plaintiff's picture in two magazines. The reason and content of the first reporting was that the plaintiff’s husband surprisingly did not extend his engagement in his talk show and the question of why (speculatively) was posed. As a possible reason the report mentioned that the husband now had more time for his family and their recently acquired an estate (vineyard). In the past, the wife had repeatedly appeared publicly and had advertised herself and her estate (vineyard) in particular by means of an illustrated homestory in a magazine, thereby partially opening up her private life to the public. The husband had repeatedly stated in various interviews that due to his job he could not spend enough time with his family and the newly acquired (wine) estate. The report was illustrated with a picture of the couple from a public event with a blurred background. The second attacked photo report in another magazine had the occasion and included the husband's behaviour in his talk show. The text was illustrated with a photo of the plaintiff (depicting her pouring a glass of wine at a public event), signed with the words "(The plaintiff) and her husband have been amateur vintners for years and spend a lot of time on their winery". The wife was not directly involved in the event of the report, nor did the picture and the signature referred to the subject. The Court had to balance the right of the depicted person deriving from Articles 1(2), 2(1) of the Basic German Law and 8(1) ECHR with the rights of the press deriving from Articles 5(1) Basic German Law and 10(1) ECHR. The Court upheld the applicant's claim that she had a right to obtain an injunction against the dissemination of her image which she had not consented to. . The court justified its decision with the so-called graduated protection concept (abgestuftes Schutzkonzept), which is positively reflect

Outcome

Court Ruling

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

Related Cases (0)

No other cases found for Court case 2-03 O 6/19 in DE

This is the only recorded case for this entity in this jurisdiction.

Details

Ruling Date

19 December 2019

Authority

DPA LGFrankfurt

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Cite as: Cookie Fines. Court case 2-03 O 6/19 - Germany (2019). Retrieved from cookiefines.eu

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