Minister van Financiën – Court Ruling (Netherlands, 2023)

Court Ruling
DPA RbAmsterdam12 April 2023Netherlands
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.

The Dutch Council of State ruled that the Minister of Finance provided enough information about a data search in response to a citizen's request. This decision shows that authorities must give clear explanations of their data handling, but they aren't required to search unspecified or secret systems.

What happened

The Council of State ruled that the Minister of Finance provided sufficient information about a data search in response to a citizen's request.

Who was affected

A citizen who requested information about their data in the fraud alert system and other databases.

What the authority found

The Council of State found that the Minister of Finance adequately explained the data search process and was not required to search unspecified systems.

Why this matters

This case underscores the importance of transparency in data handling by authorities, while also setting limits on the extent of data searches required under GDPR.

GDPR Articles Cited

Art. 15 GDPR
Decision AuthorityRVS
Reviewed AuthorityRb. Amsterdam (Netherlands)
Full Legal Summary
Detailed

On 20 April 2020, the data subject exercised his right of access and information under Article 15 GDPR by sending a request to the Minister of Finance. He was asking more specifically whether his data were processed in the fraud alert system "Fraude Signalering Voorziening" (FSV) and/or other undisclosed databases. In the affirmative, he requested a copy of such data. The Minister stated in his answer that no personal data could be found in the FVS. The data subject considered this answer insufficient and asked the Minister to reconsider its position. He claimed that the Minister could not limit the data search to FVS alone, but also had to consult all other systems in response to his request. He didn't refer to specific system, arguing that he could not be aware about their names or even existence, some of which possibly being secret or undisclosed to the public. In this respect, he refered to a report by KPMG mentioning a possible existence of non identified systems used by the tax authorities. In addition, the data subject claimed that the Minister did not provide sufficient information regarding the search method used. The Minister refused to give further information. As a consequence, the data subject lodged an action with the District Court of Amsterdam, which declared the appeal unfounded. He therefore appealed before the Council of State against the decision of the District Court of Amsterdam The Council stated that the report of KMPG, which mentions possible systems that have not been identified, does not imply that it is plausible that there are other systems whose existence is kept secret by the tax authorities and the Ministry. Next, the Council of State confirmed that in his answer to the request of access and information the Minister has provided sufficient insight into how he searched for personal data and indicated that other search methods would have led to a similar result. For the above reasons, the Council of State declared the appeal unfou

Outcome

Court Ruling

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

Related Cases (0)

No other cases found for Minister van Financiën in NL

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

Details

Ruling Date

12 April 2023

Authority

DPA RbAmsterdam

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 (2023). Retrieved from cookiefines.eu

Report Inaccuracy

Last updated: