Heinz Huber – CJEU Judgment (Germany, 2008)
CJEU precedent (Directive 95/46/EC, pre-GDPR)
This is a Court of Justice judgment predating the GDPR. It interprets Directive 95/46/EC (the Data Protection Directive). It is not a cookie or ePrivacy case and is excluded from cookie statistics and the Risk Calculator.
The EU's top court ruled that Germany's foreigner register, which stored data on non-German EU citizens, was legal but must only contain necessary information. This case is important because it addresses how countries can manage data about foreign residents while respecting non-discrimination rules.
What happened
Heinz Huber challenged the legality of storing his data in Germany's foreigner register, claiming it was discriminatory.
Who was affected
Non-German EU citizens whose personal data was stored in Germany's foreigner register.
What the authority found
The court found that the foreigner register is legitimate but must only include data necessary for residence rights and comply with non-discrimination principles.
Why this matters
This decision clarifies that while countries can keep records on foreign residents, they must ensure these records are limited to necessary information and do not discriminate based on nationality.
In 1996, the Austrian citizen Heinz Huber moved to Germany to become self-employed as an insurance agent. As a non-national of Germany his data was stored in the register of foreigners, including his name, date and place of birth, nationality, sex, marital and residential status, previous domiciles as well as an assigned reference number used by the public authorities in charge. Since such a register did not exist for German nationals, Mr. Huber felt discriminated by the processing of his data within and requested a deletion thereof. His erasure request was rejected by the Federal Office for Migration and Refugees, the public authority in charge of the register. Mr. Huber brought legal action before the administrative courts in Germany further challenged by the authority. Since there were serious doubts regarding whether such a different treatment of nationals and non-nationals can be justified, the Higher Administrative Court of Nordrhein-Westfalen referred several questions regarding the compatibility with the principle of necessity and the prohibition of discrimination to CJEU for a preliminary ruling. The European Court of Justice (CJEU) held that the use of a foreign register for the purpose of providing support to the authorities responsible for the right of residence is, in principle, legitimate and compatible with the prohibition of discrimination on grounds of nationality laid down by [https://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-content/EN/TXT/HTML/?uri=CELEX:12012P/TXT&from=EN Article 12(1) ECFR]. It is necessary for Member States to have the relevant particulars and documents available in order to ascertain whether a right of residence in its territory exists for nationals of other Member States. However, this requires that the register contains only data necessary for these purposes and that its centralised nature enables corresponding legislation to be more effectively applied. Similarly, Union law does not exclude Member States from adopting measures enabling th
Outcome
CJEU Judgment
A judgment by the Court of Justice of the European Union, typically on a preliminary reference from a national court.
Related Cases (0)
No other cases found for Heinz Huber in DE
This is the only recorded case for this entity in this jurisdiction.
Details
Judgment Date
16 December 2008
Authority
Court of Justice of the European Union
GDPRhub ID
gdprhub-cjeu-4289About this data
Cite as: Cookie Fines. Heinz Huber - Germany (2008). Retrieved from cookiefines.eu
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