On the 4th March the Supreme Court handed down judgment in the conjoined cases of Catt and T v Commissioner of Police of the Metropolis ([2015] UKSC 9). Almost unanimously (there was one dissenting opinion in Catt) the appeals by the Met were allowed. In brief, the judgments held that the retention of historical criminal conviction data was proportionate. But what I thought was particularly interesting was the suggestion (at paragraph 45) by Lord Sumption (described to me recently as “by far the cleverest man in England”) that T‘s claim at least had been unnecessary:
[this] was a straightforward dispute about retention which could have been more appropriately resolved by applying to the Information Commissioner. As it is, the parties have gone through three levels of judicial decision, at a cost out of all proportion to the questions at stake
and as this blog post suggests, there was certainly a hint that costs might flow in future towards those who choose to litigate rather than apply to the Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO).
But I think there’s a potential justice gap here. Last year the ICO consulted on changing how it handled concerns from data subjects about handling of their personal data. During the consultation period Dr David Erdos wrote a guest post for this blog, arguing that
The ICO’s suggested approach is hugely problematic from a rule of law point of view. Section 42 of the Data Protection Act [DPA] is crystal clear that “any person who is, or believes himself to be, directly affect by any processing of personal data” may make a request for assessment to the ICO “as to whether it is likely or unlikely that the processing has been or is being carried out in compliance with the provisions” of the Act. On receiving such a request the Commissioner “shall make an assessment” (s. 42 (1)) (emphasis added). This duty is an absolute one
but the ICO’s response to the consultation suggested that
We are…planning to make much greater use of the discretion afforded to us under section 42 of the legislation…so long as a data controller has provided an individual with a clear explanation of their processing of personal information, they are unlikely to need to describe their actions again to us if the matter in question does not appear to us to represent a serious issue or we don’t believe there is an opportunity for the data controller to improve their information rights practice
which is problematic, as section 42 confers a discretion on the ICO only as to the manner in which an assessment shall be made. Section 42(3) describes some matters to which he may have regard in determining the manner, and these include (so are not exhaustive) “the extent to which the request appears to him to raise a matter of substance”. I don’t think “a matter of substance” gets close to being the same as “a serious issue”: a matter can surely be non-serious yet still of substance. So if the discretion afforded to the ICO under section 42 as to the manner of the assessment includes a discretion to rely solely on prior correspondence between the data controller and the data subject, this is not specified in (and can only be inferred from) section 42.
Moreover, and interestingly, Article 28(4) of the European Data Protection Directive, which is transposed in section 42 DPA, confers no such discretion as to the manner of assessment, and this may well have been one of the reasons the European Commission began protracted infraction proceedings against the UK (see Chris Pounder blog posts passim).
Nonetheless, the outcome of the ICO consultation was indeed a new procedure for dealing with data subjects’ concerns. Their website now says
Should I raise my concern with the ICO?
If the organisation has been unable, or unwilling, to resolve your information rights concern, you can raise the matter with us. We will use the information you have provided, including the organisation’s response to your concerns, to decide if your concern provides an opportunity to improve information rights practice.
If we think it does provide that opportunity, we will take appropriate action
“Improving information rights practice” refers to the ICO’s general duties under section 51 DPA, but what is notable by its absence there, though, is any statement that the ICO’s general duty, under section 42, to make an assessment as to whether it is likely or unlikely that the processing has been or is being carried out in compliance with the provisions of the DPA.
Lord Sumption in Catt (at 34) also said that “Mr Catt could have complained about the retention of his personal data to the Information Commissioner”. This is true, but would the ICO have actually done anything? Would it have represented a “serious issue”? Possibly not – Lord Sumption describes the background to Mrs T’s complaints as a “minor incident” and the retention of her data as a “straightforward dispute”. But if there are hints from the highest court of the land that bringing judicial review proceedings on data protection matters might results in adverse costs, because a complaint to the ICO is available, and if the ICO, however, shows reluctance to consider complaints and concerns from aggrieved data subjects, is there an issue with access to data protection justice? Is there a privacy justice gap?
The views in this post (and indeed all posts on this blog) are my personal ones, and do not represent the views of any organisation I am involved with.




