First-ever Supreme Administrative Court rulings on GDPR fines – both for and against

D&I Alert

Posted on

14 Sep

2023

Dittmar & Indrenius > Insight > First-ever Supreme Administrative Court rulings on GDPR fines – both for and against

The Supreme Administrative Court of Finland has issued its first decisions regarding administrative fines under the General Data Protection Regulation (the “GDPR”). Incidentally, the decisions concerned the first administrative fines imposed by the Finnish Data Protection Ombudsman back in 2020. The court’s essential arguments, as summarised below, may provide useful insights into how the appellate courts will interpret GDPR requirements and, especially, what aspects are key when challenging GDPR fines in the future.

Data protection information must be provided to data subjects through active measures

The first decision (KHO:2023:81) dealt with the transparency of data processing and the provision of information to data subjects. In its initial decision, the Data Protection Ombudsman had considered that Posti Oy (the national postal service) had violated related obligations in connection with its change of address service and, therefore, imposed a fine of EUR 100,000. The Administrative Court subsequently overturned the fine, with which the Supreme Administrative Court ultimately disagreed by upholding the original fine.

The Supreme Administrative Court underlined the following aspects:

  • To ensure the transparency of personal data processing, data protection related information, for example relevant privacy notices, must be informative and easy to find.
  • The GDPR does not specify what is meant by the provision of information. Nevertheless, the obligation to provide information must be understood as active measures by the data controller to furnish the data subject with information or to actively direct the data subject to its location.
  • When assessing the proportionality of imposing an administrative fine, it is irrelevant whether the supervisory authority has first used its other corrective powers before imposing the fine. The supervisory authority is thus entitled to impose fines without, for example, first issuing a warning or taking any other enforcement action.

The court’s ruling clearly demonstrates that passive and confusing approaches in providing data subjects with privacy information – through various links or within lengthy terms and conditions – will now run the risk of attracting strict regulatory scrutiny, although this may have been typical practice in the early days of the GDPR.

GPDR enforcement requires due examination

The second decision (KHO:2023:82) concerned the unnecessary collection of personal data from job applicants. The Data Protection Ombudsman had considered that the company in question had not been able to sufficiently demonstrate compliance with the GDPR when processing job applicants’ personal data. Both the Administrative Court and the Supreme Administrative Court disagreed with the Ombudsman and overturned the initial fine of EUR 12,500.

According to the Supreme Administrative Court, when imposing administrative fines, the authority is primarily responsible for the investigation of the matter, not the data controller. In accordance with the requirements on administrative procedure, the authority’s investigation of the case must be based on the presumption of innocence and the fact that the party in question is not obliged to present a negative statement about itself. In this context, administrative fines are considered punitive sanctions and are, therefore, comparable to criminal cases. Accordingly, administrative sanctions must comply with the presumption of innocence, and they cannot be based on a purely reversed burden of proof or strict objective responsibility.

Following these requirements, the Supreme Administrative Court held that the Data Protection Ombudsman had not demonstrated sufficient evidence that the company had processed personal data in violation of data protection legislation.

Looking forward

Interestingly, the Supreme Administrative Court was asked to submit a request for a preliminary ruling to the Court of Justice of the European Union regarding the ambiguity of the interpretation of the GDPR. However, according to the Supreme Administrative Court, no such questions had arisen in these cases, which would have required a preliminary ruling from the EU court.

Although we are now half a decade into the application of the GDPR, significant interpretation challenges are, nevertheless, sure to continue. So far, 19 GDPR fines have been imposed in Finland, nine of which have been appealed with four cases still pending either in the Administrative Court or the Supreme Administrative Court. Therefore, it is safe to say that interesting case law tackling GDPR interpretation issues remains on its way.

More by the same author

Finnish NIS2 requirements are now in force – Key Insights

Finland has finally implemented the EU Directive on Measures for a High Common Level of Cybersecurity across the Union (Directive (EU) 2022/2555, the “NIS2 Directive“) into national legislation. The new Cybersecurity Act, along with amendments to existing legislation, notably to the Act on Information Management in Public Administration (906/2019 as amended), are applied from 8 April 2025. This marks a significant advancement in national cyber security regulation and a significant overall step towards more regulated cyber security and elevating the review and oversight of cyber security risks to a top management priority.

DORA Is Now Applicable – Key Implications for ICT Service Providers

EU’s Digital Operational Resilience Act (2022/2554, “DORA”) became applicable on 17 January 2025. This regulation strengthens the digital resilience of the financial sector and addresses outsourcing risks, as previously detailed in our Quarterly article. While financial entities are the main focus of DORA, it applies also to ICT service providers providing services to the financial sector.

New Cyber Security Requirements for Connected Products

The new EU regulation complementing the cyber security regulatory framework − the Cyber Resilience Act (EU) 2024/2847 (“CRA”) − has been adopted and published in the Official Journal of the EU. The CRA aims to improve cyber security of the connected products at the EU market. It will have significant implications for manufacturers, importers and distributors of products with digital elements across the EU.

Latest insights

Finnish NIS2 requirements are now in force - Key Insights

Article / 8 Apr 2025

The Clean Industrial Deal: Strategic Incentives to Decarbonise Industry

Alert / 28 Feb 2025