ByteSize: Monthly UK TMT case updates
March 28, 2024
ByteSize: Monthly UK TMT case updatesMarch 28, 2024 Speed readClaimants bringing misuse of private information or data breach claims, where information has been inadvertently sent to a third party, must be able to prove the information was actually accessed. Merely showing that correspondence was misaddressed and thereby put at risk is insufficient. The defendant inadvertently sent the annual pension benefit statements of over 400 current or former police officers to incorrect postal addresses. In all but 14 cases, the claimants relied solely on an inference that an unauthorised third party might have accessed the information: there was no evidence that it had been. The High Court held that to have a viable claim under the UK GDPR or in misuse of private information, a claimant must be able to evidence that the data was accessed by an unauthorised third party. The parties' argumentsThe case arose out of Equiniti’s administration of Sussex Police’s pension scheme. In its administrative role, Equiniti sent each member of the scheme an annual pension benefit statement (the “ABS”). The ABS contained personal information such as the name, date of birth, national insurance number, and pension details of the relevant officer. In each case, it would have been apparent to any third party reading the ABS that the intended recipient was a police officer. In late August 2019, Equiniti inadvertently sent some of the statements to the previous postal addresses of certain scheme participants. The decisionThe court decided that to have a viable claim, each claimant would need to show that they had a real prospect of demonstrating that their ABS was opened and read by a third party. Without such evidence of publication, there could be no misuse claim, as it is not enough to show that the information/data was “in danger” or “at risk” of being accessed by a third party – there must be an actual publication, or at least evidence of publication. Similarly, for a data breach claim, the sending of the personal data to an incorrect address was insufficient without evidence of the information being read by the third party. Learning points/Commentary
Looking forwardIt has long been understood to be the position in English law that there is a threshold of seriousness in relation to claims in misuse of private information or under the Data Protection Act or UK GDPR and that claims cannot be pursued where the breach or damage alleged is too trivial to meet that threshold. This provides a valuable protection against a proliferation of disproportionate litigation over trivial data breaches. Latest Insights
Latest News
Latest Events
legal updates June 26, 2026 UK: BoE finalises systemic stablecoin regime legal updates June 25, 2026 Lawbite: Reform of business lease renewals – second consultation published legal updates June 25, 2026 Open justice, closed files: Court issues first guidance on Filing Modifica... legal updates June 25, 2026 UK: FCA consults on changes to its penalty and decision-making policies client news June 17, 2026 Advising Trane Technologies on the acquisition of Transport-Kälte-Vertrieb ... firm news June 15, 2026 Eversheds Sutherland continues European expansion with further strategic pa... client news June 09, 2026 Eversheds Sutherland powers 12 key deals for Gresham House Energy Storage F... client news June 04, 2026 Next stop, public ownership: Eversheds Sutherland advises DfT on GTR transi... virtual Education Webinar - Consumer law compliance for higher education providers June 30, 2026 11:00AM - 12:00PM virtual Energy Transition Series - Project Financing BESS: Comparing the UK market ... July 08, 2026 10:00 ET | 15:00 BST | 16:00 CET virtual Education Webinar - The skilled worker route – what do you need to know and... July 15, 2026 11:00AM - 12:00PM virtual Education Webinar - Disability discrimination and reasonable adjustments September 10, 2026 11:00AM - 12:00PM |