Data flows of personal data which are undergoing processing or are intended for processing after transfer to a third-country or to an international organization are allowed only if enforceable data subjects rights and legal remedies to data subjects are available.
Starting with 27th of June 2021 organizations are able to use the European Commission’s long-awaited revamped version of the Standard Contractual Clauses (SCCs) for transfers of data to recipients in third-countries or to international organizations adopted by the EU Commission in its Implementing Decision (EU) 2021/914 of 4 June 2021.
Published in the aftermath of the puzzling Facebook Ireland and Schrems CJEU decision the new SCCs implements some of the requirements of the afore mentioned CJEU decision while adapting the provisions to the specifications of the GDPR. Under Article 46(5) of the EU’s General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), the old SCCs remained in force in the interim to allow for a smooth transition from the regime under the Data Protection Directive 95/46/EC to the GDPR. Therefore, there was no doubt that the old SCCs were in obvious need of updating to align with the GDPR and what a better time for updates than the months following the controversial Facebook Ireland and Schrems CJEU decision.
The differences between the old and the new version of SCCs are significant and no less than debatable. Some appreciate that the new SCCs is a compensation mechanism for the lack of data protection laws and practices in non-EEA countries making it very complicated for organizations in all sort of industries to maintain their international data transfers engagements with non-EEA providers of services to the European Union market. Some publications already penned down that pressure is growing on companies to store their data locally in Europe.
Third-party beneficiary rights under the new SCCs
The primarily scope of the new SCCs remains that of creating enforceable rights for data subjects under the domestic law of the European Union.
Data flows of personal data which are undergoing processing or are intended for processing after transfer to a third-country or to an international organization are allowed only if enforceable data subjects rights and legal remedies to data subjects are available.
Therefore, the main body of the new SCCs comprises the data exporter and the data importer promise that the SCCs can be enforced by data subjects themselves as third-party beneficiaries for almost all of the listed obligations. Therefore, where a data subject suffers material or non-material damage as a consequence of any breach of the third-party beneficiary rights under the SCCs, the data subject is entitled to compensation.
The third-party beneficiary right (also known as ius quaesitum tertio) is a benefit to enforcement and compensation received by a person who may have the right to sue basis of a contract, despite not having originally been an active party to the contract for the reason of the third-party being in fact the intended beneficiary of the contract.
As per the last paragraph of Recital 12 of the Commission Implementing Decision (EU) 2021/914 of 4 June 2021: “In the event of a dispute between the data importer and a data subject who invokes his or her rights as a third-party beneficiary, the data subject should be able to lodge a complaint with the competent supervisory authority or refer the dispute to the competent courts in the EU.”
Data subjects in the Member States can start legal proceedings against the data exporter and/or data importer before the SA or Courts of the Member State in which the data subject has the habitual residence.
Data subjects in non-Member States can start legal proceedings against the data exporter and/or data importer before the SA or Courts of the Member State of the data exporter and/or data importer establishment or if the data exporter and/or data importer do not have an establishment in the Union before the SA or the Courts of the Member State in which the representative within the meaning of Article 27(1) of Regulation (EU) 2016/679 is established.
Third-party beneficiary rights and the doctrine of privity in common-law countries
Two points needs to be made with regards to the interplay between the third-party beneficiary rights and the doctrine of privity in common-law systems.
First, the third-party beneficiary rights are intrinsically linked to the stipulations regarding the law governing the SCCs. Or, according to the second paragraph of Recital 12 of the Commission Implementing Decision (EU) 2021/914 of 4 June 2021: “(…) while the parties should be allowed to choose the law of one of the Member States as governing the standard contractual clauses, that law must allow for third-party beneficiary rights.”