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First-tier Tribunal (General Regulatory Chamber) |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> First-tier Tribunal (General Regulatory Chamber) >> Carrabino v Information Commissioner [2024] UKFTT 775 (GRC) (28 August 2024) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKFTT/GRC/2024/775.html Cite as: [2024] UKFTT 775 (GRC) |
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(General Regulatory Chamber)
Information Rights
Heard on: 20 December 2023 |
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B e f o r e :
MEMBER E YATES
MEMBER P TAYLOR
____________________
ANNETTE CARRABINO | Appellant |
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- and - |
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INFORMATION COMMISSIONER | Respondent |
____________________
For the Appellant: Annette Carrabino in person
For the Respondent: No attendance
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Decision: The appeal is allowed.
Substituted Decision Notice: Within 35 days of being sent this decision, the Royal Borough of Kensington & Chelsea must disclose the requested information.
"London musician wins battle against council over piano
A Young Musician of the Year finalist has won his battle against a council which tried to stop him practising piano in his £5 million family home.
James Carrabino, 19, was banned from playing for more than one hour a day thanks to complaints from his neighbour, Joao Baptista, 59, in Kensington, West London.
His parents succeeded in overturning the ban last year, with a judge ruling that the pianist and his younger brother can play for five hours, up until 9pm.
But the council appealed the decision by Westminster Magistrates' Court.
However, this week James's banker father Jim Carrabino and his wife Annette were delighted to learn that RBKC [the Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea] has withdrawn the council order and finally ended legal proceedings against them. …"
"One bizarre consequence of the Grenfell Tower fire on 14 June was the decision of Kensington and Chelsea council to pull the plug on funding a bitter dispute between wealthy neighbours over… piano practice.
The Carrabino and Baptista families live in Scarsdale Villas, Kensington, where houses command £5m-plus prices. They fell out over the long hours spent on piano practice by the Carrabinos' teenaged son James, a talented player who was a Young Musician of the Year finalist in 2015 and is now a student at the Royal College of Music.
The Baptistas claimed that hearing James tinkling the ivories through the walls for hours every day was "torture". Neighbours on the other side denied any problem. K&C council took the well-connected Baptistas' part. Since 2014 it has spent an astonishing £200,000 in legal costs supporting their claims.
Following the service of a noise abatement notice by the council, in April 2014 the Carrabinos successfully appealed, with the High Court ordering the council to pay the family's costs in full. A judge can only make such an order if the council is deemed to have acted either dishonestly or unreasonably.
Rather than accepting the ruling, the council hired counsel from three different chambers for an appeal, including the prominent and expensive James Pereira QC. A week before the hearing set for 4 July, and two weeks after the Grenfell fire, the council abruptly dropped the action. …"
"11. At the highest levels of RBKC, elected Members and Senior Executives responded to the Appellant and her husband's requests for assistance against the abusive behaviour of lower level officers, with a "doubling down" and a hardening of the Council's position. When the Appellant and her husband approached their Member of Parliament, Victoria Borwick (whose husband was in the House of Lords at that time) for assistance, Lady Victoria, who was also a senior RBKC councillor at that same time and had already been made aware of the dispute, responded with a similar "doubling-down", if not outright hostility. It was as if an impenetrable "brick wall" of senior, well-connected and inter-connected councillors had "circled the wagons" to protect RBKC officers and to carry out the bidding of the complainant in the dispute, Mr Joao Baptista, the Carrabinos' unyielding next-door neighbour."
The present request for information
From: Mehaffy, Keith
Sent: 23 February 2015 08:56
To: Cllr-Husband; ¦¦¦¦¦¦
Cc: Seraphim, Georgina
Dear Councillor Husband,
Thank you for your email.
My colleague Miss Seraphim is currently very involved in this case. I am copying her into this email so she can update you and ¦¦¦¦¦¦ on the matter.
Kind regards
Keith Mehaffy
"RBKC has also redacted the name of one of the recipients of an email to the RBKC councillor, Cllr Husband. I asked RBKC if this recipient is a third person other than the complainant in the piano dispute, Mr Baptista or his then-wife Ms Allen. RBKC responded that they would not disclose this because it is third party information. RBKC has disclosed many items of information containing Mr Baptista's and Ms Allen's name and involvement in the dispute, therefore it seems likely this third person is someone else who intervened on the Baptistas' behalf."
"Having reviewed this e-mail the council continue to rely on the exemption that this is third party personal data and this email will not be disclosed. The Council has an overriding duty to ensure that the personal information of third-party individuals remains confidential. On occasion the council have taken the decision to release third party personal information but this decision is only made after they have scrutinised the content of the information, taking in to account a number of factors including the relationship between the data subject and the third party, the nature of the third party personal information, any potential negative impact on the third party individual directly due to the disclosure of their personal information and whether the third party is acting in a professional or personal capacity. In this instance the information is withheld."
The appeal
Legal Principles
Personal data
(3) To the extent that the information requested includes personal data of which the applicant is not the data subject, the personal data shall not be disclosed otherwise than in accordance with regulation 13.
(1) To the extent that the information requested includes personal data of which the applicant is not the data subject, a public authority must not disclose the personal data if—
(a) the first condition is satisfied, or
(b) the second or third condition is satisfied and, in all the circumstances of the case, the public interest in not disclosing the information outweighs the public interest in disclosing it.
(2A) The first condition is that the disclosure of the information to a member of the public otherwise than under these Regulations—
(a) would contravene any of the data protection principles, or
(b) would do so if the exemptions in section 24(1) of the Data Protection Act 2018 (manual unstructured data held by public authorities) were disregarded.
(2B) The second condition is that the disclosure of the information to a member of the public otherwise than under these Regulations would contravene—
(a) Article 21 of the UK GDPR (general processing: right to object to processing), or
(b) section 99 of the Data Protection Act 2018 (intelligence services processing: right to object to processing).
Article 6 – Lawfulness of processing
(1) Processing shall be lawful only if and to the extent that at least one of the following applies:
…
(f) processing is necessary for the purposes of the legitimate interests pursued by the controller or by a third party, except where such interests are overridden by the interests or fundamental rights and freedoms of the data subject which require protection of personal data, in particular where the data subject is a child.
The parties' cases
Mrs Carrabino
"Examples of a legitimate interest include the general requirement for transparency in public life, or in the issue that the information in question relates to. This particularly applies to issues of interest to the wider public and where disclosure demonstrates accountability. For example, disclosing the expenses claims of a public official may lead to increasing accountability and transparency in the spending of public funds."
"Confidential interaction between government ministers and others, in a context where those others are seeking to advance the work of charities or to promote views, would generally be disclosable – especially where those others have privileged access to ministers."
There is a legitimate interest, Mrs Carrabino argues, in finding out whether that is what happened here.
The Commissioner
"27. The Commissioner is mindful that disclosure under the EIR differs from disclosure under the right of subject access. Disclosure under the EIR is to the public at large, rather than to interested individuals. The Commissioner must therefore be careful to avoid inadvertently disclosing withheld information in his analysis. The Commissioner can say that in his opinion, the withheld information itself would not indicate whether or not inappropriate intervention as envisaged by the complainant actually occurred. It would not inform the public as to how the Council handled the noise complaint, or made decisions regarding it."
Consideration
a. It is not necessarily the case that the unnamed individual must be either the Baptistas or an interlocutor whose involvement is inappropriate. There might be others who unobjectionably wished to be kept informed, or had an interest in the case that demanded their anonymity be preserved due to their own particularly circumstances.
b. On principle, we would go further than Mrs Carrabino suggests and hold that in some circumstances the public interest in transparency may support debunking undue influence as well as exposing it.
a. Mrs Carrabino is pursuing a legitimate interest;
b. Disclosure of the information is necessary to meet that legitimate interest;
c. This overrides the legitimate interests or fundamental rights and freedoms of the data subject;
d. Processing the subject's personal data by disclosure in response to the request therefore has a lawful basis under Article 6(1) of UK GDPR and is consistent with the data protection principles at Article 5;
e. The prohibition at regulation 12(3) therefore does not apply, and the presumption of disclosure at regulation 12(2) means that the requested information should be provided.
Signed
Judge Neville
Date: 22 August 2022
Note 1 https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-4902284/Musician-wins-battle-against-council-playing-piano.html [Back] Note 2 https://webarchive.nationalarchives.gov.uk/ukgwa/20191001144017/http://informationrights.decisions.tribunals.gov.uk/DBFiles/Decision/i2110/Carrabino,%20Annette%20EA-2017-0010%20(21.11.17).pdf [Back] Note 3 https://webarchive.nationalarchives.gov.uk/ukgwa/20220601103837/https://informationrights.decisions.tribunals.gov.uk/DBFiles/Decision/i2957/023%20091221%20DECISION.pdf [Back] Note 4 https://ico.org.uk/media/action-weve-taken/decision-notices/2023/4023588/ic-187230-w0d5.pdf [Back] Note 5 https://webarchive.nationalarchives.gov.uk/ukgwa/20220213031213/https://ico.org.uk/media/for-organisations/documents/1213/personal-information-section-40-regulation-13.pdf [Back] Note 6 https://webarchive.nationalarchives.gov.uk/ukgwa/20191001144006/http://informationrights.decisions.tribunals.gov.uk/DBFiles/Decision/i181/DBERRvIC_FOEfinaldecision_web0408.pdf [Back] Note 7 https://webarchive.nationalarchives.gov.uk/ukgwa/20230601105916/https://informationrights.decisions.tribunals.gov.uk/DBFiles/Decision/i314/Creekside_Forum_v_IC_&_DCMS_(0065)_Decision_28-05-09_(w2).pdf [Back]