21 septembre 2021
Disputes Quick Read – 59 de 105 Publications
In Darren Warren v DSG Retail Limited earlier this year, the High Court struck out misuse of private information, breach of confidence and negligence claims, ruling that failure to provide adequate data security is not a positive act that can form the basis of such claims.
DSG Retail Limited was the victim of a malware hack between 2017 and 2018 on 5,930 point of sale terminals. These terminals stored customer data, which the hackers compromised. The ICO investigated the attack and decided that DSG, as data controller, breached the seventh data protection principle (DPP7) – ie it failed to take appropriate technical and organisational measures against unauthorised or unlawful processing of data. The ICO issued a monetary penalty, which is currently under appeal to the FTT.
Darren Warren was a victim of the hack and discovered that the hackers had stolen his personal information. This included his name, address, phone number, date of birth and email address. Mr Warren claimed damages of £5,000 for distress via claims for:
In response, DSG applied under CPR 24 and CPR 3.4(2) for summary judgment/strike out of the first three claims. DSG argued that these claims had no realistic prospect of success based on the facts and were untenable as a matter of law.
The court noted that, when ruling on strike out applications, it assumes the primary facts alleged are true. This means that the court should not strike out a claim unless it's certain that the statements of case disclose no reasonable grounds for bringing the claim.
Mr Warren had argued that:
Justice Saini disagreed and struck out the first three claims. He said that:
The court also struck out Mr Warren's negligence claim. Justice Saini couldn't see the logic of imposing a common law duty of care when a statutory regime (ie the Data Protection Act 1998) was already in place, through which DSG owed duties to Mr Warren as the data controller. Warren had only claimed "distress", but a state of anxiety produced by a negligent act or omission – but which falls short of a clinically recognisable psychiatric illness – is not enough damage to complete a tortious cause of action.
Only Mr Warren's claim for breach of the Data Protection Act 1998 remained, which the court stayed pending the FTT case's outcome.
To discuss the issues raised in this article in more detail, please reach out to a member of our Disputes & Investigation team.
Andrew Howell and Natalia Faekova unpack an extraordinary case. A Mexican billionaire's strong fraud claim. Former Israeli intelligence operatives hired to target the defendant's solicitor. Secret recordings over wine and dinner. A judge who called it 'anathema to civil litigation' but may have been 'too lenient'.
19 novembre 2025
During an LSLA lecture on transparency and open justice, Mrs Justice Cockerill, recently appointed as Deputy Head of Civil Justice, outlined a pilot practice direction (PD) that will place select court documents squarely in the public domain via a new, public-facing side of the electronic court file (CE-File).
21 octobre 2025
11 juin 2025
30 janvier 2025
6 décembre 2024
14 novembre 2024
14 novembre 2024
15 octobre 2024
14 décembre 2023
13 décembre 2023
17 octobre 2023
4 août 2023
21 juillet 2023
10 juillet 2023
1 juin 2023
20 avril 2023
8 mars 2023
14 février 2023
13 février 2023
8 février 2023
19 janvier 2023
3 octobre 2022
22 septembre 2022
9 août 2022
25 juillet 2022
6 juillet 2022
Welcome news for those pursuing fraud claims in the English Courts
28 juillet 2022
27 juillet 2022
29 juillet 2022
17 juin 2022
13 juin 2022
26 mai 2022
31 mai 2022
4 avril 2022
5 avril 2022
31 mars 2022
21 septembre 2021
13 septembre 2021
6 septembre 2021
2 août 2021
21 juillet 2021
15 juillet 2021
5 mai 2021
21 avril 2021
31 mars 2021
26 février 2021
24 février 2021
20 janvier 2021
12 janvier 2021
23 novembre 2020
16 octobre 2020
23 septembre 2020
7 octobre 2020
15 avril 2020
27 avril 2020
21 avril 2020
2 juin 2020
16 juin 2020
9 juillet 2020
21 juillet 2020
3 décembre 2021
24 novembre 2021
8 octobre 2021
10 janvier 2022
20 janvier 2022
22 mars 2022
7 avril 2022