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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## M.A.M obo K.M v MEC for the Department of Education: Gauteng Province and Others (14625/2020)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 1155 (13 November 2024)
M.A.M obo K.M v MEC for the Department of Education: Gauteng Province and Others (14625/2020)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 1155 (13 November 2024)
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sino date 13 November 2024
SAFLII
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REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
Case
Number: 14625/2020
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: NO
DATE: 13/11/24
SIGNATURE
In the matter between:
M[...] M[...] A[...]
obo
M[...]
K[...]
Plaintiff
and
MEC FOR THE DEPARTMENT
OF EDUCATION:
GAUTENG
PROVINCE
First Defendant
MRS
M BOKABA
Second Defendant
MRS
CM
MVULANE
Third Defendant
Delivered:
This judgment was prepared and
authored by the Judge whose name is reflected and is handed down
electronically by circulation to
the parties/their legal
representatives by e-mail and by uploading it to the electronic file
of this matter on Caselines. The date
for hand-down is deemed to be
20 November 2024.
Summary: Action
against the Member of the Executive (MEC) in the Department of
Education in the Gauteng Province for an alleged
breach of a duty of
care by a public special school and its officials. In any litigation,
a party is confined to the four corners
of its pleaded case. The
plaintiff has failed to tender evidence in support of the pleaded
allegations of negligent breach. In
the absence of cogent evidence in
support of the pleaded case, the claim must be dismissed. Once an
owed legal duty is alleged,
there must be evidence in support of its
breach. Where negligence is alleged, the plaintiff must show that the
injury was foreseeable.
The plaintiff must establish a causal link
between the alleged negligent breach and the injury sustained. No
evidence was led in
support of the breach of the alleged legal duty
of care. Held: (1) The action is dismissed. Held: (2) The plaintiff
must pay the
costs of the action on party and party scale taxable at
scale A.
JUDGMENT
MOSHOANA,
J
Introduction
[1]
The melancholy appertaining this action is
that it is one that involves a patient with cerebral palsy and
significant intellectual
abstruseness, which action was, in the
Court’s view, poorly litigated. There was no perspicuous
endeavour, in the Court’s
respectful view, to present relevant
and cogent testimony in support of the pleaded case. This Court
expressed to both counsel
during oral submissions that ostensibly the
patient had a “good” case, which was presented poorly.
Given the limpid
significance of this case, it is one that, in the
Court’s view, required an experienced legal team in order to
litigate it
in the best interest of the patient.
[2]
That said, this is an action instituted by
Mrs M[...] A[...] M[...](“the mother”) on behalf of Mr
K[...] M[...] (“the
patient”). The patient was a learner
enrolled at Medicos Special School (Medicos), a school catering for
learners with special
needs. The patient was seriously injured on a
day he had gone to attend school. The mother contends that the
patient was so injured
as a result of Medicos and its officials (the
Principal and the Deputy Principal) breaching a duty of care owed to
the patient.
The Principal and the Deputy Principal are cited as
defendants in this action. The action is defended by the MEC and the
cited
Principals.
Pertinent background
facts and evidence tendered.
[3]
The patient was born on 21 March 1998. He
was born with cerebral palsy. He is also hemiplegic on the left side
of his body. As a
result of these infelicitous birth conditions, he
became severely intellectually impaired. Given those conditions, he
could not
be admitted at a normal public school. On or about 03
October 2007, he gained an admission as a learner at Medicos. At the
time
of his admission, the patient was nine years of age.
[4]
On or about 26 August 2016 when the patient
was 18 years of age, he sustained head injuries. He was treated at a
local clinic situated
at Block TT, Soshanguve, whereafter, he was
transferred to George Mukhari Academic Hospital (Mukhari) for further
medical treatment.
In 2020, the present action was instituted against
the MEC; Mrs M Bokaba, the Deputy Principal of Medicos; and Mrs CM
Mvulane,
the Principal of Medicos.
[5]
At the trial of this action, the mother as
the plaintiff and a
dominis litis
,
tendered her own evidence and that of the erstwhile driver of the
patient, in support of the action. I interpose to mention that
the
driver was present in Court when parts of the evidence of the mother
was tendered. He only left the Court room after it was
observed that
he was sitting in the Court room and listening to the testimony
delivered by the mother. The defendants, in seeking
to defend the
action, tendered the testimony of four witnesses. This Court, takes a
view that, given the alleged breach of the
legal duty of care, the
testimony of the mother was of no major significance to the
plaintiff’s case. She was not a particularly
good and
impressive witness. She did not provide direct answers to direct
questions. Hereunder, a brief summation of the testimony
of the
witnesses is provided.
Mrs M[...] A[...]
M[...]
[6]
She is the mother of the patient. She
enrolled the patient at Medicos since she considered it to be a safe
and secure school for
the patient, regard being had to his birth
conditions. On 26 August 2016, as per usual, the patient was
collected from his home,
by the driver, who transports the patient
and other learners, to Medicos. At around 14h10, she received a call
from the driver
informing her that the patient was injured.
Subsequent thereto, she received a call from Medicos, confirming that
the patient was
indeed injured and that he is being transported to
the clinic situated at Block TT Soshanguve for medical attention.
[7]
She agreed to meet with the officials of
Medicos at the clinic. Indeed, she arrived at the clinic, where the
patient was offered
primary medical treatment. Owing to the fact that
an ambulance to be summoned by the clinic to transfer the patient to
Mukhari
would delay, as it is usually the case, she engaged the
services of a private transportation, to convey the patient to
Mukhari.
Whilst at the clinic with the school officials, she
attempted to obtain answers as to how and where was the patient
injured, to
no avail.
[8]
She testified that at some unspecified
point, when she visited the patient, she noticed that the gates of
Medicos were no longer
being locked as it used to be the case, the
security guard who was employed had left and access to the premises
of Medicos was
free and unrestricted. Her version in this regard was
disputed and contradicted by the testimony of the defendants’
witnesses.
I interject to mention that, notwithstanding the
unrestricted and free access to the premises of Medicos, she
continued to keep
the patient as a learner at Medicos. When she
allegedly raised the issue, on an unspecified date, with Mrs Bokaba,
she was told
that the school is safe nevertheless.
[9]
On 27 August, she visited the local police
station to lay a criminal charge against the assailants of the
patient. She later established
that the criminal case was not
investigated and the docket was inexplicably closed. On 29 August,
she visited Medicos and met with
the Principal, who accepted
responsibility for the injury sustained by the patient and actually
apologised. This testimony was
vehemently disputed and challenged
during her cross-examination.
[10]
She again met with the Principal at the
district offices of the Department of Education, who again confirmed
to her that the injury
to the patient happened inside the school
premises and she admitted guilt for that. Similarly, this testimony
was vehemently challenged
and contradicted. She testified about some
old injuries on the eye, hand and chin, allegedly sustained by the
patient at Medicos.
Ultimately, in due course, she deregistered the
patient at Medicos and enrolled him at some other school.
[11]
During cross-examination, she testified
that the averments made in paragraph 8 of the particulars of claim
annexed to the combined
summons was mistakenly made. She, however,
testified that she only heard as to where and how the patient was
injured, as she was
not present when he got injured. She could not
positively comment to the number of versions contradicting hers put
to her on behalf
of the defendants due to the undisputed fact that
she was never at Medicos on the day in question and that some of the
facts she
testified to were told to her by third parties.
Mr Jan Molatelo Maboya
[12]
He testified that from 2011, he had the
patient as one of the learners he transported to Medicos. On 26
August 2016, he arrived
at Medicos, at around 13h40 and whilst
approaching the premises of Medicos, he was confronted by some of the
learners he transports
together with the patient, who conveyed to him
that the patient was injured. He also observed that the patient was
bleeding from
the head. He then proceeded to the offices, together
with the patient, to inform the officials that the patient was badly
injured
and he cannot transport him back home in that state. He
confirmed that on that day he arrived late for a pick up since his
vehicle
had gone in for a service. The officials he encountered at
the offices insisted that he must transport the patient home. He
refused,
given the state in which the patient was at that point in
time.
[13]
He did not witness how and where the
patient was injured. Given the medical conditions of the patient, who
has speech challenges,
the patient was not in a position to clearly
relate to him as to what had happened to him and where. Having
refused to take the
patient with him, he proceeded to call the mother
and informed her that he is not bringing the patient home, since the
patient
was badly injured.
[14]
He testified as to how handing over of the
learners usually happened. At a particular stage, a security guard
would open the remote
controlled gate and learners would be
identified and picked up by the respective drivers, including him. At
some stage, one Mr
Nkosi, an educator at Medicos, told them as
drivers that the school was searching for a security guard since one
Mr Sekgobela had
left. Mr Nkosi told them nothing thereafter and
since the departure of Mr Sekgobela the gates remained open the whole
day with
unrestricted movement in and out of the school premises. I
pause to mention that his testimony on this aspect magically mimics
that of the mother.
[15]
It is unsurprising because he remained in
the Court room when the bulk of the testimony of the mother was
tendered. He confirmed
that once the gates are opened after school
hours, it became the duty of every driver to collect the learners he
transports. On
the admitted sketch plan contained in the joint bundle
of documents, he pointed the collection point to be just after what
was
identified by the mother as gate 2. He disputed the version of
the defendants as to how the handover of learners happened. For
obvious reasons, he disputed that gate 2 was always locked and was
only opened when learners are allowed to exit the school premises
after the school hours. He insisted that the Principal was at the
school premises on the day in question. I interject to remark
that
the driver did not leave a good impression to the Court. He was not
forthright. He appeared apprehensive as and when he presented
his
testimony. It was as if he was hiding something. The day before, he
could not tender his testimony, because he was allegedly
struck by a
lightning the previous day.
Mrs Constance Mokgadi
Mvulane
[16]
She commenced employment with Medicos as a
Principal in 2013. Medicos is a school that admit learners with
severe intellectual disability
(SID); epilepsy; and cerebral palsy
(CP). The school starts at 07h30 and teachers arrive at 7h00 in order
to assist with the supervision
when learners with those special needs
arrive at school. The school ends at 13h30 and teachers would leave
after 14h00 after having
completed the supervision of the handing
over of the learners. Daily, supervision is done by four educators at
different points
of the school premises including at the exit and
entrance gate. Supervision of entrance and exit of the learners
happens at the
identified gate 2.
[17]
Learners at Medicos used different modes to
travel back home once school time ends. Some learners use a school
bus whilst others,
like the patient, use private transportation.
Other learners, who live nearby the school, would walk home.
Normally, those learners
whose transportation does not arrive would
be collected back into the school premises until their respective
transportation arrive.
On the day in question, she was not at the
school premises. She had attended another school function outside the
premises of Medicos.
On 29 August, the Deputy Principal related to
her the events of the 26
th
.
She disputed as being impossible, the averments made at paragraph 8
of the particulars of claim.
[18]
During cross-examination, she testified
that the school carried the duty of care until the learner is handed
over to the respective
drivers or leave the school premises. She also
testified that at 12h00, on the 26
th,
the school was still in session, as such it was impossible that the
patient would leave the school premises at that time. She further
testified that the investigations, conducted by the school
ex
post facto
the incident, yielded
nothing with regard to what could have happened to the patient and
whereit could have happened.
Ms Zulile Bridgette
Masuku
[19]
She is an educator at Medicos since April
2015. On the day in question she was on duty. She left the school
premises just after
13h30. Whilst driving outside the school premises
on the road opposite the Z[...] C[...] C[...] (ZCC), she encountered
a person
who was walking improperly in front of her vehicle. On
closer look, she observed that the person was a learner at Medicos
and was
injured. The two boys who were nearby, who were also learners
at Medicos, informed her that the patient was assaulted by some other
boys who had ran away. He requested the two boys to assist the
patient back into the school premises whilst she drove back slowly
alongside the boys. Back at the premises, she encountered another
educator who went with her to the Deputy Principal’s office.
At
the Deputy Principal’s office, she later encountered the driver
of the patient. She reported to the Deputy Principal as
to where she
encountered the patient. She reiterated the supervision procedure as
testified to by the Principal. She actually encountered
the other
educator at gate 2 whilst engaged in the supervision process. After
having handed over the patient to the Deputy Principal
she left.
Mrs Matlakala Bokaba
[20]
She is the Deputy Principal. On the day in
question, after around 13h30, whilst in her office, Ms Kutumela and
Ms Masuku came to
her office together with the injured patient. She
was told where the patient was encountered. Whilst listening to the
narration,
the driver also walked in. She called the mother to meet
her at the nearest clinic. At the clinic she met the mother, who was
shouting
all the time and was uncooperative. Since the patient was
handed to a professional nurse, she left the clinic. On the 29
th
she had to report to the Principal since the Principal was not on
duty on the day in question.
Ms
Mercy Kutumela
[21]
In 2007, she commenced employment at
Medicos as an educator. On the day in question she was part of the
educators who performed
supervision duties after school hours. She
was stationed at gate 2. She was rostered with three other educators
on the supervision
duty. She explained the duties of supervision.
Once all the learners have left, the supervisors would also leave. On
that day,
at around 13h45, Ms Masuku accompanied by some two boys
came to the gate together with the patient. The patient was injured
at
that time. She and Ms Masuku took the patient to the office of the
Deputy Principal, whereafter she returned to her supervision
duties.
[22]
On the 29
th
,
she encountered the parents of the patient at the waiting area of the
office of the Principal. She gave her own account of what
transpired
on the day in question. During cross-examination, she was quizzed
about her supervision duties at the gate. She testified
that on the
day in question, she arrived at gate 2 at around 13h30. She never
interacted with the patient since he is not a learner
in her phase.
She knew that the patient was using a private transport but did not
know which one specifically. On the day in question,
she did not see
the patient. She saw the driver after the patient was reported
injured. She testified that at the gate, when it
is opened around,
300-400 learners would exit the gate to their respective
transportation or homes, for those who walk home. Her
role is to
guide them out of the premises through the gate. She ordinarily will
collect the little ones and sit with them under
a shelter next to the
gate and continue to supervise them. Whereafter, hand them over to
their respective transportation. At times,
the supervision process
would end at 16h00 or thereafter. If, for any reason, the
transportation of the learners collated back
to the shelter does not
arrive at the school, parents of the specific learners would be
contacted telephonically. The school keeps
a record of the telephone
numbers of the parents.
Documentary evidence
[23]
Some of the documents contained in
the joint bundle were handed in and marked as exhibits respectively.
It is obsolete for the purposes
of this judgment to tabulate those
exhibits. It suffices to simply state that those identified documents
then served as evidence
before Court. Their probative value shall be
taken into account when the entire evidence is assessed.
Argument
[24]
At
the conclusion of the evidence stage, both counsel sought to be
indulged with a few days in order to prepare for argument. At
the
commencement of the trial, this Court informed both counsel that a
continuous trial inclusive of arguments is going to happen
and no
adjournment will be accommodated specifically to allow for the
preparation of written arguments. Both counsel were urged
to prepare
for legal submissions as and when the evidence stage progresses
[1]
.
Nonetheless, this Court indulged them for half a day and overnight to
prepare for oral argument
[2]
.
This Court must take this opportunity to expressly state that there
is no rule or practice directive in place to the effect that
after
hearing of evidence in a trial, parties deserve an indulgence for few
days in order to prepare for argument.
[25]
If this Court allows a practice of that
nature, such, in my view, is a recipe for endless partly-heard
matters being accumulated
by judges in this Division. A trial must
start and finish and where judgment is reserved, only a judgment and
its hand down should
remain. This apparent luxury of affording
practitioners time to prepare for argument, must end, in my view. It
is something that
will obliquely justify further legal costs at the
expense of consumers of legal services. It is inimical to social
justice, in
my view. It delays finalisation of cases. A trial of
three days, inadvertently, becomes a trial of five or more days. Of
course,
a practitioner may be indulged by a Court to make
supplementary submissions on an issue a Court seek to be addressed
on. Such is
an exception and not a norm.
[26]
On the day of hearing oral arguments, both
parties furnished the Court with well researched and helpful written
heads of argument.
This Court is indebted to both counsel for those
written heads. Briefly, counsel for the plaintiff argued that Medicos
breached
its duty of care in respect of the patient, as such, the MEC
must be held liable for 100% of the patient’s proven damages.
On the other hand, counsel for the defendants argued that no evidence
was led to support the pleaded case. On that singular basis,
this
Court must dismiss the action with costs. In retort, counsel for the
plaintiff conceded that there is no direct evidence in
support of the
pleaded case but implored this Court to draw certain inferences in
favour of the plaintiff.
Analysis
[27]
At the commencement of the trial, the
merits of the action were separated from the quantum issue, within
the contemplation of rule
33(4) of the Uniform Rules. This judgment
only concerns itself with the merits of the instituted action. Before
this Court considers
the evidence tendered, it is essential to have
regard to the pleaded case that the defendants were required to meet.
The particulars
of claim annexed to the combined summons made the
following pertinent averments:
8
“
On
or about the 26
th
August 2016 at approximately 12h00 and at Medicos, Block L
Soshanguve, Gauteng Province,
K[...]
left Medicos premises unassisted and unaccompanied
by
the Second Defendant, Third Defendant and/or members of the First
Defendant and sustained a head injury.
9
The aforesaid injury
occurred
during school hours whilst K[...] was under the care and
supervision of
the Second and Third Defendant and/or members of
the First Defendant.
10
The injuries sustained by
K[...] were as a result of the
negligent breach of a legal duty of
care that rested
on the Second and Third Defendant and/or members
of the First Defendant in the employ of the First Defendant…”
[28]
Regard
being had to the pleaded case and on application of the old adage
that s/he who alleges must prove, it was incumbent on the
plaintiff
to present evidence in support of the allegation that the patient
left Medicos premises at approximately 12h00. None
of the witnesses
who testified for the plaintiff tendered any evidence in support of
this allegation. The mother was never at the
premises of Medicos on
that day. The driver arrived after the school had ended. It is
settled law that the purpose of pleadings
is to define the issues for
the other party and for the Court. It is impermissible for a Court to
decide issues outside the pleadings.
[3]
[29]
During
the argument, when faced with the reality that there is no direct
evidence in support of the pleaded case, counsel for the
plaintiff
attempted an argument that there is circumstantial evidence to
support the pleaded case. I disagree. In assessing circumstantial
evidence, the evidence should not be approached in a piecemeal
fashion but in its totality. Once approached in that fashion, then
the two cardinal rules of logic, as suggested in
R
v Blom
[4]
must be applied. This Court takes a view that the onus was not
discharged because the inference advanced is not the most readily
apparent and acceptable one from a number of possible inferences.
[5]
.
On the totality of the evidence before this Court, it cannot be
reasonably inferred that Medicos and its officials negligently
allowed the patient to leave the school premises in order for him to
foreseeably be assaulted and injured.
[30]
Additionally, the plaintiff was required to
tender evidence which will support the averment that the patient was
injured during
school hours whilst he was still under the care and
supervision of Medicos. No scintilla of evidence was tendered as to
when and
where was the patient injured. On the evidence of the
driver, when he observed that the patient was injured and was still
bleeding,
it was after school hours and outside the school premises.
On the uncontested evidence of Ms Masuku, the patient was encountered
outside the school premises and after the school hours. When the
patient was returned to the school premises, as testified by Ms
Masuku, he was already injured and the school hours had ended at that
time. On the strength of this evidence, it is more probable
than not
that the patient was injured outside the school premises and after
the school hours had ended. Axiomatically, at the time
of injury, the
patient was no longer in the care and supervision of Medicos. No
amount of circumstantial evidence can gainsay this
axiom.
[31]
This Court must say that the evidence of
the driver is suspect in many respects. Firstly, where his evidence
coincides with sufficient
exactitude with that of the mother, it can
only be attributed to the fact that he sat in the Court room and
listened to her testimony
so that his own must be tailor-made to
corroborate hers. On the uncontested evidence, when the learners exit
gate 2 they are received
by the transportation people who from that
point on, assume control and responsibility of the to be transported
learners. On his
own version, he was not there to receive the patient
as per usual after the school time had ended. He made no arrangements
with
the school regarding his unavailability to assume control and
responsibility of the learners he transports. There was no way in
which the supervisors on duty that day would have known nor foreseen
that he will fail in his usual duties of receiving the learners
he
transports.
[32]
To my mind, the driver also stands in
loco
parentis
from the time the
loco
parentis
of the school ends until he
hands the patient back to his mother. According to Black Law
Dictionary (1983:403)
in loco parentis
means in the place of the parent; instead of parent; charged
factitiously, with a parent’s rights, duties and
responsibilities.
There is no doubt in my mind that for all and
intended purposes of the transportation of the patient, the driver’s
care that
is exacted from him is that which the
diligens
paterfamilias
would have taken in
similar circumstances. The duties of the driver under those
circumstances must be compared to that of a reasonably
careful parent
in relation to his or her own obligations. A diligent parent of an
intellectually challenged child shall not arrive
late to receive his
or her child after the school hours. Having failed, due to late
arrival at the school premises, to assume his
own
loco
parentis
,
it suited his selfish reasons for him to testify that the entrance
and exit was at some unspecified time free and unrestricted.
Somewhat, this testimony was exculpatory in nature, given his known
and accepted duties and responsibilities after the school time
ends.]
[33]
Given the types of learners at Medicos, the
version of the mother and that of the driver that access was free and
unrestricted for
a considerable period of time is not only improbable
but it is preposterous to the extreme. If that was the case, there
would have
been dozens of incidents where learners had bolted out of
the premises. The mother having observed this practice, and with
safety
and security being her primary concern, hence she enrolled the
patient at a safe and secure premises, it is improbable that she
would have availed to the defendants a
volenti
non fit iniuria
defence on a silver
platter. Why she would compromise the safety and security of the
patient, this Court would ask. Regard being
had to her demeanour when
she testified before Court, undoubtedly, such an observation of
obvious and serious security lapse would
have led her to the
immediate deregistration of the patient from the school. She would
not have adopted a nonchalant attitude she
suggestively took at the
time of the observation.
[34]
It is clear to my mind that this version
that the school premises were free for all is nothing but a recent
fabrication fabricated
to suit the narrative that the patient left
unassisted and unaccompanied on the day in question. If this
narrative were to stick,
it must have been the hope of the driver
that he shall be exonerated from the possible negligence from his own
loco
parentis
duties. If the gates remained unlocked and with unrestricted access,
why would the patient only on this fateful day grab an opportunity
to
bolt as opposed to earlier when the opportunity was, on the evidence
of the duo, proverbially a perennial low hanging fruit.
[35]
Their
version on this aspect is simply improbable. This Court, without any
hesitation, rejects the testimony of the mother and the
driver on
this aspect of unrestricted access and accepts the corroborated and
probable version of the defendants’ impressive
witnesses. To a
large degree, other than the recently fabricated evidence of free for
all access, the evidence of the mother and
that of the driver with
regard to the injury, as to how and where it happened, is hearsay and
ought to be excluded because it does
not satisfy the requirements of
the law as recently confirmed in
Kapa
v S
[6]
.
[36]
It was also incumbent on the plaintiff to
lead evidence that will support the averred negligent breach of a
legal duty. Owing to
the fact that there is no evidence as to where
and how the injury happened, it is impossible, in my considered view,
to attribute
any
culpa
on the part of the school officials. Negligence is an incident
aligned to a particular conduct or an act. The act or conduct must
be
one that foresees the possible injury but continues recklessly or in
complete ignorance of the possible injury. Even if this
Court were to
infer negligent breach of the duty of care, as implored by the
plaintiff’s counsel, it would not have been
foreseeable that
when the patient bolts he would probably be assaulted by some boys
outside the school premises. It was daylight,
and the worst that
could have perhaps foreseeably happened to him was him being knocked
down by a motor vehicle. If the patient
bolted because the gates were
not locked it seems incongruent that he will then return to the
school premises and be assaulted
inside the premises thereafter
return to where he was indisputably encountered.
[37]
If
indeed he bolted given the free for all access then it must be so
that the patient was assaulted outside the school premises.
That
being so what is it that a school could do or have done to prevent a
common law assault from happening outside its premises.
To my mind
nothing. It was not suggested through any evidence or pleadings that
the patient left unassisted and unaccompanied then
returned being
followed by his assailants, who gained access through the
unrestricted access to the school premises and assaulted
him in the
premises whereafter returned him to the place where he was, on the
objectives evidence, encountered still oozing blood
from the back of
his head. There is simply no basis laid for negligent breach of a
legal duty. The test for negligence, as perfected
by the erudite
Holmes JA in
Kruger
v Coetzee
[7]
,
is very far from being met in the present case.
[38]
In
an action of this nature it is not sufficient to simply allege that
another party owes a legal duty. A breach of that duty must
also be
proven in order to succeed. It is rested law that at the school
premises, the school owes a legal duty since the teachers
stand in
loci
parentis
during school hours. The question whether a school breached the owed
legal duty is a factual one. Ordinarily a breach in a duty
of care
would occur in a failure of supervision. There was no evidence to
suggest that any of the educators observed that the patient
as he
exited gate 2 did not among the sea of other learners proceed to his
transportation. There is no categorical duty to provide
constant
supervision. In
Carmarthenshire
County Council v Lewis
[8]
Lord Oaksey stated that to hold that education authorities are bound
to keep children under constant supervision throughout every
moment
of their attendance at school is to demand a higher standard of care
than the ordinary prudent schoolmaster or mistress
observes. I fully
concur with the sentiments of the erudite Lord Oaksey.
[39]
Similarly,
it cannot be said that at the gate, where 300-400 learners exit,
there is a much high duty of constant supervision expected.
A
submission to that effect must fail. Besides, it is not the
plaintiff’s pleaded case that there was failure of supervision
at that point – at the exit gate after school hours. In
Geyer
v Downs
[9]
it was held that a reasonable parent formulation will be somewhat
unreal in the case of a school master who was in charge of a
school
with some 400 children, or a master who takes a class of thirty or
more children. The plaintiff’s pleaded case does
not suit the
after school hours situation. It suggests a within school hours
situation. All the authorities cited and relied to
by the plaintiff’s
counsel relate to incidents which happened at the school premises
(
Mageni
v Minister of Education of the Western Cape Education Department
[10]
;
Rusere
v The Jesuit Fathers
[11]
;
and
MEC
Education North West Province v Foster and others
[12]
).
In
casu
,
the evidence overwhelmingly suggests that the injury happened outside
the premises of Medicos and after school hours.
[40]
More
recently Mabuse J in
Mhlongo
v MEC of Gauteng Department of Education
[13]
correctly, in my view, reverberated the following sentiments:
“
[43]
There is no evidence by the Plaintiff that when patrolling the
playgrounds, the Defendant’s educators could
and should have
adopted an alternate method and what that method is that they failed
to adopt.
There
is no evidence by the Plaintiff that even if the Defendant had
deployed all the teaching staff at Nantes, which they failed
to do,
the said incident could have been avoided.
This Court is left in doubt as to whether there were other reasonable
steps which the educators could and should have taken to
prevent the
incident in which the Plaintiff was involved from taking place.
This
means that the negligence on the part of the Defendant has not been
proven.
”
[14]
[41]
Congruently,
the question of adequacy of supervision is often linked with the
question whether supervision would have prevented
the injury which
occurred. Unless the plaintiff can show that the supervision which
allegedly should have been provided would more
probably than not have
prevented the injury, the plaintiff must fail
[15]
.
The plaintiff must still show that there is a causal link between the
alleged negligent breach of legal duty and the injury sustained
by
the patient. Based on the evidence before this Court, there is
nothing that unsuggested alternative “adequate supervision”
at the gate 2 would do or have done to prevent the patient from being
assaulted next to ZCC outside the school premises.
[16]
[42]
As a parting shot and
en
passant
, this Court harbours an uneasy
feeling that the patient was short changed in this action. For that,
all this Court can do is to
pour out its sympathy with the patient.
It would be stretching the interests of justice project to find in
favour of the patient
in the absence of evidence in support of the
punted for case. With proper and seemingly available evidence being
tendered, this
Court would have been sufficiently positioned to
deliver justice to the patient. Ostensibly, the rights of the patient
were one
way or another compromised. Either by the school or the
members of the South African Police Services (SAPS). The duty of this
Court
is to resolve legal disputes and not to give legal advice to
the parties. Sadly, absent cogent and reliable evidence the Court’s
hands are tight at the back.
[43]
For all the above reasons, I am constrained
to make the following order:
Order
1.
The plaintiff’s action is dismissed.
2.
The plaintiff is to pay the costs of this
application on a party and party scale taxable or to be settled at
scale A.
GN MOSHOANA
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
APPEARANCES:
For
the Plaintiff:
Mrs K
Mashaba
Instructed
by:
Mphela
and Associates, Pretoria
For
the Respondent:
Mr
TC Kwinda
Instructed
by:
State
Attorney, Pretoria
Date
of the hearing:
7
November 2024
Date
of judgment:
13
November 2024
[1]
Chris Maverick SC in Forum 2010 December Volume 23 p67-69 said:
“
Closing
argument ought to be prepared in advance of the trial
.
Everything the advocate does during the preceding phases of the
trial is intended to serve that argument. So one has to know
what
argument is intended to be made before opening statement is made…
An argument, of course, is a series of propositions
which are
supported by the law, the facts and the evidence and are connected
to each other by a string of logic to justify a
conclusion. Heads of
argument prepared before the trial are an invaluable step.
The
heads of argument could be refined each evening as the trial
progresses…”
[2]
Ordinarily, in a trial action, parties are not required to submit
written heads of argument.
[3]
DHB v
CSB
2024 (8) BCLR 1080 (CC).
[4]
1939 AD 188.
[5]
AA
Onderlinge
Assuensie Assosiasie Bpk v De Beer
1982 (2) (SA) 603 (A).
[6]
2023
(4) BCLR 370 (CC).
[7]
1966
(2) SA 428 (A).
[8]
[1955] UKHL 2
;
[1955]
A.C 549.
[9]
[1975]
2 NSWLR 835, 841.
[10]
[2021]
ZAWCHC 79.
[11]
1970
(4) SA 537
(R).
[12]
[2023]
ZASCA 11.
[13]
[2024] ZAGPPHC 1056.
[14]
Id at para 43.
[15]
Victoria
v Bryar
(1970) 44 ALJR 174, 175.
[16]
Barker
v State of South Australia
(1978) 19 SASR 83.
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