Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 325South Africa
L.G.N and Another v Member of the Executive Committee of Education: Gauteng Province [2023] ZAGPPHC 325; 25873/2020 (22 May 2023)
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## L.G.N and Another v Member of the Executive Committee of Education: Gauteng Province [2023] ZAGPPHC 325; 25873/2020 (22 May 2023)
L.G.N and Another v Member of the Executive Committee of Education: Gauteng Province [2023] ZAGPPHC 325; 25873/2020 (22 May 2023)
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sino date 22 May 2023
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FLYNOTES:
CIVIL LAW – Delict – School – Gate falling on
learners – Completion not signed off by qualified
person and
of poor quality – School’s governing body
sub-committee of maintenance and principal negligent when
they
performed the role of quality control and sign off for the wall
and gate – Created a dangerous environment for
the learners
– Breached their obligations by failing to obtain proper
designs as required by the Act – MEC found
liable for the
proven damages –
South African Schools Act No 84 of 1996
.
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
NO
: 25873/2020
25874/2020
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED:
N
Date:
22/5/2023
In
the consolidated matter between:
L[...]
G[...] N[...] obo S[...] H[...] N[...]
First
Plaintiff
T[...]
O[...] N[...] obo B[...] A[...] N[...]
Second
Plaintiff
And
MEMBER
OF THE EXECUTIVE
COMMITTEE
OF EDUCATION:
GAUTENG
PROVINCE
Defendant
JUDGMENT
NICHOLS
AJ
Introduction
[1]
This is a consolidated action against
the Member of the Executive Committee of Education, Gauteng Province
(the MEC) by the plaintiffs
L[...] G[...] N[...] and T[…] O[…]
N[…] in their representative capacities as the mothers and
guardians of
the minors S[...] H[...] N[...](SHN) and B[...] A[...]
N[...](BAN) respectively.
[2]
The two minor children, SHN and BAN,
sustained various severe injuries on 16 January 2020 at R[…]
Primary School, Soshanguve
(the school) when a newly constructed gate
fell on them whilst they were on their way to the school’s
portable toilets unaccompanied.
They were both grade 1 learners at
the school when this incident occurred. SHN and BAN were 5 and 6
years old respectively when
the incident occurred. The plaintiffs
claim damages as a result of the incident.
[3]
At the commencement of the trial and
at the request of the parties, an order separating the issues of
liability and quantum was
granted.
[4]
It is
common cause that the school is a public school
[1]
and the MEC would be vicariously liable for the negligent acts of the
employees of the school.
Pleadings
[5]
The plaintiffs’ pleadings
mirror each other substantially and plead that the two learners
sustained severe injuries when they
were ‘hit’ by a newly
constructed gate at the school. These severe injuries include broken
bones that have resulted
in both learners’ inability to walk
again.
[6]
It is pleaded that the learners’
injuries were caused solely by the negligent conduct of the MECs
employees who had a duty
of care of the learners and who were
negligent on, inter alia, the following grounds:
(a)
by placing temporary portable toilets in the school playground, which
required that learners,
particularly SHN and BAN, pass through a huge
newly constructed gate to access these portable toilets;
(b)
the newly constructed gate was not properly braced and/or supported;
and
(c)
there were no adult(s) in the vicinity of the incident to supervise
the learners seeking to pass
through the gate to access the portable
toilets.
[7]
The plaintiffs plead further that a
reasonable person in the position of the MECs employees would have
foreseen the reasonable possibility
that their negligence and / or
failure to:
(a)
properly brace and/or support the
newly constructed gate and/or insist that the newly constructed gate
be properly braced and/or
supported.
(b)
place an adult(s) in the vicinity of
the newly constructed gate to supervise the learners seeking to pass
through the gate to use
the portable toilets.
(c)
place the portable toilets in a
different location which would not require the learners and in
particular SHN and BAN to pass through
the newly constructed gate to
access the portable toilets.
(d)
would cause injuries / damages to the
learners and in particular to SHN and BAN.
[8]
Further, that a reasonable person in
their position would have taken reasonable steps to guard against
such injuries/damages; and
the MECs employees’ failure to take
such reasonable steps was a negligent failure in the duty of care
which they owed to
learners and in particular SHN and BAN.
[9]
The MECs amended plea is essentially
a denial of the allegations of negligence on the basis that:
(a)
the portable toilets were accessible
to learners since they were located on the school premises.
(b)
the school complied with the
guidelines on safety and security.
(c)
the incident which led to the
injuries suffered by SHN and BAN was unforeseeable and the
negligence, if any, remote.
[10]
In response to the plaintiffs’
written request for further particulars required for preparation for
trial, the MEC confirmed,
inter alia, that:
(a)
the construction of the ‘boundary
wall’ and sliding gate was approved by the school’s
governing body and not the
MEC.
(b)
the school’s governing body
sub-committee of maintenance (SCM) commissioned and approved the
design specification for the
boundary wall and sliding gate.
(c)
a detailed drawing was not issued for
the construction of the boundary wall and sliding gate, nor was
regulatory approval sought
for the construction of the boundary wall
and sliding gate. The boundary wall details were outlined and
provided to the service
provider to reinforce the boundary fence on
the southern and western side of the school building within the
school premises as
it was viewed as a gateway for criminals breaking
into the school at the time. The steel palisade fence was not serving
the purpose
of securing the premises. Approval for the boundary wall
and sliding gate was not requested as it was considered an alteration
to the existing school perimeter fence.
(d)
regulatory approval for the
construction of the wall and sliding gate was not sought from the
local authority because the activity
was considered to be an
alteration/ modification of similar fence although using different
material within the school premises.
(e)
Madipopo Construction & Projects
CC (the contractor) was the service provider which was contracted for
the construction of the
entire project, and which designed and
constructed the wall and sliding gate based on the school governing
body’s scope/specifications.
(f)
the first phase of the project was
the construction of the wall and sliding gate. This phase was
complete when the incident occurred
on 16 January 2020. The gate was
open for use from 15 January 2020 when the school re-opened for the
year. The second phase of
the project was underway, and the
construction site associated with this phase was fenced off. Traffic
control cones and precautionary
tape were also used to demonstrate a
construction site and prevent unauthorised entry.
The evidence
[11]
The plaintiffs led the evidence of a
witness to the incident, Ms Popia Hlongwane, a relative, Ms E[…]
S[…] N[...]and
an expert witness, Mr Willie du Preez. The MEC
adduced evidence by the principal of the school, Mr Gerald Poo and an
educator Ms
Nombuso Mkhumbuza. The totality of the evidence is
uncontentious.
[12]
The grade one learners, SHN and BAN
sustained severe injuries at the school on 16 January 2020 at
approximately 10h30 when a large
newly constructed sliding gate (the
gate) fell on them. The school made use of chemical portable toilets
and to access these toilets
at that stage the learners had to pass
through the gate. The learners were not accompanied by any adult when
the incident occurred.
[13]
The gate formed part of a newly
constructed wall (the wall) that was built around the school
buildings within the fenced off school
property. The gate and
wall were designed and constructed by the contractor on instructions
of the SCM and pursuant to approval
provided by the school governing
body.
[14]
The school has 1352 learners and 32
personnel. It re-opened for the year on 13 January 2020 when staff
and educators returned to
school. The school year for learners only
commenced from 15 January 2020 when the school re-opened for the
learners. General construction
was taking place on the school
property on the day of the incident. The first phase of construction,
which involved the construction
of the wall and gate, was complete
and the second phase of construction was occurring on the south side
of the school property.
[15]
Ms Hlongwane testified that at the
time of the incident she was employed by a feeding scheme for the
school on a two year contract.
Her contract has concluded, and she is
no longer employed at the school. When the incident occurred on 16
January 2020, she had
been employed at the school for a year.
[16]
She returned to the school for that
year on 15 January 2020. When she did, she was informed by Solly, the
gardener at the school,
not use the gate because its construction was
incomplete, and it could fall on them. He said they would be told
when to use the
gate and security would be posted at it. She noted
that security had not been posted at the gate on 15 or 16 January.
Solly
is now unfortunately deceased, and she is unaware if he
relayed this message to anyone else.
[17]
On 16 January 2020 at about 10h30 she
witnessed the incident occurring. Breaktime is at 11h00. She was
delivering food from 10h30
for the 11h00 breaktime when the learners
would have their lunch. She was carrying a tray of food to the
classroom for the grade
three learners’ lunch when she saw the
entire gate fall.
[18]
There were several learners playing
in the school yard at the time and there were learners in the
vicinity of the gate which fell
on them. She ran to help these
learners and managed to pull BAN out from under the gate, whilst
Solly pulled SHN out from under
the gate. They carried the learners
to the principal’s office, and she accompanied the principal in
his car when he took
the learners to the clinic for medical
attention. BAN was distraught and in immense pain so she stayed as
long as she could with
her from the moment she pulled her out from
under the gate until she was obliged to leave the clinic. BAN told
her that they were
going to the portable toilets when the incident
occurred.
[19]
Ms Hlongwane identified the gate that
fell on the learners from photographs shown to her. She testified
that during her employment
at the school she did not interact with
any safety officers generally or in the kitchen. She was not informed
of safety laws. She
was only informed that if anything happened in
the kitchen, like if she was burnt by a pot, then that would not be
the responsibility
of the school. There were no visits by any safety
inspectors. The only inspectors that visited that she was aware of
related to
the quality of food which they made for the learners.
[20]
During cross examination, Ms
Hlongwane confirmed that she did not know whether the learners had
been told about the safety of the
gate. She maintained that she could
only speak for herself. The school closed for the festive period the
year before on or about
15 December 2019. At that time construction
was taking place at the school because a kitchen was being built. She
was not aware
whether those contractors were the same contractors who
built the gate.
[21]
The principal and senior members of
the school did not say anything to her about the safety of the gate.
She confirmed that she
reported to Ms Ngobeni who also did not
mention any safety concerns about the gate, and she did not enquire
into this with her.
Solly told her that he was informed about the
gate by the principal. When Ms Hlongwane was advised that the
principal will deny
having issued such instruction to Solly, she
conceded that she could not respond to that but maintained having had
such conversation
with Solly.
[22]
She further testified that she did
not see safety cones or safety tape adjacent to the construction site
when the school closed
in December. She confirmed the location of the
portable toilets on the day of incident as outside the wall and gate
next to the
playground/sports field. She also confirmed that the wall
encircled only the school buildings and not the entire school
premises.
[23]
She also testified that a vendor
selling sweets also witnessed the incident and that four learners in
total were injured by the
gate, but she was unaware of the status of
the other two learners. She maintained that lunch was taken to the
learners in their
classrooms, and they had to leave their classrooms
to access the portable toilets whilst the educators remained in the
classrooms.
She maintained that she saw the gate fall on the learners
as she was walking to the classroom. That generally around that time
the learners were told to go the toilet if they needed to. Further
that she only saw the gate fall on four learners and that there
were
other learners in the school yard at the time.
[24]
Ms N[...] is related to the learners
who were injured. SHN is her sister’s child and BAN is her
sibling. On 16 January 2020,
she was at home when her sister received
a call from the school telling her to go to the clinic because the
learners were injured.
She overheard the conversation and immediately
ran to the clinic to see the learners. She found SHN sitting on a
stretcher and
BAN sitting on a chair. When she asked SHN what
happened, he told her that they were passing by, and the gate fell on
them.
[25]
The learners were then taken by
ambulance from the clinic to the hospital. Ms N[...] proceeded to the
school and to the gate, which
was pointed out to her by the security
as the gate that fell on the learners. She observed 12 to 13
men around the gate at
this time and one of them had a welding
machine. She took a photograph of the gate with her cellphone and
went home.
[26]
She confirmed that the photograph she
took is depicted as photograph 00 in exhibit A. This photograph
depicts about eight men holding
up a solid gate which appears to be
almost double their height. The gate is adjacent to a brick wall of
similar height. Ms N[...]
also confirmed that the portable toilets
were situated outside this gate.
[27]
Ms N[…]’s evidence was
not challenged in any respect and is accepted.
[28]
The plaintiff’s expert witness,
Mr du Preez is a forensic engineer, registered civil and professional
engineer, and construction
project manager. He is a consultant to the
IMF and the World Bank. He has 41 years of experience, 27 of which
were with the South
African police services as a forensic engineer,
and he has been involved in over 3500 cases. His report dated 7
January 2021
was entered into evidence and marked as exhibit A.
[29]
Mr du Preez was instructed to
investigate and provide an opinion on the sliding gate that dislodged
from its support and fell over
at the school. He was provided with
two photographs as part of his instruction, one of these being the
photograph taken by Ms N[...]
on the day of the incident and the
second being a google maps photograph of the school property. He was
not provided with a copy
of the design or drawing specifications for
the wall or gate.
[30]
He conducted an inspection at the
school on 7 December 2020, during which he took photographs of and
inspected the wall and gate.
He took the photographs to depict the
defects and poor construction workmanship that he observed during his
inspection. The photographs
were annexed to and formed part of his
report dated 7 January 2021.
[31]
He confirmed that photograph 00 was
one of the photographs provided to him and he was informed that it
had been taken on the day
of the incident. He noted that it indicates
the gate as it was lifted back into position. He also observed from
photograph 00 that
there are no warning signs at the gate or
barricades warning of a potentially dangerous situation.
[32]
Photograph 28 is the second
photograph which was provided to him. It is a google maps photograph
of the school property taken on
20 January 2020. It depicts the
portable toilets located outside the wall and gate of the school
buildings and to the south of
the school buildings and north of the
sports field. Photograph 29 depicts the portable toilets in a new
position on the school
buildings side of the wall.
[33]
Photograph 4 depicts the elevation of
the gate from the front. Although he did not know the weight of the
gate, he noted that it
was solid steel and quite substantial. He
informed the Court that he did not believe that he would be able to
stop the gate if
it was falling.
[34]
Photographs 2, 3 and 5 to 13 depict
poor welding practices on elements of the gate. The welding has not
been properly done or cleaned
off. The surfaces should be properly
prepared. Slugs should be chipped off and the surface should be
grinded and smoothed properly
to allow you see and notice any defects
with the welding. The welding was not continuous on one of the
horizontal elements that
is supposed to stop the gate in the closing
position and the welding was poorly done on one corner of the element
only, thereby
providing a poor stopper mechanism. The welding
was porous. The elements were not lined up and did not evidence a
secure
welding position.
[35]
Overall, the standard of the welding
depicted poor welding practices which indicated that there was no
quality control and sign
off by a qualified and experienced person
confirming that it accords with the design or drawing specifications.
[36]
Photographs
14 to 24 depict construction deficiencies in the wall which indicate
that the wall was not constructed in accordance
with SANS
10-400-2011
[2]
Part K: Walls
(SANS 10-400K), which provides the minimum standards for free
standing walls. SANS 10-400K provides, inter alia,
that free standing
walls shall be designed and constructed to not exceed certain height
requirements.
[37]
The maximum height above ground to which a free-standing
wall with no piers may be built is 2.2 m. A free-standing wall with
piers
projecting on one side may be built to a maximum height above
ground of 2.3 m. A free-standing wall with piers projecting on both
sides may be built to a maximum height above ground of 2.1 m.
The values which are determinative of the wall’s height
in each
case are the nominal wall thickness, the nominal dimensions of the
piers (overall depth x width) and the maximum centre
to centre pier
spacing distance. These values are irrelevant in these circumstances
since Mr du Preez determined and opined that
regardless the wall was
non-compliant because the height of the wall was 2740 mm / 2.74m.
[38]
Additionally, Mr du Preez contended that there was
non-compliance with paragraph 4.2.4.2 of SANS 10-400K which provides
that ‘walls
terminate in a pier or a return.’ He referred
to photographs 15,17,18 and 20 which depict
the
vertical line of the pier and the wall coming onto the pier. He
explained that this means that the bricks of the wall come into
pier
without stabilisation. It is clear, he opined, that the walls
terminate against the pier and not inside the pier rendering
it
non-compliant.
[39]
Mr du Preez explained that a
construction site is a site on which any portion of the work is being
undertaken. Until a certificate
of completion is provided, the entire
site remains a construction site. If a project is being completed in
phases, then the entire
site remains a construction site. Children
should not be allowed in or near a construction area.
[40]
Mr du Preez opined that quality
control on any construction site is of paramount importance. This
responsibility rests with the
person who appointed the contractor,
and that person is usually the architect or designer. He concluded
that the design in total
for the wall and gate was not done by a
competent person or that person did not manage and inspect the work
diligently. There was
either no specification in relation to quality
required or nobody with experience and training, diligently
exercising the function
of quality control.
[41]
He was not provided with a copy of
the contractor’s contract. He assumed that the school, as the
client, appointed the contractor.
If any architect or engineer was
appointed to the project to prepare the required drawing / design,
that person would also have
been appointed by the school, as the
client.
[42]
His conclusions and findings were
that the wall was constructed incorrectly; the welding in total was
sub-standard with no quality
control; the construction site was not
demarcated properly during the construction; it is unclear who
designed the wall and gate
and would be responsible for construction
site management, control and safety; and there was no stopping
mechanism for the gate,
which allowed it to move beyond its
boundaries where it had no support and fell over. He opined that the
stopping mechanism would
not necessarily be visible to a layperson.
It could be obscured by grass or items, or they may not know what it
is.
[43]
During construction site safety is
important. The responsible person must ensure that the site is safe
and only essential people
are allowed access to the construction
site. He was not provided with copies of the practical completion
certificates, despite
formal request. A safety plan must be compiled
for the construction site before construction commences. He requested
a copy of
the safety plan, and it was not provided. This plan should
indicate the exact delineation of the construction site and areas
that
are out of bounds to non-construction workers and personnel.
This construction area should be further identified by barricading.
[44]
Mr Du Preez was asked to comment on
the fact that the school had no authorisation or approval from the
local authority for the construction
of the wall and installation of
the gate because the school considered it as a mere alteration to the
existing palisade school
fence. He noted that he was unaware of
the type of fence the wall replaced, however for a wall of this
magnitude it is a
requirement of SANS 10-400 that there is a
regulatory approved drawing. He expressed the strong opinion that the
replacement of
a palisade fence with a brick wall is not an
alteration.
[45]
Mr du Preez’s evidence was
largely unchallenged during cross-examination. He testified that he
considers the technical and
engineering aspects when conducting an
investigation and compiling his report. He does not consider the
school’s finances
although he conceded a school’s
resources will have a bearing on his conclusions.
[46]
He confirmed that his inspection was
conducted 11 months after the incident occurred and he did not know
if changes had been made
to the gate during that period. He
maintained, however that wear and tear would only impact the wheels
and moving parts of the
gate during this period and the quality of
the body of the gate would be the same. Even daily use by 1400
learners would
only affect the mechanical and moving element of the
gate but not the quality of the body of the gate.
[47]
He conceded that he had not
interviewed or spoken to any witnesses regarding the circumstances of
the incident. He confirmed that
he was informed that the learners who
were injured were attempting to pass the gate to go to the temporary
toilets depicted on
photograph 28 when the gate fell and injured
them. That on the day when he conducted his site inspection, the
portable toilets
had been moved and were situated on the school side
of the wall as depicted in photograph 29.
[48]
The principal, Mr Poo testified that he has been
principal at the school since 2018. The school is a quintile one
school, and the
parents are therefore not required to pay any school
fees. The school is funded by an annual grant. He testified that the
incident
occurred at about 10h15. He was informed that the gate had
fallen on learners. When he observed these learners in the sick bay,
he decided that they were clearly in pain, and the emergency services
would take too long to arrive, so he drove them to the clinic.
[49]
Construction had been taking place at the school since
December 2019 with four planned phases.
The
construction project was approved by the school’s governing
body and overseen by the SCM of which he was a member.
Phase one was the construction of the wall and gate. The
contractor was
contracted on
the design and construction of the wall and gate which
were
certified safe and complete on 13 January 2020 when the school opened
for the staff and teachers. The gate was opened and put
into use from
that day.
[50]
The quality control and inspection were performed by the
SCM which had been summoned to inspect whether the gate complied with
their
specifications. They concluded that it did, and the school then
paid the contractor and asked it to move on to phase two of the
construction project. He testified that the SCM used a checklist to
determine whether the gate complied with their specifications.
With
regard to the sub-standard welding, which was reported by Mr du
Preez, he averred that as a layperson, he and the SCM members
considered the gate and were of the view that it was satisfactory and
met their requirements. He testified that they were satisfied
with
the safety of the gate, and they could not have foreseen such an
incident occurring. The contractor and SCM members
did not
raise queries regarding the safety of the sliding gate.
[51]
He confirmed that Ms Hlongwane was a contract employee
with the school’s feeding scheme reporting to Ms Ngobeni. He
also confirmed
that Solly was employed by the school as one of five
general assistants and that he is now deceased. He denied having
informed
Solly that the gate was unsafe. He in fact denied being
aware that the gate was unsafe. He communicated with staff and
teachers
by SMS and his communication book. Solly did not form part
of his management or communication team.
[52]
He testified that the learners have their lunch in the
classroom. The educators are in charge in the classroom and have a
discretion
whether or not to allow a learner to leave the classroom
to go to the toilet. Learners need to be supervised when they have
lunch
in the classroom or when they are in the classroom. At that
stage he had 32 teachers for 1352 learners from grade R to grade
seven.
The normal ratio of teachers to learners is usually 1:36,
however the school is situated in a high-pressure admission area.
[53]
During questioning under cross-examination Mr Poo
disputed Solly’s authority to unilaterally inform staff members
that the
gate was not safe and maintained that Solly was not part of
his communication team. He testified that the wall and gate were
required
because of the ongoing burglaries on the palisade fence and
confirmed that the Department of Public Infrastructure had not been
involved in the school’s construction project.
[54]
In his view this construction project was a minor
project based on the budget which was allocated for it regardless of
the fact
that the wall was a 2.74m high walls. He stated that 12% of
the school’s budget is allocated to maintenance and repairs and
the school must work within that budget. However, he could not recall
the costs of the project or even an estimate of the costs.
[55]
He testified that learners get permission from the
educators to leave the classroom and / or go to the toilet during
class time.
The educator will have a record of the learners who went
out at the same time. The learners did not need to touch the gate as
it
was open and had been open from the morning. He maintained that
the learners were supervised at the time of the incident although
they were unaccompanied.
[56]
He testified that though the portable toilets were
located on school property on the day of the incident, they had
mistakenly been
placed in an incorrect location outside the wall near
the sports field. They should have been located on the school
building side
of the wall and were in fact moved to that location
before the end of the week of 16 January 2020.
[57]
He did not know the weight of the gate, but he confirmed
that it was about 2m in height and that it was not remote controlled.
The
gate would be opened in the morning and left open for the rest of
the day. He confirmed that there would be no security at this
gate.
[58]
He confirmed that there is a district school safety unit
which is coordinated by Mr David Moses. A telephone call or email is
a
sufficient mode of communication to request his attendance at the
school or assistance. They did not seek this unit’s assistance
beforehand to compile a safety plan and only reported the incident to
this district school safety unit. He confirmed that he is
not aware
of the role played by safety officer although the school does have a
safety officer. His reason for not requesting the
school safety
office or Mr Moses to pre-incident conduct a safety check or compile
a safety plan was vague and unconvincing.
[59]
He was questioned about his testimony that he looked at
the gate and it seemed fine although he also testified that he knows
nothing
about construction because he is an educator. His response
was that they considered the gate and whatever needed to be in place
was there or appeared to be there. The gate seemed perfect for their
purposes, but he conceded that an expert could tell difference.
[60]
He accepted Mr du Preez’s opinion that the lack of
a stopping mechanism is what caused the gate to fall. He testified
that
he did not establish the cause of the gate falling although he
asked the contractor. He conceded that in the absence of an
explanation
by him and the school, the expert’s opinion that
the probable cause was the lack of stoppage i.e., workmanship and /
or the
design was reasonable and that both could have played a part.
He expressed in re-examination that this was a valuable and unbiased
opinion. However, he had been assured of the gate’s safety by
the contractor and the issue of setting safety measures for
the gate
never arose prior to the incident.
[61]
Mr Poo was of the view that he had appropriate security
measures to mitigate risk to learners. The toilet routine for the
learners
was prescribed as a safety measure and they could ask the
individual educators for additional permission.
[62]
He conceded that he has no
construction knowledge, and he considers himself an expert educator.
He confirmed that construction was
still ongoing at the school, but
he disputed that there was any construction required for the gate or
wall. He maintained that
he had no safety concerns regarding the gate
as the wall and gate were certified safe by contractor. In this
regard, the contractor
was not called to testify and the certificate
of completion which was requested by the plaintiffs for the
construction was not
produced.
[63]
Ms Nombuso Mkhumbuza has been employed at the school
since January 2017. She arrived at the school on 16 January 2020 at
07h30.
She has a routine for toilet breaks with the learners and she
takes them to the portable toilets every day at 09h00. At 10h30, she
would be waiting for the feeding scheme ladies to deliver the
learners lunch and is required to remain in her classroom at all
times to ensure that all the learners have lunch. This is the
procedure she followed on 16 January 2020.
[64]
At about 09h00, she took the learners in her class to
the toilet. Thereafter she conducted her classes. A boy and
girl learner
asked for permission to go the toilet but because it was
around the time when the feeding scheme ladies would be arriving, she
allowed the learners to go to the toilets on their own.
She
did not accompany the learners to the toilets because the regulations
required educators to be in the classroom to observe the
learners
when they have their lunch and there are general workers on the
school premises to ensure the safety of the minor learners.
She was then called and informed that the gate had
fallen on the learners.
[65]
She denied having been informed about safety issues
relating to the gate and testified that she would have not used the
gate entrance
when she took the learners to the portable toilets
earlier that morning. She also testified that the gate was in an open
position
the whole day as it had been opened by the workers.
[66]
The educators would be informed about safety issues at
the school by the principal or their departmental head. She had been
informed
by neither that there were safety issues associated with the
gate.
[67]
Under cross-examination she testified that the school
has a problem with toilets at the moment and this is the reason for
the use
of the portable toilets. S
he
explained that the educators accompany the learners to the toilets in
the morning to check if they are passing water. Ms Mkhumbuza
had no
response to the proposition that the sole reason for educators to
accompany learners to the temporary toilets was because
safety is
paramount and to ensure the safety of the learners and that her
conduct of failing to accompany SHN and BAN to the temporary
toilet
on the day in question was a dereliction of her duty and negligent.
[68]
From the time she returned to school on 13 January 2020
she did not see any construction work taking place around the gate.
However, there was other
construction happening on the school premises on the day of the
incident as
she could see the contractor
working on the wall in the distance. She clarified that the wall
which supported the gate was still
being built in the distance. She
could not see traffic cones or safety signs in that area of
construction because it was a distance
away from her classroom.
[69]
She confirmed that the school has a safety committee,
but she could not recall her last communique from it. This committee
meets
every term to discuss issues like fire extinguishers and first
aid. She recalled that a safety meeting was held when the school
closed in December 2019, and she only recalled being told about the
construction taking place during the school closure.
[70]
Ms Mkhumbuzu was shown photograph 00
and she
testified that the men depicted in
that photograph were not employed by the school as general assistants
but by the contractor for
the ongoing construction works. They were
the ones who installed the gate and who also fixed it after it had
fallen and injured
the learners.
Issues for
determination
[71]
It is
trite that educators owe learners under their control and care at
school a legal duty to act positively to prevent physical
harm being
sustained by them through misadventure.
[3]
The imposition of such a duty on educators to prevent such harm
coming to learners in their care is aligned with public and legal
policy and accords with constitutional norms.
[4]
In addition, the MEC did not dispute the issue of wrongfulness.
[72]
Accordingly, the issues which require
determination in this delictual claim are negligence and causation.
Whether the MECs employees
were negligent in the circumstances
rendering the MEC liable for the damages suffered by the plaintiffs
as a result of the injuries
sustained by SHN and BAN.
Discussion
[73]
In addition to the determination of
negligence, an analysis of the circumstances of the matter is
required to determine what constitutes
reasonable steps for the MECs
employees to have taken in the circumstances, and whether these if
taken would have averted the harm.
[74]
The
locus
classicus
on
the determination of negligence is by Holmes JA in
Kruger
v Coetzee,
[5]
which reads:
‘
For
the purposes of liability culpa arises if-
(a)
a diligens paterfamilias in the
position of the defendant:
(i)
would forsee the reasonable
possibility of his conduct injuring another in his person or property
and causing him patrimonial loss;
and
(ii) would take
reasonable steps to guard against such occurrence; and
(b)
the defendant failed to take such
steps to guard against such occurrence.
This
has been constantly stated by the Court for some 50 years.
Requirement (a)(ii) is sometimes overlooked. Whether a diligens
paterfamilias in the position of the person concerned would take any
guarding steps at all, and if so what steps would be reasonable,
must
always depend upon the particular circumstances of each case.’
[6]
[75]
The evidence of the plaintiffs’
witnesses was largely unchallenged. Mr Managa, who appeared on behalf
of the MEC argued that
the evidence of Ms Hlongwane is contested in
all material respects and is speculative, far-fetched and
uncorroborated. I must disagree.
Ms Hlongwane did not strike me as
being unsophisticated. During her evidence she was sincere,
forthright and readily conceded issues
where she should. She was very
clear about the fact that her evidence was about what she saw, did,
was personally told and her
views on aspects. I did not gain the
impression that she had any axe to grind with the school and she was
not overly critical but
rather more factual. Additionally, her
evidence was corroborated in most material respects by the MECs
witnesses. Therefore, I
find her evidence to be reliable, credible
and acceptable in all respects.
[76]
By contrast the MECs witnesses did
not impress me as being reliable or credible. Ms Mkhumbuza’s
reasons for accompanying learners
to the portable toilets did not
have a ring of truth to it and her evidence seemed contrived to
rigidly support one narrative.
Where her evidence contradicts that of
Ms Hlongwane and Ms N[…], theirs are preferred. The evidence
of the principal is
addressed fully below.
[77]
Mr Managa argued that negligence
could not be attributed to the MECs employees because the incident
and injuries sustained by the
learners were not foreseeable and
negligence remote. He argued that the evidence showed that the school
has safety measures to
ensure that that the learners are safe during
school hours; the principal and educators were not aware of any
safety concerns regarding
the gate; the portable toilets are located
within the school’s premises and accessible to the learners;
the gate was certified
safe by the contractor; the portable toilets
were placed outside the wall by the contractor; the gate was open to
allow access
to the portable toilets by the learners; and the
incident which led to the learners injuries was unforeseeable.
[78]
This argument, however, does not
address the fact that the no evidence was actually presented
regarding the safety measures in place
for the learners during school
hours. Ms Hlongwane’s evidence was that there were no safety
briefings or safety measures
in relation to the construction. The
contractor’s completion certificate for the wall and gate was
not provided despite a
formal request for this document. The
principal’s concession that the portable toilets should have
been moved to the school
side of the wall and that construction on
the school premises was ongoing and required a higher degree of risk
prevention.
[79]
Mr
Managa contended that the evidence of the plaintiffs’ expert
witness should be rejected as unreliable because he did not
interview
any people who witnessed the incident, and his factual account of the
incident was provided to him by the plaintiffs’
attorneys.
In
Bee
v Road Accident Fund
[7]
the court quoted from the judgment in
The
State v Thomas
(CC
19/2015) [2016] NAHCMD 320 (19 October 2016) which referred to the
expert reports of two psychiatrists and said:
‘
When
dealing with expert evidence the court is guided by the expert
witness when deciding issues falling outside the knowledge of
the
court but within the expert’s field of expertise; information
the court otherwise does not have access to. It is however
of great
importance that the value of the expert opinion should be capable of
being tested. This would only be possible when the
grounds on which
the opinion is based is stated. It remains ultimately the decision of
the court and, although it would pay high
regard to the views and
opinions of the expert, the court must, by considering all the
evidence and circumstances in the particular
case, still decide
whether the expert opinion is correct and reliable.’
[80]
The factual account of the incident
provided to Mr du Preez by the plaintiffs’ attorneys was
correct and it was a factual
account that was common cause. The gate
fell on and injured the learners who were on their way to the
portable toilets at the time.
Mr du Preez’s mandate was to
investigate and ascertain the technical reason why the gate fell. His
expert evidence was unchallenged.
His opinion and conclusions were
supported by his technical findings. Having considered the totality
of the evidence, I am satisfied
that Mr du Preez’s expert
opinion and conclusions are reliable and may be accepted.
[81]
Axiomatically, I accept Mr du Preez’s
opinion that the probable cause of the gate falling was the lack of a
stopping mechanism
on both or either side of the gate to prevent it
from rolling off its track and tipping over. I accept his opinion
that the standard
of professional workmanship on both the wall and
gate was poor; the welding on the gate was sub-standard; and that
there was no
proper quality control, inspection and sign off for the
wall and gate where the sub-standard nature of the workmanship and
work
would have been noticed. I also accept his conclusion that
proper construction practices were not followed with clear regulatory
non-compliance in certain respects.
[82]
Mr Managa also contended that the
cause of the incident is not a result of the school’s
negligence because the wall and gate
were designed and constructed by
the contractor. Accordingly, any negligence should be attributed to
the contractor and not the
school. This argument does not take
account of the following pertinent facts.
[83]
Mr du Preez’s expert evidence
was unchallenged. The principal was asked if he had ascertained the
cause for the gate falling
from the contractor and he was evasive in
furnishing a response. The best response which was eventually
elicited from him was that
he did not know what caused the gate to
move off its rail that day. He also indicated his acceptance of Mr du
Preez’s opinion
and conclusions which he considered valuable
and unbiased.
[84]
The principal’s responses are
illustrative of the MECs absence of evidence or a version regarding
the probable cause of the
gate falling in circumstances where the
school would have been best placed to inform the Court of the nature
of the remedial steps
and action taken immediately after the incident
and the outcome of any investigations to prevent a re-occurrence.
[85]
The legal duty owed to learners by
the principal and the school must require at a minimum that
mitigatory measures were implemented
immediately after the incident
to ensure that such an incident did not reoccur and yet no evidence
was adduced in this regard.
The evidence by Ms Mkhumbuza that the men
depicted in photograph 00 were employed by the contractor and they
installed and repaired
gate, is the only evidence which faintly
suggests that remedial action was taken.
[86]
One would have assumed that the
contractor would be called upon to immediately ascertain the cause
for the gate falling and to repair
it. Surprisingly, no evidence
regarding this repair or the contractor’s view on the cause is
adduced. More surprisingly,
no investigation regarding the cause of
the gate falling is instituted by the school or the district school
safety unit in circumstances
where at least two minor learners
sustained severe injuries.
[87]
It is apposite at this point to
reiterate a few of the expert witness’ conclusions.
(a)
quality control is of paramount
importance and this responsibility rests with the person who
appointed the contractor and that person
is usually the architect or
designer.
(b)
the design in total was not done by a
competent person or that person did not manage and inspect the work
diligently. There was
either no specification in relation to quality
required or nobody with experience and training, diligently
exercising the function
of quality control. quality control and sign
off was not done by a qualified and experienced person confirming
that it accords
with the design or drawing specifications.
(c)
the wall was not constructed in
accordance with SANS 10-400K.
(d)
for a wall of this magnitude, it is a
requirement of SANS 10-400 for there to be an approved drawing by the
local authority.
[88]
The principal testified that they did
not retain the services of an architect or designer. The school
governing body acting through
the SCM provided the design
specifications to the contractor to design and construct the wall and
gate. The SCM also performed
the role of quality control and sign
off. In the performance of this role, he candidly conceded that the
SCM members had no technical
expertise. They executed this obligation
from a layperson’s perspective and considered that the wall and
gate satisfied their
specified requirements and was fit for their
purposes.
[89]
The principal conceded that it would
have been easy to summon the district school safety unit, but he
could provide no clear reason
why this was not done prior to the
incident. The school’s own safety officer was also not called
upon to contribute to any
aspect of the construction project.
[90]
It is inexplicable that safety would
not be a paramount consideration for the principal or SCM during an
infrastructure project
which entails the construction of a 2.7m free
standing wall and equivalent height solid steel gate on public school
property.
[91]
I am therefore of the considered view
that the SCM members and the principal were negligent when they
performed the role of quality
control and sign off for the wall and
gate.
[92]
In
terms of the South African Schools Act
[8]
(the Act) and the regulations issued in terms of s61, activities
that are hazardous to learners or prohibited by the Act
should not be
allowed on school property.
[9]
A
public school must ensure, where reasonably practicable, that
learners are under the supervision of an accompanying educator
at all
times.
[10]
Supervision is
defined as ‘the management and control of learners at school
and during school activities.’
[11]
School design for additions, alterations and improvements must comply
with all relevant laws, including, inter alia, the national
building
regulations
[12]
and SANS
10-400.
[13]
[93]
Consequently, I am also of the view
that the principal and SCM members breached their obligations in
terms of the Act by failing
to obtain proper drawings and/or designs
for the wall and gate; failing to obtain local authority approval for
the wall; failing
to ensure that the wall and gate complied with SANS
10-400 and the national building regulations before signing off on
its construction.
The budgetary constraints of the school do not
afford it a defence to the various issues of regulatory and statutory
non-compliance
identified.
[94]
As a result of their negligent
actions, they created a dangerous environment for the learners. They
should have foreseen that by
failing to engage the services of
appropriately qualified and competent professionals to oversee or
project manage the construction
project, they increased the risk and
likelihood of some or all aspects of the construction work being
non-compliant and sub-standard
because of their inability to discern
otherwise.
[95]
Educators are not, generally,
qualified to assess, detect or recognise structural defects or
deficiencies in the design or construction
of walls and gates. It is
inconceivable that they could not have objectively considered that
their inability to determine whether
the wall or gate was
structurally sound could not have foreseeably resulted in their
approval and sign off of a wall and/or gate
that would in fact
collapse and injure learners.
[96]
The
duty to keep learners of a young age under constant supervision
depends essentially upon the risks to which they are exposed
in their
particular surroundings
.
[14]
The factual circumstances of this matter should have required that
the learners SHN and BAN were accompanied when they went to
the
portable toilets.
[97]
The principal acknowledged that the
portable toilets should have been located on the school side of the
wall and the portable toilets
were in fact moved there before the end
of the week in which the incident occurred. He also testified that
phase two of the construction
project was happening at the school and
he conceded that construction work posed an increased risk to the
learners’ safety.
It was in fact for this reason that phase one
of the construction project took place during the school holidays.
[98]
Ms Mkhumbuza also testified that
construction work was occurring at the school. She could see that it
was construction work on the
same wall in the distance. Additionally,
we have Mr du Preez’s opinion that the school will be regarded
as a construction
site even though the construction project is
carried out in phases and that children should not be allowed in or
near a construction
site.
[99]
Apart from the risk created by the
wall and gate alluded to earlier, and without taking into account Ms
Hlongwane’s evidence
that the safety issues about the gate were
known, these aforementioned facts demonstrate that the school
property was potentially
dangerous and unsafe for the learners
because of the construction taking place on it which required a
higher degree of supervision
in certain circumstances. One of those
circumstances, in my view, would be when SHN and BAN wished to go to
the portable toilets
which were located outside the wall near the
sports field.
[100]
Therefore, Ms Mkhumbuza was negligent
when she failed to supervise or arrange supervision for SHN and BAN
when they were given permission
to go to the portable toilets.
[101]
It
matters not that the principal and/or educators did not foresee the
exact manner of the learners’ injuries. As stated in
Member
of the Executive Council of Gauteng Responsible for Education v
Rabie:
[15]
‘
The
foreseeability test does not require foresight of the exact manner of
the occurrence or the precise form of the dangerous activity
or game
or event which gives rise to the damage, anymore that it requires
foresight of the specific damage which in fact eventuates,’
[102]
Ultimately,
the risk of harm must have been a real risk, which a reasonable
person would not have brushed aside as being farfetched.
[16]
[103]
This tragic incident could have been
averted if appropriately qualified personnel, adhering to
professional standards administered
with due professional skill and
expertise, had been appointed to prepare the requisite
drawings/designs and to oversee and project
manage the construction
project to ensure that it was executed in accordance with the
approved drawing/design and applicable legislation.
Alternatively, if
the learners were supervised at the time, the educator or staff
member may have been able to prevent the learners
from being harmed
when the gate fell. Further alternatively, if the portable toilets
had been located on the school side of the
wall on the day of the
incident it is unlikely that SHN and BAC would have been injured in
this manner.
[104]
In the premises, I am satisfied that
a reasonable person in the position of the principal and/or educators
would have foreseen the
reasonable possibility of their actions
resulting in harm to a learner in their care. No steps were taken to
prevent such harm
and it is not unreasonable to expect that a
regulated public school comply with applicable legislation and adhere
to professional
standards administered with due professional skill
and expertise when undertaking infrastructure construction projects
on school
property.
[105]
In the circumstances, I am satisfied
that the plaintiffs have established, on a balance of probabilities,
that the learners SHN
and BAC sustained severe injuries at the school
on 16 January 2020 when the newly constructed and installed gate fell
on them.
The learners’ injuries were caused by the negligence
of the MECs employees who could have taken reasonable steps to avert
this harm and they failed to do so.
[106]
The general rule in matters of costs is that the
successful party is entitled to be awarded costs, and this rule
should not be departed
from except where there are good grounds for
doing so.
[107]
In the circumstances, I make the
following order:
(a)
The defendant is found liable to
compensate the plaintiffs for their proven damages arising from the
injuries sustained by the learners
S[...] H[...] N[...]and B[...]
A[...] N[...] when the gate fell on them at R[…] Primary
School, Soshanguve on 16 January
2020.
(b)
the defendant shall pay the
plaintiffs costs of action to date insofar as these costs relate to
the merits of the case.
(c)
the issue of quantum is postponed
sine die.
T
NICHOLS
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
This
judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties' representatives via email, by being uploaded to CaseLines
and by release to SAFLII. The date and time for hand-down is deemed
to be 10H00 on 22 May 2023.
HEARD
ON:
7,8,9 and 11 November 2022
JUDGEMENT
DATE: 22 May 23
FOR
THE PLAINTIFFS:
Adv J
Nkosi
INSTRUCTED
BY:
MWIM
& Associates
Ref:
MWIM/GALAKI/EDEH/0051
Email:
edehpaul@mwimlaw.co.za
/
osmwim@gmail.com
FOR
THE DEFENDANT:
Adv P
Managa
INSTRUCTED
BY:
The
State Attorney, Pretoria
Ref:
2017/2020/Z64/jb
Email:
rsebelemetsa@justice.gov.za
/
[1]
As defined in the
South African Schools Act No 84 of
1996
.
[2]
The South African National Standard with that number,
issued by the South African Bureau of Standards in terms of the
National
Building Regulations.
[3]
Minister of Education and Another v Wynkwart NO
2004
(3) SA 577
at 580A-C;
[4]
AD v MEC for Education, Eastern Cape Provincial
Government
(541/2013) [2020] ZAECBHC 29 (21
December 2020) para 6.
[5]
Kruger v Coetzee
1966 (2) SA
428 (A).
[6]
Kruger v Coetzee
1966 (2) SA
428
(A) at 430E-F.
[7]
Bee v Road Accident Fund
2018
(4) SA 366
(SCA) (29 March 2018) para 29.
[8]
The
South African Schools Act No 84 of 1996
.
[9]
Section 36 (4) (b) of the Schools Act.
[10]
Regulation 8A (2) (b) of the regulations for Safety
Measures at Public Schools
[11]
In the regulations for Safety Measures at Public
Schools.
[12]
Regulations issued in terms of s17 of the National
Building Regulations and Building Standards Act No 103 of 1977.
[13]
Regulation 18 (14) of the regulations relating to
Minimum Uniform Norms and Standards for Public School
Infrastructure.
[14]
Rusere v The Jesuit Fathers
1970
(4) 537 at 539E-F;
Minister of Education and
Another v Wynkwart NO
2004 (3) SA 577
at
583H-I.
[15]
Member of the Executive Council
of Gauteng Responsible for Education v Rabie
(A758/06)
[2008] ZAGPHC 71
(7 February 2008) para15.
[16]
Dlamini v
Member
of the Executive for the Department of Education Mpumalanga
Provincial Government
(885/2016)
[2017] ZAGPPHC 814 (20 December 2017) para 34.
sino noindex
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