Case Law[2024] ZAWCHC 401South Africa
St Cyprian's School v R.V and Another (20693/2024) [2024] ZAWCHC 401 (29 November 2024)
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## St Cyprian's School v R.V and Another (20693/2024) [2024] ZAWCHC 401 (29 November 2024)
St Cyprian's School v R.V and Another (20693/2024) [2024] ZAWCHC 401 (29 November 2024)
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sino date 29 November 2024
THE
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
Case Number: 20693
/ 2024
In the matter between:
ST
CYPRIAN’S SCHOOL
Applicant
and
RV
ACV
First
Respondent
Second
Respondent
Coram: Wille, J
Heard: 22 November
2024
Order: 26 November
2024
Reasons: 29
November 2024
REASONS
WILLE,
J:
INTRODUCTION
[1]
The first and second respondent’s daughter is at school and
educated by the
applicant. The first respondent is indebted to
the applicant regarding outstanding school fees for the sum of R407
902,15.
[1]
[2]
The applicant is an independent school for the most part, receives no
government funding
and relies entirely on school fees and donations
to fund its operations and educate learners enrolled at the
school.
[2]
[3]
The respondents knew that the applicant relied on school fees to fund
its operations
and provide their daughter with an education.
School fees must be paid for being educated at an elite private
school.
[3]
[4]
The payment of school fees and the quantum thereof year on year was
(and continues
to be) regulated by an enrolment contract. This
contract determined that the education of the first respondent’s
daughter
by the applicant was dependent on the first respondent
timeously paying for school and related fees incidental to the
education
of their daughter. Undoubtedly, the contract of
enrolment records that a failure to pay the school fees following the
agreed
contractual terms constitutes a breach of the contract, which,
if unremedied (and if these fees remained unpaid), would inevitably
result in the exclusion of the respondent’s daughter from the
applicant school.
[4]
OVERVIEW
[5]
It is not the subject of any dispute that the first respondent is in
arrears regarding
the payment of his daughter’s school fees in
the sum of R407 902,15.
[5]
[6]
The applicant endeavoured over several years to accommodate the first
respondent and,
over the years (from time to time), engaged with him
to restructure the payment of these arrears. During the
hearing, the
first respondent conceded that affordability was the
issue and that he could not pay the outstanding arrears.
[6]
[7]
Several payment indulgences were afforded to the first respondent,
and these arrangements
were reduced to writing through an
acknowledgement of debt and various addenda.
[7]
[8]
It is common cause on the papers that the first respondent has not
adhered to these
agreements and has failed to comply with the payment
terms he agreed to concerning the payment of the arrears due
regarding his
daughter’s school fees.
[8]
FACTUAL
MATRIX
[9]
The first respondent has been in arrears for over four years. A
payment plan
was negotiated by agreement about four years ago. After
that, a plethora of correspondence followed concerning the payment
of
arrear school fees, and the first respondent did not comply with the
undertakings given by him.
[9]
[10]
The
modus
operandi
of non-payment and broken undertakings continued during this school
year. It seemed to me that the last straw that broke
the
camel’s back was the first respondent’s flat-out refusal
to sign the most recent restructuring agreement, which
had been
drafted in a last-ditch effort to record in writing the terms of the
most recent agreement between the applicant and the
first respondent
so that his daughter could be enrolled at the school for her next
academic year.
[10]
CONSIDERATION
[11]
At all material times hereto, the applicant took steps to procure the
enrolment of the first
respondent’s daughter in an alternative
school for the upcoming school year. This ‘alternative’
school
is a government-subsidized school and is in the same suburb
where the respondents’ son attends school.
[11]
[12]
This reserved place (at the alternative school) remains open for
acceptance by the first respondent’s
daughter. Surprisingly and
unashamedly, the first respondent says that this alternative school
is ‘unsuitable’ because
this school is not predominantly
white, and this does not align with his daughter’s cultural
values.
[12]
[13]
Although this case involves the interests of a minor child
(constitutionally infused), it is
really about applying the contract
law. I say this because (a) the contractual relationship
between the parties has terminated,
thereby vesting the applicant
with a clear right to the interdictory relief it sought, (b) the
applicant has a reasonable apprehension
that unless interdicted, the
first respondent will present his daughter at the school for the
commencement of the next school year
because he refuses to have his
child educated anywhere other than at the applicant school, and (c)
the applicant has no alternative
remedy other than the interdictory
relief it sought in the application.
[13]
[14]
As alluded to, I must consider the minor child's best interests in
this case, not in isolation
but within the peculiar circumstances of
this factual matrix. Thus, I must, among other things, consider
the reason why the
exclusion of the learner is sought. In the
context of the exclusion of a child from an independent school, it
has now been
established that:
‘…
Schools
that provide basic education are under a constitutional duty not to
diminish the right to basic education and at all times
to act in the
best interests of the child
…’
[14]
[15]
In the case of an exclusion of a learner based on the non-payment by
parents of school fees,
this issue has now been definitively
determined by way of our precedent jurisprudence as follows:
‘…
any
decision to suspend or expel a learner during school term must
satisfy due process. These include adequate warning prior
to
suspension or exclusion, provision to make arrangements to settle
fees, or the opportunity to make arrangements to enrol a learner
at a
new school…
’
[15]
[16]
This, the applicant has done. I say so because (a) the
applicant has secured an alternative
good school for the education of
the learner, (b) the applicant has on numerous occasions sought to
negotiate a settlement with
the first respondent, and (c) the
first respondent has been given several opportunities to settle the
arrear and outstanding
school fees due to the applicant.
[16]
[17]
Before these reasons were delivered, the first respondent said I had
not determined the
applicant’s
application to strike out. The respondents were not legally
represented; they were represented in person by the first respondent.
Because of this, I prevailed upon the applicant’s counsel
not to proceed with the applicant’s application to
strike out
and for all the papers to be considered. This was undoubtedly
to the benefit of the respondents. This limited
issue, which
the first respondent says falls to be determined in our apex court,
is exceedingly challenging to understand.
[17]
[18]
The first respondent also sought to appeal and set aside a previous
court order about mostly
the same issues that did not favour his
case. Finally, the first respondent sought some species of
declarator setting aside
the entire education
policy/framework/programme of the applicant (and it seems to be an
attack in a broader sense as well) as unconstitutional
and calls for
the appointment of a committee to review the entire educational
policy/framework/programme.
[18]
[19]
This is in circumstances where the respondents have yet to define the
alleged constitutional
issue, and several interested parties have not
been joined to the application. This court is not obliged to
trawl through
the papers to seek out the alleged constitutional issue
the respondents may wish to pursue.
[19]
[20]
In a final throw of the dice, the respondents sought to argue some
obscure points relating to
completely unrelated specified legislation
that had nothing to do with the issues for determination.
[20]
[21]
The first respondent submitted that he was ‘coerced’ into
signing the acknowledgement
of debt and the other supporting
documents in which he undertook to pay the outstanding amounts due to
the applicant. The
jurisdictional facts supporting these
allegations were completely absent from the papers presented to the
court.
[21]
[22]
The arguments made by the respondents to the relief sought by the
applicant were challenging
to understand. The applicant had a
good case. The first respondent’s case was not good.
Thus, I granted
the interdict sought by the applicant, preventing the
respondents from enrolling their minor child at the applicant’s
school
for the next school year. I also granted an order for
the first respondent to repay the arrear school fees with
interest.
[22]
[23]
The applicant requested costs on the attorney and client scale.
The written agreements
provided for costs on this scale.
However, I declined the request. I did this because the first
respondent was in a
difficult financial position, and using my
discretion, I reasoned that costs on party and party scale would
suffice in these specific
circumstances. These are then the
reasons for my order.
[23]
E.
D. WILLE
Cape
Town
[1]
Plus,
interest thereon.
[2]
It does receive some government funding for Grade R.
[3]
This is not disputed.
[4]
The
“
Contract
of Enrolment”.
[5]
Affordability
was the issue.
[6]
He
averred that third parties in turn, owed him large sums of money.
[7]
Several
written agreements were concluded with the first respondent in this
connection.
[8]
The
first respondent is simply not able to pay the outstanding arrears.
[9]
The
applicant attempted over the years to structure a payment plan to
benefit the first respondent.
[10]
The
first respondent refused to sign this agreement.
[11]
St
George’s Grammar School, which is an excellent
government-subsidized school.
[12]
The
less said about this argument, the better.
[13]
Setlogelo v Setlogelo
1914 AD 221
at 227.
[14]
AB and Another v Pridwin Preparatory School and Others
2020
(5) SA 327
(CC) at paragraph [93].
[15]
NM v John Wesley Schools
2019 (2) SA 557
(KZD) at paragraph
[
70].
[16]
No
more could reasonably or legally be expected from the applicant in
the circumstances.
[17]
This
“constitutional issue” remains undefined.
[18]
Mr
Justice Nuku’s prior order refused the relief sought by the
respondents.
[19]
Rule
16A of the Uniform Rules of Court.
[20]
The
first respondent raised unrelated issues in connection with Consumer
Law and the National Credit Act.
[21]
The
instrument was emailed to the first respondent, and he appreciated
the indulgence granted to him.
[22]
The
amount that was to be paid was the sum of R 407,902,15, together
with interest thereon
.
[23]
The
acknowledgement of debt made provision for costs on the attorney and
client scale.
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