Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 735South Africa
Curro Holdings Limited Trading as Curro New Road v Member of Executive Council, Gauteng Department of Education and Others (2024/074009) [2024] ZAGPJHC 735 (14 August 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
14 August 2024
Headnotes
Summary:
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Curro Holdings Limited Trading as Curro New Road v Member of Executive Council, Gauteng Department of Education and Others (2024/074009) [2024] ZAGPJHC 735 (14 August 2024)
Curro Holdings Limited Trading as Curro New Road v Member of Executive Council, Gauteng Department of Education and Others (2024/074009) [2024] ZAGPJHC 735 (14 August 2024)
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sino date 14 August 2024
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
CASE NO: 2024-074009
1.
REPORTABLE:
2.
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
3.
REVISED:
14
August 2024
In the matter between:
CURRO
HOLDINGS LIMITED TRADING AS CURRO NEW ROAD
Applicant
and
MEMBER
OF THE EXECUTIVE COUNCIL,GAUTENG DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION
First
Respondent
GAUTENG
DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION
Second
Respondent
HEAD
OF DEPARTMENT: GAUTENG DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION
Third
Respondent
CHIEF
DIRECTOR: EXAMINATION AND ASSESSMENT
Fourth
Respondent
JUDGMENT
Summary:
Modiba J
Introduction
[1]The
Curro Holdings Limited (Curro) an order directing the Gauteng
Department of Education (the Department) to submit Curro New
Road’s
application for registration as an examination centre for the
National Senior Certificate (NSC exam centre) for 2024
to the Chief
Director: Examination and Assessment (Chief Director) forthwith and
that the Chief Director considers it by 27 August
2024. In the
alternative, Curro New Road seeks a mandamus that the respondents
give effect to the undertakings made to it on 8
May 2024, to register Curro New Road
as a NSC exam centre under the department pending the determination
by the Chief Director of
Curro New Road’s application to be
registered as a matric exam centre. If successful, it seeks a cost
order on scale C.
[2]Curro
is the applicant. It is a corporate entity incorporated according to
the company laws of the Republic of South Africa.
Its registered
office is in Durbanville, Western Cape. It operates several
independent schools. Curro New Road is one of them.
Curro New Road is
registered with the department as an independent school. It operates
from Halfway House, Midrand, Gauteng. It
is convenient to simply
refer to the applicant corporate entity as Curro. Other independent
schools operated by Curro, namely Curro
Clayville and Curro Jewel
City, feature in this application. I distinguish these schools by
their names.
[3]The
first respondent is the Member of the Executive Council, Gauteng
Department of Education (MEC). The department is the second
respondent. It is responsible for overseeing and regulating the basic
education system in the Gauteng Province in accordance with
the
South
African Schools Act 84 of 1996
. Unless otherwise specified, reference
to statutory provisions in this judgment are to this Act.
[4]The
third respondent is Head of Department: Gauteng Department of
Education (HOD). The Chief Director is the fourth respondent.
The
orders Curro seeks fall withing his scope of official duties. The
first, third and fourth respondents are cited in their official
capacities.
[5]The
respondents oppose the application jointly. They have raised two
points in
limine
,
namely urgency and failure to comply with the requirements set out in
the Promotion of Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000 (PAJA).
They
also oppose the application on the merits. They seek its dismissal
with costs on scale C.
[6]I
firstly set out the background facts. Then, I deal with the points
in
limine
, followed by the merits. I
consider the issue of costs. I conclude the judgment with an order.
Background facts
[7]Some
of the material facts are in dispute between the parties. For reasons
I later explain, I resolve the dispute on the respondents’
version according to the
Plascon
Evans
[1]
rule.
[8]Curro
New Road was established and started operating as an independent
school in 2020. At the time, it was not duly registered
with the
department. It was only officially registered as a school on 6
September 2023 with effect from 2024. It is not registered
as a NSC
exam centre for 2024. Since its existence in 2020 until its effective
registration date, it enrolled and promoted leaners
without following
the department’s applicable policies and guidelines.
[9]In
terms of s46(1), no person may establish or maintain an independent
school unless it is registered by the HOD. In terms of
s46(2),
failure to comply with the statutory requirement in s46(1)
constitutes a criminal offence. It attracts liability for a
fine or
three months imprisonment.
[10]The
department conducted investigations into Curro New Road’s
failure to comply with s46(1) and waived its rights to institute
criminal proceedings against the managers of Curro New Road in terms
of s46(4). It acknowledged and condoned the promotion of leaners
at
Curro New Road despite Curro New Road’s failure to fully comply
with the National Protocol Assessments of Grade R to 12.
It has also
condoned the late registration of Curro New Road’s candidates
for the 2024 NSC exams.
[11]In
addition to being registered with the department as an independent
school, Curro is required to register with Umalusi for
accreditation
and certification purposes. It also had to apply to the department by
October 2023 to be registered as a NSC exam
centre for 2024. When
applying for registration as an NSC exam centre, an independent
school must also submit various documents,
including health and fire
compliance certificates, proof that its staff members are registered
with the South African Council for
Educators (SACE) and approved
promotion schedules for grades 9 to 11.
[12]Curro
did not apply timeously for registration as a NSC exam centre for
2024. It only submitted the application in April 2024.
Further, it is
yet to register with Umalusi for accreditation and certification
purposes. It is unclear how it will overcome the
Umalusi
accreditation hurdle. That is an irrelevant consideration for the
purpose of this application because this court is not
called upon to
made a decision on Curro New Road’s application for
registration as a NSC exam centre.
[13]Curro
alleges at paragraph 41 and 45 of its founding affidavit, that at a
meeting held on 8 May 2024, officials of the Department
undertook to
make a submission to the Chief Director in support of Curro being
registered as a NSC exam centre for 2024. If the
application is not
dealt with at the time of the 2024 October/November NSC exams, the
department will establish and oversee a designated
examination centre
at Curro New Road to enable its NSC candidates to sit for the 2024
NSC examination there.
[14]Curro
further alleges that only at a subsequent meeting held on 10 June
2024 did the Department state that Curro New Road candidates
should
write their 2024 NSC exams at Curro Clayville. Curro Clayville is run
and operated by Curro and is registered as a NSC exam
centre for
2024.
[15]The
respondents deny the allegations set out in paragraphs 13 and 14
above. They assert that they have no knowledge of the alleged
undertaking and deny that it was made. They allege that at a meeting
between the parties held on 19 February 2024, the department
advised
Curro New Road to register its candidates under Curro Jewel City as
they were included in its 2023 promotion schedules.
Ms Sishuba, the
principal for Curro New Road mentioned that Curro has a branch in
Clayville. It is registered as a NSC exam centre.
It will be able to
bus candidates there. Ms Naidoo will send the 2025 NSC exam centre
application link to Ms Sishuba to apply for
registration.
[16]Curro
New Road denies these allegations. It alleges that Curro Claville and
Curro Jewel City were discussed as two possible
venue but no
agreement was reached. It also alleges that this meeting was held on
12 February 2024.
[17]Curro
attached to its replying affidavit what it contends are minutes of
the meeting of 8 May 2024. However, these were never
shared with the
department prior to this application being instituted. They were also
not attached to its founding papers. By only
attaching them in reply,
it deprived the respondents of an opportunity to deal with them.
During oral argument, counsel for the
respondent took issue with the
purported minutes, contending that they are mere notes and fail to
record attendees.
[18]I
note from correspondence exchanged between the parties after the
meeting 8 May, attached to Curro’s founding affidavit
an
undertaking to make a submission to the HOD in support of Curro New
Road’s application for registration as a NSC exam
centre for
2024 is reflected. However, no record of such an undertaking in
respect of which it seeks alternative relief in these
proceedings is
reflected. A letter Curro wrote to the Department on 7 June 2024,
makes no reference to such an undertaking. Neither
is a follow up
email by Curro New Road’s Ms Lategan to the department’s
Mr Williams dated 21 May 2024. An email by
Ms Lategen to Mr William
dated 8 May 2024 only records that a second submission will be made
to the Chief Director on Friday in
support of Curro New Road being a
NSC exam.
[19]Under
these circumstances, William’s bare denial is sufficient to
raise a dispute of fact in respect to Curro’s
alleged basis for
the alternative relief. What more should he say? He was at the 8 May
meeting. The correspondence referenced above
confirm his version.
[20]To
the extent Curro seeks to rely on the purported undertaking for the
alternative relief, it was aware when it instituted this
application
that the respondents dispute the agreement allegedly reached at the 8
May meeting. Therefore, this present dispute
was forceable. It is for
that reason that I determine the application on Curro’s
undisputed version and the respondents’
version.
[21]The
same cannot be said about the undertaking to support Curro New Road’s
late application for NSC exam centre registration
for 2024.
Interestingly, it is not the respondents’ version that the HOD
rejected the application before it was submitted
late. They are only
belatedly stating in this application that since it was submitted
late, there is no proper application for
consideration. By
implication, the HOD is entitled to ignore it. This version is at
odds with the correspondence referenced above.
It is also
inconsistent with Curro’s version that the department requested
further information on Curro New Road’s
application, which it
also submitted and the department sent its officials on a site visit
to Curro New Road’s premises.
I therefore accept Curro New
Road’s version on this point.
Points in limine
Urgency
[22]Curro
contends for urgent relief in terms of uniform rule 6(12). The
urgency it relies on arose on 10 June when officials of
the
department allegedly reneged the agreement reached on 8 May 2024. I
note that Curro took almost three weeks after the alleged
urgency
arose to institute this application. It has not offered any
explanation for its delay in launching the application. Given
the
inordinate time it takes for an opposed application to be heard in
the ordinary cause and given that the final NSC exams will
take place
in October/November this year, there is no doubt that if this
application is not heard based on urgency, Curro will
be denied
substantive redress in due course.
[23]I
therefore find that Curro meets the test for urgency.
PAJA requirements
[24]The
respondents contend that the application falls to be dismissed
because Curro has failed to exhaust internal remedies. Curro
contends
that PAJA is not applicable because it is not seeking to review any
decision. I disagree with Curro’s contention.
Relief under PAJA
is not only confined to administrative review relief. It includes
relief in relation to failure or refusal by
an organ of state to make
a decision.
[2]
[25]The
difficulty with this point in limine as raised by the respondents’
is that no proper factual and legal basis is laid
for it in its
answering affidavits and heads of argument. They have not set out the
internal remedies at Curro’s disposal.
It is unclear from their
papers whether such internal remedies exist and if so, what they are.
[26]I
therefore find that a proper case is not made out for this point in
limine
to
be upheld.
The merits
[27]Curro
seeks urgent final relief. To succeed, it must establish (a) a clear
right, (a) threat to breach the right (c) no other
remedy.
Clear right
[28]Curro
New Road submitted to the department an application to register as an
examination centre for the 2024 NSC examination
in April 2024. At the
8 May meeting, the department’s officials undertook to make a
second submission to the Chief Director
in support of the
application. Curro enjoy a right to a decision on Curro New Road’s
application based on the undertaking
made at the 8 May 2024.
[29]Since
it has failed to establish that an undertaking it relies on for the
alternative remedy was made, it has equally not established
a clear
right to the alternative remedy.
Threat to breach
the right
[30]Curro
New Road has successfully established that the department threatens
to breach its right to have its application for registration
determined as undertaken at the 8 May meeting.
[31]However,
since it failed to establish the alleged right to the alternative
relief, there can never be a threat to breach a non-existing
right.
No alternative remedy
[32]Curro
contends that it lacks an alternative remedy. It contends that having
its 2024 NSC candidates write final exams at Curro
Clayville is not a
reasonable and ordinary remedy. Having found that it has not
established the factual basis for the alternative
remedy, this is an
irrelevant consideration.
[33]Curro
clearly lacks an alternative remedy in relation to the main relief.
The HOD is the only repository of power to consider
an application to
register a NSC exam centre.
[34]For
the above reasons, I find that Curro has made out a proper case for
the main relief.
Costs
[35]I
find no reason why costs, in the scale contended for by the parties,
should not follow the cause.
[36]I
therefore make the following order:
Order
An order is granted in
terms of prayers 1, 2, 3 and 5 of the applicant’s notice of
motion dated 4 July 2024.
MODIBA J
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT,
JOHANNESBURG
Appearances
For
the Applicant:
M
Smith
Instructed
by
:
Cliffe
Dekker Hofmeyer Inc
For
the Respondent:
S
Tshungu
Instructed
by
:
The
State Attorney, Johannesburg
Date
of hearing:
6
August 2024
Date
of judgment:
14
August 2024
MODE
OF DELIVERY:
this judgment is
handed down virtually
on the MS Teams platform and transmitted to the parties’ legal
representatives by email, uploading on
Caselines and release to
SAFLII. The date and time for delivery is deemed to be 10 am.
[1]
See
Plascon
Evans Paints Limited v Van Reibeeck Paints (Pty) Limited
[1984] ZASCA 51
;
1984 (3) SA 623
(A) and
Room
Hire Co (Pty) Limited V Jeppe Street Mansions (Pty) Limited
1949
(3) SA 1155
(T) AT 1163.
[2]
See
the definition of decision in s1 of PAJA.
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