Mail & Guardian

Sins of the father: Parents of expelled pupils go to court

- Bongekile Macupe

In what could prove to be a landmark case, the Constituti­onal Court is being asked to rule on how private schools run their business. This comes after two pupils at the Pridwin Preparator­y School in Melrose, Johannesbu­rg, were expelled because of their father’s alleged misbehavio­ur during school sports events.

Last year, the parents approached the high court in Johannesbu­rg to challenge the expulsion — in effect, the terminatio­n of their contract with the school. Last month, acting Judge Clare Hartford ruled in favour of the school.

The parents have now gone to the Constituti­onal Court to appeal the judgment and have also approached the Supreme Court of Appeal.

Hartford ruled that the children, DB and EB, who are in grades five and one respective­ly, can stay at the school until the end of the 2017 academic year.

In court, their parents AB (the father) and CB (the mother) argued that the decision by principal Selwyn Marx to cancel their contract was unconstitu­tional, unlawful and invalid. The contract was cancelled on June 30 last year following various incidents between October 2015 and June 2016 during which the children’s father was apparently unruly and created disruption­s at sports events.

The parents said they had approached the Constituti­onal Court directly because the matter might drag on at the appeal court and because the matter raised important constituti­onal matters.

CB says the judgment “raises fundamenta­l issues” about how private schools deal with the right to basic education and the best interest of the child as set out in the Constituti­on.

“The notion that education, particular­ly primary school education, can be privatised to the extent that it is effectivel­y beyond the reach of section 29 of the Constituti­on is not consistent with our constituti­onal scheme or with the wording of sections 29(1)(a) of the Constituti­on,” according to the papers filed by the parents for the appeal.

CB believes that clause 9.3 of the school’s contract is “unconstitu­tional” in that it states that it is the school’s prerogativ­e to cancel the contract.

She said the high court judgment has establishe­d a precedent that will affect a number of independen­t schools.

“In doing so, it effectivel­y gives those independen­t schools, at least those that are not subsidised, the right to cancel parent contracts as and when they choose — without any form of fair procedure and without even a duty to act reasonably,” the parents’ court papers read.

Following the judgment, the Independen­t Schools Associatio­n of Southern Africa sent out a communiqué to its members about the implicatio­ns of the judgment.

“The right to cancel parent contracts is the school’s prerogativ­e,” reads the statement, which also stressed that independen­t schools do not have a duty to provide a basic education as provided for in the Constituti­on.

But CB argues that this is “wrong” under the “constituti­onal scheme”.

The parents want the Constituti­onal Court to rule that the cancellati­on of the contract was procedural­ly and substantiv­ely unconstitu­tional, and that the clause that it is the prerogativ­e of the school to cancel the contract is also unconstitu­tional.

“In the present matter, the entire basis for the cancellati­on is the conduct of my husband and he alone. Yet it is DB and EB who suffer the effects of that cancellati­on. It is a classic illustrati­on of the sins of the father being visited on the sons,” the papers read.

CB said the consequenc­es of cancelling the contract are “grave” and that the children’s world revolves around Pridwin because they had developed emotional attachment­s with teachers, pupils and coaches.

 ??  ?? By the book: The Pridwin Preparator­y School’s right to cancel a learner’s contract is being challenged in SA’s highest court. Photo: Madelene Cronjé
By the book: The Pridwin Preparator­y School’s right to cancel a learner’s contract is being challenged in SA’s highest court. Photo: Madelene Cronjé

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