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Govt
wins fees battle
Tsungirirai Shoriwa,
The Herald (Zimbabwe)
November 24, 2006
http://www.herald.co.zw/inside.aspx?sectid=11740&cat=1&livedate=11/24/2006
THE High Court has dismissed an urgent
chamber application by the Association of Trust Schools seeking
an order compelling the Secretary for Education, Sport and Culture,
Dr Stephen Mahere, to allow them to increase school fees.
Justice Antonia Guvava, who heard the
matter, said the ATS, Arundel School Trust, Chisipite Junior School
Trust and 27 other applicants did not exhaust all the channels open
to them before approaching the court.
She said they, therefore, had used
a wrong procedure in approaching the court for redress.
In the application, Dr Mahere and the
Minister of Education, Sport and Culture, Cde Aeneas Chigwedere,
were cited as respondents.
Justice Guvava said the Education
Act, which provides the Secretary for Education with powers
to approve increases in school fees, was very clear that an aggrieved
party should appeal to the minister.
She said the relief sought by the ATS
and its fellow applicants required the court to usurp the powers
of the minister.
"Where an Act of Parliament provides
domestic remedies and they have not been exhausted, the court has
discretion of whether or not to deal with the matter or decline
jurisdiction.
"The relief sought by the applicants
requires that this court usurp the functions of the respondents
and itself approve increases in fees. It seems to me that this is
not the proper course to take, especially where an Act of Parliament
sets out the procedure to be followed in the event that a party
is not satisfied with a decision," Justice Guvava said.
She said in her view, the applicants
had failed to make out "a case in terms of which I am inclined to
exercise my discretion in their favour".
The judge also said she was not persuaded
by the arguments by the schools’ lawyer Advocate Edith Mushore that
replies from the Acting Secretary for Education were wrong at law
and should be dealt with in terms of Section 22 of the Act.
Justice Guvava said the said section
deals with a "situation where the Secretary has given his approval
based on false information".
She said the Secretary had declined
to grant an approval, hence Section 22 would not be applicable.
"In my view, therefore, where the Secretary
has responded to an application made in terms of subsection 2 of
Section 21 and declined to approve the increase applied for, then
the remedy of the aggrieved party lies with an appeal to the Minister
in terms of Section 22," Justice Guvava said.
The private schools dragged the Government
to court in September this year after it declined to approve their
application to increase school fees for the third term.
ATS chairman Mr Jameson Timba, in his
affidavit, said there was no provision in the Education Act where
it was stipulated that applications for increasing school fees should
be made for the coming term.
The Government opposed the application,
saying the schools had adopted a wrong procedure and that the matter
was not urgent.
The Government, however, later conceded
that the matter required immediate resolution, prompting Justice
Guvava to deal with the case on an urgent basis.
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