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Private
schools appeal to Supreme Court over fees
The Herald (Zimbabwe)
November 28, 2006
http://www1.herald.co.zw/inside.aspx?sectid=11872&cat=1&livedate=11/28/2006
PRIVATE trust schools, which last week
lost a bid to have the Ministry of Education, Sport and Culture
compelled to allow them to increase fees fully in line with inflation,
have lodged an appeal with the Supreme Court and are preparing for
a constitutional case over the legality of fixing fee rises.
The Association of Trust Schools, Ariel
School Trust, Chisipite Junior School Trust and 27 other private
schools filed the application.
The association represents 61 schools
but not all schools have yet had a reply to their applications for
fee rises in line with inflation.
High Court judge Justice Antonia Guvava
last week dismissed the schools’ application, saying they had adopted
a wrong procedure by approaching the court before appealing to the
Minister of Education, Sport and Culture for redress against the
decision by the Secretary for the Ministry as provided by the Education
Act.
In her ruling,
Justice Guvava said the relief sought by the schools required the
court to usurp the powers of the Minister as provided in the Education
Act and the schools had not exhausted all the domestic channels
available to them in terms of the Act.
The schools
have approached the court after they were told they could increase
day-school fees by only 40 percent of the actual percentage rise
in the cost of living and they had to backdate this formula to the
third term of last year.
In their appeal,
filed by Harare law firm Atherstone and Cook, the schools cited
misdirection on the part of Justice Guvava and cited both the Secretary,
Dr Stephen Mahere, and Minister, Cde Aeneas Chigwedere, as respondents.
The schools
want the Supreme Court to set aside the High Court decision, arguing
that the High Court erred in deciding that Parliament had given
the Minister an appellate role in this particular case since they
believe the Secretary acted "outside the law".
The schools
argue that an administrative remedy cannot oust the jurisdiction
of the courts to enforce a law. The High Court, said the appeal,
failed to recognise that the Minister had already taken a clear
stand on the matter.
The dispute
between the parties was a dispute of law, and "thus properly one
to be determined by the courts, particularly as resolution of this
dispute is acknowledged to be urgent", the schools argued.
The Secretary
for Education had refused approval, said the schools, in those cases
where the Act mandated him to give his automatic approval for fee
increases that did not exceed the official increase in the cost
of living.
The schools
also argue that other decisions by the acting Secretary were not
in accordance with the law, particularly as the record showed he
had failed to consider the factors which the Act required him to
consider in those other cases where he may have had a discretion
whether to approve an application.
At the same
time, the chairman of the Association of Trust Schools, Mr Jameson
Timba, has written to all parents at trust schools, explaining its
case and seeking formal support for the legal action being taken
from the elected parents’ body at each school and from the individual
parents themselves.
The association
has told parents that all Zimbabwean parents have a constitutional
right to run and maintain non-Government schools and to send their
children to these schools if they so wish.
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