- The Western Cape High Court declared Oakdale High’s disciplinary actions against two learners unlawful and unconstitutional.
- The school’s rehearing and sanctions violated legal principles, including the principles of double jeopardy and procedural fairness.
- The judgment affirms restorative discipline and learner dignity, rejecting punitive measures that exceed lawful authority.
The Western Cape High Court has declared the disciplinary proceedings and sanctions imposed by Oakdale Agricultural High School against two Grade 10 learners invalid and unlawful.
The learners, L and M, were expelled from the hostel and stripped of bursaries and leadership opportunities after being found guilty of vaping, a contravention of the school’s Code of Conduct.
The court found that the school’s governing body had acted beyond its powers by expelling the student without referring the matter to the Head of Department, as required by law. This omission denied the learners their statutory right to appeal and rendered the disciplinary process procedurally unfair and constitutionally defective.
Double jeopardy and unlawful re-prosecution
After implementing the hostel expulsion in August 2024, the school reconvened a second disciplinary hearing in October 2024, on the same vaping incident. The court ruled this rehearing impermissible, citing the doctrine of functus officio and the constitutional prohibition against double jeopardy.
The second round of sanctions included permanent exclusion from leadership roles, withdrawal of bursaries, and social isolation, which the court deemed disproportionate and humiliating.
Judge G da Silva Salie emphasised that discipline must reform, not break down learners. “Once a child’s spirit is broken by disproportionate punishment, the prospects of reform and growth are diminished, if not extinguished,” the judgment reads.
Vaping: serious misconduct, not a criminal offence
While acknowledging the health risks and regulatory concerns surrounding vaping, the court drew a clear line between serious misconduct and criminality. It criticised the school’s conflation of vaping with criminal behaviour, noting that such mischaracterisation distorted the proportionality of the sanctions imposed.
The judgment referenced scientific and legislative developments, including the Tobacco Products and Electronic Delivery Systems Control Bill, which seeks to regulate e-cigarettes under South African law. However, it cautioned against punitive measures that exceed the bounds of legality and educational purpose.
The court declined to remit the matter for fresh disciplinary proceedings, citing the cumulative harm already suffered by the learners. It also dismissed the school’s conditional counterapplication and ordered the first to third respondents to pay costs on scale C.
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