Parents of Children Abused at School
Parents of Children Abused at School Have a Claim for a Refund of Fees?”A woman has recently spoken publicly about her children abused at school. The tuition fee’s she spent sending her son to an elite private school were refunded. This school was located in Queensland and was attended for five years from 1989.
Sexual Assault
Her son was sexually abused at the school and has since attempted suicide. In fact, she initially sent letters to the school in 2010 which were rejected, however her claim was recently reviewed. The school has now decided to reimburse her for the cost of all tuition fees. Additionally this was adjusted for inflation, in the amount of $30,988.
The woman stated that she was ‘not asking for ‘compensation’. Also, ‘nor was she asking for any financial settlement to address the pain and suffering my family have endured’. The money paid to her was ‘a refund for a faulty product or service, not a dollar more or less’.
The faulty service in question was the quality of pastoral care provided by the school to her son. The woman’s criticisms of the school included its ‘failure to provide the product or service you advertised’ – being the provision of pastoral care to its students. A viewpoint which looks at the issue as a contractual obligations between a purchaser and the provider of a service.
This raises the question of whether schools can be liable for misleading and deceptive conduct, which is prohibited under the Australian Consumer Law (ACL), if services aren’t delivered as advertised.
Institutional Abuse
Private Schools provide assurances through their website. Additionally they do this in person and/or in advertising materials that they have certain qualities as an education provider. They do this in order for parents to choose their school over others. So if a school claims in an advertisement that it ensures the safety and well being of all students and fails to take necessary, reasonable steps to protect its students from harm, it is reasonable to argue that it can be held liable under the ACL.
Unfortunately, as the refund in this circumstance was a private decision. There is no judicial guidance as to what constitutes a “faulty education”.
While the situation reported was resolved privately, without evidence that the refund was made on legal grounds, it does raise several significant issues regarding the provision of education and pastoral care services by schools.
We hope that the woman’s decision to speak publicly about the agreement could lead to an increase in parents pursuing a similar path with other institutions.
Accordingly, Koffels Solicitors & Barristers are currently investigating this issue with experts in the field and will provide further information in due course.
1 replies to Parents of Children Abused at School
Although the school abuse was not sexual, the school did not comply with the school policies of a fair hearing and prompt investigation of bullying which my son with ASD suffered at the school. He was provoked and ended up making extreme threats to the bullies, but he was the only one who was segregated, secluded, excluded and disallowed in school except for HSC related subjects. The school was dishonest, including faking the attendance sheets, and told us to keep everything confidential. We sued but received a meager compensation due to the bad pleadings of our exsolicitor.
The elite private school, Sydney Grammar should be investigated and punished retroactively.