Timothy Bajjani was assaulted by a fellow student while both were attending North Gwinnett High School and suffered severe injuries as a result. Acting individually and on behalf of Timothy, Timothy’s parents filed a lawsuit against the Gwinnett County School District, the Gwinnett County Board of Education and the individual members thereof, the superintendent of the Gwinnett County school system, and the principal, assistant principal, and clinic nurse of North Gwinnett High School. The Bajjanis dismissed their claims against the school district, the board of education, and the board members and employees in their official capacities, leaving as defendants the members of the board of education and the principal, the assistant principal, and the clinic nurse in their individual capacities. The trial court granted the defendants’ motion for judgment on the pleadings after finding they were entitled to official immunity.
On appeal, the Court of Appeals reversed the judgment after making three determinations: with regard to the allegation of negligent performance of the statutory duty to create a school safety plan that addressed security issues (OCGA § 20-2-1185 (a), (c)), the court ruled that the absence from the record of a school safety plan precluded the grant of judgment on the pleadings (see
Leake v. Murphy,
1. The Court of Appeals rejected the assertion by the defendant school superintendent and board of education members that official *198 or qualified immunity protected them from the personal liability the plaintiffs sought to impose upon them with regard to the creation of a school safety plan pursuant to OCGA § 20-2-1185. 1 The Georgia Constitution provides:
Except as specifically provided by the General Assembly in a State Tort Claims Act, all officers and employees of the state or its departments and agencies may be subject to suit and may be liable for injuries and damages caused by the negligent performance of, or negligent failure to perform, their ministerial functions and may be liable for injuries and damages if they act with actual malice or with actual intent to cause injury in the performance of their official functions____
1983 Ga. Const., Art. I, Sec. II, Par. IX (d). Under this constitutional provision,
[qjualified immunity “protects individual public agents from personal liability for discretionary actions taken within the scope of their official authority, and done without wilfulness, malice, or corruption.” [Cit.] Under Georgia law, a public officer or employee may be personally liable only for ministerial acts negligently performed or acts performed with malice or intent to injure. [Cit.] The rationale for this immunity is to preserve the public employee’s independence of action without fear of lawsuits and to prevent a review of his or her judgment in hindsight. [Cit.]
Cameron v. Lang,
Relying on its decision in
Leake v. Murphy,
supra,
We apply the same test used by the Court of Appeals in this case and in both
Leake I,
supra,
A ministerial act is commonly one that is simple, absolute, and definite, arising under conditions admitted or proved to exist, and requiring merely the execution of a specific duty. A discretionary act, however, calls for the exercise of personal deliberation and judgment, which in turn entails examining the facts, reaching reasoned conclusions, and acting on them in a way not specifically directed.
Leake I
found a ministerial duty based solely on the presence of the word “shall” in the first sentences of OCGA§ 20-2-1185 (a) and (c). We agree with the Court of Appeals that, as a rule of statutory construction, “ ‘[s]hall’ is generally construed as a word of mandatory import.”
O’Donnell v. Durham,
2. Plaintiffs alleged that OCGA § 20-2-1184
4
imposed upon the school principal, assistant principal, and clinic nurse a duty to report the commission by a student upon school property of statutorily-delineated prohibited acts, and asserted that the failure of the school employees to comply with that duty subjected them to liability for negligence per se. Noting that negligence per se arises when a statute is violated, the person injured by the violation is within the class of persons the statute was intended to protect, and the harm complained of was the harm the statute was intended to guard against
(Hubbard v. Dept. of Transp.,
OCGA§ 20-2-1184 (d) states that “[a]ny person required to make a report pursuant to this Code section who knowingly and willfully
*201
fails to do so shall be guilty of a misdemeanor.” Where the breach of a statutory duty can result in criminal liability, the statute is penal in nature and “ ‘the violation of a penal statute does not automatically give rise to a civil cause of action on the part of one who is [purportedly] injured thereby.’”
Oswald v. American Nat. Can Co.,
3. While acknowledging the holding in
Teston v. Collins,
To the extent the provision of medical care is a ministerial act because the duty is imposed by statute
5
and “because medical care is a fundamental right”
(Cantrell,
supra at 514), the holding in
Cantrell
is not applicable to the case before us because neither OCGA § 20-2-1184 nor § 20-2-1185, the statutes at issue in this case, expressly imposes on public school employees a duty to provide medical aid to students, and the constitutional right to medical care enjoyed by a jail inmate is not shared by a student in a public school. The United States Supreme Court has ruled that “the [U. S.] Constitution imposes upon the State affirmative duties of care and protection [including medical care] with respect to particular individuals . . . when the State by the affirmative exercise of its power so restrains an individual’s liberty that it renders him unable to care for himself....”
DeShaney v. Winnebago County Dept. of Social Svcs.,
In keeping with the Supreme Court’s binding precedent with regard to the interpretation of the Eighth Amendment and the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, and the Eleventh Circuit’s persuasive authority on the subject, we conclude that neither the Eighth Amendment nor the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment can serve as the basis for a ministerial duty on the part of school employees to provide medical care to Timothy. In light of that conclusion and the lack of an express statutory duty imposed on school employees to provide medical care to students, we conclude the Court of Appeals erred in relying on Cantrell to deny judgment on the pleadings to the defendants on the ground that there existed a ministerial duty to provide medical care.
4. In the final two sentences of its opinion, the Court of Appeals alternatively concluded that the plaintiffs’ complaint contained allegations of malice sufficient to draw into question the applicability of official immunity to the discretionary acts of the defendants, noting that plaintiffs’ complaint contained allegations that the defendants acted with wilfulness, corruption, and malice.
6
A public agent’s acts do not have official immunity if they are discretionary acts committed “with actual malice or with intent to cause injury.” 1983 Ga. Const., Art. I, Sec. II, Par. IX (d). “Actual malice,” as that term is used in the constitutional provision, denotes “express malice,” i.e., “a deliberate intention to do wrong,” and does not include “implied malice,” i.e., the reckless disregard for the rights or safety of others.
Merrow v. Hawkins,
Judgment reversed.
Notes
OCGA § 20-2-1185 (a) states:
Every public school shall prepare a school safety plan to help curb the growing incidence of violence in schools, to respond effectively to such incidents, and to provide a safe learning environment for Georgia’s children, teachers, and other school personnel. Such plan shall also address preparedness for natural disasters, hazardous material or radiological accidents, acts of violence, and acts of terrorism. School safety plans of public schools shall be prepared with input from students enrolled in that school, parents or legal guardians of such students, teachers . . ., community leaders, other school employees and school district employees, and local law enforcement, fire service, public safety, and emergency management agencies____
In subsection (c), the statute provides that “[s]chool safety plans prepared by public schools shall address security issues in school safety zones. . . .”
But see
Leake v. Murphy,
OCGA§ 20-2-59 states, “The county school superintendent and county board of education shall make rules to govern the county schools of their county.”
OCGA § 20-2-1184 (a) requires a teacher or other school employee who has reasonable cause to believe that a student has committed on school property a statutorily-proscribed act to immediately report to the school principal or president the name of the student and the act committed. Subsection (b) requires the recipient of such a report who has reasonable cause to believe the report is valid to make an oral report thereof immediately to the school system superintendent and the appropriate police authority and district attorney.
OCGA§ 42-4-4 (a) (2) expressly assigns to a sheriff the duty “[t]o furnish persons confined in the jail with medical aid, heat, and blankets. . . .”
Plaintiffs alleged in their complaint that “this failure [to develop and implement an effective security plan] is both wilful and wanton, malicious and corrupt arising solely from a systemic need to avoid publicity as an unsafe school system...”; “this failure [to seek immediate medical attention for Timothy] is both wilful and wanton, malicious and corrupt arising solely from a systemic need to avoid publicity as an unsafe school system...”; and “this failure [to seek immediate medical attention for Timothy]... is both wilful and wanton, malicious and corrupt arising from a systemic need to avoid publicity as an unsafe school system.”
