Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 552South Africa
Keegans Auto Spares and Accessories CC t/a Jaymees Midas v National Treasury of South Africa and Others (38145/2022) [2024] ZAGPPHC 552 (18 June 2024)
Headnotes
Summary: application for leave to appeal a decision refusing review of a tender – unsuccessful tenderer’s bid non-compliant – decision objectively rational – no reasonable prospects of success – no other compelling reasons – leave to appeal refused.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Keegans Auto Spares and Accessories CC t/a Jaymees Midas v National Treasury of South Africa and Others (38145/2022) [2024] ZAGPPHC 552 (18 June 2024)
Keegans Auto Spares and Accessories CC t/a Jaymees Midas v National Treasury of South Africa and Others (38145/2022) [2024] ZAGPPHC 552 (18 June 2024)
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sino date 18 June 2024
HIGH
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
CASE
NO: 38145/2022
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO.
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED.
DATE:
18
JUNE 2024
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
KEEGANS
AUTO SPARES AND ACCESSORIES CC
t/a
JAYMEES MIDAS
Applicant
and
NATIONAL
TREASURY OF SOUTH AFRICA
First
Respondent
CHIEF
DIRECTOR: TRANSVERSAL
CONTRACTING
OFFICE, NATIONAL TREASURY
Second
Respondent
THE
ACTING DIRECTOR GENERAL,
NATIONAL
TREASURY
Third
Respondent
THE
MINISTER OF FINANCE
Fourth
Respondent
THE
MINISTER OF POLICE
Fifth Respondent
THE
NATIONAL COMMISSIONER OF POLICE
Sixth
Respondent
ALLPARTS
(PTY) LTD
Seventh Respondent
KAIZEN
MSD (PTY) LTD
Eighth
Respondent
AHK
MOTOR PARTS (PTY) LTD
Ninth
Respondent
DAR
AUTOMOTIVE (PTY) LTD
Tenth Respondent
BOUTIQUE
LEASING COMPANY (PTY) LTD
Eleventh Respondent
Summary:
application for leave to appeal a decision refusing review of a
tender – unsuccessful tenderer’s bid non-compliant –
decision objectively rational – no reasonable prospects of
success – no other compelling reasons – leave to appeal
refused
.
ORDER
The
application is refused with costs, including costs of two counsel,
where employed.
JUDGMENT
(In
the application for leave to appeal)
This
matter has been heard in open court and is otherwise disposed of in
terms of the Directives of the Judge President of this
Division. The
judgment and order are accordingly published and distributed
electronically with the effective date of judgment
being 18 June
2024.
DAVIS,
J
Introduction
[1]
The applicant
was the unsuccessful bidder in a tender to supply automotive parts
and tools to the South African Police Service.
The court
refused an application to have the decision not to award the
applicant a tender reviewed and set aside. The applicant
now
seeks leave to appeal that refusal.
The
application for leave
[2]
The applicant
raised numerous grounds in its application for leave to appeal why it
contended that this court had erred. Twelve
of the thirteen
grounds centered around the issue of warehousing. In the bid
documents the applicant had been required to
disclose sufficient
warehousing capacity to satisfy the “footprint”
requirement of the tender.
[3]
I
have perused the record yet again and had due regard to the argument
presented on behalf of the applicant but none of the arguments
convinced me that the applicant in fact had submitted a true, correct
and compliant bid. All the surrounding arguments on
behalf of
the applicant, stumble at this hurdle. This is principally the
hurdle which the applicant needed to overcome to
indicate reasonable
prospects of success on appeal.
[1]
[4]
In
addition, it appears that the applicant’s contention that the
National Treasury needed guidance as to how it should conduct
its due
diligence or “
other
verifications in Transversal Contracts
”
has been made without the necessary factual foundations. This
contention was advanced as a “compelling reason”
[2]
why leave to appeal should be granted.
[5]
I shall deal
with these two aspects hereunder when considering the respondents’
opposition to the application for leave to
appeal.
The
first to fourth respondents’ arguments
[6]
These
respondents firstly argued that the hearing of an appeal would
have no practical effect and that the application for
leave to appeal
should be refused on this ground alone.
[3]
[7]
The reason for
this contention is that the extended date of the bid validity period
was 8 April 2022. The applicant did not
claim that the whole
tender be set aside and during argument did not persist with the
relief that the award of the tender to two
other successful
tenderers, being the seventh and eighth respondents, be set aside.
[8]
The argument
was that if leave is granted, and the decision is remitted for
reconsideration of the applicant’s bid, both the
bid validity
and the tender period would have expired.
[9]
I am not
entirely convinced that the bid itself would have lapsed as a
remittal would entail the reconsideration of a validly submitted
bid. What is however a relevant factor is the expiration of the
tender itself. It has been in operation since 7 March
2022 and
the tender period is 36 months. It therefore expires in about 8
months, having been in operation for more than two
years. It
is doubtful whether an appeal, a remittal and reconsideration would
be able to take place prior to the expiry
of the tender. Even
if the applicant were to be successful in both these aspects, the
practical effect would be very little.
[10]
The additional
argument of these respondents was that, while the parties were all
ad
idem
that
a successful bidder need not have indicated a physical presence
inside the province for which it was bidding in order to satisfy
the
footprint requirement, it at least had to indicate a “physical
and geographical space” (warehouse) from which it
intended to
supply parts from.
[11]
Based
on this, these respondents argued that there was no material
difference whether Treasury referred to its verification process
as a
“due diligence” process in terms of clause 8.1 of the SCC
or a verification process in terms of clause 5.3.5 (c)
thereof.
The fact remains that Treasury had been entitled to verify the
truthfulness of the information submitted by a bidder
regarding
compliance with bid requirements. Not only is this entitlement
(or obligation) provided for in the SCC, but it
is sourced in the
PFMA.
[4]
[12]
This was
exactly the finding in paragraph [49] of the judgment. These
respondents contend that the finding was correct.
I fail to
find reasonable prospects that a court of appeal would find that, in
circumstances where the terms of the SCC contemplated
compliance with
the legislative prescripts of the PFMA, a party should be able to
avoid scrutiny because one rather than the other
of a set of terms
were referred to when a verification exercise was conducted.
Surely the substantive issue, namely verification,
should prevail
over from.
[13]
The substance
of the facts were that, even while ownership per se was not a
requirement in respect of a warehouse, the applicant
factually did
not have any warehouses of its own, did not have any leased
warehouses nor did it have an existing arrangement with
the third
party from which it could render the services. At best it might
have had an undisclosed agreement that Motus would
in fact render the
service. It is this aspect which Treasury, upon conducting a
site visit at the indicated warehouse, found
to constitute
non-compliance with the tender requirements.
[14]
The
applicant’s contentions that Treasury was expected to have
conducted a further site visit at the “Florida warehouse”
simply because it had indicated an intention to do so, takes the
matter no further. It in fact indicated that the applicant
had
presented incorrect (or false) information in its bid by indicating a
different warehouse, but moreover, even if such an inspection
were to
have taken place, it would have revealed that the Florida warehouse
did not belong to the applicant and was not designed
nor capacitated
to render the services bid for.
[15]
On all counts
there does not appear to be a reasonable prospect that a court of
appeal would find that the applicant should not
have been found
ineligible to be awarded a tender.
The
eighth respondent’s argument
[16]
This
respondent also considered and meticulously evaluated the twelve
grounds relied on by the applicant in its application for
leave to
appeal. Without diminishing the evaluative efforts, I find it
unnecessary for purposes of this judgment to repeat
that process,
primarily for the reason that the basic premise namely that Motus
(and not the applicant) was the actual party contemplated
to render
the services and that this fact had not been disclosed in the
applicant’s bid documents, must prevail.
[17]
Motus had not
been listed as the applicant’s exclusive supplier in table
TCBD.1 of the bid documents, where the applicant
had been required to
do so and neither was it declared as an intermediary between the
applicant and the manufacturers of the respective
parts and tools.
All this was only discovered during Treasury’s inspection at
the warehouse indicated by the applicant,
where Motus’ actual
role, was explained by the applicant itself. The explanation
amounted to a virtual “wholesale
abdication” of the
tender obligations, so this respondent contended. This is
in fact what this court has also
found and, on the evidence
presented, there is no indication that this factual finding was
incorrect.
[18]
In addition to
what has been argued by the first four respondents regarding the lack
of a practical effect, the eighth respondent
pointed out that the
initial tender evaluation and consideration period was approximately
6 – 7 months. If this period
is factored into the time
periods referred to in paragraph [8] above, then it is clear that the
probabilities become overwhelming
that, even if the applicant were to
be granted leave to appeal and even if it were to succeed on appeal
in respect of its claim
for a remittal, then the validity period of
the tender would have expired by the time any reconsideration could
be finalised.
Having regard to the provisions of section
16(2)(a)(i), leave to appeal should be refused on this ground alone.
[19]
In
addition, in the circumstances where the applicant has not sought a
review and setting aside of the whole tender process and
has during
the course of litigation elected not to proceed with the review of
the awards to the seventh and eighth respondents,
the matter became
one limited to the applicant only. There was no “discrete
legal issue of public importance”
which could either satisfy
section 17(1)(a)(ii) or which would enjoin a court to exercise its
discretion to grant leave to appeal
despite the issue in all
probability becoming moot.
[5]
Summary
of conclusions
[20]
On the issue
of whether the applicant’s bid had been compliant, I find that
there are no reasonable prospects of success on
appeal. I also
find that there are insufficient compelling reasons to otherwise
grant leave to appeal. In addition,
I find that there is a real
prospect that, even if successful on appeal, an order of remittal
would have little or no practical
effect and that leave to appeal
should also be refused on this ground. I find no cogent reason
why costs should not follow
the event.
Order
[21]
In the
premises the following order is made:
The
application for leave to appeal is refused with costs, including the
costs of two counsel, where employed.
N DAVIS
Judge of the High Court
Gauteng Division,
Pretoria
Date
of Hearing:
02 April 2024
Judgment
delivered:
18 June 2024
APPEARANCES:
For the Applicant:
Adv H P Wessels
Attorney for the
Applicant:
Couzyn, Hertzog &
Horak Inc.,
Pretoria
For the 1
st
to 4
th
Respondents:
Adv M P D Chabedi
SC together
with Adv N January
Attorney for the
1
st
to 4
th
Respondents:
State Attorney,
Pretoria
For the 7
th
Respondent:
Adv Y Alli together
with
Adv S Mohammed
Attorney
for the 7
th
Respondent:
Hajibhey-bhyat,
Mayet & Stein Inc,
Johannesburg
For the 8
th
Respondent:
Adv M
Cajee together with Adv M K Peacock
Attorney for the
8
th
Respondent:
Taahir Moola
Attorney, Norwood
For the 11
th
Respondent:
Mr M Bouwer
(watching brief)
Attorney for the
11
th
Respondent:
Bouwer Olivier Inc,
Randburg
c/o Pierre Krynauw
Attorney,
Pretoria
[1]
Section 17(1)(a)(i) of the Superior Courts Act, 10 of 2013 (the
Act).
[2]
Section 17(1)(a)(ii) of the Act.
[3]
See Section 16(2)(a)(i) of the Act.
[4]
The Public Finance Management Act,
[5]
Qoboshiyane
NO v Avusa Publishing Eastern Cape (Pty) Ltd
2013 (3) SA 315
(SCA) and
Legal
Aid South Africa v Magidiwana
2015 (2) SA 568
(SCA).
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