Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 1161South Africa
Altron TMT (Pty) Ltd v City of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality and Others (23/075060) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1161 (8 September 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
8 September 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Altron TMT (Pty) Ltd v City of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality and Others (23/075060) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1161 (8 September 2023)
Altron TMT (Pty) Ltd v City of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality and Others (23/075060) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1161 (8 September 2023)
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sino date 8 September 2023
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
REPORTABLE: NO
OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: NO
REVISED: NO
DATE: 8 September 2023
Case No. 23/075060
In
the matter between:
ALTRON
TMT (PTY) LTD
Applicant
and
CITY
OF TSHWANE METROPOLITAN MUNICIPALITY
First
Respondent
BRILLIANT
TELECOMMUNICATIONS (PTY) LTD
Second
Respondent
CBX
TECH (PTY) LTD
Third
Respondent
#####
##### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
DE
VOS AJ:
Introduction
1
The Court must decide if a successful tenderer can object to
the disclosure of portions of the Rule 53 record, on confidentiality
grounds, in the context of a tender review.
2
The City awarded a tender to the second respondent for R 585
million. The second respondent’s bidding price was R 74
million.
There is a R 510 million difference at play. The applicant,
as unsuccessful tenderer, has launched a review of the award of the
tender. It is as a matter of process entitled to a Rule 53 record,
but has been denied the full record as the second respondent’s
confidentiality claim.
3
The
case engages section 34 of the Constitution. Without the record the
applicant has to litigate in the dark. The record allows
of a
levelling the inequality of arms between the reviewer and the
decision-maker. It serves the purpose of shining a light on
the
reasons for the decision. Without the record both the litigants
and the Court are disadvantaged in their task to interrogate
the
decision.
[1]
4
The case also engages section 217 (1) of the Constitution.
Section 217(1) of the Constitution requires that awards must be
made
in accordance with a system that is fair, equitable, transparent,
competitive and cost-effective. The Constitution requires
that
tender awards must be done in a transparent manner.
5
The second respondent claims that portions of the record
contains trade secrets. The second respondent does not want its
competitors
to gain access to these trade secrets. It ranks the
applicant as a competitor. There is little to gainsay that they
are competitors. The second respondent’s position is that
it has delineated what is confidential and what is not and
has
already disclosed the non-confidential documents.
6
The affidavits, in the confidentiality application before this
Court, run to over 600 pages. The confidential papers, which the case
turns on, themselves are 7 lever arch files. The bundle is in
excess of 7 000 pages. The case was heard in the urgent Court
on 18
August 2023. Argument required more than one day. The parties
agreed to a holding order that would operate until submissions
could
be concluded on 1 September 2023. On 1 September 2023 this Court
extended the operation of the interim order until the hand
down of
this judgment.
7
The interim order permitted the Court an opportunity to
consider the matter whilst protecting the second respondent’s
confidentiality
claim in the interim. The proceedings were conducted
in camera and the confidential documents provided to the Court only
in hardcopy.
8
The case must be considered in the context of the tender and
the review.
The
tender
9
The tender concerns the operation and maintenance of the
City’s Information and Communication Technology (“ICT”)
corporate network equipment and the expansion of the existing ICT
network. The successful bidder was to provide hardware,
equipment and support services to ensure the reliable functioning and
ensure City’s ICT services had sufficient capacity.
10
The tender reaches into the data system, the telephone system
and the entire ICT system for the City. The tender affects 12 000
data users and 14 000 voice users. These systems run in
approximately 370 buildings and covers the area from Bronkhorstspruit
to Hammanskraal, and from Midrand to the Carousel.
11
The services covered in the tender are integral to the
functioning of the City. Those directly affected by the ICT
network
services include the Office of the Executive Mayor, the
Office of the Speaker, the Office of the City manager, all political
office
bearers, the Chief Operating Officer, the Chief Financial
Officer, the Group Heads, the Divisional Heads, the Directors, the
Deputy
Directors and all personnel reporting to the Deputy Director.
12
Inclusive in this, is the City’s emergency call centres.
The ambulance, hospital, fire brigade and rescue departments all run
on these systems. The tender also covers the call centres that
deal with general municipal services such as domestic bins,
electricity, bus services, sewerage potholes traffic fines, faulty
traffic light, water leaks, meter readings, faulty street lights,
water problems and billing issues. If these systems do not
work, then the public cannot, for example, call a hospital or
the
fire brigade.
13
The systems underpin the acute and every day needs of those
that engage with the City and runs the gamut from the Office of the
Mayor to those starting out their careers within the City.
14
The applicant and second respondent responded to the
invitation to bid. The City awarded the tender to the second
respondent.
The
review
15
The applicant’s focus, is naturally on the R 510
difference between original bid price and the bid price as awarded.
However, the applicant has also raised other questions in these
proceedings. The applicant identifies that one of the mandatory
conditions of tender is that the bidder had to hold two valid
licenses from ICASA (Individual Electronic Communications Service
License and an Individual Electronic Communications Network Service
License). The applicant has subpoenaed ICASA for a list of
license
holders. ICASA’s response to the subpoena shows that there is
no license registered which reflects the second respondent’s
company number. The second respondent is listed as a license holder –
but under a different company registration number.
In other words
there is a license which reflects the second respondent’s name,
but when the registration number is investigated
– it belongs
to a different company.
16
In addition, the City stated in its bid document that it had
invested heavily in the Alcatel-Lucent and Huawei range of products
and equipment. To protect the City’s investment the successful
bidder “must be able to maintain the current Alcatel
Productions on the corporate network”. The tender
documents stated that “any vendor must have the highest
possible
partnership with the Original Equipment Manufacturer of the
proposed equipment”. Practically, the successful bidder
cannot procure products, warranties, support services or software
from Alcatel—Lucent or Huawai (being the Original Equipment
Manufacturer OEMs) without a partnership agreement in place with
these two.
17
The applicant has been provided with a letter from Pinnacle –
who is the sole distributed of Alcatel-Lucent products - confirming
that the second respondent was not an Alcatel-Lucent partner at the
time when pricing for the Tshwane tender was provided.
The
applicant contends that this letter indicates that the second
respondent was not an accredited partner of Alcatel-Lucent at
the
time of the bid, and it failed to satisfy a minimum mandatory
condition of tender and it ought to be haven disqualified from
the
tender evaluation process.
18
After launching the review, the applicant awaited the filing
of the Rule 53 record. The City did not provide the record in time.
The applicant had to launch an urgent application to compel the
production of the Rule 53 record. From that, first urgent
application, it emerged that the delay was caused by the second
respondent’s objection to the disclosure of certain parts
of
the record as they contain confidential information. In response to
the second respondent’s classification of the documents
as
confidential, the parties entered into a confidentiality agreement.
19
The parties complied with the confidentiality required in that
the second respondent identified the documents it regards as
confidential,
the applicant’s legal representatives were given
access to the confidential documents and remain contractually
prohibited
from disclosing these documents to their client. The
applicant’s legal representatives were then given an
opportunity
to challenge the second respondent’s classification
of these documents as confidential. It is this challenge which
serves before this Court.
Merits
of the confidentiality claim
20
The second respondent claims confidentiality over three sets
of documents: its price schedule, the CV’s of its key personnel
and certain annexures to the Service Level Agreement.
Price
Schedule
21
The
second respondent must support its objection to the production of the
documents and provide the grounds for its objection.
[2]
In order to sustain a claim of confidentiality the second respondent
must indicate which documents contain confidential information,
the
nature of such information and the legal basis on which the right to
confidentiality is asserted.
[3]
22
Confidentiality
is determined with reference to the nature of the information
[4]
and a fact-specific claim to confidentiality needs to be
sustained.
[5]
The second
respondent has to show clear evidence of trade secrets.
[6]
23
The Court has not been told how the final prices included in
the second respondent’s Price Schedule is confidential, a trade
secret or even how a competitor can gain a competitive advantage from
gaining access to these documents. The second respondent
has not set
out the basis and grounds for the confidentiality of these documents.
It has presented the Court with conclusions it
has drawn that the
documents are confidential without providing the basis for this
conclusion.
24
The second respondent’s Price Schedule shows the final
price for each item. The Price Schedule does not reveal the pricing
formula, discounts, cost price or profit margins. The prices are
specific to this bid. The advantage to other competitors to have
access to this information has passed. The tender has been awarded,
and no one can alter their bid to match these prices. These
prices
are of relevance only to the review application.
25
The Court concludes that these documents are not confidential.
CVs
of the key personnel
26
The applicant claims that the CVs of the second respondent’s
key personnel are relevant to whether the second respondent satisfied
the minimum mandatory requirements relevant to personnel and whether
the second respondent satisfied the functionality criteria.
A maximum
of 35/100 points could be allocated to the evaluation of key
personnel under the functionality stage of the tender evaluation.
27
The second respondent wishes the CVs of its key personnel to
remain confidential as it fears that the applicant may poach its
personnel.
This does not mean the CVs are confidential. The second
respondent’s case is not that the nature or content of the CVs
are
confidential. In any event, the second respondent has other
avenues to protect against this perceived harm. No facts
have
been pleaded to support the second respondent’s apprehension of
harm in this regard.
28
The Court is however mindful that the CVs contains the
cellphone numbers and home addresses of the personnel. These can be
redacted
to protect the confidentiality of the personnel. The
applicant happily conceded that these can be redacted as it is not
the
personal details of these CVs that they are interested in, but
rather whether their accreditations and qualifications meet the
tender specifications.
29
The
Court notes that this is not the first time that the tender prices
and CVs of personnel were sought to be excluded from a tender
review. In
ABBM
v Transnet
[7]
the Court dismissed the contention that a part of the tender document
such as the tender price and the tenderer’s experience
and
expertise are confidential purely because the successful tenderer
claims so.
30
It would be counterproductive and contrary to the
Constitution to allow a successful bidder to hide behind an
unsubstantiated
claim of confidentiality on issues that are directly
relevant to determining the merits of the review.
31
The Court rejects the notion that the pricing schedule and CVs
of the key personnel enjoy a claim to confidentiality, particularly
as no clear basis has been provided for this claim. The second
respondent’s attempt to categorise these documents, in general
as confidential, is at odds with the more nuanced tests of our courts
that require a basis be provided for the claim of confidentiality.
Service
Level Agreement
32
The second respondent objects to the disclosure of the Service
Level Agreement on the basis that they were concluded after the award
of the tender and is therefore not part of the Rule 53 record.
33
The parties have entered into a confidentiality agreement. The
confidentiality agreement permits a Court to consider the
confidentiality
of specific documents. If the Court releases the
document from the confidentiality agreement – ie it is no
longer covered
by the agreement - then it must be released to the
applicant. The Service Level Agreement forms part of the documents
which a Court
may release from confidentiality. The applicant
therefore has a contractual right, in terms of the confidentiality
agreement to
request the Court to release the Service Level Agreement
from the confidentiality agreement.
34
The second respondent has provided no basis on which it can
claim that the annexures to the Service Level Agreement, or the
agreement
itself is confidential.
35
As with the other documents, the second respondent had to lay
a foundation and provide the Court with a clear basis on which these
documents are confidential. The second respondent has pleaded a
conclusion that the documents are confidential without telling
the
Court what the basis for the confidentiality is. This is
insufficient to sustain a claim of confidentiality.
Urgency
36
The applicant had to justify its urgent approach to this
Court. The applicant relied on its rights to fair
administrative
action, access to courts, the broader public interest
in the lawfulness of tender awards, the absence of any substantial
redress
in due course and that it had treated the matter as one of
urgency from the outset.
37
The applicant submits that if this matter were heard in the
ordinary course, there is a real likelihood that the 36 month
lifespan
of the contract would come to its end prior to Court being
able to scrutinise the application.
38
The
nature of tender reviews are that, often, the contract is served to
completion before the review proceedings are finalised.
The
practical impact is that often these cases, even if successful,
result in no real effective relief for a successful litigant.
Despite
the success of a review, the effluxion of time means that an invalid
administrative act must be permitted to stand.
Consequently,
the scope of granting an effective relief to vindicate the infringed
rights becomes drastically reduced. The Supreme
Court of Appeal has
held that “it may help if the High Court, to the extent
possible, gives priority to these matters.”
[8]
39
In this particular case, it was possible for the High Court to
give priority to this matter. The parties were well prepared, had
delineated the issues and concise and helpful written submissions
were provided. In addition, the parties were amenable to
enter
into a holding order which permitted the Court to return to finalise
the hearing of the matter. The Court’s roll
had largely
been alleviated by the time the matter was heard. The Court was
also able to obtain the necessary support and
approvals from the
Court for the matter to be heard over two days. These factors,
combined, are rare and permitted the Court
to hear the matter.
They rarely all exist simultaneously in a burdened urgent roll. The
Court does not find, in general,
that these types of matters must be
heard on an urgent basis.
40
The
applicant further submits that the room for substantial redress in
due course, if any, is limited. The applicant relies on the
judgments
in
Steenkamp
[9]
and
Pipeline
[10]
which considered together indicate the limited scope for a successful
tendered to obtain monetary relief in the normal course.
The
applicant contends, based on these cases, that an unsuccessful bidder
has no claim in delict for pure economic loss, limited
room to claim
damages, and potentially can only claim compensatory relief in
exceptional circumstances.
41
Substantial redress in the normal course is therefore, at
least, severely limited by the pragmatic nature of tender reviews of
a
short duration contracts and the remedies available to an
unsuccessful bidder to claim their losses.
42
In addition, the Court considers that the case engages section
217 of the Constitution which seeks to ensure transparency in tender
awards. In order to test the legality of the exercise of public
power, thoroughly, is by affording the applicant access to
all
material relevant to the exercise of that power. If not, there is a
risk that withholding information will permit possible
irregularities
to remain uncovered and therefore insulated from scrutiny. This
would limit the effectiveness of the right
to review and be at
variance with the rule of law, the values of accountability and
openness.
43
Aside from the importance of section 217, it weighs with the
Court that there is a compelling public interest at risk in the
matter.
The services which are to be provide by the second respondent
are integral to the functioning of the City. This may be true
for most litigation concerning tender reviews. What is
compelling about the particular facts of this case is that it is the
second respondent’s version that it cannot conduct business
anymore. The reason for this is that the second respondent
relies on Alcatel-Lucent, an international company, to comply with
the tender. Alcatel-Lucent has however taken the view that it
will no
longer provide any services to the second respondent until this
review is finalised. The second respondent therefore
has to
service a tender without the necessary support to give effect to the
tender. The Court must consider the common cause
impact of a
delay on the litigation on the practical implementation of the
tender.
44
The second respondent opposes the urgency on the basis that
the applicant has taken a casual stroll to urgent court and has not
treated the matter with the requisite urgency. The facts do not
support this opposition. The chronology, which will unnecessarily
burden these reasons, shows that the applicant had to repeatedly
request and demand that the second respondent identify which
documents are confidential so that it can consider its position. The
founding affidavit is filled with letters, one after the other,
requesting the second respondent to delineate which documents are
confidential and which are not. The second respondent delayed
identifying which documents are confidential. Then, the second
respondent started releasing the documents in dribs and drabs.
The delay is caused by the second respondent not responding with any
level of urgency to the applicant’s requests.
45
Whilst the confidentiality agreement was signed in June, it
was only in July 2023 that the second respondent marked the documents
as confidential. It was only then the applicant could know what
documents had been carved out so that it could launch these
proceedings.
The parties then sought to resolve the issue through
communications and it was only on 27 July 2023 that it was apparent
that that
engagement would not yield a fruitful result. The
application was then launched within a couple of days. The
second respondent was provided a week to respond. The Court is
not persuaded that the applicant has delayed the institution
of these
proceedings.
46
The application raises issues of public importance, the
particular facts indicates a concern regarding the implementation of
the
tender, the applicant has not delayed the institution of these
proceedings and there is limited recourse for the applicant in the
ordinary course. It weighs with the court that the longer it
takes for the matter to be properly argued, the more advanced
the
implementation of the tender becomes and the harder it will be for
the review court to be able to consider an effective remedy
in the
event the review is upheld.
47
For all these reasons, the applicants have satisfied the test
for an urgent audience.
Costs
48
The applicant has been successful in its application. On this
basis alone it is entitled to its costs. The applicant’s
litigation was motivated by its rights to access to court and just
administrative action. As it was litigating to vindicate
constitutional rights it is entitled to its costs on this basis also.
49
The applicant has asked for a punitive costs order. The
factors that are relevant in this regard are that the applicant had
to institute
these proceedings before the second respondent released
portions of the bid that it had previously marked as confidential.
These portions were only released on 16 August 2023. In
addition, significant portions of the second respondent’s bid
that were not confidential were marked as confidential on 4 July
2023. These non-confidential portions of the bid were only released
from the confidentiality agreement on 16 August 2023 after the
applicant instituted this application, and two days before the
hearing on 18 August 2023. These documents should never have been
marked confidential. The applicant was justified in launching
these
proceedings.
50
The applicant further contends that:
50.1
The second respondent claimed confidentiality over documents that did
not contain any information relating to the second respondent, for
example, the Price Schedule that was not completed by the second
respondent.
50.2
The second respondent refused to provide the applicant’s
counsel,
attorney and expert with copies of the documents marked as
confidential in terms of a confidentiality agreement. Copies of the
documents marked as confidential were only provided to the
applicant’s legal team and expert on 18 August 2023. This was
in breach of the confidentiality agreement and caused significant
delays and prejudice to the applicant in the prosecution of the
review.
51
The Court weighs that the second respondent delayed to mark
the documents, missed its own imposed deadlines and then marked
documents
confidential only to release them after these proceedings
were launched. It further weighs with the Court that the second
respondent
claimed confidentiality over documents where it failed to
provide a factual basis for this claim. The Court expresses its
displeasure
with the second respondent’s conduct in this
application by awarding costs on a punitive scale.
Order
52
The following order is made:
52.1
The forms and service provided for in the Uniform Rules of Court are
dispensed with and the application is heard on an urgent basis in
terms of Uniform Rule 6(12)(a).
52.2
The second respondent’s claims of confidentiality over the
documents
that form the subject of the confidentiality agreement is
set aside, specifically
52.2.1
The portions of the second respondent’s bid marked
confidential.
52.2.2
The price schedule attached to the letter of award.
52.2.3
The Service Level Agreement concluded between the first and the
second respondents. The second respondent is directed to provide the
annexures to this agreement.
52.2.4
The documents withheld from the BEC Report consisting of CV’s
of the second respondent’s key personnel.
52.3
The Court directs the first respondent to deliver the documents that
have been released from the confidentiality agreement as part of the
record and to upload the documents to caselines and made available
to
the applicant.
52.4
The second respondent is to pay the costs of this application on an
attorney
and client scale.
52.5
The numbers, addresses and other private information of the key
personnel
must be redacted in the Court file which appears on
caselines.
I
DE VOS
Acting
Judge of the High Court
This
judgment was prepared by Irene de Vos. It is handed down
electronically by circulation to the parties or their legal
representatives
by email, by uploading it to the electronic file of
this matter on Caselines, and by publication of the judgment to the
South African
Legal Information Institute. The date for hand-down is
deemed to be 15 August 2023.
HEARD
ON:
18
August 2023 and 1 September 2023
DECIDED
ON:
8
September 2023
For
the Applicant:
T
Prinsloo
Instructed
by Lowndes Dlamini Inc
For
the First Respondent:
Z
Matebese SC
Instructed
by Mahumani Incorporated
For
the Second Respondent:
TJ
Machaba SC
Instructed
by Kekana Hlatshwayo Radebe Attorneys
For
the Third Respondent:
Kruger
Attorneys.
[1]
Helen Suzman Foundation v Judicial Service Commission
2018 (4) SA 1
(CC) paras
16
- 19
[2]
C
rown
Cork & Seal Inc and Another v Rheem South Africa (Pty) Ltd and
Others
1980 (3) SA 1093
(W), at 1101F
[3]
Tulip Diamonds FZE v Minister of Justice and Constitutional
Development and others 2012 (4) SA All SA 401 SCA para 15
[4]
Helen Suzman Foundation v Judicial Service Commission
2018 (4) SA 1
(CC) (“Helen Suzman Foundation”) para 63
[5]
Helen Suzman Foundation para 76
[6]
Afrisun Mpumalanga (Pty) Ltd v Kunene NO and Others
1999 (2) SA 599
(T) at 628 F – J
[7]
ABBM
Printing & Publishing (Pty) Ltd v Transnet Ltd
1998
(2) SA 109
(W) at 24.
[8]
Millennium Waste Management (Pty) Ltd. v Chairperson of the Tender
Board: Limpopo Province and Others (31/2007)
[2007] ZASCA 165
;
[2007] SCA 165 (RSA);
[2008] 2 All SA 145
;
2008 (2) SA 481
;
2008 (5)
BCLR 508
;
2008 (2) SA 481
(SCA) (29 November 2007)
[9]
Steenkamp
N.O. v Provincial Tender Board of the Eastern Cape
[2005]
ZASCA 120
at
para 33
[10]
Esorfranki Pipelines (Pty) Ltd v Mopani District Municipality (CCT
222/21)
[2022] ZACC 41
;
2023 (2) BCLR 149
(CC);
2023 (2) SA 31
(CC)
(“Pipeline”)
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