Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 375South Africa
Colvic Marketing & Engineering (Pty) Ltd v Minister of Public Works and Infrastructure and Others (21819/2020) [2022] ZAGPPHC 375 (9 June 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
9 June 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Colvic Marketing & Engineering (Pty) Ltd v Minister of Public Works and Infrastructure and Others (21819/2020) [2022] ZAGPPHC 375 (9 June 2022)
Colvic Marketing & Engineering (Pty) Ltd v Minister of Public Works and Infrastructure and Others (21819/2020) [2022] ZAGPPHC 375 (9 June 2022)
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sino date 9 June 2022
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
Case Number:
21819/2020
REPORTABLE: NO
OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: NO
REVISED.
09.06.2022
In the matter between:
COLVIC
MARKETING & ENGINEERING (PTY) LTD
Applicant
and
MINISTER
OF PUBLIC WORKS AND INFRASTRUCTURE
First Respondent
BSE
DISTRIBUTORS WESTERN CAPE CC
Second Respondent
ECM
TECHNOLOGIES (PTY)
LTD
Third Respondent
BLUE
APPLE TRADING
CC
Fourth Respondent
MATAKANYE
CONSTRUCTION CC
Fifth Respondent
BSE
DISTRIBUTIONS CC (Reg no. 1988/032140/23)
Sixth Respondent
JUDGMENT
AC
BASSON, J
Introduction
[1]
This is an application for the review of a decision taken by the
Department of Public
Works (“
the
Department”
)
to award the tender for the supply of old generation type Bailey
bridge components, materials and equipment for the construction
of
bridges to the sixth respondent (BSE Distributions CC - “
BSE”
).
The application for review is brought in terms of the Promotion of
Administrative Justice Act
[1]
(“
PAJA”
).
[2]
The applicant (Colvic
Marketing & Engineering (Pty) Ltd) seeks an order setting aside
the decision of the Department and for
an order substituting the
decision with one awarding the tender to it. The applicant mainly
seeks to review the tender on the basis
that it was awarded to BSE on
the strength of misrepresentations that BSE made in its bid as well
as for serious failure on the
part of the Department to properly
evaluate its bid. This application is opposed by the Department and
BSC only.
[3]
The grounds of review
are:
3.1 The
Department unlawfully and irrationally rejected the applicant’s
bid solely because it was not satisfied
with the formal appearance of
certified copies of artisanal trade qualifications that were
submitted as part of the applicant’s
bid. These copies were
rejected because they bore a stamp from a previous certification,
even though there was no basis in law
or in fact for the Department
to reject these certified copies.
3.2 The
Department failed to reject BSE’s bid even though it clearly
failed to meet the functionality criteria
of the tender. In
particular, BSE did not have the necessary manufacturing capacity or
the necessary accreditation to meet the
functionality criteria.
3.3
These decisions by the Department collectively were unfair and
unlawful in that they did not reflect a fair,
equitable, transparent,
competitive or cost-effective procurement process as contemplated in
section 217 of the Constitution of
the Republic of South Africa,
1996.
[4]
The applicant submitted
that its bid ought to have been accepted as the only responsive bid
and that the tender ought to have been
awarded to it. Consequently,
the applicant submitted that it is entitled to an order substituting
the decision of the Department
with a decision awarding the tender to
it.
The invitation to bid
[5]
On 19 July 2019, the
Department published an invitation to bid under the tender reference
number H19/001GS for the appointment of
a service provider to supply
old generation type Bailey bridge components, materials and equipment
for the construction of bridges
on a three-year term contract (“
the
tender”
). The
tender is to terminate by effluxion of time at the end of September
2022.
[6]
A Bailey bridge is
described by the applicant as a type of portable prefabricated truss
bridge. It was originally developed by the
British military for use
during the second world war. Because it requires no special tools or
heavy equipment to assemble and because
the elements of the bridge
are small and light enough to be carried in trucks and lifted into
place without the use of a crane,
they continue to be used in civil
engineering to provide temporary crossings for pedestrian and vehicle
traffic, particularly where
permanent bridges have been destroyed by
floods or other incidents. Bailey bridges may also be used to provide
permanent solutions
to areas where it is not feasible to bring in
heavy machinery to construct any other kind of bridge.
[7]
The purpose of the bid
in the present matter is to improve accessibility in rural areas to
the communities living there.
[8]
The tender states that
the refurbished Bailey bridge components of the Department of Defense
have been depleted and that new components
now had to be procured.
The purpose of the tender is set out as follows:
“
The
Department of Public Works requires the appointment of an experienced
service provider who has the relevant experience in providing
bridge
components, supplying construction materials and equipment for
construction of bailey bridges.”
[9]
The tender involves the
following:
9.1 The
fabrication of the components and the delivery of those components to
the bridge construction sites across
South Africa;
9.2 The
supply and delivery of various other construction materials as stated
in the bill of materials. Bulk construction
materials were to be
sourced within the local vicinity of construction sites to empower
local suppliers;
9.3 The
supply and delivery of tools and equipment as stated in the bill of
materials;
9.4
Bidders were required to comply with local production and content.
[10]
The functionality
criteria that the bidders were required to meet in terms of the
tender, included the following:
10.1 Company
experience in marketing steel bridges, which was given a weighting
factor of 30% (“
the experience criterion”
). Here
the bid document requires that the company must “
provide
indicating list and type of projects completed (completed bridges
projects similar to the scope off this tender only will
be
considered)”
.
10.2 The
manufacturing workshop, its location and its capacity to handle the
amount of workload in maximum steel tonnage that
could be handled per
month, which was given a weighting factor of 30% (“
the
manufacturing criterion”
);
10.3 A minimum of
two qualified artisans to be used in the fabrication of components
for Bailey bridges with a minimum of
two years each post trade
certification experience, which was given a weighting factor of 20%
(“
the artisan criterion”
); and
10.4 The
accreditation and certification of the company and the workshop,
which was given a weighting factor of 20% (“
the
accreditation criterion”
).
[11]
The applicant and BSE
responded to this tender. The Department awarded the applicant the
full score under the
manufacturing
criterion
and the
accreditation
criterion
but
awarded it zero points under the
artisan
criterion
and the
experience
criterion
. It is
the latter two decisions to award zero points to BSE and to select
BSE instead of the applicant as the successful bidder,
that
constitute the premise of this review application.
[12]
BSE was awarded the
tender by the Department in September 2019. BSE immediately commenced
with manufacturing the bridge components
for the Department. By the
time the answering affidavit was prepared in May 2021, BSE had
already manufactured and supplied 14
bridges to the Department under
the tender, within the required time frames.
The sixth respondent
(“
BSE”
)
[13]
BSE opposes this
application on the following grounds:
13.1
The applicant has
unreasonably delayed in launching this application and therefore
condonation should be refused;
13.2 The first
respondent’s award of the tender to BSE is not susceptible to
review;
13.3 BSE’s
bid complied with the terms of the tender;
13.4 To the extent
that the award of the tender is found to have been unlawful, it would
not be just and equitable to substitute
the decision of the first
respondent and to set aside the contract due to the significant
period that has elapsed since the award
of the contract and in light
of the work that has already been done by BSE under the tender; and
13.5
The relief sought by
the applicant may be rendered moot by the time the application is
heard and determined.
[14]
BSE submitted that,
with its experience in manufacturing and supplying Bailey bridges,
its bid for the tender satisfied all the
competencies for the works
required and submitted that the tender was lawfully awarded to it.
BSE referred to the fact that it
has been supplying, manufacturing
and refurbishing Bailey bridge components for the Department since
2009 and that it has since
supplied and refurbished Bailey bridge
components
for
the
government
for
over
11
years. BSE further
elaborated that, during this period, it has supplied components for
approximately 20 bridges and submitted that
it has a wealth of
knowledge of, and
experience
with,
Bailey
bridges,
supplying
both
the
public and private
sectors.
The applicant’s
delay in launching the review
The delay
[15]
Section 7(1) of PAJA
provides that any proceedings for judicial review in terms of section
6(1) must be instituted without unreasonable
delay and not later than
180 days after the date on which the person concerned was informed of
the administrative action, became
aware of the action and the reasons
for it, or might reasonably have been expected to have become aware
of the action and the reasons.
[16]
In terms of section 9
of PAJA the period of 180 days may be extended for a fixed period by
agreement between the parties or, failing
such agreement, by a court
on application by the party concerned. Such an application may be
granted where the interests of justice
so require.
[17]
On its own version, the
applicant became aware that it was an unsuccessful tenderer on
27
September 2019
. The
applicant was required in terms of section 7 of PAJA, to launch the
main application within a period of 180 days from 27 September
2020.
This 180-day period lapsed on 25 March 2020.
[18]
The applicant claims
that it only became aware of the reasons for its unsuccessful bid on
17 October 2019
.
Calculated from this date, the 180-day period lapsed (at the latest)
on 14 April 2020.
[19]
The main application
was only launched on
7
May 2020
. This is
43 days after the period prescribed by section 7 of PAJA had lapsed,
if reckoned from 27 September 2019, and 23 days after
the later
period, if claims from 17 October 2019.
[20]
The review application
is out of time on both constructions. The applicant also did not
launch a condonation application simultaneously
with the review
application. It was only filed much later. And, although the initial
delay in launching the review application
is not that excessive, this
delay was significantly worsened by a further unreasonable delay in
filing the replying affidavit,
[21]
In November 2020, BSE
notified the applicant that its review application was launched
outside of the 180-day period and that it
ought to apply for an
extension of time in terms of section 9 of PAJA. At that stage the
applicant ought to have launched the condonation
application but only
did so on 8 April 2021. Taking into account the fact that the tender
was awarded as far back as 27 September
2019, a period of one and a
half years of a three year contract had, by that time, already
lapsed.
[22]
Despite the fact that
the reasons for the rejection of the bid were known as far back as 17
October 2019, the applicant only approached
counsel for advice on 8
March 2020. The explanation for this delay is that the papers are
voluminous and technical in nature and
that it took time to prepare
which it could not reasonably do before the end of March 2020. The
applicant also alleges that it
had been waiting for some information
from the Department which was not forthcoming. The Department, in
opposing the application
for condonation, reiterates that it did
provide the applicant with written reasons on 17 October 2019. The
applicant was furnished
with the functionality criteria scored by the
applicant and other bidders; the price and preference criteria of the
applicant and
other bidders; the Bid Evaluation Committee meeting
minutes and related notes; the Adjudication Committee notes and
recommendations;
the applicant’s original bid submission
documents and a review of the applicant’s bid submission
documents with an
authorised individual of the Department. The
applicant responded that it intended relying on the provisions of
PAJA to obtain further
documents,
inter
alia
, relating to
other bidders that participated in the tender process. The Department
responded to this request on the same day and
advised that this
request for additional documents was to be treated separately in
terms of PAJA from the reasons for the applicant’s
successful
bid. According to the Department, the applicant had all the necessary
information in order to consider whether to launch
a review
application and that the applicant did not require the PAJA documents
as it was aware of the reasons for its unsuccessful
bid. However,
notwithstanding the fact that the applicant had all the documents
pertaining to the refusal of its bid, it still
waited until a week
before the first period prescribed to approach counsel for advice.
[23]
I am in agreement with
the Department. The applicant had sufficient information at its
disposal to launch the review application:
There was not need for
information regarding the other bidders in order to launch the
review. Also, the applicant’s explanation
as to why it waited
until the end of March 2020 to only then seek legal advice is tenuous
particularly in circumstances where the
180- day time limit was
looming large.
[24]
The Department filed
its answering affidavit in October 2020. The replying affidavit was,
however, only filed almost 193 court days
late.
Should the delay be
condoned?
[25]
The
Supreme Court of Appeals in
The Camps Bay Ratepayers'
and Residents' Association v Harrison
[2]
sets
out what should be taken into consideration in deciding an
application for condonation in the context of section 9(2) of PAJA:
“
...Section
9(2) however allows the extension of these time frames where 'the
interests of justice so require'. And the question
whether the
interests of justice require the grant of such extension depends on
the facts and circumstances of each case: the party
seeking it must
furnish a full and reasonable explanation for the delay which covers
the entire duration thereof and relevant factors
include the nature
of the relief sought, the extent and cause of the delay, its effect
on the administration of justice and other
litigants, the importance
of the issue to be raised in the intended proceedings and the
prospects of success.”
[26]
Also
in the specific context of PAJA, the Supreme Court of Appeals in
Opposition
to Urban Tolling Alliance
and
Others v The South African National Roads Agency Ltd & Others
[3]
(“
OUTA”
)
held that the legislature determined a delay exceeding 180 days as
“
per
se unreasonable”
.
In other words, after the 180-day period has lapsed, the issue of
unreasonableness is pre-determined by the legislature; it is
unreasonable
per
se
.
The court is only empowered to entertain the review application if
the
interests
of justice
dictate an extension in terms of section 9 of PAJA. The Supreme Court
of Appeals in
Asla Construction
(Pty) Ltd v Buffalo City Metropolitan Municipality
[4]
(Asla)
explains:
“
The
respondent therefore required an extension of the period fixed by
PAJA within which to bring the application for review. Section
9
contemplates a substantive application to the relevant court or
tribunal, by the person or administrator concerned. That application
ought to have been made by the respondent when it first approached
the court for relief. It did not do so. Once the appellant had
raised
the issue of compliance with PAJA, the respondent was obliged to
launch an application in terms of this section for
an extension of
the fixed period. This application could thereafter have been
consolidated with the review application. The correct
procedure would
have ensured that the relevant facts were placed before the court a
quo, to enable it to exercise its discretion
properly.”
[27]
The
applicant launched the main application for review outside of the
180-day period prescribed by PAJA which delay is regarded
as “
per
se unreasonable”
.
A court may, however, still condone such delay. The overriding
question is whether it is in the interest of justice to grant
condonation with reference to all the factors listed by the court in
Camps
Bay Ratepayers
.
[5]
Starting with the explanation for the delay. I am not persuaded that
the applicant has furnished a full and reasonable explanation
for the
delay. I have already referred to the various delays and the absence
of a proper explanation therefore.
[28]
What cannot be ignored
is the fact that, even though the extent of the initial delay might
not be extensive, more than 2 years have
elapsed since BSE was
appointed as service provider and that more than 2/3 of the contract,
had already elapsed as of May 2021
and that 14 bridges had already
been manufactured. Adding to the applicant’s woes is the fact
that its replying affidavit
is also unreasonably late. The Department
served its answering affidavit on 19 October 2020 and in terms of the
Rules of Court,
the
applicant was obliged to file its replying affidavit within 10 court
days, on 2 November 2020. The applicant’s replying
affidavit
was served on the Department’s legal representative on 27 July
2021. This is approximately 193 court days late
(approximately six
months out of time). The applicant merely states that the delay was
caused by the fact that
it
had
to acquire certain
evidence from the South African Institute of Steel Construction. No
proper explanation is, however, forthcoming
about what had transpired
in the period between October 2020 and
5
July 2021. The
applicant vaguely refers to the fact that it had to make various
telephone calls and send some emails. The applicant
does not,
however, attach any of these emails or letters directed at the South
African Institute of Steel Construction and has
also not set out who
made the telephone calls and to whom.
[29]
By the time this review
application served before court on 22 April 2022, at best for the
applicant, 5 months are left until the
contract comes at an end by
effluxion of time.
Prejudice
[30]
The applicant states in
its papers that the respondents face no substantive prejudiced as a
result of the late filing of the replying
affidavit.
[31]
The
prejudice that BSE and the Department will suffer in general as a
result of all of these delays (the late filing of the review
application and the substantial delay in filing a replying affidavit)
is certainly not negligible, especially if regard is had
to the time
period that is left on the contract before it expires. Also, it is
evident from the facts that approximately 14 bridges
have already
been manufactured. But, apart from this, there is a need for finality
in administrative acts.
[6]
More
importantly, it is not only the Department and BSE that will suffer
prejudice because of these delays, but also the prejudice
that will
be caused to the communities for whom the bridges are destined if the
tender is declared invalid.
Prospects of success
[32]
Considering
the prospects of success in the context of a condonation application
does not entail a determination of the merits.
The Supreme Court of
Appeals in
Asla
[7]
held
as follows:
“
Although
a consideration of the prospects of success of the application for
review requires an examination of its merits, this does
not encompass
their determination. In Beweging vir Christelik-Volkseie
Onderwys
v
Minister of Education
[2012] 2 All SA 462
(SCA) ([2012] ZASCA
45) paras 42–44 the proposition that a court is required to
decide the merits before considering whether
the application for
review was brought out of time or after undue delay and, if so,
whether or not to condone the defect, was rejected.
Thereafter,
in Opposition to Urban Tolling Alliance and Others v South
African National Roads Agency Ltd and Others
[2013] 4 All SA 639
(SCA) ([2013] ZASCA 148) paras 22, 26 and 43 it was decided that a
court was compelled to deal with the delay rule before examining
the
merits of the review application, because in the absence of an
extension the court had no authority to entertain the review
application. The court there concluded that because an extension of
the 180-day period was not justified, it followed that
it was
not authorised to enter into the merits of the review application.
However, in South African National Roads Agency
Ltd v Cape Town
City
2017
(1) SA 468 (SCA)
([2016]
4 All SA 332
;
[2016] ZASCA 122)
para 81 a submission based upon this
decision, namely that the question of delay had to be dealt with
before the merits of the
review could be entertained, was answered
as follows:
'It
is true that . . . this court considered it important to settle the
court's jurisdiction to entertain the merits of the matter
by first
having regard to the question of delay. However, it cannot be read to
signal a clinical excision of the merits of the
impugned decision,
which must be a critical factor when a court embarks on a
consideration of all the circumstances of a case
in order to
determine whether the interests of justice dictate that the delay
should be condoned. It would have to include a consideration
of
whether the non-compliance with statutory prescripts was egregious.'
A
full and proper determination of the merits of the review application
was accordingly dependent upon a finding that the respondent's
failure had to be condoned. As stated in Opposition to Urban
Tolling Alliance supra para 26:
'Absent
such extension the court has no authority to entertain the review
application at all. Whether or not the decision was unlawful
no
longer matters. The decision has been validated by the delay . .
. .'
[33]
It is not necessary to
consider the prospects of success in light of the unreasonableness of
the delay. I will nonetheless make
a view brief observations on why I
am of the view that the prospects are in any event slim. I have
already referred to the fact
that on two criteria (the manufacturing
and the accreditation criteria) the applicant received a full score.
On the experience
and artisan criteria, the applicant was awarded
zero points.
Artisan criteria
[34]
The Department rejected
the trade certificates of two of the applicant’s artisans on
the basis that the certificates were
certified copies of a copy and
not a certified copy of the original. In respect of this criteria,
the applicant does have prospects
of success: Nothing prevents a
Commissioner of Oaths to certify a copy of an original that already
bores the stamp of a previous
Commissioner of Oaths in circumstances
where the Commissioner of Oaths (that certified the documents in
question) confirmed that
at the time she certified the documents
after she was presented with and examined the original qualification
certificates in question.
The experience
criteria
[35]
The applicant scored
zero on this criterion. The minutes of the bid evaluation committee
of the Department reflect that the applicant,
as a bidding entity,
does not possess the required minimum experience in the manufacturing
of steel bridges.
[36]
The applicant was
required to indicate by providing a company profile, a list and type
of projects completed (namely completed bridge
projects similar to
the scope of the tender), the year in which it was completed and the
value of the projects.
[37]
From the applicant’s
company profile and bid document, it does not appear that the
applicant (as a bidding entity) has manufactured
steel bridges in its
more than 20 years’ of existence. The Department pertinently
raises this lack of experience of the applicant
as a bidding entity
in its answering affidavit. The applicant, in its replying affidavit
pays scant attention to this claim and
merely states that the fact
that the applicant’s main business relates to the construction
of fuel structures, does not mean
that the applicant is not able to
construct steel structures. The remainder of the replying affidavit
deals with the condonation
application for the late filing of the
replying affidavit and with attacking the experience of BSE.
[38]
The applicant describes
itself as a supplier of turnkey product and service solutions for the
safe management and storage of fuel
at filling stations, commercial
sites and depots. If regard is had to what is stated in the founding
papers, it is not claimed
that the applicant (as an entity) has in
fact manufactured bridges in the past. What it does say is that it
has the capacity to
do so through the expertise of a certain Mr.
Forbes. Mr. Forbes is an independent contractor and does not form
part of the company
structure of the applicant. Considering the
Department’s submission that what was required was that the
company had to show
experience in manufacturing steel bridges by
providing a company profile setting out the relevant experience. On
the papers as
they stand, the applicant, as
the
bidding entity
and
a juristic person with a separate legal
persona
,
does not have any experience in the manufacturing of steel bridges.
The applicant also did not provide any proof that any of its
employees have the requisite experience in the construction of
bridges. It was therefore submitted on behalf of the Department
that
the point allocation of zero is justified and that this was a
rational score. Compared to the fact that BSE has extensive
experience in the supply of Bailey Bridges and suspension bridge
materials, the applicant’s prospects of success in succeeding
to overturn the award of the bid is slim.
Administrative action
rendered unassailable
[39]
One
last point. In
OUTA
[8]
the court unequivocally endorsed the principle that unlawful
administrative action may be rendered unassailable due to a delay:
“
The
fourth basis invoked by the appellants as to why the 180 day time bar
should be extended was that it is the requirement of the
rule of law
that the exercise of all public power should be lawful and that
SANRAL and the government has failed to act legally.
As I see it,
however, the argument is misconceived. While it is true that the
principle of legality is constitutionally entrenched,
the
constitutional enjoinder to fair administrative action, as it has
been expressed through PAJA, expressly recognizes that even
unlawful
administrative action may be rendered unassailable by delay”.
[40]
In my view, the present
matter is one of those cases where the administrative action is, in
any event, rendered unassailable due
to the delays. With only a few
months left in the contract and in circumstances where BSE has
already manufactured 14 bridges,
coupled with the prejudice that
would be caused to the respondents and public interest element in the
finality of administrative
decisions and the exercise of
administrative functions, the administrative action (even if it is
held to be unlawful which for
the reasons set out hereinbelow is not
determined in this judgment), renders the decision unassailable.
Order
[41]
In the event the
following order is made:
1.
The application for
condonation for the late filing of the review application is
dismissed.
2.
The applicant is
ordered to pay the costs of the first and sixth respondents such
costs to include the costs of two counsel where
so employed.
A.C.
BASSON
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION OF THE HIGH COURT, PRETORIA
Delivered:
This judgment was prepared and authored by the Judge whose name is
reflected and is handed down electronically by circulation
to the
Parties/their legal representatives by email and by uploading it to
the electronic file of this matter on CaseLines. The
date for
hand-down is deemed to be 9 June 2022.
Date
of hearing
22
April 2022
Appearances
For
the applicant
Adv
O Ben-Zeev
Instructed
by Girard Hayward Inc
For
the 1
st
respondent
Adv
HC Janse van Rensburg
Instructed
by State Attorney Pretoria
For
the 6
th
respondent
Adv
N Cassim SC
Adv
K Naidoo
Instructed
by C De Villiers Attorneys
[1]
Act 3 of
2000.
[2]
2010
JDR 0099 (SCA);
[2010] 2 All SA 519
(SCA) (17 February 2010) at para
54.
[3]
[2013] 4
All SA 639 (SCA).
[4]
2017
(6) SA 360
(SCA) at para 8.
[5]
Supra.
[6]
Beweging vir
Christelike-Volkseie Onderwys v The Minister Education
2012
JDR 0505 (SCA): “
[23]
Underlying that latter aspect of the rationale is the inherent
potential for prejudice, both to the efficient functioning
of the
public body and to those who rely upon its decisions, if the
validity of its decisions remains uncertain. It is for that
reason
in particular that proof of actual prejudice to the respondent is
not a precondition for refusing to entertain review
proceedings by
reason of undue delay, although the extent to which prejudice has
been shown is a relevant consideration that
might even be decisive
where the delay has been relatively slight (Wolgroeiers Afslaers,
above, at 42C).”
[7]
Supra
fn. 5 at para 12-13
.
[8]
Supra
,
see fn. 4 at para 36.
sino noindex
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