Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 601South Africa
Gcwabe Consulting (Pty) Ltd v South African Police Services (46817/2015) [2022] ZAGPPHC 601 (10 August 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
10 August 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Gcwabe Consulting (Pty) Ltd v South African Police Services (46817/2015) [2022] ZAGPPHC 601 (10 August 2022)
Gcwabe Consulting (Pty) Ltd v South African Police Services (46817/2015) [2022] ZAGPPHC 601 (10 August 2022)
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sino date 10 August 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISON, PRETORIA)
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
Case
Number:
46817/2015
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED:
YES
10
August 2022
In
the matter between:
GCWABE
CONSULTING (PTY)
LTD
Plaintiff
and
# SOUTH AFRICAN POLICE
SERVICESDefendant
SOUTH AFRICAN POLICE
SERVICES
Defendant
J
UDGMENT
JANSE
VAN NIEUWENHUIZEN J:
[1]
The plaintiff’s action is based on a written contract entered
into
between the parties on 18 March 2013, in terms of which the
plaintiff would supply and fit new and overhauled petrol and diesel
motor vehicle engines in the defendant’s motor vehicle fleet.
The plaintiff alleges that the defendant had unlawfully cancelled
the
contract, which cancellation the plaintiff deemed as a repudiation of
the contract. The plaintiff accepted the repudiation
and instituted
this action in which it claims payment of the damages it had suffered
as a result of the defendant’s conduct.
[2]
The defendant defends the claim and has raised several defences in
its
plea.
[3]
Having considered the issues in dispute between the parties, I issued
a separation order in terms of rule 33(4), which order reads as
follows:
“
The issue of
the validity of the agreement as per the Defendant’s plea at
paragraph 11 and counter-claim read together with
paragraph 10-12 of
the Plaintiff’s plea to the counter-claim, is separated for
adjudication before all other issues.”
[4]
In the result, this judgment is only concerned with the separated
issue
as defined
supra
.
[5]
The parties did not present any evidence and confined their
submissions
to the averments contained in the pleadings.
Pleadings
# Defendant’s claim
Defendant’s claim
[6]
Paragraph 11 of the defendant’s plea raises the defence of the
invalidity
or illegality of the contract between the parties. In
amplification of the plea, the paragraph refers to the defendant’s
counter-claim.
[7]
The counter-claim is based on contractual invalidity and in the
alternative
on constitutional invalidity.
## Contractual invalidity
Contractual invalidity
[8]
In respect of contractual invalidity, the defendant avers that the
written
contract between the parties was concluded as a result of the
plaintiff being the successful bidder of tender number
19/1/9/1/38TV(11).
[9]
The defendant stated in paragraph 5 that the relevant express terms
of
the agreement were:
“
5.1 the
Plaintiff certified that it was satisfied as to the correctness and
validity of its bid, that the price(s) and rate(s) covered
all the
goods and works specified in the bidding documents, that the price(s)
and rate(s) covered all its obligations and that
the Plaintiff
accepted that any mistakes regarding the price and tares and
calculation would be at its own risk; (clause 3 of contract
4 –
purchase of goods / works SBD7.1)
5.2
at the closing date and the time of the bid, each bidder had
to submit with its/his/her bid documents a complete itemized price
list containing prices of all items. All prices included on the price
list had to be firm, and not subject to any escalations, except
exchange rate variations for year 1 and 2. Failure to comply would
invalidate the bid; (clause 2.9.6 of bid specification)
5.3
The Plaintiff certified that prices quoted would be firm for
12 months; (questionnaire per item)
5.4
the Plaintiff certified that three price schedules had to be
completed for each province; (questionnaire per item)
5.5
the Plaintiff certified that if all three price schedules were
not completed, its offer would be invalid; (questionnaire per item)
.”
[10]
The price lists submitted by the Plaintiff did not comply with the
aforesaid terms and
were incomplete.
[11]
The plaintiff’s failure to submit a comprehensive price list as
required by the bid
specification, invalidated, according to the
defendant, the plaintiff’s bid and it is
ab initio
invalid.
[12]
Accordingly, no agreement came into existence due to the invalidity
of the tender. The
agreement dated 18 March 2013 therefore falls to
be set aside.
## Constitutional invalidity
Constitutional invalidity
[13]
In the alternative and in respect of constitutional invalidity, the
defendant relies on
section 217 of the Constitution that provides as
follows:
(1) When an organ of
state in the national, provincial or local sphere of government or
any other institution identified in national
legislation, contracts
for goods or services, it must do so in accordance with a system
which is fair, equitable, transparent,
competitive and
costeffective….”
[14]
The closing date for the submission of bids was 17 July 2012.
[15]
It is common cause between the parties that the defendant’s Bid
Adjudication Committee
invited bidders on 5 December 2012 to provide
a list of prices based on a basket of 30 items specified by the
defendant (“the
amended price list”).
[16]
The defendant contends that the invitation is a deviation of the
tender conditions as advertised
during July 2012 and falls foul of
the procurement requirements contained in section 217 of the
Constitution.
[17]
In the result, the tender and concomitant contract should be set
aside in terms of section
172(1) of the Constitution
alternatively
on the ground that it offends against the principle of
legality.
# Plaintiff’s plea
Plaintiff’s plea
[18]
In respect of contractual invalidity, the plaintiff pleaded as
follows:
“
10.1 The
plaintiff admits that annexure P4 is the price list it submitted with
the tender.
10.2
The plaintiff further pleads that all tenderers submitted
price lists which were incomplete. The defendant afforded all
tenderers,
including the plaintiff, a further opportunity to submit
further price information in accordance with the guidance provided by
the defendant.”
10.3
The plaintiff denies that its bid was invalidated and/or that
it was invalid ab initio for the reason alleged by the defendant or
at all.
10.4
The plaintiff denies that no agreement came into effect for
the reasons alleged by the defendant or that it falls to be set aside
for any reason.”
[19]
The plea in respect of constitutional invalidity reads as follows:
“
12.1 The
plaintiff denies that it failed to submit a completed price list.
12.2
The defendant afforded all tenderers, including the plaintiff,
the opportunity to submit revised price lists incorporating
information
as directed by the defendant.
12.3
The conduct of the defendant to allow all the tenderers,
including the plaintiff, to submit revised price lists was lawful and
valid.
12.4
The award of the tender is valid and remains binding on the
parties. The plaintiff rendered services and the defendant received
services in the performance of the tender.
15. The plaintiff
denies that the contract is void or voidable for the reasons stated
and that it stands to be set aside on any
ground.”
# Discussion
Discussion
[20]
In the heads of argument filed on behalf of the defendant and during
oral submissions,
Mr van der Merwe SC, counsel for the defendant,
referred to further terms of the contract than those that were relied
upon in the
counterclaim. After a careful analysis of the further
terms, Mr van der Merwe submitted that the contract as signed is
contradictio in terminis
in that it provides that the bid is
invalid, and it is also void for vagueness.
[21]
Mr Mureriwa, counsel for the plaintiff, pointed out that the
contradiction in terminis
defence does not appear in the
counter-claim and objected to the defence being introduced in
argument.
[22]
I agree with Mr Mureriwa. The separation issue pertains to the
defendant’s pleaded
case in its counter-claim. It is manifestly
unfair to the plaintiff to introduce a new defence during argument.
[23]
In the result, I will confine this judgment to the defences as
pleaded in the defendant’s
counter-claim.
## Contractual invalidity
Contractual invalidity
[24]
The defendant submits that the bid conditions leave no room for a bid
to be valid where
all the prices on the list were not completed. In
support of the aforesaid contention, the defendant relied on clause
2.9.6
supra
. The defendant also referred to the following
portion on p. 114 of the bid document: “
IF ALL THREE PRICE
SCHEDULES WERE NOT COMPLETED YOUR OFFER WIL BE INVALID.”
[25]
The plaintiff’s bid was as a result invalid and accordingly a
valid contract could
not be concluded.
[26]
The plaintiff submits that it is the defendant that changed the price
lists. The plaintiff
accepted the amendment and complied with the
amended requirement by submitting the requested price lists. The
contract is as result
valid.
[27]
Insofar as amendments to the contract is concerned, Government
Procurement: General Conditions
of Contract, July 2010, provides in
clause 18 as follows:
“
No variation in
or modification of the terms of the contract shall be made except by
written agreement signed by the parties concerned.”
[28]
The clause is not applicable to the facts in
casu
. The parties
have not amended the terms of the contract that was signed on 18
March 2013. It is the defendant that amended the
price listing
condition after the bid process was closed.
[29]
Thereafter and in terms of the amended condition, the plaintiff
submitted its price lists,
and the contract was concluded on the
aforesaid price lists.
[30]
The defendant did not refer me to any principle in the law of
contract or to any tender
conditions that prohibit the amendment of
bid conditions prior to the conclusion of a contract.
[31]
In the result, I am of the view that the amendment of the bid
conditions prior to the conclusion
of the contract between the
parties, does not invalidate the contract.
## Constitutional invalidity
Constitutional invalidity
[32]
I agree with the defendant that the amendment of the bid conditions
subsequent to the closing
date for bids, offends the provisions of
section 217.
[33]
The initial bid conditions in respect of pricing offered a fair,
equitable and transparent
opportunity to the public to submit a bid.
The moment the defendant changed these conditions and made the
amended conditions known
to a select few, the bid process became
unfair, inequitable and without transparency. The requirement in
section 217 that the bid
process must be competitive, was also
violated. Only a select few could after the close of the bid submit
competitive bids.
[33]
Mr Mureriwa submitted that the mere fact that the price list
conditions were changed, does
not necessarily lead to the setting
aside of the contract. In support of the aforesaid submission. Mr
Mureriwa referred to the
Supreme Court of Appeal judgment in
Chief
Executive Officer, Southern African Social Security Agency and Others
v Cash Paymaster Services Pty (Ltd)
2012 (1) SA 216
SCA in which
the court held as follows at para [29]:
“
In any event
this court in Moseme Road Construction CC and Others v King Civil
Engineering Contractors (Pty) Ltd held that ”(n)ot
every slip
in the administration of tenders is necessary to be visited by
judicial sanction’ (para 21). Considerations of
public
interest, pragmatism and practicality should inform the exercise of a
judicial discretion whether to set aside administrative
action or
not.”
[34]
In
Allpay Consolidated Investments Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Others v
Chief Executive Officer, South African Social Security Agency and
Others
2014(1) SA 604 CC, the Constitutional Court, however, held
as follows in respect of a finding that public interest matters
require
greater caution in finding that grounds for review exist:
“
[24] This
approach to irregularities seems detrimental to important aspects of
the procurement process. First, it undermines the
role procedural
requirements play in ensuring even treatment of all bidders. Second,
it overlooks that the purpose of a fair process
is to ensure the best
outcome; the two cannot be severed. On the approach of the Supreme
Court of Appeal, procedural requirements
are not considered on their
own merits, but instead through the lens of the final outcome. This
conflates the different and separate
questions of unlawfulness and
remedy. If the process leading to the bid's success was compromised,
it cannot be known with certainty
what course the process might have
taken had procedural requirements been properly observed”.
[35]
Under the heading Procurement framework legality, the Constitutional
Court held as follows:
[31] In Steenkamp
Moseneke DCJ stated:
'Section 217 of the
Constitution is the source of the powers and function of a government
tender board. It lays down that an organ
of State in any of the three
spheres of government, if authorised by law may contract for goods
and services on behalf of government.
However, the tendering system
it devises must be fair, equitable, transparent, competitive
and cost-effective. This requirement
must be understood together with
the constitutional precepts on administrative justice in s 33 and the
basic values governing public
administration in section 195(1).'
In Millennium Waste
the Supreme Court of Appeal (per Jafta JA) elaborated:
'The . . .
Constitution lays down minimum requirements for a valid tender
process and contracts entered into following an award
of tender to a
successful tenderer (s 217). The section requires that the tender
process, preceding the conclusion of contracts
for the supply of
goods and services, must be ''fair, equitable, transparent,
competitive and cost-effective''. Finally,
as the decision to
award a tender constitutes administrative action, it follows that the
provisions of [PAJA] apply to the process.'
30
[Footnotes
omitted.]
……
.
[34] An 'acceptable
tender' under the Procurement Act is any 'tender which, in all
respects, complies with the specifications and
conditions of tender
as set out in the tender document; . . . .'
33
The
Preferential H Procurement Regulations
34
(Procurement
Regulations) define a tender as —
'a written offer in a
prescribed or stipulated form in response to an invitation by an
organ of state for the provision of services,
works or goods, through
price quotations, advertised competitive tendering processes or
proposals; . . . .'
35
[36]
In view of the aforesaid criteria, the changing of price list
conditions subsequent to
the bid being closed can hardly be described
as an “
administrative slip”.
In
Premier, Free
State and Others v Firechem Free State (Pty) Ltd
2000 (4) SA 413
SCA, the court dealt with the importance of treating tenderers
equally:
“
[30]
……
Yet another requirement is that competitors should be treated
equally, in the sense that they should all be entitled to tender for
the same thing. Competitiveness is not served by only one or some of
the tenderers knowing what is the true subject of tender.”
[37]
Mr Mureriwa, further, submitted that the court cannot declare the
contract invalid, if
the record of the decision to call for amended
price lists is not before court. The record would indicate what the
reasons for
the Bid Adjudication Committee’s decision is. This
is important because Regulation 16A6.4 provides as follows:
“
If in a
specific case it is impractical to invite competitive bids, the
accounting officer or accounting authority may procure the
required
goods or services by other means, provided that the reasons for
deviating from inviting competitive bids must be recorded
and
approved by the accounting officer or accounting authority.”
[38]
The problem with the aforesaid submission, is that it did not form
part of the plaintiff’s
plea to the defendant’s
allegations in respect of constitutional invalidity. If it was the
plaintiff’s case that the
decision by the Bid Adjudication
Committee to request new price lists was taken in terms of Regulation
16A6.4 and therefore valid,
the record of the decision might have
been relevant.
[39]
Furthermore and if the defendant was of the view that the procurement
for the supply
and fitment of new and overhauled petrol and
diesel motor vehicle engines, fell within the ambit of Regulation
16A6.4, it would
not have issued a public tender.
[40]
The problem with the price lists in the published tender was,
according to the submissions
by the parties, that none of the bidders
submitted completed price lists, because it was simply impractical if
not impossible to
do so. Instead of cancelling the tender and
publishing a new tender with the amended price list, the defendant
solved the problem
by changing the price list conditions after the
bid was already closed.
[41]
One should, furthermore, bear in mind that the plaintiff’s
defence as pleaded in
its plea is premised on the fact that the
decision was made known to all the tenderers. In the result the
plaintiff submits that
the changed bid conditions were transparent
and fair, all tenderers were treated equally, and the bidding process
was competitive.
[42]
The plaintiff’s submission fails to take into account that the
public and more specifically
potential bidders, were unaware of the
amended bid condition. In order for the bid process to be
transparent, fair and equitable,
the amended conditions should have
been published to give all interested parties an opportunity to
submit a competitive bid.
[43]
In the result, it is patently clear that the bid process deviated
from the basic requirements
for a valid tender and the tender as well
as the concomitant contract stands to be declared invalid in terms of
section 172(1)(a)
of the Constitution.
# ORDER
ORDER
In
the premises, I issue the following order:
1. The
contract between the parties is declared invalid.
2.
Costs are reserved.
N.
JANSE VAN NIEUWENHUIZEN
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
DATE
HEARD PER COVID19 DIRECTIVES:
1,
2, 3 and 05 August 2022
DATE
DELIVERED PER COVID19 DIRECTIVES:
10
August 2022
APPEARANCES
For
the Plaintiff
: Advocate I Mureriwa
Instructed
by :
Baloyi Masango Incorporated
For
the Defendant :
Adv JL Van der Merwe SC
Adv J Janse van Rensburg
Instructed
by
:Soutie van Rensburg Attorneys
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