Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 924South Africa
Aptitude Trading Enterprise (Pty) Ltd and Others v City Of Tshwane Metropolitan City and Others (33009/2022) [2022] ZAGPPHC 924 (28 November 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
28 November 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Aptitude Trading Enterprise (Pty) Ltd and Others v City Of Tshwane Metropolitan City and Others (33009/2022) [2022] ZAGPPHC 924 (28 November 2022)
Aptitude Trading Enterprise (Pty) Ltd and Others v City Of Tshwane Metropolitan City and Others (33009/2022) [2022] ZAGPPHC 924 (28 November 2022)
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sino date 28 November 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
NO: 33009/2022
REPORTABLE:
YES/
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES/
NO
REVISED:
DATE:
28 November 2022
In
the matter between:
APTITUDE
TRADING ENTERPRISE (PTY) LTD
(Registration
No. 2012/166139/07) 1st
Applicant
MDOSENI
TRADING & PROJECTS (PTY) LTD 2nd
Applicant
LTC
HOLDINGS
CC 3rd
Applicant
and
THE
CITY OF TSHWANE METROPOLITAN CITY 1st
Respondent
AND
102
OTHERS 2nd
to 103rd Respondent
JUDGEMENT
EJ
FERREIRA AJ
Introduction
1.
This is an application to review and set
aside a tender issued by the City of Tshwane Metropolitan City being
Tender no HH 01 2021/2022
(“
the
tender
”).
2.
Central
considerations in this review application are Constitutional
principles of social justice relating to citizens’ entrenched
rights in respect of access to water. This includes, amongst others,
the achievement of equality, one of the founding values of
our
Constitutional.
[1]
Parties
3.
The first applicant is Aptitude Trading
Enterprises (Pty) Ltd (Registration No. 2012/166139/07), a company
duly registered and incorporated
in terms of the company laws of the
Republic of South Africa with its registered address situated at 1823
Bashele Street, Rockville
Mhluzi, Middleburg, Mpumalanga.
4.
The second applicant is Mdoseni Trading &
Projects (Pty) Ltd (Registration No. 2014/005684/07), a company duly
registered and
incorporated in terms of the company laws of the
Republic of South Africa with its registered address situated at 20
Fuel Street,
Coronationville, Gauteng, 2093.
5.
The third applicant is LTC Holdings CC
(Registration No. 2003/075380/23), a close corporation duly
registered and incorporated in
terms of the
Close Corporations Act,
69 of 1984
with its registered address situated at 381 Osiris Street,
Ruimsig County Estate, Mogale City, Gauteng, 1740.
6.
The first respondent is the City of Tshwane
Metropolitan City (“
the City”
)
duly established in terms of the
Local Government: Municipal
Structures Act, 117 of 1998
, situated in Pretoria.
7.
The second to 103
rd
respondents are beneficiaries of the tender awarded by the City and
which is the subject of the present review application.
Background
8.
All three applicants duly and timeously
submitted documentation to be considered for an award in respect of
the tender.
9.
The
first and second applicants were appointed as part of the panel in
respect of the tender.
[2]
10.
The third applicant has not received a
letter of appointment and has also not been advised of the outcome of
the tender.
11.
The
first applicant owes 86 water trucks that comply with the
specifications.
[3]
12.
The second applicant owns 9 water trucks
that comply with the specifications in the tender. All these vehicles
were included in
the second applicant’s tender.
13.
The third applicant owns 13 water trucks
that comply with the specifications in the tender. All these were
included in the third
applicant’s tender.
14.
All the applicants have rendered similar
services to the City and/or the other municipalities.
15.
The
applicants rely on both
section 38(a)
and
38
(d) for their
locus
standi
in the present proceedings.
[4]
Issues
16.
The
parties have identified the issues for determination by this Court,
in their joint practice note dated 29 September 2022
[5]
as follows:
[6]
16.1.
Whether or not the City validly extended
the tender validity period from 6 December 2021 to 2 June 2022.
16.2.
Whether or not the City validly extended
the tender validity period from 5 March 2022 to 5 June 2022.
16.3.
Whether or not the City failed to evaluate
the tender on the mandatory requirements prior to the tender awards.
16.4.
Whether or not the panel appointments were
made in accordance with the provisions of
section 2(1)(f)
of the
Preferential Procurement Policy Framework Act, 5 of 2000
.
16.5.
Whether or not the City correctly
disqualified the third applicant base on the alleged
misrepresentation on the MBD3.14 form.
16.6.
Whether or not there was any material
irregularity in the tender process that is supported by a ground of
review under the Promotion
of Administrative Justice Act, 3 of 2000
(“
PAJA
”).
16.7.
Upon finding that the applicants are
entitled to an order as contemplated in section 172(1)(a) of the
Constitution, the appropriate
remedy as contemplated in section
172(1)(b) read together with section 8 of PAJA.
17.
As a result of the finding that is made
hereunder, it is not necessary to consider any of the other issues
beyond paragraph 16.1
hereinabove.
The
statutory design of the procurement process
18.
When an organ of state in the local sphere
of Government procures goods or services there is in place a
statutory scheme,
which
the City is required to comply in the form of applicable legislation
and regulations.
19.
They are the following: The Preferential
Procurement Policy Framework Act, 5 of 2000 (“
the
PPPFA
”); The Preferential
Procurement Regulations, 2017 (“
the
Procurement Regulations
”); The
Local Government: Municipal Finance Management Act, 56 of 2003
; The
Municipal Supply Chain Management Regulations
(“
the
Supply Chain Management Regulations
”);
The City’s approved Supply Chain Management Policy (“
the
Supply Chain Policy
”) and the
relevant Treasury guidelines.
20.
A further aspect that underpins the fair
procurement process requires the
Municipal Supply Chain Management
Regulations which
has to be adopted by a city. In this case, the City
of Tshwane formally adopted
Municipal Supply Chain Management
Regulations that
describe in detail how the City, as a City, should
procure goods and services. The Supply Chain Management Regulations
include
a Tender Specification Committee required from the outset, a
Bid Evaluation Committee (BEC) and also a Bid Adjudication Committee
(BAC).
21.
The BEC is a statutory body whose task it
is to evaluate the tender for
administrative and mandatory requirements.
It has to evaluate the functionality of each tenderer and has to
score each tender.
When
the BEC completes its duty, and after the documents are handed to the
BAC then the function of the BEC is primarily complete.
The
applicants submit that the work BEC and the BAC can never take place
at the same time as each stage must be completed
before the next
stage is embarked upon. Each Committee has a discrete function where
one committee’s function follows upon
the other. The Nexus
Report shows the continual engagement between the two committees and
itself. There should not be a back-and-forth.
It is common cause the
City proceeded with the implementation of the tender when it had not
concluded the evaluation process which
is a further discrete stage
in
the
mandatory stage 1. In addition, the applicants contend that the City
is currently
allocating
work in a random manner.
22.
The stages in which the bid evaluation
takes place is stage 1, which is the administrative and mandatory
requirement, stage 2 which
is the functional assessment and stage 3
which is the point scoring exercise.
The
tender validity period
23.
The tender validity period as was
stipulated in the tender, and it formed part of what was compiled by
the Bid Specification Committee
in terms of Regulation 27(1) of
the Municipal Supply Chain Management Regulation. The applicants
contend that the tender specification,
like the validity period, can
only be changed after the publication of the tender if the supply
chain policy allows and provides
for it or if there is timeous, prior
to the date of expiration, consented by all participants in the
bidding process.
24.
This is what the City’s letter dated
29 November 2021 stated:
“
29
November 2021
TENDER
NO: HHS01 2021/2022
TENDER
FOR HIRE OF 10 000 LITRES OF MOBILE DRINKING WATER RANKERS
(sic)
(TRUCKS) FOR
THE SUPPLY IN THE INFORMAL SETTLEMENT IN THE CITY OF TSHWANE
Return
Form 2
Mpho
Lelekela (
meholek@tshwane.gov.za
)
DATE
TO WHICH TENDER WILL EXPIRE (sic): 06 DECEMBER 2021 EXTENDED DATE TO
WHICH TENDER WILL BE VALID: 5 MARCH 2022
1.
A possibility exists that the tender
of which particulars appear above, may not be adjudicated before
expiry of the current validity
period, and I shall be glad to learn
whether you are willing to hold your tender valid
IN
ALL RESPECTS
for the further
period indicated.
To facilitate
the matter the reply form hereunder MUST be completed and returned
within seven (7) days from date of the letter.
2.
Should you not be willing to hold
your tender valid for the further period, it will of course lapse on
expire of the current validity
period and will therefore be ignored
if the tender are not adjudicated within this period.
3.
If you are willing to hold your
tender valid for the further period, but subject to amendment in any
respect, the reason for and
the nature of the amendment must be
clearly indicated in a separate letter, but in that event and should
the tender not be adjudicated
during the current validity period, the
right is reserved to ignore your qualified extension of validity,
particularly if the amendment
has the effect of increasing or
decreasing the tender price.”
25.
The applicants submit that the right to
extend the tender validity period was not provided for in the tender
specification.
26.
In my view therefore the bid validity
period cannot be validly extended without
the consent or rejection of the parties
prior
to
the lapse of the validity period. To do so would amount to
“
a
licence to
contend
for meanings
unmoored in
the
text and
its structure
.”
The purpose of the tender validity period
is a rule laid down in the bid itself and is clear. The process of
the bid validity extension
must be complete before the bid evaluation
period lapses if it is indeed allowed at all. If the extension is not
agreed to before
the lapse of the validity period, then that is the
end of the tender.
27.
I
was referred to a number of cases in relation to the extension of the
bid validity period where the wording or facts were different. An
expired tender cannot be resuscitated was made clear by Southwood J
in
Telkom
SA v Merid Training (Pty) Ltd and others; Bihati Solutions (Pty) Ltd
v Telkom SA and others
:
[7]
“
The
question to be decided is whether the procedure followed by the
applicant and the six respondents after 12 April 2008 (when
the
validity period of the proposal expired) was in compliance with
section 217 of the Constitution. In my view it was not. As
soon as
the validity period of the proposals had expired without the
applicant awarding a tender the tender process was complete
–
albeit
unsuccessfully
–
and
the
applicant
was
no
longer
free
to
negotiate
with
the
respondents
as
if
they
were simply attempting to enter into a contract. The process was no
longer transparent, equitable or competitive. All the tenderers
were
entitled to expect the applicant to apply its own procedure and
either award or not award a tender within the validity period
of the
proposals. If it failed to award a tender within the validity period
of the proposals it received it had to offer all interested
parties a
further opportunity to tender. Negotiations with some tenderers to
extend the period of validity lacked transparency
and was not
equitable or competitive. In my view the first and fifth respondents’
reliance
only
on rules of contract is misplaced.”
[8]
28.
In
Defensor
the full bench per Daffue JP and
Mhlambi J stated as follows:
“
I
therefore also agree with applicant’s counsel that in the
absence of the required proof, there was after the expiry date
no
longer any valid tender process. The tender award has to be set aside
for this reason alone”
.
[9]
29.
Procurement by an organ of state is in the
realm of administrative law that requires a fair and transparent
approach. The
applicants point out that
in this case, prior to the expiry of the
tender validity period none of the bidders
had consented to the extension. The
applicants submit that it cannot remedy the situation because such
consent cannot revive a lapsed
tender.
30.
It
is trite that in application proceedings the affidavits contain both
the pleadings and the evidence. Upon the applicants’
challenge
to the City that the tender period was not validly extended the City
provided the Court, through a witness and deponent
whose personal
knowledge thereof is by no means clear, only the following
evidence:
[10]
“
37.
The closing date for the impugned tender was set 7 September 2021
and the validity period was for a period
of 90 days and therefore the
tender would lapse on 6 December 2021.
38.
On 29 November 2021, the first respondent issued out a letter stating
that the tender will expire on 6 December
2021 and that the tender
will be extended and be valid until 5 March 2022.”
31.
No evidence of consent by participants to
the bidding process is presented by the City. The City does not
contend that such timeous
consent was received.
32.
The City argues that it had an enormous
task to evaluate some 253 bids that were lodged and therefore it was
justified in seeking
the extension and it sufficed if the request was
made prior to the expiration.
33.
I conclude that in order to ensure a fair
tender process in accordance with section 217 of the Constitution all
the necessary administrative
steps requesting an extension must be
taken before the lapse of the tender validity period. Variations,
additions, and the like
are impermissible once the tender validity
period has come to an
end
and there has been no consent or rejection by the bidders to the
extension.
Evaluation
34.
The City also contends that there were no
irregularities of any moment that require the tender to be set aside.
In this case, the
deviations are material and therefore go
to the heart of the fairness of this tender
process.
35.
I conclude that in order to ensure a fair
tender process in accordance with section 217 of the Constitution all
the necessary administrative
steps requesting an extension must be
taken before the lapse of the tender validity period. Variations,
additions, and the like
are impermissible once the tender validity
period has come to an end and there has been no consent or rejection
by the bidders
to the extension.
Conclusion
and remedy
36.
The request for an extension of the tender
validity period was done just before the expiration of the tender
validity period and
the responses should have been in before the
procurement process expired.
37.
In summary, therefore, I find that the
tender should be set aside. This is public law procurement, and it
must be assessed through
the prism of the Constitution.
It must be based on fairness and
transparency. I find that the process was skewed from the time
that there was a request for
an extension of the tender
validity period. Irregularities took place
to. For these reasons, the tender is hereby reviewed and set aside.
38.
In able argument, Mr Laka SC for the City,
implored on the Court to consider and decide the matter bearing in
mind the overriding
preamble to our constitution demanding social
justice. Mr Laka SC was quick to assist the Court, and quite rightly
so in my view,
upon questioning to indicate that the demand for
social justice ought to be aimed at the citizens in need of water
supply and not
at the beneficiaries of the tender sought to be set
aside.
39.
An appropriate remedy is an important
consideration.
In
terms of section 172(1)(b) of the Constitution a Court:
“
(b)
may make any order that is just and equitable, including–
(i)
an order limiting the retrospective effect of the declaration of
invalidity; and
(ii)
an order suspending the declaration of invalidity for any period and
on any conditions, to allow the
competent authority to correct the
defect.”
40.
Section 8 of PAJA also provides that,
concerning an appropriate remedy, a Court may grant any order that is
just and equitable,
including the following orders:
“
(a)
directing the administrator–
(i)
to give reasons; or
(ii)
to act in the manner the court or tribunal requires;
(b)
prohibiting the administrator from acting in a particular manner;
(c)
setting aside the administrative action and–
(i)
remitting the matter for reconsideration by the administrator, with
or without directions; or
(ii)
in exceptional cases–
(aa)
substituting or varying the administrative action or correcting a
defect resulting from the administrative action;
or
(bb)
directing the administrator or any other party to the proceedings to
pay compensation;
(d)
declaring the rights of the parties in respect of any matter to which
the administrative action relates;
(e)
granting a temporary interdict or other temporary relief; or
(f)
as to costs.”
41.
In
Steenkamp
NO v National Tender Board of the Eastern Cape
[11]
the appropriate principles are set out clearly. The remedy must fit
the injury, the remedy must be fair to those affected by it
and yet
vindicate effectively the right violated, the remedy must be just and
equitable in light of the facts, the implicated constitutional
principles, if any, and the controlling law.
42.
Ultimately the purpose of a public remedy
is to afford the prejudiced party administrative justice, to advance
efficient and effective
public administration compelled by
constitutional precepts and at a
broader
level, to entrench the rule of law.
43.
An appropriate remedy requires that I take
into account the nature of the tender, namely the provision of water
to communities in
need must continue in a proper manner which this
order must take into account.
44.
A suspension
of
the
declaration
of
invalidity
should
only
last
as
long
as
it
will
take the City to finalise a new and legitimate process. This period
should be as short as possible, to ensure that the invalid
awards are
continued with for the shortest possible periods.
45.
Stare
decisis
refer
to a doctrine
[12]
that must be
borne in mind by every court when rendering a decision involving a
legal principle, both as to common law and as to
statutory law. The
object of the doctrine is to avoid uncertainty and confusion,
[13]
to protect vested rights and legitimate expectations as well as to
uphold the dignity of the court. Therefore, when a decision
on a
legal principle has been delivered by a superior court it should, in
general, as far as possible be followed by all courts
of equal and
inferior status, until such time as that judgment has been overruled
or modified by a higher court or by legislative
authority. In
general, it can be stated that a court is bound by the ratio of a
decision of a higher court to a fuller court
[14]
on its own level unless the decision was rendered per incuriam. A
court will follow its own previous decision, unless it is satisfied
that it is wrong. In the present case this Court is bound by the
decisions and principles set out in amongst others
JL
Excavators (Pty) Ltd v City of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality
(27907/2018)
[2018] ZAGPHHC 584 (11 June 2018);
JL
Excavators (Pty) Ltd v City of Tshwane Metropolitan Municipality
46698/2021 and 46727/2021 (18 March 2022);
Allpay
Consolidatied Investment Holdings (Pty) Ltd and others v Chief
Executive Officer, south African Social Security Agency and
others
2014
(1) SA 604
(CC);
City
of Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality v Takubiza Trading and
Projects CC and others
2022
JDR 1544 (SCA).
46.
In consequence I make the following order:
46.1.
The decision of the City to award tender HH
01 2021/2022 to the 2
nd
to 103
rd
respondents is declared constitutionally invalid, reviewed and set
aside.
46.2.
The agreements concluded between the City
and such respondents pursuant to the award of the tender are set
aside.
46.3.
The orders in paragraphs 1 and 2 are
suspended until
28 February
2023.
46.4.
The City is ordered
to
commence
with
the
new
tender
process
for
the procurement of the same services as
contemplated in the tender within seven days after granting of this
order.
46.5.
The City is ordered to inform the 2
nd
to 103
rd
respondents of this order by no later than 15 December 2022.
46.6.
The City is ordered to:
46.6.1.
Inform the Auditor General’s office
of this order by no later than 15 December 2022;
46.6.2.
Inform the Public Protector’s office
of this order by no later than 15 December 2022;
46.6.3.
Provide the Auditor General’s office
of a comprehensive reconciliation of all amounts paid to the 2
nd
to 103
rd
respondents up to 30 November 2022 by no later than 15 January 2023;
46.6.4.
Provide the Public Protector’s office
of a comprehensive reconciliation of all amounts paid to the 2
nd
to 103
rd
respondents up to 30 November 2022 by no later than 15 January 2023;
46.6.5.
Provide the Auditor General’s office
of a comprehensive reconciliation of all amounts paid to the 2
nd
to 103
rd
respondents for the period 1 December 2022 to 28 February 2023 by no
later than 30 March 2023;
46.6.6.
Provide the Public Protector’s office
of a comprehensive reconciliation of all amounts paid to the 2
nd
to 103
rd
respondents for the period 1 December 2022 to 28 February 2023 by no
later than 30 March 2023.
46.7.
The City is ordered to pay the applicants’
costs.
EJ
FERREIRA, AJ
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
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 26 November 2022.
HEARD
ON 07 NOVEMBER 2022
JUDGMENT
DELIVERED ON 26 NOVEMBER 2022.
Appearances
Counsel
for Applicants: Adv
APJ Els
Attorney
for Applicant: Albert
Hibbert Attorneys
Counsel
for 1
st
and 2
nd
Respondents Adv
A Laka SC
Adv
TM Makola
Attorney
for the 1
st
and 2
nd
Respondents: Kutumela
Sithole Attorneys Inc.
[1]
Mazibuko
and Others v City of Johannesburg and Others (CCT 39/09)
[2009] ZACC
28
;
2010 (3) BCLR 239
(CC);
2010 (4) SA 1
(CC) (8 October 2009) at
paras 1 – 2.
[2]
See
CaseLines 1 – 79.
[3]
See
CaseLines 1 – 79.
[4]
See
CaseLines 1 – 80.
[5]
See
CaseLines 000001 – 25 to 000001 – 31.
[6]
See
CaseLines 000001 – 28 to 000001 – 29.
[7]
(27974/2010,
25945/2010) [2011] ZAGPPHC 1 (7 January 2011).
[8]
[2011]
ZAGPPHC 1 at para 14
[9]
Defensor
Electronic Security (Pty) Ltd v Centrlec SOC Limited - unreported No
3372/2021 ZAFSHC.
[10]
See
CaseLines 11 – 15.
[11]
2007
(3) SA 121
(CC) at para 29.
[12]
The
historical development of this doctrine is traced by Kahn
1967 SALJ
43
175 308.
[13]
Commissioner
for Inland Revenue v Estate Crewe
1943 AD 656
680; Kahn 52.
[14]
Pretorius
v Glas
1923 TPD 156
160 161; Germiston Town Council v
Union Government
1931 TPD 396
405; Le Marchand v Creeke
1953 1
SA 186
(N).
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