Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 991South Africa
RMS Joint Venture CC t/a Radds Transport v Transnet SOC Limited, Eyamakoshi and Others (038072/2022) [2022] ZAGPPHC 991 (15 December 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
15 December 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## RMS Joint Venture CC t/a Radds Transport v Transnet SOC Limited, Eyamakoshi and Others (038072/2022) [2022] ZAGPPHC 991 (15 December 2022)
RMS Joint Venture CC t/a Radds Transport v Transnet SOC Limited, Eyamakoshi and Others (038072/2022) [2022] ZAGPPHC 991 (15 December 2022)
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sino date 15 December 2022
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
Case
No:
038072/2022
REPORTABLE: NO
OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: NO
REVISED
In the matter between:
RMS
JOINT VENTURE CC t/a RADDS TRANSPORT
Applicant
and
TRANSNET
SOC LIMITED, EYAMAKOSHI
1
ST
Respondent
TRANSPORT
(OTY) LTD, AQUA TRANSPORT
2
ND
Respondent
PLANT
HIRE (PTY) LTD
3
RD
Respondent
JUDGMENT
COWEN J
Introduction
1.
The
applicant, RMS Joint Venture CC, applied to this Court on an urgent
basis for an interim interdict to prevent the respondents
from
implementing a tender to provide a three year maintenance lease of
materials handling equipment at the terminals of the Port
of Richards
Bay (the tender).
[1]
The
first respondent, Transnet SOC Limited (Transnet) awarded the tender
to the second and third respondents, respectively,
Eyamakhosi
Transport (Pty) Ltd and Aqua Transport and Plant Hire (Pty) Ltd.
The interim interdict was sought (as Part A)
pending a review of the
decision to award the tender (Part B), which, it was prayed, should
be case-managed and heard on an expedited
basis. The applicant
was excluded from the tender in circumstances where Transnet is in
the process of blacklisting the applicant
as a supplier due to
concerns about tender collusion and issues that are under forensic
investigation. These concerns
do not relate to the tender
itself but to prior tender processes. The concerns are detailed in
the founding affidavit and in view
of the basis of my decision, I do
not detail them in full.
2.
On 2 December 2022 I delivered my order in
Part A in the following terms.
‘
1.
The forms and service provided for in the Rules of Court are
dispensed with and the matter is heard as an urgent application
in
terms of Rule 6(12) of the Rules of this Court.
2. Pending the final
determination of the relief sought in Part B of this application (the
interdict period), the respondents are
interdicted from taking any
steps to implement the tender advertised under Request for Proposal
tender iCLM HQ 628/TPT (the tender).
3. The parties are
directed to prosecute the review (Part B) expeditiously and shall,
after the commencement of the first term 2023,
approach the office of
the Deputy Judge President for the allocation of a hearing date and
any expedited case management that may,
at that stage, be required.
4. The First Respondent
shall deliver the Rule 53 Record, if it has not already done so, by
no later than 9 December 2022.
5. The Applicant shall
deliver its supplementary founding affidavit and any amendment to the
notice of motion in terms of Rule 53
by no later than 23 December
2022.
6. The Respondent shall
deliver its answering affidavit by no later than 20 January 2023.
7. The Applicant shall
deliver its replying affidavits by no later than 31 January 2023.
8. In the event that a
dispute arises in connection with the production of the Rule 53
Record and the dispute is of such a nature
that prevents the
applicant from complying with paragraph 5 above, the dates set in
paragraph 5 to 7 shall, with the necessary
changes, apply to the
delivery of affidavits in any application to compel production of a
full record.
9. Without derogating
from the parties’ common law rights in any way, the parties are
granted leave during the interdict period
to apply to the Court, on
good cause shown, to vary paragraph 2 of this order should such
variation be necessary to prevent disruption
to the operations of the
Port of Richards Bay notwithstanding that the relevant facts may have
existed at the time this order was
granted.
10. Costs are
reserved.’
3.
I now explain my primary reasons for making
this order.
Urgency
4.
The application was instituted urgently on
25 October 2022. The applicant afforded the respondents until
11 November 2022
to deliver answering affidavits, with a replying
affidavit to follow. The applicant enrolled the matter on the
urgent roll
for Tuesday 22 November 2022. I allocated the
matter for hearing on Thursday 24 November 2022. The applicant
followed
the above time-table in circumstances where Transnet had
finally notified it of the tender decision on 17 October 2022.
Although
Transnet initially notified the applicant of its exclusion
from the tender process in correspondence dated 15 August 2022, the
applicant took issue with the exclusion, and in correspondence dated
26 August 2022, threatened an urgent application. On
29 August
2022, Transnet indicated that the bid process was ongoing and that
all bidders, including the applicant would be notified
of the final
outcomes when the process was finalized including the process to be
followed in cases of objections or complaints.
Thereafter, on 9
September 2022, Transnet requested the applicant to confirm an
extension of the validity of its tender until 5
December 2022.
Following the notification of the decision on 17 October 2022, the
applicant requested Transnet to give it
an undertaking not to
implement the tender pending a review, which Transnet did not do.
Although the applicant truncated
the time frames for the delivery of
affidavits, the time afforded was adequate to enable a reasoned and
substantiated response
(13 court days). Although
Transnet did not supply its intended time-line for implementation in
its answering
affidavit, it wishes to implement the tender. In
my view, the applicant prosecuted the application for interim relief
appropriately
in terms of Rule 6(12) of the Rules of this Court.
Preliminary point:
section 7(2) of PAJA
5.
At
the hearing, Transnet raised a preliminary point in terms of section
7(2) of the Promotion of Administrative Justice Act 2 of
2000 (PAJA)
which prevents a court from reviewing administrative action unless
any internal remedy provided for in any other law
has first been
exhausted. Section 3 of PAJA imposes a duty on administrators
to provide persons whose rights or legitimate
expectations are
materially and adversely affected with adequate notice of any right
of review or internal appeal, where applicable.
[2]
This is part of the right to procedural fairness and the correlative
duty on administrators to act in a procedurally fair manner
under
PAJA.
6.
Before
the applicant instituted the application, it requested Transnet to
inform it of any available internal remedy. It did
so in
correspondence dated 26 August 2022, at which point the applicant had
been notified of its initial exclusion. As indicated
above, on
29 August 2022, Transnet advised that it would notify all bidders of
the final outcomes of the process in due course
including the process
to be followed in cases of objections or complaints.
However, in the letter of 17 October 2022,
in which Transnet finally
notified the applicant of the outcome of the bid process, there was
no information supplied regarding
the process to be followed in cases
of objection or complaints. Although not traversed in the
answering affidavit and apparent
only from an annexure thereto,
[3]
it appears that the only parties that were so advised (to the extent
that they were), are the successful bidders, who were informed
in
their letters of 17 October 2022 that the award of the bid was
subject to various terms and conditions including the ‘expiry
of a five (5) working day objection period afforded to unsuccessful
bidders to object to the award of [the] bid to [the] company.’
The first time that the applicant was informed of any process is in a
letter dated 31 October 2022 from Transnet’s attorneys.
This was both after the urgent application was instituted and,
through no fault of the applicant, after the lapse of the five (5)
working day objection period. Accordingly, Transnet is
responsible for any failure on the part of the applicant to pursue
any available internal remedy.
7.
The applicant submitted that the internal
remedy of which it was informed, albeit belatedly on 31 October 2022,
does not constitute
an internal remedy as contemplated by section
7(2) of PAJA as there is nothing to indicate that the process can
result in any effective
redress, entailing revisiting the decision to
exclude it from the process. Alternatively, it was
submitted that the
defence is not available to Transnet in the
application for interim relief: it would apply to the review
itself.
8.
The
internal remedy upon which Transnet relies in its letter of 31
October 2022 is stated to involve a debriefing and an independent
compliance review of the procurement process followed by
Transnet.
[4]
The letter
explains that Transnet no longer has an internal Ombudsman, but there
is an interim measure whereby complaints
and objections are dealt
with through an independent compliance review process as determined
by the relevant operating division.
The letter continues:
‘
The
internal remedy is available to your client in addition to the
debriefing meeting where your client would be provided with the
reasons for them being unsuccessful in the tender process, and is a
further opportunity to provide it with clarity on the reasoning
for
its disqualification. This internal remedy process complies
with the requirements of the applicable legislation and will
entail a
fair and transparent review of the applicant’s complaint and in
no way obviates your client’s rights to approach
a court after
these remedies have been exhausted if your client is unsatisfied with
the outcome thereof.’
9.
The letter itself does not set out what the
applicant is to do in order to follow this process, or processes, it
does not explain
whether the lodgment of any complaint would result
in the suspension of the award of the tender and it does not explain
the competent
outcomes. Transnet’s Supply Chain Management
Procurement Procedures Manual (PPM), attached to the answering
affidavit, only
details the power of the now non-operational
Ombudsman. The debriefing process is detailed in a further
document attached
to the answering affidavit titled ‘Debriefing
process’. On a consideration of its content, it entails a
process
whereby bidders are afforded a hearing before a Transnet
committee (called a representation), which would result in the
bidder’s
proposal being ‘unpacked’ ‘in line
with the evaluation process’ and a detailed explanation given
as to
why and how they were disqualified. Questions would be
answered. The process pertinently does not entail any
revisiting
of the decision itself and it is not suggested that the
award of the bids is suspended in the meantime. There is simply
no
information to hand about the process entailed in the independent
compliance review process and its competent outcomes.
10.
The
Constitutional Court has considered the value and need for internal
remedies in our law and why they should be exhausted before
approaching a court.
[5]
In
doing so, it has found that they provide immediate and cost-effective
relief, provide administrators with the opportunity
to correct their
own irregularities, enhance the autonomy of the administrative
process and the separation of powers, and have
notable value where
internal remedies require specialized or technical knowledge or are
fact intensive.
[6]
The
applicant’s counsel correctly highlighted these considerations
in her submissions.
11.
On
the information supplied in the affidavits, the debriefing process
does not, on its own, constitute a remedy as contemplated
by section
7(2) as it is not capable of redressing the harm complained of or
providing an effective remedy.
[7]
Rather it is what is claims to be: a debriefing process.
To the extent that Transnet relies, in tandem with that
process, on a
compliance review process, no information has been supplied about
it. To the extent that Transnet relies on
the remedy referred
to in the letters of 17 October 2022 to successful bidders, as was
submitted in argument, the applicants did
not receive the relevant
notification and the five-day period has lapsed due to no fault of
the applicant. To the extent
that the remedy remains available,
notwithstanding the assurances given to the successful bidders, the
applicant has not yet been
given adequate notice of it. The
applicant has not been told with whom it should lodge any complaint,
it has not been given
adequate notice of the procedure to follow and
it has not been told what outcomes are competent. In my view,
compliance with
section 3(2)(b)(iv) of PAJA would, in this case,
entail the provision by Transnet of at least such information to meet
the standard
of procedural fairness.
12.
Thus, at least as matters stand, Transnet
has not given the applicant adequate notice of any internal remedy
that may be available
to it and the point must fail for this reason
alone. In any event, on the facts of this case, the
defence does not
assist Transnet at the interim stage as there is no
suggestion on the affidavits that the lodgment of any complaint at
this point
would suspend the operation of the award of the tender.
In those circumstances, the applicant cannot be faulted for
approaching
the court for interim relief. If, however, an
effective internal remedy remains available to the applicant of which
Transnet
is yet to give adequate notice, Transnet should do so and
the parties can then conduct themselves accordingly. In this
regard,
it was apparent during the hearing that Transnet may not have
fully canvassed these matters on the affidavits.
Interim relief
13.
An
applicant for an interim interdict must, ordinarily, establish a
prima
facie
right
(being a right
prima
facie
established
even if open to some doubt), that irreparable harm is likely to
result if the remedy is not granted, that there is no
other
satisfactory remedy available and the balance of convenience must be
in favour of granting the remedy.
[8]
The remedy is a discretionary remedy.
[9]
In cases where the interdict restrains the exercise of public power
impacting on the separation of powers, the application
of these
considerations is qualified and ‘the test must be applied
cognizant of the normative scheme and democratic principles
that
underpin our Constitution.’
[10]
In such cases, a court may grant an interim interdict if satisfied
that an applicant has good prospects of success in the main
review
and the claim must be based on strong grounds likely to succeed.
[11]
Moreover, courts are required to consider what is described as
separation of powers harm in assessing the balance of convenience.
This entails, amongst other things, a consideration of the extent to
which the restraining order will intrude into the exclusive
terrain
of another branch of government. Where the effect of an
interdict is to prevent the exercise of public power, then
a
temporary interdict should be granted only in the clearest of
cases.
[12]
Counsel did
not draw to my attention to any authority in which these elevated
standards have been applied in an application
for an interim
interdict restraining the implementation of a tender pending its
review under PAJA. However, what is apparent
from the
authorities I have considered is that courts understand the
principles, established by the Constitutional Court, to apply
to the
exercise of all public power, and not, as is sometimes argued, as
being limited to executive or legislative powers. Moreover,
I
located one decision in which the elevated standards have been
applied in context of a tender decision.
[13]
The decision predates the decision of
EFF
v Gordhan
which limits the application of the above principles to where there
is a restraint on the exercise of power.
[14]
It may be, as counsel for the applicant submitted, that there is no
restraint on the exercise of power in the case before me as
the
tender process is complete and what is sought to be restrained is the
resultant contract. But it is not necessary for
me to decide
this as I am satisfied that the elevated standards are met in this
case.
The strength of the
applicant’s case
14.
I
am satisfied, on the papers before me, that the applicant has
established strong prospects of success and that the review is likely
to succeed.
[15]
The
founding affidavit is detailed and multiple grounds of review are
advanced, both procedural and substantive. It
is only necessary
and desirable for me to detail my conclusions in respect of one
animating feature of the review in order to decide
the application
for interim relief. This concerns whether Transnet has complied
with its own processes in excluding the applicant
from the tender,
which processes are integral to ensuring that the process is
procedurally fair. On the affidavits before
me, the procedure
has not been followed and the case on procedural unfairness is
resultantly a strong one.
[16]
15.
The reason for the applicant’s
exclusion is recorded in the following terms in the 17 October 2022
letter.
‘
Due
to the blacklisting process that is currently underway against RMS
joint Venture t/A Radds, Transnet exercises its right made
available
to it in clause 5.1 and 5.2 of the Integrity pact by excluding RADDS
from this process as a result of the Final Forensic
Investigation
Report which has evidence of corrupt and collusive bidding and bid
rigging by RADDS in conjunctions with its associated
companies SI
Trucking and SI Logistics.’
16.
Section 217(1) of the Constitution obliges
Transnet, when it contracts for goods and services, to do so in
accordance with a system
which is ‘fair, equitable,
transparent, competitive and cost-effective.’
Procurement is governed
by the Preferential Procurement Policy
Framework Act 5 of 2000 (the PPPFA).
As regards Transnet’s own
tender system, most relevant for present purposes are Transnet’s
Supplier Integrity Pact (the
integrity pact) and the PPM.
During argument, Transnet’s counsel pinned Transnet’s
case on paragraph 20.9.2 of
the PPM which governs the position where
a bidder or supplier is subject to a restriction process (which I
explain more fully below)
or a forensic investigation.
Paragraph 20.9 provides:
‘
20.9.1
Where a bidder is the subject of an ongoing restriction process, it
is not advisable for Transnet to award new business to that entity if
it is the highest ranked bidder in a bid process. This
is
considering that such supplier would already in the view of Transnet,
be reasonably suspected to have abused the supply chain
management
system and the supplier could ultimately be restricted from doing
business with organs of state. In such instances
it is
recommended that the restriction process be expedited, if possible.
However, if it is not possible to delay the award,
the risks
associated with awarding to such a bidder must be considered.
It may be considered whether objectives criteria
exist to justify
award to another Bidder and such recommendation may be made to the
relevant Acquisition Council. Should
it be determined that it
appropriate to apply objective criteria, the Bidder must be requested
to make representations as to why
it should not be awarded the
business and the AC must consider such representations before making
a final decision.
20.9.2 Similarly,
it is not advisable for Transnet to award new business to a supplier
that is the subject of a forensic investigation.
The mere fact
that a forensic investigation is commissioned against the supplier
would indicate that there are significant allegations
of wrongdoing
against that supplier, which, if proven correct, could result in the
supplier being restricted from doing business
with organs of state.
The process indicated in paragraph 20.9.1 should be followed where
such a Bidder is the highest ranked
bidder in a bid process.’
17.
The
integrity pact details conduct to ensure the integrity of the tender
process and to which bidders must commit. In correspondence
from
Transnet to the applicant dated 27 May 2022, Transnet pertinently
refer to Clause 3.4, 3.7, 4.2 and 4.3
[17]
thereof to justify a proposed disqualification from the tender.
In terms of Clause 5.1, where there is a breach of
Clause 3 or
in a form that puts the bidder’s reliability or credibility
into question, the bidder’s application may
be rejected.
Clause 5.2 confers a power to exclude a bidder from future bidding
processes where there is a breach of paragraph
3 or any material
violation that puts the bidder’s reliability and credibility
into question after following ‘due procedures’.
The
applicant understandably understood that this provision was being
applied, but while relevant, Transnet ultimately relies on
Clause
20.9 2. Notably, in its founding affidavit, the applicant
pleads, amongst other things, the absence of any of the
conditions
required to trigger the provisions referred to as well as the absence
of due process in the process of exclusion.
18.
The process of restricting suppliers from
business with Transnet is governed by Chapter 20 of the PPM in the
following terms:
‘
20.1
What is restriction?
It is a mechanism used to
exclude suppliers, shareholders and directors from future business
with all organs of state, including
Transnet, for a specified
period. The decision to restrict must be based on one of the
prescribed grounds for restriction
allowed for in terms of National
Treasury Instruction 3 of 2016/2017 on Prevention and Combatting
Abuse in the SCM system and the
PPPFA Regulations, 2017.
20.1.1 In terms of
the Instruction Note, the final approver of the restriction is
Transnet. Transnet is required to
complete the restriction
process and advise the entity of its restriction. Thereafter
National Treasury must be requested
to add the relevant bidder to its
database of restricted suppliers.
20.1.2 In terms of
the PPPFA Regulations, 2017, National Treasury grants final approval
for the restriction. Where a
restriction is sought in terms of
the PPPFA regulations, Transnet must submit its request for
restriction to National Treasury.
Upon approval by National
Treasury, Transnet must advise the bidder of such restriction.
20.2 Grounds for
restriction
20.2.1
Grounds for restriction in terms of the NT Instruction Note 3 of
2016/2017
relate to general abuse of the supply chain management
system, which includes the following acts of misconduct:
* Where any person /
Enterprise which has submitted a Bid, concluded a contract, or in the
capacity of agent or subcontractor, has
been associated with such Bid
or contract has acted in bad faith toward Transnet, e.g. fictitious
invoices, poor or nonperformance
with adequate supporting evidence;
* Any person / Enterprise
which has offered, promised or given a bribe, including offer a
facilitating fee in relation to obtaining
or execution of the
contract;
* Any person or
enterprise who has solicited unauthorized information relating to a
bid.
20.2.2 Grounds for
restriction in terms of the Preferential Procurement Regulations,
2017 are as follows:
* False information
regarding B-BBEE status levels, local production and content or
another matter required in terms of the Regulations
which will affect
or has affected the evaluation of bid; or
* Where a bidder has
failed to declare any subcontracting arrangements.
19.
It
is common cause that the restriction process, which is in motion, is
not yet finalized. In these circumstances, Transnet
was
compelled to rely on Clause 20.9.2. That in turn makes some
sense of the content of the letter of 17 October 2022, cited
above,
which refers to the fact that the exclusion is ‘as a result of
the Final Forensic Investigation Report which has evidence
of corrupt
and collusive bidding and bid rigging by RADDS in conjunction with
its associated companies SI Trucking and SI Logistics.’
[18]
20.
It is correct that Clause 20.9.2 permits
Transnet to decline to award new business to a supplier that is the
subject of a forensic
investigation at least where the allegations,
if proven correct, could result in the supplier being restricted from
doing business
with organs of state. Even assuming that the
allegations in question may be of this sort, Transnet’s
difficulty is
that it failed to follow the requisite process, which
is integral to ensuring procedural fairness.
21.
Clause 20.9.2 requires that the process in
Clause 20.9.1 be followed ‘where such a Bidder is the highest
ranked bidder in
a bid process.’ Transnet submitted that
that process need not have been followed because the applicant was
not the
highest ranked bidder. But that submission cannot be
accepted because on the evidence before me, it did not fully evaluate
the applicant’s bid. Notwithstanding an allegation in the
answering affidavit suggesting otherwise, Transnet’s
counsel
properly drew the Court’s attention to the relevant documents
which show that the applicant was excluded from evaluation
before
that process was finalized. The tender process ensued in three
stages. Stage 1 entailed testing for responsiveness
(administratively and substantively). The applicant was
positively evaluated in Stage 1. Stage 2 entailed compliance
with minimum functionality and technical thresholds. The
applicant was positively evaluated in Stage 2. But the
applicant
was then removed from the evaluation process and not
evaluated at all in Stage 3 which includes, as the first step, the
critical
process of weighted scoring contemplated by the PPPFA having
regard to price (90) and black economic empowerment scores (10).
On price, the evidence before me, which is – at least at this
stage – uncontested, shows that the applicant would have
scored
highest on price. In the circumstances, Transnet disabled itself from
assessing whether the applicant was the highest ranked
bidder (and on
the applicant’s uncontested evidence it would have been.)
In consequence, it failed to follow the requisite
procedures, being
the due process provisions in Clause 20.9.1.
22.
Transnet submitted, in the alternative,
that in fact the due process procedures were followed when regard is
had to several requests
for submissions that Transnet addressed to
the applicant prior to its exclusion. But these do not assist
Transnet as none
of these requests are directed at the proposed
action in terms of Clause 20.9.2. There are potentially various
difficulties
with the process followed. For present purposes,
it suffices that the applicant was pertinently not asked why it
should not
be awarded the business as contemplated by that
section. Nor could it have been rationally engaged on the issue
as
it had not been finally evaluated and Transnet had not directed
itself to the considerations that would have been relevant if it
had
been.
Alternative
satisfactory remedy
23.
Counsel
for Transnet did not suggest that the applicant should pursue a
remedy in damages if it is found in due course that the
tender was
unlawful. Nor could it in light of the case pleaded –
the plaintiffs do not allege fraud or dishonesty.
[19]
I have dealt with the availability of internal remedies above:
on the information to hand, there is no currently available
internal
remedy that, if pursued would have the effect of suspending the award
of the tender.
Irreparable harm
24.
Transnet
submitted that the applicant will not suffer irreparable harm in that
the only harm is one of alleged loss of profit.
But this type
of harm can be protected by interdict.
[20]
Furthermore, there is a real risk that the dispute may become
academic in the meantime. If so, the applicant will not
only have
lost the prospect of the award of the tender but will have been
subjected to unlawful and unfair administrative action.
It is
also relevant that the impugned decision in this case has adverse
reputational consequences for the applicant.
I am
satisfied that this requirement is met.
Balance of convenience
25.
From the applicant’s perspective,
considerations of convenience obviously favour the grant of an
interim interdict.
However, considerations relevant to
Transnet, the public and potential separation of powers harm have
particular resonance in this
case and warrant careful consideration.
26.
First, Transnet embarked on the tender to
support the operations of the port and its implementation is
ultimately instrumental to
its smooth running. In this regard,
Transnet pleads a plethora of potential harms and disruption to the
port if interim relief
is granted. Transnet’s difficulty
is that it does so in the most general of terms without explaining
why the harms
will result or providing any evidence upon which the
Court can conclude that there is any real risk that they will.
For example,
general statements are made that any potential non-award
will create significant risk that the terminal will have a shortage
of
equipment and transport for mineral handling, supply will be
disrupted, the inbound rail logistics leg and the outbound shipping
leg will be brought to a standstill, contractual demand for various
minerals will stall resulting in revenue loss and the port’s
licence may be affected. Other similar concerns are raised.
None of these concerns are substantiated, for example by
explaining
why it is not possible to continue in the interim with the current
contracts. The tender has a very long history
and has been
subject to a series of delays and in the interim Transnet has
proceeded with shorter contracts which are, on the information
before
me are still in place, including with the applicant, and there is
nothing to explain why they can’t be temporarily
extended if
needed. In this regard, the applicant made a series of
averments regarding the interim position and how the port
would
continue to be serviced. Transnet did not answer these
allegations. In these circumstances, Transnet has failed
factually to establish any likely inconvenience or disruption to the
port.
27.
However, given the public importance, and
importance to Transnet, of ensuring that the port is not disrupted,
my order empowers
Transnet to approach the court to vary the interim
order on good cause shown notwithstanding that the relevant facts may
have existed
at the time the order was granted. This
entitlement is in addition to any common law right Transnet has to
approach the Court
to vary the interim order.
28.
Secondly, Transnet is concerned about the
harm, reputational and systemic, that results from doing business
with a party who is
the subject of forensic investigation and under
scrutiny for alleged collusive practices and other conduct. In
my view, this
concern cannot outweigh the demand for procedural
fairness and legality in circumstances where no final findings have
been made
in the restriction process. The restriction process
itself is designed to protect Transnet from these harms and it must
ensue
fairly and lawfully. Furthermore, it is far from
clear why Transnet has failed to complete its restriction process at
this stage: the issues under consideration are not of recent
origin and the process has been long underway.
29.
Thirdly, Transnet submitted that the court
must give due prominence to potential separation of powers harm in
this case. In
my view, this is in part related to any potential
disruption to port operations which I have dealt with above.
Beyond this,
I am satisfied that the order I made does not cause harm
to the constitutional scheme or the separation of powers by intruding
into the sphere of other arms of government. The tender process
is complete and in issue now is the implementation of the
decision
through the conclusion of contractual arrangements. Courts are
frequently called upon to evaluate the lawfulness
of tender
processes, and in doing so, courts perform a vital function entrusted
to them under the Constitution which both enhances
the rule of law
and ensures the observance of constitutional rights, not least
section 33 of the Constitution, to which PAJA gives
effect.
30.
Fourthly, the applicant referred to the
public harm that can result if the applicant’s tender is not
duly evaluated given
that its price is, on the evidence before me,
substantially better than the price offered by the successful
tenderers. As
against this Transnet submitted that the prices
currently being paid are higher than what would be paid if the tender
is evaluated,
but this is not quantified. In my view, these are
relevant considerations, but the ultimate cost / benefit is not
adequately
explained. Nevertheless, in circumstances where, on
the evidence before me, the applicant’s bid is significantly
more
cost-effective than the successful bidders, it seems to me that
the public will ultimately gain if the tender is ultimately awarded
lawfully, provided the parties co-operate to ensure that the review
is expeditiously finalized.
Conclusion
31.
Transnet submitted that the court must be
mindful that in the current political environmental, parastatals must
be astute to ensure
proper tender processes and not to do business
with persons who may undermine these efforts. The country is,
after all, trying
to emerge from a period often described and
recently investigated as a period of state capture. The public
rightly demands
that tender processes are above board and that no
corrupt practices ensue. But this submission does not assist
Transnet in
this case. This is for two reasons. First,
whatever the merits of Transnet’s concerns about the applicant,
it
has in place a restriction procedure which, if followed, is
intended to ensure that its outcomes are not arbitrarily,
unjustifiably
or unfairly reached. Unless that process is
properly followed, the public cannot have any confidence that the
correct persons
are being targeted for restriction or excluded from
business notwithstanding offering competitive business. Second,
on the
information before me there are serious allegations levelled
against the successful bidders, which, while not the basis of my
decision
in Part A, warrant due consideration in the review.
Accordingly, in this case, there is a prospect that it is not only
the
restriction process but the tender award itself that has the
potential to threaten the integrity of a tender process.
S
COWEN
JUDGE
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 15 December 2022.
HEARD
ON 22 NOVEMBER 2022
ORDER
GRANTED ON 2 DECEMBER 2022
JUDGMENT
DELIVERED ON 15 DECEMBER 2022.
APPEARANCES
On
behalf of the Applicant:
Mr
HF Oosthuizen SC, Mr T Scott and Mr Z Raqowa
Instructed
by:
Froneman
Roux & Streicher Attorneys
On
behalf of the Respondents:
Ms S Mahabeer SC and Ms LR Naidoo
Instructed
by:
Livingston
Leandy Attorneys
[1]
The
tender number is iCLM HA 628/TPT.
[2]
See
section 3(2)(b)(iv).
[3]
A
party cannot approach a case on this basis: the portions of
annexures relied upon must be identified together with an
indication
of the case sought to be made out on the strength thereof. See
Swissborough
Diamond Mines (Pty) Ltd and others v Government of the RSA and
others
1999(2) SA 279 (T) at 324F-H
[4]
The
latter is confirmed in paragraph 18 of a document supplied in the
answering affidavit described as PPM Directive 20/2020 dealing
with
the subject of interim procurement procedure changes.
[5]
Koyabe
v Minister for Home Affairs
[2009]
ZACC 23
; 2009(12) BCLR 1192 (CC); 2010(4) SA 327 (CC) (
Koyabe
)
at paras 36 to 38.
[6]
Id.
[7]
See
Koyabe
at
para 42 to 44, Hoexter and Penfold Administrative Law of South
Africa (3 ed) at p 746 and
Reed
and others v Master of the High Court of SA and others
[2005] 2 All SA 429
E at para 20. Cf
Nichol
and another v Registrar of Pension Funds and others
[2005] ZASCA 97
; 2008(1) SA 383 (SCA) at para 22 and 23.
[8]
Setlogelo
v Setlogelo
1914
AD 221
at 227 and
Webster
v Mitchell
1948(1) SA 1186 (W) at 1186-90 approved in
National
Treasury and others v Opposition to Urban Tolling Alliance and
others
[2012] ZACC 18
; 2012(6) SA 223 (CC)’2012(11) BCLR 1148 (CC)
(
OUTA
)
at
paras 41 and 45 and
Tshwane
City v Afriforum
2016(6) SA 279 (CC) at para 49.
[9]
Knox
DÁrcy and others v Jamieson and
others
1996(4) SA 348 (A).
[10]
OUTA
supra
n 8 at para 45;
[11]
Economic
Freedom Fighters v Gordhan
2020(6)
SA 325 (CC) (
EFF
v Gordhan
)
at para 42 and OUTA.
[12]
OUTA
supra n 8 at para 46-47 and
EFF
v Gordhan
supra n 11 at para 110.
[13]
I
considered the cases referred to in Hoexter and Penfold
Administrative Law in South Africa Juta 2021 3 edat p804 fn 813.
The standards were applied in
Air
France-KLM SA v SAA Technical SOC Ltd and others
[2016] ZAGPPHC 877 paras 15-22). The case concerned an award
of a tender for aircraft components support.
A
similar though not wholly analogous scenario is
Vukani
Gaming Eastern Cape v Chairperson, Eastern Cape Gambling and Betting
Board
2018
JDR 0553 (ECG) paras 65 – 67 (application for interim relief
to suspend a gaming licence).
[14]
EFF
v Gordhan
,
supra para 60 and
see
Reaction Unit South Africa (Pty) Ltd v Private Security Industry
Regulatory Authority
2020(1) SA 281 (KZD) at para 33.
[15]
A
prima
facie
right
may be established by showing prospects of success in the review
application:
African
Informal Traders Forum and Others v City of Johannesburg and
Others
2014
(4) SA 371
(CC) para 25.
[16]
A
failure to act procedurally fairly is a ground of review recognized
in section 6(2)(c) of PAJA.
[17]
‘
3.4
The bidder / supplier will not enter into any illegal or dishonest
agreement or understanding, whether formal or informal
with other
bidders / suppliers. This applies in particular to
certifications submissions or non-submission of documents
or actions
that are restrictive or to introduce cartels into the bidding
process …
‘
3.5
The bidder / supplier will not misrepresent facts or furnish false
or forged documents or information in order to influence
the bidding
process to the advantage of the bidder / supplier or detriment of
Transnet or other competitors …
‘
4.2
The bidder has arrived at his submitted bid independently from, and
without consultation, communication, agreement or
arrangement with
any competitor …
‘
4.3
In particular, without limiting the generality of paragraph 4.2
above, there has been no consultation, communication,
agreement or
arrangement with any competitor regarding:
(a)
Prices;
(b)
Geographical area where goods or services
will be rendered [market allocation];
(c)
Methods, factors or formulas used to
calculate prices;
(d)
Intention or decision to submit or not
submit a bid;
(e)
The submission of a bid which does not
meet the specifications and conditions of the RFP; or
(f)
Bidding with the intention of not winning
the bid …
[18]
It
is not clear whether the forensic process is complete or not.
There are suggestions it is. I did not hear argument
on
whether the provision is available when the process is complete.
[19]
See
Olitzki
Property Holdings v State Tender Board
2001(3) SA 1247 (SCA) (
Olitzki
).
[20]
Id.
sino noindex
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