Case Law[2022] ZASCA 82South Africa
City of Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality v Takubiza Trading & Projects CC and Others (846/2021) [2022] ZASCA 82; 2023 (1) SA 44 (SCA) (3 June 2022)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
3 June 2022
Headnotes
Summary: Tender – award of after expiry of tender validity period – once tender validity period expired – tender process completed, albeit unsuccessfully.
Judgment
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## City of Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality v Takubiza Trading & Projects CC and Others (846/2021) [2022] ZASCA 82; 2023 (1) SA 44 (SCA) (3 June 2022)
City of Ekurhuleni Metropolitan Municipality v Takubiza Trading & Projects CC and Others (846/2021) [2022] ZASCA 82; 2023 (1) SA 44 (SCA) (3 June 2022)
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sino date 3 June 2022
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Reportable
Case
no: 846/2021
In
the matter between:
CITY
OF EKURHULENI METROPOLITAN
MUNICIPALITY
APPELLANT
and
TAKUBIZA
TRADING & PROJECTS CC
FIRST RESPONDENT
ZUTARI
(PTY)
LTD
SECOND RESPONDENT
NTIYISO
CONSULTING (PTY) LTD
THIRD RESPONDENT
Neutral citation:
City of Ekurhuleni Metropolitan
Municipality v Takubiza Trading & Projects CC and Others
(Case no 846/2021)
[2022] ZASCA 82
(03 June 2022)
Coram:
PONNAN and MABINDLA-BOQWANA JJA and MEYER, MATOJANE and
PHATSHOANE AJJA
Heard:
26 May 2022
Delivered:
03 June 2022
Summary:
Tender – award of after expiry of tender validity period –
once tender validity period expired –
tender process completed, albeit unsuccessfully.
ORDER
On
appeal from
: Gauteng Division of the High Court, Johannesburg
(Victor J, sitting as court of first instance):
(1)
The appeal is dismissed with costs.
(2)
The appellant’s Johannesburg and Bloemfontein attorneys shall
not be entitled to recover
any of the costs associated with the
preparation, perusal or copying of the record from the appellant.
JUDGMENT
Ponnan
JA (Mabindla-Boqwana JA and Meyer, Matojane and Phatshoane AJJA
concurring)
[1]
In March 2020, the appellant, the City of Ekurhuleni Metropolitan
Municipality (the
Municipality), published an invitation to tender
under reference PS-F07-2020 (the tender) for the appointment of
finance meter
management consultants to manage the Municipality’s
electricity and water meter readings and credit control processes on
an ‘as and when’ required basis for a 36-month period.
Appointments were sought to be made in respect of two separate
areas,
namely the North East (area 1) and South West (area 2). The total
value of the tender amounted to some R117 million, being
approximately R37 million in respect of area 1 and R79 million in
respect of area 2.
[2]
The initial closing date for the tender was 24 April 2020. However,
due to the COVID-19
pandemic and resultant national lockdown, the
closing date had to be extended to 11 June 2020. The bid validity
period was 120
days from the closing date, being 9 October 2020. On
that date at 11h47, Ms Sanjuka Makhan, the ICT Acquisition
Specialist: Supply
Chain Management in the Finance Department of the
Municipality, despatched the following email to all 24 bidders:
‘
SUBJECT:
REQUEST FOR EXTENSION OF VALIDITY: PS-F 07-2020
THE
APPOINTMENT OF FINANCE METER MANAGEMENT CONSULTANTS TO MANAGE THE
CITY OF EKURHULENI’S WATER AND ELECTRICITY METER READINGS
AND
CREDIT CONTROL PROCESSES, ON AN AS AND WHEN REQUIRED BASIS FROM 01
JULY 2020 UNTIL 30 JUNE 2023.
Contract
number
PS-F 07-2020
120 day validity period will expire on 09
October 2020.
You
are kindly requested to indicate whether you are accepting the
extension of validity until
31 December 2020
.
Please
confirm by completing the note below and return by e-mail to:
Sanjuka.Makhan@ekhuruleni.gov.za
Kindly
note that the confirmation is required on or before 9 October 2020. .
. .’
[3]
According to the Municipality:
‘
91
. . . The email was sent to [Aurecon South Africa Pty Ltd (Aurecon)]
at the email address: benoni@aurecon.com. A short while
later, Ms
Makhan received a “no delivery notification” from
Microsoft Outlook which included no delivery in respect
of [Aurecon].
.
. .
93
According to Ms Makhan, pursuant to receiving the notification from
Microsoft Outlook,
she discovered that some email addresses of
bidders had been captured incorrectly on the system – it
included [Aurecon’s]
email address. She states that once the
typographical errors were corrected she re-sent the email separately
to affected bidders.
94
The letter was subsequently sent to [Aurecon] on 9 October 2020 at
15h32 to the correct
email address:
benoni@aurecongroup.com
.
[Aurecon] emailed its confirmation on 12 October 2020 at 16h43 . . .
95
Ms Makhan states that there was not a deliberate delay to any
specific bidder to jeopardize
them in any way. The extension notices
were sent to all the bidders by the close of business on 9 October
before the validity period
had ended. Ms Makhan concedes that it
would have been preferable to have sent the letter to the bidders
earlier.
96.
According to Ms Makhan, all the bidders, bar one, agreed to the
extension, with three other
bidders also indicating their agreement
after the deadline. Bidder 8 did not respond to the extension letter.
None of the bidders
were disqualified from being evaluated due to
their late response to the letter, or in the case of bidder 8, due to
its non-response.
A bidder would only have been excluded if it had
responded to the extension letter and explicitly rejected the
extension of the
validity period.’
[1]
[4]
On 19 November 2020, the Bid Evaluation Committee of the Municipality
(the BEC) recommended
to the Bid Adjudication Committee (the BAC)
that the second respondent, Zutari (Pty) Ltd (previously known as
Aurecon South Africa
(Pty) Ltd (Aurecon)), and the third respondent,
Ntiyiso Consulting (Pty) Ltd (Ntiyiso), be awarded the tender for
area 1 and area
2, respectively. On 23 November 2020, the BAC
accepted the recommendation of the BEC. The City Manager and the
Chairperson of the
BAC approved the award to each of Aurecon and
Ntiyiso on 24 November 2020 and, by letter dated 17 December 2020,
they were informed
of their appointment.
[5]
Having informally learnt on 11 January 2021 that it was unsuccessful,
the first respondent,
Takubiza Trading & Projects CC (Takubiza),
caused an urgent review application to be issued out of the Gauteng
Division of
the High Court, Johannesburg (the high court). The
application was heard by Victor J on 22-23 April 2021, who, in a
judgment delivered
on 14 of June 2021, set aside the award to both
Aurecon and Ntiyiso, but suspended the declaration of invalidity for
a period of
150 days to enable the Municipality to commence with a
new tender process.
[6]
Takubiza’s primary contention, which found favour with the high
court, is that
the award to each of Aurecon and Ntiyiso had been made
after the tender validity period had already lapsed. In support of
that
contention, Takubiza called in aid a line of high court
authority commencing with the judgment of Southwood J in
Telkom
SA v Merid Training (Pty) Ltd and others
;
Bihati
Solutions (Pty) Ltd v Telkom SA and others
(
Telkom
SA
).
[2]
In that matter,
Telkom
published a request for proposals in order to appoint service
providers. The request stipulated a closing date and a tender
validity period of 120 days from the closing date, during which
offers made by bidders would remain open for acceptance. By the
time
the tender validity period had expired, no decision had been taken by
Telkom, and the tender validity period had not been
extended. Despite
this, Telkom continued to evaluate and shortlist the bidders. It was
only after the tender validity period had
expired that Telkom sent
e-mails to the 15 shortlisted bidders requesting them to agree to an
extension of the tender validity
period. Some, including the six
successful bidders, agreed to do so. The decision to accept the bids
of the six respondents was
taken only after the expiry of this
further period. Before any contract was concluded with the six
bidders, Telkom decided, on
legal advice, to apply for the setting
aside of its own decision.
[7]
Southwood J took the view that:
‘
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.’
[3]
[8]
Telkom
SA
was
followed by Plasket J in
Joubert
Galpin Searle Inc & others v Road Accident Fund & others
(Searle)
.
[4]
The facts in
Searle
were
these:
On
13 July 2012, the respondent, the Road Accident Fund (RAF),
advertised a ‘request for proposals’ with the description
‘Panel of Attorneys for [RAF] to provide specialist litigation
services’. The RAF invited suitably qualified legal
firms from
all provinces to be listed on a panel of attorneys to provide
specialist litigation services in various specified categories.
The
closing date for the submission of bids was 20 August 2012 and the
tender validity period was ‘90 days from the closing
date’.
It would appear that the process was complex and time-consuming and
did not always run smoothly. The Bid Evaluation
Committee (the BEC)
finalised the evaluation of all of the bids on 21 September 2012. An
evaluation report was finalised by the
BEC on 2 November 2012 and
tabled before a meeting of the Procurement Control Committee (the
PCC) on 5 December 2012. On 5 August
2013, the RAF wrote to bidders
to inform them that it had taken a decision to proceed with its
proposal concerning the extension
of the tender validity period. It
asked bidders to ‘amend and renew’ their bids in
accordance with this decision by
13h00 on 14 August 2013.
[9]
Plasket J, who took the view that the judgment in
Telkom
SA
was
‘essentially on all fours with [
Searle
]’,
[5]
observed:
‘
[68]
As with this case, what had to be decided, according to Southwood J,
was “the legal consequence of a failure by a public
body to
accept, within the stipulated validity period for the (tender)
proposals, any of the proposals received.” In deciding
this
issue, Southwood J’s starting point was four inter-related
propositions. They are that:
(a)
the decision to award a tender is an administrative action and the
PAJA therefore applies;
(b)
generally speaking, once a contract has been entered into following
the award of a tender, the law of contract applies;
(c)
but a contract entered into contrary
to prescribed tender processes is invalid; and
(d)
consequently, “even if no contract is entered into, all steps
taken in accordance with a process which does not comply with
the
prescribed tender process are also invalid.”
. .
.
[70]
I am in agreement with Southwood J for the reasons given by him. As a
result, it is my view that, in this case, once the tender
validity
period had expired on or about 20 November 2012, the tender process
had been completed, albeit unsuccessfully.’
[10]
Telkom
SA
and
Searle
have
been cited with approval in several subsequent judgments.
[6]
However, the argument advanced on behalf of the Municipality is that
this weighty body of authority is distinguishable because,
so the
argument goes, here, unlike in those matters, the Municipality took
steps (in the form of the notification from Ms Makan)
before the
expiration of the validity period. As I shall endeavour to show,
there are several reasons why any distinction, as may
exist between
those matters and the present, is a distinction without a difference.
[11]
First, the Municipality has quite inexplicably advanced no
explanation as to why the notification
was despatched on the very
last day of the tender validity period. That aside, second, a real
difficulty for the Municipality is
that the notification from Ms
Makan, required ‘confirmation’, for good reason, from all
of the bidders ‘on or
before 9 October 2020’, which, did
not happen. Conceptually, there can be no difference between the
situation encountered
here, where the confirmation sought is not
received by the organ of state within the stipulated period, and that
dealt with in
Telkom SA
and
Searle
(and the cases that
followed them), where the notification is only despatched by the
organ of state after the period has expired.
Surely, both stand on
the same footing: and in both, so it seems to me, the same
consequence must inexorably follow. It is difficult
to appreciate why
an organ of state would be better placed, merely because it has
despatched a request to which it has not received
a favourable
response before the expiration of the validity period, compared to
one that only takes such a step after the expiry
of that period.
Here, the despatch of the notification plainly did not serve to
achieve its intended purpose and, in truth, was
so late as to be more
illusory than real.
[12]
Third, to borrow once again from Plasket J (
Searle
para 74):
‘
.
. . By the time the tender validity period has expired, there is
nothing to extend because, as Southwood J said in
Telkom
,
the tender process has been concluded, albeit unsuccessfully. The
result, in this case, is that the RAF had no power to award
the
tender once the bid validity period had expired and it had no power
to extend the period as it purported to do. In the language
of s
6(2)
(a)
(i) of the PAJA, the decision-maker – the board,
in this instance – “was not authorised” to take the
decision.
Put in slightly different terms, there were no valid bids
to accept, so the RAF had no power to accept the expired bids.’
In
Tactical
Security Services CC v Ethekwini Municipality and Others
,
[7]
which considered the question whether the validity of bids can be
extended by agreement after they had expired, Ploos van Amstel
J
pointed out that a tender is defined in the Preferential Procurement
Regulations as ‘a written offer in the 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’.
[8]
He accordingly held that without an extension, the tender, like any
other offer, falls away, if it is not accepted in time. Accordingly,
that come the 10
th
of October, there was no longer a valid tender from Aurecon for the
Municipality to accept.
[13]
Fourth, as was held by the high court, the validity period is indeed
one of the fundamental ‘rules
of the game’, being the
period within which the process should be finalised. To extend the
tender validity period, the consent
of all the participants to the
tender process is required. Unless there is a timeous request and
favourable response from all the
tenderers prior to the expiry of the
tender, the tender comes to an end. The view taken by the high court
in this matter accords
with the judgment of the full court (Daffue JP
and Mhlambi J) in
Defensor Electronic Security (Pty) Ltd v Centlec
SOC Ltd
, where the following was said:
‘
.
. . It is the applicant’s case that the first respondent
awarded the tender to the second respondent after expiry of the
tender validity period and without a prior request for extension and
approval of all relevant bidders. The tender validity period
expired
on 2 March 2021. Although the first respondent relied on letters
addressed to applicant and second respondent dated 1 March
2021, the
day before expiry of the tender, there is no proof that the request
for extension was communicated to the bidders prior
to the expiry and
the bidders consented to the extension of the period prior to expiry
thereof. In fact, applicant has proved that
the request for extension
was sent by e-mail to it as late as 23 March 2021. It is the
applicant’s case that once the tender
validity period has
expired, it was not possible to resuscitate it. A new bid process had
to be initiated in order to ensure that
all interested parties were
provided a further opportunity to tender. I am in respectful
agreement with the judgment of Southwood
J in
Telkom
SA Ltd v Merid Training (Pty) Ltd and others
;
Bihiti
Solutions (Pty) Ltd v Telkom SA and others
relied
upon by Mr Cilliers. I therefore also agree with the applicant’s
counsel that in the absence of the required proof
that 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]
[14]
Fifth,
the signification of confirmation by
Aurecon on the 12
th
could not somehow have had the effect of turning the clock back to
the 9
th
and breathing life into the process with retrospective effect to that
date. What the argument advanced on behalf of the Municipality
boils
down to is that whereas, as a fact, there was confirmation only on
the 12
th
,
it fell to be treated as if, to all intents and purposes, that had
occurred on the 9
th
.
What then of the period that intervened between the 9
th
and 12
th
(namely the 10
th
and 11
th
);
what would the status of the tender process have been in that period?
If not
completed, then what? If completed, albeit
unsuccessfully, then how could it possibly be resuscitated?
What
if, instead of the 12
th
,
the confirmation from Aurecon had only come much later, say after
several more days, weeks or months? What would the status of
the
tender have been in that extended period between the 9
th
and confirmation?
[15]
It goes without saying that a tender process cannot be open-ended.
Certainty has to be the touchstone.
[10]
I can thus conceive of no reason why the principle so firmly
established in
Telkom
SA
and
Searle
does
not find application here. It follows that the appeal must fail.
[16]
It remains to comment on the lamentable state of the record. It
consists of 12 main volumes consisting
of 2244 pages and one
supplementary volume of 111 pages. It is replete with all manner of
irrelevant material. Much of it is barely
legible, with inadequate
line numbering and no proper cross-referencing to speak of. Bulk was
added by pasting photostatic copies
over other pages, resulting often
enough in pages sticking together and having to be prised apart.
No
heed was paid to the requirement that volumes should be so bound that
upon being opened they will remain open or that, in use,
the binding
will not fail.
[17]
Such was the state of the record, that the registrar would have been
entitled to have rejected
it. An order striking the matter from the
roll may also not have been unwarranted. However, prior to the
hearing of the appeal,
the appellant was invited to file
supplementary heads of argument to address the failure to properly
comply with the rules and
what consequence, if any, should follow. In
those heads, it was stated somewhat euphemistically that ‘there
were shortcomings
in the preparation of the record’. The heads
then proceed to identify some of the shortcomings, but not all of
them.
[18]
Given the unnecessary volume and the state of the record as a whole
some sanction must follow.
This
Court has previously expressed its displeasure at records that
include unnecessary documents of the kind encountered here and
has,
where appropriate, ordered costs to be paid by attorneys
de
bonis
propriis
or disallowed the costs of perusing the record.
[11]
[19]
Despite having filed a record in excess of 2300 pages, we were told
in the practice note filed
by Counsel for the Municipality that only
some 350 pages were relevant. From the bar, Counsel accepted that
even that was an over-estimation.
Indeed, from what is set out
earlier in this judgment, it is patent that the facts fall within a
very narrow compass. On the point
held to be decisive of the appeal,
the record ought not to have exceeded one volume. It would not be
right for the residents of
the Municipality to be burdened with costs
that should not have been incurred in the preparation, perusal and
copying of the record.
[20]
In the result:
(1)
The appeal is dismissed with costs.
(2)
The appellant’s Johannesburg and Bloemfontein attorneys shall
not be entitled to recover
any of the costs associated with the
preparation, perusal or copying of the record from the appellant.
V
M Ponnan
Judge
of Appeal
APPEARANCES
For
appellant:
N H Maenetje SC (with
U Dayanand-Jugroop)
Instructed
by:
Seanego
Attorneys, Pretoria
Blair
Attorneys, Bloemfontein
For
first respondent: A P J Els (with K N
Peterson)
Instructed
by:
Albert
Hibbert Attorneys, Pretoria
Webbers
Attorneys, Bloemfontein.
[1]
This
being the explanation advanced in the answering affidavit filed on
behalf the Municipality.
[2]
Telkom
SA Limited v Merid Training (Pty) Ltd and Others
;
Bihati
Solutions (Pty) Ltd v Telkom SA Limited and others
[2011] ZAGPPHC 1.
[3]
Ibid
para 14.
[4]
Joubert
Galpin Searle Inc and Others v Road Accident Fund and Others
[2014]
ZAECPEHC 19; [2014] 2 All SA 604 (ECP); 2014 (4) SA 148 (ECP).
[5]
Ibid
para 66.
[6]
See, inter alia,
SAAB
Grintek Defence (Pty) Ltd v South African Police Services and Others
[2015]
ZAGPPHC 1; 2015 JDR 0080 (GP)
;
Tactical Security Services CC v Ethekwini
Municipality
2017
JDR 1558 (KZD);
Secureco
(Pty) Ltd v Ethekwini Municipality and Others
[2016] ZAKZDHC 14 and
Ethekwini
Municipality v Mantengu Investments CC and Others
[2020]
ZAKZDHC 11
.
[7]
Tactical Security Services CC v
Ethekwini Municipality
2017
JDR 1558 (KZD).
[8]
Ibid
para 10.
[9]
Defensor
Electronic Security (Pty) Ltd v Centlec SOC Ltd and another
[2021] ZAFSHC 315
para 8.
[10]
Tahilram
v Trustees, Lukamber Trust and Another
[2021] ZASCA 173
;
2022 (2) SA 436
(SCA) para 24.
[11]
Municipal
Manager: Qaukeni and Others v F V General Trading CC
[2009]
ZASCA 66
;
2010 (1) SA 356
(SCA);
[2009] 4 All SA 231
(SCA) para 31
and the cases there referred to.
sino noindex
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