Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 217South Africa
Unyazi Rail (Pty) Ltd v Passenger Rail Agency Of South Africa and Others (60552/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 217 (14 March 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
14 March 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Unyazi Rail (Pty) Ltd v Passenger Rail Agency Of South Africa and Others (60552/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 217 (14 March 2023)
Unyazi Rail (Pty) Ltd v Passenger Rail Agency Of South Africa and Others (60552/2022) [2023] ZAGPJHC 217 (14 March 2023)
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sino date 14 March 2023
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED.
DATE:
14 March 2023
Case No. 60552/2022
In
the matter between:
UNYAZI
RAIL (PTY)
LTD
Applicant
and
PASSENGER
RAIL AGENCY OF SOUTH AFRICA
First
Respondent
CHINA
RAILWAY INTERNATIONAL GROUP
SOUTH
AFRICA
Second
Respondent
SIEMENS
MOBILITY (PTY) LTD
Third
Respondent
#####
##### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
WILSON
J:
1
The applicant, Unyazi, was disqualified from a tender process
run by the first respondent, PRASA. The tender was for the design and
construction of a signalling system for PRASA’s KwaZulu-Natal
rail network. The second and third respondents are two other
participants in the tender process who have not, as yet, been
disqualified. They have not participated in these proceedings. I
was
assured from the bar that the second and third respondents have been
notified of the application.
The
dispute
2
The reason for Unyazi’s disqualification was its failure
to put up a bid bond in the sum of eighty million rand within the
time specified in PRASA’s request for proposals. Unyazi says
that it could not practically do so because the period of time
afforded to arrange the bond – five weeks – was
insufficient to allow it to meet a series of very onerous
requirements.
Those requirements were, first, that the bond be drawn
on a bank, and not on any other financial institution; second, that
the
bank be based in South Africa; and third, that PRASA be entitled
to call up the bond if in PRASA’s opinion, it is “entitled
to amounts recoverable from the Bidder for any reason whatsoever”.
3
Unyazi argues that these requirements are so onerous as to
transgress the requirement, in section 217 of the Constitution, 1996,
that public procurement processes take place within a system that is
“fair, equitable, transparent, competitive and cost-effective”.
In particular, Unyazi says that the tender conditions, whether
evaluated separately or cumulatively, are unfair, in-equitable or
anti-competitive, in that at least three major providers of the
services PRASA seeks to purchase, including Unyazi itself, have
effectively been excluded from the tender because they cannot meet,
or at least cannot reasonably be expected to meet, the conditions
applicable to the bid bond.
4
Unyazi alleges that an earlier tender process to which the bid
bond conditions applied had to be abandoned, substantially because
all but one of the bidders in that process failed to meet the bid
bond conditions. The bid bond conditions in that process were
even
more restrictive, because prospective bidders were only afforded
three weeks to obtain the required bond. The one bidder that
met the
conditions in the time stipulated ended up being disqualified for
other reasons. This, Unyazi says, ought to have brought
home to PRASA
the potentially unfair, inequitable or anti-competitive nature of the
bid bond conditions, particularly because Unyazi,
and two other
bidders in the first process, complained about the onerous conditions
attached to the bid bond at that time.
5
However, PRASA was unmoved. It has not, says Unyazi, so much
as taken account of the fact that its bid bond requirements could be
so unfair, inequitable or anti-competitive as to be unlawful. The two
other bidders who took issue with the conditions and the
deadline set
to reach them in the earlier process elected not to participate in
the second process, despite having been given an
extra two weeks to
comply with the bid bond conditions. Unyazi asks me to accept that
those bidders elected not to participate
because of the restrictive
nature of the bid bond conditions.
6
Unyazi says that this makes the tender process itself unlawful
and vulnerable to review. It has launched such a review. The gravamen
of its case is that the failure to take into account the potentially
unfair, inequitable or anti-competitive nature of the bid
bond
conditions renders PRASA’s insistence on the provisions
irrational. That, it is argued, taints the tender process as
a whole.
7
Unyazi now seeks urgent interim relief from me interdicting
and restraining PRASA from awarding the tender pending the outcome of
the review. To succeed, Unyazi must convince me that its application
is urgent; that it has suffered, or reasonably apprehends,
irreparable harm if the interim relief is not granted, and that it
has no effective remedy other than an interim interdict to prevent
or
ameliorate that harm.
8
Unyazi must also show that it has a
prima facie
right
to the relief it seeks in its review application. There is room for
me to entertain some, but not “serious”,
doubt about that
right, while still granting the relief (
Webster v Mitchell
1948 (1) SA 1186
(W) at 1189).
9
Finally, the balance of convenience must favour the grant of
an interim interdict.
Urgency
10
After some initial demur, PRASA all but accepted that the
application was urgent, which it plainly is. It is common cause that
the
tender is likely to be awarded before the end of March 2023. If
Unyazi is correct that the award of the tender would be unlawful,
then it is entitled to restrain the award, and will not be able to do
that by bringing an application in the ordinary course. Although
there was some suggestion in argument that PRASA is unlikely to have
commenced the work Unyazi tendered for before the review can
be heard
on an expedited basis, that speculation lacks a factual foundation in
the papers, and in any event would hardly count
as a reason not to
grant interim relief. Unyazi was entitled to an urgent hearing.
Irreparable
harm and alternative remedies
11
There can, in my view, be no question that Unyazi will suffer
irreparable harm if the interdict is not granted. It is harm enough,
in my view, that the tender will likely be awarded, and the work will
likely commence, without Unyazi’s bid being considered.
I think
that it is also plain that Unyazi has no realistic remedial
alternative to an interdict. There is, in other words, no other
way
of reversing its disqualification. Ms. Sello, who appeared together
with Mr. Nondwangu for PRASA, argued that, instead of seeking
to
review the tender process, Unyazi ought to have applied to court for
an order extending the time available to it to meet the
bid bond
requirements – which, it turns out, Unyazi could have done if
given more time. However, that is water under the
bridge. The
question is whether Unyazi has that alternative available to it now.
Having been disqualified, Unyazi plainly no longer
has that
alternative available, the decision to disqualify Unyazi itself being
of an administrative character, which cannot be
reversed without
court intervention.
Unyazi’s
prima facie
right
12
Unyazi’s entitlement to interim relief accordingly boils
down to whether it has a
prima facie
right to set the tender
process aside, and the strength of that right evaluated in light of
the balance of convenience. It has
long been accepted that the
stronger a
prima facie
right, the less the balance of
convenience is required to favour the grant of interim relief.
Conversely, the weaker the
prima facie
right, the greater the
weight of any inconvenience that will be suffered by the party
potentially subject to the interim interdict
sought (see, in this
respect,
Eriksen Motors (Welkom) Ltd v Protea
Motors Warrenton
1973 (3) SA 685
(A) at
691E-G).
13
In its review, Unyazi argues that PRASA’s insistence on
its bid bond conditions serves no rational purpose and has an unfair,
inequitable or anti-competitive effect. The section 217 requirement
that public procurement takes place “in accordance with
a
system” that is, amongst other things “fair”,
“equitable” and “competitive”, means
that
every tender process must be sufficiently fair, equitable and
competitive in order to be lawful. Unyazi says that PRASA has
failed
to take account of the conditions’ effect on the extent to
which its tender process promotes these requirements. This,
Unyazi
alleges, amounts to the failure to take into account a relevant
consideration, in the sense meant in
section 6
(2) (e) (iii) of the
Promotion of Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000
.
14
The imposition of any condition on a bid in a tender process
has, at least in theory, the potential to exclude a prospective
tenderer
from that process. Indeed, as PRASA points out, the bid bond
requirements are at least in part designed to ensure that only
credible
bidders, who are able to undertake the work, are considered
for the award of the contract in this case. Unyazi stakes its claim
partly on the proposition that its consortium includes the biggest
and most capable global provider of the sorts of services that
PRASA
needs. If, Unyazi suggests, it cannot meet the bid bond conditions,
then almost no-one can. That is, in itself, advanced
as a strong
reason why PRASA’s tender process must be unfair, inequitable
or anti-competitive.
15
During argument, Ms. Sello suggested that I can safely assume
that, since they have not been disqualified from the tender process,
the second and third respondents in this case have in fact been able
to meet the bid bond requirements. That is not clear to me
on the
papers, but I do not in any event think that it follows from the mere
fact that an otherwise credible bidder – even
one of the
biggest and the best – cannot meet the specific requirements of
a bid bond, that the conditions on the bond render
the tender process
unfair, inequitable or anti-competitive. Unyazi’s inability to
meet the conditions just as easily raises
questions about whether it
is in fact as capable a bidder as it says it is.
16
There may be something to the argument if it could be shown
that the bid bond conditions are irrational on their face. But I do
not think that has been shown, even
prima facie
.
17
The requirement that the bid bond be drawn on a South African
bank may be idiosyncratic, given that South African banks are not the
only players in the financial services market capable of providing
the required guarantees. But it is not obviously irrational.
PRASA
justifies the requirement on the basis that a South African bank
provides an easier and more straightforward means of execution
on the
guarantee. Mr. Snyckers took issue with this, arguing that the type
and location of an otherwise credible guarantor makes
no difference
in principle to the strength of a creditor’s right. Whatever
the merits of that contention, I cannot say that
PRASA is obviously
irrational to prefer domestic banks, subject, as those institutions
are, to well-known regulatory regimes and
possessed, as they are, of
familiar reputations.
18
The rationality test is not particularly exacting. I need only
be satisfied that the South African bank requirement is rationally
connected to a legitimate purpose. The mere fact that other
requirements may be equally rational, or even preferable, does not
render the requirement PRASA has imposed irrational. Here, I cannot
see anything inherently senseless about PRASA’s preference
for
a domestic bank guarantee, or the reasons it advances for that
preference. It is certainly not irrational merely because it
might be
difficult for a particular bidder to fulfil.
19
It was also contended that the conditions under which the bid
bond could be called up were not rationally connected to the terms
of
the guarantee PRASA required in its request for proposals. The bid
bond required in the request for proposals could be called
up in a
series of clearly specified circumstances, but the terms of the
guarantee PRASA ultimately required were that PRASA could
call it up
if it believed a bidder owed it money “for any reason
whatsoever”.
20
Unyazi argues that this effectively means that PRASA can call
up the guarantee on a “whim”. That, I think, is an
exaggeration.
It is possible that what PRASA really meant was that
the bond could be called up in respect of sums owing “for any
reason
whatsoever” relating to the circumstances specifically
delineated in the tender conditions. But even if it did not, there
is
nothing inherently irrational or unlawful in the requirement that a
guarantee can be called up in the event that PRASA subjectively,
but
honestly, believes that a bidder owes it money. That is not the same
as saying that PRASA can call up the guarantee on a “whim”.
Triggering conditions of this nature are commonplace in construction
contracts. They entitle the employer to form the honest but
subjective view that they are owed money and to require the
contractor, by calling up the guarantee, to pay the money now, and
argue about the true nature of its liability, if any, later.
21
In the context of this case, the bid bond serves important
purposes. It helps ensure that a bidder seriously intends to carry
out
the work if its bid is successful. It also insulates PRASA
against the cost of a preferred bidder withdrawing between the award
of the tender and the signature of the contract for the work, if that
means that PRASA ultimately has to accept a more expensive
tender.
22
Finally, it was contended that the five-week deadline to
obtain the required guarantee was irrational, when read alongside all
the
other requirements applicable to it. If, as Ms. Sello suggests,
two bidders actually did manage to secure the guarantee in that
time,
that is a strong indication that the deadline was not irrational. In
any event, the five-week deadline was not attacked as
irrational
per
se
, although the period is criticised as being slightly shorter
than the minimum PRASA’s standard operating procedure generally
provides for.
23
In my view the five-week period could only really be assailed
if any of the other conditions were shown to be irrationally or
unusually
onerous. I do not think that has been shown. What has been
shown is that the bid bond conditions might have discouraged
prospective
bidders because, in the prevailing circumstances, they
were unable to raise the finance necessary to obtain the guarantee.
24
I do not think that is enough to suggest, even
prima facie
,
that the tender process is unfair, inequitable or anti-competitive.
Unyazi’s difficulties in raising the guarantee in the
required
time illustrate the point. Unyazi said that it had difficulties
raising finance from Chinese members of its consortium
because of the
strict anti-covid lockdown in place in China at the time the
guarantee had to be raised. It seems to me, though,
that this
difficulty might be indicative of an inherent weakness of Unyazi’s
consortium, rather than of anything irrational
about the bid-bond
requirement. Unyazi’s particular difficulties in arranging the
finance necessary to meet the bid bond
requirements do not, without
more, make the requirements themselves irrational.
25
Of course, had the bid conditions, including the bid bond
requirements, been designed to exclude a particular class of bidders,
or if, notwithstanding the absence of such an intent, they clearly
had that effect, or if the conditions were tailor-made to prefer
one
bidder, or a particular class of bidders, over another, then they
would be clearly unfair, inequitable or anti-competitive
(see for,
example,
Swifambo Rail Leasing (Pty) Limited v Passenger Rail
Agency of South Africa
2020 (1) SA 76
(SCA), paragraphs 23 to
24). But there is no suggestion that has happened in this case.
26
It follows from this that the success of Unyazi’s
proposed review is far from clear. It is possible that a closer
examination
of the Unyazi’s grounds as the papers in the review
mature may yield a clearer idea of why the bid bond conditions were
unfair,
inequitable or anti-competitive. As things stand, however, I
am driven to conclude that Unyazi has shown no more than a weak
prima
facie
right.
The
balance of convenience
27
Ordinarily critical to the assessment of
the balance of convenience, is any “separation of powers harm”
PRASA would
suffer if the interim relief were granted.
Weighing
this harm involves recognising the need to allow the state to
continue to exercise its powers and functions, unless “the
clearest of cases” has been made out that they are based on an
illegality (
National Treasury v Opposition to Urban Tolling
Alliance
2012 (6) SA 223
(CC) (“
National Treasury”)
at paragraph 47).
28
In this case, however, Mr. Snyckers, who appeared with Ms.
Stein for Unyazi, argues that there will be no “separation of
powers
harm”, because, properly construed, the concept of
“separation of powers harm” cannot and does not apply to
interdicts
in restraint of the exercise of public procurement powers.
The argument, as I understood it, was that separation of powers
concerns
do not arise in every case where a court is asked to
restrain an organ of state from exercising statutory powers. They
only arise
when the organ of state concerned is an executive office
bearer, or the department of state for which they are responsible.
29
I do not think that is a realistic interpretation of the
decision in
National Treasury
.
30
National Treasury
was concerned with the
appropriateness of interim relief being granted against organs of
state “exercising statutory powers
flowing from legislation
whose constitutional validity is not challenged” (
National
Treasury
, paragraph 27). In that context a court must “not
fail to consider the probable impact of the restraining order on the
constitutional
and statutory powers and duties of the state
functionary or organ of state against which the interim order is
sought” (paragraph
46). The court “must keep in mind that
a temporary restraint against the exercise of statutory power well
ahead of the final
adjudication of a claimant's case may be granted
only in the clearest of cases and after a careful consideration of
separation
of powers harm” (paragraph 47).
31
I do not think that
National Treasury
left any room for
doubt: interim relief restraining an organ of state from exercising
valid statutory powers pending review may
only be granted in the
clearest of cases. PRASA is indisputably an organ of state. Nobody
suggests that its procurement powers
are not based in statute, or
that those powers are suspect. The
National Treasury
test
clearly applies.
32
As the court in
National Treasury
itself implicitly
accepts, the “clearest of cases” includes cases where the
statute underlying the power sought to
be restrained is itself
constitutionally suspect, or where the statute, though valid on its
face, is deployed in a manner injurious
to constitutional rights. In
those sorts of cases, interim relief will fairly readily be granted.
Besides that, as I held in
Gibb v PRASA
[2021] ZAGPJHC 146 (26
August 2021), where a credible case has been set up on review that
the organ of state is acting, or has acted,
ultra vires
its
statutory powers, an interim interdict will also be necessary to
protect the applicant’s rights pending the determination
of the
review. There will be no appreciable separation of powers harm in any
of these cases, because the debate on review will
always be concerned
with whether the organ of state actually has the power it seeks to
exercise.
33
Unyazi’s case is not of this character. Unyazi alleges
not that PRASA lacks the powers it exercises, but that PRASA has
failed
to weigh a material consideration – the need for its
tender process to be competitive – before exercising that
power.
But Unyazi has itself failed to establish that the bid bond
conditions it complains of are themselves clearly material to the
fairness,
equity or competitiveness of the tender process.
34
For those reasons, I do not think that this case can be said
to be one of “the clearest”. Unyazi has not shown, even
prima facie
, that PRASA has conducted itself unlawfully. It is
not clear to me that the constitutional standards of fairness, equity
and competitiveness
applicable to this case require anything more
than a process free of conditions that are (a) tailor made in advance
to ensure the
success of a particular bidder; or (b) designed
improperly to exclude a particular bidder or class of bidders; or (c)
otherwise
demonstrably irrational or unlawful. Having failed to set
up a case that PRASA has breached any of these requirements, Unyazi’s
case boils down to little more than the proposition that a fair,
equitable and competitive process would not have resulted in its
disqualification. I do not think that is enough.
35
That aside, at the practical level, Unyazi wishes to delay the
progress of a tender to upgrade the rail network signalling system
of
South Africa’s second most populous province. One need not look
very far to see the urgency of infrastructure renewal
projects across
South Africa. This project is no exception.
36
For all these reasons, the balance of convenience tips
decisively against the grant of interim relief.
Order
37
Unyazi has failed to establish a
prima facie
right of
the strength necessary to overcome the inconvenience to PRASA of
interim relief being granted pending review. Accordingly,
the
application is dismissed with costs, including the costs of two
counsel.
S
D J WILSON
Judge
of the High Court
HEARD
ON: 1
March 2023
DECIDED
ON: 14
March 2023
For
the Applicant: F
Snyckers SC
N Stein
Instructed
by: Hulley
and Associates Inc
For
the First Respondent: M
Sello SC
K Nondwangu
Instructed
by: Mncedisi
Ndlovu Sedumedi Inc
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