Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 415South Africa
Lethabulumko Group (Pty) Ltd v Gauteng Department of Education (28952/2020) [2023] ZAGPJHC 415 (3 May 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
3 May 2023
Headnotes
in order to determine the irregularity of the administrative action required to be reviewed,
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## Lethabulumko Group (Pty) Ltd v Gauteng Department of Education (28952/2020) [2023] ZAGPJHC 415 (3 May 2023)
Lethabulumko Group (Pty) Ltd v Gauteng Department of Education (28952/2020) [2023] ZAGPJHC 415 (3 May 2023)
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sino date 3 May 2023
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG)
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
CASE NO:
28952/2020
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES
NOT REVISED
03.05.23
In the matter between:
LETHABULUMKO
GROUP
(PTY) LTD
Applicant
and
GAUTENG
DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION
Respondent
Neutral
Citation:
Lethabulumko Group (Pty) Ltd v
Gauteng Department of Education
(Case
No:
28952
/2020
)
[2023] ZAGPJHC
415
(3
May 2023)
Delivered:
By transmission to the parties via email and
uploading onto Case Lines the Judgment is deemed to be delivered.
JUDGMENT
A.
INTRODUCTION
[1] This is an opposed
application to review and set aside the decision of the Gauteng
Department of Education (the respondent)
to disqualify the
applicant’s bid submitted in response to tender number
GT/GDE/071/ 2019 (“the tender”). The
tender was for the
procurement, storage, supply and delivery of groceries to schools in
the Gauteng province. This application
is brought in terms of the
Promotion of Administrative Justice Act of 2000 (“PAJA”).
[2] The applicant seeks
narrow relief in the sense that it does not seek to set aside the
award of the tender to the panel of 26
bidders who were awarded the
tender and who are the contractors to the respondent. All the
applicant seeks, if the court is with
it, is the remittance of the
decision to the respondent for re-consideration.
B. BACKGROUND
[3] The respondent
published the tender which,
inter alia
,
included the technical mandatory requirements that the bidders
had to comply with. The tender was published during November 2019
and
the closing date was the 13th of December 2019. The applicant
submitted its bid on time with all its documentation.
[4] The tender document
made it clear in in paragraph 5.2 (a) to 5.2 (d) which included a
certified copy of the Certificate of Acceptance
(the COA), that bids
which did not contain the documents stated in these paragraphs would
be disqualified. The documents required
in terms of the mandatory
requirements included the certified copy of the COA.
[5] In response to the
tender, the applicant compiled and submitted its documents which also
included an uncertified copy Certificate
of Acceptance (“the
COA”). The COA had to do with the procurement and storage of
groceries that had to be kept. The
requirement was that the COA had
to be consistent with
the original
document or a certified copy thereof.
[6] The applicant
submitted a copy of the COA which was not certified as required by
the tender procedural mandatory requirements.
It contended that
during March 2020 the officials of the respondent came to its
premises to satisfy themselves that there was compliance
with the bid
requirements and were later shown the original documents including
the COA. It is for that reason, so goes the contention,
that the
uncertified copy was not material and stands to be condoned.
[7] During the evaluation
of the tender by the respondent, the applicant was disqualified and
the reasoning advanced was that the
COA was not compliant because
only an uncertified copy was submitted. It can be inferred from this
arrangement that the inspection
of the COA as alleged by the
applicant was carried out by the officials of the respondent outside
of the mandatory requirements
of the tender itself.
C. ISSUE FOR
DETERMINATION
[8] The issue for
determination in this matter is whether failure to comply with the
strict procedural requirements of the tender
could render the bid to
be disqualified. The respondent contends that it should and the
applicant contends that for that to be
answered it strongly depends
on the materiality of the requirement and that in this case based on
PAJA the decision to disqualify
it should be reviewed and set aside.
D. THE LAW AND REASONS
FOR THE JUDGMENT
[9]
Procedural compliance in tender disputes has been pronounced upon by
our courts. The leading case is
Allpay
Consolidated Investments Holdings (Pty) and Others v Chief Executive
Officer of the South African Social Security Agency
and Others
[1]
where
the Constitutional Court held that in order to determine the
irregularity of the administrative action required to be reviewed,
the tender requirements and the procedural compliance stated therein
should be interpreted in accordance with the normal established
principle of our law.
[10]
In tender mandatory procedural requirements, the courts should ensure
insistence on compliance with process formalities which
has
three-fold purpose
[2]
, namely:
(a) it ensures fairness
to the participants in the bid process;
(b) it enhances the
likelihood of efficiency and optimality in the outcome; and
(c) it
serves as a guardian against a process skewed by corrupt influences.
[11] The constitutional
court in
Allpay
, held as follows on the approach that the
public interest in procurement matters requires greater caution in
finding that grounds
for judicial review exist in each matter, and
concluded that that notion should be dispelled and continued to
state:
“
[23]
To the extent that the judgment of the Supreme of Court of Appeal may
be interpreted as suggesting that the public interest
in procurement
matters requires greater caution in finding that grounds for judicial
review exist in a given matter, that misapprehension
must be
dispelled. So too the notion that even if proven irregularities
exist, the inevitability of a certain outcome is
a factor that should
be considered in determining the validity of administrative action.
[24]
This approach to irregularities seems detrimental to important
aspects of the procurement process. First, it undermines
the
role procedural requirements play in ensuring even treatment of all
bidders. Second, it overlooks that the purpose of
a fair
process is to ensure the best outcome; the two cannot be severed.
On the approach of the Supreme Court of Appeal,
procedural
requirements are not considered on their own merits, but instead
through the lens of the final outcome. This conflates
the
different and separate questions of unlawfulness and remedy. If
the process leading to the bid’s success was compromised,
it
cannot be known with certainty what course the process might have
taken had procedural requirements been properly observed.”
[12] The applicant
submits that since the mandatory requirements of the bid on the
certified copies of the COA were not material,
the disqualification
of its bid by the respondent, rendered that decision irregular
because the COA was inspected by the officials
of the respondent
subsequent to the closure of the bids during March 2020 or for that
matter June 2020. This contention by the
applicant based on the
All
pay
case is without merit. In the
All pay
case, SASSA
choose not to enforce its bid requirements which is not the case in
the instant matter, as the respondent is seeking
strict compliance
with the clear terms of the tender documents.
[13]
This is so when regard is had to the fact that the tender document
makes it clear that failure to comply with the mandatory
requirements
would lead to a disqualification of the bid submitted. It will not be
consistent with the principles spelled out in
the
Allpay
case to hold that the decision to disqualify the
applicant’s bid is reviewable because, unlike in
Allpay
case, in this case the respondent is enforcing the
strict compliance with its procedural requirements. It finds the
support for
such enforcement in paragraphs
5.2
(a) to 5.2 (d) of the tender requirements.
There
is therefore no basis for this court to hold otherwise.
[14] It matters not, in
my considered view, that the COA which was not certified when the bid
was submitted on the 13th of December
2019 was allegedly cured by the
subsequent inspection thereof by an officials of the respondent three
months after the closure
of the tender. If this was to be
permissible, this would undermine the procedural compliance
requirements of the tender which other
bidders were required to
comply with. It does not matter that the applicant does not seek to
interdict the execution of the tender.
It can only be inferred that
the other 26 contractors who were appointed to carry out the service
complied with all the mandatory
requirements including ensuring that
the COA’s submitted were certified.
[15] It therefore follows
in my view that the disqualification of the applicant’s bid
based on non-compliance with the mandatory
procedural requirements
was regular. Accordingly, there is no basis to interfere with the
administrative decision taken to disqualify
the applicant’s
bid.
ORDER
[16]
The
following order is made:
(a)
The application is dismissed with costs.
ML
SENYATSI
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
DATE JUDGMENT
RESERVED:
0
1
November
202
2
DATE JUDGMENT
DELIVERED:
03 May 2023
APPEARANCES
Counsel
for the Applicant:
Adv
M Augustine
Instructed
by:
Lawtons
Africa
Counsel
for the Respondent:
Adv
K Mvubu
Instructed
by:
State
Attorney
## [1]Allpay
Consolidated Investment Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Others v Chief
Executive Officer of the South African Social Security Agency
and
Others (CCT 48/13) [2013] ZACC 42; 2014 (1) SA 604 (CC)
[1]
Allpay
Consolidated Investment Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Others v Chief
Executive Officer of the South African Social Security Agency
and
Others (CCT 48/13) [2013] ZACC 42; 2014 (1) SA 604 (CC)
[2]
Supra
at para [27]
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