Case Law[2023] ZAGPJHC 1430South Africa
AfriRent (Pty) Ltd v Rand West City Local Municipality and Another (2023-052811) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1430 (11 December 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
11 December 2023
Headnotes
Rand West could not have acted unlawfully because it turned out that the requirement did not apply to Fleet Horizon after all, whatever Fleet Horizon had originally said in its bid documents.
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## AfriRent (Pty) Ltd v Rand West City Local Municipality and Another (2023-052811) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1430 (11 December 2023)
AfriRent (Pty) Ltd v Rand West City Local Municipality and Another (2023-052811) [2023] ZAGPJHC 1430 (11 December 2023)
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sino date 11 December 2023
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG DIVISION,
JOHANNESBURG)
#### Case
No.2023-052811
Case
No.
2023-052811
NOT REPORTABLE
NOT OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES
REVISED
11/12/23
In the matter between:
AFRIRENT
(PTY) LTD
Applicant
And
RAND
WEST CITY LOCAL MUNICIPALITY
First
Respondent
FLEET
HORIZON SOLUTIONS (PTY) LTD
Second
Respondent
##### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
WILSON
J:
1
The applicant, Afrirent, seeks leave to appeal my judgment,
dated 23 October 2023, in which I refused its application to review
and set aside the award of a tender to the second respondent, Fleet
Horizon. The tender was advertised and awarded by the first
respondent, Rand West.
2
The review application turned on three issues. The first was
whether Rand West conducted itself irrationally in refusing to award
the tender to Afrirent because Afrirent had failed to hand over a
copy of a statement of its liability to the South African Revenue
Service. The second was whether Fleet Horizon ought to have been
disqualified for its failure to hand over three years’ worth
of
audited financial statements. The third was whether a post-award
condition that there be a negotiation aimed at reducing Fleet
Horizon’s tender price had been fulfilled.
3
For the most part, Mr. Els, who appeared for Afrirent, trod a
familiar path in arguing the application for leave to appeal. He was
unable to convince me that there was any prospect that a court of
appeal would interfere with my conclusion on the first issue.
Rand
West had a rational basis on which to ask Afrirent for a statement of
its tax liability. When that statement was not provided,
despite two
requests for it, Rand West plainly had a rational basis to refuse to
award the tender to Afrirent solely because of
that non-disclosure.
4
On the second issue, Mr. Els sought to persuade me that I had
overlooked the effect of the decision of the Supreme Court of Appeal
in
WDR Earthmoving Enterprises v Joe Gqabi District Municipality
2018 JDR 1295 (SCA) (“
WDR
”). In that case, an
unsuccessful bidder had stated in its bid that it was required by law
to have its financial statements
audited. It followed from that
representation that three years’ worth of audited financial
statements had to be supplied
with the bid. However, the audited
statements were not submitted with the bid. On review, the
unsuccessful bidder asserted that
it was not, after all, legally
required to have its financial statements audited, that the
requirement to submit audited statements
did not apply to it, and
that it ought not to have been excluded from consideration for the
award of a tender merely because audited
statements were not
submitted.
5
The Supreme Court of Appeal rejected that submission. The
court found that the municipality was entitled to decline the bid on
the
basis that the bidder had represented that it was required to
supply the audited statements, and then failed to submit them, even
if it later turned out that the representation was erroneous. The
court went on to hold that the successful bidder, too, ought
to have
been disqualified, because it had also failed to submit audited
financial statements notwithstanding its representation
that it was
required by law to have its financial statements audited. There was
no suggestion that the successful bidder was not
in fact legally
required to have its statements audited.
6
In this case, like the successful bidder in
WDR
, Fleet
Horizon originally told Rand West that it was required to provide
audited financial statements, but Rand West nonetheless
accepted
Fleet Horizon’s bid without them. However, unlike the
successful bidder in WDR, Fleet Horizon was not in fact legally
required to have its financial statements audited. As a result, it
was not legally required to submit audited financial statements.
7
The question before me was whether Rand West had acted
unlawfully in accepting Fleet Horizon’s bid without the audited
statements.
I held that Rand West could not have acted unlawfully
because it turned out that the requirement did not apply to Fleet
Horizon
after all, whatever Fleet Horizon had originally said in its
bid documents.
8
Mr. Els accepted that Fleet Horizon was not legally required
to have its financial statements audited (or at least that there was
no basis on the papers for him to argue otherwise). He nonetheless
contended that Rand West ought to have rejected Fleet Horizon’s
bid on the basis that the requirement did apply, because Fleet
Horizon had said so in its bid, even though everyone later accepted
that the requirement did not in fact apply.
9
That proposition need only be stated to be rejected. I accept
that the approach in tender matters has generally been to require
strict compliance with statutory requirements and the bid conditions
that give effect to them. However, I am unable to accept that
strict
compliance means that organs of state must be prevented from
appointing service providers who do not conform to requirements
that
turn out not to apply to them, especially where the tender process
was otherwise fair and lawful.
10
Mr. Els’ submission boils down to the proposition that
this case should have been determined on the basis of a fact that
everyone
now accepts is untrue: that Fleet Horizon is required by law
to have its financial statements audited. I fail to see how, as Mr.
Els submitted, such an approach would promote either rational, lawful
and fair administrative procedure (see section 33 of the
Constitution, 1996), or fair, equitable, transparent, competitive and
cost-effective procurement (see section 217 of the Constitution,
1996). I see no basis on which an appeal court would disagree.
11
On the third issue, Mr. Els argued that the post-award
condition was not merely that there be a negotiation, but that Fleet
Horizon’s
price actually be reduced. However, the condition set
out in the award letter speaks for itself. It calls for a
“negotiation
of decreasing” the price. Despite the
inelegant turn of phrase, this can only mean one thing: that the
parties negotiate.
It is incapable of also meaning that they must
reach a particular resolution.
12
Mr. Els further argued that, even if that was the meaning to
be ascribed to the condition, there was no evidence before me that
there had actually been a negotiation. But counsel for Rand West and
for Fleet Horizon both pointed out undisputed passages of their
clients’ affidavits which clearly state that there was such a
negotiation. On the well-known rules applicable to the evaluation
of
factual averments in applications for final relief, those allegations
must be accepted
13
The application for leave to appeal is dismissed with costs,
including the costs of two counsel.
S D J WILSON
Judge of the High Court
This judgment is handed
down electronically by circulation to the parties or their legal
representatives by email, by uploading
to Caselines, and by
publication to the South African Legal Information Institute. The
date for hand-down is deemed to be 11 December
2023.
HEARD ON: 5 December 2023
DECIDED ON: 11
December 2023
For the Applicant:
AJP Els
Instructed by Albert
Hibbert Attorneys
For the First Respondent:
V Maleka SC
M Salukazana
Instructed by Straus Daly
For the Second
Respondent:
AC Botha SC
C Cremen
Instructed by Bouwer &
Oliver
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