LSM Security (Pty) Ltd and Others v MEC, Department of Social Development, EC and Another (2300/2022) [2023] ZAECQBHC 12 (24 January 2023)

78 Reportability
Public Procurement

Brief Summary

Tender — Judicial review — Urgent interdict pending review application — Applicants sought to stay implementation of a tender award by the Department of Social Development, alleging procedural unfairness and lack of transparency in the tender process — Court granted interim interdict pending finalisation of review application, condoning non-compliance with procedural rules due to urgency — Holding that the applicants demonstrated a reasonable apprehension of harm and a prima facie case for review, warranting the interdict to prevent implementation of the tender until the review could be heard.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


This judgment concerns urgent motion proceedings in which four security-service providers sought interim interdictory relief to prevent the implementation of a provincial departmental tender award, pending the institution and determination of anticipated judicial review proceedings. The matter was framed as an urgent interdict application designed to preserve the status quo until a review could be launched and the procurement record and reasons could be properly interrogated.


The applicants were LSM Security (Pty) Ltd, Mkwaze Security (Pty) Ltd, NUBC Security (Pty) Ltd, and Ngonyama Security (Pty) Ltd, all security companies operating in Gqeberha that had tendered for the relevant contract. The first respondent was the MEC, Department of Social Development, Eastern Cape (“the Department”). The second respondent was Golden Security Services CC, described as the successful bidder in respect of Bid Number SCMU4-21/220019, and it joined as a respondent on the return day.


Procedurally, the court initially granted a rule nisi in an urgent application during the week of duty in Gqeberha, together with interim relief staying implementation of the tender award. On 22 August 2022, the court confirmed paragraph 3 of the rule nisi (the substantive interim interdict) and amended paragraph 4 of the interim order to require the applicants to institute the anticipated review within a shorter timeframe, having regard to the respondents’ interest in certainty. The present judgment consists of reasons furnished after both respondents requested them.


The dispute arose from a contested public procurement process for security services over a 36-month period at specified Departmental facilities in the Gqeberha area, and the applicants’ concern that the award was likely constitutionally non-compliant, including because of the alleged inadequacy of the reasons provided for their non-success and the circumstances under which a higher-priced bid was selected.


2. Material Facts


The Department issued Bid Number SCMU4-21/220019 on 15 November 2021 for the provision of security services at Kwa-Nobuhle One Stop Centre, Protea, CYCC, Erica CCYC, and the Department’s Ibhayi district office, for a long-term period of thirty-six months. The tender closed on 14 December 2021 but its validity was later extended; the judgment records that the tender “was extended until 17 July 2022”, and the applicants ultimately abandoned an initially pleaded contention that there had been an irregular extension after expiry, describing that contention as a mistake made under urgent conditions.


The applicants had previously provided services to the Department on short-term contracts, but the urgent application was not directed at extending those short-term arrangements as such. Rather, it was directed at preventing implementation of the new long-term tender award, which the applicants understood was imminent.


After the tender was believed to have been awarded, the applicants (initially through the Gqeberha Security Forum, and later through their attorneys) sought reasons and documentation to explain why their bids had not succeeded and to allow an assessment of whether a review was warranted. On 21 July 2022, the Forum requested information, including evaluation and adjudication reports and any functionality scorecards. On 10 August 2022, attorneys acting for bidders including the applicants pressed for reasons for the rejection of each applicant’s bid and sought an undertaking that implementation would be suspended pending resolution of what was described as a “dispute” concerning their entitlement to reasons and concerns about the lawfulness of the process.


The Department acknowledged, in principle, the applicants’ entitlement to information, but refused to suspend implementation. When the Department eventually responded late on Friday 12 August 2022, it provided what it characterised as reasons. The court recorded that these reasons were generic and non-specific, stating broadly that 40 of 45 bids were “not acceptable” for various reasons, without clearly attributing disqualifying shortcomings to each applicant’s bid or explaining at what stage and on what precise basis each applicant fell out of contention. The Department also volunteered that the successful bidder was not based in Gqeberha (or at least addressed the local presence question raised by the Forum) and that the successful bid was not the lowest priced.


The judgment further records that, on the papers, it emerged that the value of the winning bid was more than four million rand higher than the second applicant’s bid and substantially exceeded the other applicants’ bids. This fact was treated as contributing to the applicants’ concern and the public-interest character of the dispute, in circumstances where the Department had not provided a clear explanation for selecting a higher-priced bid.


The Department did not meaningfully amplify its reasons in its answering affidavit. It disclosed the identity of the successful bidder only at that stage, asserting that this was known to the applicants, although the court regarded the suggestion that the applicants had been coy about the identity as unjustified on the papers. The answering papers also reflected further uncertainty about whether a “local presence” feature was a requirement or merely a preference, and the Department was described as being unclear and non-committal on key aspects of compliance and justification.


The applicants launched the urgent interdict application on Monday 15 August 2022, based on the expectation that the tender would be implemented on the next working day and the view that the Department’s late response had not furnished meaningful reasons. The rule nisi was initially granted in circumstances where the first respondent was served minutes before the hearing and by email only to a private address. The second respondent joined as a respondent on the return day.


3. Legal Issues


The central legal questions concerned the grant of an interim interdict pending a tender review application, and whether the requirements for such interim relief were satisfied on the facts presented. The dispute was therefore primarily one of the application of legal standards to the facts, including evaluative judgment in relation to urgency, balance of convenience, and whether the applicants had shown a sufficiently strong prima facie entitlement to interim protection.


More specifically, the court was required to determine whether, pending an anticipated review, the applicants had established a prima facie right, a reasonable apprehension of irreparable harm, that the balance of convenience favoured interim restraint, and the absence of any satisfactory alternative remedy. These questions were intertwined with the adequacy (or otherwise) of the Department’s reasons and disclosures about the tender process and outcome, and the implications of those deficiencies for the prospects of a review.


The respondents also raised procedural and threshold objections, including alleged non-compliance with the State Liability Act 20 of 1957, challenges to urgency (including allegations that urgency was self-created), accusations of non-disclosure or dishonesty regarding the identity of the successful bidder, and broader allegations that the application was an abuse of process. The court was therefore also required to assess whether these objections undermined the applicants’ entitlement to interim relief.


4. Court’s Reasoning


The court approached the matter on the basis that tenderers have a legally protected interest in participating in a procurement process subject to the governing legal framework, and that exclusion from such participation must be lawfully grounded and procedurally fair. In this regard, the court relied on the articulation in Down Touch Investments (Pty) Ltd and Another v South African National Road Agency SOC Limited and Another (2064/2020) [2020] ZAECGHC 120 (29 October 2020), which recognises that where an exclusion appears not to be fairly or lawfully grounded, a tenderer may establish a prima facie right and a corresponding apprehension of irreparable harm, and that the public interest suffers where constitutionally regulated procurement values are undermined.


On the facts, the court treated the applicants as having participated as co-bidders with legitimate expectations of a fair process and entitlement to reasons after the process concluded. While the Department accepted in principle that they were entitled to information, the court evaluated the substance of the reasons ultimately provided and found them inadequate, because they did not state clearly why each applicant’s bid had been disqualified (if disqualification was the basis), nor did they explain why the successful bidder was preferred in circumstances where price was significant and the winning bid was apparently materially higher.


The court considered that the Department’s “purported reasons” were of no utility to the applicants, and that the Department’s stance that it had provided all it needed to provide, coupled with its refusal to suspend implementation, created a reasonable basis for concern that the award might not withstand review. The court regarded transparency as vital in tender processes and considered that attention to detail in explaining disqualifications would naturally have removed doubt; the Department’s failure to do so contributed to the inference that procedural fairness may have been compromised.


A notable feature of the reasoning was the court’s criticism that the Department did not squarely assert that its processes and decision met the requirements of section 217 of the Constitution, nor did it unequivocally assert that the successful bid was compliant in all respects. The court regarded it as problematic that the respondents appeared to expect the applicants to prove compliance “in a vacuum” while withholding the information necessary to understand how and why the applicants’ bids were treated as unsuccessful.


In assessing harm and the need for interim protection, the court accepted that the imminent implementation of a potentially unlawful tender award threatened the constitutional value of legality, and that it may be extremely difficult to undo the practical consequences once performance commenced. In applying the approach endorsed in Down Touch Investments, the court accepted that it might be “well-nigh impossible to unscramble” the consequences of unlawful administrative action once implementation has reached a certain point. This supported the conclusion that interim restraint was justified to preserve the practical effectiveness of a forthcoming review.


As to alternative remedies, the court considered that it might have been possible to direct the applicants to pursue information via the Promotion of Access to Information Act 2 of 2000 or to seek improved reasons under section 5 of PAJA, but regarded that course as ineffective on the facts because the Department had made it plain that it considered its reasons already comprehensive and did not intend to provide more meaningful disclosure voluntarily. The court therefore treated interim interdictory relief as the only satisfactory means to prevent implementation while review proceedings were prepared.


On the balance of convenience, the court was persuaded that it favoured interim relief. The Department did not disclose key contextual facts, including when the award was made, and was unclear about the status of the contract. The judgment also records ongoing discussions about a “requirement” that at least 50% of the successful bidder’s staff be local, suggesting continuing uncertainty around implementation details. The second respondent, for its part, did not provide information indicating real prejudice, and the court noted that by 12 August 2022 it was already plain there was a dispute about the award.


Finally, while affirming that courts grant such restraining orders only in the clearest of cases, the court characterised this as an instance where it was “constitutionally appropriate” to intervene. The court also declined to make a final costs determination at the interim stage, indicating that costs should follow the result of the review, and noting that certain shortcomings and abandoned allegations in the applicants’ papers might later bear on the appropriate costs order.


5. Outcome and Relief


The court confirmed the interim restraint embodied in paragraph 3 of the rule nisi, thereby interdicting and restraining the Department from implementing the decision to award Bid Number SCMU4-21/220019, and similarly interdicting the successful bidder from commencing work under that bid, pending the finalisation of review proceedings.


The court also amended the timetable for the institution of the anticipated review by requiring the applicants to launch the review within a shorter timeframe than originally stipulated, with due regard to the respondents’ interest in certainty.


The issue of costs was not finally determined at this stage. The operative approach was that costs stood over for determination in the review application, rather than being finally adjudicated in the interim interdict proceedings.


Cases Cited


Down Touch Investments (Pty) Ltd and Another v South African National Road Agency SOC Limited and Another (2064/2020) [2020] ZAECGHC 120 (29 October 2020).


Minister of Finance v Afribusiness NPC 2022 (4) SA 362 (CC).


Majojobela v MEC for Rural Development and Agrarian Reform, Eastern Cape [505/2020] (2020) ZAECBHC 22 (3 November 2020).


Legislation Cited


Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996, section 217.


Promotion of Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000, sections 5, 5(3), and 6(2)(c).


Promotion of Access to Information Act 2 of 2000.


Preferential Procurement Policy Framework Act 5 of 2000, section 2(1)(f).


General Law Amendment Act 62 of 1955, section 35.


State Liability Act 20 of 1957.


Rules of Court Cited


Uniform Rules of Court, Rule 6(12)(a).


Held


The court held that the applicants established the requirements for an interim interdict pending the institution and finalisation of review proceedings in relation to a tender award for security services. The applicants’ prima facie entitlement arose from their right to participate in a tender process subject to the legal framework and to receive meaningful reasons, and from the court’s provisional assessment that the Department’s reasons were materially inadequate and did not properly explain either the applicants’ non-success or the selection of a higher-priced successful bid.


The court held further that implementation of the tender award was imminent, that harm would likely be irreparable in the sense that it would be practically difficult to undo the consequences once implementation commenced, that no satisfactory alternative remedy presented itself in the circumstances, and that the balance of convenience favoured preserving the status quo. The court therefore confirmed interim relief restraining implementation and commencement of work, and directed that costs stand over for determination in the review.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


The judgment applied the principle that tenderers are entitled to participate in public procurement processes subject to the legal framework, and that exclusion from participation must be lawful, rational, and procedurally fair, consistent with constitutional procurement requirements and administrative-law standards.


It applied the principle that, in tender-related disputes, inadequate or non-specific reasons and a lack of transparent disclosure may support a conclusion that a tender award is reasonably susceptible to being set aside on review, thereby assisting an applicant in establishing a prima facie right for purposes of interim relief.


The judgment applied the principle that interim interdictory relief may be warranted where the imminent implementation of possibly unlawful administrative action threatens the constitutional value of legality, particularly because the consequences of implementation may become practically irreversible or extremely difficult to undo, making later review relief potentially hollow.


It further applied the established principle that interim interdicts are granted only where the recognised requirements are met, and that the court’s intervention in procurement matters, while cautious, may be justified where it is constitutionally appropriate to prevent potentially unlawful implementation pending review, especially when the decision-maker does not provide clear justification for the decision under challenge.

About SAFLII
Databases
Search
Terms of Use
RSS Feeds
South Africa: Eastern Cape High Court, Gqeberha
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: Eastern Cape High Court, Gqeberha
>>
2023
>>
[2023] ZAECQBHC 12
|

|

LSM Security (Pty) Ltd and Others v MEC, Department of Social Development, EC and Another (2300/2022) [2023] ZAECQBHC 12 (24 January 2023)

IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(EASTERN
CAPE LOCAL DIVISION, GQEBERHA)
CASE
NO. 2300/2022
NOT
REPORTABLE
In
the matter between:
LSM
SECURITY (PTY) LTD
(2015/208312/08)
First Applicant
MKWAZE
SECURITY (PTY) LTD
(2014/126620/07)
Second Applicant
NUBC
SECURITY (PTY) LTD (2013/153977/07)
Third Applicant
NGONYAMA
SECURITY (PTY) LTD
(2013/087140/07)
Fourth Applicant
and
MEC,
DEPARTMENT OF SOCIAL
DEVELOPMENT,
EC
First Respondent
GOLDEN
SECURITY SERVICES CC
Second Respondent
REASONS FOR GRANT OF
INTERIM RELIEF
PENDING ANTICIPATED
REVIEW APPLICATION
HARTLE
J
[1]
On Monday, 22 August 2022, I granted an order confirming paragraph 3
of
a rule
nisi
which I had granted in an urgent application
for an interdict in the preceding week of duty in Gqeberha staying
the implementation
of a tender award pending likely review
proceedings.  I also further amended paragraph 4 of the interim
order that would require
the applicants to initiate the anticipated
application for review within a shorter time frame with due regard to
the interests
of the respondents who would know their fate in respect
of the proposed review with certainty in a shorter while.
[2]
Having invited the parties to request reasons for my order, both
respondents
took up my invitation.
[3]
The rule
was essentially granted in the absence of the first respondent who
was served (by email only and
via
a
private address of one of its legal directors) minutes before the
matter was due to be heard for the first time at 16h30 on Monday,
15
August 2022.
[1]
[4]
My order and the rule
nisi
provided as follows:

1.
The applicants’ non-compliance with the Rules of this
Honourable Court as regard
the time limits, forms and service is
condoned and the matter is heard as one of urgency in terms of Rule
6(12)(a) of the Uniform
Rules of Court;
2.
Non-compliance with the provisions of section 35 of the General Law
Amendment
Act 62 of 1955, is condoned;
3.
A
rule nisi
be and is hereby issued, calling upon all
interested parties, including the successful bidders, to show cause
on 19 August 2022
at 09h30 why the following order should not be made
pending the finalisation of review proceedings, which is to be
instituted in
respect of the awarding of the contract under Bid
Number: SCMU4-21/220019:
3.1
That the respondent is and is hereby interdicted and restrained from
in any way implementing
the decision to award Bid Number
SCMU4-21/220019;
3.2
The successful bidder is likewise interdicted from commencing any
work under Bid Number
SCMU4-21/220019;
3.3
The costs of application to be costs in the review application.
4.
The orders in the first two paragraphs in the preceding paragraph
shall operate
as an interim interdict with immediate effect pending
finalisation of the judicial review application to be instituted by
the applicants
within twenty (20) days of this order against the
decision of the respondent’s Department to award tender number:
SCMU4-21/220019,
failing which the interim interdict will fall away.
5.
That service of this order take place by email to the following email
addresses.
a)
…;
b)
…;
c)
…;
d)

6.
The respondent (is) to provide the applicant’s attorney with
the name and
contact details of the person or company that was
awarded the contract under the said bid as well as a copy of such
contract on
or before Wednesday, 17 August 2022 at 12h00.
7.
Authorising the applicants to supplement their founding papers, if so
advised;
8.
The respondent may anticipate the return day upon delivery of not
less than twenty-four
hours’ notice to the applicants’
legal representative and the court.
9.
The costs stand over for determination in the review application.”
[5]
On the morning of the launch of the application on 15
August
2022, I received a certificate of urgency from the applicants’
counsel which foreshadowed the relief that they required
and in which
the reasons for the professed urgency were set out.  In essence
it was alleged that a very likely constitutionally
invalid contract
concluded under what was feared to be a flawed tender process was
about to be implemented that same day and, since
the first respondent
was not inclined to suspend its execution pending the resolution of
the applicants’ declared dispute
concerning it, that an
interdict was vitally necessary pending a review of the tender
process and outcome.
[6]
The same
reasons were restated in the founding affidavit(s) together with
other material averments.  In essence the four applicants,
all
private companies providing security in Gqeberha had in common, apart
from the fact that they had previously provided services
to the first
respondent (“the Department”) on various short term
contracts,
[2]
that they had
tendered and competed for the respondent’s tender bid
(SCMU4-21/220019) issued on 15 November 2021 for the
provision of
security services at Kwa-Nobuhle One Stop Centre, Protea, CYCC, Erica
CCYC and the department’s Ibhayi district
office for a long
term period of thirty-six months.
[3]
The tender closed on 14 December 2021 but was extended until 17 July
2022.
[4]
[7]
The applicants, despite tendering for security services on a
long-term
basis, were uncertain why their bids in respect of the new
contract model had come up short, or alternatively why the successful

bidder had been awarded the tender.  Indeed, they had heard a
rumour that the tender had been awarded to an undisclosed bidder

hailing from East London who was not a member of the Gqeberha
Security Forum (“the Forum”), an unregistered voluntary

association representing the interests of security service providers
within Gqeberha inclusive of themselves.
[8]
Reasons were sought on their behalf initially by the Forum (this on
21
July 2022 a day after the rumour surfaced among their employees
that the tender had been awarded), and later (on 10 August 2022)
by
an attorney acting on behalf of five named bidders including the four
applicants after the realisation that the first respondent
was not
going to answer the Forum’s request for information or
documentation.
[9]
The first
respondent cited a lack of authority and privacy reasons why it could
not consider the Forum’s objections.
One of these
objections (which the applicants in passing aligned themselves with
in the founding papers)
[5]
included the fact that the tender had according to information been
awarded to a security company not based in Gqeberha. A further

complaint was that the bid had been awarded to the winning bidder as
opposed to “any lower priced tenders”.  This
raised
a concern regarding the competitiveness of the respective bids in the
absence of a list of prices. The Forum expressed an
interest not only
in the reasons that would make everything clear, but also asked the
Department to make available to it copies
of the evaluation and
adjudication reports, including any functionality score cards to
provide a basis for it to assess whether
there were any grounds to
review its decision.
[6]
[10]
The applicants’ attorneys, when they joined the fray in a
letter written to the Department
20 days later, pressed in on the
fact that the applicants had not been provided with any reasons for
the assumed rejection of each
of their bids, this inference flowing
from the fact that a successful bidder had been selected.  They
intimated that they
were not in the know why they had been trumped by
the “successful bidder” or, conversely, what the reasons
were for
the granting of the tender to the successful bidder.
Self-evidently they wished to be apprised of reasons and regarded the

absence of these as a matter of concern and a basis to conclude that
the tender had not been awarded in a manner consistent with
section
217 of the Constitution.  Additionally, they sought an
undertaking that pending the resolution of the issue raised,
viz
their entitlement to be so apprised and their concerns allayed that
something might be amiss (“the dispute”), that
the
implementation of the tender to the successful bidder in the meantime
be held over.
[11]
The first respondent recognized the applicants’ entitlement to
the information sought
but requested time to collate the necessary
information.  The applicants’ attorneys agreed but again
insisted on the
necessary undertaking being given that it would
suspend the commencement of the tender pending resolution of the
“dispute”.
(The first respondent was however resolute
throughout that the implementation of the winning bid would not be
suspended.)
[12]
When the first respondent was ready to respond (late on Friday
afternoon the 12
th
at the close of business) after
having purportedly exhaustively looked at the records relative to the
process, instead of simply
providing the specific reasons for the
rejection of the applicants’ bids, vaguely asserted in their
formal response (“reasons”)
that the “winning
bidder” (unnamed) had succeeded essentially because 40 of the
45 bids received were “not acceptable”
for various
reasons mentioned, none of which were specifically attributed to
material shortcomings on the part of any of the applicants.
The
implication by the reply is that their bids were considered
nonresponsive and or unacceptable due to noncompliance with the

specifications and conditions of the tender, but the reasons in each
case why their bids fell to be so disqualified were strangely
left
unstated. Logically attention to detail would have removed any doubt
that their bids had been disqualified for valid reasons
in each
instance if these had pointedly been provided and, in the event that
the information had revealed at what stage each of
them had fallen
out of the game, exactly why that had been the case.  (It goes
without saying that transparency is vital in
any tender process.)
[13]
As indicated above, even though the first respondent had not been
asked by the applicants’
attorneys why the winner bidder was
not based in Gqeberha, this information was volunteered, probably in
response to the objections
raised by the Forum.  Also
volunteered to the applicants’ attorneys was the revelation
that the winning bidder’s
tender had not been the lowest
priced, a matter of concern to them since price is a significant
factor in the procurement of Government
goods and services.
Indeed, it came to light in the answering papers that the value of
the winning bid was in excess of four
million rands higher than the
second applicant’s bid, and substantially exceeded the three
other applicants’ bids as
well, which made it everyone’s
business and in the public interest to know how and why the second
respondent had pipped its
competitors in these peculiar
circumstances.)
[14]
This
absence on the part of the Department in playing open cards provided
a reasonable basis for the first applicant to contend
that the
process was quite conceivably procedurally unfair and fell to be
reviewed in terms of section 6 (2)(c) of the Promotion
of Justice
Act, No.  3 of 2000 (“PAJA”).  It pointed out
further the real possibility that the first respondent
had elevated
irrelevant considerations and ignored relevant considerations in
getting to its decision to award the tender to the
second
respondent.  Finally, the first applicant asserted that if the
first respondent had intended to apply objective criteria
in terms of
section 2 (1)(f) of the Preferential Procurement Policy Framework
Act,
[7]
it had been obliged to
stipulate that criteria in the tender documents in clear terms which
it had not done.
[15]
Rather curiously the first respondent imagined that the Department
had given good and proper
reasons to the applicants’ attorneys
in its formal reasons despite not saying clearly and unequivocally
why each of the applicants’
bids had been disqualified if
indeed that was the assumption they were expected to draw from the
Department’s terse reply,
namely that each of their bids were
nonresponsive or that they had each been disqualified for one or
other of the collective generic
reasons advanced relating,
inter
alia
, to prior experience, good standing with the Department of
Labour or deficient pricing schedules having been provided etc.

Even assuming there was good reason for them to be dropped from
the competition the preferring of the second respondent as
the
winning bidder required some explanation in all the circumstances
which on the face of it was also lacking in the formal reasons
except
for the feeble assertion that the Department could do what it had
done despite the fact that the winning bidder had not
come in with
the lowest price.
[16]
In justifying that the Department was compelled to resist the
applicants’ demand
that it suspend the implementation of the
tender, the first respondent ironically expressed the hope that its
“detailed responses”
(
sic
) would serve to convince
them “that the Department’s processes were compliant and
in line with all prevailing legislation,
prescripts and policies
regulating public procurement.”  In a separate letter
giving cover to its formal reasons, it
further expressed the hope
that it had covered all the applicant’s “concerns”
and would be surprised if litigation
were to ensue “despite the
reasons proffered by the Department”.  It rather
mischievously suggested that it was
“safe in the knowledge that
(it had) tried (its) level best to stave off (the dispute)”.
(This stance that it had said
all it wanted to or had to be said was
repeated in its answering affidavit. It, for example, denied that the
applicants had not
received the assurances that they were entitled
to, lamenting that its formal reasons were “as comprehensive as
one could
want.” Mr Mullins who appeared on behalf of the first
respondent also surprisingly sought to impress upon the court in
arguing
the department’s case that it had made a full and frank
disclosure in giving an account for its administrative conduct.)
[17]
Not unexpectedly, however, since the applicants were self-evidently
not made any wiser
why any of their bids had been rejected (it was
not even indicated if they were among the 40 or the 5 or the other
categories of
exclusion for each reason) or why they had not measured
up to the winning bidder, they launched the interdict proceedings on
the
ensuing Monday, the urgency then envisaged having been occasioned
by the late Friday afternoon reply with the expectation in the
offing
that the first respondent would implement its decision at the next
working day.
[18]
The object
by the urgent relief was to bar the commencement of the new contract
(feared to have been unlawfully and unfairly awarded
to the winning
bidder at their expense) pending the obtaining of the necessary
particulars of the successful tenderer (who the
Department notably
referred to in the formal reasons only as “the winning bidder”)
with a likely review application
expected to be launched in the near
future.  The applicants also required a copy of the contract
entered into with the winning
bidder (which was not provided even to
this court in the answering papers).
[8]
[19]
The basis
for the applicants concerns throughout was the apparent secrecy
surrounding the issue of the award firstly to a bidder
whose identity
was unknown to them or the Forum (they mistakenly believed that the
information regarding the award had not been
published by the
Department by the date of the application whereas the official
bulletin of 5 August 2022 bears this out)
[9]
and, secondly, because they had not been brought up to speed
regarding why their bids had been rejected, this despite the
purported
comprehensive reasons furnished that had significantly not
lifted the veil in any manner.  Indeed, the Department’s
attempt at clearing the air had instead revealed the further detail
that the winning bidder’s bid had also not been the lowest,

which on its own provided a real basis for concern.
[20]
Leaving
aside the applicants’ initial mistaken assertion that the
validity period for the bid had been irregularly extended,
as well as
the general complaint that the tender was driven under the auspices
of constitutionally invalid regulations
[10]
the applicants pleaded that their exclusion (if one had to read in
that they were amongst the 40 whose bids were found to have
been
unacceptable or non-responsive) had, by the absence of good and sound
reasons which had been requested, left them uncertain
that the
Department’s decisions were informed and grounded on a sound
and lawful consideration underpinned by the legal framework
and
permeated by considerations of fairness. The obvious harm to them
thereby, indeed to any tenderer in such a situation bereft
of
meaningful helpful information that the Department should have
offered without hesitation, is that their right to have participated

in the tender process subject to the rules created within the legal
framework, appeared to have been compromised. As for the reasons

fobbed off on them, the Department had said absolutely nothing that
could placate them to the contrary that the process had been
beyond
reproach.
[21]
The
Department added nothing more by its answering affidavit to the
formal supposedly exhaustive reasons it had given in its letter
to
the applicants’ attorneys that had gone before, rendering it
appropriate for this court to have determined their adequacy
or lack
of utility, at least on a provisional basis, right then and
there.
[11]
It did
however declare for the first time the identity of the “winning
bidder” which it claimed was a fact well
known to the
applicants.
[12]
[22]
The first
respondent opposed the application and in summary did so on the
grounds that the applicants had failed to comply with
the provisions
of the State Liability Act, 20 of 1957 (which failure it contended
was fatal to the application);
[13]
that the application was not urgent alternatively urgency had been
self-created;
[14]
that the
applicants had not been honest with the court regarding their
knowledge of the identity of the successful bidder,
[15]
that it had misled it regarding the validity extension period;
[16]
that the application was an abuse of this court’s processes;
that they had not made out a case for the review of the tender
award
in due course; and that they had not satisfied the requirements for
an interim interdict.
[23]
The second
respondent also opposed the application on the basis of a contrived
and abused urgency and supposed non-disclosure by
the applicants as
to its identity.
[17]
In
respect of the substantive issues it contended that the applicants’
had not made out the requirements for the grant
of interim relief.
[24]
I looked in vain in the first respondents’ answering affidavit
for any positive assertion
that the processes the Department had
adopted in getting to their decision to award the tender to the
second respondent, or the
decision itself, met the requirements
envisaged by section 217 of the Constitution.  Ironically it put
the applicants to the
proof of establishing the converse.
[25]
Further, what the first respondent never said and was notably absent
from the answering
papers, is that the second respondent’s bid
had been compliant in all respects. Indeed, the two respondents
appeared to be
at opposite ends in one important respect, namely
whether it was a requirement or not of the tender that it had to be
established
in the Gqeberha area.  The Department defended its
success on the basis that it was a preference not a requirement yet
the
latter boasted that it had met the requirement! The first
respondent also never unequivocally asserted in respect of each of
the
applicants that their bids were nonresponsive or on what basis
exactly, objectively assessed from the actual documentation filed

with the Department. Of concern was the fact that both respondents
appeared to expect the applicants to prove in a vacuum that
their
bids were compliant and had a go at them for not doing so.  I
wondered why the second respondent could have any opinion
about this
at all since it could not have been privy to  what documents had
or had not been placed before the Department neither
was it its call
from a tender adjudication point of view to sit in judgment on the
status of each of the applicant’s bids.
[26]
The second respondent’s insistence that the first applicant did
not have the requisite
experience (a further issue that it could not
naturally have been privy to because it was not its obligation to
consider and award
the tender) appeared to be contrived because a
perusal of the tender invitation requires five years of experience in
the industry
(as opposed to with the Department itself).
Ironically the second respondent never asserted that the entity
itself was compliant
in this respect. (Ms Crouse was well minded in
my view to point out the irony that the respondents could not even be
bothered to
reflect the formal registration number of the second
respondent so that the date of the entity’s own registration
could be
established at a glance.  Even in the Tender Bulletin,
intended by the Treasury to promote openness and transparency, a
useful
description of the close corporation eludes a reader.)
[27]
The respondents’ criticism of the first applicant that the
Department of Labour’s
certificate of good standing does not
reflect that the entity is covered thereby because of a slight
difference in name (despite
the registration number of the first
applicant matching the details of the company vouched for by the
certificate) also reflected
the extent to which the second respondent
was prepared to move the court away from the real issue in this
matter which is that
the first respondent had fallen woefully short
in explaining or justifying why the first applicant had fallen out of
the competitive
race.  Evidently the certificate had served the
first applicant well up to that point (it would be of concern if the
Department
had contracted with it without it being properly
registered for labour purposes) so the respondents’ common
attack of it
in this manner stood out of place.
[28]
Concerning the trite established principles for the grant of an
interim interdict, the
respondents appeared to miss the premise for
the interdict, or at least the
prima facie
right relied upon
by the applicants, to assert their entitlement to the relief sought.
[29]
In Down
Touch Investments (Pty) Ltd and Another v South African National Road
Agency SOC Limited and Another
[18]
the court had reason in a similar matter to reflect upon the nature
of the tenderers’
prima
facie
right sought to be established in interdict proceedings pending a
review of a tender process as follows:

There
can be no argument that the applicant, like all construction
companies is entitled to participate in the tender process subject
to
the rules created within the legal framework.
It
follows that the exclusion from participation must also be informed
and grounded on a sound and lawful foundation undergirded
by the
legal framework and permeated by considerations of fairness.  If
this is not done and an exclusion appears to be neither
fairly nor
lawfully grounded, it follows that the applicant would have a prima
facie right and would have an apprehension
of imminent
irreparable harm.
Public good or interest suffers where a state organ such as the
first respondent which is constitutionally obliged to encourage
and
assist in ensuring that the constitutional value system as applies in
this country is observed and promoted.  This on
its own may
entitle a wronged tenderer to challenge the process and if a
prima
facie
right
is established, to be granted an interdict pending the review
depending on the facts of each case.”
[19]
(Emphasis added)
[30]
In this
instance each of the applicants (including the fourth applicant)
[20]
were alleged to be co-bidders with legitimate expectations of a fair
process and outcome.
[21]
Once this process had run its course and the decision taken, they
were entitled to reasons.  This was never in doubt.
They
were provided with “purported reasons” following a
rigorous claimed self-examination by the first respondent of
the
tender process involving a resource intense exercise that yielded up
a comprehensive set of purported reasons that were self-evidently
of
no utility at all to the interested parties in the end.  It
begged further questions which the Department appeared to be
resolute
it would not offer up, alternatively it conveyed the impression that
it did not matter in its view because the implementation
of the
contract arising from that process would be given effect to on the
day of the launch of the interdict application.
Logically those
reasons are inadequate and provide a reasonable basis to conclude
that the award of the bid to the second respondent
might be set aside
on review.
[31]
The harm
(which the respondents appeared to concede as a matter of logic) is
that the implementation of a constitutionally invalid
award arising
from the feared flawed process was imminent
and
if allowed to stand pending the very likely review application would
undermine the constitutional value of legality.
In challenging the claimed constitutionally invalid conduct the
review application would allow the applicants to “delve
deeper
into the intricate issues entangled in (the matter).”
[22]
Further, the court reminds us in Down Touch Investments that:

..
it might very well be well-nigh impossible to unscramble the
consequence of an unlawful administrative action once it is allowed

to reach a certain point.”
[32]
It was self-evident that no other satisfactory remedy suggested
itself. I might have granted
the interdict but suggested that it be
subject to the applicants have another go at getting information from
the first respondent
under the guise of The
Promotion of Access to
Information Act, No. 2 of 2000
, or seeking “better”
reasons under the provisions of
section 5
of PAJA, but to what
avail.  The Department had made it plain that the reasons
provided were as comprehensive as they could
be.  The point was
that the Department had strung the applicants along right up to the
end when they in effect said nothing
at all, but in saying nothing
had raised a reasonable suspicion (which naturally conduced to the
likelihood of success in the proposed
review application) that the
applicants’ exclusion from the tender process, if not the
selection of the second respondent
as the successful bidder, might
have been substantively flawed and falling short of the
constitutional standard.
[33]
As for
balance of convenience, I was persuaded that these favoured the
granting of the interdict pending the review. The respondent
did not
really take the court into its confidence even to state when the
award had been made.  It was further notably mum
on the status
of the new contract supposedly in progression. I was concerned that
even after the award, discussions were still
being had with the
second respondent regarding the Department’s “requirement”
(presumably of the contract if
not of the tender itself) that 50% of
the successful tenderer’s proposed staff establishment be from
the Gqeberha area. In
any event it further boasted that it could
issue short term contract to whoever it wanted and would not be
dictated to in this
regard.
[23]
[34]
The second respondent said nothing from which any real prejudice
could be gleaned.
Evidently it was only negotiating employment
contracts with the first applicant’s staff on 12 August 2022 by
when it must
have been abundantly plain to the respondents that there
was a dispute in place about the award of the tender.
[35]
In the
result I was satisfied that all the elements for the grant of an
interim interdict had been met.  Whilst the court has
the power
to grant a restraining order of the kind envisaged by my order, it is
a trite principle that it does so only in the clearest
of cases. This
was one of those instances where I considered that it was
“constitutionally appropriate” to intervene
in all the
circumstances.
[24]
[36]
Concerning the issue of costs, I considered that these would follow
the result of the review
(the applicants did not ask for costs to be
finally adjudicated at that juncture), hence I made no final
determination in this
respect.  I considered too that the
applicants had made fair concessions, for example, that they had
erred in including as
a  ground of illegality that the tender
validity period had been irregularly extended. Although ultimately
abandoned this
ground had of necessity to be dealt with by the
respondents in their answering affidavits.   There were
other obvious
shortcoming in the applicants’ papers (for
example in the confirmatory affidavits of the second and third
applicants) which
might impact what costs orders should issue even if
(all) the applicants achieve success in the proposed review
application.
B
HARTLE
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
DATE
OF HEARING:

19
August 2022
DATE
OF ORDER:

22
August 2022
DATE
OF REQUEST
FOR
REASONS:

24 August 2022
DATE
OF REASONS:

24
January 2023
Appearances
:
For
the Applicants : Ms E Crouse SC & Mr. A Mbenyane instructed by
SPJ Attorneys, Gqeberha (ref. SPJ/L0010/SJ).
For
the First Respondent : Messrs NJ Mullins SC & N Dwayi instructed
by State Attorney, Gqeberha (ref. 0979/2002/L).
For
the Second Respondent :  Mr. OH Ronaasen SC instructed by
Friedman Scheckter, Gqeberha (ref. Mr. Friedman).
[1]
The
second respondent applied successfully and without challenge after
the fact to join as the second respondent on the return
day.
By the launch of the application their identity was alleged to have
been unknown to the applicants.
[2]
As
at the date of the launch of the application the first applicant’s
existing short-term contract was due to expire on
that same day, but
it was not the objective by the temporary interdict proceedings to
challenge that inevitability. The history
of its short-term stints
with the Department that were extended for short intervals at a time
before was merely incidental to
the features of the matter and bore
some relevance to the issue of urgency and the element of balance of
convenience (as a consequence
to staff that the work cycles would be
changing from short to long term arrangements and might not be
renewed cyclically as before),
but it was not the
prima
facie
right relied upon by the applicants for the temporary interdict.
[3]
The
trend up to the date of the impugned tender award had been to engage
the services of security providers for short periods
at a time with
those cycles being extended from time to time at the Department’s
election.
[4]
Initially
they averred that the bid had been extended after the tender
validity period has expired, an averment which Ms. Crouse,
who
appeared for the applicants together with Mr. Mfenyane, assured the
court had been an error or mistaken assumption made in
the haste of
preparing the papers under the exigencies which had prevailed.
From the moment of this realization, she confirmed
that the alleged
irregularity relied upon in this respect had been promptly
abandoned.  It was an obvious mistake because
the copy of the
notice of extension of validity of the bid (SM 6) self-evidently
reflects the initial validity period to have
been for four months
(120 days).  It was most unfortunate that this contradicted the
assertion made in the founding affidavit
that the tender had expired
90 days from the closing date of the bid.  Ms. Crouse
attributed this mistake to negligence
on the part of the applicants’
legal representative which she accepted without hesitation as a
blunder.  I was inclined
to accept her
bona
fides
in
this respect though the respondents sought to make capital of the
obviously mistaken premise as an indication of the applicants’

supposed
mala
fides
.
[5]
This
was not the primary reason for the applicants’ concerns with
the tender process but they alleged in summarising their
concerns
that the successful tenderer “is not even from Gqeberha by all
accounts.”
It was not clear incidentally whether it was an actual condition of
the tender that the bidder had to be a local entity.
The
second respondent was keen to impress upon the court though that it
had a Gqeberha connection or footprint in the local area
and the
first respondent justified its appointment as the successful bidder
on the basis of an application of “local preference”.

The first respondent clarified to the applicants’ legal
representative in its formal reasons, probably in response to the

Forum’s concern raised that the winning bidder “is”
not based in Gqeberha, that such a preference was included
in the
bid document but suggested that it was a preference rather than a
qualification criterion for the award of the tender.
In order
to “qualify” for local preference, so they rationalised,
services providers were required “to provide
documents to
support local presence”.  Without putting up any
documents, the first respondent claimed that the unnamed
“service
provider” had complied with this “requirement” by
“providing the required supporting documents
which were found
acceptable by all the committees”.  Elsewhere the first
respondent alluded to a meeting held on 3
August 2022 arising from
“(its) requirement that at least 50% of the successful
tenderer’s staff had to be local
and have previously been
employed by existing service providers”.  I accepted
therefore that in all probability it
was a requirement of the tender
that the successful bidder had to be based in Gqeberha and the first
respondent certainly seemed
constrained to want to justify that the
winning bidder (self-evidently unknown to the Forum representing
security providers in
Gqeberha) had met its requirement in this
respect.  The applicants’ attorneys however came with a
different approach
in their quest to get to the bottom of things.
They simply wanted to know why their client’s bids had been
disqualified,
or conversely stated, on what basis the winning bidder
had made it through successfully to the exclusion of their clients.
[6]
These
were not provided by the first respondent even to the court.
[7]
No
5 of 2000.
[8]
The
first respondent was not even bothered to confirm when the
Department had awarded the tender.  This date (6 July 2022)
was
coincidentally revealed by the second respondent.
[9]
The
winning bidder is however referred to in the bulletin as “Golden
Security” only without reference even to the
fact that it is a
close corporation.
[10]
This
argument was made on the back of the declaration of their invalidity
by the Constitutional Court in Minister of Finance v
Afribusiness
NPC
2002 (4) SA 362
(CC).  Ms. Crouse explained that it was
necessary to reserve the applicant’s rights in respect of this
ground depending
on its import once the fully informed reasons for
the administrative decision were to hand. She assured the court that
the applicants
were not by including it as a possible ground for the
anticipated review merely throwing the net as wide as possible.
Rather
the applicants needed to be astute lest there was any impact
by the impugned regulations and their import ultimately.
[11]
The
applicants had asserted that the presumption in section 5 (3) of
PAJA operated in their favour in this respect.  It was
argued
on behalf of the respondents that the presumption could only be
relied on in proceedings for judicial review but I can
perceive of
no reason why the effect of a lack of good and proper reasons would
not be relevant in interdict proceedings as a
precursor to an actual
PAJA challenge arising therefrom. In any event, the reasons had been
given finally, after a claimed exhaustive
process, so it was not
unreasonable to assess their adequacy against that background.
Logically they were deficient as
they did not say why each of the
applicant’s bids had been discounted, or why their removal
from the competition would
have been especially warranted.  The
deficiency of the reasons provided by the Department was
demonstrated further by the
first respondent belatedly claiming in
the answering affidavit that the 4
th
applicant had not filed a bid and thus lacked “locus standi”
to have been in the consideration at all.  Logic
dictates that
if the Department had carefully studied each bid to source a reason
for an early disqualification, then the answer
that the 4
th
applicant had not filed a bid at all would surely have suggested
itself in the formal reasons given already. Instead, the unfortunate

impression created is that the Department was paying mere lip
service to its obligations to provide reasons for the sake of
transparency.
[12]
This in my view never raised a genuine dispute of fact.  The
allegation that the applicants were in the know and were somehow

being coy about the identity of the second respondent was simply not
justified on the papers. The first respondent said the Department

informed the applicants that their bids had been rejected but did
not put up proof. They ought to have known from the Bulletin

(published on 5 August 2022) that the bid had been awarded to an
entity referred to only as Golden Security) but evidently did
not.
If they were misleading the court that they knew by then they would
surely have mentioned the fact of the value of
the contract much
earlier (also stated in the Bulletin) as this ultimately proved to
be of a greater concern in justifying a
necessary review application
down the line.  Rather ironically the basis for arguing this
knowledge that they knew exactly
who had bested them (supposedly
before deposing to the founding papers) rested on hearsay
allegations that the director of the
first applicant had been party
to an official meeting called by the Department on 3 August 2022 at
which a discussion was held
about the 2
nd
respondent poaching its employees. At the end of the day the worst
that the second respondent could say is that it is inconceivable

that the applicants did not know the identity of the successful
bidder.  However, all indications point to the fact that
the
applicants were genuinely none the wise who the winning bidder was.
Why ask if they knew the answer to the question.
And if they
knew, why did the Department merely refer to this entity as the
“winning bidder”.  Further, the
Department failed
to say when the applicants were supposedly informed.  If they
were advised on 6 July 2022, why was the
Forum having to contend
with “rumours” on 20 July 2022.
[13]
I
was unpersuaded by this argument given that the applicants’
attorneys, and the Forum before them, had been quite specific
in
their engagement with the Department regarding what direction would
be taken absent its cooperation.
[14]
In
this respect too the applicants gave a fair account of all the steps
undertaken by them, under the auspices of the Forum, and
as a
collective.  The crunch came when a reply was provided late on
the Friday afternoon.
[15]
See
footnote 12 above.
[16]
See
footnote 4 above.
[17]
See footnote 12 above.
[18]
(2064/2020) [2020] ZAECGHC 120 (29 October 2020).
[19]
At
par [41].
[20]
The
fourth applicant’s interest on this basis was not challenged
until the first respondent delivered an answering affidavit.
It was
not suggested to its attorneys in the formal reasons that had gone
before that there was a doubt that it had been in the
race at all.
It is so that the fourth applicant did not refute the belated
allegation, not that it had
not
tendered but rather that the Department had no record of such a
tender. To my mind this still established a
prima
facie
right not to have been unlawfully excluded from the tender process
even if open to some doubt.
[21]
See
Majojobela
v MEC for Rural Development and Agrarian Reform, Eastern
Cape
[505/2020] (2020) ZAECBHC 22 (3 November 2020) at para 26 in which I
held that:

On
the issue of legal standing, the applicant does not have to make out
a case that the bid would have been granted to it, or
that it was
poised for success in respect thereof, if the tender process had run
its course but for the untimely cancellation
thereof.  It
establishes such standing instead in my view on the basis of its
legitimate expectation to a fair outcome in
the tender process
which, after the bids were closed, left it and its co-bidders in a
race to the conclusion entailing an evaluation
of the competing
compliant bids in due course and a proper adjudication thereof, even
if the recommendation flowing from such
process was going to be that
the tender should be re-advertised
.
[22]
Down
Touch Investments
Supra
at [47].
[23]
Ironically
the Provincial Treasury issued circular 10 of 2018 in September 2018
already. This was handed up by Mr. Mullins during
argument to
demonstrate the imperative on the Department to break the pattern of
issuing short-term contracts.  It had persisted
with this
practice right up to August 2022 so it appeared notwithstanding the
Treasury’s condemnation of the practice and
drawing of
attention to the risks related thereto.
[24]
See
the court’s sentiments expressed in Down Touch Investments,
Supra
,
at [43]-[45].