Spec Joint Venture v Minister: Department of Water and Sanitation and Others (2806/2022) [2023] ZAECQBHC 8 (17 February 2023)

82 Reportability
Administrative Law

Brief Summary

Administrative Law — Tender Review — Compliance with mandatory requirements — Applicant sought to review the decision to award a tender for mechanical installation and maintenance services, arguing that the first respondent improperly disqualified its bid due to non-compliance with mandatory UIF certificate requirements, while allowing other non-compliant bids to proceed. The court found that the applicant's bid did not meet the specified mandatory requirements and that the first respondent's actions were consistent with the tender conditions, leading to the conclusion that the decisions were rational and lawful.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


The proceedings concerned an application for judicial review under the Promotion of Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000 (PAJA) arising from a public procurement process. The applicant, Spec Joint Venture, sought the review and setting aside of decisions taken by the Minister: Department of Water and Sanitation (the first respondent) to award a tender for mechanical and related major plant and machinery services to Zana Manzi Services (Pty) Ltd (the second respondent) and Phunya Consulting CC (the third respondent).


The matter was heard in the High Court of South Africa, Eastern Cape Division, Gqeberha. The tender decisions under challenge were made on 21 June 2022 (Eastern Cape portion awarded to the second respondent) and 29 September 2022 (Western Cape portion awarded to the second and third respondents). On 2 February 2023, the court granted an order reviewing and setting aside the impugned decisions and remitting the matter to the first respondent to commence the procurement process afresh. The judgment delivered on 17 February 2023 provided reasons for that earlier order.


The dispute concerned the lawfulness of the tender evaluation and award process, and in particular whether non-compliance with a mandatory tender requirement relating to UIF compliance documentation could be condoned or “relaxed” in the evaluation process, and whether the first respondent acted lawfully in how it treated non-compliant bidders.


2. Material Facts


The first respondent issued an invitation to tender for the appointment of contractors under a three-year term contract for mechanical and related major plant and machinery installation, maintenance, repair, refurbishment and upgrade for southern operations in the Eastern and Western Cape. Following mandatory briefing sessions held on 13 and 15 July 2021, a total of 23 tenders were submitted, including those of the applicant and the second and third respondents.


The tender evaluation process was structured into seven phases, beginning with Phase 1: Mandatory Requirements. The tender invitation expressly recorded that failure to submit any of the documents listed under Phase 1 would render a bid non-responsive and result in disqualification. A central mandatory requirement was item 10, which required “[a] copy of a valid UIF certificate of compliance or copy of a valid letter of good standing/tender letter (verification will be done with the Department of Labour)”.


It was common cause that the applicant was a joint venture comprised of three entities and that, for purposes of compliance, the applicant’s bid had to be assessed with reference to the mandatory requirements applicable to the joint venture members, including the lead partner. It was also common cause that two of the joint venture entities (including the lead partner) failed to submit valid UIF certificates of compliance. Instead, the applicant submitted alternative documents (including statements) and provided a cover letter asserting that the entities were UIF-compliant notwithstanding what was reflected on the Department of Employment and Labour website. The court recorded that the applicant’s alternative documentation was not included in item 10 as an acceptable substitute for the documents specified there.


The court further recorded as undisputed that the documents submitted by the applicant did not comply with the mandatory tender requirement in item 10.


The minutes of the Bid Evaluation Committee (BEC) reflected that other bidders, including the second respondent and Bicacon (Pty) Ltd, had also failed to submit the specified UIF compliance documentation. Rather than declaring those bids non-responsive and disqualifying them at Phase 1, the BEC recommended that their documents be forwarded to the Department of Labour for verification. The minutes recorded that the Department of Labour confirmed that declarations and contributions were up to date at bid closing, but that UIF certificates had not been issued, with the result that those bids were allowed to proceed for further evaluation.


In contrast, the first respondent’s stance in the litigation was that the applicant was not considered further because of its non-compliance with the mandatory requirements, specifically its lead partner’s failure to submit a valid UIF certificate of compliance. The applicant contended, in substance, that the first respondent had relaxed mandatory requirements for certain bidders but not for others, and that it had sufficient information to verify the applicant’s UIF status but failed to do so.


A further factual contention advanced by the applicant was that UIF compliance certificates had ceased to be issued (or were issued only intermittently) by the Department of Labour prior to the tender. The court found that this contention was not supported by the papers, and referred to the first respondent’s reliance on departmental circulars issued in March and April 2022 (after bid submission). The court also noted that a certificate of compliance had been issued to the second respondent on 29 July 2021, and that the applicant’s own explanatory letter submitted with its bid did not allege an inability to obtain the required certificates. In addition, the court recorded that the applicant did not contend that it was unable to obtain the alternative documentation expressly contemplated by item 10, namely a letter of good standing/tender letter.


3. Legal Issues


The central legal question was whether the first respondent had lawful authority, on a proper construction of the tender documents and the applicable procurement framework, to condone or relax non-compliance with a peremptory mandatory tender requirement (item 10) that was framed as disqualifying if not met.


Closely connected to this was whether, in procurement law and under PAJA, the absence of strict compliance with the mandatory requirement could nonetheless be treated as sufficiently compliant on the basis that the purpose of the requirement (ensuring UIF registration and up-to-date contributions) could allegedly be met through other forms of proof, and whether that type of “materiality” enquiry (as discussed in Constitutional Court jurisprudence) could justify the decision to allow certain non-compliant bids to proceed.


The dispute therefore primarily concerned questions of law and the application of legal principles to largely common-cause facts, namely the content of the tender requirements, the common-cause non-compliance, and whether the first respondent had discretion to condone. To the extent that the applicant relied on a “purpose-based” assessment of compliance, the matter also implicated a value judgment about the materiality of deviation; however, the court treated the decisive issue as the existence (or absence) of lawful power to condone in the first place.


4. Court’s Reasoning


The court began from the premise (common cause between the parties) that the evaluation and award of the tender constituted administrative action reviewable under PAJA. It then located the procurement process within the constitutional framework of section 217(1) of the Constitution, which requires a procurement system that is fair, equitable, transparent, competitive, and cost-effective, subject to the permissibility of preferential procurement policies and the statutory framework contemplated in section 217(3).


The court identified the Preferential Procurement Policy Framework Act 5 of 2000 (PPPFA) as the legislation giving effect to section 217(3), and emphasised the statutory concept of an “acceptable tender”, namely one which “in all respects, complies with the specifications and conditions of tender as set out in the tender document”. The court treated acceptability as a threshold requirement, linked to the constitutional procurement values and to the principle of legality, with the consequence that acceptance of a tender failing to meet the threshold would be invalid and liable to be set aside.


In addressing how compliance should be assessed, the court referred to Supreme Court of Appeal authority interpreting “acceptable tender” against the background of section 217(1) values. The court noted the observation (in later authority) that “acceptable tender” cannot require compliance with conditions that are immaterial, unreasonable, or unconstitutional, but also emphasised that it is for the procuring entity, not the court, to decide prerequisites for a valid tender, with non-compliance resulting in disqualification unless the relevant requirement falls into one of those exceptional categories.


Against that background, the applicant’s central submission was that strict insistence on a UIF compliance certificate (without allowing other proof of compliance) was irrational given the purpose of the requirement. The court characterised this as an argument that the first respondent could and should have condoned non-compliance with the prescribed documentary requirement.


The court then applied the general principle that an administrative authority has no inherent power to condone failure to comply with a peremptory requirement, and has such power only if a discretion to condone has been conferred. The decisive enquiry therefore became whether the tender invitation, properly construed, gave the first respondent any express or implied discretion to condone non-compliance with items 1 to 10 of the mandatory requirements. Having considered the tender documents, the court concluded that they did not confer such discretion, either expressly or by implication.


The court engaged with the jurisprudential debate around “substantial compliance” and the “materiality” of deviations, including the Constitutional Court’s statement that materiality depends on the extent to which the purpose of the requirement is attained. However, the court held that those statements were not authority for the proposition that an organ of state may condone non-compliance with a mandatory prerequisite for a valid tender where no discretion exists. The court distinguished the position in Allpay, noting that in that case the administrative authority had reserved a right to disqualify, thereby retaining a discretion to condone; in the present tender, the first respondent retained no such discretion.


The court also recorded its alignment with authority emphasising legality and the limits of condonation in procurement processes, and it treated item 10’s requirement as neither trivial nor minor, and as not immaterial, unreasonable, or unconstitutional. On that basis, the court concluded that the applicant’s tender was not an acceptable tender under the PPPFA threshold. By necessary implication, the same applied to other bids that failed to comply with the mandatory requirements and yet were erroneously allowed to proceed through an effective relaxation of item 10.


Because the first respondent’s process allowed non-compliant bids to be treated as responsive and eligible for further evaluation and award, the court found that the first respondent failed to comply with a mandatory and material procedure or condition prescribed by an empowering provision, as contemplated in section 6(2)(b) of PAJA. The court considered that, having reached this conclusion, it was required by section 172(1)(a) of the Constitution to declare the decisions unlawful on that basis alone. It therefore did not address an additional dispute raised on the papers relating to the Western Cape portion allegedly being awarded outside the tender validity period.


On costs, the court considered the applicant to have been substantially successful and held that costs should follow the result. However, it did not accept that the costs of two counsel were warranted given the crisp and uncomplicated issue for determination.


5. Outcome and Relief


The court reviewed and set aside the decision of the first respondent to award the Eastern Cape portion of tender BID DWS 05-0621 WTE to the second respondent on 21 June 2022.


The court reviewed and set aside the decision of the first respondent to award the Western Cape portion of the tender to the second and third respondents on 29 September 2022.


The impugned decisions were remitted to the first respondent with a direction to start the procurement process afresh for the relevant services.


The first respondent was ordered to pay the costs of the application, with the court indicating that costs of two counsel were not justified on the facts.


Cases Cited


Pharmaceutical Manufacturers Association of SA: In re Ex parte President of the Republic of South Africa [2000] ZACC 1; 2000 (2) SA 674 (CC).


Chairperson, Standing Tender Committee v JFE Sapela Electronics (Pty) Ltd 2008 (2) SA 638 (SCA).


Millennium Waste Management (Pty) Ltd v Chairperson, Tender Board: Limpopo Province 2008 (2) SA 481 (SCA).


Dr JS Moroka Municipality and Others v Betram (Pty) Limited and Another (937/2012) [2013] ZASCA 186; [2014] 1 All SA 545 (SCA) (29 November 2013).


Minister of Environmental Affairs and Tourism v Pepper Bay Fishing (Pty) Ltd; Minister of Environmental Affairs v Smith 2004 (1) SA 308 (SCA).


Overstrand Municipality v Water and Sanitation Services South Africa (Pty) Ltd [2018] 2 All SA 644 (SCA).


Allpay Consolidated Investment Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Others v Chief Executive Officer of the South African Social Security Agency and Others [2014] ZACC 42; 2014 (1) SA 604 (CC).


WDR Earthmoving Enterprises and Another v Joe Gqabi District Municipality and Others (392/2017) [2018] ZASCA 72 (30 May 2018).


Weenen Transitional Local Council v Van Dyk [2002] 2 All SA 482 (A) (14 March 2002).


Nkisimane and Others v Santam Insurance Co Ltd 1978 (2) SA 430 (A).


Ex parte Mothuloe (Law Society Transvaal, Intervening) 1996 (4) SA 1131 (T).


Amakahaya Construction CC v Eastern Cape Department of Human Settlements and the Member of the Executive Council of the Eastern Cape Department of Human Settlements (Eastern Cape Division, Grahamstown) Case No. 3782/2021 (unreported).


Legislation Cited


Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996.


Promotion of Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000.


Preferential Procurement Policy Framework Act 5 of 2000.


Rules of Court Cited


No rules of court were cited in the judgment.


Held


The court held that the applicant’s bid did not comply with the tender’s mandatory requirements because it failed to submit the specified UIF compliance documentation contemplated in item 10, and that this non-compliance rendered the bid non-responsive under the tender terms and unacceptable under the statutory procurement framework.


The court held further that the first respondent had no discretion, express or implied in the tender documents, to condone or relax non-compliance with the mandatory prerequisites. As a result, the treatment of non-compliant bids as eligible for further evaluation and award constituted non-compliance with a mandatory and material condition prescribed by an empowering provision for purposes of section 6(2)(b) of PAJA.


On that basis, the court set aside both tender awards and remitted the matter to the first respondent to commence the procurement process anew, with a costs order against the first respondent.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


A tender submitted in a public procurement process must satisfy the threshold requirement of being an “acceptable tender” under the Preferential Procurement Policy Framework Act 5 of 2000, meaning that it must comply, in all respects, with the specifications and conditions set out in the tender documents, assessed against the constitutional procurement values in section 217(1).


An organ of state may not, consistent with the principle of legality, exercise powers beyond those conferred by law, and therefore may not accept or treat as responsive a tender that fails to meet mandatory prerequisites where those prerequisites are binding and no condonation power is conferred.


As a general principle, an administrative authority has no inherent power to condone non-compliance with a peremptory requirement; it has such power only where it has been afforded a discretion to do so by the relevant empowering instrument, properly construed.


Purpose-based assessments of the “materiality” of compliance in administrative law do not, without more, supply a power to condone non-compliance with mandatory tender prerequisites where the tender framework does not reserve or confer a discretion to waive or overlook non-compliance.


Where a procuring authority fails to comply with a mandatory and material condition prescribed by an empowering provision, this constitutes a reviewable irregularity under section 6(2)(b) of PAJA, and invalid administrative action must be declared unlawful under section 172(1)(a) of the Constitution.

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[2023] ZAECQBHC 8
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Spec Joint Venture v Minister: Department of Water and Sanitation and Others (2806/2022) [2023] ZAECQBHC 8 (17 February 2023)

SAFLII
Note:
Certain
personal/private details of parties or witnesses have been
redacted from this document in compliance with the law
and
SAFLII
Policy
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(EASTERN
CAPE DIVISION, GQEBERHA)
REPORTABLE
Case
No: 2806/2022
In
the matter
between:
SPEC
JOINT
VENTURE
Applicant
and
THE
MINISTER: DEPARTMENT OF WATER
First

Respondent
AND
SANITATION
ZANA
MANZI SERVICES (PTY) LTD
Second

Respondent
AND
SANITATION
(Registration
number: 2[...])
PHUNYA
CONSULTING CC
Third

Respondent
(Registration
number:
2[...])
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT
BANDS
AJ:
[1]
The applicant applied for the review and
setting aside of decisions by the first respondent to award tender
BID DWS 05-0621 WTE
for the mechanical and other related major plant
and machinery installation, maintenance, repair, refurbishment and
upgrade for
southern operations in the Eastern and Western Cape to
the second and third respondents, respectively.  The Eastern
Cape portion
of the tender was awarded to the second respondent on 21
June 2022, whilst the Western Cape portion was awarded to both the
second
and third respondents on 29 September 2022.
[2]
It is common cause that the evaluation and
award of the tender in question is administrative action and is
reviewable under the
Promotion of Administrative Justice Act, 3 of
2000 (“
PAJA
”).
[3]
On
2 February 2023, I granted an order reviewing and setting aside the
impugned decisions and remitting the matter back to the first

respondent to start the procurement process afresh.
[1]
What follows are my reasons for the order.
[4]
The facts are largely common cause.  The
first respondent invited interested parties to tender for the
appointment of contractors
relating to a three-year term contract for
the services referred to above.
[5]
Pursuant
to this invitation, and following mandatory briefing sessions, which
were held on 13 and 15 July 2021,
[2]
23 tenders were submitted, including tenders from the applicant and
the second and third respondents respectively.  The tender

evaluation process comprised of seven phases, including: mandatory
requirements; compulsory subcontracting; administrative compliance;

local production and content; functionality compliance; workshop
evaluation; and price and preference points claimed.
[6]
It is common cause that the applicant’s
bid, being that of a joint venture between three separate entities,
namely, (i) Surface
Preparations Equipment and Coatings (Pty) Ltd,
the lead partner; (ii) SPEC Hardware (Pty) Ltd; and (iii) SPEC
Corrosion Protection
(Pty) Ltd, had to be materially evaluated in the
context of the applicant’s lead entity’s compliance with
the mandatory
tender requirements.  In order to establish
whether or not there had been compliance by the applicant, I am
required to consider
the schedule of returnable documents, which is
central to the present dispute.
[7]
The invitation to tender, in respect of phase
1, records as follows:

PHASE
1: MANDATORY REQUIREMENTS
Failure
to submit any of the documents listed below will render your bid
non-responsive and will be disqualified
.

[8]
Of relevance is item 10 of the mandatory tender
requirements, being “
[a] copy
of a valid UIF certificate of compliance or copy of a valid letter of
good standing/tender letter (verification will be
done with the
Department of Labour)
.”
Where I make reference to non-compliance with the mandatory tender
requirements, such reference is made in the context
of item 10.
[9]
It is common cause that two of the entities
comprising the joint venture, inclusive of the applicant’s lead
partner; and SPEC
Hardware (Pty) Ltd, failed to submit valid UIF
certificates of compliance.  Instead, the applicant submitted
alternative documentation
in respect of the aforementioned entities
in support of its contention that it was UIF compliant.  I pause
to mention that
the documents submitted, inclusive of EPMSA
statements, were not included in item 10 as acceptable alternatives
to a valid UIF
certificate of compliance.  More particularly,
the applicant’s tender was accompanied by a cover letter, in
which the
applicant, in respect of its UIF compliance, commented as
follows:

6.1
The SPEC JV member SPEC Corrosion Protection (Pty) Ltd is in
compliance with the UIF requirements and
the Certificate of
Compliance as issued by the Department of Employment and Labour is
attached to this Tender Bid.
6.2
The SPEC JV member SPEC Hardware (Pty) Ltd is in compliance with the
UIF requirements, but
at time of this letter it is recorded on the
DoEL website that the contributions for June 2021 is (sic)
outstanding.  However,
proof of that payment (statement of
account) is attached to the tender Bid document.  In view of
this it is the correct contention
that SPEC Hardware (Pty) Ltd is in
compliance with UIF requirements.
6.3
The SPEC JV member Surface Preparations Equipment and Coatings (Pty)
Ltd is in compliance
with the UIF requirements, but at time of this
letter it is recorded on the DoEL website that contribution (sic) and
declaration
is (sic) outstanding.  However, proof of that
payment (statement of account) as well as proof of submission of
declaration
is attached to the tender Bid document.  In view of
this it is the correct contention that Surface Preparations Equipment
and Coatings (Pty) Ltd is in compliance with UIF requirements.

[10]
It is not in dispute that the documents
submitted by the applicant do not comply with the mandatory tender
requirements.
[11]
Apparent from the minutes of the Bid Evaluation
Committee (“
the BEC
”)
is that despite non-compliance with the mandatory tender requirements
by several of the other bidders, inclusive of the
second respondent
and Bicacon (Pty) Ltd (to whom I shall return later), such bids were
not declared non-responsive by the first
respondent, nor were they
disqualified.  Instead, the BEC suggested that the documents
submitted by the respective bidders
be forwarded to the Department of
Labour for verification.  The following entries, with reference
to “
Phase 1: Mandatory
requirements
”, in the minutes
under discussion bear repetition:
SUMMARY
RESOLUTION/
ACTION
All twenty-three
(23) bids were evaluated on phase 1 (mandatory requirements).
Failure to submit documents listed under
mandatory requirements
will render your bid non-responsive and will be disqualified.
The following
bidders did not comply with Mandatory Requirements
·
Bidder 5: Zana Manzi Services (Pty) Ltd

bidder
submitted SARS notice of
registration instead of UIF certificate or tender letter.
Bid Evaluation Committee (BEC) suggested
that the documents
submitted should be forwarded to (DoL) for verification. DoL
confirmed that the companies’ (sic)
declaration and
contributions were up to date at the closing of the bid, but the
UFC certificates were not issued.
Bidder was therefore
considered for further evaluation.

·
Bidder 8: Bicacon (Pty) Ltd
- bidder submitted application for
registration instead of UIF certificate or tender letter.
Bid Evaluation Committee
(BEC) suggested that the documents
submitted should be forwarded to (DoL) for verification.  DoL
confirmed that the
companies’ declaration and contributions
were up to date at the closing of the bid, but the UIF
certificates were not
issued.  Bid was therefore considered
for further evaluation.

·
Bidder 20 – SPEC JV (Pty) Ltd

one of the joint venture company (SPEC) UIF was non-compliant.

See score sheets
attached for ease of reference.
Below is a list of
nine (9)
[3]
bids who were considered for further evaluation:
·
Bidder 2: Isiphethu Water Services (Pty) Ltd
·
Bidder 4: Tushcor Holdings (Pty)
Ltd
·
Bidder 5: Zana Manzi Services
(Pty) Ltd
·
Bidder 8: Bicacon (Pty) Ltd
·
Bidder 9: Phunya Consulting CC
·
Bidder 15: CMS Water Engineering
CC
·
Bidder 19: Kelotlhoko JV
Xintsabyana

Seven (7) bids
complied with the mandatory requirements and were considered for
further evaluation into Phase 2 (compulsory
sub-contracting
(Regulation 9) criteria.
[12]
The main thrust of the applicant’s case
is two-fold.  Firstly, that the first respondent relaxed the
mandatory tender
requirements for certain bidders but not for others,
including the applicant; and secondly, that the first respondent had
sufficient
information to verify the applicant’s UIF status and
compliance with the Department of Labour, which it failed to do.
[13]
On the other hand, the first respondent,
notwithstanding the department’s own apparent deviation from
the mandatory requirements,
and without addressing this disparity on
the papers before court, takes the position that the applicant
was
not considered for further participation in the bidding process by
reason of the applicant’s non-compliance with the mandatory

requirements, and more particularly, its lead partner’s failure
to submit a valid UIF certificate of compliance.
[14]
The applicant’s submission
that
it was undisputed on the papers that the Department of Labour had
ceased to issue UIF compliance certificates for some time
before the
date of issue of the tender; alternatively, that such certificates
were only issued intermittently, is not only incorrect,
but it is not
born out by the papers before court.  This aspect was
pertinently dealt with by the first respondent with reference
to
circulars issued by the Department of Labour during or about March
and April 2022, some seven to eight months after the submission
of
the applicant’s bid on 12 August 2021.  This too is
evidenced by the certificate of compliance issued to the second

respondent by the Department of Labour on 29 July 2021.
Significantly, nowhere in the applicant’s explanatory
letter,
under cover of which its bid was submitted, and to which I
have already referred, does the applicant contend that it was unable

to obtain the required certificates of compliance.
[15]
Further and in any event,
leaving aside the dispute between the parties as to the availability
of certificates of compliance, the
applicant does not contend that it
was unable to obtain a valid letter of good standing/tender letter,
this being the alternative
acceptable documentation falling within
the ambit of item 10.
[16]
In argument, Mr Beyleveld SC
correctly conceded that on the facts of the present matter, and in
the event of a finding that the
first respondent had no authority to
condone non-compliance with its own mandatory requirements, the
proper order in the circumstances
was to review and set aside the
impugned decisions
and to refer
the matter back to the first respondent to start the procurement
process afresh.  Whilst Mr Buchannan SC was,
in principle, in
agreement with the said proposition, he contended that on the facts
of the present matter, (i) the materiality
of compliance with the
mandatory requirement depends on the extent to which the purpose of
the requirement is attained; (ii) the
purpose of the requirement to
supply a UIF compliance certificate is to ensure that a prospective
tenderer is registered for UIF
and that its UIF contributions are up
to date; and (iii) the decision of the first respondent to
qualify/limit this condition by
enforcing the rigid requirement that
a tenderer can only prove its compliance in the manner sought,
without allowing any other
valid proof of such compliance, is
irrational in light of the purpose of the requirement.
[17]
Section
217(1) of the Constitution
[4]
requires that public procurement must occur in accordance with a
system which is fair, equitable, transparent, competitive, and

cost-effective.  Such requirements are qualified to the extent
that organs of state or institutions referred to in section
217(1)
are permitted to implement a preferential procurement policy as
provided for in section 217(2) of the Constitution.
In turn,
section 217(3) of the Constitution makes provision for the enactment
of legislation to provide a framework within which
such policy is to
be implemented.  To give effect to section 217(3) of the
Constitution, the Preferential Procurement Policy
Framework Act 5 of
2000 (“
the
PPPFA
”)
was enacted.
[18]
In
addition to providing for the application of a preferent point system
in the evaluation of bids, the PPPFA makes it clear that
for a
tenderer to be eligible for consideration, ie for the allocation of
points, the tender must be what the PPPFA defines as
an acceptable
tender, this being one which, in all respects, complies with the
specifications and conditions of tender as set out
in the tender
document.  In accordance with the doctrine of legality, the
legislature and executive in all spheres are constrained
by the
principle that they may exercise no power and perform no function
beyond those conferred upon them by law.
[5]
The acceptability of the tender is accordingly a threshold
requirement and the acceptance by an organ of state of a tender
which
fails to meet this threshold is an invalid act which falls to be set
aside.
[6]
[19]
In
Chairperson,
Standing Tender Committee v JFE Sapela Electronics (Pty) Ltd
(supra)
Scott JA, with reference to the definition of an acceptable tender,
stated as follows at paragraph [14]:

The
definition of ‘acceptable tender’ in the Preferential Act
must be construed against the background of the system
envisaged by s
217(1) of the Constitution, namely one which is ‘fair,
equitable, transparent, competitive and effective’.
In other
words, whether ‘the tender in all respects complies with the
specifications and conditions of tender as set out
in the contract
documents’ must be judged against these values…”
[20]
In
considering the aforesaid passage, Jafta JA in
Millennium
Waste Management (Pty) Ltd v Chairperson, Tender Board: Limpopo
Province
[7]
commented, obiter, that in such context, the definition of tender
cannot be given its wide literal meaning and accordingly, it
cannot
mean that a tender must comply with conditions which are immaterial,
unreasonable or unconstitutional.
[21]
In
this context, and with reference to the above, the Supreme Court of
Appeal, in
Dr
JS Moroka Municipality and Others v Betram (Pty) Limited and Another,
stated that:
[8]

Essentially
it was for the municipality, and not the court, to decide what should
be a prerequisite for a valid tender, and a failure
to comply with
prescribed conditions will result in a tender being disqualified as
an ‘acceptable tender’ under the
Procurement Act unless
those conditions are immaterial, unreasonable or unconstitutional.”
[22]
The
requirement that tenders should only be awarded to bidders who are
UIF compliant is not in issue.  Instead, the applicant
contends
that
the
decision of the first respondent to qualify or limit such condition
by enforcing the rigid requirement that a tenderer can only
prove its
compliance by way of a UIF certificate,
[9]
without allowing any other valid proof of its compliance, is
irrational in light of the purpose of the empowering provision, such

purpose being, as stated, to ensure that a prospective tenderer is
registered for UIF and that its UIF contributions are up to
date.
[23]
In short, the applicant’s
contention is that the first respondent could and should have
condoned the applicant’s non-compliance
with the mandatory
tender requirements.
[24]
The
court in
Minister
of Environmental Affairs and Tourism v Pepper Bay Fishing (Pty) Ltd;
Minister of Environmental Affairs v Smith
[10]
in dealing with the question as to whether an administrative
authority has the power to condone a failure to comply with a
peremptory
requirement, stated that:

As
a general principle an administrative authority has no inherent power
to condone failure to comply with a peremptory requirement.
It
only has such power if it has been afforded the discretion to do so.”
[25]
This
has been reaffirmed by the Supreme Court of Appeal on more than one
occasion.
[11]
[26]
The first respondent’s
ability to condone a failure to comply with a peremptory tender
requirement, in the present instance,
is dependent upon a proper
construction of the documents forming part of the tender invitation.
Having had regard to the
tender invitation under discussion, I
am satisfied that it in no manner, either expressly or impliedly,
affords the first respondent
a discretion to condone a bidder’s
failure to comply with the prescribed minimum prerequisites set out
in items 1 to 10 of
the mandatory requirements.
[27]
I
am aware of the comments in
Millennium
Waste Management
that
our law permits condonation of non-compliance with peremptory
requirements where the granting thereof is not incompatible with

public interest and if it is granted by the body for whose benefit
the provision was enacted.  The aforesaid dictum was later

disapproved of by the court in
Moroka
Municipality
[12]
on the basis that such proposition is inconsistent with the decision
of the court in
Pepper
Bay
,
a decision which is regularly followed and cited with approval, and
that it also offends the principle of legality as emphasised
by the
court in
Sapela
Electronics
,
to which I have referred.  The Supreme Court of Appeal in
Overstrand
Municipality v Water and Sanitation Services South Africa (Pty)
Ltd
,
[13]
in considering the aforesaid apparent differences and having held
that it was not necessary on the facts confronted with to resolve

such differences, stated as follows:

I
am alert to the debate concerning the possible sufficiency of
substantial or adequate compliance with what, in conventional terms,

is described as mandatory requirements. One should also guard against
invalidating a tender that contains minor deviations that
do not
materially alter or depart from the characteristics, terms,
conditions and other requirements set out in tender documents.
In
the present case the non-compliance is not of a trivial or minor
nature. The tender by Veolia was not an ‘acceptable’
one
in terms of the Procurement Act, in that it did not ‘in all
respects’ comply with the specifications and conditions
set out
in the RFP. Thus, the challenge in terms of s 6(2)(b) of PAJA,
namely that a ‘mandatory and material procedure
or condition
prescribed by an empowering provision, was not complied with’.
In my view, for all the reasons set out
above, WSSA has made
out a case for setting aside the decision by the Municipality to
award the tender to Veolia and the consequent
contract.”
[28]
I
align myself with the decisions of
Moroka
Municipality
,
Pepper
Bay
,
and
Sapela
Electronics
.
[14]
I am, in any event, of the view that the mandatory requirement set
out in item 10 of the tender invitation is neither trivial
nor is it
of a minor nature.  Similarly, it is not immaterial,
unreasonable or unconstitutional.
[29]
The
dictum in
Allpay
Consolidated Investment Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Others v Chief
Executive Officer of the South African Social Security Agency
and
Others
[15]
that in determining whether a ground of review exists under PAJA, the
materiality of any deviance from legal requirements is dependent
on
the extent to which the purpose of the requirements is attained, is
distinguishable on the facts of this case.
[16]
[30]
The applicant placed reliance on the comments
of the Constitutional Court in
Allpay
to advance its argument that the first respondent was permitted to
condone a bidder’s non-compliance with the mandatory tender

requirements.  The Constitutional Court, at paragraph [30], in
dealing with the distinction between mandatory or peremptory

provisions on the one hand and directory provisions on the other,
stated as follows:

Assessing
the materiality of compliance with legal requirements in our
administrative law is, fortunately, an exercise unencumbered
by
excessive formality.  It was not always so.  Formal
distinctions were drawn between “mandatory” or
“peremptory”
provisions on the one hand and “directory”
ones on the other, the former needing strict compliance on pain of
non-validity,
and the latter only substantial compliance or even
non-compliance. That strict mechanical approach has been discarded.
Although
a number of factors need to be considered in this kind of
enquiry, the central element is to link the question of compliance to

the purpose of the provision.  In this Court O’Regan J
succinctly put the question in ACDP v Electoral Commission as

being “whether what the applicant did constituted compliance
with the statutory provisions viewed in the light of their purpose.”
[31]
An
examination and consideration of the context in which the above
comments were made is necessary.  Such comments were made
in the
context of the interpretation of documents, and more particularly,
the interpretation of clauses which are framed in peremptory
terms;
and the trend to move away from the strict legalistic to the
substantive.  In this regard, the Constitutional Court,
inter
alia
,
made reference to paragraph [13] of
Weenen
Transitional Local Council v Van Dyk,
[17]
which reads as follows:

It
seems to me that the correct approach to the objection that the
appellant had failed to comply with the requirements of s 166
of the
Ordinance is to follow a common sense approach by asking the question
whether the steps taken by the local authority were
effective to
bring about the exigibility of the claim measured against the
intention of the legislature as ascertained from the
language, scope
and purpose of the enactment as a whole and the statutory requirement
in particular (see Nkisimane and Others
v Santam Insurance Co
Ltd
1978
(2) SA 430
(A)
at 434 A - B). Legalistic debates as to whether the enactment is
peremptory (imperative, absolute, mandatory, a categorical

imperative) or merely directory; whether 'shall' should be read as
'may'; whether strict as opposed to substantial compliance is

required; whether delegated legislation dealing with formal
requirements are of legislative or administrative nature, etc may

be interesting, but seldom essential to the outcome of a real case
before the courts. They tell us what the outcome of the court's

interpretation of the particular enactment is; they cannot tell us
how to interpret. These debates have a posteriori, not a

priori significance. The approach described above, identified as
' ... a trend in interpretation away from the strict legalistic
to
the substantive' by Van Dijkhorst J in Ex parte Mothuloe (Law
Society Transvaal, Intervening)
1996
(4) SA 1131
(T)
at 1138 D - E, seems to be the correct one and does away with debates
of secondary importance only.”
[32]
Whilst the comments in
Allpay
are apposite to the interpretation and assessment of the general
provisions contained in tender invitations such comments are not

authority for the proposition that an administrative authority has
the power to condone a failure to comply with a mandatory
(peremptory)
requirement, which is included as a prerequisite for a
valid tender, in the absence of a discretion to do so.  In
Allpay
,
the administrative authority had reserved the right to disqualify any
bidder who failed to submit mandatory documentation and
accordingly
it retained a discretion to condone such failure.  As already
stated, the first respondent herein retained no
such discretion.
[33]
Similarly,
the applicant’s reliance on
Millennium
Waste Management
and the unreported decision of
Amakahaya
Construction CC v Eastern Cape Department of Human Settlements and
the Member of the Executive Council of the Eastern
Cape Department of
Human Settlements
[18]
is misplaced.  In neither of the aforesaid matters was the court
confronted with a failure of a bidder to comply with peremptory

tender requirements, which were required to be met in order to meet
the threshold of an acceptable tender, and in respect of which
the
administrative authority in question retained no discretion to
condone.
[34]
Having come to this
conclusion, the tender submitted by the applicant was not an
acceptable tender as envisaged by the PPPFA and
accordingly, it did
not pass the threshold requirement to which I have referred.  By
necessary implication, the same holds
true for the remainder of the
bidders who failed to comply with the mandatory tender requirements
and in whose cases such requirements
were erroneously relaxed by the
first respondent.  I am accordingly satisfied that the first
respondent failed to comply with
a mandatory condition prescribed by
an empowering provision as envisaged in section 6(2)(b) of PAJA.
[35]
In
light of the conclusion to which I have arrived, I was required by
section 172(1)(a) of the Constitution to declare the decisions
under
consideration unlawful on this basis alone.
[19]
Accordingly, it is not necessary to deal with the dispute regarding
the validity of the first respondent’s award of
the Western
Cape portion of the tender to the second and third respondents
outside the tender validity period, which portion had
previously been
conditionally awarded to Bicacon
(Pty)
Ltd within such period.
[36]
In respect of the issue of costs, I am
satisfied that the applicant was substantially successful herein and
accordingly, it was
appropriate that the costs should follow the
cause.  Given the crisp issue which fell to be determined, which
was uncomplicated
in nature, I do not agree that the costs of two
counsel was justified in this case.
[37]
Having already granted the order herein, I need
not make any further order.
I
BANDS
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
Heard:
2
December 2022
Judgment
granted:
2
February 2023
Reasons:
17
February 2023
For
the applicant:
Mr
Buchanan SC; Mr Ronaasen SC; and Ms Ellis
Instructed
by:
Greyvensteins
Inc
St
Georges House, 104 Park Drive, Gqeberha
For
the first respondent:
Mr
Beyleveld SC
Instructed
by:
State
Attorney
29
Western Road, Central, Gqeberha

1.
The decision of the first respondent (“the first impugned
decision”)
to award the Eastern Cape portion of tender BID DWS
05-0621 WTE to the second respondent on 21 June 2022 is reviewed and
set
aside.
2.
The decision of the first respondent (“the second
impugned decision”) to award the Western Cape portion of
tender
BID DWS 05-0621 WTE to the second and third respondents on 29
September 2022 is reviewed and set aside.
3.
The first and second impugned decisions are referred back to
the first respondent to start the procurement of services for the
mechanical and other related major plant and machinery installation,
maintenance, repair, refurbishment and upgrade for southern

operations (Eastern Cape and Western Cape) afresh.
4.
The first respondent is ordered to pay the costs of the
application.”
[2]
Each bidder was required to attend one briefing session.
[3]
Despite reference being made to 9 bids having been considered for
further evaluation, it appears
ex
facie
the minutes that only 7 progressed to phase 2.
[4]
The Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996.
[5]
Pharmaceutical
Manufacturers Association of SA: In re Ex parte President of the
Republic of South Africa
[2000] ZACC 1
;
2000 (2) SA 674
(CC) at paras 17 and 50.
[6]
Chairperson,
Standing Tender Committee v JFE Sapela Electronics (Pty) Ltd
2008 (2) SA 638
(SCA) at 644B-E.
[7]
2008 (2) SA 481
(SCA) at para 19.
[8]
(937/2012)
[2013] ZASCA 186
;
[2014] 1 All SA 545
(SCA) (29 November
2013).
[9]
Which in any event is not the case if regard is had to the wording
of item 10.
[10]
2004 (1) SA 308
(SCA) at para 31.
[11]
Dr JS
Moroka Municipality and Others v Betram (Pty) Limited and Another
(supra)
at
para 12.
See
also:
WDR Earthmoving Enterprises and Another v Joe Gqabi
District Municipality and Others
(392/2017) [2018] ZASCA 72 (30
May 2018) at para 30.
[12]
At paragraph 18.
[13]
[2018]
2 All SA 644 (SCA) at para 50.
[14]
And to which I am bound.
[15]
ZACC 42;
2014 (1) SA 604
(CC) at para 22.
[16]
In this regard, see also:
WDR
Earthmoving Enterprises and Another v Joe Gqabi District
Municipality and Others
(392/2017)
[2018] ZASCA 72
(30 May 2018) at para 40.
[17]
[2002] 2 All SA 482
(A) (14 March 2002).
[18]
(Eastern Cape Division, Grahamstown) Case No. 3782/2021.
[19]
Allpay
Consolidated Investment Holdings (Pty) Ltd and Others v Chief
Executive Officer of the South African Social Security Agency
and
Others
ZACC
42;
2014 (1) SA 604
(CC) at para 25.