Heydricks Civils CC v Amatola Water Board and Others (EL1450/2017) [2019] ZAECELLC 26 (22 August 2019)

78 Reportability
Public Procurement

Brief Summary

Tender — Review of tender award — Application to review and set aside tender awarded to Mamlambo Construction — Heydricks Civils contending that the tender should be awarded to it — Amatola Water conceding to set aside the award but opposing the award to Heydricks Civils — Delay in launching review proceedings — Court finding that review was not launched later than 180 days from the conclusion of the internal appeal process — Award process not compliant with established criteria, leading to the conclusion that the tender award was invalid.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


The matter concerned an application in the Eastern Cape High Court, East London Circuit Local Division, for the judicial review and setting aside of a public tender award made by the first respondent, Amatola Water Board, to the second respondent, Mamlambo Construction CC. The applicant, Heydricks Civils CC, additionally sought an order substituting the impugned administrative decision so that the tender would be awarded to it.


The first respondent delivered a conditional counter-application. It supported the setting aside of the award to the second respondent, but opposed substitution in favour of the applicant and contended instead that the matter should be remitted to Amatola Water for a fresh adjudication and award. The second and third respondents did not participate on the merits and filed notices to abide the court’s decision.


The dispute arose from a procurement process relating to the construction of a 10ML post-tensioned, reinforced concrete water reservoir at Misty Mount within the King Sabata Dalindyebo Local Municipality. The review implicated both PAJA-based review grounds advanced by the applicant and a legality-based challenge aligned with Amatola Water’s counter-application, with the remedy stage focusing on whether the court should substitute the decision or remit it for reconsideration by the administrator.


2. Material Facts


Amatola Water, a state entity responsible for bulk water supply and related infrastructure, invited bids on 28 September 2015 for the construction of the Misty Mount reservoir, with bids closing on 30 October 2015. The reservoir formed part of a larger set of 14 projects which Amatola Water decided would be undertaken within the same bidding process. Among the stated bid requirements were a CIDB contractor grading of 7CE, or for emerging enterprises 6CE, and an objective criterion requiring at least 51% black ownership.


The bid evaluation system used by Amatola Water involved a Bid Evaluation Committee (BEC) and a Bid Award Committee (BAC). The BEC process proceeded in stages: eliminating non-responsive tenders, scoring responsive tenders for price and preference points under the Preferential Procurement Policy Framework Act 5 of 2000, and applying objective criteria to identify the most suitable tenderer. The BEC would then recommend a bidder to the BAC, which would consider the recommendation and conduct an additional risk assessment against a set of factors.


Twenty-four bids were received, including bids from Heydricks Civils and Mamlambo Construction. For reasons not disclosed in the judgment, the BEC only met to evaluate bids on 15 March 2016. At that meeting, both Heydricks Civils and Mamlambo Construction were found non-responsive because their CIDB gradings were suspended at the time. The BEC recommended a third party, WK Construction, as preferred bidder. On 15 April 2016, the BAC remitted the matter to the BEC because WK Construction did not meet the 51% black ownership requirement.


Thereafter, the process became irregular and poorly documented. The BEC’s detailed deliberations after the remittal were not available because the minutes were missing, but it appeared to recommend another third party, Xesibe Construction, after revising the risk threshold from 6% to 20% to widen the scope of bids under consideration. On 10 May 2016, the BAC supported this recommendation subject to satisfaction regarding Xesibe’s prior work quality.


On 24 June 2016, the BAC met to “finally conclude” appointments and considered the financial stability of recommended tenderers across the series of projects. At that late stage, and on the instruction of Amatola Water’s former CEO, the objective criteria were retracted with immediate effect, and the BAC referred appointments back to the BEC. Subsequently, for undisclosed reasons, the risk assessment approach shifted again, reverting to a 6% threshold, with the effect that only Mamlambo Construction and WK Construction were said to qualify. Again, the BEC’s minutes were unavailable, and this reconstruction was derived from BAC minutes.


On 15 September 2016, the BAC concluded that Xesibe Construction lacked financial capacity to execute more than one project at a time. A revised evaluation report was presented which included Mamlambo Construction as a responsive tenderer, reversing the earlier non-responsiveness finding from March 2016. No reason for this reversal was provided. The BAC referred the appointment decision to the former CEO. Mamlambo Construction was thereafter appointed in a letter dated 3 February 2017, but only dispatched and received on 26 July 2017. The judgment records that neither the BEC nor the BAC recommended Mamlambo Construction, and that despite efforts by the current CEO, the reason for that appointment could not be established.


A point in limine was raised by Amatola Water that Heydricks Civils delayed unreasonably in launching review proceedings. The court, however, relied on the chronology showing that Heydricks Civils lodged an internal challenge shortly after being informed its bid was unsuccessful. The judgment records that the award decision was taken on 16 May 2016, that Heydricks Civils sought further information on 19 May 2016, and that it lodged an “appeal” (styled as an objection) on 23 May 2016, followed by reasons/grounds provided on 25 May 2016. Subsequent correspondence persisted in seeking documents to amplify the grounds, and the applicant ultimately launched an application on 28 November 2017 initially aimed at document production and convening of the internal appeal. During litigation, the parties agreed to a draft order regulating conduct of proceedings, including that Heydricks Civils would no longer prosecute the internal appeal, Amatola Water would provide the requested documents, and the applicant could amend its application to pursue a review.


3. Legal Issues


The central legal questions were whether the tender award to Mamlambo Construction constituted unlawful administrative action (for purposes of a PAJA review) and/or was invalid under the principle of legality, given that the award did not follow Amatola Water’s own bid adjudication procedures and lacked a traceable recommendation by the designated committees.


A preliminary legal issue was whether the review was instituted without unreasonable delay as required by section 7(1) of PAJA, including whether the calculation of the 180-day period should be assessed with reference to the status and conclusion of the internal appeal/objection process and the parties’ subsequent litigation agreement about abandoning that internal remedy.


A further issue concerned the proper remedy under section 8(1)(c)(ii)(aa) of PAJA, namely whether there were exceptional circumstances justifying substitution of the administrative decision (awarding the tender to the applicant), or whether the matter should be remitted to Amatola Water for a de novo adjudication.


These questions primarily involved the application of law to fact. The delay enquiry required a mixed assessment of procedural chronology against statutory standards and constitutional review principles. The remedy enquiry required an evaluative judgment about institutional competence, fairness, and the suitability of remittal versus substitution in light of the procurement record and the lapse of time.


4. Court’s Reasoning


On the delay point, the court applied section 7(1) of PAJA, together with the understanding (drawn from the cited authority) that when a delay exceeds 180 days, a court must consider whether extension is justified in the interests of justice, and that the delay assessment under PAJA and under legality review both turn on whether the delay was unreasonable, albeit with PAJA’s stipulated 180-day period as a key differentiator.


On the facts, the court found that Heydricks Civils acted promptly after being informed its bid was unsuccessful by lodging an internal challenge within days. The court accepted that describing the internal step as an “objection” rather than an “appeal” was, in the circumstances, a matter of semantics, and treated it as an internal remedy process that remained pending for an extended period while the applicant sought documents to support the appeal. The court regarded the subsequent draft order (in which the parties agreed that the applicant would no longer prosecute the internal appeal) as concluding the appeal process for purposes of calculating the 180-day period. On that basis, the court held that the review was not instituted outside the PAJA period reckoned from conclusion of the internal remedy as agreed, and it rejected the contention that there was unreasonable delay.


On the merits of the tender award, the court reasoned that the procurement chronology demonstrated that the award to Mamlambo Construction was not made in accordance with Amatola Water’s own procedures, because neither the BEC nor the BAC recommended Mamlambo Construction. The process was characterised by missing minutes, shifting application of objective criteria and risk thresholds, and a final appointment by the former CEO for reasons that could not be established. The court held that these were substantial and material flaws rendering the award unlawful and invalid. Because both the applicant’s PAJA review and Amatola Water’s legality review rested on the same factual irregularities, the court regarded it as self-evident that the award had to be set aside on either basis.


In considering the remedy, the court applied section 8 of PAJA and the approach to substitution described in Trencon Construction (Pty) Ltd v Industrial Development Corporation of South Africa Ltd and Another 2015 (5) SA 245 (CC). The court treated substitution as permissible only in exceptional circumstances, assessed through what is just and equitable. It referred to factors that may justify refusing to remit a decision back to an administrator (including waste of time, prejudice caused by further delay, or demonstrated bias/incompetence), and emphasised the Trencon requirements that the court must be in as good a position as the administrator and that the outcome must effectively be a foregone conclusion.


The court rejected substitution in this case. It accepted that Amatola Water appeared to have changed materially since the flawed process, noting the appointment of a new CEO and the counter-application seeking to set aside the award as part of a corrective effort. The court emphasised that bid adjudication entails a value judgment by administrators with relevant skills and expertise, and held that it was not in as good a position as the administrator to evaluate bids. The court also considered that Heydricks Civils had been excluded early due to the non-responsiveness finding, meaning the record did not support a conclusion that it was a foregone conclusion that Heydricks would necessarily have been appointed. The court further noted that other eligible bidders were similarly affected and that a de novo process should consider all bids unless exceptional circumstances existed.


The applicant’s reliance on Groenewald NO and Others v MS Developments (Cape) (Pty) Ltd 2010 (5) SA 82 (SCA) was rejected as distinguishable. The court explained that Groenewald concerned a municipal internal appeal under section 62(1) of the Municipal Systems Act 32 of 2000, whereas the present matter was a judicial review where the entire evaluation was found invalid and had to start afresh. The absence of other bidders from the review proceedings was therefore not treated as a reason to exclude them from a renewed tender evaluation.


Finally, the court considered the passage of time since the award decision of 16 May 2016, reasoning that such delay could materially affect pricing and operational conditions. This supported the conclusion that it would not be fair and just for the court to substitute the decision after such an interval.


On costs, the court accepted Amatola Water’s tender to pay costs up to the filing of the applicant’s supplementary affidavit, reasoning that it was fair because the applicant was substantially successful in securing the setting aside of the award. The court ordered that each party bear its own costs incurred after that point.


5. Outcome and Relief


The court declared Amatola Water’s decision to award the tender for the construction of the 10ML reservoir at Misty Mount under project reference AW2015/16/17 to be unlawful and invalid ab initio, and therefore of no force or effect.


The matter was remitted to Amatola Water for adjudication of all bids received, to commence de novo before the Bid Evaluation Committee and the Bid Award Committee. The court refused the applicant’s request that the tender be awarded to it by substitution.


Amatola Water was ordered to pay the applicant’s costs up to the date of the filing of the applicant’s supplementary affidavit, and each party was ordered to pay its own costs incurred thereafter.


Cases Cited


Buffalo City Metropolitan Municipality v Asla Construction (Pty) Ltd 2019 (6) BCLR 661 (CC); 2019 (4) SA 331 (CC).


Trencon Construction (Pty) Ltd v Industrial Development Corporation of South Africa Ltd and Another 2015 (5) SA 245 (CC).


Groenewald NO and Others v MS Developments (Cape) (Pty) Ltd 2010 (5) SA 82 (SCA).


Legislation Cited


Promotion of Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000.


Preferential Procurement Policy Framework Act 5 of 2000.


Local Government: Municipal Systems Act 32 of 2000.


Rules of Court Cited


No rules of court were cited in the judgment.


Held


The court held that the tender award to Mamlambo Construction CC was unlawful and invalid because it was not made in accordance with Amatola Water’s established bid adjudication procedures and was unsupported by a recommendation from either the Bid Evaluation Committee or the Bid Award Committee. The procurement process was materially flawed, including unexplained reversals of responsiveness findings, missing minutes, and late-stage changes to objective criteria and risk assessment thresholds, culminating in an appointment by the former CEO for reasons that could not be established.


The court further held that the review was not defeated by unreasonable delay under section 7(1) of PAJA, because the applicant had promptly pursued an internal appeal/objection process and the 180-day period was properly calculated from the conclusion of that internal process as reflected in the parties’ litigation agreement.


On remedy, the court held that substitution was not justified on the facts and that it was just and equitable to remit the matter for a fresh de novo adjudication by Amatola Water under its current administration, taking into account the need for administrative expertise, the presence of other affected bidders, and the time elapsed since the original award.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


A review under section 7(1) of PAJA must be instituted without unreasonable delay and within 180 days of the relevant triggering date, including, where applicable, the conclusion of internal remedies. The assessment of delay focuses on reasonableness, with the 180-day period playing a distinctive role in PAJA compared to legality review.


A public tender award is unlawful and invalid where it is made contrary to the procuring entity’s prescribed evaluation and award procedures, particularly where the designated evaluation and award committees do not recommend the ultimately appointed tenderer and the decision-making trail cannot be properly established.


Under section 8(1)(c)(ii)(aa) of PAJA, substitution is an exceptional remedy assessed through what is just and equitable. The court must consider, consistently with Trencon Construction (Pty) Ltd v Industrial Development Corporation of South Africa Ltd and Another 2015 (5) SA 245 (CC), whether the court is in as good a position as the administrator to make the decision and whether the outcome is effectively a foregone conclusion. Where bid adjudication involves administrative value judgments requiring expertise, and where the process must be restarted with multiple bidders potentially affected, remittal will generally be preferred in accordance with separation of powers considerations.


Where the passage of time may materially affect pricing and execution conditions, that delay may weigh against judicial substitution and in favour of remittal as the just and equitable remedy.

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[2019] ZAECELLC 26
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Heydricks Civils CC v Amatola Water Board and Others (EL1450/2017) [2019] ZAECELLC 26 (22 August 2019)

IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(EAST
LONDON CIRCUIT LOCAL DIVISION)
Case
No: EL 1450/2017
In
the matter between:
HEYDRICKS
CIVILS CC

Applicant
and
AMATOLA
WATER BOARD

First
Respondent
MAMLAMBO
CONSTUCTION CC

Second Respondent
THE
MINISTER OF WATER & SANITATION       Third
Respondent
JUDGMENT
MALUSI
J
:
[1]
This is an application to review and set aside a tender award to the
second respondent
(Mamlambo Construction)
and for that tender
to be awarded to the applicant
(Heydricks Civils)
.  There
is a conditional counter application by the first respondent
(Amatola
Water)
which assents to the tender award be set aside but opposes
the award of the tender to the applicant.  Amatola Water
contends
that the tender must be referred back to it for adjudication
and award. Both the second and the third respondents have not
participated
in the application and have filed notices to abide the
decision of this court.
[2]
Heydricks Civils is a close corporation with a commendable track
record in the construction
of water reservoirs.
[3]
Amatola Water is a wholly owned state entity with a statutory
responsibility for the
provision of bulk water supplies to various
municipalities coupled with construction and maintenance of
infrastructure to fulfil
its purpose.
[4]
The material facts relating to the tender award are largely common
cause.  Amatola
Water invited bids for the construction of a
10ML post-tensioned, reinforced concrete water reservoir at Misty
Mount within the
King Sabata Dalindyebo Local Municipality.
This particular project was part of the series of 14 construction
projects aimed
at providing water supply services to the
Municipality.  Amatola Water took a decision that all 14
projects would be undertaken
in the same bidding process.
[5]
Some of the requirements the bidders needed to satisfy as contained
in the bid documents
were the following:
(i)
a CIDB contractor grading of 7CE or in the case of an emerging
enterprise a
CIDB grading of 6CE;
[1]
(ii)
an objective criteria of at least 51% black ownership.
[6]
The bid evaluation process by Amatola Water involved two committees.
The bids
were initially evaluated by the Bid Evaluation Committee
(BEC)
.  This involved a three stage process by the BEC:
6.1
Step 1 is the tender evaluation process wherein the BEC eliminates
all non-responsive tenderers.
6.2
Step 2 is the price and preferential points adjudication during which
responsive tenderers
are adjudicated against all the Provisions of
the Preferential Procurement Policy Framework Act 5 of 2000
(PPPFA).
6.3
Step 3 is the application of objective criteria to determine which
tenderer is the best
suited candidate for the project.
[7]
The process provides that the BEC prepares an evaluation report with
a recommended
tenderer.  The evaluation report is submitted to
the Bid Award Committee (BAC).  The BAC considers the
recommendation
and further undertakes an assessment to determine the
likely risk of the tenderer not being able to successfully complete
the work
and meet all the contractual obligations.  A list of
eight factors are considered at this stage of the evaluation.
The
BAC recommends a tenderer who is ordinarily awarded the tender by
Amatola Water.
[8]
On 28 September 2015 Amatola Water advertised a tender inviting bids
for the project
and the closing date for submission of bids was 30
October 2015.  In response to the advertisement twenty four bids
were received
from various bidders including Heydricks Civils and
Mamlambo Construction.
[9]
For undisclosed reasons the BEC met to evaluate the bids only on 15
March 2016.
Heydricks Civils and Mamlambo Construction were
determined as non-responsive bidders due to their CIDB grading being
suspended
at the time.  After evaluation the BEC recommended WK
Construction, a third party, as the preferred bidder.
[10]
Exactly a month later, on 15 April 2016 the BAC met to consider the
BEC recommendation.
It resolved to remit the bids to the BEC as
WK Construction did not meet the 51% black ownership requirement.
[11]
The BEC considered the referral by the BAC.  The full
deliberations of the BEC are not known
as the minutes of the meeting
are missing.  Suffice to say it appears that it recommended a
third party bidder, Xesibe Construction,
after it revised the risk
threshold from 6% to 20% in order to evaluate and analyse a broader
scope of bids.
[12]
On 10 May 2016 the BAC met to consider the revised recommendation of
the BEC.  It resolved
to support the recommendation on the
proviso that the first respondent was satisfied with the quality of
work by Xesibe Construction
on previous projects.
[13]
On 24 June 2016 the BAC met ostensibly to ‘
finally conclude’
on the appointment of a tenderer.  It had to consider the
financial stability of the recommended tenderers in the series of

projects.  On the instruction of the former CEO of Amatola Water
the objective criteria was retracted with immediate effect
at that
late stage in the process.  The BAC decided to refer the
appointment of the bidders back to the BEC.
[14]
For some undisclosed reason the risk assessment was increased and the
previous threshold of 6%
was applied once more.  The consequence
of the revision of the objective criteria and the risk assessment was
that the only
bidders that qualified were Mamlambo Construction and
WK Construction.  Both aforementioned entities were considered
low risk
during the assessment and WK Construction was recommended on
this project.  Again, no minutes of the BEC deliberations are

available and this summary is gleaned from the BAC minutes.
[15]
On 15 September 2016 the BAC met and decided that Xesibe Construction
did not have the financial
capacity to execute more than one project
at a time.  A revised tender evaluation report was presented to
the BAC.  Mamlambo
Construction was then included as a
responsive tenderer.  This was a reversal of the March 2016
determination by the BAC.
No reason was provided for this
decision nor is it available anywhere.  The BAC resolved to
refer the appointment in the project
to the former CEO of Amatola
Water.  Mamlambo Construction was appointed apparently by the
former CEO in a letter dated 3
February 2017 which was only
dispatched and received on 26 July 2017.  The reason for the
appointment is unknown as neither
the BEC nor the BAC recommended the
appointment.  Despite the diligent efforts of the current CEO
the reason for the appointment
could not be established.
[16]
At the hearing of this application Amatola Water raised the point
that Heydricks Civils had unreasonably
delayed in launching the
review proceedings.  It was contended that the review
proceedings had been launched more than:
16.1
Eighteen months after Heydricks Civils was notified that its bid was
not successful;
16.2
Fourteen months after its own presumption of administrative action;
16.3
Fourteen months after its own stance that Amatola Water has failed to
take a decision or proceed
with Heydricks Civils’ objection.
It was further submitted
that Heydricks Civils has neither sought condonation nor provided
sufficient evidence for its non-compliance
to be excused.
[17]
Heydricks Civils argued out that it launched the present proceedings
initially for the provision
of documents by Amatola Water to enable
it to prepare for the appeal.  The further relief was to compel
Amatola Water to convene
an appeal relating to Heydricks Civils’
objection to the award of the tender.  It was argued that the
appeal was pending
until the application was launched.
[18]
Section 7(1) of the Promotion of Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000
(PAJA)
provides:

any proceedings
for judicial review in terms of section 6(1) must be instituted
without unreasonable delay and not later than 180
days after the date

(a)
subject to subsection (2)(c), on which any proceedings
instituted in terms of internal remedies as contemplated in
subsection (2)(a)
have been concluded; or
(b)
where no such remedies exist, on which the person concerned
was informed of the administrative action, became aware of the action

and the reasons for it or might reasonably have been expected to have
become aware of the action and the reasons.”
[19]
The mechanism for extensions is provided in sec 9 of PAJA.  It
has been held that when the
delay is longer than 180 days, a court is
required to consider whether it is in the interest of justice for the
time period to
be extended.  It was stated that the standard to
be applied in assessing delay under both PAJA and legality review is
whether
the delay was unreasonable.  In both assessments the
calculation of time starts from the date that the applicant became
aware
or reasonably ought to have become aware of the action taken.
The assessment between the two reviews differs and is not the
same.
A distinction between the assessments of the delay under PAJA and
that under the principle of legality turns on the
prescribed time
period of 180 days provided in PAJA.
[2]
[20]
A consideration of the evidence in
casu
indicates that the
award decision was taken by Amatola Water on 16 May 2016.
Heydricks Civils requested further information
so as to decide
whether or not to lodge an appeal on 19 May 2016.
On 23 May 2016 Heydricks Civils launched an
appeal against the award
of the tender.  That appeal was styled as ‘
an objection
to the award of bid’.
[22]
Mr Kotze, who appeared on behalf of Amatola Water conceded that it is
merely semantics to contend
that the objection was not an appeal.
On the same day the objection was lodged the former CEO of Amatola
Water requested
Heydricks Civils to provide ‘
reasons or
grounds for appeal’
.  On 25 May 2016 Heydricks Civils
provided reasons or grounds for appeal to Amatola Water.  In my
view it is abudantly
clear that the appeal was lodged a mere 7 days
after Heydricks Civils was informed that its bid was unsuccessful.
[23]
On 24 June 2016 Heydricks Civils’ attorneys of record indicated
in a letter of demand that
they persist with the ‘
objection
and appeal’.
They demanded specified documents so as
to amplify and supplement the grounds of appeal.  They persisted
with the request for
the information to be provided in a letter dated
12 September 2016.  On 17 October 2017 the attorneys again
reminded Amatola
Water that the appeal had not yet been processed and
there had been no hearing.  Amatola Water acknowledged the
demand for
the documents for the first time on 25 October 2017.
[24]
Heydricks Civils launched the present application on 28 November
2017. The substantial relief sought related to provision of
documents
and the hearing of the internal appeal.  During the course of
the litigation the parties consented to a draft order
to regulate the
conduct of the proceedings.  It was agreed that Heydricks Civils
will no longer prosecute the internal appeal.
Amatola Water
agreed to furnish the documents that had long been requested by
Heydricks Civils within 5 days of the order.
Heydricks Civils
was allowed to amend its application to be a review of the award.
[25]
In my view it is abudantly clear that the review was not launched
later than 180 days from the
date in which the appeal was concluded.
A proper reading of the papers clearly indicates that the parties
agreed to conclude
the appeal process in the draft order.  A
proper calculation of the 180 days must start from the date of that
draft order.
On the facts of this matter I find no merit in the
contention that there has been an unreasonable delay in launching the
review
proceedings.
[26]
It is manifest on a reading of the synopsis of the process followed
in the award of the bid that
the award was not in accordance with the
set procedures of Amatola Water as neither the BEC nor the BAC
recommended Mamlambo Construction.
The award was tainted by
substantial and material flaws which rendered it unlawful and
invalid.  Both on the PAJA review by
Heydricks Civils and on the
legality review by Amatola Water it is self-evident that the bid
award must be set as both reviews
are pivoted on the same facts.
[27]
The next issue is the appropriate remedy.  The applicant sought
as a just and equitable
relief that it be awarded the tender by the
Court.  The relief sought is based on the provisions of sec
8(1)(c)(ii)(aa) of
PAJA which provides:

The court or
tribunal, in proceedings for judicial review in terms of s 6(1), may
grant any order that is just and equitable, including
orders-
Setting aside the
administrative action and-
In exceptional cases-
Substituting or
varying the administrative action or correcting a defect resulting
from the administrative action.”
[28]
It has been held in
Trencon
Construction
[3]
that exceptional circumstances must be viewed in the context of what
is just and equitable in the prevailing circumstances of a
particular
case.  A Court has a wide discretion upon consideration of the
facts to refuse to remit a decision back to the
administrator if
there is no reason to do so.  A Court may decline to remit a
decision to the administrator where:
28.1    It
would be a waste of time for the administrator to reconsider the
matter;
28.2    An
extensive amount of time has unjustifiably been lost by the bidder to
whom time is of significant value
and a further delay caused by
reference back would result in prejudice; or
28.3
Where the administrator has exhibited bias or incompetence to such a
degree that it would be unfair for the
bidder to submit to its
jurisdiction again.
[29]
The exceptional circumstances test postulated in
Trencon
Construction
requires:
29.1
That the Court is in as good a position as the administrator to make
a decision; and
29.2
That the decision of the administrator to appoint the unsuccessful
bidder is a foregone conclusion.
[30]
Heydricks Civils contended that the adjudication process at Amatola
Water was fraught with bias
and incompetence.  In its view its
bid was not guaranteed to be subjected to a fair tender process.
It argued that in
such circumstances it would not be fair for it to
be required to again submit its tender for adjudication before
Amatola Water.
[31]
In my view Amatola Water appears to have turned a new leaf since the
fatally flawed bid adjudication
process.  The Board of Directors
has appointed a new Chief Executive Officer.  The CEO has
brought the counter-application
to set aside the bid award in what
appears to be a cleaning of the Augean stables.
[32]
The applicant was excluded from the bid adjudication process right at
the onset as indicated
earlier in this judgment.  It is clear
from the evidence before me that the adjudication of the bids
involves a value judgment
by administrators with the necessary skills
and expertise to evaluate the bids.  The Court is not vested
with the skills and
the expertise required to adjudicate the bids. In
my view the Court is not in as good a position as the administrators
as administrative
skills and expertise still need to be applied in
the adjudication and the Court is not in possession of those.
[33]
The situation may well have been different if Heydricks Civils had
been included in the evaluation
process but the irregularity occurred
towards the conclusion of the process and it was a foregone
conclusion that Heydricks Civils
must be appointed.  In a
process so fraught with irregularity as the one in
casu
it is
only fair and just that the matter be remitted to Amatola Water for a
proper evaluation to be done under the current administration.

It is prudent and proper in this case to rely on the new
administration being able to take the correct decision in accord with

the principle of separation of powers and deference to the
administrators.
[34]
It appears that other eligible bidders were similarly affected as
Heydricks Civils and their
bids were unfairly not considered.
Heydricks Civils placed much reliance on the
Groenewald
[4]
decision in arguing that other bidders ought not be considered as
they did not participate in this review.  The
Groenewald
decision involved an internal appeal in a municipality by a
disgruntled bidder against the award of a tender.  The appeal

was in accordance with s62(1) of the Municipal Systems Act 32 of
2000.
[35]
In my view
Groenewald
is distinguishable from the present
matter which is a review.  I have already found that the
evaluation of the bids was invalid
and the evaluation process has to
be started afresh.  Thus all the bidders ought to be considered
unless there were exceptional
circumstances.  I find that
Groenewald is not applicable in
casu
.
[36]
The other factor I have considered relates to the delay from 16 May
2016 when the bid was awarded.
A significant period has elapsed
which may materially affect the prices and operational conditions in
the execution of the bid.
It does not appear fair and just for
the Court to substitute the decision of Amatola Water after the
elapse of such a significant
amount of time.
[37]
The last issue relates to costs of the application.  Amatola
Water has, correctly in my
view, tendered costs up to the filing of
the supplementary affidavit by Heydricks Civils.  The costs
tender appears to be
fair in the circumstances of this matter.
Heydricks Civils was substantially successful in setting aside the
bid award.
Each party should bear their own costs incurred
beyond the date of the filing of the supplementary affidavit.
[38]
In the circumstances and for the above reasons the following order
will issue:
38.1
The first respondent’s decision to award the tender for the
construction of a 10ML reservoir at Misty
Mount under project
reference AW2015/16/17 is declared unlawful, invalid
ab initio
and consequently of no legal force or effect;
38.2
The matter is remitted back to the first respondent for the
adjudication of all the bids received to start
de novo
before
the Bid Evaluation Committee and the Bid Award Committee.
38.3
The first respondent is ordered to pay the applicant’s costs up
to the date of the filing of the applicant’s
supplementary
affidavit.  Each party is to pay its own costs beyond that date.
_______________________
T MALUSI
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
Appearances
:
For the
Applicant:                         Advocate

Veerasamy
instructed
by
M B Pedersen &
Associates
Ground Floor, 159 Cowey
Road
Morningside
DURBAN
c/o M A Fredericks &
Associates
7 Gately Street
Southernwood
EAST
LONDON
For the First
Respondent:
Advocate Kotze
instructed by
Ntsiki
Pakade Attorneys Inc
21
Steward Drive
Berea
EAST
LONDON
For the Second
Respondent:        Don Maree
Attorneys
19
Tecoma Street
Berea
EAST
LONDON
For the Third Respondent:
The State
Attorney
Old Spoornet Building
17
Fleet Street
EAST
LONDON
Heard
on:                                       01

November 2018
Judgment
delivered:                       22

August 2019
[1]
The Construction Industry Development Board is a statutory body
which registers, regulates and grades all entities operating
in the
building and infrastructure sphere according to their capability.
[2]
Buffalo
City Metropolitan Municipality v Asla Construction (Pty) Ltd
2019
(6) BCLR 661
(CC);
2019 (4) SA 331
(CC) at para 49.
[3]
Trencon
Construction (Pty) Ltd v Industrial Development Corporation of South
Africa Ltd & Another
2015
(5) SA 245
(CC) at paras 35-47.
[4]
Groenewald
NO & Others v MS Developments (Cape) (Pty) Ltd
2010
(5) SA 82
(SCA) paras 22-25.