Energy Regulatory Commission v SGS Kenya Limited & 2 others (Civil Appeal 341 of 2017) [2018] KECA 616 (KLR) (11 May 2018) (Judgment)
Energy Regulatory Commission v S G S Kenya Limited & 2 others [2018] eKLR
Neutral citation:
[2018] KECA 616 (KLR)
Republic of Kenya
Civil Appeal 341 of 2017
RN Nambuye, W Ouko & PO Kiage, JJA
May 11, 2018
Between
Energy Regulatory Commission
Appellant
and
SGS Kenya Limited
1st Respondent
Adminstrative Procurement
2nd Respondent
Intertek Testing Services (EA) Ltd
3rd Respondent
(An appeal from the judgment of the High Court of Kenya at Nairobi (Mativo, J.) dated 22nd September, 2017 in Jr. Misc. Appln. 496 of 2017)
Judgment
1.The appellant, the Energy Regulatory Commission is a public body established under the Energy Act 2006. Its duties include the regulation of electrical energy, petroleum and related products, renewable energy and other forms of energy. In exercise of its statutory mandate, the appellant in or about 12th May 2017 floated tender number ERC/PROC/4/3/16-17/119 for marking and monitoring of petroleum products, a service meant to curb adulteration of fuel, which attracted 3 bids. These were opened on 31st May 2017 with the responding firms being SILPA SA, Intertek Testing Services (EA) Ltd and SGS Kenya Ltd (SGS).
2.In compliance with section 46 of the Public Procurement and Disposal Act 2015 (the Act), the appellant appointed an evaluation committee which duly evaluated the bids under the two heads of technical and financial. It then recommended on 30th June 2017 that the contract for provision of marking and monitoring services be awarded to SGS, at an annual cost of US$2,760,844.72, having attained the highest combined technical and financial score and being the lowest evaluated bidder. Before making that recommendation, however, the Committee in its evaluation report made the following general observations;
3.Owing to the existence of that technology indicated in the general observations, the applicants Acting Director, Petroleum, gave an option on the 7th July 2017 in which he recommended to the Acting Director General that the procurement process be terminated and re-started with the requirement that the new technological changes be incorporated in the tender for the provision of the marking and monitoring of petroleum services specifically;
4.The Ag. Director General duly considered that opinion as well as that of the Head of Procurement to the same effect, and approved the recommendation for termination under section 63(1)(a) of the Act. The appellant?s decision to terminate the tender was communicated to all bidders as well as the Public Procurement Regulatory Authority as required by section 63(4) of the Act.
5.Aggrieved by that decision to terminate the tender, SGS filed a Request for Review of the same before the Public Procurement Administration Review Board (the Board) seeking orders that the termination of the tender be declared null and void; the appellant be directed to award it the tender; in the alternative, the appellant be directed to proceed with the tender and complete the process including making of an award. It also sought costs and any such further orders in the interests of justice.
6.After hearing SGS, the appellant, and Intertek which was named as an interested party, the Board by its decision dated 1st August 2017 disallowed the request for review. It also ordered that the appellant was at liberty to re-advertise the tender f the provision of the Petroleum Marking Services. Each party was to bear its own costs of the request for review.
7.Further aggrieved by that dismissal, SGS moved to the High Court where it sought and was granted leave to file a judicial review application. In the substantive motion subsequently filed on 16th August 2017 it sought orders of;
8.The judicial review proceedings were heard by Mativo, J. who, by a judgment dated 25th September 2017 made the following orders;
9.Aggrieved by that judgment, the appellant filed a notice of appeal against the whole of it and thereafter filed a memorandum of appeal raising a dozen grounds. They all can be compressed as follows even as we appreciate what counsel for SGS has done in extracting and suggesting the issues for determination are merely four. In paraphrase, the appellant complains that the learned Judge erred by;
- Acting in excess of jurisdiction under the Act by directing the award of the tender to SGS thereby assuming the powers of the accounting officer.
- Acting in excess of jurisdiction by directing the award of an invalid tender.
- Holding that there was no technical or professional opinion before the Board to confirm technical change while there was.
- Forming a view of the evidence and improperly substituting the decision of the Board with his own.
- Failing to appreciate the appellant's compliance with the Act and misinterpreting section 139 thereof.
- Improperly exercising his discretion by acting on matters he should not, failing to act on those he should have and misapprehending the facts.
10.It therefore prayed that the High Court judgment be set aside and be substituted by an order dismissing SGS' judicial review application.
11.The parties filed written submissions which their learned counsel, Mr. Otachi appearing with Mr. Moenga for the appellant and Mr. Musyoka appearing with Mr. Muturi for the SGS highlighted before us. There was no appearance by the Board and Intertek even though service of the hearing notice had been effected on their advocates.
12.Mr. Otachi submitted that the Act at section 63 does provide for termination of a tender in progress for various reasons, including discovery of substantial technological change. The contemplated discovery occurs in the course of the tender process.
13.He contended that the appellant terminated the tender with the intention of retendering it so as to include important technological aspects so discovered. SGS were not disqualified and were therefore eligible to participate in the new tender.
14.Contending that the Board was rightly satisfied that the termination was properly carried out, Mr. Otachi criticized the learned Judge for totally ignoring the time-tested principles of judicial review of administrative action. There was no issue of the Board acting beyond jurisdiction or denying fair hearing to SGS. The learned Judge instead fell back on the “controversial” ground of unreasonableness by holding that there was no expert evidence placed before the Board for which he relied, “unfortunately” on a previous decision for the Board itself. The same decision had been cited before the Board and, in counsel's view, it properly found that in the instant case there was a report by experts showing there had been technological advance.
15.The Judge impermissibly and improperly delved into an evaluation of the evidence and substituted that of the Board with his own view of it, as this was not a case of there being no evidence but rather the weight and meaning of such evidence, which the learned Judge ought not to have engaged himself in. The Act itself does not decree that there has to be expert evidence of technological advance and the SGS itself did admit the existence of the new technology. The technology, from the appellants' point of view, was crucial to addressing the problem of fuel adulteration and was therefore beneficial to the public. The incorporation of the new technology was in the public interest.
16.Mr. Otachi spoke of SGS' case having mutated from an initial complaint that no reasons had been given for the termination to a later grouse about the quality of the evidence relied on to justify the termination. He insisted that the Head of Procurement had a statutory duty to review and recommend the evaluation committee's report and then the Accounting Officer would consider that recommendation. The evaluation committee itself had observed that there was need to incorporate the technology in question so that the appellant acted in a commonsensical manner, and not capriciously, in terminating the tender.
17.Counsel complained that the learned Judge usurped the triple roles of the evaluation committee, the Head of Procurement and the Accounting Officer of the appellant in ordering it to award the tender to SGS, something that not even the Board could do. This, in counsel?s view, was a whimsical interference by the learned Judge that set a bad precedent and made nonsense of the powers of the Board which is technically capable of dealing with procurement issues. He rested by submitting that the decision of the Board did not prejudice SGS as it would still participate is the new tender process.
18.For SGS, learned counsel Mr. Musyoka started by submitting that the procurement in question was a public one and by virtue of Article 227 of the Constitution it had to be fair, equitable transparent, competitive and cost-effective. The issue of the emerging technology first featured in the course of the evaluation process for the tender. According to him, the technology in question was an added advantage SGS had, and it would be unfair for it to be used to its disadvantage. He then stated that whereas the appellant spoke of emergent technology, what the Act envisages is "substantial" technological advance and the learned Judge should not be faulted for making that distinction. He asserted that the decision of the Board was irrational because it was not supported by any evidence of what the substantial technological advancement was. He insisted that the prejudice his client would suffer is that it had revealed its strengths which would now be used to its disadvantage. He argued that the termination was too late in the day but conceded, as he had to, that the Act does envisage termination even at that stage. He added, however, that such termination was strictly circumscribed under section 63. To him, the recommendation of the evaluation Committee was final and binding on the appellant and so it was properly compelled by mandamus to award the tender to SGS thereby supporting the order of certiorari quashing the termination.
19.Mr. Otachi replied that the notion substantial technological advance is a matter of fact that was best handled by the appellant as the procuring entity and the Board and since the two were satisfied, it was improper for the learned Judge to override their decision made within jurisdiction.
20.We have given due consideration to the record, the submissions and the authorities cited. It is not in dispute that this appeal calls upon this Court to interfere with the learned Judge's exercise of discretion in granting the judicial review orders that he issued. As a Court of Appeal we are slow to interfere with the exercise of discretion by a judge of the Court below. We do so only in a limited set of circumstances as were aptly enunciated in the oft-cited case of Mbogo vs. Shah [1968]EA 93 where Newbold put it thus, at p96;
21.The thrust of the appellant's case is that the learned Judge made errors of law and arrived at a decision that was plainly wrong entitling this Court to interfere with his exercise of discretion. The discretion is wide, undoubtedly, but it is a judicial discretion exercisable only on the basis of sound principle, not on caprice in accordance with a judge's personal preferences. In order to decide whether the learned Judge erred in the case at bar, it is worth recalling that the true province of judicial review is to deal with and correct procedural improprieties but not the merits of the decision itself. See Chief Constable vs. Evans [1982] 3 ALL ER 141 where Lord Brightman sounded the caution that unless the restriction to process as opposed to merits is observed, “the court will, …under the guise of preventing abuse of power, be itself guilty of usurping power”. He went on make clear that “judicial review is not an appeal from a decision, but a review of the manner in which the decision was made.” (At P 155 para C The main basis for the learned Judge's grant of the judicial review prayers was that the Board was wrong to find that there was technological change when no sufficient evidence of the same had been availed by the appellant. The learned Judge put it this way at paragraph 31 of his judgment.He pursued the theme of sufficiency of evidence in paragraphs 36 and 41 as follows;
22.It seems obvious that the learned Judge was here pre-occupied with the sufficiency of the evidence of technological change. Words such as the said evidence being „clear?, „cogent?, „substantial?, „real?, „tangible?, „significant?, and the like, can only mean that the learned Judge was embarking on an exercise of making value judgments regarding the evidence, weighing it and minutely examining or interrogating it to determine whether it reached a certain standard of acceptance. With respect, that approach is far removed from process, the purpose and province of judicial review, and is a delving into the merits of the decision as one would do were he dealing with an appeal.
23.In so doing, the learned Judge fell into error. Our holding on this point is consistent with a long line of decision of this Court including, quite recently, in OJSC Power Machines Limited, Transcentrury Limited & Civicon Limited (consortium) Vs. Public Procurement Administrative Review Board & 2 Others [2017] eKLR where it was stated that;See also Biren Amritlal Shah & Anor v Republic & 3 Others [2013] eKLR.
24.The learned Judge would only have been entitled to interfere were it the case that there was absolutely no evidence before the Board that would have justified the upholding of the appellant's termination of the tender. In other words, the case should have been so plainly and self-evidently devoid of evidence or basis for termination, as to render upholding of the termination an inexplicable act of capricious irrationality defiant of all logic and reason. It should have been such a decision that no reasonable tribunal, properly directing itself on the case would have arrived at. That is the Wednesbury unreasonableness that would invalidate a tribunal's decision by way of certiorari. That principle was well- enunciated by the English Court of Appeal in Associated Provincial Picture Houses Ltd vs. Wednesbury Corporation [1948] 1 KB 223.
25.In the lead judgment, with which Somerville LJ and Singleton J, agreed, Lord Greene M.R. treated of the subject as follows;
26.The Master of the Rolls was quite comphatic that the ultimate arbiter of what is and is not reasonable cannot be the court but the body, authority or tribunal exercising statutory powers. This is because that authority (in this case the Board) is entrusted by the Parliament with the decision on a matter which the knowledge and experience of the authority (the Board) can best be trusted to deal with it. The courts can only interfere if the decision of the authority is so unreasonable that no reasonable authority could ever come to it. He then pointed out, and we readily agree, that “to prove a case of that kind would requires 'something overwhelming’. The body in question needs to have acted in a manner so far removed from which good sense and logic dictate and demand as to amount to an aberration requiring judicial intervention and correction.
27.The learned Judge in the instant case saw in the absence of evidence meeting the standard the Board had set in its earlier decision of Avante International INC vs. IEBC (Pboard Review No. 19 of 2017) the something overwhelming to warrant his interference. With respect, the learned Judge appears to have hoisted his own sense of reasonable or unreasonable above that of the Board. It is to be noted that the Board did not here act in ignorance or disregard of its own decision in Avante. It is plain from the Board's decision that it took into consideration the nature and weight or sufficiency of the opinion on technological change that the appellant acted upon and which had been challenged as insufficient. The Board made the categorical finding that the termination was based on the “General observations” of the appellant's evaluation Committee members who had the necessary technical qualifications for technical evaluation of the tender, they were selected on the basis of those technical qualifications and that the non-inclusion of the new technology in the tender document prejudiced some bidders who had the technology but did not incorporate it. This is because it was not required and that therefore it would be improper to allow some bidders to benefit from a criterion which was not part of the tender documents, to the exclusion of others.
28.Far from being unreasonable in the Wednesbury sense, we find that the Board's reasoning exhibited a fidelity to good sense and sensibility. It was founded on rational considerations including the wider public interest such as follows;
29.We think that on a proper consideration of the record, the learned Judge's conclusions that the Board's decision was tainted by irrationality or unreasonableness was also erroneous, is unsupportable and is for reversal. He ought to have shown greater deference to the Board's decision and been more circumspect about interfering with its decision bearing in mind the specialization of the Board as was recognized by this Court in Kenya Pipeline Ltd Vs. Hyosung Ebara Company LTD [2012] eKLR;
30.The Review Board is a specialized statutory tribunal established to deal with all complains of breach of duty by the procuring entity. By Reg. 89, it has power to engage an expert to assist in the proceedings in which it feels that it lacks the necessary experience. S. 98 of the Act confers very wide powers on the Review Board. It is clear from the nature of powers given to the Review Board including annulling, anything done by the procurement entity and substituting its decision for that of the procuring entity that the administrative review envisaged by the Act is indeed an appeal. From its nature the Review Board is obviously better equipped than the High Court to handle disputes relating to breach of duty by procurement entity. It follows that its decision in matters within its jurisdiction should not be lightly interfered with.”
31.We have said enough to show that this appeal is for granting but there is yet one more reason. In his final order, the learned Judge granted mandamus directing the appellant to proceed with the tender and effect the recommendation that the tender/contract be awarded to SGS. That order was wholly underserved for a number of reasons. We have already indicated that there was nothing perverse or outrageous about the Board?s decision upholding the appellant?s termination of the award, the said termination being statutorily recognized in the Act and also expressly stated in the tender documents.
32.Further, and more critical, the appellant did not bear a statutory duty to award the tender to SGS or to any other entity to attract the compulsive force of mandamus. The grant or award of such tenders and contracts are matters that lie within its discretion. Moreover, the recommendation of the tender committee was just that; a recommendation, which did not divest the accounting officer of the appellant of the authority to apply his mind and either accept or reject the recommendation for good cause. To command the award therefore denied the appellant's accounting officer of a right and discretion flowing from statute and the order was therefore a classic case of the court, in the guise of preventing abuse of power itself engaging in a conspicuous abuse of its powers by usurping those tht belong to other entities. See Wanyoike vs. Medical Practictioners and Dentists Board & anor [2017] eKLR; R vs. Kenya Revenue Authority Ex Parte Yaya Towers Limited [2008] eKLR.
33.We need only cite this passage from this Court's decision in Makupa Transit Shade Limited & Anor vs. Kenya Ports Authority & Anor [2015] eKLR to show that the order of mandamus as issued by the court below was wholly misconceived;
34.With respect, that reasoning applies mutatis mutandis to this case with the same result of invalidating the mandamus issued by the learned Judge.
35.This appeal ultimately succeeds and is allowed with costs. The orders of the learned Judge are set aside in entirety and substituted with an order dismissing the substantive motion with costs.
36.The appellant shall also have the costs of this appeal.
DATED AND DELIVERED AT NAIROBI THIS 11TH DAY OF MAY, 2018.R. N. NAMBUYE....................................JUDGE OF APPEALW. OUKO.....................................JUDGE OF APPEALP. O. KIAGE.....................................JUDGE OF APPEALI certify that this is a true copy of the originalDEPUTY REGISTRAR