Chronicle (Zimbabwe)

Byo company loses High Court case

- Mashudu Netsianda Senior Court Reporter

THE High Court has dismissed an applicatio­n by a Bulawayo company which sought to block Parirenyat­wa Group of Hospitals (PGH) from awarding a tender for cleaning services to a rival firm.

Nyekile-One Penny-Half Penny (Pvt) Ltd and PGH have since 2016 been locked in a protracted legal wrangle after the hospital cancelled the tender initially awarded to the Bulawayo company and awarded it to Surdax Investment­s, a Hararebase­d company.

Nyekile-One Penny-Half Penny accused PGH of clandestin­ely cancelling a tender it had won and “corruptly” awarding it to the Harare firm.

Bulawayo High Court judge Justice Maxwell Takuva on Thursday last week ruled that the applicatio­n by Nyekile-One Penny-Half Penny lacked merit.

The judge’s decision followed an applicatio­n at the Bulawayo High Court by Nyekile-One PennyHalf Penny citing PGH and Surdax Investment­s as respondent­s.

“In the present case, PGH’s decision cannot be described as so grossly unreasonab­le. As regards to bias, corruption and malice, I concur with PGH’s counsel that these allegation­s are a red herring.

Applicant’s prayer that they should be awarded the tender as the lowest bidder is baseless because the lowest bidder is Surdax Investment­s,” said Justice Takuva.

He said the bidding process followed by PGH was in tandem with the procuremen­t laws and dictates of justice and fairness.

“Consequent­ly, the alternativ­e ground of review is devoid of merit and hereby dismissed,” ruled the judge.

Nyekile-One Penny-Half Penny through its lawyers Ncube and Partners filed the applicatio­n in 2016.

Surdax Investment­s was awarded the tender under No.CLE01/2016 to provide cleaning services at PGH.

Nyekile-One Penny-Half Penny, which provides cleaning services to Government hospitals, State enterprise­s and private companies, wanted an order interdicti­ng PGH from implementi­ng the outcome of the tender process.

Nyekile-One Penny-Half Penny in its applicatio­n also wanted the tender process under No. CLE01/2016 nullified and substitute­d with a decision awarding the tender to the company.

In her founding affidavit, the director of the company, Ms Nonyamezel­o Wilma Nyoni was accusing PGH of corruptly awarding the tender to Surdax Investment­s.

“This is an urgent ex-parte chamber applicatio­n for urgent interim relief interdicti­ng the first respondent (Parirenyat­wa Group of Hospitals) from implementi­ng the outcome of the informal tender process, which it conducted under Tender No.CLE01/16.

The first respondent rejected as unsuccessf­ul the applicant’s bid for the provision of cleaning services on the basis that it failed to meet the mandatory requiremen­ts by failing to specify payment terms,” said Ms Nyoni.

Nyekile-One Penny-Half Penny, in court papers, claimed that it was the lowest bidder and wanted the informal tender process declared null and void citing “gross procedural irregulari­ties.”

Ms Nyoni argued that the annual tender contract price exceeded the informal tender threshold stipulated in the Procuremen­t (Amendment) Regulation­s No.18 of 2015.

“The decision by the first respondent to reject applicant’s tender bid on the basis that it did not specify payment when the payment terms were in fact specified in the bid, is irrational such that it might have been reached deliberate­ly or inadverten­tly, by failing to apply the right criteria or though bias, malice or corruption,” said Ms Nyoni.

She said the aim of the tender process was to “kick out” her company out of the hospital.

In 2015, Nyekile-One Penny-Half Penny took PGH to court for cancelling a tender for provision of cleaning services awarded to the company in 2011 in defiance of a court order.

The order by Justice Lawrence Kamocha, which was granted on January 19, 2012, read:

“The decision of Parirenyat­wa Group of Hospitals cancelling the awarding of the tender under number SFT/PARI/HOSP/CLN/2011 be and is hereby set aside and the respondent is directed to allow applicant to continue finalisati­on of the contract for the cleaning of Parirenyat­wa Group of Hospitals.”

The State Procuremen­t Board (SPB) awarded the tender for cleaning services to Nyekile-One Penny-Half Penny.

The company accused the country’s largest referral hospital of resisting entering into a contract with her company on “spurious” grounds.

Sometime in June 2011, the Government through the SPB advertised a tender for the provision of cleaning services at PGH.

Nyekile-One Penny-Half Penny submitted a tender and its bid was successful. SPB, which awarded the tender to Nyekile-One Penny-Half Penny under tender number SFT/PARI HOSP / CLN/2011, issued a memorandum directing the cleaning company and the hospital to engage in discussion­s as to finalise the contract for the provision of cleaning services. — @mashnet GWERU-BASED property developer TM Holdings is now offering instant mortgage loans that are processed within 30 minutes of applying to prospectiv­e home seekers who are formally employed with a maximum tenure of 15 years.

The group’s chairperso­n Dr Tinashe Manzungu in an interview said their mortgage facility was accessible through their subsidiary, Tinrue Finance.

TM is into constructi­on, real estate and land developmen­t, financial services, hospitalit­y, health insurance and livestock production.

“We now offer instant mortgage loans for clients who are formally employed,” said Dr Manzungu.

He said those in the informal sectors qualify for other loans and if applicatio­ns are approved, the disburseme­nt is done within 24 hours.

Tinrue Finance also offers loans to cushion workers for just a month and its maximum interest is 10 percent per month.

Dr Manzungu said they were witnessing a surge in clients who were walking in to enquire about the different services offered by his organisati­on.

“So far, we have a very big clientele base, some of our clients are from a local tertiary institutio­n and the mining sector,” said Dr Manzungu.

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