The Mercury

R80m tender bungle

- Bernadette Wolhuter

ADURBAN High Court judge has slammed city officials involved in awarding an R80 million tender and found 16 of them – including the city manager who confirmed it – personally liable for the costs of subsequent court action brought against the municipali­ty.

The judgment, handed down yesterday, comes after Social Developmen­t Minister Bathabile Dlamini was asked to explain why she personally should not pay costs in the grants matter. It also suggests the judiciary has adopted a firm stance to hold public officials to account.

Judge Dhaya Pillay said in her judgment: “This inquiry, I emphasise, is about recovering costs incurred at the expense of the taxpaying public in a procuremen­t process that was seriously flawed.”

Judge Pillay explained the significan­ce of her judgment by saying if the matter had not come to court, people living in subsidised housing would have been uninsured for water leaks and the municipali­ty – and by extension, taxpayers – would have had to pay.

Last year Westwood Insurance Brokers took the eThekwini Municipali­ty to court over a three-year water loss insurance tender it lost to South West Brokers. It turned out, South West had not complied with one of the conditions of the tender: that it supply the city with a letter of undertakin­g for water leak insurance.

The brokers had instead submitted a quote for profession­al indemnity insurance.

In December, Judge Pillay set aside the tender award and ordered the city to file affidavits naming all the officials involved in awarding it.

Now she has ordered that, collective­ly, 16 of them pay the municipali­ty 50% of the costs it was ordered to pay Westwood, and that South West pay it the other 50%.

She has also ordered the acting city manager to report back to her by July, on what steps have been taken to recover the money.

After perusing the affidavits deposed by those officials, Judge Pillay found their joint decision to award the tender was “not merely irrational but bizarre” and “so bizarre that unsurprisi­ngly even those who participat­ed in making it cannot explain it”.

“How did the entire procuremen­t team of eThekwini… unanimousl­y decide that, firstly, a quotation is the equivalent of a letter of undertakin­g and, secondly, that provision of profession­al indemnity insurance qualifies as underwriti­ng insurance for undergroun­d water leaks for individual dwelling units, which was the specified condition of tender?” she asked.

“Metaphoric­ally speaking, they decided that chalk is cheese.”

Explanatio­ns

She said none of the deponents had advanced any possible explanatio­ns. Nor had they recognised the difference between profession­al indemnity insurance and underwriti­ng insurance for water leaks; expressed remorse for their conduct; recognised the consequenc­es of South West being allowed to stand; or explained why the city’s legal adviser Sbusiso Shezi’s opinion – proffered early on in a memorandum, that South West had failed to submit proof of underwriti­ng insurance – was rejected.

“All those involved in the decision to appoint South West persist in defending what is now manifestly indefensib­le by trying to justify their conduct in order to avoid having to pay costs,” she said.

“Their responses fortify their failure and continuing refusal to be not only accountabl­e and transparen­t but also remorseful for their manifestly inexplicab­le decision which renders them liable for costs.”

She said they denied liability for costs, claiming they did not act dishonestl­y, in bad faith or negligentl­y.

She found all who participat­ed, including South West, liable. “However, I do distinguis­h South West from the rest,” she said. “No tenderer should be allowed to escape with impunity for deliberate misreprese­ntations in public procuremen­t processes. South West created the situation that compelled this litigation. Walking away unscathed from this debacle is not an option.”

Officials cited to pay costs include the head of water and sanitation, Ednick Msweli; deputy head of supply chain operations, Sandile Ngcobo, and members of the bid evaluation committee and bid adjudicati­on committee.

Instructin­g attorney for Westwood, Yahya Hassan of Larson Falconer Hassan Parsee Inc, yesterday told The Mercury he believed this was a “groundbrea­king judgment”.

“It places reliance on integrity in dealing with these tender matters,” he said. “City officials have to ensure that when a tender is awarded, it is done fairly, transparen­tly and properly, and if they fail to uphold these high standards, then they can be held personally liable for any costs that the municipali­ty might otherwise incur so taxpayers are not burdened with them.”

Paul Hoffman, of the Institute for Accountabi­lity in Southern Africa, said this was an “emerging trend” and a “welcome developmen­t”.

“The courts are gearing themselves up to award punitive costs against public administra­tive personnel in circumstan­ces in which it is clear that there is either intentiona­l wrongdoing or recklessne­ss with public money,” he said.

He compared Judge Pillay’s ruling with the Constituti­onal Court’s recent order that Dlamini file an affidavit explaining why she should not be held personally liable for the South African Social Security Agency (Sassa) payment disaster.

Spokespers­on for the eThekwini Municipali­ty, Tozi Mthethwa, said the city received a copy of the judgment only yesterday.

“It is premature to comment on the matter at this stage as the city is still studying the contents of the judgment,” she said.

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