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England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales Court of Appeal (Civil Division) Decisions >> Sita UK Ltd v Greater Manchester Waste Disposal Authority [2011] EWCA Civ 156 (24 February 2011) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWCA/Civ/2011/156.html Cite as: [2011] 2 CMLR 32, [2011] TCLR 3, [2011] Eu LR 719, [2011] BLGR 419, 134 Con LR 1, [2012] PTSR 645, [2011] EWCA Civ 156 |
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ON APPEAL FROM THE HIGH COURT (CHANCERY DIVISION)
MR JUSTICE MANN
Strand, London, WC2A 2LL |
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B e f o r e :
LORD JUSTICE RIMER
and
LORD JUSTICE ELIAS
____________________
SITA UK LIMITED |
Appellant |
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- and - |
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GREATER MANCHESTER WASTE DISPOSAL AUTHORITY |
Respondent |
____________________
WordWave International Limited
A Merrill Communications Company
190 Fleet Street, London EC4A 2AG
Tel No: 020 7404 1400, Fax No: 020 7831 8838
Official Shorthand Writers to the Court)
Ms Dinah Rose QC, Brian Kennelly and Tom Richards (instructed by SJ Berwin LLP) for the Respondent
Hearing dates: 14, 15 and 16 December 2010
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Crown Copyright ©
Lord Justice Elias :
The relevant law.
"and, in particular, as rapidly as possible…on the grounds that such decisions have infringed Community law in the field of public procurement or the national rules implementing that law."
The limitation period.
"(4) Proceedings under this regulation may not be brought unless –
(a) The services provider bringing the proceedings has informed the contracting authority of the breach or apprehended breach of the duty owed to him pursuant to paragraph (1)…by the contracting authority and of his intention to bring proceedings under this regulation in respect of it; and
(b) they are brought promptly and in any event within 3 months from the date when grounds for the bringing of the proceedings first arose unless the Court considers that there is good reason for extending the period within which proceedings may be brought."
"The answer to the first question accordingly is that Article 1(1) of Directive 89/665 requires that the period for bringing proceedings seeking to have an infringement of the public procurement rules established or to obtain damages for the infringement of those rules should start to run from the date on which the claimant knew, or ought to have known, of that infringement."
"If the national provisions at issue do not lend themselves to such an interpretation, that court is bound, in exercise of the discretion conferred on it, to extend the period for bringing proceedings in such a manner as to ensure that the claimant has a period equivalent to that which it would have had if the period provided for by the applicable national legislation had run from the date on which the claimant knew, or ought to have known, of the infringement of the public procurement rules."
"….Directive 89/665 requires the national court, by virtue of the discretion conferred on it, to extend the limitation period in such a manner as to ensure that the claimant has a period equivalent to that which it would have had if the period provided for by the applicable national legislation had run from the date on which the claimant knew, or ought to have known, of the infringement of the public procurement rules. If the national provisions do not lend themselves to an interpretation which accords with Directive 89/665, the national court must refrain from applying them, in order to apply EU law fully and to protect the rights conferred thereby on individuals."
What degree of knowledge is required?
"30 However, the fact that a candidate or tenderer learns that its application or tender has been rejected does not place it in a position effectively to bring proceedings. Such information is insufficient to enable the candidate or tenderer to establish whether there has been any illegality which might form the subject-matter of proceedings.
31 It is only once a concerned candidate or tenderer has been informed of the reasons for its elimination from the public procurement procedure that it may come to an informed view as to whether there has been an infringement of the applicable provisions and as to the appropriateness of bringing proceedings."
" 'knowledge'" does not mean knowing for certain and beyond possibility of contradiction. It means knowing with sufficient confidence to justify embarking on the preliminaries to the issue of a writ, such as submitting a claim to the proposed defendant, taking advice, and collecting evidence; suspicion, particularly if it is vague and unsupported, will indeed not be enough, but reasonable belief will normally suffice".
"the standard ought to be a knowledge of the facts which apparently clearly indicate, though they need not absolutely prove, an infringement."
Knowledge and the statutory letter.
Further refinements of the knowledge test.
"A contract notice lacking any information as to the estimated value of the contract, followed by evasive conduct by the contracting authority in response to the questions of a potential tenderer such as that at issue in the main proceedings, must be considered, in view of the existence of a limitation period, as rendering excessively difficult the exercise by the tenderer concerned of the rights conferred on him by Community law…"
Likewise, it is submitted that here time did not begin to run because of evasive conduct by the GMWDA.
The test for striking out.
"… a claim should not be struck out unless it can be demonstrated sufficiently clearly that it was bound to fail as a matter of law and/or fact, and that I should not determine the serious live issue of fact which requires oral evidence, or which requires a full scrutiny that a trial will bring to bear"
And a little later at paragraph 18, he said this:
"The real question for me is whether it is clear enough, at this stage, that the claim is bound to fail on limitation grounds, and that a trial (or a fuller hearing of a preliminary issue) would not change that situation. Any doubt about it would have to be resolved in favour of the claimant. When I make any determination in this matter whether of fact law or discretion, I should be taken to be doing so on the footing that the point has been clearly established, and that the same result would clearly be reached at trial."
The material facts.
"Both Viridor Laing (Greater Manchester) Limited and the Sita Consortium submitted in their BaFOs alternative facilities as back-up for the EfW element of the project. Viridor Laing offered a Combined Heat and Power facility located at the Ineos Chlor Site at Runcorn. At the request of the Authority, Viridor Laing were invited to develop this solution further in the course of the negotiations following their appointment as Preferred Bidder. To satisfy itself that Viridor Laing should remain the Preferred Bidder based upon the Runcorn Facility being the EfW facility for the project, the Authority re-evaluated the Viridor Laing bid once the solution had been developed. The same Evaluation Criteria, weightings and methodology were applied as had been applied at ITT and BaFO. On the basis of this the Preferred Bidder decision was not undermined on the basis of this, the Authority resolved at its meeting on 29th June 2007 to proceed with the Runcorn facility as its EfW facility."
"In the present case, the PFI contract that has been entered into is clearly not the contract in respect of which Sita was debriefed in January 2007. We were aware of certain changes relating to the construction works to be provided by Laing, which prompted our letter of 16 April 2008. This letter is not concerned with those changes, but the changes we now learn of through the press release of 8 April 2009, which we believe required the authority to carry out a further debrief. Accordingly, by way of a further breach, GMWDA has unlawfully entered into a "new" contract with VL without providing Sita with the necessary debrief and opportunity for challenge under the 2006 Regulations".
"In the circumstances, if GMWDA continues to refuse further information, Sita will have no choice but to bring proceedings on the basis of the information so far available; to seek from the court an order that further information be supplied, to apply for an order that the contract be set aside, alternatively that no further steps be taken to implement the contract, pending further resolution of the matters."
"in breach of its obligations under the applicable procurement regulations …. and in particular, the underlying obligations of equal treatment and transparency, in proposing to contract with VL on a basis which was the subject of the procurement stage when the award was made in April 2007. This letter is to be treated as a further formal written notice of Sita's intention to bring proceedings under both of these sets of regulations in respect of those breaches.
The pleadings.
"73. It is unknown on what precise basis, whether relative scores, or a qualitative review, GMWDA made its decision to proceed with VL at the various stages of the post-BaFO negotiations, including at the point at which a contract was entered into in April 2009. The information available to Sita regarding these matters is as follows:
a) The Press Release of 8 April 2009 showed very substantial increases in VL's costs;
b) In December 2007 Ernst & Young concluded that Sita's original BaFO bid had a similar score to VL's updated bid. The assumptions on which that conclusion were based have not been disclosed.
c) The January 2007 assessment showed that Sita's best bid was VB1 and that VL's best bid was MSB1. That assessment, on which Sita was 6 percentage points behind, has formed the basis of subsequent re-assessments. Subsequent comparisons have been based on fundamentally different assumptions, namely a comparison between Sita's MSB1 (and not its best bid) and VL's MSB1, although based on a different site with different costs than the contract entered into.
d) Assumptions have been made as to the likely increase in Sita's bid, had it been asked to re-submit a bid. Those assumptions are without foundation.
i) They take no account of the differences between VL and Sita's position in the market, for example as regards access to finance, parent company support, and relative experience of waste contracts;
ii) They take no account of the fundamental purpose of the Regulations which is to enable competition. Sita would not necessarily have expected GMWDA to assume all/any of the increases in any costs that would have been incurred.
iii) They take no account of the greater margins identified by GMWDA in Sita's bid, and the consequent scope for absorbing additional costs.
iv) They take no account of the unreliability of the VL bid as evidenced by its material under-costing of its capital costs in its BaFO bid.
v) They take no account of Sita's offers to re-enter the competition. Those offers were made by Sita without knowledge of the material increases in VL's costs at the time the offers were made. GMWDA should have realised that Sita would only make such an offer, involving further expense, if they believed they could supply an offer that might be competitive with VL, even without knowledge of the increases in price.
74. Accordingly, on the information available, GMWDA wrongly failed to offer the contract to Sita when the VL costs increased and/or wrongly failed to invite Sita to offer a further bid. Further, GMWDA has no basis upon which to determine or proceed on the basis that VL offered "the most economically advantageous tender" either at the times when GMWDA directed their minds to the matter during the procurement process and/or when they entered into a contract with VL and/or if Sita had been able to supply a further bid."
The hearing before Mann J.
The grounds of appeal.
Did Sita know enough?
"The thrust [of the letter] is an assertion of breach by a party who has a keen understanding of the position and who is offering the other side the chance to head off proceedings which would otherwise ensue."
Disposal.
Lord Justice Rimer :
'… come to an informed view as to whether there has been an infringement of the applicable provisions and as to the appropriateness of bringing proceedings.'
Lady Justice Arden:
"30 However, the fact that a candidate or tenderer learns that its application or tender has been rejected does not place it in a position effectively to bring proceedings. Such information is insufficient to enable the candidate or tenderer to establish whether there has been any illegality which might form the subject-matter of proceedings.
31. It is only once a concerned candidate or tenderer has been informed of the reasons for its elimination from the public procurement procedure that it may come to an informed view as to whether there has been an infringement of the applicable provisions and as to the appropriateness of bringing proceedings. "