Full Judgment Text
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PETITIONER:
G.J. FERNANDEZ
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
STATE OF KARNATAKA & ORS.
DATE OF JUDGMENT01/02/1990
BENCH:
RANGNATHAN, S.
BENCH:
RANGNATHAN, S.
SAIKIA, K.N. (J)
CITATION:
1990 AIR 958 1990 SCR (1) 229
1990 SCC (2) 488 JT 1990 (1) 134
1990 SCALE (1)117
CITATOR INFO :
RF 1991 SC1579 (6)
ACT:
Constitution of India 1950: Articles 226 and 136--Award
of contract by Karnataka Power Corporation to Mysore Con-
struction Co.-Validity of--Eligibility of party to apply for
State contracts--Supply of tender documents--Essentiality
of--Comparative merits of parties-Not for Court to decide.
HEADNOTE:
The petitioner aggrieved by the award of a contract by
the respondent in favour of Mysore Construction Company
(M.C.C.) filed a Writ Petition and a further Writ Appeal in
the Karnataka High Court. Being unsuccessful there he came
up in appeal before this Court by way of special leave.
The single judge of the High Court had taken the view
that prerequisites for the supply of tender forms were
contained in Para I of the Notification Inviting Tender
(NIT) and the details called for in Para V could be supplied
any time. The Division Bench on appeal did not express any
opinion regarding the requirements set out in para V but was
of the view that there was nothing unfair or arbitrary about
the award of the contract to the MCC. In appeal before this
Court the plea of the petitioner is that the Karnataka Power
Corporation should not have accepted the tender of MCC, as
the MCC did not fulfil certain preliminary requirements
contained in Para I and V of the NIT which according to him
have to be fulfilled before the forms of tender could be
supplied to any intending contractor.
Dismissing the appeal of the petitioner, the Court,
HELD: Para V cannot but be read with para I. The supply
of some of the documents referred to in para V is indispens-
able to assess whether the applicant fulfills the prequali-
fying requirements set out in para I. It will be too extreme
to hold that the omission to supply every small detail
referred to in para V would affect the eligibility under
para I and disqualify the tenderer. [240E-F]
230
If a party has been consistently and bona fide inter-
preting the standards prescribed by it in a particular
manner, this Court should not interfere though it may be
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inclined to read or construe the conditions differently.
[241E]
Assuming for purposes of argument that there has been a
slight deviation from the terms of the NIT, it has not
deprived the appellant of its right to be considered for the
contract. On the other hand its tender has received due and
full consideration. If, save for the delay in filing one of
the relevant documents, MCC is also found to be qualified to
tender for the contract. no injustice can be said to have
been done to the appellant by the consideration of its
tender side by side with that of the MCC and in the KPC
going in for a choice of the better on the merits. [242E-G]
The comparative merits of the appellant ViS-a-vis MCC
are, however, a matter for the KPC to decide and not for the
Courts.[243C-D]
JUDGMENT:
Ram Gajadher Nishad v. State of U.P., (C.A. 1819/89);
Ramana Dayaram Sherry v. The International Airport Authority
of India & Ors., [1979] (3) SCR 1014, referred to.
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION: Civil Appeal No. 1027 of
1990.
From the Judgment and Order dated 27.10.1989 of the
Karnataka High Court in Writ Appeal No. 2017 of 1989.
K. Parasaran, C.S. Vaidyanatha, S.R. Bhat, S.R. Setia,
K.V. Mohan and Mrs. Sunitha B. Singh for the Petitioner.
K.N. Bhatt, Rajinder Sachhar, Vineet Kumar, B. Mohan and
K.G. Raghvan for the Respondents.
The Judgment of the Court was delivered by
RANGANATHAN, J. The petitioner is aggrieved by the award
of a contract by the Karnataka Power Corporation Ltd.
(K.P.C.), an instrumentality of the State of Karnataka, in
favour of the Mysore Construction Co. (M.C.C.). His writ
petition and a further writ appeal in the Karnataka High
Court having been unsuccessful, he has preferred this Spe-
cial Leave Petition from the judgment of the High Court in
the writ appeal. We have heard counsel for both sides at
length. We
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grant Special leave and proceed to dispose of the appeal.
Though, at an earlier stage of the proceedings there
were some allegations of favoritism, the plea of the peti-
tioner, as urged before us, is that the K.P.C. should not at
all have entertained the tender of M.C.C. as the M.C.C. did
not fulfill certain preliminary requirements which, under
the Notification Inviting Tenders (N.I.T.), had to be ful-
filled even before the forms of tender could be supplied to
any intending contractor.
The contract pertained to the construction of a Main
Station Building of a Power House at the Raichur Thermal
Power Plant at an estimated cost of about Rs. 1.8 crores.
The N.I.T. dated 27.12.1988 invited tenders from registered
contractors of appropriate class. Paragraph I of the notifi-
cation listed three "Minimum qualifying requirements" viz.,
that the intending tenderer:
(1) should have executed civil and architectural works
including insulation in a power plant/industrial complex,
preferably in power plant;
(2) should have executed atleast 1000 cubic metres per month
of concrete pouring and atleast 300 cubic metres per month
of brick work at one site; and
(3) should have had an annual turnover of atleast 1 crore
for each of the preceding three years.
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Para V- required the intending tenderers to furnish the
following information "along with the application for issue
of blank tender books", namely:
(a) Audited Balance Sheet/Certificate from Chartered Ac-
countant for preceding three years;
(b) Latest income-tax clearance Certificate;
(c) Copy of the Registration Certificate
(d) Annual output of the works of all the above nature at
any site accompanied by a certificate from the organisation
for whom the tenderer had carried out the works furnishing
details such as rate of pouring of concrete. manufacturing
of hollow concrete
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block, precast concrete block, ..... etc., and period of
completion scheduled/envisaged, equipments and their deploy-
ment i.e., man months etc.
The N.I.T. specified January 17, 1989, as the last date for
receipt application forms for issue of blank tender books.
The issue of blank tender books was to be between 23rd
January to 27th January, 1989 and the completed tender books
had to be submitted by 3.00 p.m. on 6.2.89. It is common
ground, however, that subsequently this time frame was
altered. The last date for receipt of application form for
issue of blank tender books remained as 17th January, 1989
but the other items were altered to read as follows:
"1. Last date for receipt of 10.2.89
clarification:
2. Period to issue blank tender 10.2.89 to
books 16.2.89
3. Last date and time for receipt 27.2.89
completed tender books: upto 3.00 P.M.
It appears that six parties applied for tender books.
These were scrutinized with reference to the pre-qualifying
requirements and data on experience, work done etc. as
furnished by each of the applicants. Four of the firms were
found to be pre-qualified by the Chief Engineer and tender
books were issued to them. Only three of them, however,
submitted completed tender books by February 27, 1989. These
tenders were examined by the Chief Engineer as well as an
independent firm of Engineering Consultants, namely, Tata
Consulting Engineers (T.C.E.). Both the Chief Engineer as
well as T.C.E. recommended acceptance of the tender of
M.C.C. (which was the lowest tender) in view of the fact
that M.C.C. had adequate experience in the construction of
R.C.C. works and they were capable of mobilising the work-
force required for the work. It may be mentioned that after
making necessary adjustments it was found that the tender of
M.C.C. was Rs. 15 lakhs less than the tender of the peti-
tioner.
The principal argument advanced on behalf of the peti-
tioner is that paragraphs I and V of the N.I.T. specified
certain pre-qualifying requirements. Unless these require-
ments were fulfilled, the contractor was not even entitled
to be supplied with a set of tender documents. It is submit-
ted that M.C.C. did not comply with these requirements and
233
hence its application for tender forms should have been
rejected at the outset.
The learned single Judge in the High Court went into the
matter in great detail and came to the conclusion that the
petitioner’s contentions were not well founded. He took the
view that the pre-requisites for supply of tender forms were
only the three conditions set out in para I of the N.I.T.
and that the details called for in para V could be supplied
at any time. He, therefore, rejected the petitioner’s con-
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tention that the extensions of time given to M.C.C. to
submit the tender with requisite clarifications were not
warranted. The Division Bench, on appeal, did not express
any clear opinion as to the nature of the requirements set
out in Para V but was satisfied, on an overall view, that
there was nothing unfair or arbitrary about the award of the
contract tO the M.C.C. It observed:
"We have carefully considered these contentions. We
are of the view that while exercising jurisdiction under
Article 226 of the Constitution, it is not for us to reap-
praise the facts on merits and come to one conclusion or
other with regard to these aspects of the matter. Why we are
obliged to say this is if the Court is satisfied there is
nothing arbitrary or unfair in the award of the contract, it
cannot convert itself into a super technical Committee and
find out whether the requirements have been fulfilled or
not. While saying so, we are conscious of the fact that what
is argued before the learned single Judge is with reference
to prequalifications or in other words the eligibility.
Nevertheless where the person who is incharge of award of
contract was satisfied about the eligibility and that too
after consultancy through an independent agency like Tata’s,
we cannot come to a contrary conclusion and then say a
particular certificate does not in terms meet the require-
ment laid down under clause V(d). That we consider is no
function of the Court. After all the object of tender in
most matters like this is to satisfy the authority that the
person who undertakes to execute the work or the person who
offers the tender would be really worth and then he would
perform to the best of his ability and to the requirement of
the person who wants to have the contract. If these basic
principles are kept in mind, we do not think we can intro-
duce nuances of law to enter into the realm of contract
which we consider should be kept out of the purview of writ
234
jurisdiction. From this point of view, we are unable to find
out any justification to interfere with the order of the
learned single Judge."
The first question that falls to be considered is as to
whether there is any difference between the requirements in
paras I and V and whether only para I and not para V--sets
out the pre-conditions of eligibility to submit a tender for
the contract. In our opinion, it is difficult to accept the
view of the learned single Judge of the High Court that it
is only para I that stipulates the pre-conditions and that
all the documents referred to in the other paras can be
supplied at any time before the final award of the contract.
It is seen that paras I to XIII set out various terms and
conditions some of which relate to the pre-tender stage and
some to later stage. For instance, paras X and XI come into
operation only after the tenders are received and para XII
makes it clear that the K.P.C.’s decision regarding the
fulfilment of para IV may remain open right till the actual
award of the contract. However, on the contrary, the condi-
tion set out in para VI has clearly to be fulfilled even
before asking for tender forms. Para V seems to stand some-
where in between. If one reads paras I and V together, it
will be seen that a common thread runs through them and that
they are really meant to supplement each other. It is in
order to satisfy itself that the requirements of para I(1)
and (2) are fulfilled that the K.P.C. calls for the certifi-
cates mentioned in para V and the fulfilment of the require-
ment in para I(3) has obviously to be verified by reference
to the audited balance sheets called for under clause (a) of
para V. The reference in clause (d) of para V to the "annual
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output of the works of the above nature" is also obviously a
reference to the works of the nature described in para I. It
is clear that at least some, if not all, of the documents
referred to in para V, are intended to verify the fulfilment
of the three prequalifying requirements of para I. The
stipulation of the time element within which the information
asked for in para V should be supplied is also of some
significance; it specifically requires the information to be
supplied along with the application for tender forms. As
pointed out by this Court in its judgment dated 3.3.1989 in
Ram Gajadher Nishad v. State of U.P., C.A. 1819/89, an
intending tenderer can be perhaps letigimately excluded from
consideration for a contract, if the certificates such as
the ones under clauses (b) and (c) of para V are not fur-
nished. It may not, therefore, be correct to read para I in
isolation and treat it as the only condition precedent for
the supply of forms of tender. The more harmonious and
practical way of construing the N.I.T. is by saying that,
before the tender books can be supplied, an intending ten-
derer should satisfy the K.P.C, by supplying such of the
documents called for in para V as are material in assessing
the fulfilment of the condition in para I, that he fulfills
the three
235
conditions set out in para I. It seems clear to us that,
apart from para I, there are some other requirements in the
N.I.T. which have to be complied with before the applicant
can be eligible for supply of tender forms. These include,
if not all, at least such of those documents referred to in
para V(d) as have a direct bearing on the three conditions
outlined in para I.
Bearing this approach in mind, let us examine to what
extent, according to the appellants, the M.C.C. failed to
fulfil the N.I.T. requirements:
So far as para I is concerned, two defects were pointed
out. The first was that, as against the requirement that the
applicant "should have executed ..... works including
insulation", the certificate of 25.1.1989 produced by the
M.C.C. was only to the effect that it "is constructing" a
building in Hyderabad for the National Geophysical Research
Institute "in which they have done wall insulation and roof
insulation for airconditioning work". The second was that,
as against the second requirement of para I that the appli-
cant should have executed "at least 300 cubic metres per
month of brick work at one site, the certificate from Vasa-
vadatta Cements produced by the M.C.C. on 1.2.89 only stated
that it had "constructed over 300 cubic meter of brick
masonry for the packing plant and D.G. building totaling to
327.29 cubic metre during the month of June 1985". These
certificates, it is submitted, do not come up to the re-
quirements of Para I. We think that this criticism, based on
the differences in wording as between the language of para I
and the certificates produced by the M.C.C., is too weak to
be accepted. It was for the K.P.C. to consider the suffi-
ciency of these certificates. The conditions only required
that the applicant should supply information to show that he
had experienced in insulation work and that he could carry
out brick work in a month to the extent indicated. It was
for the K.P.C. to assess the value of the certificates
furnished in this regard and if the K.P.C. considered them
sufficient to warrant the issue of a tender form to the
applicant, we do not think we should interfere with their
decision.
So far as para V is concerned, the criticism is that two
items of information concerning the requirements of clause
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(d) of Para V were not supplied along with the request for
application of tender forms.but were supplied much later. It
was only on 21.6.89 that M.C.C. furnished a certificate that
they had executed "hollow cement blocks work" for the Indian
Telephone Industries Ltd. but even that certificate gave no
details. It vaguely stated that "the item had been executed
as per our bill of quantities". Again, it was only on
18.8.89 that M.C.C. produced a certificate from Vasvadatta
Cements regarding the work of concreting done by it. It is
pointed out incidentally that
236
this is also a part of the specific requirements in para I
and, as such, the VI.C.C. cannot be said to have satisfied
the preliminary conditions Tendering it eligible to tender
for the contract. The second of these does not really cause
much difficulty. For, even as early as 11.1.89 along with
its application for tender dated 3.1.89 M.C.C. had produced
a certificate from the K.P.C. itself that it had done 35,000
cubic metres of concreting during 7 months and this was
apparently considered sufficient for the K.P.C. subsequently
called for a certificate only regarding brick work. This
leaves only the first of the criticisms that the details
regarding hollow cement block works done by the M.C.C. was
furnished only on 21.5.89.
Should the M.C.C. have been denied altogether the right
to Tender for the contract consequent on the delay in sub-
mitting this document is the second question that arises for
consideration. Sri Parasaran, for the appellant would have
us answer this question in the affirmative on the principle
enunciated by Frankfurter, J. and approved by this Court in
Raman Daygram Sherry v. The International Airport Authority
of India & Ors., [1979] 3 S.C.R. 1014. Bhagwati, J. (as his
Lordship then was) formulated in the following words a
principle which has since been applied by this Court in a
number of cases:
"It is a well settled rule of administrative law that an
executive authority must be rigorously held to the standards
by which it professes its actions to be judged and it must
scrupulously observe those standards on pain of invalidation
of an act in violation of them. This rule was enunciated by
Mr. Justice Frankfurter in Viteralli v. Seton, 359 U.S.
535:3 Law. Ed. (Second series) 1012, where the learned Judge
said:
An executive agency must be rigorously held to the
standards by which it professes its action to be judged.
Accordingly, if dismissal from employment is based on a
defined procedure, even though generous beyond the require-
ments that bind such agency, that procedure must be scrupu-
lously observed. This judicially evolved rule of administra-
tive law is now add, rightly so. He that takes the procedur-
al sword shall perish with the sword."
"This Court accepted the rule as valid and applicable in
India in A.S. Ahluwalia v. Punjab, [1975] 3 SCR 82 and in
subsequent decision given in Sukhdev v. Bhagatram, [1975] 3
SCR 619. Mathew, J., quoted the above-referred observations
of Mr. Justice Frankfurter with approval. It may be noted
that this rule, though supportable also as emanation
237
from Article 14, does not rest merely on mat article. It has
an independent existence apart from Article 14. It is a rule
of administrative law which has been judicially evolved as a
check against exercise of arbitrary power by the executive
authority. If we turn to the judgment of Mr. Justice Frank-
furter and examine it, we find that he has not sought to
draw support for the rule from the equality clause of the
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United States Constitution, but evolved it purely as a rule
of administrative law. Even in England, the recent trend in
administrative law is in that direction as is evident from
what is stated at pages 540-41 in Prof. Wade’s Administra-
tive Law 4th edition. There is no reason why we should
hesitate to adopt this rule as a part of our continually
expanding administrative law.
XXX XXX XXX
It is, therefore, obvious that both having regard to the
constitutional mandate of Article 14 as also the judicially
evolved rule of administrative law, the 1st respondent was
not entitled to act arbitrarily in accepting the tender of
the 4th respondents, but was bound to conform to the stand-
ard or norm laid down in paragraph I of the notice inviting
tenders which required that only a person running a regis-
tered. Find II Class hotel or restaurant and having at
least 5 years’ experience as such should be eligible to
tender. It was not the contention of the appellant that this
standard or norm prescribed by the 1st respondent was dis-
criminatory having no just or reasonable relation to the
object of inviting tenders namely, to award the contract to
a sufficiently experienced person who would be able to run
efficiently a find class restaurant at the airport. Admit-
tedly the standard or norm was reasonable and non-discrimi-
natory and once such a standard or norm for running a Find
Class restaurant should be awarded was laid down, the 1st
respondent was not entitled to depart from it and to award
the contract to the 4th respondents who did not satisfy the
condition of eligibility prescribed by the standard or norm.
If there was no acceptable tender from a person who satis-
fied the condition of eligibility, the 1st respondent could
have rejected the tenders and invited fresh tenders on the
basis of a less stringent standard or norm, but it could not
depart from the standard or norm prescribed by it and arbi-
trarily accept the tender of the 4th respondents. When the
1st respondent entertained the tender of the 4th respondents
even though they did not have 5 years’ expe-
238
rience of running a II Class restaurant or hotel, denied
equality of opportunity to others similarly situate in the
matter of tendering for the contract. There might have been
many other persons, in fact the appellant himself claimed to
be one such person, who did not have 5 years’ experience of
running a II Class restaurant, but who were otherwise compe-
tent to run such a restaurant and they might also have
competed with the 4th respondents for obtaining the con-
tract, but they were precluded from doing so by the condi-
tion of eligibility requiring five years’ experience. The
action of the 1st respondent in accepting the tender of the
4th respondents, even though they did not satisfy the pre-
scribed condition of eligibility, was clearly discriminato-
ry, since it excluded other person similarly situate from
tendering for the contract and it was plainly arbitrary and
without reason. The acceptance of the tender of the 4th
respondents was, in the circumstances invalid as being
violative of the equality clause of the Constitution as also
of the rule of administrative law inhibiting arbitrary
action."
Shri Vaidyanathan, who supplemented the arguments for
the petitioner, contended that this rule has been demonstra-
bly infringed in the present case, even on the K.P.C.’s own
showing. He cited two documents filed by the K.P.C. to
substantiate this contention. The first is "A note on the
tendering system in K.P.C." which, inter alia, reads:
"2.00 Brief tender notification containing description of
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the work, estimated cost of the work, period of completion
and the minimum prequalifying/eligibility conditions
required and other general requirements such as the value/
fashion of C.M.D. to be furnished, latest certificates
works, and furnishing of audited balance sheet etc., duly
indicating the dates for issuing and receipt of tenders is
widely circulated and also advertised in leading newspapers
for the information of the intending tenderers. Where
prequalifying conditions are notified in the notification,
the applications for the issue of tenders is carefully
scrutinised with reference to these requirements and the
tenders will be issued to those who comply with all the
prequalifying/ eligibility requirements. Apart from the
prequalifying conditions contained in the brief tender
notification, certain general requirements as described
above will also be looked into. any deficiency in the gener-
al requirements
239
will, however, not disqualify the tenderers from receiving
the tender books as these conditions could be satisfied
prior to acceptance of the successful tender. Any clarifica-
tions required on the prequalifying requirements/general
requirements will also be obtained before issue of tender
documents from the intending tenderers. The tenders will be
issued to those tenderers who comply with the prequalifying
conditions.
The second is the record of minutes showing what they actu-
ally did:
"57.01 There was extended discussion on the issue. C.M.D.
also informed that one of the tenderers had sent a represen-
tation objecting to the consideration of the tender of M/s
M.C.C. on the ground that they had not fulfilled the
prequalifying requirements. There was a discussion as to
whether the stipulations mentioned in the N.I.T. other than
those stipulated under prequalifying conditions have to be
mandatorily fulfilled before the tenders were filed. It was
clarified that only three prequalifying conditions were
prescribed in the N.I.T. and other details called for vide
para 5(c) of N.I.T., were only for information and are such
they could be met before consideration of the tenders. It
was clarified that while tenders which did not meet minimum
prequalifying conditions were not eligible to be considered
at all, any shortcoming in furnishing the details at the
time of tendering would not disqualify the tenderer from
bidding for the work, so long as the conditions could be met
before finalisation of the award. It was further clarified
that the word ’shall’ used in the N.I.T. has been the normal
practice in all tenders and agreement clauses and the deci-
sion of the K.P.C. and the application other than the mini-
mum qualifying requirement should be prerogative of K.P.C.
only. It was informed that the practice in K.P.C. so far has
been to go by the minimum qualifying requirements as stated
in the N.I.T. and the rest of the information were only for
assessing the capabilities of the tenderers as well as their
eligibility and simply because Mr. G.J. Fernandez has made a
complaint it would not be proper to deviate from this estab-
lished procedure. As per clause-11, the Corporation reserves
the fight to reject or accept the tender without assigning
any reasons. In this particular case, the lacuna in furnish-
ing the information has been set right subsequently by the
tenderer before opening of the price documents, the Chief
Engineer had
240
come to the conclusion that the firm had fulfilled all the
prequalifying requirements and as such the tender of M/s
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M.C.C. had been found to be in order. It was also clarified
by GM(T) that the use of cement hollow block masonry may not
be required at all and instead the brick masonry may be used
as this item of work was essentially for a filler wall and
the walls would be non-load bearing. It was clarified that
those who were prequalified had satisfied the condition with
regard to quantity of brick masonry work.
57.02 Under the circumstances, the Committee
recommended entrustment of work to M/s M.C.C. at their
quoted rates amounting to Rs.209.39 lakhs together with
their stipulation regarding release of security deposit
against furnishing bank guarantee.
57.03 However, it was decided that in future it should be
made clear that only prequalifying conditions would be
mandatory."
These two documents, particularly the last sentence of the
second one, clearly show, Shri Vaidyanathan urged, that the
K.P.C. had relaxed its N.I.T. standards in favour of the
M.C.C.
Interesting as this argument is, we do not see much
force in it. In the first place, although, as we have ex-
plained above, para V cannot but be read with para I and
that the supply of some of the documents referred to in para
V is indispensable to assess whether the applicant fulfills
the prequalifying requirements set out in para I, it will be
too extreme to hold that the omission to supply every small
detail referred in para V would affect the eligibility under
para I and disqualify the tenderer. The question how far the
delayed supply, or omission to supply, any one or more of
the details referred to therein will affect any of the
prequalifying conditions is a matter which it is for the
K.P.C. to assess. We have seen that the documents having a
direct learning on para I viz. regarding output of concrete
and brick work had been supplied in time. The delay was only
in supplying the details regarding "hollow cement blocks"
and to what extent this lacuna effected the conditions in
para I was for the K.P.C. to assess. The minutes relied upon
show that, after getting a clarification from the General
Manager (Technical), the conclusion was reached that "the
use of cement hollow block masonry may not be required at
all and instead the brick masonry may be used". In other
words, the contract was unlikely to need any work in hollow
cement blocks and so the documents in question was consid-
ered to be of no importance in judging the pre-qualifying
requirements. There is nothing wrong with this,
241
particularly as this document was eventually supplied.
Secondly, whatever may be the interpretation that a
court may place on the N.I.T, the way in which the tender
documents issued by it has been understood and implemented
by the K.P.C. is explained in its "note", which sets out the
general procedure which the K.P.C. was following in regard
to N.I.T.s issued by it from time to time. Para 2.00 of the
"note" makes it clear that the K.P.C. took the view that
para I alone incorporated the "minimum prequalifying/eligi-
bility conditions" and the data called for under para V was
in the nature "general requirements". It further clarifies
that while tenders will be issued only to those who comply
with the prequalifying conditions, any deficiency in the
general requirements will not disqualify the applicant from
receiving tender documents and that data regarding these
requirements could be supplied later. Right or wrong, this
was the way they had understood the standard stipulations
and on the basis of which it had processed the applications
for contracts all along. The minutes show that they did not
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deviate or want to deviate from this established procedure
in regard to this contract, but, on the contrary, decided to
adhere to it even in regard to this contract. They only
decided, in view of the contentions raised by the appellant
that para V should also be treated as part of the prequali-
fying conditions, that they would make it specific and clear
in their future N.I.T.s that only the fulfilment of prequal-
ifying conditions would be mandatory. If a party has been
consistently and bona fide interpreting the standards pre-
scribed by it in a particular manner, we do not think this
Court should interfere though it may be inclined to read or
construe the conditions differently. We are, therefore, of
opinion that the High Court was right in declining to inter-
fere.
Thirdly, the conditions and stipulations in a tender
notice like this have two types of consequences. The first
is that the party issuing the tender has the right to punc-
tiliously and rigidly enforce them. Thus, if a party does
not strictly comply with the requirements of paras III, V or
VI of the N.I.T., it is open to the K.P.C. to decline to
consider the party for the contract and if a party comes to
Court saying that the K.P.C. should be stopped from doing
so, the Court will decline relief. The second consequence,
indicated.by this Court in earlier decisions, is not that
the K.P.C. cannot deviate from these guidelines at all in
any situation but that any deviation, if made, should not
result in arbitrariness or discrimination. It comes in for
application where the non-conformity with, or relaxation
from, the prescribed standards results in some substantial
prejudice or injustice to any of the parties involved or to
public interest in general. For example, in this very case,
the K.P.C. made some changes in the time frame origi-
242
nally prescribed. These changes affected all intending
applicants alike and were not objectionable. In the same
way, changes or relaxations in other directions would be
unobjectionable unless the benefit of those changes or
relaxations were extended to some but denied to others. The
fact that a document was belatedly entertained from one of
the applicants will cause substantial prejudice to another
party who wanted, likewise, an extension of time for filing
a similar certificate or document but was declined the
benefit. It may perhaps be said to cause prejudice also to a
party which can show that it had refrained from applying for
the tender documents only because it thought it would not be
able to produce the document by the time stipulated but
would have applied had it known that the rule was likely to
be relaxed. But neither of these situations is present here.
Sri Vaidhyanathan says that in this case one of the appli-
cants was excluded at the preliminary stage. But it is not
known on what grounds that application was rejected nor has
that party come to Court with any such grievance. The ques-
tion, then, is whether the course adopted by the K.P.C. has
caused any real prejudice to the appellant and other parties
who had already supplied all the documents in time and
sought no extension at all? It is true that the relaxations
of the time schedule in the case of one party does affect
even such a person in the sense that he would otherwise have
had one competitor less. But, we are inclined to agree with
the respondent’s contention that while the rule in Ramana’s
case (supra) will be readily applied by Courts to a case
where a person complains that a departure from the qualifi-
cations has kept him out of the race, injustice is less
apparent where the attempt of the applicant before Court is
only to gain immunity from competition. Assuming for pur-
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poses of argument that there has been a slight deviation
from the terms of the NIT, it has not deprived the appellant
of its right to be considered for the contract; on the other
hand, its tender has received due and full consideration.
If, save for the delay in filing one of the relevant docu-
ments, M.C.C. is also found to be qualified to tender for
the contract, no injustice can be said to have been done to
the appellant by the consideration of its tender side by
side with that of the M.C.C. and in the K.P.C. going in for
a choice of the better on the merits. The appellant had no
doubt also urged that the M.C.C. had no experience in this
line of work and that the appellant was much better quali-
fied for the contract. The comparative merits of the appel-
lant vis-a-vis M.C.C. are, however, a matter for the K.P.C.
(counselled by the T.C.E.) to decide and not for the Courts.
We were, therefore, rightly not called upon to go into this
question.
For the reasons discussed above, this appeal fails and
is dismissed. But we make no order as to costs.
R.N.J. Appeal dis-
missed.
243