Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 2227 of 2008
PETITIONER:
S.S. & Company
RESPONDENT:
Orissa Mining Corporation Limited
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 28/03/2008
BENCH:
H.K.Sema & Aftab Alam
JUDGMENT:
J U D G M E N T
[arising out of SLP (C) NO.12003/2007]
WITH
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 2228 OF 2008
[@ SLP (C) NO.12008/2007]
M/s.Faridabad Gurgaon Minerals ...Appellant
Versus
Orissa Mining Corporation Limited ...Respondent
REPORTABLE
AFTAB ALAM, J.
Leave granted in both the matters.
These two appeals, taken together for the sake of
convenience, question the validity of two different clauses
in the eligibility criteria in a Notice Inviting Tenders (NIT),
issued by the respondent-Orissa Mining Corporation
Limited (hereinafter referred to as \021the Corporation\022). The
appellants in the two appeals make a grievance that the
two clauses were designed to exclude them from
consideration. They first went to the High Court of
Orissa challenging the validity of the clauses and the
rejection of their respective tenders on that basis. M/s.
S.S. & Company challenged the validity of Clause 8(i) of
the NIT in W.P.(C) No.7001/2007, (giving rise to SLP (C)
No.12003/2007). M/s.Faridabad Gurgaon Minerals
challenged Clause 8(vii) of the NIT in W.P. (C)
No.7002/2007, (giving rise to SLP (C) No.12008/2007).
A Division Bench of the High Court by separate
judgments, dated July 12, 2007 dismissed both the writ
petitions. The judgments of the High Court are brought
in appeal before this Court.
The appellants in each of the two appeals are
proprietorship firms owned and controlled by a father
and son duo and the controversy in the two cases relates
to the grant of contract for raising, calibration and
transport of iron ores at Daitari Iron Ore Mines of the
respondent-Corporation.
The Corporation issued NIT No.16 on November 11,
2004 for grant of contract for raising, calibration and
transport of iron ore at Daitari mines for a three year
period. Here, it may be noted that in NIT 16 sub-clauses
(i) and (vi) of Clause 8 relating to eligibility criteria were
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as follows:-
\0238. The eligibility criteria of the tenderers
shall be as follows:-
Only such tenderers who fulfil the
following eligibility criteria shall
participate in the tender:-
(i) The agency must have successfully
executed similar work (as
mentioned in NIT/raising work(s) of
ore/minerals) for a minimum
amount of 30% in case of a single
work or 50% in case of two works of
the value of work shown in column
No.5 of NIT in any one financial year
during the last three years including
2003-04.
(vi) Any agency who is already executing
similar and identical work in any
mine will not be allowed to take up
the second work in the same mine
and such agency will not be allowed
to participate in the tender.
However, if the work of the said
agency is due to end within six
months of the date of issue of this
NIT and there is no possibility that
the work tendered for and the
existing work in hand will operate
concurrently, this restriction will not
be applicable to the concerned
agency.\024
(The above quoted clauses in their
amended form are now the subject matter
of controversy).
In response to NIT 16, dated November 11, 2004,
M/s.Faridabad Gurgaon Minerals (FGM) was the
successful bidder and by letter, dated January 29, 2005
issued by the Corporation it was awarded the work
\021initially for a period of one year for a quantity of 12.00
lakh MT.\022 on rates as indicated in that letter. In that
letter, it was further stipulated that the awardee might
be considered for extension for second and third year
working subject to satisfactory performance in the
preceding year(s) based on the terms and conditions
mentioned in the tender schedule. The first year period
of the contract commenced from February 25, 2005 and
came to end on February 24, 2006. The parties are also
in agreement that the contract was extended for the
second year, i.e., upto February 24, 2007 but as regards
the third year, the two sides are in serious dispute. The
Corporation takes the stand that the appellant was
given work for the third year as well and the work
period would come to end on February 24, 2008. The
appellant FGM, however, maintains that its work in
Daitari Mines under NIT 16 came to end on June 30,
2007.
Even while the contract awarded to FGM under
NIT 16 was subsisting, the Corporation issued NIT
No.65 on July 7, 2006 for grant of another similar
contract for raising, calibration and transport of iron
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ores from Daitari Iron Ore Mines. FGM was not eligible
to take part in the tender process in view of the bar of
clause 8(vi) but M/s.S.S. & Company (SSC), the other
appellant before the court gave its tender for the work
under NIT 65. For some reasons, however, its tender
was not accepted and it took the matter before the
Orissa High Court. During the pendency of the writ
petition, the Corporation cancelled NIT 65 and issued
NIT 75, dated November 18, 2006 for the same work.
This rendered the writ petition filed by SSC infructuous
and it was withdrawn. NIT 75 had a similar fate. The
tender made by SSC was not accepted. The dispute was
taken to the Orissa High Court but the Corporation
cancelled NIT 75 thus rendering the writ petition
infructuous. Here, it may be noted that both NITs 65 &
75 had clauses 8(i) and 8 (vi) exactly in the same terms
as in the earlier NIT 16, dated November 11, 2004
(which have been reproduced above).
After cancellation of NIT 75, the Corporation
issued NIT 85, dated May 25, 2007 which is the
subject-matter of the controversy in the two cases. NIT
85 had the two clauses 8 (i) and 8 (vii) in slightly
amended forms as follows:-
\0238.The eligibility criteria of the tenderers
shall be as follows:
Only such tenderers who fulfil the
following eligibility criteria shall
participate in the tender:-
(i) The agency must have successfully
executed similar work (as mentioned in
NIT/raising work(s) of ore/minerals
excluding Minor Mineral) for a minimum
amount of 30% in case of a single work or
50% in case of two works of the value of
work shown in column No.5 of Sl. No.2 of
NIT in any one financial year during the
last three years including 2006-07.
(vii) The agency who is already executing the
work in a mine of OMC Ltd. will not be
allowed to take up the second work in the
same mine and such Agency will not be
allowed to participate in the tender.\024
It is thus to be seen that in sub-clause (i) the
words \021excluding Minor Mineral\022 was added to the
portion in parenthesis, making it explicitly clear
that raising of Minor Mineral would not be
acceptable as experience in \021similar work\022.
Likewise, in sub-clause (vii), the overlapping
margin of six months was done away with and as a
result the tenderer was required not to have any
pre-existing work in Daitari Mines on the last date
for submission of tender (11.06.2007).
SSC was hit by sub-clause (i) and FGM that
was working in Daitari Mines on the basis of the
previous contract, by sub-clause (vii). Both the
appellants fancied that the two sub-clauses were
specially tailored with the sole intent and purpose
to exclude them from consideration. They,
accordingly, went to the High Court making loud
protests and alleging mala fide.
FGM filed Writ Petition (C) No.7002 of 2007,
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before the High Court stating that the overlapping
margin of six months for a pre-existing contract to
work in the same mine was dropped from NIT 85 of
2007 with the mala fide intent to exclude it from
consideration. It was submitted that on May 25,
2007, the date on which the notice was issued and
on June 11, 2007, the last date for submission of
tenders in response to the notice, the appellant
alone was working in Daitari Mines and the sub-
clause was only aimed to exclude it from
participating in the tender process. It was also
pointed out that previously three successive
notices allowed the margin of six months and there
was no reason to do away with the margin period.
It was further contended that the amendment in
the sub-clause, disallowing anyone with a pre-
existing contract in the same mine to participate in
the tender process was arbitrary as it would serve
no purposes, much less any reasonable one.
The High Court by a well reasoned judgment
and order negatived all contentions raised by the
appellant and dismissed the writ petition. It held
and found that the appellant completely failed to
establish any mala fides and in paragraph 20 of
the judgment observed as follows :
\023Insofar as question of malice or bias is
concerned, no case is made out in the
writ petition. Though some vague
allegations are scattered in the writ
petition in different paragraphs, there is
no serious pleading of malice or mala fide
or bias against the authorities of the
Corporation.\024
On merits, the High Court held that there was a
perfectly good reason for doing away with the six
months\022 margin for a pre-existing contract in the
same mine.
The High Court also took note of the case of
the respondent-Corporation that by communication,
dated February 21, 2007, the period of the
appellant\022s contract was extended upto February
24, 2008. According to the Corporation, the letter
made it clear that the contract was extended for the
third year too and the appellant was awarded the
work of raising 20.00 lakh metric tons of Ore from
February 25, 2007 to February 24, 2008 on the
terms and conditions as provided in the agreement.
Since the appellant would be working the mines till
February 24, 2008, it could not take part in the
tender process even if the six months margin was
still there. The High Court accepted the case of the
respondent-Corporation in this regard and cited it
as one more reason for taking the view that there
was no substance in the appellant\022s grievances.
Mr.Mehta, learned counsel for the appellant
FGM, submitted that the letter dated February 21,
2007 (referred to in the High Court judgment) could
not be taken as extension of the contract for the
third year under NIT 16.
The letter, dated February 21, 2007 was
written in response to the appellant\022s request for
renewal/extension of the contract for the third year
and it conveyed the Corporation\022s decision to award
the work to the appellant for the third year
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extension with effect from February 25, 2007 to
February 24, 2008 under the same terms and
conditions of the agreement. This letter was
followed by another letter, dated May 25, 2007
(which according to Mr.Mehta was overlooked by the
High Court). By this letter the Corporation awarded
the work to the apppellant \021though partly, to be
precise from February 25, 2007 to June 30, 2007\022
indicating the target (of extraction) to be achieved
and the work value as per the rate under the tender
schedule. The letter was described as the \021letter of
intent\022 and it asked the appellant to make certain
deposits by June 30, 2007 for drawing up the
agreement for the third year period of the contract.
In paragraph 7 of the letter it was clearly stipulated
that all other terms and conditions indicated in the
tender schedule would remain unchanged and
would apply mutatis mutandis.
Mr.Mehta submitted that this letter was simply
a work order and neither this letter nor the earlier
one of February 21, 2007 could mean the extension
of the contract under NIT 16 for the third year.
Learned counsel referred to Annexures P-8 and P-9
which are copies of agreement No.4/2005-2006 and
agreement No.4/2006-2007 for the periods
February 25, 2005 to February 24, 2006 and
February 25, 2006 to February 24, 2007
respectively. Learned counsel submitted that unlike
the two previous years no formal agreement was
drawn up for the third year of the contract period
from February 25, 2007 to February 24, 2008 and,
therefore, the High Court was clearly in error in
accepting the claim of the Corporation that the
appellant\022s contract under NIT 16 was extended for
the third year period and it would be subsisting till
February 24, 2008.
In our view, the submission is quite mis-
conceived. The materials on record plainly indicate
that the appellant was trying to find ways to get out
of the contract for the third year period because the
rates under the tender schedule were no longer
profitable to it. We were shown the Corporation\022s
letter, dated June 29, 2007 by which it was pointed
out to the appellant that according to the terms of
the tender the contract was for a period of three
years and it would expire on February 24, 2008. It
was further stated in the letter that the appellant
had badly defaulted on the production target for the
first quarter of 2007-2008 and in terms of clause
1.8 of the tender schedule it was asked to clarify its
final stand and to indicate its production plan for
the remaining tender period i.e. till February 24,
2008. To the Corporation\022s letter, the appellant
gave a highly evasive reply by its letter of July 4,
2007. Alluding to Writ Petition (C) No.7002/2007 it
stated that the matter was sub-judice before the
High Court and on that plea it declined to enter into
any correspondence on the issue raised by the
Corporation. It is to be noted here that the Writ
Petition arose from a controversy relating to the
eligibility clause in NIT 85/2007 and it had nothing
to do with the production targets under NIT
16/2004.
Be that as it may, suffice it to note that on the
appellant\022s request for renewal/extension of the
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contract the Corporation had taken the decision to
award the work in its favour for the third year
extension with effect from February 25, 2007 to
February 24, 2008 (vide letter dated February 21,
2007). In pursuance of the decision the
Corporation further issued the letter dated May 25,
2007 asking the appellant to make the required
deposits by June 30, 2007 for drawing up the
agreement for the third year under the contract. It
is thus manifest that, according to the Corporation,
the appellant-company had the right to work the
mine till February 24, 2008 and on its own showing
it was actually engaged in working the mine till
June 30, 2007.
Here, it is to be noted that sub-clause (vii) of
clause 8 is aimed at preventing the same party from
executing two different works in the same mine at
the same time. The clause does not even refer to a
formal contract and if someone should be working
the mine, may be on the basis of a work order
issued by the Corporation, that in itself might be
sufficient, in certain circumstances to attract clause
8(vii), even in the absence of a formally drawn up
contract. Seen thus, the whole issue as to whether
or not a formal contract for the third year of the
tender period was drawn up in favour of the
appellant would appear to be of no relevance. The
fact of the matter is that the appellant on its own
showing was working the mine upto June 30, 2007.
Further, in view of the decision of the Corporation it
had the right to be there upto February 24, 2008.
Therefore, the High Court was not incorrect in
observing that the appellant would have been
barred from taking part in the tender process even if
the six months margin was retained in the eligibility
clause.
Furthermore, the question whether the
appellant had the right to stay in the mine till
February 24, 2008 or its work there came to end on
June 30, 2007 has relevance only on the issue of
mala fide. Otherwise, it is always open to the
Corporation to issue a tender notice, at any time,
according to its needs, and to introduce an
eligibility clause in the tender notice or to delete
from it any pre-existing one as it might best serve
its purpose. Hence, the controversy with regard to
the outer limit of the appellant\022s presence in the
mine on the basis of the earlier contract under NIT
16 has no relevance sans the allegation of mala fide.
Now, we will proceed to examine the case of
the appellant in this regard. On behalf of the
appellant, it is alleged that the overlapping margin
of six months in clause 8(vii) was dropped with the
sole intent to keep it out of the tender process. In
support of the allegation three arguments are
advanced on its behalf. One is that on May 25,
2007, (when NIT 85 was issued) and on June 11,
2007 (the last date for submission of tender) the
appellant alone was working the mine. The
appellant\022s work in the mine, according to its
assertion would have come to end on June 30,
2007. The eligibility clause was, therefore, so
tailored as to render it disqualified by 19 days. The
second argument is that the change in clause 8(vii)
was made for the first time. In the earlier tender
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notices the same eligibility clause allowed a margin
period of six months but it was done away with in
order to exclude the appellant who had only 19 days
presence left in the mine. The third argument
advanced on behalf of the appellant is that the
deletion of the six months margin is otherwise
completely arbitrary and it serves no reasonable
purpose.
The first two circumstances are woefully
inadequate to bring home the grave charge of mala
fide and the High Court was quite right in holding
that the appellant completely failed to establish its
case in that regard. It is axiomatic that the
Corporation is the best judge of its interests and
needs and it is always open to it to suitably modify
or change the eligibility criteria so as to best serve
its purposes. Whenever a change is introduced in
the eligibility criteria either by introducing some
new conditions or restricting or altogether doing
away with certain previous concessions it might
hurt the interests of someone or the other but for
that reason the change(s) made in the eligibility
criteria cannot be labelled as mala fide. The first
two arguments advanced on behalf of the appellant
thus completely fail to show any mala fide and we
now proceed to examine the third argument
advanced on its behalf.
As noted above, on behalf of the appellant it is
contended that dropping away of the six months
margin does not serve any purpose whatsoever but
it only ensured the appellant\022s exclusion.
On the other hand, the Corporation gives a
very reasonable and valid explanation for the
change made in the eligibility clause. In paragraph
4 of counter-affidavit filed by the Corporation it is
stated as follows :
\023That the above condition was included in
the Tender Notice because if an agency
which is working at a particular rate in a
particular mine is allowed to operate at a
different and higher rate under a different
Contract but in the same mine there is
every possibility of the said agency
claiming payment in respect of the work
done under the earlier contract at rates
stipulated under the new Contract. In
other words, the same agency will operate
in the same mine with two different rates
for similar work i.e. Raising, Calibration
and Transportation of Iron Ore and fines
and there is every possibility of mixing up
the Ores which would be raised and
transported at two different rates.\024
We find that the explanation given by the
Corporation is perfectly reasonable and if any
illustration is needed it is to be found in the facts of
the case in hand itself.
The appellant was given the three years\022
contract under NIT 16 at the following rates :
\023ACCEPTED RATE
Rate per MT in Rs.
S.
No.
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Description of work
1st
Year
2nd
Year
3rd
Year
1.
Drilling, blasting,
excavation, transport of
ROM to Dry Screening
Plant/Crushing &
Screening Plant,
crushing and screening
of ROM to 10-30/10-
40mm CLO and 10mm
fines.
67.01
70.00
75.00
2.
Transport of 10-30/10-
40mm CLO and fines
from Dry Screening
Plant/Crushing and
Screening Plant to
a) Baliparbat
Stockyard
b) Daitari Railway
siding
30.80
35.20
31.80
36.20
33.46
39.18
There was no escalation clause in the contract and
from the record it is manifest that the rates on
which the appellant\022s tender was accepted were no
longer profitable for it, at least in third year, and the
appellant was not at all interested in carrying on the
work for the third year on the rates given in the
tender schedule. In paragraph 2 of the
Corporation\022s counter-affidavit it is stated that the
appellant had completely failed to meet the
production target and it was badly in default. The
relevant extract from paragraph 2 of the affidavit is
as follows :
\023However, the respondent (sic) could not
achieve the target under said contract as
indicated hereunder :
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Period Target Achieved
Quantity Quantity
(Quantity in MT)
1st Year 12.00 lakh 03.75 lakh
2nd Year 20.00 lakh 13.05 lakh
3rd Year 09.22 lakh 01.16 lakh
(Upto 19th July, 07)
Since 19th July, 2007, the Petitioner has
virtually stopped the work on the ground
that the rates are low even though there
is no escalation clause in the Contract
and the Petitioner is bound to complete
the contract at the contracted rates. The
non-achievement of the target by the
Petitioner has resulted in a loss in terms
of sales revenue to the tune of Rs.115.90
crore.\024
In its rejoinder affidavit the appellant has sought to
give explanation for not being able to meet the
targets during the first and the second year of the
contract period. It has not given any explanation
for the third year and has gone on to compare its
performance with another contender M/s.Arun
Udyog. Any comparison with M/s.Arun Udyog is
besides the issue. What is relevant here is that the
appellant was hugely in default and yet it was
insisting on taking part in NIT No.85/2007. In the
aforesaid circumstances the consequences of the
appellant getting the contract under NIT 85/2007
would have been two-fold : one, that it would
operate the same mine at the same time under two
different contracts with widely different rates and
the other, that it would be charging much higher
rates for extraction of ores that it was obliged to
extract at much lower rates under the previous
contract. The Corporation can hardly be faulted for
protecting itself against entering into such a bargain
with anyone.
Thus, on a careful consideration, we are fully
satisfied that doing away with the six months
margin in clause 8(vii) was not arbitrary or
unreasonable, nor it had any mala fide intent.
For the reasons discussed above, we find no
merit in the appellant\022s (FGM\022s) case.The High Court
has taken a perfectly correct view of the matter and
it warrants no interference by this Court.
M/s. S.S.& Company (SSC)
Mr. R.F. Nariman, learned senior counsel
appearing for the SSC also began his submissions
by alleging, that the amendment in clause 8(i) of NIT
85 by insertion of the words \023excluding minor
minerals\024 was mala fide: its sole purpose was to
exclude SSC and to unduly favour another bidder,
namely, M/s. Arun Udyog Ltd. In support of the
plea of mala fide Mr. Nariman advanced three
arguments. Learned counsel stated that though
being the lowest bidder in response to the earlier
two NITs 65 and 75, SSC was not awarded the
work because the concerned officials in the
Corporation wanted to give it to Arun Udyog whose
bids were much higher than the appellant. When
the appellant took the matter arising from NITs 65
and 75 to the High Court, on each occasion the bid
process was aborted in the middle and finally NIT
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85 was issued with the offending amendment. He
next submitted that the amendment made in the
clause was a one time exclusionary measure: it was
not there in the earlier NITs and it is unlikely to find
place in the future NITs. He also submitted that the
impugned amendment in clause 8(i) of NIT 85 was
made at the instance of the Managing Director and
without the prior approval of the Corporation\022s
Board of Directors.
The Corporation strongly denied that the
object of the amendment in clause 8(i) of the NIT
was to disqualify the appellant and thereby help
Arun Udyog in securing the contract. In the counter
affidavit filed in the High Court on its behalf it was
pointed out that the appellant\022s technical bid in
response to NIT75 was rejected because it had no
past experience of similar work as required under
the NIT. Thereafter the price bid of the technically
qualified tenderer, i.e., M/s. Arun Udyog Ltd. was
opened on 18.11.2006. But the Corporation decided
to cancel NIT75 and to issue a fresh NIT so that it
may have more competitive bids for consideration.
M/s. Arun Udyog Ltd. was not given the work under
NIT75 even though the appellant was out of
reckoning.
However, the High Court, even without
referring to the averments made in the
Corporation\022s affidavit, declined to entertain the
appellant\022s allegation that M/s. Arun Udyog Ltd.
was being shown undue favour and the appellant
was sought to be ousted to favour that company
observing as follows:
\023In paragraph 17 of the writ petition there
are some allegations that the opposite
party wants to favour and award the
tender to one M/s.Arun Udyog Limited.
Since M/s.Arun Udyog Limited is not
impleaded in this writ petition the
allegations against it cannot be taken into
consideration.\024
The second and the third allegations in support of
the plea of mala fide were also rebutted by the
Corporation by filing before the High Court an
affidavit sworn by the Addl. General Manager
(Mining). The High Court took note of the averments
made in that affidavit in paragraph 8 of its
judgment as follows:
\023Another affidavit dated 2.7.2007 was
also filed by the Additional General
Manager (Mining) of the Corporation. It
has been stated therein that the
Corporation in a year floats about 120
nos. of tenders to undertake mining and
related activities in different minerals
with widely varying conditions and the
Board of Directors lays down the general
guidelines for preparing the special terms
and conditions for different types of
words. In this connection, the broad
guidelines of special terms and conditions
were approved by the Board of Directors
on 11.6.2007. It has been stated in the
said affidavit that the same is general
guidelines and incorporation of any other
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condition appropriate for different work
can be made. It has also been stated in
the said affidavit that in future in the
eligibility criteria the word \021excluding
minor mineral\022 will be included while
floating NIT if the nature of work
demands for the same. It was also stated
in the affidavit filed by the Managing
Director that Tender Notice No.85 dated
25.5.2007 was issued after its clauses
were recommended by the Managing
Director of the Corporation vide notes
dated 15.5.2007 were duly approved by
the Chairman of OMC.\024
The High Court thus brushed aside the plea of mala
fide raised by the appellant.
We are in complete agreement with the view
taken by the High Court. As a matter of fact, for
rejecting the allegation that the impugned
amendment was introduced in clause 8(i) of the NIT
at the instance of the Managing Director, without
obtaining prior approval of the Board of Directors
we need not even go to the rebuttal affidavit filed by
the Addl. General Manager. The Board of Directors
is the apex policy making body. It may lay down
broad guidelines but it is impossible to conceive
that all the NITs (over a hundred in number) issued
by the Corporation for different purposes every year
should come before it for consideration and
approval of their respective clauses or any
amendment proposed in any clause in any of the
NITs. [We fail to see any good reason why the matter
should not be finalized by the Managing Director or,
depending upon the nature of the contract, even at
some lower level]. The normal work of any
organization or government department would be
seriously hampered if every tendering party would
claim the right to raise objection that one or the
other clause in a NIT or any amendment introduced
in any of its clauses did not have the prior sanction
of the highest policy making body of the
organization. In this case particularly there is no
occasion to go into that question as there is neither
any material to suggest, even remotely, that the
Managing Director harboured any malice against
the appellant nor is the Managing director made a
party to this case in his personal capacity.
This brings us to consider Mr.Nariman\022s
submissions on the substance of the amendment in
the clause in question. Here we may observe, in
fairness to the counsel, that though raising the
allegation of mala fide with some vehemence in the
beginning, as he proceeded with the submissions,
he completely shifted the focus and argued mainly
on the merits of the change introduced in clause 8
(i) of the NIT. He assailed it as wholly unreasonable,
arbitrary and as serving no purpose. Mr. Nariman
contended that the distinction between minor and
major minerals was illusory and hence, the
exclusion of any past experience of working any
minor minerals was quite unreasonable and
arbitrary and it had no relation to the object that
was claimed to be achieved. Learned counsel
elaborately referred to various provisions of the
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Mines and Minerals (Regulation and Development)
Act, 1957 and the Mineral Concession Rules, 1960.
He referred to the long title, the preamble and
section 2 of the Act and submitted that from the
latter provisions of the Act it would be evident that
the control of the Union over the regulation of mines
and minerals was cent per cent. He then referred to
section 3 clauses (a) and (e), sections 4 to 13, 14, 15
and sub-section 3 of Section 15 of the Act. He also
referred to rule 17 of the Rules that provides that
sand was not to be treated as minor mineral when
used for certain specified purposes. In light of the
provisions of the Act and the Rules, learned counsel
submitted that the distinction between major and
minor minerals did not depend upon hardness or
softness or the technology of excavation. Illustrating
the point learned counsel submitted that quartz and
granite though, minor minerals being so notified
under Section 3(e) of the Act, are very hard
substances and on the other hand gypsum, talc and
china clay, though major minerals are relatively
much softer substances. Further referring to rule
17, learned counsel submitted that whether a
substance was major mineral or minor mineral
depended on its end user. In case, sand was used
for any of the purposes specified in rule 17 of the
Mineral Concessions Rules it would qualify as major
mineral and in that event any past experience in
excavating/lifting sand would not be hit by the
impugned exclusionary amendment in clause 8(i) of
the NIT.
Mr. Nariman also referred to the decision of
this Court in D.K. Trivedi & Sons & Ors. Vs. State
of Gujarat & Ors. [1996 Suppl. SCC 20 paras 29
and 30]. He submitted that in view of the statutory
scheme of the Act as explained in the decision in
D.K.Trivedi the distinction sought to be made
between major and minor minerals and the
exclusion of any past experience in the excavation of
minor mineral was wholly untenable and
unfounded.
Mr. Nariman also cited before us some
decisions dealing with the scope of judicial review in
matters of grant of contract by public bodies but we
see no need to mention those decisions here.
Mr. P.P.Rao and Dr. R.Dhawan, senior
advocates appearing for the Corporation in the two
cases strongly refuted the submissions made on
behalf of the appellant. Mr. Rao submitted that in
light of the past experience the Corporation felt the
need to introduce the amendment as a measure of
quality control. He referred to the Corporation\022s
affidavit filed before the High Court where it is
stated:
\023Iron ore being too hard, drilling and
blasting and strict quality control
measures will be essential which cannot
be compared with mining of \023minor
minerals\024. To bring required expertise for
undertaking efficient iron ore mining, the
above change in eligibility criteria has
been made.\024
Mr. Rao further submitted that the amendment was
fully in accord with the guidelines laid down by the
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Board of Directors and it was wrong to say that it
was introduced at the instance of the Managing
Director. In support of the submission he referred to
several documents but it is not necessary to advert
to them in view of the discussions made above.
Mr. Rao also submitted that the appellant\022s
turn over for the past years was far below the
requirement of the NIT and on that score also the
appellant was not eligible to take part in the bid.
Dr. Dhawan submitted that as in the case of
FGM, once the plea of mala fide is held to be
unfounded, practically nothing remains of the
appellant\022s challenge to the substance of the
amendment. Learned counsel controverted the
submission made on behalf of the appellant and
contended that the distinction between minor and
major minerals is a statutory distinction of far
reaching significance. He submitted that both the
Statute and case law recognized the differences
between minor and major minerals. He referred to
paragraph 22 of the decision in D.K. Trivedi where it
was observed as follows:
\023\005\005..It is pertinent to note that the term
\023minor minerals\024 came to be defined in a
statute for the first time by clause (e) of
Section 3 of the 1957 Act. In addition to
the minor minerals mentioned in the said
clause (e), boulder; shingle; chalcedony
pebbles used for ball mill purposes only;
limeshell, kankar and limestone used in
kilns for manufacture of lime used as
building material; murrum; brick-earth;
Fuller\022s earth; bentonite; road metal; reh-
matti; slate and shale when used as,
building material; marble; stone used for
making household utensils; quartzite and
sandstone when used for purposes of
building or for making road metal and
household utensils; and saltpetre, have
been declared to be minor minerals by
various notifications issued by the
Central Government\005..\024
He also referred to paragraph 33 of the decision
where it was observed as follows:
\023\005\005..As seen from the definition of minor
minerals given in clause (e) of Section 3,
they are minerals which are mostly used
in local areas and for local purposes while
minerals other than minor minerals are
those which are necessary for industrial
development on a national scale and for
the economy of the country. That is why
matters relating to minor minerals have
been left by Parliament to the State
Governments while reserving matters
relating to minerals other than minor
minerals to the Central Government.
Sections 13, 14 and 15 fall in the group
of sections which is headed \023Rules for
regulating the grant of prospecting
licenses and mining leases\024. These three
sections have to be read together\005\005.\024
(Emphasis added)
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In light of the above, Dr. Dhawan submitted that
there is a fundamental difference between minor
and major minerals in regard to their use. Minor
minerals like sand were extracted and consumed
locally. On the other hand, major minerals were
essential for the industrial development and the
economic growth of the country. This vast difference
in their purpose and use was naturally reflected in
their relative importance and the nature of mining.
Learned counsel submitted that the importance of
iron ore could not be over-stated. The production
and consumption of steel (the source of which is
iron ore) is one of the indices of economic growth of
a country. Iron ore, apart from being required for
production of iron and steel at the national level,
was also exported to international markets. Its
extraction, therefore, apart from other things,
requires to be carried out under far stricter quality
control measures. It would be, therefore, wholly
inappropriate to compare the mining of iron ore
with the lifting and excavation of sand or other
minor minerals.
We find substance in Dr. Dhawan\022s
submission and we are unable to accept the
arguments advanced on behalf of the appellant that
any distinction between minor and major minerals
was illusory and the amendment in the clause in
question, based on the distinction between the two,
was arbitrary and did not serve any purpose.
We have noted the submissions of the two
sides and have also said that on the issue whether
there are any differences between minor and major
minerals we are inclined to accept the position
taken by Dr. Dhawan. But we think that in the
context of the case an elaborate analysis of the
provisions of the MM (R&D) Act and Mineral
Concession Rules to bring out the distinction
between minor and major minerals is quite
misconceived. We think it would be a mistake to see
the NIT through the prism of the Act and the Rules.
The NIT should not be viewed in the highly pedantic
and legalistic manner as suggested by Mr. Nariman
but it should be read and understood for what it is.
It is a notice issued by the Corporation which is
engaged in the business of mining. The Corporation
owns a number of mines and wishes to give the
work of raising, calibration and transport of iron
ores from its mines on contract to an outside
agency. It would be truism to say that the
Corporation knows best the exact nature of its work
and it is the best judge to say what is and what is
not comparable to it. The expression \023excluding
minor minerals\024 used in the eligibility must,
therefore, be viewed as commonly understood in the
mining/industrial and commercial world. What the
clause intends to convey is that the extraction of
iron ore requires certain degree of technical
expertise and competence and in order to have the
required degree of competence the bidder must have
some past experience of similar kind of work,
clarifying further that working of minor minerals
would not be accepted as qualifying
experience/sufficient expertise for the purpose of
the NIT. The distinction between minor and major
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minerals is well-known to the mining/industrial
and commercial world and anyone engaged in the
business would know what the eligibility clause in
the NIT demands without referring to the statute
and case law and any abstruse arguments based
thereon.
There is yet another reason, weightier than the
previous ones, for rejecting the appellant\022s challenge
to the amendment made in the eligibility clause. A
grievance against the amendment, either based on
the plea of mala fide or on the substance of the
amendment can only be raised by someone whose
position gets adversely affected by the amendment.
The basic question therefore is how far the
appellant can be said to be affected by the
amendment in actual terms. Clause 8(i) is simply
the well known and the well established experience
clause. In its unamended form as contained in NITs
65 and 75 it required the bidder to have some past
experience of the work under contract. In other
words, the bidder was required to have successfully
executed in the past some work similar in nature to
the one being the subject matter of the contract. In
NIT 85, which is for raising, calibration and
transport of iron ore the clause in question
stipulated that the tenderer must have past
experience of similar work and made it further clear
that working of minor mineral would not be
accepted as similar in nature to the work under the
NIT. It is thus manifest that the insertion of the
words \023exclude mine and mineral\024 does not bring
about any alteration or change in the basic
experience clause. It simply makes it clear and
explicit that the working of any minor mineral is not
the same as raising, calibration and transport of
iron ore at Daitari Mines. It may be noted here that
in the affidavit filed before the High Court on behalf
of the Corporation it was stated as follows:
\023Some changes in the eligibility criteria of
NIT No.85 in comparison to NIT No.75
have been approved. In clause 3(i)
\023excluding minor minerals\024 has been
added in the 2nd line of the clause after
the word minerals. Iron ore being too
hard, drilling and blasting and strict
quality control measures will be essential
which cannot be compared with mining of
\023minor minerals\024. To bring required
expertise for undertaking efficient iron ore
mining, the above change in eligibility
criteria has been made.\024
Let us now examine how far the petitioner SSC
can feel aggrieved by what it describes as
amendment in the clause in question. The
appellant\022s own statement in regard to its
experience is to be found at Annexure P-1 in which
it gives description of five different kinds of work.
The works at Sl.Nos.1 and 2 are described as
follows:
\023Drilling, Blasting, Excavation, Loading
and transportation of Sand and Lumps
deploying HEMM from the leasehold area
of Faridabad Yamuna Sand Mines of M/s.
S.S. & Company (M/s. SSC)\024.
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The other three works related to handling of
materials like Rock Phosphate, Gypsum, Copper
Concentrate, flux, slag and material handling work
at Zinc Smelter Plant.
On the basis of the appellant\022s own statement
submitted along with the tender documents, the
Technical Committee in its report dated June 11,
2007, noted as follows :
\023M/s.S.S.& Co. has submitted experience
certificate for working in Yamuna Sand
Quarry in the district of Faridabad and
other minor minerals including handling
in the Plant. As per the eligibility criteria
of NIT under clause 8(i) the experience of
the agency is not at par with the
eligibility of NIT.\024
We are unable to see any error much less any
unreasonableness in the view taken by the
Technical Committee and in rejecting the
appellant\022s tender on that basis. It does not require
much imagination to hold that the work of lifting of
sand from a riverbed or a sand quarry is not similar
in nature to the work of raising, calibration and
transport of iron ore.
It is significant to note here that the
appellant\022s tender in response to NIT75 that did not
contain the expressions \023excluding minor mineral\024
was also rejected at the stage of technical bid since
it did not satisfy the eligibility clause of having
previously done some work similar in nature to the
work under contract.
It is thus evident to us that the appellant-SSC
did not satisfy the eligibility criteria with regard to
past experience even in terms of the unamended
clause 8(i). Had the appellant been qualified in
terms of the unamended clause and faced exclusion
only as a result of the amendment in the criterion it
might have been open to it to assail the introduction
of the amendment. But that is not the case here. As
noted above, the appellant was liable to be
excluded, and was in fact excluded, even under the
unamended clause 8(i) and, therefore, all arguments
either based on mala fide or on the substance of the
amendment lose all their relevance.
Thus on a careful consideration of all the
materials produced before the court and the
submissions advanced by the two sides we find no
merit in the case of SSC either.
Both the appeals are accordingly rejected but
with no order as to costs.