Full Judgment Text
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CASE NO.:
Appeal (civil) 2515 of 2006
PETITIONER:
Reliance Airport Developers Pvt. Ltd
RESPONDENT:
Airports Authority of India and Ors
DATE OF JUDGMENT: 07/11/2006
BENCH:
ARIJIT PASAYAT
JUDGMENT:
JUDGEMENT
ARIJIT PASAYAT, J.
Challenge in this appeal is to the judgment of a Division
Bench of the Delhi High Court. Decision taken by a group of
Ministers in a matter of joint venture partnership as a part of
the privatization policy of the Government of India was
assailed before the High Court.
According to the appellant, the project has to be
grounded because of several major defects which would render
the projects’ take off disastrous. The respondents on the other
hand contend that minor technical flaws, if any, have been
rectified before the ultimate decision was taken and the project
has been rightly held to be in a fit condition to take off.
The key players in this dispute are M/s Reliance Airports
Developers Pvt. Ltd. (in short ’RAL’), Airports Authority of India
(in short ’AAI’), Government of India (in short ’GOI’), GMR
Infrastructures Ltd. (in short ’GMR’), GVK Industries Ltd. (in
short ’GVK’).
Background facts sans unnecessary details are as
follows:
As a part of the GOI’s avowed policy of privatization of
strategic national assets, the first step appears to be
privatization of two airports i.e. Mumbai and Delhi on a joint
venture basis. In March, 2003 AAI initiated process to
consider modernization of Delhi and Mumbai Airports on the
basis of an earlier decision taken on January 12, 2000 by the
Union Cabinet relating to re-structuring of airports of AAI
through long term leasing route. On 11.9.2003 the GOI
approved restructuring of airports of Mumbai and Delhi
through joint venture (shortly called ’JV’) route and
constituted Empowered Group of Ministers (in short ’EGOM’)
to decide the detailed modalities including design parameters,
bid evaluation criteria etc. based on which JV partners were to
be selected. It was required to submit the final proposal for
Government’s approval. An Inter Ministerial Group (in short
’IMG’) was set up to assist EGOM for re-structuring of two
airports. The same was set up under the Chairmanship of
Additional Secretary-cum-Financial Adviser of Ministry of Civil
Aviation. Subsequently, on 15.6.2004, EGOM was re-
constituted under the Chairmanship of Minister of Defence.
On 12.10.2004 IMG was re-constituted under the
Chairmanship of Secretary, Ministry of Civil Aviation. On the
basis of recommendations made by IMG, EGOM approved
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appointment of Global Technical Adviser, Legal Consultant
and Financial Consultant (called GTA, LC & FC in short
respectively). They were Airport Planning Ply Ltd., Amarchand,
Mangaldas & Suresh A. Shroff & Co. and ABN AMRO Asia
Corporate Finance (I) Pvt. Ltd (in short Airplan, AMSC and
ABN AMRO respectively). The Consultants prepared the
"Invitation To Register An Expression of Interest" (shortly
called ’ITREOI’) and the same was endorsed by IMG.
Subsequently, EGOM approved the same. On 17.2.2004,
ITREOI was issued for the two airports. Request for proposal
was routed by AAI and the bidders were invited to bid on
certain basis and pattern. The tendering process involved two
tiers; i.e. an Expression Cum Request for Qualification (in
short ’ECRQ’) and a Request for Proposal (in short ’RFP’). At
the RFP stage, evaluation was carried out in four stages. The
first two stages involved verification in the nature of
mandatory norms. The third stage was technical evaluation
stage and the final stage was financial evaluation stage. On
15.2.2005, EGOM finalized and approved key principles of
RFP and draft transaction documents. The RFP documents
were issued on 1.4.2005.
Certain changes to the draft transaction documents were
approved by EGOM. Before such approval, RFP documents of
the two airports were forwarded to the bidders. On 30.8.2005
final transaction documents were forwarded to the bidders.
The deadline for submissions of bids was fixed as 14.9.2005.
There were in fact six bidders for Delhi and five bidders for
Mumbai. On 19.9.2005, a meeting of IMG was held relating to
methodology for evaluation of offers and evaluation criteria in
RFP documents. IMG decided that bid evaluation on all
parameters shall be carried out by a composite team of GTA,
LC and FC. IMG also decided to set up a review committee to
review the evaluation carried out by GTA, LC and FC. The
same was also described as an "Evaluation Committee" (in
short ’EC’).
The technical bids were opened on 22.9.2005. On
10.10.2005 Government Review Committee (in short ’GRC’)
was constituted to undertake an independent review of
evaluation report of bids of two airports and re-structuring
process prepared by the Evaluation Committee/Advisers. The
Consultants submitted their evaluation report. GRC held its
meeting on 23.11.2005 and 24.11.2005 to review the
Consultants’ Evaluation Reports. GRC endorsed the views
expressed in the Consultants’ Evaluation Reports. Certain
queries were raised by members of the GRC and the
Consultants clarified the position so far as the queries are
concerned. In the Evaluation Report a list of evaluation criteria
where a different approach has been adopted by the
Consultants was indicated. On 1.12.2005, GRC submitted its
report to IMG. In the meeting of IMG held on 2.12.2005
reports of Consultants and GRC were placed. Consultants
made a representation to the IMG. The majority members felt
that the terms of the RFP had been adhered to and there had
been sufficient transparency in the process. It is to be noted
that one of the members who was the member of the Planning
Commission had recorded his personal opinion. Majority of the
members of the Committee felt that if the entire bid process
was transparent and GRC was satisfied with the process it
would not be necessary to go by the advise of the member of
the Planning Commission and the final decision should be left
to the EGOM. The matter was placed before the EGOM on
5.12.2005. EGOM directed IMG to undertake an independent
review of the Consultants’ evaluation with GRC’s assistance
and give a clear recommendation to EGOM. It was noted that
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the bid documents could be made available to the IMG and
they could seek clarification from the Consultants. It was felt
that there was no need for change in the evaluation criteria as
stipulated in the RFP documents. It was stipulated that IMG
would not undertake any fresh evaluation or allocate marks
for any of the criteria and finally the mandate of IMG will be
restricted to ascertain as to whether it is in agreement or
otherwise with the assessment/findings and allocation of
marks across various criteria in respect of various bids. IMG
was required to complete the exercise in two weeks. On
6.12.2005 a meeting of the IMG was held. Bid documents were
shown to the members of the IMG. Another meeting was held
on 9.12.2005 and the Consultants were directed to re-work
the marks matrix by strict adherence to RFP norms. On four
days i.e. 12th, 13th, 14th and 16th December, 2005 meeting of
IMG was held. In the meeting queries were raised by IMG
members as to whether evaluation was consistent with the
RFP evaluation criteria and the answers given by the
Consultants. On 20.12.2005 RAL wrote to the Chairman,
EGOM criticizing the SKYTRAX Report and denying that
Consultants acted in an improper/biased manner or that the
technical evaluation conducted by the Consultants was
flawed. RAL wrote another letter on the same day to the EGOM
pointing out its alliance with international players.
On 21.12.2005 EGOM met to consider the views of the
IMG. It decided that a Committee of Secretaries (in short
’COS’) should be set up to advise the EGOM on all issues
relating to the restructuring and modernization of the two
airports. The COS was required to consider and recommend
the selection of appropriate JV bidders for executing the works
related thereto. The COS was set up by order dated
21.12.2005 to assist the EGOM. It met and decided to set up
two members Committee consisting of Mr. Sreedharan & Mr.
Sevadasan (hereinafter described as ’Sreedharan Committee’
or Group of Eminent Technical Experts (in short ’GETE’) to
recommend to the COS on the overall validation of the
evaluation process including calibration of the qualifying cut
off and sensitivity analysis. GETE was accordingly appointed
to review the Consultants’ Evaluation Report (in short ’CER’)
on 27.12.2005. RAL wrote to the Ministry of Civil Aviation (in
short ’MCA’) asking that copies of its letters dated 20.12.2005
be forwarded to the GETE.
ABN AMRO wrote a letter regarding clarification sought
by MCA on determination of bids attached to the criteria used
in the technical prequalification of bidders for the two airports.
GETE submitted its report on 7.1.2006. A meeting of the COS
was held on 9.1.2006. On 12.1.2006 a meeting of EGOM was
held where GETE’s report was considered. EGOM felt that the
GETE had apparently done the evaluation of all the bidders as
is evident from the conclusion drawn about status of the other
bidders in para 4.8 of its report. No details of revaluation were
available about the other bidders, as have been provided in
respect of RAL. EGOM therefore decided that in order to reach
a definite conclusion, GETE was to be requested to do a
similar revaluation exercise in respect of other bidders.
Supplementary report of GETE was submitted on 17.1.2006.
On 23.1.2006 RAL Airport Operator wrote to the GOI asserting
that it had the requisite qualification. On 24.1.2006 meeting of
EGOM was held and several decisions were taken. On
28.1.2006 RAL wrote to GOI asking it to adhere to the RFP
norms. On 30.1.2006 AAI wrote to the bidders informing them
that the final bids were to be opened on January 31, 2006.
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On 31.1.2006 Executive Director of AAI informed RAL
that GMR would be given a choice of the two airports and
whichever airport it chooses, it would be required to match the
higher financial bid. On that day itself, RAL wrote to the AAI
alleging change of procedure and protesting against the same.
Later on, the financial bids were opened that day. A report was
submitted by the Committee opening the financial bids. RAL
again wrote to the members of the EGOM alleging illegalities in
consideration of the bids. On the next day again RAL wrote to
the members of the EGOM regarding the events that had
transpired during the opening of bids. AAI wrote to RAL setting
out the procedure followed while opening and evaluating the
financial bids.
Writ Petition was filed by RAL before the Delhi High
Court on 2.2.2006. On 4.2.2006 GOI informed GMR and GVK
that they have been selected as successful bidders for
undertaking the restructuring and modernization of the Delhi
and Mumbai airports respectively and required them to
furnish enhanced bid bonds guarantees for Rs.500 crores.
Both GMR and GVK furnished their bid bonds guarantees of
Rs.500 crores each on 6.2.2006 and 8.2.2006.
On 1.3.2006 Special Purpose Vehicle (in short ’SPV’) was
formed for Delhi while on the next day SPV was formed for the
Mumbai airport. On 4.4.2006 Operations Management and
Development Agreement (in short OMDA’) was signed by the
concerned parties. At this stage, it would be appropriate to
take note of what has been described as OMDA. Shareholders
agreement with GMR and GVK was signed. Consequently 26%
shares in SPV were allotted to AAI and 74% shares allotted to
GMR. Similarly, 26% shares in SPV were allotted to AAI and
74% shares allotted to GVK.
By the impugned order, RAL’s writ petition before the
Delhi High Court was dismissed by order dated 21.4.2006.
The primary stand of the appellant is that the EGOM/
GOI should have accepted the recommendations of the EC and
should not have asked the GETE to make further examination.
It is submitted that GETE did not examine the queries relating
to GMR as raised by the IMG and the reduction of technical
qualification from 80% to 50% was impermissible. It is also
submitted that the appointment of GETE itself was illegal and
unauthorized. The High Court proceeded on the basis as if
EGOM had absolute discretion in the matter of choosing the
modalities. It is also submitted that the uniform pattern of
assessment has not been done and while reducing the marks
so far as the appellant is concerned, similar procedure has not
been adopted so far as GMR and GVK are concerned. In the
initial assessment, only the GMR and the appellant had
crossed the bench mark. If in respect of one airport GMR was
given the option of matching the financial bid of the appellant,
in respect of the other airport similar option should have been
given to the appellant who was at the relevant point of time
and even now willing to match the financial bid of GVK. There
was no justification for reduction of standard from 80% to
50%, particularly when at all stages EGOM had emphasized
that there shall not be any compromise with quality. The
argument that any bidder who had crossed the mandatory
requirement stage would be competent to execute the contract
is completely erroneous since in that case there was no need
to fix the high bench mark of 80%. Appellant had scored over
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80% on the development side and fell short of merely 6% less
than 80% on the management side. The award of contract to
the third ranked bidder i.e. GVK who had scored only 59% on
the development side and whose bid had been adversely
commented upon by all committees is against public interest.
The bench mark of 80% had been approved by the EGOM. The
EC expressly recommended against lowering the bench mark
and the EGOM in its meeting on 5.12.2005 had also wanted
the bench mark to remain at 80%. GETE had also not
recommended lowering of the bench mark.
The constitution of GETE was without jurisdiction as it
was outside the RFP. Allegations made by the respondents in
the arguments that EC was biased are not factually correct.
As noted above, GETE was not competent to deal with the
issues relating to airports and, therefore, it was not a
competent body to express any view. GETE’s evaluation of
appellant’s bid was wrong and it should not have interfered
with EC’s evaluation. Different weightages were justified in
case for criteria 1.2.2 and 1.2.3 and also in respect of criteria
3.1.1 and 3.1.2. GETE’s view as regards non aeronautical
revenue being less than 40% is not correct. Its view about the
lack of experience of operating in a non-OECD country is also
erroneous. The marking system for absorption of AAI
employees as done in the case of the appellant has been
wrongly interfered with.
Appellant has contended that EC has given marks on the
basis of RFP parameters. According to it, the parameters were
fixed by the GOI or the EC. The question is not of allotting
marks, the real issue is whether right parameters have been
applied. It has been emphasized that the other Committees
consisted of mainly bureaucrats or persons with inadequate
technical knowledge, only the EC was an expert body and,
therefore, its view had to be given primacy.
GMR had qualified in both the bids. Appellant has
contended that the option of choosing one of the airports
should not have been given to GMR but it should have been
allotted the Mumbai airport because of its superior quality of
bid in respect of the said airport. By giving option to choose
one of the airports, the fate of the appellant was sealed
because in the other, it had fallen below the bench mark.
Though in one case, appellant’s bid was above the bench mark
and its bid was the best amongst those who were below the
bench mark in respect of the other airport, it has not been
able to get any of the airports.
Despite the specific mandate GETE had not examined the
queries qua the other bidders. Objective criteria assessment
which was the foundation for GETE’s decision has no basis. In
fact GETE itself had indicated that the assessment was
subjective in totality. By making an artificial distinction
between the subjective and objective queries, the real essence
has been lost and unacceptable yardsticks have been applied.
Queries made by members of the Review Committee,
comments of the EC, comments of the Planning Commission’s
representatives and the various queries raised by IMG have
been either lightly brushed aside or not considered by the
GETE. The decision for lowering of technical standard was
arbitrary. EGOM should have examined the conflicting reports
given by the experts. Since no reason has been given by EGOM
to adopt the report of the GETE by giving its preference over
the report of EC, same cannot be maintained. Report of GETE
was not independently examined. By reducing the bench
mark, the zone of consideration was enlarged and it was
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against public interest. Since different yardsticks have been
adopted and a partisan approach has been adopted, the
decision is clearly unsustainable and is amenable to judicial
review. Selective examination by GETE is not bona fide though
no personal allegation of mala fide is made against the
members of GETE. Adoption of technical criteria for one
airport and financial criteria for the other is not in accordance
with law.
In response, learned counsel for the GMR, GVK, Union of
India and the AAI have submitted that the appellant is trying
to enlarge the scope of judicial review. It is not a case of non
existence of power. It essentially relates to exercise of power.
The appellant is trying to contend that the report of EC was
sacrosanct and GETE’s report was not to be accepted. GETE
has formed its view as to how the allotment of marks made by
EC was clearly not in line with the prescription made in the
RFP. Marks have been allotted by EC on irrational basis and
even marks had been awarded when no marks were to be
awarded. Even the EC while commenting upon the
weaknesses of the airport development plan of GMR itself had
said that the weaknesses would be sorted out at the stage
when the master plan is drawn up. It is pointed out that EC
on whose evaluation appellant has led great stress found only
one flaw with the plan given by GVK i.e. lack of re-use of
existing facilities and the high cost limits to assess it as
medium. This is really a non-factor, according to learned
counsel for GVK, because plan envisages fresh creation of
assets at Mumbai airport whose existing buildings are out-
dated. It is characterized as a lack of reuse as well as involving
high costs. It is pointed out that GVK’s development plan took
note of much larger amount of fresh development of assets
considering that the existing buildings are out-dated. It has
also considered that large sum of money for rehabilitation of
the slum dwellers is required as they would have to be re-
housed if a realistic plan for expansion of facilities and
runways was to be drawn up. The development in each of the
phases of the 20 years of projected development was also a
relevant factor. There was departure by EC from the norms in
various cases without good reasons. Where there is such
departure it shows arbitrariness. This is a case which relates
to judicial review of the exercise of power and not the existence
of power.
It is pointed out that the basic fallacy in the argument of
the appellant is its stress on EC being the only advisor to
assist the EGOM in arriving at a decision. It is submitted that
as rightly observed by the High Court, it was a part of multi-
tier decision making process and appointment of GETE is a
part of the process. It is pointed out that though the appellant
has challenged the constitution of GETE, it, in uncertain
terms, asked the GETE to assess the materials placed before it
by the appellant. The EGOM has given reasons for the
appointment of GETE.
The EC was not designated in the RFP as an external
expert agency on whose evaluation the Government was
obliged to act. In fact at the first stage itself GRC was
constituted to review the evaluation done by EC. The report of
EC had no binding effect on the IMG much less the EGOM.
The AAI required permission from the Cabinet for privatization
of airports. The ultimate decision making authority was
EGOM. However, since the decision making process involved
inputs from series of ’in house’ committees, this creation of
GETE is in fact a part of ’in house mechanism’. This itself is
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clear from the fact that several Committees were constituted
like EC, GRC, IMG and COS. In view of the existence of
various tiers in the decision making process, EGOM who has
delegated the power of Cabinet did not exceed the powers by
setting up the committees. If the appellant’s submission is
accepted, even the GRC, IMG and COS being not the
committees mentioned specifically in the RFP, their
constitution would be vulnerable. This is certainly not a case
of the appellant and these were not external agencies. These
committees form part of the ’in-house mechanism’ for
evaluation of the bids. Their reports were to be used as inputs
in the final decision making process and thus imparted a great
deal of transparency. Judicial review cannot involve evaluation
of the comparative merits.
It has also been emphasized that the various discussions
in the Committees established beyond doubt that the Union of
India wanted a transparent process to be adopted considering
the fact that this was a first case of private JV. It enabled the
EGOM to take note of various view points and take the final
decision. These discussions strengthened the decision making
process and did not weaken it as contended by the appellant.
It has also been submitted that the conduct of the appellant is
itself contrary to the norms fixed by the RFP. Though it was
specifically indicated that there shall not be any contract with
the authorities connected with the decision making process,
several times appellant wrote letters relating to matters which
were under consideration. It baffles one as to how the
appellant had knowledge as to what had transpired in the
meetings. It was conveniently mentioned that the source of
appellant’s knowledge was "newspapers’ reports". The
appellant therefore has clearly violated the norms fixed by RFP
and on that score alone, its bid should have been kept out of
consideration. A person who seeks relief on equitable ground
should have clean conduct and surreptitious methods adopted
by it cannot be condoned and this, according to learned
counsel for the respondents, is an additional factor to dismiss
the appeal filed by the appellant.
It appears that whatever has been discussed in the
various meetings apparently found its way outside. Who was
responsible for the leak is not very clear but it is not a very
healthy trend. The meetings were highly confidential and
sensitive in nature dealing with global tenders.
Various clauses of RFP which have relevance read as
follows:
1 INTRODUCTION
1.1 Purpose of this RFP
The purpose of this Document is to:
\025 Provide an overview of the process for Stage 2 of the
restructuring and modernization of Mumbai Airport
Transaction;
\025 Specify the terms and procedures governing the
transaction process for selecting Joint Venture Partners
and for the Joint Venture Company (JVC) to be
incorporated for the Airport;
\025 Specify the requirements for the preparation and
lodgement of binding offers and
\025 Outline the approach that will be used in evaluating
Binding Offers.
Terms used in this RFP are defined in the Glossary section
of this RFP.
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1.2 Other Documentation and Information
In addition to this RFP, Pre Qualified Bidders (PQB) will be
issued the following documentation and material:
\025 An Information Memorandum for the Airport;
\025 Draft Transaction Documents for the Airport (open for
discussions before finalising the terms and conditions);
\025 Specialist Reports and AAI data substantially in CD ROM
form with some documents in hard copy form for the
Airport.
AAI may choose to update, vary or add to all or some of this
information (including this RFP) at any time during the
Transaction process.
A separate document will be provided to PQB outlining the
times, dates and venues of their scheduled meetings with
the AAI, the Airport management team and parties of the
GTT, as relevant and necessary.
1.3 Confidentiality
PQB receiving this RFP must have completed and returned
the required, duly executed Confidentiality Deed.
PQB are reminded that information provided in this RFP
and the accompanying documentation package is covered
by the terms of the Confidentiality Deed and the Disclaimer
set out herein. PQB are also reminded that they are not to
make any public statements about the Transaction process
or their participation in it.
1.4 The Transaction
AAI is offering a long term Operations, Management and
Development Agreement to suitably qualified, experienced
and resourced parties to design, construct, operate,
maintain, upgrade, modernize, finance, manage and develop
the Airport. The Successful Bidder will participate in a Joint
Venture Company with the AAI (and other GOI public sector
entities) and such JVC shall be awarded the right to
operate, manage and develop the Airport.
An overview of the indicative Transaction structure is set
out in Appendix G.
The key features of the Transaction are as follows:
\025 the Operations, Management and Development Agreement
will be for an initial period of 30 years with the JVC having
the right to extend this by a further 30 years, in
accordance with the terms and conditions of the
Transaction Documents.
\025 the Successful Bidder will have an initial 74% equity
interest and AAI, along with other GOI Public Sector
Entities, will have 26% equity interest in the JVC.
\025 AAI will endeavor to contribute (without any binding
commitment) equity funds in cash in proportion to its
equity share to assist the JVC in funding working capital
and major developments upto a cap of Rs.5000 million
(Rupees five thousand million) for the Airport. It is AAI’s
intention to maintain 26% equity share capital in the JVC.
\025 If AAI along with other GOI Public Sector Entities does not
wish to contribute to further equity calls, the JV Partners
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will contribute the additional equity and the equity
interest, of AAI and other GOI Public Sector Entities will be
correspondingly reduced but the voting rights with regard
to reserved board and shareholder matters (as contained
in the Shareholders Agreement) will be preserved in the
manner set forth in the Shareholders Agreement.
\025 JVC will have an Employee Arrangement for a period of
three years whereby AAI employees (other than those
pertaining to ATC and CNS departments) posted at the
Airport on Effective Date continue to provide their services
at the Airport. Further the JVC will be required, during the
three years period to make offers of employment in order
to absorb a minimum of 40% (or such higher percentage
as committed by the Bidder) of the existing AAI employees
working at the Airport excepting those engaged in
Communication Navigation Surveillance (CNS), Air Traffic
Management (ATM), Security, as reduced for retirements,
resignations, transfers and death. Employment offers can
be made at any time during this Employee Arrangement
Period but in no event later than three (3) months prior to
the end date of the Employee Arrangement Period. At the
end of this Employee Arrangement Period those employees
who do not take up the employment offers or who are not
made such an employment offer will return to the services
of AAI. Additional weightage is provided in the evaluation
process to Bidders who commit to make offers of
employment in order to absorb more than the minimum
level of 40%. There will be a financial penalty, as set out in
the OMDA, for any shortfall between the 40% or such
higher nominated percentage and the result actually
achieved.
\025 Due to the public and economic importance of the Airport
a State Support Agreement will be entered into between the
JVC and GOI. The State Support Agreement will address
matters such as principles of economic regulation,
approvals, assistance with licensing and coordination with
government agencies. Under the State Support Agreement,
the JVC for a specific Airport will have a "Right of First
Refusal (ROFR)" with regard to the second airport in the
vicinity (except in the case of a proposed new airport in/for
Pune) on the basis of a competitive bidding process, in
which the JVC can also participate. In the event, the JVC is
not the successful bidder, the JVC will have the ROFR by
matching the first ranked bid in terms of the selection
criteria for the second airport, provided the JVC has
satisfactory performance without any material default at the
time of exercising the ROFR.
It is the endeavour of the AAI/GOI that a State
Government Support Agreement will be entered into with
the State Government of Maharashtra wherein the said
State Government will provide assistance on a best
endeavour basis on dealing with encroachments,
reservation of land for settlement of encroachments and
assistance in making land available if required for
aeronautical purposes, surface land transport access to the
Airport, expediting applicable clearances and the provisions,
where applicable, of essential utility services. However,
bidders should note that the exact form of the State
Government Support Agreement and contents thereof will
be decided upon receipt of feedback from the said State
Government. Upon receipt of feedback from the said State
Government and finalization of form and contents of the
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State Government Support Agreement, the same will be
provided to Pre-Qualified Bidders.
The JVC for the Airport will have a lease over the land
and assets (with certain exclusions which are not limited
only to carve out assets listed in the schedule to the Lease
Deed) of the Airport for the tenure of the OMDA.
The JVC will enter into separate MOUs with various
agencies such as Customs, immigration, Health and Plant
and Animal Quarantine to deal with issues relating to
space, performance standards, facilitation/coordination
mechanism.
The JVC will be required to prepare a Master Plan for the
development, expansion and modernization of the Airport,
covering a time period of 20 years as well as the ultimate
vision of the Airport at full aeronautical development and to
submit this for approval of MCA within the stipulated time
frame as outlined in the Transaction Documents. The
Master Plan has to be consistent with the Initial
Development Plan submitted as part of the Binding Offer.
Thereafter, the JVC will be required to update the Master
Plan every ten years (or upon occurrence of certain traffic
trigger events or as and when circumstances warrant). In
addition, each major development requires the preparation
and approval of a Major Development Plan setting out the
proposed details of the development.
The Airport, in recognition of its natural monopoly
position, will be subjected to economic regulatory measures.
The regulatory authority or the GOI (until such regulatory
authority is in place) will set a price cap for aeronautical
charges and will be entitled to impose other standards.
Over the tenure of the OMDA, the Joint Venture
Company will pay both a nominal lease rental and a fee
(consisting of an upfront fee of Rs.1,500 million (Rupees one
thousand five hundred million) and an annual fee expressed
as a percentage of gross revenue of the Airport) for the right
to operate, manage and develop the Airport. The fee will be
calculated annually in advance on projected revenue, paid
monthly and with an adjustment at the end of each quarter
to reflect any difference between actual and projected
revenue. Revenue for this purpose shall mean all pre-tax
gross revenue of JVC, excluding the following: (a) payments
made by JVC, if any, for the activities undertaken by
Relevant Authorities; (b) Insurance proceeds except
insurance indemnification for loss of revenue; (c) any
amount that accrues to JVC from sale of any capital assets
or items, (d) Payments and/or monies collected by JVC for
and on behalf of any governmental authorities under
applicable law. It is clarified that annual fee payable to AAI
and Employee Arrangement costs payable to AAI shall not
be deducted from revenue,
2 GOVERNMENT OBJECTIVES, REQUIREMENTS AND
REGULATION
2.1 Key Strategic Objectives
Key strategic objectives of the GOI are:
World class development and expansion:
Ensure world class phased development and
expansion such that the JVC meets its commitments
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through the timely provision of high quality airport
infrastructure, on both the airside and landside, to meet
growing demand; and
World class airport management:
Ensure the creation of world class airport
management team and systems through the selection of
serious, committed Successful Bidders with suitable
operational expertise, managerial and financial
capability, Financial commitment and the commitment to
provide quality airport services, in order to transform the
present Airport into world class international airport.
2.2 Other Transaction Objectives
In addition to the key strategic objectives, other
Transaction objective include:
Timely completion end certainty of Transactions,
with minimal residual risks.
Appropriate financial consideration for the right to
operate, manage and develop the airport.
Smooth transition of operations from AAI to JVC.
Appropriate regulation- achieving economic
regulation of aeronautical assets that is fair,
commercially and economically appropriate, transparent,
predictable, consistent and stable while protecting the
interests of users and ensuring that the Airports are
operated and developed in accordance with world
standards;
Fair and equitable treatment of AAI employees,
including preservation of accrued entitlements.
Diversity of ownership between Mumbai and Delhi
Airports, to enhance competition, encourage innovation
and allow competitive benchmarking, and
Ensure satisfaction on the part of passengers and
airlines by the provision of quality services and the
provision of State-of-the-art facilities.
The GOI’s key strategic and other Transaction objectives
will provide the means of establishing the bid evaluation
criteria.
2.3 Management and Development Requirements
Reflecting the focus on the strategic objectives, Bidders
will be required to present as part of their Binding Offer a
fully detailed Business Plan and Initial Development Plan,
as well as a Transition Plan and certain other documents.
These documents will be an important element in the
selection of the Successful Bidder for the Airport.
TERM OF REFERENCE
1.0 Scope of work
1.1 The scope of work for the FINANCIAL CONSULTANT shall
consist of the following:
a. Updating of the traffic, financial, commercial and
operational data pertaining to the two airports;
b. Organizing Road Shows in India and/or abroad, if
required;
c. Preparation of the Request for Expression of interest
(RFEOI), Request for Proposal (RFP), draft concession
agreement, draft Joint venture agreement and all other
necessary project documentation.
d. Determining the pre-qualification criteria, technical and
financial evaluation criteria which will include
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formulation and analysis of various options along with
the recommended approach in respect of the same;
e Evaluation of Expressions of Interests and Technical and
Financial proposals received.
f. Organizing and managing interactions and
communications with the potential bidders;
g. Negotiation assistance together with other advisors to AAI
in successfully concluding the transaction;
h. Work closely with AAI on overall coordination and
management of various aspects of the transaction;
i. Any other work as may be required for the successful
completion of the transaction,
Glossary
Words and phrases used in the document have the meaning
set out below.
AAI
Airports Authority of India
Airport Operator -
The Entity in the Consortium submitting
the Binding Offer who has been identified
as such by the Bidder and who is
assessed for the necessary qualifications
for operating, managing and developing a
major international airport which seeks to
provide airport management services to
the Joint Venture Company.
Financial Consultant
or
ABN AMRO
ABN AMRO Asia Corporate Finance (I) Pvt.
Ltd. being the financial adviser to the
Transaction.
Foreign Airline(s)
Means a Foreign Entity that provides air
transport services.
GTA or Global
Technical Adviser or
Airplan
The technical adviser, to AAI advising on
the technical aspects in relation to this
Transaction, being Airport Planning Ply
Ltd. (Airplan).
Initial Development
Plan
The Development Plan submitted by the
Bidder(s) an part of their Offer which sets
out plans over a calmed period for the
development of the Airport to meet traffic
growth as per the terms hereof.
ITREOI
The Invitation to Register an Expression of
interest document issued by AAI in
relation to the Transaction.
Legal Consultant or
AMSS
The legal adviser to the Transaction, being
Amarchand & Mangaldas & Suresh
A.Shroff & Co.
5. EVALUATION OF STAGE 2 OFFERS
5.1 Overview of Evaluation Process
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This section sets out the approach that will be applied by
the AAI and its advisers when evaluating Offers. General
Guidance in relation to the relative importance of each of
the criteria and certain tender requirements are set out
below.
The approach to be followed will be undertaken in four
phases as set out in summary form in the figure below:
Phase Explanation
Phase 1
Assessment of
Mandatory Requirement
?
Any Bidder not
meeting the
mandatory
requirement will
have its Offer
removed from
further
consideration.
?
??
Clarification
Phase 2
Assessment of
Financial Commitment
?
Debt and equity
commitment as
specified at
Appendix A is
evaluated and
Offers not
meeting the
requirement are
excluded from
further
consideration.
?
Phase 3
Technical Pre-
Qualifications
?Management Capability,
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Commitment and value
add
?Development Capability,
Commitment and value
add
?
All remaining
offers are
assessed on
technical
prequalification
criteria and only
those assessed
with technical
pre-qualification
on each of the
two criteria of
80% or more
proceed to Phase
4
?
Phase 4
Assessment of Financial
Consideration
?
The offer of the
Bidder with
highest Financial
consideration for
the Airport is
selected as
Successful
Bidder
5.2 Mandatory Requirement
The Mandatory Requirements for Stage 2 Offers are as
follows:
Mandatory Requirements for Stage 2 Offers
\025 Confirmation of acceptance of final Transaction
Documents
\025 Confirmation that the Networth criteria of the Bidder as
per the requirement in the ITREOI document continues to
be fulfilled
\025 No Consortium member or Group Entity of a Consortium
member or nominated Airport Operator is participating in
more than one Consortium bidding for the same Airport
\025 Consortium has an Airport Operator who has relevant and
significant experience of operating, managing and
developing airports.
\025 Confirm that the Offer is capable of acceptance anytime
during the Bid Period
\025 Confirm that the offer commits the Offeror to the
mandatory capital projects and/the Initial Development
Plan is in accord with the Development Planning.
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\025 Principles and the Traffic Forecast (It is to be noted that
Traffic Forecasts are only the Base level forecast)
\025 Equity Ownership in the Joint Venture Company by a
Scheduled Airline and their Group Entities does not exceed
l0% and there is no participation by any airline that is a
Foreign Entity and their Group Entities, subject to the
exemption of group Entities that are existing airport
operator.
\025 FDI in the JVC does not exceed 49%
\025 Minimum equity ownership by Indian Entities (other than
AAI/GOI public sector entities) in the JVC is 25%
\025 Provision of suitable probity and security statements
\025 Lodgement of Offer that incorporates all the material
required as set out in Appendices A to E, inclusive, in this
Document
\025 Submission of Bid Bond.
5.4 Assessment of Technical Pre-Qualification
The Technical pre-qualification is based on two global pre-
qualification criteria
\025 Management Capability, Commitment and Value Add
\025 Development Capability, Commitment and Value Add
Each of these is assessed in terms of a set of pre-
qualification criteria and supporting pre-qualification
factors that are detailed in the Section 5.6.
The purpose of the Technical Pre Qualification phase is to
ensure that only those Bidders that can address the GOI’s
strategic objectives are evaluated at the final phase of the
evaluation process and that only Bidders satisfying the
benchmark of 80% under the technical pre qualification
requirements are allowed into the final phase of Evaluation.
A scoring system will be applied based on the assessment
of the evaluation terms of the Offer against the Technical
pre-qualification criteria. Each of the two global pre-
qualification criteria is assessed out of a possible 100
marks. The assessment is on an absolute basis not relative
as between the Offers. Hence there is no predetermined
number of Offers that will be considered in the final phase.
5.6 Technical Pre-Qualification Criteria and Factors
This section sets out the pre-qualification criteria and pre-
qualification factors that will be used to assess each of the two
global pre-qualification factors.
Pre-Qualification
Criteria
Pre-
Qualification
Criteria
Weighting
Pre-Qualification
factors
Global Technical Pre-
Qualification
Criteria:
(A) Management Capability,
Commitment and Value Add
Sub Criteria:
(i) Management Capability
(a) Experience of the
nominated Airport
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Operator
25
Each of the following to be
supported by documents
case studies and relevant
statistics (PAX and cargo
statistics for each airport
nominated)
Number, scale and
geographic diversity of
airports operated and
managed by the airport
operators with substantial
domestic, international and
cargo operations including
specific role of the airport
operator in respect of each of
these operations
Experience in operating
global or regional hub
airports, including achieving
improved connectivity.
Track record in route and
traffic development and in
managing relations with
airlines and other key
stakeholders.
The level of service quality
performance achieved at
major airports managed by
the Airport Operator and
trends over the last 5 years.
Experience if any, with
operating a multi-airport
system.
The performance of
commercial operations at
major Airports managed by
airport Operators, covering
retail, property and other
commercial operations,
focusing on airport where
non-aeronautical revenue is
40% or more of total
revenue.
Performance in turning
around and improving
aeronautical and non-
aeronautical operations at
airports.
Experience in operating and
developing airports in non-
OECD countries and a track
record in improved
performance.
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Experience in proactive
environmental monitoring,
evaluation, planning and
implementation of
environmental systems and
improvements.
(b) Experience of the
other Prime Members
(separately
identifying and
evaluating Indian
and non-Indian
Prime Member
experience on an
equal weight basis).
12.5
Commercial/retail
experience
Experience with major
property development
Experience with major
infrastructure developments.
Experience with handling
HR issues in ownership
change situations.
Sub Criteria:
(ii) Management Commitment
(a) Commitment of
airport operator
12.5
Level of equity commitment
Performance based nature of the
Airport Operator Agreement
Experience and level of
management resources
committed to the transaction in
each area of airport management
including:
? Traffic and route
development and marketing
? Aeronautical operations
? Cargo handling
? Slot management
? Terminal operations
? Airport Retail operations
? Airport Property operations
? Environmental
Management
(b)Commitment by
other Prime Members
(separately
identifying and
evaluating Indian
Prime Members.
12.5
Experience and level of
management resources
committed by the other Prime
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Members in non-aeronautical
operations and development
6.7 Variations to the RFP
AAI/GOI reserves the right, in its absolute discretion and at
any stage, to cancel, add to or amend the information, terms,
procedures and protocols set out in the RFP. PQB and
Consortium member will have no claim against AAI with
respect to the exercise, or failure to exercise, such rights.
6.12 Other AAI rights:
AAI/GOI reserves the right in its absolute discretion without
liability and at any stage during the Transaction process, to:
? Add to, or remove parties from any shortlist of PQBs or
Bidders;
? Require additional information from any PQB or Bidders;
\025 Vary its tender requirements;
\025 Terminate further participation in the Transaction process
for any PQB or Bidder;
\025 Change the structure and timing of the Transaction process;
\025 Accept or reject any Offer at any time for any reason;
\025 Not provide PQBs or Bidders any reasons for any actions or
decisions it may take including in respect of the exercise by
the AAI of any or all of the above mentioned rights; and
\025 Take such other action as it considers, in its absolute
discretion, appropriate in relation to the Transaction process
for the Airport.
xx xx xx
APPENDIX ’A’ (Information to be included in offer)
xx xx xx
A.7 Relevant Management Experience and Expertise
xx xx xx
(c) In addition, please provide information on any experience
that the airport operator has with turning around the
performance of under performing airports and in the
operation, management, development of major airports in
developing countries and handling human resource
management issues in ownership change situation, including
privatization.
xx xx xx
A.11. Initial Development Plan
The Initial Development Plan must be prepared in conformity
with the Airport Development Planning Principles set out in
the Transaction Document, shall incorporate the mandatory
capital projects as set out in the Transaction Documents and
shall use the base Traffic Forecasts prepared by SH&E. Where
the PQB has a strong view that an alternative traffic forecast is
significantly more likely to occur, it can indicate the
implications for the timing of the implementation of the
development plan.
The Offer should provide the following information in the
Initial Development Plan:
(a) A long-term airport development vision for year 20 and
the ultimate vision for the Airport showing the following:
(i). The full configuration of the Airport
identifying all aeronautical facilities and their
operating capacity and all commercial
development areas and their functions.
(ii). Information on traffic, passenger and
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cargo flows, both landside and airside.
(b) The development path for the Airport leading up to its
long-term vision in year 20, shown in five (5) yearly
stages for each functional area, namely airfield, apron,
passenger terminals, cargo terminals, car parks, city side
access roads and commercial area together with capital
expenditure estimates. The development path should
show the linkage of the development to traffic projections,
with the indicated trigger points for both the
commencement of the development and its completion.
(c) An outline of how the development path can be flexibly
adjusted to accommodate both lower and higher traffic
flows than the base projection used for Airport
development planning.
(d) Set out how it is planned to fully maintain
aeronautical operation during the development phase.
(e) Explain how key stakeholders will be involved during
both the planning and implementation stages, including
the preparation of the Master Plan, identifying issues
that will need to be addressed and the approach to each
issue.
(f) Identify any constraints that will negatively impact on
the Development Plan, explain the extent of the impact
and any mitigating strategy proposed.
Pivotal challenge by the appellant is to the constitution of
GETE and the scope for its constitution. It is to be noted that
the ultimate authority to take the decision in the matter was
EGOM. It was within the powers of EGOM to decide as to what
inputs it can take note of and the source of these inputs.
Therefore, the necessity for taking views of various committees
constituted appears to be a step in the right direction. This
was a step which appears to have been taken for making the
whole decision making process transparent. There was no
question of having the view of one Committee in preference to
another. EC was a Committee constituted as a part of the
decision making process like other Committees vis. GRC, COS
and IMG.
In the multi tier system in the decision making process
the authority empowered to take a decision can accept the
view expressed by one committee in preference to another for
plausible reasons. It is not bound to accept the view of any
committee. These committees, it needs no emphasis, are
constituted to assist the decision making authority in arriving
at the proper decision. It is a matter of discretion of the
authority to modify the norms. It is not a case of absolute
discretion.
While exercising the discretion, certain parameters are to
be followed.
"Discretion" said Lord Mansfield in R. V Wilkes (1770 (4)
Burr 2527, ’when applied to a court of justice, means sound
discretion guided by law. It must be governed by rule, not by
humour; it must not be arbitrary, vague and fanciful but legal
and regular. (See Craies Statute Law, 6th Edn. P.273 and
Ramji Dayawala & Sons (P) Ltd. v. Invest Import (1981 (1) SCC
80).
’Discretion’ undoubtedly means judicial discretion and
not whim, caprice or fancy of a Judge. (See Dhurandhar
Prasad Singh v. Jai Prakash University and Ors. (2001 (6) SCC
534). Lord Halsbury in Sharp v. Wakefield (1891 AC 173)
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considered the word ’discretion’ with reference to its exercise
and held: "Discretion" means when it is said that something is
to be done within the discretion of the authorities that
something is to be done according to the rules of reason and
justice, not according to private opinion: (Rooke case (1598) 5
Co. Rep. 99b, 100a) according to law, and not humour. It is to
be, not arbitrary, vague, and fanciful but legal and regular.
And it must be exercised within the limit, to which an honest
man competent to the discharge of his office ought to continue
himself. (See Kumaon Mandal Vikas Nigam Ltd. v. Girja
Shankar Pant and Ors. (2001 (1) SCC 182).
’Discretion’ when applied to a court of justice, means
sound discretion guided by law. It must be governed by rule,
not by humour; it must not be arbitrary, vague and fanciful
but legal and regular.
Though the word, discretion’ literally means and denotes
an uncontrolled power of disposal’ yet in law, the meaning
given to this word appears to be a power decide within the
limits allowed by positive rules of law as to the punishments,
remedies or costs. This would mean that even if a person has
a discretion to do something the said discretion has to be
exercised within the limit allowed by positive rules of law. The
literal meaning of the word ’discretion’ therefore, unmistakably
avoids untrammeled or uncontrolled choice and more
positively pointed out at there being a positive control of some
judicial principles.
Discretion, in general, is the discernment of what is right
and proper. It denotes knowledge and prudence, that
discernment which enables a person to judge critically of what
is correct and proper united with caution; nice discernment,
and judgment directed by circumspection: deliberate
judgment; soundness of judgment; a science or understanding
to discern between falsity and truth, between wrong and right,
between shadow and substance, between equity and
colourable glosses and pretences, and not to do according to
the will and private -affections of persons. When it is said that
something is to be done within the discretion of the
authorities, that something is to be done according to the
rules of reason and justice, not according to private opinion;
according to law and not humour. It is to be not arbitrary,
vague, and fanciful, but legal and regular. And it must be
exercised within the limit, to which an honest man, competent
to the discharge of his office ought to confine himself (Per Lord
HALSBURY, L C. in Sharp v. Wakefield. (1891) Appeal Cases
173.
The word "discretion’ standing single and unsupported
by circumstances signifies exercise of judgment, skill or
wisdom as distinguished from folly, unthinking or haste;
evidently therefore a discretion cannot be arbitrary but must
be a result of judicial thinking. (33 Bom 334) The word in itself
implies vigilant circumspection and care: therefore, where the
Legislature concedes discretion it also imposes a heavy
responsibility. [(See National Insurance Co. Ltd. v. Keshav
Bahadur, AIR 2004 SC 1581, 1584, para 10) (AIR 1933 Sind
49)].
The discretion of a Judge is the law of tyrants; it is
always unknown. It is different in different men. It is casual,
and depends upon .constitution, temper, passion. In the best
it is often times caprice; in the worst it is every vice, folly, and
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passion to which human nature is liable," said Lord Camden,
L.C.J., in Hindson and Kersey, (1680) 8 How St Tr 57. as cited
in National Insurance Corporation Ltd. v. Keshav Bahadur,
AIR 2004 SC 1581, 1584, para 11 and Kumaron Mandal
Vikas Nigam Ltd. v. Girja Shanker Pant, (2001) 1 SCC 182).
If a certain latitude or liberty accorded by statute or rules
to a Judge as distinguished from a ministerial or
administrative official, in adjudicating on matters brought
before him. It is judicial discretion. It limits and regulates the
exercise of the discretion, and prevents it from being wholly
absolute, capricious, or exempt from review.
In "ADVANCED LAW LEXICON" BY P. RAMANATHA
AIYAR, it has been stated as follows:
"Discretion. Power of the Court or arbitrators to decide as
they think fit. The word "discretion" connotes necessarily an
act of a judicial character, and, as used with reference to
discretion exercised judicially, it implies the absence of a hard-
and-fast rule, and it requires an actual exercise of judgment
and a consideration of the facts and circumstances which are
necessary to make a sound, fair and just determination, and a
knowledge of the facts upon which the discretion may properly
operate. [Corpus Juris Secundum, Vol. 27, page 289 as
referred in Aero Traders Pvt. Ltd. v. Ravinder Kumar Suri, VI
(2004) SLT 428, 430, para 6]"
"A discretion", said Lord WRENBURY, "does not empower
a man to do what he likes merely because he is minded to do
so, he must in the exercise of his discretion do not what he
likes but what he ought. In other words, he must, by the use
of his reason, ascertain and follow the course which reason
dictates." (Roberts v. Hopwood, 1925 AC 578). This approach
to construction has two consequences the statutory discretion
must be truly exercised, and when exercised it must be
exercised reasonably. (MAXWELL).
"Discretion", said Lord MANSFIELD in R. v. Wilkes,
(1770) 98 ER 327), ’when applied to a Court of justice, means
sound discretion guided by law. It must be governed by rule,
not by humour, it must not be arbitrary, vague, and fanciful
but legal and regular. (See Craies on Statute Law, 6th Edn.
P.273)
’Discretion’ means when it is said that something is to
be done within the discretion of the authorities that that
something is to be done according to the rules of reason and
justice, not according to private opinion: Rooke’s case
according to law, and not humour. It is to be not arbitrary,
vague and fanciful, but legal and regular. Lord HALSBURY LC
in Susannah Sharp v. Wakefield, (1891) AC 173 at p. 179
referred to in Siben Kumar Mondal v. Hindustan Petroleum
Corporation Ltd, (AIR 1995 Cal 327, 333-335). (See also Aero
Traders Pvt. Ltd. v. Ravindra Kumar Suri, VI (2004) SLT 428,
430, para 6; Man Mal Sharma v. Bikaner Sahkari Upbhokta
Bhandar, (AIR 1999 Raj 13, 18) and Rekha Bhasin v. Union of
India, (AIR 1998 Del 314, 322.)
Discretion, Lord MANSFIELD stated in classic terms in,
John Wilke’s case, (1970) 4 Hurr 2528, must be a sound one
governed by law and guided by rule, not by humour; Lord
DENNING put it eloquently in Breem v. Amalgamated
Engineering Union, (1971) 1 All ER 1148, that in a
Government of Laws’ "there is nothing like unfettered
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discretion immune from judicial reviewability." Courts stand
between the executive and the subject alert, to see that
discretionary power is not exceeded or misused. Discretion is a
science of understanding to discern between right or wrong,
between shadow and substance, between equity and
colourable glosses and pretences and not to do according to
one’s wills and private affections. Lord BRIGHTMAN elegantly
observed in the case of, Chief Constable of North Sales Police
v. Evans, (1982) 3 All ER 141 that:
"Judicial review, as the words imply is
not an appeal from a decision, but a
review of the matter in which the decision
was made."
"The judge, even when he is free, is still not wholly free. He is
not to innovate at pleasure. He is not a knight-errant roaming
at will in pursuit of his own ideal of beauty or of goodness. He
is to draw his inspiration from consecrated principles. He is
not to yield to spasmodic sentiment, to vague and unregulated
benevolence. He is to exercise a discretion informed by
tradition, methodized by analogy, disciplined by system, and
subordinated to ’the primodial necessity of order in the social
life’. Wide enough in all conscience is the field of discretion
that remains." BENJAMIN CARDOZE in ’The Nature of
Judicial Process’.
The power to decide within the limits allowed by positive
rules of law as to punishments, remedies or costs and
generally to regulate matters of procedure and administration;
discernment of what is right and proper [See Article 136(1),
Constitution)
’Discretion’ is governed by rule and it must not be
arbitrary, vague and fanciful. (See Jaisinghani v. Union of
India, AIR 1967 SC 1427, 1434).
When any thing is left to any person, Judge or magistrate
to be done according to his discretion, the law intends it must
be done with sound discretion, and according to law, (Tomlin).
In its ordinary meaning, the word signifies unrestrained
exercise of choice or will; freedom to act according to one’s
own judgment; unrestrained exercise of will; the liberty of
power of acting without other control than one’s own
judgment. But, when applied to public functionaries, it means
a power or right conferred upon them by law, of acting
officially in certain circumstances according to the dictates of
their own judgment and conscience, uncontrolled by the
judgment or conscience of others. Discretion is to discern
between right and wrong; and therefore whoever hath power to
act at discretion, is bound by the rule of reason and law. ( 2
Inst. 56, 298; Tomlin)
There may be several degrees of Discretion, discretio
generalis, discretio legalis, discretio specialis,- Discretio
generalis is required of every one in everything that he is to do,
or attempt "Legalis discretio", is that which Sir E Coke
meaneth and setteth forth in Rooke’s and Keighley’s cases and
this is merely to administer justice according to the prescribed
rules of the law.
"The third discretion is where the laws have given no
certain rule .... and herein discretion is the absolute judge of
the cause, and gives the rule." (Callis. 112. 113)
DISCRETION, FREE AND UNQUALIFIED, The "free and
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unqualified discretion" to refuse or grant licences, which is
given to justices by the Beer Dealers Retail Licences is
absolute as well as regards the renewal of an old, as the grant
of a new, licence. (R. v. Kay, 52 LJMC 90).
Discretion, Judicial is a certain latitude or liberty
accorded by statute or rules to a judge as distinguished from a
ministerial or administrative official, in adjudicating on
matters brought before him, The use of the word "judicial"
limits and regulates the exercise of the discretion, and
prevents it from being wholly absolute, capricious, or exempt
from review. But the presence of the word "discretion" permits
the judge to consider as a judge, what are vaguely termed, all
the circumstances of the case and the purpose for which he is
invested with the considerations of convenience or utility or
saving of expense rather than on considerations of strict law
or technicalities.
Such discretion is usually given on matters of procedure
or punishment, or costs of administration rather than with
reference to vested substantive rights. The matters which
should regulate the exercise of discretion have been stated by
eminent judges in somewhat different forms of words but with
substantial identity. When a statute gives a judge a discretion,
what is meant is a judicial discretion, regulated according to
the known rules of law, and not the mere whim or caprice of
the person to whom it is given on the assumption that he is
discreet (Lee v. Bude Railway Co., (1871) LR 6 CP 576, 580,
WILLES, J.; and see Morgan v. Morgan, 1869, LR 1 P & M 644,
647). "That discretion, like other judicial discretions, must be
exercised according to common sense and according to justice,
and if there is a miscarriage in the exercise of it, it will be
reviewed; but still it is a discretion, and for my own part I
think that when a tribunal is invested by Act of Parliament, or
by rules, with a discretion, without any indication in the Act or
rules of the grounds on which the discretion is to be exercised,
it is a mistake to lay down any rules with a view of indicating
the particular grooves on which the discretion would run, for if
the Act or rules did not fetter the discretion of the judge, why
should the Court do so?" Gardner v. Jay, (1885) 29 Ch D 50 at
58, per BOWEN, L.J.) (See also 5 Cal 259)
Discretion of Court. "Ability to discern by the right line of
law, and not by the crooked cord of private opinion, which the
vulgar call discretion"; freedom to act according to the
judgment of the Court, or according to the rules of equity, and
the nature of circumstances; judicial discretion regulated
according to known rules of law; legal discretion, and not
personal discretion sound discretion guided by fixed legal
principles".
In the instant case, though the High Court seems to have
noted that the EGOM has absolute discretion, it has really not
held that the discretion was unfettered. In fact it has on facts
found that the discretion was properly exercised to make some
variations in the terms of RFP.
Coming to the constitution of GETE, no mala fides are
alleged against the members. It is only the method of
evaluation done by GETE which is challenged apart from
contending that GETE should not have been constituted.
About the constitution of GETE, as noted above, the stand is
clearly untenable. So far as evaluation of the marks as done
by EC is concerned, GETE has given reasons for altering the
marks allotted which ultimately led to the non qualification of
the appellant. There were four identified areas where it was
noted that the EC’s approach in the evaluation exercise was
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 24 of 55
inconsistent with the terms of the RFP.
EGOM in its order dated 27.12.2005 constituting GETE,
stipulated as follows:
"The Group would particularly look into and
present its recommendations before the COS
on:
(a) Overall validation of the evaluation
process, including calibration of the
qualification and sensitivity analysis. The
sensitivity analysis will cover the impact
of inter-se weightages of sub-criteria as
well as scoring.
b) The issues raised by the Members of
the Inter Ministerial Group about the
evaluation process.
c) An overall assessment of transparency
and fairness of the evaluation process,
including steps required, if any, to
achieve a transparent and fair outcome.
d) Suggestions for improving the selection
process for Joint Venture Partner in the
future."
Essentially there were four instances of rewriting of
priorities and weightages as contained in the RFP and
valuation was then made by the EC on the basis of these re-
written priorities and weightages. These were as follows;
(i) Change in priority in the matter of
absorption of staff,
(ii) Changing the weightage ascribed to
property development by merging the
marks for infrastructure development
and property development,
(iii) Changing of the weightage ascribed to
non-aeronautical development by failing
to consider aeronautical revenue of 40%
as a "threshold" - less than which would
not get any marks, and
(iv) Changing the weightage of experience in
respect of a non-OECD airport by
treatment of a OECD airport on par with
non-OECD airports.
As regards (i), the EC divided the marks between 3.1.1
and 3.1.2 unequally, and also awarded marks for the extent of
absorption proposed from a baseline of Zero -instead of a
baseline of 40% which was the mandatory absorption criteria.
The RFP accorded a priority to a higher absorption of existing
staff by the new company. The EC proceeded to modify this
priority. It opined that the overall approach was more
important than absorption, and gave marks accordingly. So
far as (ii) is concerned, the EC again altered the weightages
accorded in the RFP, which considered experience in "property
development" as valuable as "infrastructure development" and
thereby put each of them as a sub-head. According to EC, the
former was not as important as the latter and thus gave 1.6
marks for the former (1.2.2) and 4.7 marks for the latter
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(1.2.3.).
As consequence of (iii) above, EC gave marks to the
appellant who had projected less than 40% non-aeronautical
revenue- whereas the RFP clearly gave a weightage to
aeronautical revenue beyond 40%. As rightly contended by the
respondents, if a project has a high revenue share given to the
government, then aeronautical revenue being regulated, the
incomes would flow from non-aeronautical revenues. However
generation of such non-aeronautical revenues would involve a
larger capital investment in property development. EC (a) gave
less marks to GVK because it had a high capital outlay
projected (as compared to the appellant), (b) did not regard
experience in property development as having the same
priority as infrastructure development, and (c) gave marks to
the appellant for its non-aeronautical revenue, although its
projected revenue was less than 40%.
As a consequence of (iv) above, EC gave marks to the
appellant for Mexico Airport which is admittedly an OECD
Airport - on the spacious reasoning that it is virtually like a
non-OECD Airport since Mexico is like a developing country.
Relevant portions of GETE’s reports read as follows:
FIRST REPORT DATED 7.1.2006
xx xx xx xx
"2.1. The Group of Eminent Technical Experts (GETE)
had their first meeting and deliberations on Friday, 30th
December, 2005\005\005\005\005The presentation was basically
for explaining the contents of the Request for Proposal
(RFP), the approach adopted by the EC in evaluating the
technical bids and the views expressed by Inter
Ministerial Group (IMG) on the EC evaluation. The EC
explained that the weightage marks for the two criteria
and sub-criteria were already indicated in the RFP for the
information of bidders. Splitting up these marks to the
different sub-factors of sub-criteria was done by the E.C.
based on the mandate given to them by the I.M.G. On
query from the GETE, they formed that after the
technical bids were opened certain clarifications were
invited from bidders mainly to sort out discrepancies in
their submittals and not for eliciting additional
Information or submission of additional documents. E.C.
stated that the assignment of marks for technical
evaluation was done strictly based on the submittals of
the tenderers.
2.2 The GETE again met on 2 January when only Shri
Sanjay Narayan and Dr. Sihag were present. The
Consultants were not invited to this meeting. In this
meeting Shri Sanjay Narayan handed over to the GETE a
copy of the Note prepared for the Committee of
Secretaries (COS) dated 23rd December, 2005 together
with all Annexures which also contained details of marks
assigned (both original and revised) to the Consortiums A
to E in The Annexure IX and Appendix- II to Annexure
XII to the Note. In this meeting, the GETE enquired at
what stage the apportionment of marks to the sub-
factors was done by the EC and whether after assigning
these marks, the same had the approval of the I.M.G. The
GETE also wanted to know whether after assigning the
marks to the sub-factors, the same were kept in a sealed
cover to obviate the possibility of any changes or
alterations to these marks during evaluation stage. The
GETE also enquired whether a formal Tender Committee
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was appointed for the technical and financial evaluation
of the bids and whether the Airport Authority of India, as
the owner, was associated in the technical evaluation. It
was informed to the GETE that there was no Tender
Committee per se and the assignment of marks to the
sub-factors was done entirely by the EC. (The Global
Consultants) and at no stage Airport Authority of India
was associated in assessing and assigning the marks.
The GETE was informed that the E.C. had taken about
one and a half months to complete this exercise,
scrutinizing about 40,000 pages of submissions.
2.3 The GETE again met on 4th January, 2006 when
ABN-AMRO’s letter dated 3rd January, 2006 in reply to
queries raised was handed over to the GETE (Annexure-
B.). From this letter it appears inter-se weightage and
marks to the sub-factors were finalized prior to assigning
scores on the offers, but there was no categorical
assertion that this was finalized before the exercise was
started and kept seated. We are only pointing out that
since these inter-se weightages were not approved by the
Government and kept sealed, the possibility of these
being changed during the course of evaluation cannot be
ruled out.
2.4 With all the papers made available to the GETE, the
need for seeking further clarification from the EC was not
felt. Therefore, they were not invited for any further
clarification by the GETE.
3. Scrutiny of the evaluation procedure adopted by EC.:
3.1:1 We (GETE) did not call for the technical bid papers
nor perused the same. We also did not make any attempt
for a fresh technical evaluation of the bids by assigning
marks to the sub-criteria and sub-factors. Our attempt
was to assess whether the E.C. had assigned weightages
and marks in a logical and transparent manner to the
sub-factors and whether there has been any bias in
favour of or against any of the bidders while assigning
marks. For this we relied upon the RFP and the mark
sheets attached to the Note prepared for the Committee
of Secretaries.
3.1.2 While examining the assignments of marks to the
various bidders we kept in mind the issues raised by the
members of the Inter Ministerial Group but we were not
solely guided by their views. We also examined in a
dispassionate way whether there was any flaw or bias in
the exercise of subjectiveness while assigning marks to
the different consortiums. Our observations in this
matter are briefly given as under-
3.1.3 The Global Consultants prepared ITREOI in
January, 2004 which was approved by the IMG in
February, 2004 but the appointment of the Global
Consultants was approved by EGOM in April, 2004. Thus
the Consultants started working even before their
appointment was approved.
3.1.4 From the report of the Govt. Review Committee, it
is seen that the Evaluation Committee (E.C.) has stated
that their evaluation was not based merely on the
submittals but they relied upon some published
statistics, information available within their setup and
their own perception and understanding of various
aspects of Evaluation (Please refer GRC’s) report on their
meeting dated 23rd/24th November, 2005). This is not in
conformity to RFP.
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xx xx xx
4.2 There are 8 sub-criterions in the criteria no. 4.1.1
out of which 4 have further sub-factors. Similarly there
are 11 sub-criterions in the criteria 4.1.2 out of which 8
have further sub-factors.
4.3 Through allocation of weightage to different sub-
criterions were indicated in RFP, weightage to different
sub-factors were not indicated but was assigned later by
EC based on IMG directions. EC has not confirmed
explicitly whether these weightages were assigned before
or after opening of bids. Certain anomalies have been
observed in the allocation of the weightages. While equal
weightage has been allocated to most of the sub- factors;
un-equal allocation has been done in two cases (1.2.2
/1.2.3 & 3.1.1/3.1.2). The justification given by EC that
these sub-factors are of different importance is not
considered satisfactory and convincing because such a
logic can apply to many other sub-factors as well. Since
weightages of these sub-factors were not mentioned in
RFP and allocation of equal weightage has been done in
majority of sub-factors, we feel the same concept of equal
weightage should have been adopted for these two sub-
factors also. By assigning different weightages there is
room to suspect that some of the bidders have been
favoured.
4.4. In sub-factor 1.1.6, the assessment of performance
of commercial operations of major airports covering retail
property and other commercial operations was to be done
focusing on Airports having non-aeronautical revenue of
40% or more of total revenue. Though non-aeronautical
earnings of bidder "E" are only 37%, but they have been
given 75% marks. This is considered to be in non-
conformity of the RFP. The explanation of EC that
wording of the Clause did not make the 40% mandatory
is not convincing. In any case, since the non-aeronautical
earnings of "E" was less than the threshold limit of 40%,
assigning a high score of 75% was not justified. This
should have been of the order of 40% to 50%.
4.5 In sub-factor 1.1.8, the assessment of operating in
non-OECD countries was to be as per the RFP. Bidder ’E’
operating in Mexico, which, is an OECD country, has
been awarded 75% marks, which is not in conformity to
RFP. The explanation given by EC to IMG that the bidder
has Airport development experience in other developing
countries like Ecuador, Uruguay and Guatemala, is not
considered convincing. Our considered opinion is the
"track record in improved performance" is also to be
judged only in the context of a non-OECD country.
Therefore, awarding marks against this item is not
considered in conformity to the item in RFP.
4.6 In sub-factor 3.1.2 (proportion of AAI Staff targeted
for absorption into JVC by year 3), EC has awarded 50%
marks for minimum 40% absorption and remaining 50%
on prorata basis between 40% to 100% absorption. Since
RFP has stipulated 40% absorption as minimum
acceptable and additional weightage has been
contemplated for a higher proportion of absorption, we
feel it is more reasonable and rational to distribute full
marks \005\005\005\005 to 100% absorption.
4.7 If moderation of marks for the above mentioned items
is done, following reduction in the score of bidder ’E’ will
take place:
Sr. No.
Item
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Mumbai
Delhi
(i)
If equal weightage is
given to sub-factors
1.2.2 & 1.2.3.
1.1
1.1
(ii)
If equal weightage is
given to sub-factors
3.1.1 & 3.1.2.
0.5
0.6
(iii)
If the marks of sub-
factor 1.1.6 given for
non-aeronautical
revenue less than 40%
are reduced from 75 %
to 50%.
0.7
0.7
(iv)
If score of sub-factor
1.1.8 given for
experience in an OECD
country, is excluded.
2.1
2.1
(v)
If marking system of
sub-factor 3.1.2 as
modified keeping ’0’ for
40% absorption and ’5’
for 100% absorption.
1.6
1.9
Total (i) to (vi)
6.0
6.4
Resultant score of ’E’
for criteria 4.1.1.
75.0
74.6
From the above, it is clear that the above moderation clearly
disqualifies bidder ’E’ in criteria 4.1.1.
4.8 Modernization exercise attempted above will not
make any material difference in the position of bidders
’A’, ’C’, ’D’ and ’F’ who will remain still disqualified. In
regard to bidder ’B’ he will still be well above the
qualifying marks of 80%. In fact his position would
improve marginally. Therefore, we have not attempted to
moderate the marks of the other bidders based on our
observations of paras 4.3 to 4.6.
4.9 While scrutinizing the marks for criteria 4.1.2 we
have the following observations to make:-
The GETE have not studied the development
plan of this bidder or any other bidder for that
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matter. We have also not discussed this with the
GTA (Air Plan). Considering the type of deficiencies
in the developmental plans pointed out by AAI, we
feel the marking of bidder ’E’ has been on a liberal
side in regard to sub-criteria 6.1 to 6.5. This will
also be the marks if we compare the marks scored
by bidder ’B’ vis-‘-vis marks scored by bidder "E" in
regard to Delhi Airport as brought out under:-
Maximum Score
Score of ’B’
Score of ’E’
Delhi
44.5
30.2
43.0
4.10. Admittedly bidder B has better credentials, for
airport development and such vast difference in marks
scored by bidder ’E’ over bidder ’B’ cannot be easily
explained. We feel that if the rational approach has been
adopted bidder ’E’ who now gets qualified by 0.3 marks
for Mumbai and by 1.1 marks for Delhi would have been
disqualified.
4.11 Since in any case in our view bidder ’E’ gets
disqualified on the basis of our assessment contained in
Para-4.7 above, we are of the opinion that qualifying
bidder ’E’ technically is not correct.
SECOND REPORT OF GETE DATED 13th JANUARY, 2006
"xx xx xx xx
Based on the methodology adopted by GETE for
moderating the marks of bidder ’E’, we have now
moderated the scores of all other bidders as well. Based
on this exercise, the marks secured by the different
bidders are given in a tabulated form separately for Delhi
and Mumbai Airports".
A- Table showing moderated scores of all the bidders in criteria ’A’
(Management Capabilities) for Mumbai Airport
Sl. No.
Weightage
A
B
C
D
E
F
1.1
25.0
6.7
22.5
17.1
19.7
19.6
17.2
1.2
12.5
2.8
9.7
9.7
4.7
9.2
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9.5
2.1
12.5
5.4
7.1
11.7
6.7
9.6
8.8
2.2
12.5
5.0
10.0
11.3
5.0
11.3
10.0
3.1
12.5
6.9
10.5
10.9
7.2
10.8
10.5
3.2
12.5
2.5
12.5
5.0
7.5
11.3
11.3
3.3& 3.4
12.5
6.3
12.5
7.5
6.3
9.4
8.8
Total
100
35.6
84.8
73.2
57.1
81.2
76.1
Score as per shift
35.5
84.7
73.1
57.0
81.0
76.0
Moderation due to
(i) If equal weightage
is given to sub-factor
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1.2.2 and 1.2.3
+ 0.96
-0.21
-0.02
-0.02
-1.09
-0.23
(ii) If equal weightage
is given to sub-factor
3.1.1 and 3.1.2
+1.85
-0.81
+0.35
-0.32
-0.49
-0.81
(iii) If the marks of
sub-factor 1.1.6 given
to ’E’ for non-
aeronautical revenue
less than 40% are
reduced from 75% to
50% - others no
change.
0.0
0.0
0.0
0.0
-0.70
0.0
(iv) If score of sub-
factor 1.1.8 given for
experience in OECD
country to ’E’ is
excluded - others no
change.
0.0
0.0
0.0
0.0
-2.1
0.0
(v) If marking system
of sub-factor 3.1.2 is
modified keeping ’0’
for 40% absorption
and ’5’ for 100%
absorption.
0.0
-1.98
-0.17
-3.13
-1.82
-1.98
Total variation
+2.81
-3.00
+0.16
-3.47
-6.20
-3.02
Revised score
38.3
81.7
73.3
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53.5
74.8
73.0
B- Table showing moderated scores of all the bidders in criteria ’A’
(Management Capabilities) for Delhi Airport
Sl. No.
Weightage
A
B
C
D
E
1.1
25.0
6.7
22.5
17.1
19.7
19.6
1.2
12.5
2.8
9.7
9.7
4.7
9.2
2.1
12.5
7.5
7.1
11.7
6.7
9.6
2.2
12.5
5.0
10.0
11.3
5.0
11.3
3.1
12.5
6.9
10.5
10.9
7.2
10.6
3.2
12.5
2.5
12.5
5.0
7.5
11.3
3.3 &
3.4
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12.5
6.3
12.5
7.5
6.3
9.4
Total
100
37.7
84.8
73.2
57.1
81.0
Score as per shift
37.6
84.7
73.1
57.0
80.9
Moderation due to
(i) If equal weightage
is given to sub-factor
1.2.2 and 1.2.3
+ 0.96
-0.21
-0.02
-0.02
-1.09
(ii) If equal weightage
is given to sub-factor
3.1.1 and 3.1.2
+1.85
-0.81
+0.35
-0.32
-0.60
(iii) If the marks of
sub-factor 1.1.6 given
to ’E’ for non-
aeronautical revenue
less than 40% are
reduced from 75% to
50% - others no
change.
0.0
0.0
0.0
0.0
-0.70
(iv) If score of sub-
factor 1.1.8 given for
experience in OECD
country to ’E’ is
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excluded - others no
change.
0.0
0.0
0.0
0.0
-2.1
(v) If marking system
of sub-factor 3.1.2 is
modified keeping ’0’
for 40% absorption
and ’5’ for 100%
absorption.
0.0
-1.98
-0.17
-3.13
-1.60
Total variation
+2.81
-3.00
+0.16
-3.47
-6.09
Revised score
40.4
81.7
73.3
53.5
74.8
As rightly pointed out by learned counsel for the
respondents that if EC felt that the priorities and weightages
as indicated in the RFP were inappropriate, it should have
requested AAI/GOI to amend the RFP before the bids were
received. Interestingly, the modifications were resorted to after
the bids were opened. That is the principal reason for which
EGOM appears to have sought views of the COS and the COS
was equally entitled to invite a group of experts to examine the
matter.
The details relating to the marks allotted to the bids are
as follows:
Delhi airport
Sl.
No.
Name of
Bidder
Technical evaluation
Financial
Bid %
Management
capability
Development
capability
Pre-
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Sridharan
Post-
Sridharan
1
Reliance-
ASA
(Bidder E)
80.9
74.8
81.0
45.99
2
GMR-
Frapport
(Bidder B)
84.7
81.7
80.1
43.64
3
DS
Construction
Munich
Airport
(Bidder C)
73.1
73.3
70.5
40.15
4
Sterlite -
Macquarie
(Bidder D)
57.0
53.5
61.9
37.04
5
Essel - TAV
(Bidder A)
37.6
40.4
41.4
Bid not
opened
Mumbai Airport
Sl.
No.
Name of
Bidder
Technical evaluation
Financial
Bid %
Management
capability
Development
capability
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Pre-
Sridharan
Post-
Sridharan
1
Reliance-
ASA
(Bidder E)
81.0
74.8
80.2
21.33
2
GMR-
Frapport
(Bidder B)
84.7
81.7
92.7
33.03
3
DS
Construction
Munich
Airport
(Bidder C)
73.1
73.3
54.7
28.12
4
Sterlite -
Macquarie
(Bidder D)
57.0
53.5
65.1
Bids not
opened
5
Essel - TAV
(Bidder A)
35.5
38.3
29.4
Bids not
opened
6
GVK-ACSA
(Bidder F)
76.0
73.0
59.3
38.70
Learned counsel for the respondents have emphasized
that a curious feature of the four changes is that at least three
of them were in principle designed to enable the appellant to
get over the shortcomings in its bid. It is to be noted that the
appellant had no property development experience. It had
projected less than 40% non aeronautical revenue and had a
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partner from an OECD country.
The GETE’s report shows that even taking these four
modifications led to some of the bidders getting more marks.
GVK and others did not cross the bench mark of 80% and
even after exclusion of these marks, GMR had more than 80%
marks. It was only the appellant who crossed the threshold of
80% on account of these four variations and fell below 80%
when the effect of these four variations was excluded.
Departure from the RFP made by EC after opening the
bids can reasonably raise a doubt that EC knew that the
modalities would benefit the appellant. In any event, it is not
necessary to go into the question whether EC was partial to
the appellant because that is nobody’s case, though it has
been submitted that after opening the bids, EC made the
variations and beneficiary was the appellant.
GETE’s report shows that it enunciated the principle to
carry out an exercise that would be more in the nature of
validation dealing with the four variations made by EC.
GETE also noted that certain issues can be more
satisfactorily addressed by process of validation that would
involve a re-allocation of marks, on the assessment made by
the EC of the bids albeit in a manner that would be consistent
with the RFP. It essentially was not an exercise of re-
evaluation but of a re-allocation consistent with RFP.
As noted in GETE’s first report, its attempt was to assess
whether EC had assigned weightages and marks in a logical
and transparent manner to the sub-factors and whether there
had been any biased in favour of or against any of the bidders
while assigning marks, with reference to the RFP. While
making such examination, the issues raised by the members
of IMG were kept in view, but as stated in the report, GETE
was not solely guided by their views.
Though the first report itself indicated the reasons as to
why the evaluation process containing the moderation exercise
was not undertaken in respect of bidders, as desired by EGOM
GETE did so and submitted its second report. Undisputedly,
GMR crossed the bench mark of 80% in respect of both the
bids while others did not.
Challenge has been made by the appellant to the
lowering of the bench mark. It is to be noted that the appellant
had come into the zone of consideration only because of
lowering of the bench mark as otherwise after the
modifications were made by GETE, it had not crossed the
bench mark.
The appellant’s stand that if none was found eligible on
the basis of 80% bench mark, there should have been a fresh
bid, has been answered by the respondents. It has been
pointed out that the number of bidders was small. The bidders
after opening of the bid knew the merits and demerits of all
the bids. There was an urgency for early completion of the
airports keeping in view the 2010 Commonwealth Games.
The scope for judicial review of administrative actions
has been considered by this Court in various cases.
One of the points that falls for determination is the scope
for judicial interference in matters of administrative decisions.
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Administrative action is stated to be referable to broad area of
Governmental activities in which the repositories of power may
exercise every class of statutory function of executive, quasi-
legislative and quasi-judicial nature. It is trite law that
exercise of power, whether legislative or administrative, will be
set aside if there is manifest error in the exercise of such
power or the exercise of the power is manifestly arbitrary (See
State of U.P. and Ors. v. Renusagar Power Co. and Ors. (AIR
1988 SC 1737). At one time, the traditional view in England
was that the executive was not answerable where its action
was attributable to the exercise of prerogative power. Professor
De Smith in his classical work "Judicial Review of
Administrative Action" 4th Edition at pages 285-287 states the
legal position in his own terse language that the relevant
principles formulated by the Courts may be broadly
summarized as follows. The authority in which a discretion is
vested can be compelled to exercise that discretion, but not to
exercise it in any particular manner. In general, a discretion
must be exercised only by the authority to which it is
committed. That authority must genuinely address itself to the
matter before it; it must not act under the dictates of another
body or disable itself from exercising a discretion in each
individual case. In the purported exercise of its discretion, it
must not do what it has been forbidden to do, nor must it do
what it has not been authorized to do. It must act in good
faith, must have regard to all relevant considerations and
must not be influenced by irrelevant considerations, must not
seek to promote purposes alien to the letter or to the spirit of
the legislation that gives it power to act, and must not act
arbitrarily or capriciously. These several principles can
conveniently be grouped in two main categories: (i) failure to
exercise a discretion, and (ii) excess or abuse of discretionary
power. The two classes are not, however, mutually exclusive.
Thus, discretion may be improperly fettered because irrelevant
considerations have been taken into account, and where an
authority hands over its discretion to another body it acts
ultra vires.
The present trend of judicial opinion is to restrict the
doctrine of immunity from judicial review to those class of
cases which relate to deployment of troupes, entering into
international treaties, etc. The distinctive features of some of
these recent cases signify the willingness of the Courts to
assert their power to scrutinize the factual basis upon which
discretionary powers have been exercised. One can
conveniently classify under three heads the grounds on which
administrative action is subject to control by judicial review.
The first ground is ’illegality’ the second ’irrationality’, and the
third ’procedural impropriety’. These principles were
highlighted by Lord Diplock in Council of Civil Service Unions
v. Minister for the Civil Service (1984 (3) All.ER.935),
(commonly known as CCSU Case). If the power has been
exercised on a non-consideration or non-application of mind to
relevant factors, the exercise of power will be regarded as
manifestly erroneous. If a power (whether legislative or
administrative) is exercised on the basis of facts which do not
exist and which are patently erroneous, such exercise of power
will stand vitiated. (See Commissioner of Income-tax v.
Mahindra and Mahindra Ltd. (AIR 1984 SC 1182). The effect of
several decisions on the question of jurisdiction have been
summed up by Grahame Aldous and John Alder in their book
"Applications for Judicial Review, Law and Practice" thus:
"There is a general presumption against
ousting the jurisdiction of the Courts, so that
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statutory provisions which purport to exclude
judicial review are construed restrictively.
There are, however, certain areas of
governmental activity, national security being
the paradig, which the Courts regard
themselves as incompetent to investigate,
beyond an initial decision as to whether the
government’s claim is bona fide. In this kind of
non-justiciable area judicial review is not
entirely excluded, but very limited. It has also
been said that powers conferred by the Royal
Prerogative are inherently unreviewable but
since the speeches of the House of Lords in
council of Civil Service Unions v. Minister for
the Civil Service this is doubtful. Lords
Diplock, Scaman and Roskili appeared to agree
that there is no general distinction between
powers, based upon whether their source is
statutory or prerogative but that judicial
review can be limited by the subject matter of
a particular power, in that case national
security. May prerogative powers are in fact
concerned with sensitive, non-justiciable
areas, for example, foreign affairs, but some
are reviewable in principle, including the
prerogatives relating to the civil service where
national security is not involved. Another non-
justiciable power is the Attorney General’s
prerogative to decide whether to institute legal
proceedings on behalf of the public interest."
(Also see Padfield v. Minister of Agriculture, Fisheries and
Food (LR (1968) AC 997).
The Court will be slow to interfere in such matters
relating to administrative functions unless decision is tainted
by any vulnerability enumerated above; like illegality,
irrationality and procedural impropriety. Whether action falls
within any of the categories has to be established. Mere
assertion in that regard would not be sufficient.
The famous case commonly known as "The Wednesbury’s
case" is treated as the landmark so far as laying down various
basic principles relating to judicial review of administrative or
statutory direction.
Before summarizing the substance of the principles laid
down therein we shall refer to the passage from the judgment
of Lord Greene in Associated Provincial Picture Houses Ltd.
v. Wednesbury Corpn. (KB at p. 229: All ER p. 682). It reads
as follows:
"......It is true that discretion must
be exercised reasonably. Now what
does that mean? Lawyers familiar
with the phraseology used in
relation to exercise of statutory
discretions often use the word
’unreasonable’ in a rather
comprehensive sense. It has
frequently been used and is
frequently used as a general
description of the things that must
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not be done. For instance, a person
entrusted with a discretion must, so
to speak, direct himself properly in
law. He must call his own attention
to the matters which he is bound to
consider. He must exclude from his
consideration matters which are
irrelevant to what he has to
consider. If he does not obey those
rules, he may truly be said, and
often is said, to be acting
’unreasonably’. Similarly, there may
be something so absurd that no
sensible person could even dream
that it lay within the powers the
authority....In another, it is taking
into consideration extraneous
matters. It is unreasonable that it
might almost be described as being
done in bad faith; and in fact, all
these things run into one another."
Lord Greene also observed (KB p.230: All ER p.683)
"....it must be proved to be
unreasonable in the sense that the
court considers it to be a decision
that no reasonable body can come
to. It is not what the court considers
unreasonable. .... The effect of the
legislation is not to set up the court
as an arbiter of the correctness of
one view over another." (emphasis
supplied)
Therefore, to arrive at a decision on "reasonableness" the
Court has to find out if the administrator has left out relevant
factors or taken into account irrelevant factors. The decision
of the administrator must have been within the four corners of
the law, and not one which no sensible person could have
reasonably arrived at, having regard to the above principles,
and must have been a bona fide one. The decision could be
one of many choices open to the authority but it was for that
authority to decide upon the choice and not for the Court to
substitute its view.
The principles of judicial review of administrative action
were further summarized in 1985 by Lord Diplock in CCSU
case as illegality, procedural impropriety and irrationality. He
said more grounds could in future become available, including
the doctrine of proportionality which was a principle followed
by certain other members of the European Economic
Community. Lord Diplock observed in that case as follows:
"....Judicial review has I think,
developed to a stage today when,
without reiterating any analysis of
the steps by which the development
has come about, one can
conveniently classify under three
heads the grounds on which
administrative action is subject to
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control by judicial review. The first
ground I would call ’illegality’, the
second ’irrationality’ and the third
’procedural impropriety’. That is not
to say that further development on a
case-by-case basis may not in
course of time add further grounds.
I have in mind particularly the
possible adoption in the future of
the principle of ’proportionality’
which is recognized in the
administrative law of several of our
fellow members of the European
Economic Community."
Lord Diplock explained "irrationality" as follows:
"By ’irrationality’ I mean what can
by now be succinctly referred to as
Wednesbury unreasonableness’. It
applies to a decision which is to
outrageous in its defiance of logic or
of accepted moral standards that no
sensible person who had applied his
mind to the question to be decided
could have arrived at it."
In other words, to characterize a decision of the
administrator as "irrational" the Court has to hold, on
material, that it is a decision "so outrageous" as to be in total
defiance of logic or moral standards. Adoption of
"proportionality" into administrative law was left for the future.
In essence, the test is to see whether there is any
infirmity in the decision making process and not in the
decision itself. (See Indian Railway Construction Co.Ltd. v.
Ajay Kumar (2003 (4) SCC 579)
Wednesbury principles of reasonableness to which
reference has been made in almost all the decisions referred to
hereinabove is contained in Wednesbury’s case (supra). In that
case Lord Green MR has held that a decision of a public
authority will be liable to be quashed in judicial review
proceeding where the court concludes that the decision is
such that no authority properly directing itself on the relevant
law and acting reasonably could have arrived it.
The standards of judicial review in terms of Wednesbury
is now considered to be ’traditional’ in England in contrast to
higher standards under the common law of human rights.
Lord Cooke in R v. Secretary of State for the Home
Department, ex parte Daly, (2001) 3 All ER 433 observed:
"And I think that the day will come when it will
be more widely recognized that the
Wednesbury case was an unfortunately
retrogressive decision in English
administrative law, in so far as it suggested
that there are degrees of unreasonableness
and that only a very extreme degree can bring
an administrative decision within the
legitimate scope of judicial invalidation. The
depth of judicial review and the deference due
to administrative discretion vary with the
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subject matter. It may well be, however, that
the law can never be satisfied in any
administrative field merely by a finding that
the decision under review is not capricious or
absurd."
It is further observed that this does not mean that there has
been a shift to merits review. On the contrary, the respective
roles of judges and administrators are fundamentally distinct
and will remain so. To this extent the general tenor of the
observations in R (Mahmood) v. Secretary of State for the
Home Dept. (2000)1 WLR 840 are correct. And Laws L.J. (at
847 (para 18) rightly emphasized in Mahmood’s case "that the
intensity of review in a public law case will depend on the
subject matter in hand".
(underlined for emphasis)
In Huang & Ors v. Secretary of State for the Home
Department, (2005) 3 All ER 435 it is observed:
"50....the depth of judicial review and the
deference due to administrative discretion vary
with the subject matter. Can we find a
principled approach to give this proposition
concrete effect in cases such as these appeals?
In R (on the application of ProLife Alliance) v
BBC (2003 (2) All ER 977, Lord Hoffmann
said:
’My Lords, although the word
"deference" is now very popular in
describing the relationship between
the judicial and the other branches
of government, I do not think that
its overtones of servility, or perhaps
gracious concession, are appropriate
to describe what is happening. In a
society based upon the rule of law
and the separation of powers, it is
necessary to decide which branch of
government has in any particular
instance the decision-making power
and what the legal limits of that
power are. That is a question of law
and must therefore be decided by
the courts."
(underlined for emphasis)
Section 9 of the Judicial Review Procedure Act, 1996
(Canada) states that the Court may reject an application for
judicial review of a statutory power of decision, if there is mere
irregularity in form or a technical irregularity, or if the court
feels that there has been no miscarriage of justice.
Chapter 5 of the US Code 41 also talks about judicial
review of administrative decisions regarding public contracts.
It states that the courts would not interfere in an award
process unless it is shown to be manifestly fraudulent,
capricious and so grossly erroneous as to imply bad faith.
While exercising power of judicial review courts should
not proceed where if two views are possible and one view has
been taken. In such a case, in the absence of mala fide taking
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one of the views cannot be a ground for judicial review. In
Asia Foundation & Construction Ltd. v. Trafalgar House
Construction (I) Ltd. and Ors. (1997(1) SCC 738) this Court
observed as follows:
"9. The Asian Development Bank came into
existence under an Act called the Asian
Development Act, 1966, in pursuance of an
international agreement to which India was a
signatory. This new financial institution was
established for accelerating the economic
development of Asia and the Far East. Under
the Act the Bank and its officers have been
granted certain immunities, exemption and
privileges. It is well known that it is difficult for
the country to go ahead with such high cost
projects unless the financial institutions like
the World Bank or the Asian Development
Bank grant loan or subsidy, as the case may
be. When such financial institutions grant
such huge loans they always insist that any
project for which loan has been sanctioned
must be carried out in accordance with the
specification and within the scheduled time
and the procedure for granting the award must
be duly adhered to. In the aforesaid premises
on getting the evaluation bids of the appellant
and Respondent-1 together with the
consultant’s opinion after the so-called
corrections made the conclusion of the Bank to
the effect "the lowest evaluated substantially
responsive bidder is consequently AFCONS"
cannot be said to be either arbitrary or
capricious or illegal requiring Court’s
interference in the matter of an award of
contract. There was some dispute between the
Bank on one hand and the consultant who
was called upon to evaluate on the other on
the question whether there is any power of
making any correction to the bid documents
after a specified period. The High Court in
construing certain clauses of the bid
documents has come to the conclusion that
such a correction was permissible and,
therefore, the Bank could not have insisted
upon granting the contract in favour of the
appellant. We are of the considered opinion
that it was not within the permissible limits of
interference for a court of law, particularly
when there has been no allegation of malice or
ulterior motive and particularly when the court
has not found any mala fides or favouritism in
the grant of contract in favour of the appellant.
In Tata Cellular v. Union of India (1994 (6)
SCC 651) , this Court has held that:
"The duty of the court is to confine itself
to the question of legality. Its concern
should be:
1. Whether a decision-making
authority exceeded its powers,
2. committed an error of law,
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3. committed a breach of the rules of
natural justice,
4. reached a decision which no
reasonable tribunal would have
reached or,
5. abused its powers.
Therefore, it is not for the Court to determine
whether a particular policy or particular
decision taken in the fulfilment of that policy is
fair. It is only concerned with the manner in
which those decisions have been taken. The
extent of the duty to act fairly will vary from
case to case. Shortly put, the grounds upon
which an administrative action is subject to
control by judicial review can be classified as
under:
(i) Illegality: This means the
decision-maker must understand
correctly the law that regulates his
decision-making power and must give
effect to it;
(ii) Irrationality, namely, Wednesbury
unreasonableness.
(iii) Procedural impropriety.
The above are only the broad grounds but it
does not rule out addition of further grounds
in course of time."
10. Therefore, though the principle of judicial
review cannot be denied so far as exercise of
contractual powers of government bodies are
concerned, but it is intended to prevent
arbitrariness or favouritism and it is exercised
in the larger public interest or if it is brought
to the notice of the court that in the matter of
award of a contract power has been exercised
for any collateral purpose. But on examining
the facts and circumstances of the present
case and on going through the records we are
of the considered opinion that none of the
criteria has been satisfied justifying Court’s
interference in the grant of contract in favour
of the appellant. We are not entering into the
controversy raised by Mr Parasaran, learned
Senior Counsel that the High Court committed
a factual error in coming to the conclusion
that Respondent-1 was the lowest bidder and
the alleged mistake committed by the
consultant in the matter of bid evaluation in
not taking into account the customs duty and
the contention of Mr. Sorabjee, learned senior
counsel that it has been conceded by all
parties concerned before the High Court that
on corrections being made respondent-1 was
the lowest bidder. As in our view in the matter
of a tender a lowest bidder may not claim an
enforceable right to get the contract though
ordinarily the authorities concerned should
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accept the lowest bid. Further we find from the
letter dated 12.7.1996 that Paradip Port Trust
itself has come to the following conclusion:
"The technical capability of any of the
three bidders to undertake the works
is not in question. Two of the bids are
very similar in price. If additional
commercial information which has now
been provided by bidders through
Paradip Port Trust, had been available
at the time of assessment, the outcome
would appear to favour the award to
AFCONS."
11. This being the position, in our considered
opinion, the High Court was not justified in
interfering with the award by going into
different clauses of the bid document and then
coming to the conclusion that the terms
provided for modifications or corrections even
after a specified date and further coming to the
conclusion that Respondent 1 being the lowest
bidder there was no reason for the Port Trust
to award the contract in favour of the
appellant. We cannot lose sight of the fact of
escalation of cost in such project on account of
delay and the time involved and further in a
coordinated project like this, if one component
is not worked out the entire project gets
delayed and the enormous cost on that score if
rebidding is done. The High Court has totally
lost sight of this fact while directing the
rebidding. In our considered opinion, the
direction of rebidding in the facts and
circumstances of the present case instead of
being in the public interest would be grossly
detrimental to the public interest".
It is also to be noted that there was no stand before the
High Court that the appellant wanted to match the bid. Even if
it is accepted for the sake of argument, that was so urged it
would have no consequence.
A very attractive argument was advanced that as GMR
has been allowed to match the financial dealing of appellant
for Mumbai airport, the same modality should have been
adopted for the other bidders. Though the argument is
attractive, at first flush, it cannot be accepted for the simple
reason that when bench mark is crossed, financial
consideration is the determinative factor because of revenue
sharing.
It is to be noted that though emphasis was led that the
constitution of Committees of non technical persons could not
have thrown much light on the ultimate decision, yet it is to be
noted that all the three Committees were part of the
government machinery. The issue was to assess correctness of
the EC’s decision.
Expression of different views and discussions in different
meetings really lead to a transparent process and
transparency in the decision making process. In the realms of
contract, various choices were available. Comparison of the
respective merits, offers of choice and whether that choice has
been properly exercised are the deciding factors in the judicial
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review.
As has been rightly submitted by learned counsel for the
Union of India, the RFP has to be considered in the context of
other documents like substantial document OMDA, execution
of the agreements culminating to the final master plan. Initial
development plan is nothing but a projection which has to be
broadly in line with OMDA. Undisputedly, OMDA is prepared
by the GOI and AAI. One of the documents in the transaction
documents is OMDA.
It is to be noted that if no one was qualified, two
alternatives were available either to scrap or abandon the
process and second to re-conduct the tenders. As noted above,
the practical compulsion which made the choice avoidable
cannot be termed as perverse or lacking rationality.
The safety valve is the OMDA. The ranking becomes
irrelevant after the bidders have come to the arena and then
finally the financial bid which determines the ultimate bid.
It is to be noted that GETE wanted to know as to whether
the variation for allotment of marks in respect of the
development side area was done before opening the bids or
after opening it. EC had given a very evasive answer stating
that same was done before allotting marks. GETE’s job was
not the evaluation but verifying the evaluation process.
GETE’s examination was restricted to see whether alignment
with RFP was correctly done. GETE was not expected to give
fresh opinion and no evaluation was necessary.
Weightage introduces subjectivity. GETE has gone by
objective standards. The criterion adopted by GETE appears to
be more rational. It proceeded with the idea that more
objectivity was necessary. So it has called the process to be
validation process.
It is pointed out by learned counsel for the respondents
that parameters for judicial review are different in the matters
of contract for normal case of tenders. In case of commercial
contracts the normal contractual matters are excluded. It is
pointed out that there is no overwhelming public interest
involving such matters. GETE had only touched the fallacious
approach of EC to make the process transparent. The view
taken is a possible view supported by reasons and there
should not be any interference.
In the ultimate, the question would be whether in the
process of selection the Government had adopted transparent
and fair process.
While balancing several claims a rational approach is
necessary and that is to be formed in line with the scope of
judicial interference.
It is to be noted that Clause 5.5. deals with a situation of
the same bidder being the highest bidder for both the airports.
It proceeds on the basis that there would be another eligible
bidder for the other airport and on that basis the procedure to
be adopted has been prescribed. In such a situation the bidder
who would be successful i.e. the highest bidder would be
asked to take the airport when the difference between his bid
and the next higher bid is greater. Such a procedure could be
followed where there is second valid bid at the final phase.
This procedure does not deal with a situation where there is
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only one bidder with valid bids for both the airports. In such a
situation he becomes the highest bidder for both the airports
and for that reason alone, the question of evaluation of
financial bid arises.
If the RFP was to consider at the final phase of evaluation
there would be only one bid for each of the airports. In that
event, there would be no question of finding out difference
between the various bids or comparing bids. That left no
option with the EGOM but to either vary RFP or to award one
of the airports to GMR and to cancel the process for the
second or cancel the entire process. The latter course would
not have been in larger public interest. Therefore, the EGOM
exercised its option.
In final analysis, what the EGOM has done is to accept
the report of EC subject to validation done by GETE.
The extent of judicial review in a case of this nature
where the texture cannot be matched with one relating to
award of contract, the observations of this Court in Raunaq
International Ltd. v. I.V.R. Construction Ltd. and Ors. (1999
(1) SCC 492) are relevant. It was observed as follows:
"13. Hence before entertaining a writ petition
and passing any interim orders in such
petitions, the court must carefully weigh
conflicting public interests. Only when it
comes to a conclusion that there is an
overwhelming public interest in entertaining
the petition, the court should intervene."
The view was re-iterated in Master Marine Services (P)
Ltd. v. Metcalfe & Hodgkinson (P) Ltd. and Anr. (2005 (6) SCC
138).
In the Queen’s Bench decision in R. v. Department of
Constitutional Affairs (2006 All ER (D) 101) it was inter-alia
held as follows:
"It is not every wandering from the precise
paths of best practice that lends fuel to a claim
for judicial review."
Same would be available only if public law element is
apparent which would arise only in a case of "bribery,
corruption, implementation of unlawful policy and the like". In
the case of commercial contract, the aforesaid view about
wandering was noted. In paras 50 and 51 it was noted as
follows:
"It does not have the material or expertise
in this context to "second guess" the judgment
of the panel. Furthermore, this process is even
more clearly in the realm of commercial
judgment for the defendant, which judgment
cannot properly be the subject of Public Law
challenge on the grounds advanced in the
evidence before me."
It is to be noted that in respect of both the appellant and
the GETE wherever subjectivity criteria is involved, GETE has
not dealt with the same.
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The mandate of EGOM was to validate and not to
invalidate. It was a process for overall validation and
calibration to apply the correct standard. It is the texture of
the tendered document which is of paramount importance. EC
has changed the texture whereas GETE did not do it. It needs
no emphasis that uneven denomination breaks the integrity
and textures.
Perverseness in connection with a finding of fact is an
aspect of mistake of law. Linked with the question whether
GETE’s constitution was legal, other question is whether the
jurisdiction conferred on GETE has been properly exercised.
Examination of the second question alone would be necessary
since we have held that constitution of GETE does not suffer
from any infirmity. In R (Iran) v. Secretary of State (2005
EWCA Civ 982 at para 11) it was observed as follows:
"It is well known that "perversity" represents a
very high hurdle. In Miftari v. SSHD (2005
EWCA Civ 481) the whole court agreed that the
word meant what it said: it was a demanding
concept. The majority of the court (Keene and
Maurice Kay LJJ) said that it embraced
decisions that were irrational or unreasonable
in the Wednesbury sense (even if there was no
wilful or conscious departure from the
rational), but it also included a finding of fact
that was wholly unsupported by the evidence,
provided always that this was a finding as to a
material matter."
Opinions may differ as to when it can be said that in the
"public law" domain, the entire proceeding before the
appropriate authority is illegal and without jurisdiction or the
defect or infirmity in the order goes to the root of the matter
and makes it in law invalid or void. The matter may have to be
considered in the light of the provisions of the particular
statute in question and the fact-situation obtaining in each
case. It is difficult to visualise all situations hypothetically and
provide an answer. Be that as it may, the question that
frequently arises for consideration, is, in what situation/cases
the non-compliance or error or mistake, committed by the
statutory authority or tribunal, makes the decision rendered
ultra vires or a nullity or one without jurisdiction? If the
decision is without jurisdiction, notwithstanding the
provisions for obtaining reliefs contained in the Act and the
"ouster clauses", the jurisdiction of the ordinary court is not
excluded. So, the matter assumes significance. Since the
landmark decision in Anisminic Ltd. v. Foreign Compensation
Commission [(1969) 1 ALL E.R. 208], the legal world seems to
have accepted that any "jurisdictional error" as understood in
the liberal or modern approach, laid down therein, makes a
decision ultra vires or a nullity or without jurisdiction and the
"ouster clauses" are construed restrictively, and such
provisions whatever their stringent language be, have been
held, not to prevent challenge on the ground that the decision
is ultra vires and being a complete nullity, it is not a decision
within the meaning of the Act. The concept of jurisdiction has
acquired "new dimensions". The original or pure theory of
jurisdiction means "the authority to decide" and it is
determinable at the commencement and not at the conclusion
of the enquiry. The said approach has been given a go-by in
Anisminic case as we shall see from the discussion hereinafter
[see De Smith, Woolf and Jowell - Judicial Review of
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Administrative Action (1995 Edn.) p. 238; Halsbury’s Laws of
England (4th Edn.) p. 114, para 67, footnote (9)]. As Sir
William Wade observes in his book, Administrative Law (7th
Edn.), 1994, at p. 299:
"The tribunal must not only have jurisdiction
at the outset, but must retain it unimpaired
until it has discharged its task."
The decision in Anisminic case (supra) has been cited with
approval in a number of cases by this Court.(See: Union of
India v. Tarachand Gupta & Bros. [(1971) 1 SCC 486], A.R.
Antulay v. R.S. Nayak (1988 (2) SCC 602), R.B. Shreeram
Durga Prasad and Fatehchand Nursing Das v. Settlement
Commission (IT & WT) ( 1989 (1) SCC 628), N. Parthasarathy
v. Controller of Capital Issues (1991 (3) SCC 153), Associated
Engineering Co. v. Govt. of AP (1991 (4) SCC 93), Shiv Kumar
Chadha v. Municipal Corpn. of Delhi (1993 (3) SCC 161). In
M.L. Sethi v. R.P. Kapur, (1972 (2) SCC 427) legal position
after Anisminic case (supra) was explained to the following
effect:
"12\005\005 The word ’jurisdiction’ is a verbal coat
of many colours. Jurisdiction originally seems
to have had the meaning which Lord Reid
ascribed to it in Anisminic Ltd. v. Foreign
Compensation Commission, namely, the
entitlement ’to enter upon the enquiry in
question’. If there was an entitlement to enter
upon an enquiry into the question, then any
subsequent error could only be regarded as an
error within the jurisdiction. The best known
formulation of this theory is that made by Lord
Darman in R. v. Bolton (1841) 1 QB 66. He
said that the question of jurisdiction is
determinable at the commencement, not at the
conclusion of the enquiry. In Anisminic Ltd.,
Lord Reid said:
’But there are many cases where,
although the tribunal had jurisdiction to
enter on the enquiry, it has done or
failed to do something in the course of
the enquiry which is of such a nature
that its decision is a nullity. It may have
given its decision in bad faith. It may
have made a decision which it had no
power to make. It may have failed in the
course of the enquiry to comply with the
requirements of natural justice. It may
in perfect good faith have misconstrued
the provisions giving it power to act so
that it failed to deal with the question
remitted to it and decided some
question which was not remitted to it. It
may have refused to take into account
something which it was required to take
into account. Or it may have based its
decision on some matter which, under
the provisions setting it up, it had no
right to take into account. I do not
intend this list to be exhaustive."
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In the same case, Lord Pearce said:
"Lack of jurisdiction may arise in various ways.
There may be an absence of those formalities
or things which are conditions precedent to the
tribunal having any jurisdiction to embark on
an enquiry. Or the tribunal may at the end
make an order that it has no jurisdiction to
make. Or in the intervening stage while
engaged on a proper enquiry, the tribunal
may depart from the rules of natural justice; or
it may ask itself the wrong questions; or it may
take into account matters which it was not
directed to take into account. Thereby it
would step outside its jurisdiction. It would
turn into its enquiry into something not
directed by Parliament and fail to make the
enquiry which Parliament did direct. Any of
these things would cause its purported
decision to be a nullity."
The dicta of the majority of the House of Lords, in
the above case would show the extent to which ’lack’
and ’excess’ of jurisdiction have been assimilated or,
in other words, the extent to which we have moved
away from the traditional concept of ’jurisdiction’.
The effect of the dicta in that case is to reduce the
difference between jurisdictional error and error of
law within jurisdiction almost to vanishing point. The
practical effect of the decision is that any error of law
can be reckoned as jurisdictional. This comes
perilously close to saying that there is jurisdiction if
the decision is right in law but none if it is wrong.
Almost any misconstruction of a statute can be
represented as ’basing their decision on a matter with
which they have no right to deal’, ’imposing an
unwarranted condition’ or ’addressing themselves to
a wrong question’. The majority opinion in the case
leaves a court or tribunal with virtually no margin of
legal error. Whether there is excess of jurisdiction or
merely error within jurisdiction can be determined
only by construing the empowering statute, which
will give little guidance. It is really a question of how
much latitude the court is prepared to allow...."
In the subsequent Constitution Bench decision in Hari Prasad
Mulshanker Trivedi v. V.B. Raju and Ors. (1974 (3) SCC 415),
it was held as follows:
"... Though the dividing line between lack of
jurisdiction or power and erroneous exercise of
it has become thin with the decision of the
House of Lords in the Anisminic case (i.e.
Anisminic Ltd. v. Foreign Compensation
Commission (1967) 2 All E.R. 986), we do not
think that the distinction between the two has
been completely wiped out. We are aware of
the difficulty in formulating an exhaustive rule
to tell when there is lack of power and when
there is an erroneous exercise of it. The
difficulty has arisen because the word
’jurisdiction’ is an expression which is used in
a variety of senses and takes its colour from its
context, (see per Diplock, J. at p. 394 in the
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Anisminic case). Whereas the ’pure’ theory of
jurisdiction would reduce jurisdictional control
to a vanishing point, the adoption of a
narrower meaning might result in a more
useful legal concept even though the formal
structure of law may lose something of its
logical symmetry. ’At bottom the problem of
defining the concept of jurisdiction for purpose
of judicial review has been one of public policy
rather than one of logic’. [S.A. Smith, ’Judicial
Review of Administrative Action, 2nd Edn., p.
98. (1968 Edn.)"
The observation of the learned author, (S.A. De Smith)
was continued in its 3rd Edn. (1973) at p.98 and in its 4th
Edn. (1980) at p. 112 of the book. The observation aforesaid
was based on the then prevailing academic opinion only as is
seen from the footnotes. It should be stated that the said
observation is omitted from the latest edition of the book De
Smith, Woolf and Jowell - Judicial Review of Administrative
Action - 5th Edn. (1995) as is evident from p. 229; probably
due to later developments in the law and the academic opinion
that has emerged due to the change in the perspective.
After 1980, the decision in first Anisminic’s case came up
for further consideration before the House of Lords, Privy
Council and other courts. The three leading decisions of the
House of Lords wherein Anisminic principle was followed and
explained, are the following: Re Racal Communications Ltd.,
(1980) 2 All E.R. 634; O’ Reilly v. Mackman (1982) 3 All. E.R.
1124; Re. v. Hull University Visitor (1993) 1 All E.R. 97. It
should be noted that Racal, in re case (supra) the Anisminic
principle was held to be inapplicable in the case of (superior)
court where the decision of the court is made final and
conclusive by the statute. (The superior court referred to in
this decision is the High Court) [1981 AC 374 (383, 384, 386,
391). In the meanwhile, the House of Lords in CCSU case
(supra) enunciated three broad grounds for judicial review, as
"legality", "procedural propriety" and "rationality" and this
decision had its impact on the development of the law in post-
Anisminic period. In the light of the above four important
decisions of the House of Lords, other decisions of the Court of
appeal, Privy Council etc. and the later academic opinion in
the matter the entire case-law on the subject has been
reviewed in leading text books. In the latest edition of De
Smith on Judicial Review of Administrative Action-edited by
Lord Woolf and Jowell, Q.C. [Professor of Public Law, 5th Edn.
1995], in Chapter 5, titled as "Jurisdiction, Vires, Law and
Fact" (pp.223-294), there is exhaustive analysis about the
concept "Jurisdiction" and its ramifications. The authors have
discussed the pure theory of jurisdiction, the innovative
decision in Anisminic case, the development of the law in post-
Anisminic period, the scope of the "finality" clauses (exclusion
of jurisdiction of courts) in the statutes, and have laid down a
few propositions at pp. 250-256 which could be advanced on
the subject. The authors have concluded the discussion thus
at p. 256:
"After Anisminic virtually every error of law is a
jurisdictional error, and the only place left for
non-jurisdictional error is where the
components of the decision made by the
inferior body included matters of fact and
policy as well as law, or where the error was
evidential (concerning for example the burden
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of proof or admission of evidence). Perhaps the
most precise indication of jurisdictional error
is that advanced by Lord Diplock in Racal
Communications, when he suggested that a
tribunal is entitled to make an error when the
matter ’involves, as may do interrelated
questions of law, fact and degree’. Thus it was
for the county court judge in Pearlman to
decide whether the installation of central
heating in a dwelling amounted to a
’structural, alteration, extension or addition’.
This was a typical question of mixed law, fact
and degree which only a scholiast would think
it appropriate to dissect into two separate
questions, one for decision by the superior
court, viz., the meaning of these words, a
question which must entail considerations of
degree, and the other for decision by a county
court viz., the application of words to the
particular installation, a question which also
entails considerations of degree.
It is, however, doubtful whether any test
of jurisdictional error will prove satisfactory.
The distinction between jurisdictional and
non-jurisdictional error is ultimately based
upon foundations of sand. Much of the
superstructure has already crumbled. What
remains is likely quickly to fall away as the
courts rightly insist that all administrative
action should be, simply, lawful, whether or
not jurisdictionally lawful."
The jurisdictional control exercised by superior courts
over subordinate courts, tribunals or other statutory bodies
and the scope and content of such power has been pithily
stated in Halsbury’s Laws of England - 4th Edn. (Reissue),
1989 Vol. 1(1), p. 113 to the following effect:
"The inferior court or tribunal lacks
jurisdiction if it has no power to enter upon an
enquiry into a matter at all; and it exceeds
jurisdiction if it nevertheless enters upon such
an enquiry or, having jurisdiction in the first
place, it proceeds to arrogate an authority
withheld from it by perpetrating a major error
of substance, form or procedure, or by making
an order or taking action outside its limited
area of competence. Not every error committed
by an inferior court or tribunal or other body,
however, goes to jurisdiction. Jurisdiction to
decide a matter imports a limited power to
decide that matter incorrectly.
A tribunal lacks jurisdiction if (1) it is
improperly constituted, or (2) the proceedings
have been improperly instituted, or (3)
authority to decide has been delegated to it
unlawfully, or (4) it is without competence to
deal with a matter by reason of the parties, the
area in which the issue arose, the nature of
the subject-matter, the value of that subject-
matter, or the non-existence of any other pre-
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requisite of a valid adjudication. Excess of
jurisdiction is not materially distinguishable
from lack of jurisdiction and the expressions
may be used interchangeably.
Where the jurisdiction of a tribunal is
dependent on the existence of a particular
state of affairs, that state of affairs may be
described as preliminary to, or collateral to the
merits of, the issue, or as jurisdictional. (p.
114).
There is a presumption in construing
statutes which confer jurisdiction or
discretionary powers on a body, that if that
body makes an error of law while purporting to
act within that jurisdiction or in exercising
those powers, its decision or action will exceed
the jurisdiction conferred and will be quashed.
The error must be one on which the decision
or action depends. An error of law going to
jurisdiction may be committed by a body
which fails to follow the proper procedure
required by law, which takes legally irrelevant
considerations into account, or which fails to
take relevant considerations into account, or
which asks itself and answers the wrong
question. (pp. 119-120)
The presumption that error of law goes to
jurisdiction may be rebutted on the
construction of a particular statute, so that the
relevant body will not exceed its jurisdiction by
going wrong in law. Previously, the courts were
more likely to find that errors of law were
within jurisdiction; but with the modern
approach errors of law will be held to fall
within a body’s jurisdiction only in exceptional
cases. The Court will generally assume that
their expertise in determining the principles of
law applicable in any case has not been
excluded by Parliament.(p. 120).
Errors of law include misinterpretation of
a statute or any other legal document or a rule
of common law; asking oneself and answering
the wrong question, taking irrelevant
considerations into account or failing to take
relevant considerations into account when
purporting to apply the law to the facts;
admitting inadmissible evidence or rejecting
admissible and relevant evidence; exercising a
discretion on the basis of incorrect legal
principles; giving reasons which disclose faulty
legal reasoning or which are inadequate to
fulfil an express duty to give reasons, and
misdirecting oneself as to the burden of proof."
(pp.121-122)
H.W.R. Wade and C.F. Forsyth in their book -
Administrative Law, 7th Edn., (1994) - discuss the subject
regarding the jurisdiction of superior courts over subordinate
courts and tribunals under the head "Jurisdiction over Fact
and Law" in Chapter 9, pp. 284-320. The decisions before
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Anisminic and those in the post - Anisminic period have been
discussed in detail. At pp. 319-320, the authors give the
Summary of Rules thus:
"Jurisdiction over fact and law: Summary
At the end of a chapter which is top-
heavy with obsolescent material, it may be
useful to summarise the position as shortly as
possible. The overall picture is of an expanding
system struggling to free itself from the
trammels of classical doctrines laid down in
the past. It is not safe to say that the classical
doctrines are wholly obsolete and that the
broad and simple principles of review, which
clearly now commend themselves to the
judiciary, will entirely supplant them. A
summary can therefore only state the long-
established rules together with and broader
rules which have now superseded them, much
for the benefit of the law. Together they are as
follows:
Errors of fact
Old rule : The court would quash only if the
erroneous jurisdictional.
New rule : The court will quash if an erroneous
and decisive fact was -
(a) jurisdictional
(b) found on the basis of no evidence; or
(c) wrong, misunderstood or ignored.
Errors of law
Old rule: The court would quash only if the
error was-
(a) jurisdictional; or
(b) on the face of the record.
New rule: The court will quash for any
decisive error because all errors of law are now
jurisdictional."
(emphasis supplied)
The above position was highlighted by this Court in
Mafatlal Industries Ltd. and Ors. v. Union of India and Ors.
(1997 (5) SCC 536).
Stand of respondents about appellant’s objectionable
conduct needs consideration.
Para 1.3 of RFP reads as follows:
"1.3. Confidentiality- PQB receiving this RFP
must have completed and returned the
required, duly executed Confidentiality Deed.
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PQB are reminded that information
provided in this RFP and the accompanying
documentation package is covered by the
terms of the Confidentiality Deed and the
Disclaimer set out herein. PQB are also
reminded that they are not to make any public
statements about the Transaction process or
their participation in it".
Para 6.13 speaks of the ’Contract Points’ and in no uncertain
terms provides as follows:
"\005\005..Any request for information or
clarification of information must be directed
through the questions and answer process set
out in Section 3.3 hereof.
PQB and their advisers must not make
contact with any employees of AAI or other
GOI agencies or airport customers except as
arranged through ABN AMRO as part of the
Transaction process."
‘
Learned counsel for the appellant submitted that the
expression ’contract’ obviously means an illegal attempt for
bribery etc. and cannot stand on the way of submission of
documents for consideration. The plea is clearly untenable.
Though, there is no penal clause for such breach it goes
against a very concept of fairness in the process and
evaluation of bids. Whatever documents are to be submitted
are clearly stipulated. Any attempt to take advantage of any
newspaper report, clearly falls foul of the mandate that there
shall not be any contract with any person involved in the
process of selection. It is unusual that the RFP did not make
such a contract is a factor for disqualification. This is to be
kept in view in future tenders.
The inevitable conclusion is that the appeal is sans merit,
deserves dismissal, which we direct. Costs made easy.