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England and Wales High Court (Technology and Construction Court) Decisions |
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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Technology and Construction Court) Decisions >> Riverside Truck Rental Ltd v Lancashire County Council [2020] EWHC 1018 (TCC) (06 May 2020) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2020/1018.html Cite as: 190 Con LR 110, [2020] EWHC 1018 (TCC) |
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BUSINESS AND PROPERTY COURTS IN MANCHESTER
TECHNOLOGY AND CONSTRUCTION COURT (QBD)
AND IN THE MATTER OF:
1 Bridge Street West Manchester M60 9DJ |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
RIVERSIDE TRUCK RENTAL LIMTED |
Case No: HT-2020-MAN-000003 Claimant |
|
- and - | ||
LANCASHIRE COUNTY COUNCIL | Defendant | |
AND IN THE MATTER OF: |
Case No: HT-2020-MAN-000006 | |
THE QUEEN | ||
(on the application of ) | ||
RIVERSIDE TRUCK RENTAL LIMTED | Claimant | |
- and - | ||
LANCASHIRE COUNTY COUNCIL | Defendant | |
-and- | ||
MONKS CONTRACTORS LIMITED | Interested Party |
____________________
Mr. Rhodri Williams QC (instructed by Ken Watt) for the Defendant
Hearing date: 7th April 2020
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Crown Copyright ©
COVID-19: This judgment was handed down remotely by circulation to the parties' representatives by email. It will also be released for publication on BAILII and other websites. The date and time for hand-down were 2.00pm on 6th May 2020.
HH Judge Eyre QC:
Introduction.
The Parties' Dealings.
" Please note that Schedule 1 Part A will be scored on a pass/fail basis …If a Tenderer's Schedule 1 Part A is unacceptable and therefore fails for any of the criteria, their tender submission will be non-compliant and therefore disqualified…."
"We are of the view that the ambiguity of internal cab height …does point to a legal challenge of the tender process…. I am formally requesting that [LRL] do evaluate our submission and consider our opinion that the cab height should have stated a minimum height. We will challenge this if our tender is not considered."
"You will doubtless be aware that our client had (sic) to issue its claim form pursuing a judicial review within 3 months of the date on which the grounds for the claim first arose meaning therefore the date is 28th February 2020".
"While the County Council has no objection in principle to the granting of an extension to the time for issuing a claim for judicial review we do not consider it is appropriate for claims such as this to be brought by way of judicial review proceedings. We would question whether this is permissible in the circumstances particularly in light of the specific procedure provided for under [the Regulations]
"Under the Regulations proceedings must be started within 30 days beginning with the date when the economic operator first knew or ought to have known that grounds for starting the proceedings had arisen not within 30 days following the expiration of the standstill period as you aver. In this case the 30 day limit therefore expired on 30th December 2019 at the latest".
The Regulations and the applicable Time Limits.
"A breach of the duty owed in accordance with regulation 89 or 90 is actionable by any economic operator which, in consequence, suffers, or risks suffering, loss or damage."
"(2) Subject to paragraphs (3) to (5), such proceedings must be started within 30 days beginning with the date when the economic operator first knew or ought to have known that grounds for starting the proceedings had arisen.
…
(4) Subject to paragraph (5), the Court may extend the time limits imposed by this regulation (but not any of the limits imposed by regulation 93) where the Court considers that there is a good reason for doing so.
(5) The Court must not exercise its power under paragraph (4) so as to permit proceedings to be started more than 3 months after the date when the economic operator first knew or ought to have known that grounds for starting the proceedings had arisen.
(6) For the purposes of this regulation, proceedings are to be regarded as started when the claim form is issued."
"the claim form must be filed within the time within which an economic operator would have been required by regulation 92(2) of those Regulations (and disregarding the rest of that regulation) to start any proceedings under those Regulations in respect of that decision."
The Claims.
"[the Claimant] does not at this stage contend that the approach to [the Defendant]'s marking of the tenders was inherently unlawful. Rather, it avers that [the Defendant]'s decision to reject [the Claimant] in breach of the obligations noted above infected and impugned [the Defendant]'s decision to award the Contract to Monks"
The Issues.
i) Whether the claim was issued either out of time so as to fail in limine in the absence of an extension or in time so as to have no need of an extension of time.
ii) Whether there is power to extend time. In relation to the Procurement Claim this depends on determining whether the claim is caught by the prohibition on extension contained in regulation 92 (5). In respect of the Judicial Review Claim the question is the extent to which the general power of extending time contained in CPR Pt 3.1(2) (a) is available.
iii) If there is a power to extend time whether it should be exercised in the Claimant's favour.
The Approach to Identification of the Time for Starting Proceedings under the Public Contracts Regulations in Outline.
"140 Time starts running from the date when a party has all the necessary information to know that it has a claim. This may even predate the result of the procurement competition, which is the earliest that an aggrieved tenderer will know it has been unsuccessful in the procurement. This is again different to the relevant starting date for time running under the Limitation Acts, as that is usually the accrual of a cause of action.
…
"158 …. It is not unusual in procurement cases to have more than one claim form issued in respect of the same procurement competition. Often there will be three different claim forms, sometimes four, and very occasionally more than that. This is a well-known and practised approach in procurement cases. Sometimes new information (for example on how an evaluation was performed) becomes available to a claimant on disclosure, and another claim form is issued on the basis of that new information. The only disadvantage to a claim is the incurring of the fee charged to issue a claim, which most litigants would usually wish to avoid. However, the wish to avoid incurring an issue fee is not a good reason within the terms of regulation 92(4). The same approach of issuing a protective claim form can be adopted if a litigant feels it has the necessary knowledge in advance of the procurement exercise being completed, or here, in advance of the auction being conducted. …"
"The standard ought to be a knowledge of the facts which apparently clearly indicate, though they need not absolutely prove, an infringement."
"On any view, a claimant who issues a statutory letter intending it to be a genuine statement of his belief that there has been a breach of the Regulations and that he is proposing to commence proceedings, will find it difficult to deny that he had sufficient knowledge to start time running, at least as regards the breach or breaches identified in the letter."
"Procurement cases have their own separate time limits, and these are imposed by the PCR 2015, which implement the Directive. They are very short, and deliberately so. There are good policy grounds for such an approach. In Jobsin Co UK plc (trading as Internet Recruitment Solutions) v Department of Health [2002] 1 CMLR 44 Dyson LJ said, in relation to an earlier version of the Regulations, at para 33:
`Regulation 32(4) specifies a short limitation period. That is no doubt for the good policy reason that it is in the public interest that challenges to the tender process of a public service contract should be made promptly so as to cause as little disruption and delay as possible. It is not merely because the interests of all those who have participated in the tender process have to be taken into account. It is also because there is a wider public interest in ensuring that tenders which public authorities have invited for a public project should be processed as quickly as possible. A balance has to be struck between two competing interests: the need to allow challenges to be made to an unlawful tender process, and the need to ensure that any such challenges are made expeditiously. Regulation 32(4)(b) is the result of that balancing exercise.'"
Is the Procurement Claim out of Time?
"Where the challenge goes to the decision to contract with a particular provider, there is authority that suggests that time does not start to run at the earliest until the authority becomes committed to a particular provider. In a procurement case this will typically be the date of the decision to enter into the contract with the provider after the end of the standstill period".
"26. I cannot accept that the right of action alleged by Jobsin first arose on 17th November. In my view, it arose on or about 14th August. It is clear that, as soon as the Briefing Document was issued without identifying the criteria by which the most economically advantageous bid was to be assessed, there was a breach of regulation 21(3). I do not understand Mr
Lewis to dispute this. Moreover, it was a breach in consequence of which Jobsin, and indeed all other tenderers too, were then and there at risk of suffering loss and damage. It is true that it was no more than a risk at that stage, but that was enough to complete the cause of action. Without knowing what the criteria were, the bidders were to some extent having to compose their tenders in the dark. That feature of the tender process inevitably carried with it the seeds of potential unfairness and the possibility that it would damage the prospects of a successful tender.
27. Mr Lewis submits that neither the loss nor the risk of loss was caused by the breach of regulation 21(3) until Jobsin was excluded from the tender process on 17th November. I reject that submission for the following reasons. First, it gives no meaning to the words "risks of suffering loss or damage" in regulation 32(2). It seems to me that those words are of crucial significance. They make it clear that it is sufficient to found a claim for breach of the regulations that there has been a breach and that the service provider may suffer damage as a result of the breach. It is implicit in this that the right of action may and usually will arise before the tender process has been completed.
28. That brings me to the second reason. It would be strange if a complaint could not be brought until the process has been completed. It may be too late to challenge the process by then. A contract may have been concluded with the successful bidder. Even if that has not occurred, the longer the delay, the greater the cost of re-running the process and the greater the overall cost. There is every good reason why Parliament should have intended that challenges to the lawfulness of the process should be made as soon as possible. They can be made as soon as there has occurred a breach which may cause one of the bidders to suffer loss. There was no good reason for postponing the earliest date when proceedings can begin beyond that date. Mr. Lewis suggests that there is such a reason. He points out that if, in a case such as this, the limitation period runs from the date of publication of the tender documents, it will be possible for the contracting authority to rule out any real possibility of a challenge by issuing an invitation in breach of the regulations and then not taking any further steps in relation to tenders until after the three months period has expired. I confess that I find this an unlikely state of affairs, but I can see that it might conceivably happen. If it did, a service provider who wished to bring proceedings might have a good case for an extension of time: it would all depend on the facts. In my view, this cannot affect the plain meaning of regulation 32(2). I would therefore hold that the right of action which Jobsin asserts in the present case first arose on or about 14th August 2000. The essential complaint which lies at the heart of the proceedings is that there was a breach of regulation 21(3), in that the Briefing Document did not identify the criteria by which the DOH would assess the most economically advantageous bid."
"242. When considering when grounds for proceedings first arose it is necessary to bear in mind that the 2006 Regulations prescribe the procedure
which a contracting authority must follow before entering into a contract with a supplier of goods or services. The duty owed in accordance with
paragraphs (1) and (2) of regulation 47 is therefore a duty to comply with
that procedure. It follows that a failure by the contracting authority to comply with any step in the required procedure involves a breach of duty
sufficient to support a claim under the Regulations. Moreover, because the procedure governs the whole process from the formation of the intention to
procure goods or services to the award of the contract and is structured in a way that is intended to ensure equal treatment and transparency throughout, a failure to comply with the procedure at any stage inevitably undermines the integrity of all that follows.
243 It is apparent from regulation 47(7) and (8) that grounds for bringing proceedings may exist well before the procedure reaches the award of a contract, but the regulation does not expressly identify the point at which that will occur…"
"Although the language of regulation 47(7)(b) mirrors that of
CPR r 54.5, I think it is necessary, when considering whether the approach
adopted in the Burkett case can be applied in the present case, to have regard
to the differences in the nature and subject matter of the proceedings.
Judicial review is a means of challenging the unlawful exercise of power.
That is an important part of the background against which CPR r 54.5 falls
to be construed. Moreover, as Lord Steyn observed in the Burkett case, para 38 it is in some circumstances possible to challenge a decision that is not
final and which, as in that case, has no legal effect. In a case of that kind
there are good policy reasons for not requiring a person to challenge a
decision which does not affect his rights as a condition of being allowed
challenge at a later stage one that does: see Lord Steyn, at para 42. The
contrast with a claim under the Regulations is clear: the latter is an action to vindicate private rights in the context of a procedure that in many cases will be still in progress. Moreover, as I have already observed, a failure to
comply with the procedure at any stage inevitably undermines the integrity
of all that follows. Accordingly, the right of action is complete immediately
and cannot be improved by allowing the procedure to continue to a conclusion. Where there has been a failure to comply with the proper
procedure the later award of the contract does not constitute a separate
breach of duty; it is merely the final step in what has already become a flawed process. For these reasons I do not think that the approach adopted in the Burkett case can simply be transposed to a claim under the Regulations."
"time did not run against Risk in respect of its claim founded upon actual breach (as distinct from any earlier claim which there might have been for quia timet relief in respect of an apprehended breach) until the first actual breach, which in this case was in March 2007; note, however, that any failure by a contracting authority to comply with any step in the required procedure involves an actual breach and it is accordingly not open to a putative claimant to await the last in a series of actual breaches and to contend that time runs only from then"
"Mr Giffin developed those points clearly and cogently, but I do not accept them. I do not believe that Burkett's case is authority for the proposition that in every situation in which a public law decision is made at the end of a process which involves one or more previous decisions -what I will refer to as "staged decision-making"- time will run from the date of the latest decision, notwithstanding that a challenge on identical grounds could have been made to an earlier decision in the series. In my judgment it is necessary in such a case to analyse carefully the nature of the latest decision and its relationship to the earlier decision(s). I believe the true position to be as follows. If the earlier decision is no more than a preliminary, or provisional, foreshadowing of the later decision, Burkett's case does indeed apply so that the later, "final", decision falls to be treated as a new decision, the grounds for challenging which "first arise" only when it is made. But if the earlier and later decisions are distinct, each addressing what are substantially different stages in a process, then it is necessary to decide which decision is in truth being challenged; if it is the earlier, then the making of the second decision does not set time running afresh. I accept that the distinction may in particular cases be subtle, but it is in my view nonetheless real and important."
i) There can be multiple challenges in respect of a single procurement process. That is because there can be multiple decisions which are in breach of the contracting authority's duty and which cause loss or the risk of loss to the economic operator.
ii) Time can begin to run at different dates in respect of different breaches.
iii) It is not correct to say that the date of the contracting authority's entry into a contract with a competing economic operator is typically the date when time begins to run for a claim by an economic operator (as opposed to an individual or body bringing a public law challenge). Indeed, the converse is the case and typically time will have begun to run at a stage rather earlier than the entry into the contract because it is at that earlier stage that the authority's breach of duty causing loss or a risk of loss is likely to have occurred.
iv) The court has to consider what decision is in truth being challenged or is being said to be the relevant breach of duty. If the claim is in reality founded on an earlier decision of the authority then a later decision giving effect to it does not set time running again.
v) Where there are a series of breaches time runs from the date of knowledge of each breach and not from the end of the series.
Is there Power to extend Time in this Case?
The Approach to be taken when considering an Application to extend Time for a Claim under the Public Contracts Regulations.
"It is perhaps unhelpful to try to give some exhaustive list of the grounds upon which extensions should be granted but such grounds would include factors which prevent service of the claim within time which are beyond the control of the claimant, these could include illness or detention of the relevant personnel. There must however be a good reason …"
"In my judgment, the following principles apply where an extension of time is sought under regulation 92(4):
(1) There must be a good reason for extending time.
(2) One of the matters that the court will consider is whether there was a good reason for the claimant not issuing within the time required, such as an illness or something out of the claimant's control which prevented the claimant from doing so.
(3) It would be unwise to list or seek to limit in advance what factors should be considered to have relative weight to one another in that exercise.
(4) The court will take a broad approach in all the circumstances of the particular case.
(5) The categories are not closed or exhaustively listed in the cases. Lack of prejudice to the defendant is not a determinative factor."
Should Time be extended for the Procurement Claim?
Is the Judicial Review Claim out of Time?
The Approach to be taken when considering an Application to extend Time for a Judicial Review Challenge to a Procurement Decision.
"While in the public law field, it is essential that the courts should scrutinise with care any delay in making an application and a litigant who does delay in making an application is always at risk, the provisions of RSC Ord 53, r 4 and section 31(6) of the Supreme Court Act 1981 are not intended to be applied in a technical manner. As long as no prejudice is caused, which is my view of the position here, the courts will not rely
on those provisions to deprive a litigant who has behaved sensibly and reasonably of relief to which he is otherwise entitled."
i) Whether there is a reasonable objective excuse for the claim having been commenced out of time.
ii) The presence or absence of prejudice to the Defendant and/or third parties.
iii) Whether the public interest requires that the claim be allowed to proceed. This was a potent consideration in R (ex p Greenpeace) v Secretary of State for Trade and Industry [2000] 2 CMLR 94 and is a factor on which the Claimant places reliance in the current case. In considering the public interest account is to be taken of the merits (see per Maurice Kay J at [76]). However, it is to be noted that Greenpeace was a particularly strong case. There the judge had heard full argument on the merits and had come to the clear conclusion that the regulations in question were unlawful. That conclusion related to the lawfulness of regulations of general application and Maurice Kay J explained that his finding as to their lawfulness was a "matter of substantial public importance." In addition when considering the impact of public interest and whether it calls for an extension of time account must be taken of the counterbalancing strong public interest in the speedy resolution of disputes relating to public procurement exercises
Should Time be extended for the Judicial Review Claim?
Conclusion.