AFCONS INFRASTRUCTURE LTD. Vs. NAGPUR METRO RAIL CORPORATION LTD. & ANR.
Supreme Court of India (Division Bench (DB)- Two Judge)
Appeal (Civil), 9078 of 2016, Judgment Date: Sep 15, 2016
REPORTABLE
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF INDIA
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION
CIVIL APPEAL NO. 9078 OF 2016
Afcons Infrastructure Ltd. .…Appellant
versus
Nagpur Metro Rail Corporation Ltd. & Anr. ….Respondents
WITH
C.A. NO. 9079 OF 2016
WITH
C.A. NOS. 9080-9081 OF 2016
J U D G M E N T
Madan B. Lokur, J.
1. In Civil Appeal No. 9078 of 2016 and Civil Appeal No. 9079 of 2016
filed by Afcons Infrastructure Ltd., the challenge is to the judgment and
orders dated 28th July, 2016 and 11th August, 2016 passed by the Bombay
High Court. In Civil Appeal Nos. 9080-9081 of 2016filed by the Nagpur
Metro Rail Corporation Ltd., the challenge is to the judgment and orders
dated 28th July, 2016 and 12th August, 2016 passed by the Bombay High
Court. The combined effect of all the impugned orders is that the High
Court held that M/s. Guangdong Yuantian Engineering Company (GYT) of China
and M/s. TATA Projects Limited (TPL) as a Joint Venture (hereinafter
referred to as the ‘GYT-TPL JV’) are eligible to bid for a tender invited
by the Nagpur Metro Rail Corporation Limited (for short ‘NMRCL’) on 12th
May, 2016.
2. Bids were invited by NMRCL for the design and construction of a
viaduct in Reach-3 between Jhansi Rani Square and Lokmanya Nagar Stations
from CH 7825M to CH 18212M on the East-West Corridor of Nagpur Metro Rail
Project.
3. GYT-TPL JV gave its bid for the contract but NMRCL, by an e-mail
dated 23rd July, 2016 communicated to GYT-TPL JV that its bid was
disqualified at the technical bid opening. The comment/remark relating to
the disqualification stated that the documents submitted by GYT-TPL JV do
not meet the eligibility conditions as stipulated in Clause 4.2 (a) of
Section III of the bid documents.
4. The controversy on the eligibility of GYT-TPL JV arises in view of
Clause 4.2 (a) of Section III of the tender conditions which reads inter
alia as follows:
|4.2 (a) |Specific Construction & |A minimum number of similar |
| |Contract Management experience |contracts specified below that|
| | |have been satisfactorily |
| | |completed as a prime |
| | |contractor, joint venture |
| | |member during last 10 (ten) |
| | |years i.e. up till 31.05.2016 |
| | |Should have received |
| | |minimum INR 3200 Million |
| | |from 1 contract in a metro |
| | |civil construction work and |
| | |should have completed |
| | |viaduct length not less than |
| | |5 km in the same contract. |
5. According to GYT-TPL JV, it had executed the Pearl River Delta
intercity high speed railway project in China; it had received INR 3200
million from that project and it had constructed a viaduct of 7.284 km
length under that contract. Before the High Court and before us, there was
no controversy that GYT-TPL JV had received a minimum of INR 3200 million
from its Pearl River Delta Intercity High Speed Railway Project and that
whether it had completed a viaduct having a length of not less than 5 km.
The sole question before the High Court was whether the Pearl River Delta
Intercity High Speed Railway Project met the requirement of a ‘metro civil
construction work’. According to NMRCL, an inter-city high speed railway
project did not meet the requirements of a metro civil construction work.
6. The High Court disagreed with NMRCL in the following words:
“The civil construction work completed by the petitioner [GYT-TPL JV] in
terms of condition no. 4.2 (a) was for an intercity high speed railway
project in China and in the said contract, the petitioner had completed a
viaduct of 7.284 km length….The petitioner has admittedly constructed a
viaduct of not less than 5 km for the prestigious Pearl River Delta
Intercity high speed railway project in China. We find on a reading of the
tender conditions and particularly clause 4.2(a) thereof that a contractor
or a joint venture company is required to have the experience in Metro
Civil Construction work and of completing a viaduct having a length of not
less than 5 kms. We do not appreciate the submission on behalf of the
respondent that since the petitioner had constructed the viaduct for a high
speed railway project, the petitioner would not have the experience of
constructing a viaduct for a metro. It is not disputed by the respondent
that ‘metro’ would mean a railway or an underground railway. If that be
so, we fail to fathom as to why the technical bid of the petitioner was
disqualified though the petitioner has constructed a viaduct for Pearl
River Delta Intercity high speed railway project in China of the length of
7.284 km. In our view, the petitioner has the experience of constructing a
viaduct of not less than 5 kms. in length in a Metro Civil Construction
work contract and had also received more than INR 3200 million for
satisfactorily completing the said contract. The distinction sought to be
made by the respondent NMRCL between the construction of a viaduct for
Intercity High Speed Railway Project and the construction of a viaduct for
the metro rail project, is illusory and not real. The action on the part
of the NMRCL of disqualifying the petitioner’s technical bid is clearly
arbitrary and is liable to be set aside…..”
7. There is no dispute before us that the Metro Railway (Construction of
Works) Act, 1978 and The Metro Railways (Operation and Maintenance) Act,
2002 extend to Nagpur and are applicable to the Nagpur Metro Rail Project.
The expression ‘metro railways’ has been defined in Section 2(i) of the
Metro Railways (Construction of Works) Act, 1978 in the following words:
“(i) “metro railway” means a metro railway or any portion thereof for the
public carriage of passengers, animals or goods and includes,--
(a) all land within the boundary marks indicating the limits of the land
appurtenant to a metro railway.
(b) all lines of rails, sidings, yards or branches worked over for the
purposes of, or in connection with, a metro railway,
(c) all stations, offices, ventilation shafts and ducts, ware-houses,
workshops, manufactories, fixed plants and machineries, sheds, depots and
other works constructed for the purpose of, or in connection with, a metro
railway;”
A clearer definition is to be found in The Metro Railways (Operation and
Maintenance) Act, 2002 in Section 2(i) thereof and this reads as follows:
“(i) "metro railway" means rail-guided mass rapid transit system having
dedicated right-of-way, with steel wheel or rubber-tyred wheel coaches, but
excluding tramways, for carriage of passengers, and includes--
(A) all land within the boundary marks indicating the limits of the land
appurtenant to a metro railway,
(B) all rail tracks, sidings, yards or branches worked over for the
purposes of, or in connection with, a metro railway,
(C) all stations, offices, ventilation shafts and ducts, warehouses,
workshops, manufactories, fixed plants and machineries, sheds, depots and
other works constructed for the purpose of, or in connection with, a metro
railway;”
8. In view of the extension of these two statutes to the city of
Nagpur, there can be no doubt that the definition of ‘metro railway’ or
‘metro’ would apply to the tender conditions floated for the purposes of
the metro rail project of NMRCL.
9. It is submitted before us that an inter-city rail is completely
different from a metro rail. An inter-city rail is between two cities and
the trains are usually high speed trains. A metro rail is intra-city, it
has a dedicated right-of-way, normally it does not have high speed trains
and the frequency of trains is much greater that of inter-city trains.[1]
A metro rail may extend, in some cases, to a suburb of a metropolitan city
but it essentially remains an intra-city project. There is, therefore, a
qualitative difference between an inter-city rail and a metro rail. By
itself, this indicates a qualitative difference in a railway project that
is inter-city and a railway project that is intra-city and the construction
of a viaduct for a railway project that is inter-city and a railway project
that is intra-city.
10. The fact that GYT-TPL JV made constructions in a metropolitan city or
in a metropolitan area during the execution of the Pearl River Delta inter-
city high speed railway project, does not make that project an intra-city
metro rail project - it continues to be an inter-city railway project.
However, it not necessary for us to delve into these issues or even
adjudicate on them.
11. Recently, in Central Coalfields Ltd. v. SLL-SML (Joint Venture
Consortium)[2] it was held by this Court, relying on a host of decisions
that the decision making process of the employer or owner of the project in
accepting or rejecting the bid of a tenderer should not be interfered with.
Interference is permissible only if the decision making process is mala
fide or is intended to favour someone. Similarly, the decision should not
be interfered with unless the decision is so arbitrary or irrational that
the Court could say that the decision is one which no responsible authority
acting reasonably and in accordance with law could have reached. In other
words, the decision making process or the decision should be perverse and
not merely faulty or incorrect or erroneous. No such extreme case was made
out by GYT-TPL JV in the High Court or before us.
12. In Dwarkadas Marfatia and Sons v. Board of Trustees of the Port of
Bombay[3] it was held that the constitutional Courts are concerned with the
decision making process. Tata Cellular v. Union of India[4] went a step
further and held that a decision if challenged (the decision having been
arrived at through a valid process), the constitutional Courts can
interfere if the decision is perverse. However, the constitutional Courts
are expected to exercise restraint in interfering with the administrative
decision and ought not to substitute its view for that of the
administrative authority. This was confirmed in Jagdish Mandal v. State of
Orissa[5] as mentioned in Central Coalfields.
13. In other words, a mere disagreement with the decision making process
or the decision of the administrative authority is no reason for a
constitutional Court to interfere. The threshold of mala fides, intention
to favour someone or arbitrariness, irrationality or perversity must be met
before the constitutional Court interferes with the decision making process
or the decision.
14. We must reiterate the words of caution that this Court has stated
right from the time when Ramana Dayaram Shetty v. International Airport
Authority of India[6] was decided almost 40 years ago, namely, that the
words used in the tender documents cannot be ignored or treated as
redundant or superfluous – they must be given meaning and their necessary
significance. In this context, the use of the word ‘metro’ in Clause 4.2
(a) of Section III of the bid documents and its connotation in ordinary
parlance cannot be overlooked.
15. We may add that the owner or the employer of a project, having
authored the tender documents, is the best person to understand and
appreciate its requirements and interpret its documents. The constitutional
Courts must defer to this understanding and appreciation of the tender
documents, unless there is mala fide or perversity in the understanding or
appreciation or in the application of the terms of the tender conditions.
It is possible that the owner or employer of a project may give an
interpretation to the tender documents that is not acceptable to the
constitutional Courts but that by itself is not a reason for interfering
with the interpretation given.
16. In the present appeals, although there does not appear to be any
ambiguity or doubt about the interpretation given by NMRCL to the tender
conditions, we are of the view that even if there was such an ambiguity or
doubt, the High Court ought to have refrained from giving its own
interpretation unless it had come to a clear conclusion that the
interpretation given by NMRCL was perverse or mala fide or intended to
favour one of the bidders. This was certainly not the case either before
the High Court or before this Court.
17. Under the circumstances, we find merit in the appeals filed by the
appellants and set aside the judgment and orders passed by the High Court
and restore the decision of NMRCL to the effect that GYT-TPL JV was not
eligible to bid for the contract under consideration.
18. Before we conclude, it is necessary to point out that the High Court
was of opinion that the eligible bidders were not entitled to be either
impleaded in the petition filed in the High Court by the ineligible bidder
GYT-TPL JV or were not entitled to be heard. With respect, this is not the
appropriate view to take in matters such as the present. There are several
reasons for this, one of them being that there could be occasions (as in
the present appeals) where an eligible bidder could bring to the notice of
the owner or employer of the project that the ineligible bidder was
ineligible for additional reasons or reasons that were not within the
contemplation of the owner or employer of the project. It was brought to
our notice by Afcons Infrastructure in these appeals that GYT-TPL JV did
not have any experience in the construction of a viaduct by the segmental
construction method and that the translations of documents in Mandarin
language filed in the High Court were not true English translations.
Submissions made by learned counsel for Afcons Infrastructure in this
regard are important and would have had a bearing on the decision in the
writ petition filed in the High Court but since Afcons Infrastructure was
not a party in the High Court, it could not agitate these issues in the
writ petition but did so in the review petition which was not entertained.
It is to avoid such a situation that it would be more appropriate for the
constitutional Courts to insist on all eligible bidders being made parties
to the proceedings filed by an unsuccessful or ineligible bidder.
19. We make it clear that we have not considered the submissions of
learned counsel for Afcons Infrastructure on the two issues of the
segmental construction method and faulty translation of documents since
they were not before the High Court and also because we do not find it
necessary to adjudicate on them in the view that we have taken.
20. The appeals are allowed. The parties are left to bear their own
costs.
.......………………….J.
(Madan B. Lokur)
.……….…………….J.
New Delhi; (R.K. Agrawal)
September 15, 2016
-----------------------
[1]
[2] In Delhi the time duration is approximately to 2-3
minutes during peak hours and 5-10 minutes during off peak duration in the
city. Source: http://www.delhicapital.com/delhi-metro/metro-train-
timings.html
[3]
[4] 2016(8) SCALE 99.
[5]
[6] (1989) 3 SCC 293.
[7]
[8] (1994) 6 SCC 651.
[9]
[10] (2007) 14 SCC 517.
[11]
[12] (1979) 3 SCC 489