Full Text
HIGH COURT OF DELHI
Date of Decision: 01st August, 2022 IN THE MATTER OF:
TRIDENT INFOSOL PVT LTD ..... Petitioner
Through: Mr. Sandeep Sethi, Senior Advocate with Mr. Himanshu Sethi, Mr. Sandeep Sethi, Mr. Pavan Narang and
Ms. Aishwarya Chhabra, Advocates.
Through: Mr. Vikram Jetly, CGSC with Ms. Shreya Jetly, Advocate and Mr. Tarveen Singh Nanda, Government
Pleader.
HON'BLE MR. JUSTICE SUBRAMONIUM PRASAD
JUDGMENT
1. The instant Writ Petition has been filed by the Petitioner Company under Articles 226 and 227 of the Constitution of India with the following prayers:- “(i) To issue an appropriate writ of Mandamus or other appropriate writ declaring that the bids submitted by the Petitioner are not to be rejected merely in view of the pendency of ECIR no. 12/STF/2019;
(ii) To issue an appropriate writ of Mandamus directing the respondents to allow the Petitioner to bid for and compete in the 2022:DHC:2916-DB contracts in future and tenders even during the pendency of proceedings under ECIR no. 12/STF/2019;
(iii) To seek a declaration that respondent no. 2‟s condition/undertaking in clause 7.2.19 of DRDO procurement manual, 2020 “and that there is no enquiry going on by CBI/ED/any other govt. agency against them” be quashed being arbitrary, illegal, bad in law, unreasonable and violative of fundamental rights guaranteed under Articles 14, 19(1) (g) and 21 of the Constitution of India, 1950; (iv)To declare that, mere pendency of proceedings/enquiry against any Director in his individual capacity should / could not be an impediment in bidding for tenders/contracts by the company;
(v) To declare that such enquiries pending against a company which merely got merged/amalgamated/taken over by a successor company cam1ot be an impediment or disqualification of successor company from doing Governmental business and bidding for tenders and contracts;
(vi) To declare that such enquires / proceedings cannot be the basis of denying the Petitioner company from either participating or being considered and/or award of tenders/contracts, including as an interim measure during the pendency of the writ petition;
(vii) Pass such other and or further order (s) as this Hon‟ble Court may deem fit and proper in the interest of justice”
2. The facts leading to the filing of the instant Writ Petition are as follows:i. In 2017, the Petitioner merged with one, Alligator Designs Pvt. Ltd. (hereinafter referred to as „the ADPL‟), as per scheme approved by the Regional Director, Ministry of Corporate Affairs, New Delhi vide Order No. 233/14/T- 1/2017/6513 dated 25/08/2017. It is pertinent to mention that criminal proceedings were initiated against the Directors of ADPL in 2013 alleging that the Directors of ADPL have forged and fabricated several “non-transfer & use” certificates in the name of Chhattisgarh Police for American Technologies Inc. There is also an allegation that they have applied for import licence from DGFT on the basis of photocopies issued by Bihar Police. ii. Thereafter, in 2019, the Enforcement Directorate (hereinafter referred to as „the ED‟) registered ECIR No. STF/12/2019 (hereinafter referred to as „the said ECIR‟) against some of the Directors of the Petitioner. iii. Vide Provisional Attachment Order No. 03/2020 (hereinafter referred to as the „Attachment Order‟) the ED provisionally attached the assets of the Petitioner, on account of the fact that the Petitioner was holding the proceeds of crime generated by ADPL. The Attachment Order was confirmed by the Ld. Adjudicating Authority. iv. In 2021, the Electronics and Radar Development Establishment and Naval Physical and Oceanographic Laboratory, i.e. Respondent No. 3 and Respondent No. 4 respectively, invited online bids for supply of “VPX based multi-channel system using RFSOC Gen-3”, “3U VPX Signal Processing System (Qty- 3 Nos)” and the supply of three units of Integrated 6U VPX Power Supply Unit. v. It is pertinent to note that both Respondent Nos. 3 and 4, under the Impugned Condition i.e. Clause 7.2.19 of the DRDO Procurement Manual, 2020 sought the following undertaking:- “Undertaking from the Bidders: An undertaking will be obtained from the Bidder firm/company/vendor that in the past they have never been banned/debarred for doing business dealings with Ministry of Defence/Govt. of India/ any other Govt. organisation and that there is no enquiry going on by CBI/ED/any other Govt. agency against them.” vi. The Petitioner submitted its bids to Respondent No. 3 and 4 on 04.02.2021, 15.03.2021, and 03.05.2021. vii. Stating that the Petitioner had failed to comply with the Impugned Condition, the Respondent wrote to it vide letter dated 22.06.2021 seeking the said undertaking, as mandated in the Impugned Clause. viii. The Petitioner furnished the said undertaking placing on record the existence of the said ECIR against the Petitioner Company. ix. On 10.06.2021, the technical evaluation committee of Respondent No. 3 rejected the bid of the Petitioner in the following terms:
2019. With the said law in place inclusion of Trident lnfosol in the case against Alligator Designs by ED is being contested by us in the appropriate courts.” xii. Since the bid of the Petitioner was not being considered, the Petitioner has filed the instant writ petition.
3. Ld. Senior counsel for the Petitioner argued that the only investigation where the Petitioner had been made a party was ECIR No. 12/STF/2019 dated 31.07.2019. It was further argued that the decision of the Respondents to declare the technical bid of the Petitioner as invalid, in the technical bid evaluation phase, was arbitrary, discriminatory and unjust.
4. The Ld. Senior Counsel for the Petitioner further contends that there existed no allegations against the Petitioner Company being involved in the commission of the predicate offence under the PMLA. It has further been argued by the counsel for the Petitioner that the pendency of the ED proceedings would continue to prejudice the Petitioner for an indefinite period, leading to its civil death. The Ld. Senior Counsel places reliance on a judgment passed by the Division Bench of this Court in M/s Good Year Security Services (Regd) v. Union of India & Ors., 2017 SCC OnLine Del 9639 and submits that an entity cannot be debarred from participating in a tender process for an indefinite period of time.
5. The Ld. Senior Counsel for the Petitioner has placed reliance upon the judgments passed by the Apex Court in Kulja Industries Limited. v. Chief Gen. Manager W.T. Project BSNL &Ors., (2014) 14 SCC 731 to state that the Petitioner ought to have been given a fair hearing before being blacklisted. Further, reliance has been placed on Nicholas Piramal India Ltd. v. S. Sundaranayagam, CRL. M.C. No.5392/2005, to state that the entity which has evolved upon amalgamation cannot be prosecuted for an offence committed by the transferor company.
6. Per contra, the counsel for the Respondent has argued that cancelling the Petitioner‟s bid does not constitute discrimination, as the Respondent was merely following the DRDO Procurement Manual, 2020. It has further been argued by the counsel for the Respondent that the Impugned Condition has been incorporated to maintain high standards of integrity and is inconformity with public interest.
7. The counsel for the Respondent also draws attention to the fact the DRDO is an R&D organization, which undertakes projects of national importance. Due to the sensitive nature of its work, the DRDO has been exempt from the rigours of the Right to Information Act, 2005.
8. Further, the Ld. Counsel for the Respondent states that the Petitioner is the sister concern of Alligator Designs, and that Directors of the two companies are the same. It has further been brought to the notice of this Court that the proceeds of crime to the tune of Rs. 2,36,25,000/-, received by Alligator Designs were transferred to the Petitioner Company.
9. The Respondent has placed reliance upon the judgment titled R.K. Jain & Sons Hospitality Pvt. Ltd. through Its Director v. Union of India & Anr., W.P. (C) 3712/2020, to state that one cannot challenge the conditions of the tender after having participated in it.
10. Having heard the counsels appearing for the Petitioners and the Respondent and perusing the material on record, this Court will proceed to examine the present case.
11. The said tenders have been floated by Respondent Nos.[3] & 4, i.e. the Electronics and Radar Development Establishment and Naval Physical and Oceanographic Laboratory respectively.
12. Courts generally follow a hands off approach when Government fixes the eligibility conditions in the matters pertaining to tenders, especially those that pertain to matters of national security. In Siemens Public Communication Networks (P) Ltd. v. Union of India, (2008) 16 SCC 215, the Apex Court has observed as under:
13. A Division Bench of this Court in Axiscades Aerospace and Technologies Pvt. Ltd. v. Union of India &Ors., 2018 SCC OnLine Del 9320, has observed as under:
11. It is our considered opinion/view that the extent of permissible judicial review in matters of contracts, procurement, etc. would vary with the subject-matter of the contract and there cannot be any uniform standard or depth of judicial review which could be understood as an across the board principle to apply to all cases of award of work or procurement of goods/material. The scrutiny of the challenges before us, therefore, will have to be made keeping in mind the confines of national security, the subject of the procurement being crucial to the nation's sovereignty.”
15. The said Tenders are for procurement of instruments which are necessary for the security of the country. Keeping in mind the nature of tender, it cannot be said that the Impugned condition, which warrants that an undertaking should be given by the Bidder firm/company/vendor that in the past they have never been banned/debarred for doing business dealings with Ministry of Defence/Govt. of India/ any other Govt. organisation and that there is no enquiry going on by CBI/ED/any other Govt. agency against them, is bad in law or is violative of Article 14 of the Constitution of India.
16. Further, as is evident upon a perusal of the Attachment Order dated 19.08.2020 the Petitioner Company is a sister concern of ADPL and the Directors of the Petitioner Company, namely, Nitin Gupta, Pawan Seth and Ashok Gupta are also Directors of ADPL. It also appears that investigation reveals that the Directors of ADPL, with the help of their aids have used fake and forged certificates in their erstwhile contracts. It also cannot be denied that the assets of the Petitioner have been attached by the said Attachment Order. In view of the above, there is no infirmity in the decision of the Respondents in rejecting the bid of the Petitioner/company.
17. Even generally, as has been laid down in a catena of judgments, the scope of judicial review available to this Court under the tender jurisdiction is limited. In Tata Cellular v. Union of India, (1994) 6 SCC 651, the Supreme Court has stated as under:
18. Similarly, in Michigan Rubber (India) Ltd. v. State of Karnataka, (2012) 8 SCC 216, the following principles were reiterated:- "23. From the above decisions, the following principles emerge: (a) The basic requirement of Article 14 is fairness in action by the State, and non-arbitrariness in essence and substance is the heartbeat of fair play. These actions are amenable to the judicial review only to the extent that the State must act validly for a discernible reason and not whimsically for any ulterior purpose. If the State acts within the bounds of reasonableness, it would be legitimate to take into consideration the national priorities; (b) Fixation of a value of the tender is entirely within the purview of the executive and the courts hardly have any role to play in this process except for striking down such action of the executive as is proved to be arbitrary or unreasonable. If the Government acts in conformity with certain healthy standards and norms such as awarding of contracts by inviting tenders, in those circumstances, the interference by courts is very limited;
(c) In the matter of formulating conditions of a tender document and awarding a contract, greater latitude is required to be conceded to the State authorities unless the action of the tendering authority is found to be malicious and a misuse of its statutory powers, interference by courts is not warranted;
(d) Certain preconditions or qualifications for tenders have to be laid down to ensure that the contractor has the capacity and the resources to successfully execute the work; and (e) If the State or its instrumentalities act reasonably, fairly and in public interest in awarding contract, here again, interference by court is very restrictive since no person can claim a fundamental right to carry on business with the Government.
19. Hence, while the State‟s instrumentalities ought to act fairly entering contracts with private parties, this cannot impinge upon the right of the Government in setting the terms of the tender. Hence, this Court ought only to intervene if the condition is arbitrary, discriminatory, mala fide or actuated by bias.
20. As has been noted, the present tender was floated by Labs of Respondent No. 2, which are specialised labs engaged in research pertaining to critical defence technologies and systems. It is in this context that the Respondent Nos. 3 and 4 have imposed the Impugned Condition to sift through entities which have criminal proceedings/investigation pending against them. This condition is imperative to maintain the integrity of such projects which deal with maters of national importance, security and are of immense public importance.
21. Considering the nature of the work undertaken by the Respondents, it is evident that the Impugned Condition is not arbitrary, discriminatory, mala fide or actuated by bias. Hence, this Court does not find any infirmity with the Impugned Condition and is disinclined to interfere with it.
22. Further as has also been noted, material on record shows that there are allegations that the key managerial personnel, nature of work and functioning of the Petitioner Company is the same as ADPL and the Petitioner Company has allegedly benefitted from the proceeds of crime to the tune of Rs. 2,36,25,000/-, received by ADPL as these were transferred to the Petitioner Company. Hence, the Petitioner cannot claim that it has been unfairly excluded the Petitioner from participating in the bid.
23. As noted above, this Court is not inclined to interfere with the Impugned Condition or the decision of the Respondent Nos. 2-4 from excluding the Petitioner from participating in the said tender process.
24. With these observations, the petition is dismissed, along with pending application(s), if any.
SATISH CHANDRA SHARMA, C.J. SUBRAMONIUM PRASAD, J AUGUST 01, 2022 hsk/s