GBL & ASSOCIATES LTD v DIRECTOR OF WILDLIFE MINISTRY OF LANDS, NATURAL RESOURCES AND TOURISM AND TWO OTHERS 1989 TLR 195 (HC)
Court High Court of Tanzania- Dar Es Salaam
Judge Rubama J
16 October, 1989 E
Flynote
Contract - Government tender - Whether an invitation to treat or an offer.
Contract - Government tender - Whether central tender board obliged to accept
highest bid. F
Contract - Tenderer's bid made within period stipulated by tenderee - When legally
binding contract arises. G
Contract - Government tender - Period within which to bid and pay purchase price
stipulated in tender - Tenderer bids within stipulated period - Tenderee accepts bid
subject to confirmation sale price - Tenderee confirms award of tender but shortens
original period within which sale price payable - Whether open to tenderee to modify
period of payment of H sale price.
Contract - Government tender - Tender submitted within stipulated period -
Tenderee accepts bid and confirms award of tender but shortens period within which
sale price payable - Tenderer objects - Tenderee cancels award of tender - Whether
open to I tenderee to cancel award after acceptance.
1989 TLR p196
Civil Practice and Procedure - Right of hearing - Parties to suit aware of hearing date
- A Defendants absent at hearing without assigning any reason - Suit set down for ex
parte proof - Defendants enter appearance on day set down for ex parte - Whether
defendants have a right of hearing. B
-Headnote
On behalf of the government of the United Republic of Tanzania the Secretary of the
Central Tender Board by advertisement in the Daily News paper of 9/2/88, invited
tenders for sale of elephant ivory of approximately 13 tons. The tenderers were C
requested to quote prices per kilogram in US$ or any convertible foreign currency,
the quotations to be firm and valid for acceptance for at least 60 days from closing
date of the tender. Further, successful tenderers were required to make full payment
and to collect the ivory within 30 days from the date of the award.
The plaintiff company, an agent of M/S TAT Hing Ivory Wares Factory, Hong Kong,
D offered to buy the whole lot of ivory at US$ 80 per kilogram or at US$ l0% above
highest bidder's offer
should its offer be beaten. On 13/5/88 the Director of Wildlife, Ministry of Lands,
Natural Resources and Tourism accepted the plaintiff company's offer to buy the
ivory at E 10% above the highest bid which was US$ 140 - that is to say, at US$ 154
per kilogram subject to the plaintiff company confirmation within seven days of
receipt of the letter of acceptance of the sale and at the price per kilogram. On the
same day, i.e. 13/5/88 the plaintiff company communicated its confirmation to the
Director of Wildlife. F On 19/5/88 the Director of Wildlife wrote to the plaintiff
company's principal in Hong Kong stating that the plaintiff company were the
winners of the government tender for the sale of nearly 16.5 tons of mixed ivory. The
letter of the Director of Wildlife which was copied to the plaintiff company was silent
as to the time for payment of the sale G price. On 28/5/88 the Acting Director of
Wildlife wrote to the plaintiff company confirming that the tender had been awarded
to it and requiring the plaintiff company to pay the sale price within the period of one
week from the date of the letter. The H plaintiff company objected, maintaining that
the tender regulations under which they had been operating had provided for a thirty
day, and not seven day, period of payment of the sale price. On 22/6/88 the Director
of Wildlife cancelled the award of the tender to the plaintiff company. In a suit by the
plaintiff company heard ex parte on 15/9/89, for a I declaration that the cancellation
of the tender was null and void:
1989 TLR p197
RUBAMA J
Held: (i) The advertisement by the Secretary of the Central Tender Board calling for
the A purchase of elephant ivory was not an offer but an invitation to treat. Each of
the tenderers offered to buy at his quoted price and it was upon the government of
the United Republic of Tanzania to accept an offer or reject it; B
(ii) in the letter of the Director of Wildlife of 13/5/88 seeking confirmation on
acceptability of the purchase price of US$ 154 per kilogram, the plaintiff company
was being asked if it still stood by its tender to pay 10% above the highest bidder's
offer. In this respect, the Central Tender Board was not obliged to accept the highest
bid or any of the tenders for that matter. The highest bid need not necessarily be the
best. The C Central Tender Board after opening tenders moves to evaluate them and
it is the highest evaluated tender, which need not be the highest bid, that is accepted;
(iii) on the evidence, the tender by the plaintiff was the highest evaluated
tender and that it was the offer that the government had accepted. By the Director
Wildlife's D letter dated 19/5/88 to the plaintiffs principal in Hong Kong, the
Director of Wildlife had created a legally binding contract between the government
of the United Republic of Tanzania and the plaintiff's principal; E
(iv) the tender had been awarded to the plaintiff on the basis of the tender
conditions stipulated in the advertisement that appeared in the Daily News of 9/2/88.
These conditions required payment of the sale price within 30 days and not 7 days as
demanded by the Director of Wildlife. It was not open to the Director of Wildlife to
modify and shorten the said period of 30 days subsequent to him declaring the
plaintiff F the winner of the tender. As there was a binding contract between the
plaintiff and defender.
(v) the unilateral cancellation of the award of the tender to the plaintiff by the
Director of Wildlife vide his letter of 22/6/88 was illegal and in breach of a contract
which already existed. G
(vi) Obiter: The counsel for the defendants who appeared on 15/9/89 did not
have a right of audience as the case was coming up for ex parte hearing.
Case Information
Judgment for plaintiff. H
Lamwai, for the plaintiff
Ihema, for the defendant.
[zJDz]Judgment
Rubama, J.: By Tender No. 116 of 1987 for the sale of Elephant Ivory appearing in I
the Daily News dated 9th February,
1989 TLR p198
RUBAMA J
1988, the Secretary of the Central Tender Board on behalf of the government of the
A United Republic of Tanzania invited tenders from potential authorised buyers for
the purchase of "Elephant Ivory of approximately 13 Tons".
The tenderers were told that the Ivory for sale was available for inspection in the
Ivory B Room, Dar es Salaam. Details on whom to contact to gain access to the Ivory
Room and the allowed time were provided. The tenderers were also "requested to
quote prices per kilogram in US$ or any convertible foreign currency". The quotations
had to be firm C and valid for acceptance by the government for at least 60 days
from closing date of the tender, i.e. 11 March, 1988, at 0900 am. Further, the
successful tenderer was going to be required to make full payment and collect the
Ivory within 30 days from the date of award of the tender. Failure to accomplish this
was going to have the effect of nullifying the award.
GBL & Associates Ltd on behalf of a Principal, M/S Tat Hing Ivory Wares Factory D
submitted its tender on 10th March, 1988, a day or so before the closing date for the
tender. Their tender was couched in the following terms:
We offer to buy the whole lot of Ivory at US$ 80 (eighty) per kilogram. E
PRINCIPAL CONDITION
Should our tender above become low, then we offer 10% above highest
bidders' offer. F
On 13th May, 1988 the Director of Wildlife, Ministry of Lands Natural Resources and
Tourism wrote to GBL & Associates Ltd referring to a conversation he (the Director of
G Wildlife) had had that morning with Mr. Lugendo of the GBL & Associates Ltd he
stated:
As pointed out to you, we are prepared to award your company the tender for
the sale of nearly H 16.5 tons of ivory at a price of US$ 154/kg of mixed or ungraded
ivory. This price is arrived at as follows:
i. The highest bid in the tender advertised on 19th and 11th March, 1988
was for US$ I 140 (US$ one hundred and forty).
1989 TLR p199
RUBAMA J
ii. In your quotation for the same tender, you offered US$ 80 or 10% over
and above the A highest bidder.
iii. Since your quotation for US$ 80 was far too low, we opted for your
second quotation (i.e. 10% above the highest bid, i.e. US$ 140. And 10% of US$ 140 =
154). B
The purpose of this letter is to seek your official confirmation that if you are
finally awarded the tender for the sale of nearly 16.5 tons of ivory you will be able to
pay US$ 154 per kilo of mixed ivory. We need your confirmation within seven days
upon receipt of this letter. C
GBL & Associates Ltd, wrote to the Director of Wildlife on the same day, i.e. 13th
May, 1988, confirming that if finally awarded the tender for the sale of nearly 16.5
tons of ivory, they would pay US$ 154 per kilo of mixed ivory. No doubt following
receipt of D the confirmation of sale price per kg. from GBL & Associates Ltd., on
19th May, 1988 the Director of Wildlife directly communicated with the plaintiff's
Principal in Hong Kong copying the letter to the plaintiff. The Director of Wildlife
stated: E
This is to confirm that Messrs GBL Associates Ltd. of P.O. Box 3154, Dar es
Salaam, Tanzania, are the winners of the recent Government tender for the sale of
nearly 16.5 tons of mixed ivory. F
We also confirm that the ivory will be accompanied by relevant CITES
documents which will only be released after the ivory has been paid for in full.
No mention of within what time that payment for the ivory had to be effected. The
G Acting Director of Wildlife did, however, address the Managing Director of GBL &
Associates Ltd. on the time within which payment for ivory had to be made. In his
letter dated 28th May, 1988, he stated: H
I have the pleasure to inform you that you have been awarded the said tender
under the following conditions:
(a) That you will pay US$ 154.- per kg without subjecting the lot to any
grading. I
(b) That you are ready to effect the total payment of the
1989 TLR p200
RUBAMA J
16.538 tons of elephant tusks at once, into our Bank Account within a
period of one A week from the date of this letter.
The condition on payment schedule was objected to by Mr. Lugendo on the very day,
B i.e. 28th May, 1988. He maintained that the Tender regulation under which they
had been operating had provided that payment for the purchased ivory had to be
effected within 30 and not 7 days. He called upon the Ag. Director of Wildlife to
honour his own tender regulations. On the same day, Mr. Lugendo also
communicated by phone with C the boss of the Acting Director of Wildlife, i.e. the
Principal Secretary, Ministry of Lands, Natural Resources & Tourism. He confirmed
this conversation in a letter addressed to the Principal Secretary. He stated:
Please refer to our telephone conversation of this morning with our Mr.
Lugendo and we wish D to know your account number and where in Europe or
anywhere and name of your Bankers so that our Principal in Paris and Hong Kong
can send the money in respect of the purchase of the ivory which you have advised us
we have won on behalf of our Principals. Without this E information, we cannot
arrange for payment.
On 14th June, 1988, Mr. Lugendo in two letters addressed to the Director of Wildlife
one of which was copied to the Principal Secretary of the Ministry of Lands, Natural
F Resources and Tourism presses for the same information he had sought from the
Principal Secretary on 28th May, 1988, i.e. where his Principal was to effect payment
for the 16.538 tons of elephant tusks. The response to these letters was a letter dated
22nd June, 1988, addressed to Mr. Lugendo from the Director of Wildlife cancelling
the G award of the tender number 116 for the purchase of 16.538 tons of elephant
tusks. The second paragraph of that letter reads:
I wish to inform you that a decision has been taken by the Government to
cancel the award of H the tender number 116 to your firm for the purchase of
16.538 tons of elephant tusks. Our letter No. GWC.5/73/315 dated 28th May, 1988,
addressed to you in which you were awarded the tender is, therefore, withdrawn. I
1989 TLR p201
RUBAMA J
Following this communication GBL & Associates Ltd filed a suit against the
defendants A seeking the following orders.
(i) A Declaration that the government Tender award for 16.538 tons of
ivory, the subject matter of this suit, is still valid and that the cancellation of the same
by the 1st and 2nd defendant is null and void. B
(ii) An order that the 1st and 2nd defendants issue to the Plaintiff and/or
its Principal, M/S Tat High Ivory Wares Factory Cites certificates and all necessary
permits to enable the plaintiff and/or its principal to export the ivory from Tanzania.
C
(iii) Costs of this suit.
(iv) Any other relief which the court will deem fit to grant.
I wish to first state that this suit was properly filed in that consent of the Attorney
General D was duly obtained for purpose of suing the government. The 1st and 2nd
defendants have been included herein since they were the officers that had been
involved in this case.
Following completion of the pleadings, this case was fixed for hearing on 20th July,
1989 E before my brother judge (Kyando, J.). All the parties were aware of this
hearing date. However, the defendants without assigning any reason absented
themselves. The learned counsel for the plaintiff prayed for permission to prove his
case ex parte by affidavit. This prayer was granted. An Affidavit was duly filed on
11th August, 1989 as ordered F by the Court (Kyando, J). The case eventually came
for hearing on 15th September, 1989 when learned counsel for the plaintiff, Dr.
Lamwai, prayed for judgment. Mr. Ihema, learned counsel for the Defendants, also
appeared on this day. He did not on the G day have a right of audience as the case
was coming up for an ex parte hearing.
In the affidavit sworn by the Managing Director of GBL & Associates Ltd. in
compliance with this Court's order of 20th July, 1989 (Kyando, J.), the deponent
submits that once the tender was made on the basis of the conditions stipulated in the
H advertisement that had appeared on the Daily News on 9th February, 1988,
namely, the period within which to pay to be 30 days, it was not open to the 1st
defendant to modify and shorten the said period, especially subsequent to the 1st
defendant declaring the plaintiff the winner on the 19th of May, 1988, and the 1st
defendant's letter dated 28th I May, 1988 did not have any effect on the original
terms of payment
1989 TLR p202
RUBAMA J
as stipulated in the original agreement. Further noting that on the 22nd day of June,
A 1988, the 1st defendant, vide his letter of even date, unilaterally cancelled the
award of the tender, the deponent submits that this unilateral action by the 1st
defendant was illegal and in breach of a contract which already existed.
Let us revisit the advertisement by the Secretary of the Central Tender Board calling
for B tenders from authorised buyers of Elephant Ivory. The tenderers were
"requested to quote prices per kilogram in US$ or any convertible foreign currency"
and further informed that: C
(a) Quotations be firm and valid for acceptance by the government for at
least 60 days from closing date of the tender, i.e. 11th March, 1988, at 9.00 a.a. and
that
(b) The successful tenderer would be required to make full payment and
collect the Ivory D within 30 days from the date of award of the tender. Failure to
comply with this requirement was going to nullify the award.
Were the Tender Regulations operative in respect of Tender No. 116 for the purchase
E of 16.538 tons of Elephant Tusks those detailed by the Secretary to the Central
Tender Board's advertisement appearing in the Daily News of 9th February, 1988?
This court accepts the plaintiff's submission that the tender had stipulated in the
advertisement that had appeared on the Daily News on 9th February, 1988. F
The plaintiff on behalf of M/S TAT Hing Ivory Wared Factory of the United Kingdom
had quoted the price of the highest bidder plus 10% thereof as its tender price. This
quotation was in a convertible currency, i.e. American Dollars. From the exchange of
letters between the Director of Wildlife and the Managing director of GBL &
Associates G Ltd (both dated 13/5/88) fully reproduced above, it is clear that the
quotation by GBL & Associates Ltd had remained firm and valid for the acceptance of
the United Republic of Tanzania for more than 60 days from the closing date of the
tender, i.e. 11/3/1988 at H 9.00 am. The 1st defendant, vide his letter dated 19th
May, 1988 addressed to the plaintiff accepted the plaintiff offer and required the
payment of US$ 154.00 per kilogram.
What then was the legal status of the advertisement by the Secretary of the Central
Tender Board that had appeared on the Daily News on 9th February, 1988, calling for
I the purchase of "Elephant Ivory of approximately 13 tons"? Was it an "invitation
1989 TLR p203
RUBAMA J
to Treat" or an "Offer"? Was the Central Tender Board obliged to accept the highest
A bid? The call for tenders by the Secretary of the Central Tender Board on behalf of
the Government of the United Republic of Tanzania was an "Invitation to Treat".
These tenderers' bids were the "offers". Each of the tenderer offered to buy at his
quoted price and it was upon the Government of the United Republic of Tanzania to
accept an offer B or reject. The substance of the Director of Wildlife's letter dated
13th May, 1988 to GBL & Associates Ltd., seeking confirmation from GBL &
Associates Ltd. on acceptability of the purchase price of US$ 154 per kilogram of ivory
testifies to this very fact. In this letter, GBL & Associated Ltd were being asked if they
still stood by their C tender to pay "10% above the highest bidder's offer." In this
respect, the Central Tender Board was not obliged to accept the highest bid or any of
the tenders for that matter. The highest bid need not necessarily be the best to accept.
The Central Tender Board after opening tenders moves to evaluate them and it is the
highest evaluated tender which D need not be the highest bid that is accepted.
Going by the various communications between the Director of Wildlife and the
Managing Director of GBL & Associates Ltd., the Director of Wildlife and the
plaintiff's Principal and also between the Principal E Secretary, Ministry of Lands,
Natural Resources and Tourism and the Managing Director of GBL & Associates Ltd.,
it is clear that the tender by the plaintiff was the highest evaluated tender and that it
was the offer that the government had accepted vide its letter by the Director of
Wildlife dated 19th May, 1988 to the plaintiff's Principal in F Hong Kong which was
copied to the GBL & Associates Ltd. Dar es Salaam. The 1st defendant, ignoring the
legal effect his letter to the plaintiff's Principal has had, again directly wrote to the
plaintiff on 28th May, 1988, stating that the tender for the purchase of Elephant
Tusks had been offered to the plaintiff. By the 1st defendant's letter dated G 19th
May, 1988 to the plaintiff's principal in Hong Kong, the 1st defendant had created a
legally binding contract between the government of the United Republic of Tanzania
and the plaintiff's Principal. This legal status between the two parties was again
affirmed by the 1st defendant's letter dated 28th May, 1988, addressed to the
Managing H Director, GBL & Associates Ltd. In this situation, what is the effect of
the United Republic of Tanzania's action "to cancel the award of the tender No. 116 to
the plaintiff for the purchase of 16.538 tons of Elephant Tusks" communication to the
plaintiff vide the 1st defendant's letter dated 22nd June, 1988? I
As the Tender Regulations operative in respect to Tender No.
1989 TLR p204
RUBAMA J
116 for the purchase of 16.538 tons of Elephant Tusks those detailed by the Secretary
A of the Central Tender Board's advertisement appearing in the Daily News of 9th
February, 1988 a successful tenderer was going to be required to make full payment
and collect the Ivory within 30 days from the date of award of the tender. Failure to
B accomplish this was going to have the effect of nullifying the award. "Within 30
days" here does not apportion the time within which to make payment on award of
the tender and the time within which to collect the elephant tusks. The successful
tenderer could, if he so chose, make payment on the last day allocated, i.e. 30 days
and collect the elephant tusks on the same day. C
It is clear that the 1st defendant had not acted under the above mentioned regulation.
There is no reference to non-payment for the ivory or failure to collect the bought
ivory within 30 days from the date of award of the tender. If the government had
proceeded D under this regulation, the award of the tender would have been
nullified. This is not the case in the instant case. Here we are told "that a decision has
been taken by the government to cancel the award of the tender No. 116 ... for the
purchase of 16.538 tons of elephant tusks". No reason is assigned. The plaintiff was
left to speculate whether E that government reaction was out of the objection raised
by the Managing Director, GBL & Associates Ltd. that the tender regulations under
which they were operating required payment within 30 and not 7 days as demanded
by the Director of Wildlife. For whatever reason the government had thus acted, this
chief accepts the plaintiff's F submission that the tender had been awarded to the
plaintiff on the basis of the tender conditions stipulated in the advertisement that had
appeared on the Daily News on 9th February, 1988, namely, the period within which
to pay to be 30 days. It was not open to the 1st defendant to modify and shorten the
said period of 30 days subsequent to the G 1st defendant declaring the plaintiff the
winner on the 19th day of May, 1988. As noted above, there was a binding contract
between the defendants and the plaintiffs on the 19th of May, 1988 and the 1st
defendant's letter dated 28th May, 1988 could not have any effect on the original
terms of payment as stipulated in the original agreement. H The 1st defendant's
unilateral cancellation of the tender award vide his letter of 22nd June, 1988 to the
plaintiff was illegal and in breach of a contract which already existed. On the
materials before this court, I further find that in consequence of the cancellation
referred above, the plaintiff and its Principal have suffered loss in that they had
already I opened letters of credit in favour of the defendants and that payment had
been
1989 TLR p205
RUBAMA J
duly made and the contract thus firmly concluded. The defendants could not back out
of A it at will.
In view of the above, I enter judgment for the plaintiff with costs as prayed: B
(i) It is hereby declared that the Government Tender award for 16.538
tons of ivory, the subject matter of this suit, is still valid and that the cancellation of
the same by the 1st and 2nd defendants is null and void.
(ii) It is ordered that the 1st and 2nd defendants issue to the plaintiff
and/or its Principal, C M/S TAT Hing Ivory Wares Factory Cites certificates and all
necessary permits to enable the plaintiff and/or its principal to export the ivory from
Tanzania.
(iii) Costs of this suit. D
Lastly, I find it necessary to state the obvious that the law involved in this case is
extremely simple. Appreciating that, I must express utter astonishment on how so
straight forward a matter could be left to get out of hand leading to the necessity of a
government being taken to court. Worse still, the action of the principal actors on
behalf of the E government have been contradictory and unilateral and in complete
disregard to the adverse repercussions in its future dealings in international trade.
Consistency, steadfastness and fairness are some of the many qualities and a
democratically elected F government as the one being sued is must strive to have in
its dealings. A government that chooses when to abide by a freely entered contract
does so at extreme costs to its reputation or standing. This court decries this sorry
development.
G Order accordingly.
1989 TLR p206
A
0 Comments
PLACE YOUR COMMENT HERE
WARNING: DO NOT USE ABUSIVE LANGUAGE BECAUSE IT IS AGAINST THE LAW.
THE COMMENTS OF OUR READERS IS NOT OUR RESPONSIBILITY.