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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 >> Bristol Missing Link Ltd v Bristol City Council [2015] EWHC 876 (TCC) (01 April 2015) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/TCC/2015/876.html Cite as: [2015] PTSR 1470, [2015] EWHC 876 (TCC) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
TECHNOLOGY AND CONSTRUCTION COURT
Rolls Building, Fetter Lane, London, EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
Bristol Missing Link Limited |
Claimant/Respondent |
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- and - |
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Bristol City Council |
Defendant/Applicant |
____________________
(instructed by Bevan Brittan LLP) for the Claimant/Respondent
Mr Rhodri Williams QC
(instructed by Bristol City Legal Services) for the Defendant/Applicant
Hearing date: 26 March 2015
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Crown Copyright ©
The Hon. Mr Justice Coulson:
1. Introduction
2. The Factual Background and the Claim
"It is averred that after the final tenders were open, and after evaluators had scored the claimant's tender, the defendant systematically adjusted downwards the scores awarded to the claimant's tender in respect of a number of responses. In each instance, the adjusted score was below the score awarded by all/or a clear majority of the evaluators. In so doing, the defendant breached its duties of equal treatment and transparency. No proper explanation or documents have been provided by the defendant in respect of this process. The claimant will seek full particulars and disclosure of all relevant documents regarding each such adjustment."
"As to paragraph 40 and 41, it is admitted that as part of the moderation of the scores initially attributed by individual members of the evaluation panel, the various scores of all tenderers were discussed and 'moderated' with a final score for each award criterion for each tenderer being agreed by the evaluation panel as a whole. In so far as this may have involved the 'adjustment' of any particular score, it is averred this was a wholly lawful way of conducting the evaluation process and one that is routinely adopted by evaluation panels consisting of more than one individual evaluator. Save as aforesaid, paragraph 40 and 41 are denied. It is specifically denied that the defendant was in breach of its duties of equal treatment and transparency."
"The Defendant purported to score the Claimant's response at 3/5. On a proper and lawful application of the published award criterion the Claimant's response required a score of at least 4/5. In the absence of any proper account of the reasons on which the Defendant purports to justify the score awarded, the Claimant provides herein the best particulars currently available. As expressly admitted in the Defendant's letter of 14 December 2014, the Claimant's response satisfied all of the contract specification requirements. However, the Claimant's response also exceeded the contract specification requirements/added value so as require a score of 5/5, or at the very least 4/5. Without prejudice to the foregoing, it is averred that the Claimant's response provided for: (a) clinical supervision by a qualified therapist, (b) worker specialisms, including specialist crisis workers, a complex needs worker and BME support workers, (c) a separately funded volunteer coordinator and volunteers, (d) 3 publicly accessible offices in locations offering convenient access for service users, (e) AQS Accreditation, and (f) AQA training provision. Further, the Defendant's own evaluation documents record that the Claimant's response was scored by evaluators at 4/5, before being adjusted downwards. The Defendant has yet to provide any proper particulars or disclosure regarding the downward adjustment of the Claimant's score."
"As to paragraphs 49 – 53, it is specifically denied that the Claimant's response to this question required any score above the 3/5 which it was attributed. In any event, the score attributed to this response was one which the evaluation panel was fully entitled to award on the basis of the tender information submitted to it. It is specifically denied that the evaluation panel applied any undisclosed award criteria, misdirected itself in any way or committed any manifest error of assessment in the evaluation of the Claimant's tender."
3. The Correct Approach
4. Disclosure
"14. All these are assertions of fact and it does seem to me (and it is at least partly if not entirely acknowledged by Mr Bowsher QC for the defendant), that whether or not what Mr Carter says factually is true, at least to the extent that it is not supported by contemporaneous documentation; or to the extent that it is uncontroversial as between the parties to these proceedings, there can be no reliance on it as such to justify an argument that there is not a serious issue to tried at least so far as LD's financial standing is concerned. That, it seems to me, was the proper concession to make.
15. The court, on the application of Section 47 (H), will simply not be in a position to find facts which are controversial or at the very least, which are not supported clearly by uncontroversial, contemporaneous documentation. Therefore, insofar as there is reliance by the defendants on those sorts of facts, those are facts which cannot properly be deployed as grounds for deciding that there is no serious issue to be tried."
"No explanation was provided as to why it was suddenly felt appropriate to disclose that document where previously it had been withheld. This document has caused us further concern about unequal treatment because it shows that many points of criticism about Refuge's bid were taken out of the feedback that was apparently given to them with their standstill letter, potentially to justify the high scores that were awarded."
I regard it as potentially unfair for the Council to pick and choose what documents they provide and when, as it suits them.
5. Serious Issue to be Tried
"13. Mr Barrett, clearly with some reluctance, accepted that there was a serious issue to be tried overall, primarily on the basis that disclosure had yet to take place. He however sought to argue (in the context of the balance of convenience) that the liability case pleaded against HCC was very much at the weak end of the spectrum. Ms Hannaford QC sought to argue that her client's case was at the strong end of the spectrum.
14. Mr Barrett took the Court by way of example to the pleaded complaints about inadequate marking in relation to Questions 6, 7 and 9, saying that when one looks at the answers provided by Solent they are unspecific, general and, often, not an answer to the specified question. Ms Hannaford QC however sought to persuade me otherwise. Whilst one can see, simply from the wording used by Solent that, superficially at least, the answers are not immensely informative, it would be invidious for the Court at this stage to form a concluded view that the answers are or are not so uninformative and non-responsive to the individual questions that it can be said that the pleaded case in relation to these answers to questions is weak or indeed strong. The Court has only the written answers and they would probably need to be looked at in the context in which they were written as well as in the light of the specification and indeed the word count limitation imposed by the ITT. The Court might be helped ultimately by comparing at least Inclusion's answers; if, for instance, its relevant answers are obviously more informative and responsive than Solent's (or not), that might enable a view to be formed as to the scores awarded. The Court is simply not in a position at this stage to say with any confidence that the case on breach is strong or weak.
15. The only exception to this is the pleaded case that Inclusion's tender should have been rejected because it secured a 0% mark on Price and Cost. Without finally deciding the point, this would seem to be a very weak complaint given the express wording of Paragraph 5.4.1 that HCC "reserve[d] the right not to proceed any further with the tender" which strongly suggests that it had retained a discretion either to proceed or not to proceed with a tenderer whose tender had secured such a mark. However, even if that element of the Claim is weak, there remains a serious issue to be tried on the complaints about the marking. There was much discussion before the Court about that the criteria to be applied in relation to complaints about marking. There is some authority which suggests that, provided that the marking is not irrational or not such as no reasonable authority could have given, the Court should not find a breach of the Regulations and that, provided that the marking is within the range of what authorities might reasonably have awarded, the Court will not interfere. That may well all be correct but, as indicated above, the Court is not in a position on the limited written evidence to assess the relative strengths and weaknesses of the complaints of breach."
(a) Difficulties with the Council's stance
"There were a number of instances whereby the panel members had not marked the bid in accordance with the advertised criteria. Had the moderation process not have taken place, and a mere average or median of the individual marks awarded, we would have been scoring according to incorrect criteria and would have left ourselves open to a legitimate challenge from an aggrieved bidder."
I agree with Mr Coppel QC that this is a potentially important admission. First, it suggests that the original evaluation process may have been flawed. Secondly, it highlights the importance of the subsequent moderation exercise. But that particular part of the evaluation process is something which, on the evidence provided by the Council, remains unexplained.
(b) Moderation
"…I interpose here the observation that, under the current statutory and jurisprudential regime, meetings of contract procurement evaluation panels are something considerably greater than merely formal events. They are solemn exercises of critical importance to economic operators and the public and must be designed, constructed and transacted in such a manner to ensure that full effect is given to the overarching procurement rules and principles. Where, in any given case, a disappointed bidder's legal challenge focuses on the activities and deliberations of an evaluation panel, the evidence bearing thereon will, inevitably, be carefully and objectively scrutinised by the court. Any failure by the court to scrutinise with particular care the contents of relevant individual and collective marking frames would be in dereliction of the judicial duty."
(c) Individual Scores
5. The Balance of Convenience
(a) The adequacy of damages;(b) The importance of the remedy of review;
(c) The advantages and disadvantages to the parties if the suspension is not lifted; and
(d) The advantages and disadvantages to the parties if the suspension is lifted.
I deal with those topics, one by one, below.
6. The Adequacy of Damages
"Accordingly, I would summarise the relevant principles concerning the adequacy of damages as follows:
(a) If damages are an adequate remedy, that will normally be sufficient to defeat an application for an interim injunction, but that will not always be so (American Cyanamid, Fellowes [1976] 1 QB 122 CA, National Bank [2009] 1 WLR 1405);
(b) In more recent times, the simple concept of the adequacy of damages has been modified at least to an extent, so that the court must assess whether it is just, in all the circumstances, that the claimant be confined to his remedy of damages (as in Evans Marshall [1973] 1 WLR 349 and the passage [paragraph 27/005] from Chitty on Contracts, 31st Edition);
(c) If damages are difficult to assess, or if they involve a speculative ascertainment of the value of a loss of a chance, then that may not be sufficient to prevent an interim injunction (Araci [2011] EWCA Civ 668);
(d) In procurement cases, the availability of a remedy of review before the contract was entered into, is not relevant to the issue as to the adequacy of damages, although it is relevant to the balance of convenience (Morrisons [2010] EWHC 487 (Ch)).
(e) There are a number of procurement cases in which the difficulty of assessing damages based on the loss of a chance and the speculative or 'discounted' nature of the ascertainment, has been a factor which the court has taken into account in concluding that damages would not be an adequate remedy (Letting International, Morrisons, Alstom [2010] EWHC 2747 (Ch), Indigo Services [2010] EWHC 3237 (QB), and Metropolitan Resources [2011] EWHC 1186 (Ch)). There are also cases where, on the facts, damages have been held to be an adequate remedy and the injunction therefore refused (European Dynamics [2009] EWHC 3419 (TCC), Exel."
(a) No Profit
"The rule—if "rule" is the right word—that an injunction should not be granted where damages would be an adequate remedy should be applied in a way which reflects the substantial justice of the situation."
(b) Other Consequences
(a) Paragraph 9 of the statement of Ms Metters makes clear that the work done for the Council by BMLL, in respect of women who have suffered from domestic violence and abuse, amounts to just over a third of their total turnover. Without this contract, she says, the entire organisation "will suffer catastrophic harm. This will not only harm BMLL, it will also have a significant adverse impact on the vulnerable women in Bristol who depend on our services."(b) As paragraph 14 of Ms Metters statement makes plain, BMLL carry out a range of services dealing with the linked problems of domestic violence, sexual violence and mental health. BMLL provide different services dealing with each of these related social problems. The lifting of the suspension in respect of the domestic violence strand will disconnect what had hitherto been an integral provision of services by BMML.
(c) Paragraph 46-49 of Ms Metters' statement makes plain that this part of the work could not be replaced. There is only one domestic violence and abuse support service contract available in Bristol – namely this one – and therefore the absence of this work would not only be catastrophic in itself but it would have a knock-on effect on the provision of services by BMLL in other locations.
(d) If the suspension was lifted, BMLL would be locked out from this core element of their work and would have no chance of doing it again until three or five years have expired. Again that would have an effect on other services provided by BMLL.
(e) As paragraph 48 of Ms Metters statement makes clear, the lifting of the suspension and the effective determination of the case against BMLL will have a significant effect on their reputation. Again, that could not be compensated for in damages.
7. The Importance of the Remedy of Review
"31. Looking at the matter overall, I accept the defendants' contention that there is a public interest in the avoidance of delay and that there will be a detriment to that interest if it is necessary to wait a further six weeks before the TFC scheme can be launched. I do not, however, consider that detriment to be sufficient to outweigh the strong public interest in compliance with the law and the benefits that implementing the scheme in a lawful way may be expected to bring. That is particularly so given the arrangements that have been made for an expedited trial and the fact that, as I have assumed for the purpose of this judgment, a decision on the question of legality can be expected within a relatively short time."
This is therefore a matter to which the court must have regard when assessing the balance of convenience.
8. Advantages/Disadvantages If the Suspension is Not Lifted
9. Advantages/Disadvantages If the Suspension is Lifted