This is the first in a series of blog posts that provide an overview of Canadian law with respect to the submission of late bids. As the head of a government procurement department in my past life, I was under a duty to ensure fairness in procurement with a view to obtaining the best value for money for the organization and for the taxpayer who funded all of our operations. I wrestled with the idea that we were legally required to reject perfectly good bids arriving just seconds late or that arrived late because of traffic or bad weather. These late bids led me to ask Was it really unfair to other bidders to accept a bid thatâs just a few seconds late? Was it really unfair to other bidders to accept a bid thatâs late because of slow traffic? The average person would think a few seconds or an unforeseen traffic delay shouldnât require the owner to disqualify a perfectly good bid that a bidder had invested time and money to prepare. After all, isnât it in the publicâs interest for government buyers to have as many bids as possible in any competitive procurement? The general duty to reject late bids Under Canadian common law involving a binding bid process, if a bidder submits a compliant bid on time, a contract is formed that is sometimes referred to as the âprocess contractâ. When a bidder submits a compliant bid, the owner and compliant bidder are in a binding legal process in which the owner owes each compliant bidder an implied duty of fairness. Owners do not owe such duties to non-compliant bidders â ie. bidders who are late in submitting their bids. As soon as a bid is found to be non-compliant, owners can reject it with impunity. Most domestic and international trade agreements also require that late bids be rejected. Bids arriving seconds late Whether a bid was delivered on time is not always obvious. There are Canadian cases where the bid submission deadline was stipulated as MONTH, DAY, YEAR HHMM but a bid arrived a few seconds after the minute, leaving the owner to wonder whether the bid was technically âlateâ. The caselaw is divided on whether a bid due at a certain time but submitted seconds late counts as a late bid. This is illustrated by the following decisions Smith Bros and Wilson Ltd. v. BC Hydro and Power Authority and Kingston Construction Ltd. 1997 BSCC â bid due at 11AM but filed between 1100AM-1101AM â Late. The court found that 11AM describes a precise point in time, not the time that exists between 11AM and 1101AM. Bid filed between 1100AM and 1101AM declared late. Bradscot MCL Ltd. v. Hamilton-Wentworth Catholic District School Board 1999 OJ ON CA. Bid due at 1PM filed between 100PM and 101PM â Compliant. In this case, the bid document stipulated that bids would be accepted âonly untilâ 1PM. The bid was submitted 30 seconds after 1PM and the owner awarded the contract to the late bidder. The Ontario Court of Appeal held that to prevent abuse and unfairness in the tendering of construction contracts, a clear rule is required and held that 1PM was any time before 101PM. In Construction DJL Inc. c. Quebec Procureur General, 2006 QCCS 5290 â bid due at 1500 but filed between 1500-1501 â Compliant. The ownerâs past practice had been to accept all bids time stamped before 1501. The Courtâs position was that, in the face of ambiguity, it was in the taxpayerâs interest to interpret the time requirement in a way that would support a presumption of compliance. Yukon Department of Highways and Public Works v. Sidhu Trucking et al. 2013 YKSC 105 the bid documents stipulated that documents âmust be received before the specified timeâ of 400PM. Bid due before 400PM filed exactly at 400PM â late. The Court interpreted this to mean that bids received after 359PM would not be considered. The court went on to say âA bid submitted after the tender deadline is invalid, and an owner that considers a late bid would breach its duty of fairness to other tenderersâŚ. To prevent abuse and ensure fairness in cases such as this one what is required is a clear rule.â In all of these cases, ambiguity came from the ownerâs failure to stipulate submission deadlines down to the second. To avoid running into this dilemma, owners should stipulate bid submission deadlines down to the second â DAY, HHMMSS. In my next post, Iâll cover how specific situations that have caused lateness have been handled by owners and the courts. ***** Read the full series on public procurement and late bids Part 1 â Public procurement Late bids â where seconds matter Part 2 â Public procurement Late bids due to extenuating circumstances Part 3 â Public procurement Can owners allow late bids?
ProsedurPengadaan Barang. Tidak hanya tujuan, prosedur pengadaan barang juga diatur berdasarkan Perpres No. 16 tahun 2018 tentang pengadaan barang atau jasa pemerintah. Secara umum, prosedur pengadaan barang dilakukan dengan langkah-langkah berikut ini: Menganalisis kebutuhan perusahaan; Mendapatkan persetujuan dari pihak manajemen; MelakukanIstilahmeja kantor dari bahasa belanda yaitu kantoor. Buku penerimaan barang (lampiran 8) 3. Modul Mengelola Peralatan Kantor Peralatan kantor beberapa pengertian diantaranya : Sebutkan prosedur pengadaan barang tidak habis pakai. Inilah prosedur pengadaan peralatan kantor barang habis pakai dan tidak habis pakai october 19, 2019 by admin in akuntansi , akuntansi apbd birokrasi ,