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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> England and Wales High Court (Administrative Court) Decisions >> Trinity College (CSP) Ltd, R (on the application of) v Secretary of State for Housing, Communities and Local Government [2021] EWHC 1355 (Admin) (21 May 2021) URL: http://www.bailii.org/ew/cases/EWHC/Admin/2021/1355.html Cite as: [2021] EWHC 1355 (Admin) |
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QUEEN'S BENCH DIVISION
ADMINISTRATIVE COURT
Rolls Building, Fetter Lane, London EC4A 1NL |
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B e f o r e :
____________________
THE QUEEN (on the application of TRINITY COLLEGE (CSP) LIMITED) |
Claimant |
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- and - |
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SECRETARY OF STATE FOR HOUSING, COMMUNITIES AND LOCAL GOVERNMENT |
Defendant |
____________________
Galina Ward (instructed by The Government Legal Department (for the Ministry of Housing, Communities and Local Government)) for the Defendant
Hearing dates: 11, 12 May 2021
____________________
Crown Copyright ©
Mr Justice Andrew Baker :
Introduction
Background
"I appreciate that this is not the news you were expecting, and you will be disappointed with the outcome. We are equally disappointed, as the project meets national and local strategic objectives and would provide much needed laboratory space in Cambridge for SMEs to invest and grow.
Our process now requires us to make a final decision on the application. As it stands, the project will be rejected based on the conclusion of the procurement review. If you have additional evidence (other than that already reviewed) to satisfy all the procurement issues then please provide this to us by no later than the 26 June. Alternatively if [you] would prefer to withdraw the project, please let us know."
"5. The Department has carefully considered all the factual circumstances against the applicable legal framework. For the reasons set out below we are minded to reject the application for ERDF funding. However before we make a final decision we would invite you to make any further representations in response to matters set out below. Please do so within 28 days, or confirm that you do not wish to do so if that is the case."
(1) (at [12]-[14]), Article 122(2) of the Regulation required Member States to "prevent, detect and correct irregularities". Prevention and correction were separate matters. The defendant was therefore bound to refuse the grant application since it had established, prior to the making of any grant of ERDF support, that there had been what would be a procurement irregularity;(2) (at [15]-[21]) there was no relevant representation capable of creating a legitimate expectation of funding in the circumstances as they had turned out to be;
(3) (at [22]) the October letter had been incorrect to proceed on the basis that any question of correction arose prior to the grant of ERDF support, but (at [23]-[30]) if it were a question of correction then the applicable regime would be that of the 2019 Decision and NPR6, under which this would be a case for 100% correction, not 10%. This was on the basis that no financial correction procedure could be said to have been launched, and the procurement breach had not been identified, until after 14 May 2019 (in each case, if meaningful to use those terms prior to grant).
"… the Department does not consider that [it] is able to approve the application for a grant. My final decision therefore is that your application is rejected."
The Grounds
(1) Ground 1, that the defendant had misdirected himself as to the meaning of the words "financial correction procedure" in the 2019 Decision.(2) Ground 2, that the defendant had misdirected himself as to the meaning of the word "detected" in the predecessor to the 2019 Decision, EU Commission Decision C(9527) 2013 dated 19 December 2013 ('the 2013 Decision').
(3) Ground 3, that the defendant acted procedurally unlawfully in failing to fulfil his obligation to detect irregularities within a reasonable time, causing (it was said) the claimant to be subjected unfairly to the more punitive correction regime of the 2019 Decision when it was neither necessary nor proportionate to do so.
(4) Ground 4, that there had been a breach of A1P1 and Article 6, ECHR, on the basis that:
(a) the claimant's "interest in the grant is a property right within the meaning of A1P1 (JT v First Tier Tribunal [2018] EWCA Civ 1735)";(b) the defendant "told the Claimant that it had been awarded the grant, and that the funds were being released to it, and the Claimant relied upon those representations to commence works: it had a legitimate expectation that it would receive the grant monies. Moreover, the Defendant [sic., Claimant] is, as a matter of law, entitled to the grant, less the 10% correction";(c) the defendant's failings, as alleged under Grounds 1 to 3, meant that he had interfered unlawfully with that property right, in breach of Article 6 without proportionate justification;(d) the claimant could only secure just satisfaction for those breaches by the defendant paying compensation "to put [the claimant] in the position it would have been had the grant been paid as the Defendant said it would be at the start of 2019."
The Law
"This document is guidance on the subject of how to select suppliers of goods, works and services in projects part funded through ESIF. It does not constitute legal advice, nor does it imply waiver of the legal obligations of recipients of ESIF grants. … The Department does not accept any liability relating to the use of this document. Users seeking information on public procurement should refer to the relevant Public Contracts Regulations, the guidance on the Europa website and seek their own specialist advice from professional advisers."
The Regulation
(1) at Article 2(9), a definition of 'operation' to mean "a project, contract, action or group of projects selected by the managing authorities of the programmes concerned, or under their responsibility, that contributes to the objectives of a priority or priorities; …". If the claimant's Biohub project had been granted ERDF support by the defendant, it would have been an operation within that definition;(2) at Article 2(36), a definition of 'irregularity' to mean "any breach of Union law, or of national law relating to its application, resulting from an act or omission by an economic operator involved in the implementation of the ESI Funds, which has, or would have, the effect of prejudicing the budget of the Union by charging an unjustified item of expenditure to the budget of the Union." It was common ground that if the claimant had been an ERDF grant recipient, then a breach by it of the national law procurement rules applicable to it under NPR5 or NPR6 (as the case might be) would have been a breach of national law by an economic operator involved in the implementation of an ESIF, as referred to in that definition. It would thus be an irregularity as defined by the Regulation if, but only if, it had or would have the effect of charging an unjustified item of expenditure to the EU budget. What that means needs to be considered to determine this case.
"1. The eligibility of expenditure shall be determined on the basis of national rules, except where specific rules are laid down in, or on the basis of, this Regulation or the Fund-specific rules.
2. Expenditure shall be eligible for a contribution from the ESI Funds if it has been incurred by a beneficiary and paid between the date of submission of the programme to the Commission or from 1 January 2014, whichever is earlier, and 31 December 2023. …
…
6. Operations shall not be selected for support by the ESI Funds where they have been physically completed or fully implemented before the application for funding under the programme is submitted by the beneficiary to the managing authority, irrespective of whether all related payments have been made by the beneficiary."
"In all other cases, in particular those preceding a bankruptcy or in cases of suspected fraud, the detected irregularities and the associated preventive and corrective measures shall be reported to the Commission.
When amounts unduly paid to a beneficiary cannot be recovered and this is as a result of fault or negligence on the part of a Member State, the Member State shall be responsible for reimbursing the amounts concerned to the budget of the Union. Member States may decide not to recover an amount unduly paid if the amount to be recovered from the beneficiary, not including interest, does not exceed EUR 250 in contribution from the Funds to an operation in an accounting year."
(1) by Article 125(3), "As regards the selection of operations, the managing authority shall:(a) draw up and, once approved, apply appropriate selection procedures and criteria that:…(ii) are non-discriminatory and transparent;…(e) satisfy itself that, where the operation has started before the submission of an application for funding to the managing authority, applicable law relevant for the operation has been complied with.…", and the case proceeded on the basis that Article 125(3)(e) did not apply, i.e. the claimant was treated as having submitted its application for a grant of ERDF support before project work started on 21 January 2019 although the final form of the application ultimately pursued and rejected was only submitted on 11 February 2019;(2) by Article 125(4), "As regards the financial management and control of the operational programme, the managing authority shall:
(a) verify that the co-financed products and services have been delivered and that expenditure declared by the beneficiaries has been paid and that it complies with applicable law, the operational programme and the conditions for support of the operation;…";(3) Article 125(5) requires verifications pursuant to Article 125(4)(a) to include administrative verification of each reimbursement application by a grant recipient and on-the-spot verifications of operations, the frequency and scope of which are to be proportionate to the level of funding support and risk involved.
"(a) drawing up and submitting payment applications to the Commission and certifying that they result from reliable accounting systems, are based on verifiable supporting documents and have been subject to verifications by the managing authority;
…
(c) certifying the completeness, accuracy and veracity of the accounts and that the expenditure entered in the accounts [(i)] complies with applicable law and [(ii)] has been incurred in respect of operations selected for funding in accordance with the criteria applicable to the operational programme and complying with applicable law;
…"
(my emphasis, sub-paragraph numbering (i)/(ii) added for convenience).
"2. A breach of applicable law shall lead to a financial correction only in relation to expenditure that has been declared to the Commission and where one of the following conditions is met:
(a) the breach has affected the selection of an operation by the body responsible for support from the ESI Funds or in cases where, due to the nature of the breach, it is not possible to establish that impact but there is a substantial risk that the breach has had such an effect;
(b) the breach has affected the amount of expenditure declared for reimbursement by the budget of the Union or in cases where, due to the nature of the breach, it is not possible to quantify its impact but there is a substantial risk that the breach has had such an effect.
3. When deciding on a financial correction under paragraph 1, the Commission shall respect the principle of proportionality, by taking account of the nature and gravity of the breach of applicable law and its financial implications for the budget of the Union. …"
(a) there is a serious deficiency in the effective functioning of the management and control system of the operational programme which has put at risk the Union contribution already paid to the operational programme;
(b) the Member State has not complied with its obligations under Article 143 prior to the opening of the correction procedure under this paragraph;
(c) expenditure contained in payment application is irregular and has not been corrected by the Member State prior to the opening of the correction procedure under this paragraph" [my emphasis].
The Decisions
(1) In the 2013 Decision, Article 2 states that its Annex will be applied by the Commission when making financial corrections related to irregularities "detected after the date of adoption of this Decision", i.e. after 19 December 2013; but that is effectively qualified by section 1.1 of the Annex, providing that where "the contradictory procedure with the Member State is on-going" at the date of adoption of the 2013 Decision, the prior guidelines will be applied if they would give a rate of correction more favourable to the Member State.(2) In the 2019 Decision, a somewhat similar commencement concept is used, but it is defined more neatly, by reference to the terminology of Article 145 of the Regulation, and with different effect. Thus, Article 2 provides that the Commission will apply the guidelines in the Annex to the 2019 Decision "to financial correction procedures launched after the date of adoption of this Decision", i.e. after 14 May 2019.
"In so far as the Directives do not apply, but the procurement falls within the scope of the Treaty and under national procurement law, these guidelines apply provided that at least one of the following conditions is met:
…
(ii) there is a clear breach of the national public procurement law for the contracts at stake.
In addition, these guidelines are applicable also if the national rules … explicitly require the beneficiaries of EU funds to comply with national public procurement rules or similar rules, even if those beneficiaries are not themselves a contracting authority as defined in the Directives. In that case, the irregularity is a breach to [sic.] the national rules … .
In all such cases, the required level of financial corrections should be determined by analogy with the types of irregularity identified in Section 2."
The NPRs
(1) primary language stating that, "To meet the national rules an ESIF grant recipient's process must be in line with the requirements below:" above a table;(2) the following entry in that table:
Value of contract Minimum Procedure Advertising Required £25,000 - £200,000 (services) and £4.5m (works)
[NPR6 upper limits were marginally different]The advert needs to incorporate or direct any interested party to the following information:
Details of the opportunity
What is required from all interested parties
How successful candidates will be chosen
Deadline and details of how to apply
Justification will also be required to demonstrate that the contract award is in line with the advertAdvertise the opportunity on the grant recipients/or other appropriate website for 10 days.
Breach | Correction46 |
Direct awards to linked organisations | 10% |
Non compliance with the thresholds above | 5% |
A lack of audit trail to demonstrate the process followed and decisions taken | 5% |
Failure to advertise the opportunity on the grant recipients website for 10 days | 10% |
Failure to adhere to the Guidance on Identifying, Managing and Monitoring Conflicts of Interest within ERDF and ESF, and submit a declaration to MHCLG or DWP | 5% |
Failure to impartially assess each bid against the same criteria and demonstrate this through use of a score sheet | 5% |
Failure to provide evidence to demonstrate that the winning bidder has been selected on merit | 5% |
46 The MA reserves the right to apply higher corrections where repeat breaches occur
"the department shall apply the correction rates based on upon [sic.] analogous breaches as set out in the Commission Guidelines, which is explained in Chapter 3 of this guidance.
Therefore if a Non Contracting Authority does not advertise a contract opportunity with a value over £25,000 in any form a 100% correction will be applied in accordance with the Commission's corrections note."
(larger font and emboldening in the original).
"… All breaches, including those related to contracts let prior to 14th May 2019, will be subject to the Commission Guidelines for procurement correction rates for breaches identified after 14th May 2019. The corrections listed for procurement breaches listed in the previous guidance will no longer apply, except for any breaches that were identified prior to 14th May 2019."
Analysis
"We cannot award public funds to a project that we know will incur financial corrections under ERDF rules. We must therefore omit the costs associated with the refurbishment contract …"
The letter then explained that this would render the project as a whole not viable for ERDF support, a conclusion the claimant does not challenge if the premise be right that the refurbishment contract had to be stripped out.
"There are circumstances where we cannot simply deal with a procurement failing by way of imposing a percentage correction. These are:
- where the failing is identified pre signing of the funding agreement
- where there is evidence that the failing was deliberate and/or known about and simply accepted by grant recipient …
In these instances the full value of the non-compliant contract should be removed from the application/project."
(1) that will be a breach by the grant recipient of Article 6 of the Regulation and also a breach of contract if (as is the practice in the UK) the grant is made by a grant funding agreement between the managing authority and the recipient;(2) that breach will not without more be an irregularity (see paragraphs 37-38 above);
(3) it will be an irregularity if and only if it "has, or would have, the effect of … charging an unjustified item of expenditure to the budget of the Union" (to quote again the definition of irregularity in Article 2(36) of the Regulation).
(1) If it can be shown that a procurement breach has caused an ERDF part-funded contract to be placed at some identifiably greater cost than if procurement rules had been fully respected, it would be unjustified to charge the EU budget via the ERDF for a contribution to the increase.(2) It may not be possible to say if the procurement breach has increased cost. There is room for the view that it is unjustified to charge the ERDF with contributing to cost it cannot be shown was not caused by the procurement breach, or for the view that it is only unjustified to charge the ERDF with contributing to cost that has been shown to have been so caused.
(3) There may also be room, in the context of what is ultimately the use in the discretion of a public authority of public funds to promote socio-economic goals, for a view that it is unjustified ever to charge the ERDF with contributing to cost incurred under a contract improperly procured (from the perspective of applicable procurement rules), irrespective of whether the procurement breach had or may have had any impact on the size of that cost.
"The Managing Authority reserves the right not to take forward the Full Application if any aspects of procurement are identified as non-compliant at the Full Application stage." (my emphasis)
I agree with Ms Morris QC in her submission that reserving the right not to proceed is not the same thing as being obliged not to proceed; and it does seem unfortunate, even if no representations / legitimate expectations case could be made good in this instance, that the Ministry was communicating by its application form that pre-grant procurement that would be non-compliant for a grant recipient might – but therefore, by definition, also might not – be fatal to an application, while seemingly having a policy, or an understanding of the law, to the contrary, as set out in Action Note 31.
Ground A
Ground 1
(1) the defendant was conducting by Mr Johnson's procurement review an examination of the subject procurement in order to reach a conclusion that would be provisional, in the sense that the claimant would be given an opportunity to respond before any final decision or action were taken on the basis of it, whether it had been compliant (or was a non-compliance that for a grant recipient would be an irregularity requiring a financial correction);(2) the letter of 11 June 2019 informed the claimant of the conclusion, provisional in that sense, that there had not been compliance (and that the non-compliance would, for a grant recipient, be an irregularity that required a financial correction to be made).
Ground 3
(1) First, although I observed that Mr Lewins' 22 March 2019 email, taken at face value, appears to indicate there was no advertising, it could have been clearer – it is not obvious why it took Mr Lewins 16 days to say "Not applicable to procurement route" rather than replying promptly and saying "There was no advertising" – and it did not in fact convey to Mr Johnson that indeed there had been no advertising at all. His follow-up on 9 April 2019, asking whether that was what was being said, went unanswered until the 10 May 2019 meeting.(2) Second, the absence of advertising as stipulated by the table at Ch.6, para 23, of the NPRs, or as the claimant had said in its application form would be used, did not without more constitute non-compliance with (what would be) applicable law. There was a need, in fairness to the claimant, to investigate the equivalence (or not), in substance, of the process in fact used, as was built into Ch.6, para 23, of the NPRs and as had been identified by the terms of Mr Johnson's initial list of requests on 6 March 2019. As Ms Ward submitted, had it not been for the intervention by the Commission on 14 May 2019, on these facts the claimant would have been complaining that the defendant had acted without fully examining the circumstances if a conclusion had been reached prior to the 10 May 2019 meeting and the provision thereafter (in fact on 21 May 2019) of the final information needed for a properly informed assessment of the position.
Conclusions