R v Ron Engineering and Construction (Eastern) Ltd

R v Ron Engineering and Construction (Eastern) Ltd,[1] of 1981 is the leading Supreme Court of Canada decision on the law of tendering for contracts. The case concerned the issue of whether the acceptance of a call for tenders for a construction job could constitute a binding contract. The Court held that indeed in many cases the submission of an offer in response to a call for tenders constitutes a contract separate from the eventual contract for the construction. With the release of the decision, the tendering process practiced in Canada was fundamentally changed.[2]

R v Ron Engineering and Construction (Eastern) Ltd
Supreme Court of Canada
Hearing: 1980-11-13
Judgment: 1981-01-27
Full case nameHer Majesty The Queen in right of Ontario and the Water Resources Commission v Ron Engineering & Construction (Eastern) Limited
Citations1981 CanLII 17 (SCC), [1981] 1 SCR 111
Prior historyAPPEAL from a judgment of the Court of Appeal for Ontario, (1979) 24 O.R. (2d) 332; (1979) 98 D.L.R. (3d) 548, reversing the judgment of Holland J.
RulingAppeal allowed.
Court membership
Puisne JusticesMartland, Dickson, Estey, Mclntyre and Lamer JJ.
Reasons given
Unanimous reasons byEstey J.

Background

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A call for tenders was sent out requiring a deposit of $150,000 which would be lost if the tendered offer was withdrawn. Ron Engineering submitted an offer along with the required deposit in the form of a certified cheque. The submitted tenders were opened by the owner and Ron Engineering was the low bidder by a substantial margin. It was then discovered that the price on the tender documents was far lower than the price that Ron Engineering had intended to submit, and that they had made a mistake in calculating their total bid price. They informed the owner of the mistake and tried to have the offer changed. The change was refused, the contract was given to another company, and the owner kept Ron Engineering's bid deposit. Ron Engineering sued to get their deposit back. The owner counter-claimed for costs incurred as a result of having to go with a different bidder. At trial the counter-claim was dismissed but it was held that the owner was entitled to keep the deposit. The Ontario Court of Appeal reversed the trial decision and held, relying on the contractual doctrine of mistake, that Ron Engineering was entitled to get its deposit back. The owner appealed to the Supreme Court of Canada.

Decision

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The Supreme Court held that the tender process involved two contracts:

  • Contract A - a unilateral contract arising automatically upon the submission of a tender, and
  • Contract B - the contract awarded upon the tender's acceptance.

The principal term of contract A was the irrevocability of the bid and the corollary term was the obligation in both parties to enter into a construction contract, contract B, upon the acceptance of the tender.[3] The deposit was required to ensure the performance by the contractor-tenderer of its obligations under contract A. It is not correct to say that when a mistake was proven after the tenders were opened by the production of reasonable evidence, the person to whom the tender was made could neither accept the tender nor forfeit the deposit. The test was to be imposed when the tender was submitted, not at a later date, and at that time the rights of the parties under contract A crystallized, at least in circumstances where the tender was capable of acceptance in law.

There was no question of mistake on the part of either party before the moment when contract A came into existence. The tender, despite its being the product of a mistaken calculation, could be subject to the terms and conditions of contract A so as to invoke forfeiture of the deposit. There was no error in the sense that the contractor did not intend to submit the tender in its form and substance. Then, too, there was no principle in law under which the tender was rendered incapable of acceptance by the appellant. No mistake existed which impeded the coming into being of contract A. The effect of a mistake upon the formation, enforceability or interpretation of a subsequent construction contract need not be considered in this case.

The issue did not concern the law of mistake but the application of the forfeiture provisions contained in the tender documents. The deposit was recoverable by the contractor under certain conditions, none of which was met, and also was subject to forfeiture under another term of the contract, the conditions of which had been met. The omission by the owner to insert the number of weeks specified by the tender in the appropriate blank in the contract had no bearing on the rights of the parties to the appeal and did not stand in the way of the owner's asserting its right to retain the deposit.

Aftermath

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Tendering has become the focus of six significant decisions of the Supreme Court.[4] Subsequent to Ron Engineering, judgments have come down in:

References

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  1. ^ Full text of Supreme Court of Canada decision at LexUM and CanLII
  2. ^ Sandori, Paul and William M. Pigott, Bidding and Tendering: What is the Law? 3rd ed. (Markham, ON: LexisNexis, 2004).
  3. ^ Government Procurement, Fourth Edition, by Paul Emanuelli, p. 125, Published by Lexis Nexis Canada, Year of Publication: 2017, ISBN 978-0-433-47454-8
  4. ^ Adam Baker. "Supreme Court Decisions on the Law of Bidding and Tendering in Canada". Retrieved 2012-01-31.
  5. ^ [1999] 1 SCR 619 Full text of Supreme Court of Canada decision at LexUM and CanLII
  6. ^ [2000] 2 S.C.R. 860, 2000 SCC 60
  7. ^ [2001] 2 S.C.R. 943, 2001 SCC 58
  8. ^ [2007] 1 S.C.R. 116, 2007 SCC 3
  9. ^ [2010] 1 S.C.R. 69, 2010 SCC 4