Facts of the Case

  • Tender Invitation and Parties Involved: The District Rural Development Agency (DRDA), Pudukkottai, invited tenders for the public infrastructure project concerning the construction of the Chief Minister Mini Stadium at Thirumayam Assembly Constituency, located in Sengeerai Panchayat within the Arimalam Panchayat Union. The petitioner, P. Ganesan, and the fourth respondent, M/s. Sri Amman Logistics (represented by its Managing Partner S.V. Perumal), participated as competing bidders in the procurement process.
  • Allegations of Forgery and Fraud: The petitioner approached the Madurai Bench of the Madras High Court stating that the contract was fraudulently awarded to M/s. Sri Amman Logistics based on completely fabricated, fake documents and invoices. Specifically, the tender mandated a minimum eligibility criterion of 5 years of business experience. To satisfy this, the fourth respondent allegedly submitted backdated invoices from the year 2020 showing active business transactions. However, a scrutiny of those invoices revealed that they displayed a Goods and Services Tax Identification Number (GSTIN) that was only registered and obtained in the year 2022, exposing a glaring chronological impossibility and clear fabrication.
  • Factual Verification by DVAC: Following a formal complaint lodged by the petitioner on 25.02.2026, the Directorate of Vigilance and Anti-Corruption (DVAC) conducted a preliminary factual verification. The agency's status report confirmed that the fourth respondent uploaded fake and unauthenticated receipts lacking proper GST/TIN numbers for heavy machinery and construction assets, including Static Road Rollers, Concrete Mixer Machines, Water Tankers, and Wall Form Sheets.
  • Connivance of Public Officials: The DVAC's verification disclosed that the DRDA scrutiny committee—comprising the Project Director, Executive Engineer, Accounts Officer, Assistant Project Officer, and Assistant Executive Engineer—failed to cross-verify or examine the authenticity of the technical bids. They cleared the technical bid and awarded the financial contract to M/s. Sri Amman Logistics despite explicit objections raised by the petitioner during the initial documentation scrutiny stage.

Issues Involved

  • Whether the writ petition seeking a Mandamus for anti-corruption action is maintainable when it arises from a procurement dispute where a prior writ petition challenging the same tender award had already been dismissed.
  • Whether the action of the public officials of the DRDA in ignoring blatant documentation fraud (fake GST invoices and asset receipts) to favor a specific bidder constitutes a prima facie case of corruption demanding a preliminary inquiry under the Prevention of Corruption Act.
  • Whether the administrative practice of inserting highly onerous, tailor-made tender conditions—such as mandatory pre-scrutiny ownership certificates for machinery—violates the core objectives of the Tamil Nadu Transparency in Tenders Act, 1998 by choking competition and enabling corruption.
  • What is the legal impact of administrative delay by government departments in granting statutory prior approvals under Section 17-A of the Prevention of Corruption Act?

Petitioner’s Arguments

  • Exposure of Material Fraud: The petitioner argued that the entire qualification of the successful bidder rested on criminal forgery and structural misrepresentation. The usage of a 2022 GSTIN on purported invoices from 2020 was an undeniable proof of fraud that could not have been overlooked by an objective scrutiny committee.
  • Deliberate Favoritism: It was contended that the public authorities acted with a mala fide intent to actively favor M/s. Sri Amman Logistics. The petitioner pointed out that despite bringing these dynamic document contradictions to the attention of the authorities during the evaluation stage, his protests were summarily brushed aside to clear the fourth respondent’s technical bid.
  • Demand for Statutory Investigation: The petitioner asserted that public funds were being deployed for the stadium construction, making it imperative that the DVAC register an inquiry into the financial irregularities and criminal misconduct of the erring state officials.

Respondent’s Arguments

  • Defense of the Fourth Respondent (Successful Bidder): The impleaded fourth respondent strongly resisted the petition by pointing out that the petitioner had previously challenged the tender allocation in a separate civil writ proceeding (W.P.(MD) No. 2061 of 2026). That petition was dismissed by the High Court on 17.02.2026 based on established Supreme Court precedents limiting judicial interference in commercial state tenders and on grounds of delay. Therefore, the respondent argued that the current criminal writ petition was merely an optimization tool to continuously harass the successful contractor after failing in the civil roster.
  • Defense of the State and DVAC (Respondents 1 to 3): The state counsel did not shield the transaction but rather submitted that the anti-corruption wing had acted properly upon receiving the complaint. They stated that a comprehensive factual verification had already been completed, establishing the prima facie fake nature of the fourth respondent’s receipts. The DVAC argued that it had already initiated the statutory process by forwarding formal requests to the Vigilance Commission and the Additional Chief Secretary to the Government (Rural Development and Panchayat Raj Department) on 26.03.2026 seeking mandatory prior approval under Section 17-A of the Prevention of Corruption Act to formally launch a preliminary inquiry against five suspected top-tier DRDA officials.

Court Order / Findings

  • Distinction Between Civil Tender Challenges and Criminal Investigation: The High Court observed that while courts generally refrain from intervening in private commercial disputes or concluded tender finalizations (as done in the petitioner's previous civil writ), the systemic presence of corruption and document forgery involving public funds introduces a substantial public interest element that cannot be ignored.
  • Condemnation of Onerous and "Tailor-Made" Tender Conditions: The Court delivered a sharp critique of public departments inventing restrictive, artificial clauses within tender documents. The requirement that a bidder must absolute-own heavy machinery (rather than allowing commercial hiring) and obtain pre-scrutiny operational certificates from specific departmental engineers is heavily prone to abuse. The Court observed that such conditions are deliberately designed to function as gatekeeping tools to eliminate healthy market competition and extend illegal favoritism to pre-selected contractors.
  • Strict Adherence to Section 17-A Timelines: The Court expressed deep concern over the systemic failure of administrative heads to respect the strict timeline stipulated under Section 17-A of the Prevention of Corruption Act. The statute explicitly mandates a maximum period of three months for the competent authority to decide on requests for prior approval to investigate public servants. The Court found that despite the DVAC moving the application on 26.03.2026, the competent authority had kept it pending without rendering a decision.
  • Final Directions: Highlighting that unnecessary delays in granting Section 17-A sanctions provide a golden window for corrupt individuals to manipulate records, destroy critical evidence, and escape the clutches of law, the Court expressed its strict expectation that the government would process and dispose of the pending approval request within the residual statutory period. With these observations, the Court officially closed the Writ Petition without costs.

Important Clarification

  • Precedential Consistency against Arbitrary Tenders: The Court firmly reiterated the judicial principles laid down in its own prior rulings, namely K. Raja Mohamed vs. Secretary to Government of Tamil Nadu (W.P.(MD) Nos. 22102 & 22116 of 2023) and PL.R & Co vs. Superintending Engineer (Highways) (W.P.(MD) No. 21258 of 2023). It re-emphasized that the judiciary will continue to strike down onerous procurement clauses that defeat the core anti-corruption objectives of the Tamil Nadu Transparency in Tenders Act, 1998.
  • Mandatory Nature of Section 17-A Timelines: The judgment clarifies that the three-month window under Section 17-A is not an elastic administrative guideline but a strict statutory safeguard intended to keep anti-corruption investigations viable and structurally efficient.

Sections Involved

  • Section 17-A of the Prevention of Corruption (Amendment) Act, 2018: Governs the requirement of prior approval or sanction from the competent authority before conducting any inquiry, inquiry, or investigation into offenses relatable to recommendations made or decisions taken by a public servant in discharge of official functions.
  • Article 226 of the Constitution of India: Invoked for the issuance of a Writ of Mandamus directing public authorities to discharge their statutory duties.
  • Tamil Nadu Transparency in Tenders Act, 1998: Statutory framework aimed at eliminating irregularities, ensuring transparency, and promoting healthy competition in public procurement.

Link to download the order - https://mytaxexpert.co.in/uploads/1783057270_301compressed.pdf

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