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13 March 2026

JSA Successfully Obtained An Order From The Bombay High Court In Favour Of Garware Technical Fibres Ltd., Holding CIDCO's Decision To Re-qualify An Ineligible Bidder In A Tender For Rockfall Mitigation Works To Be Arbitrary

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JSA Advocates and Solicitors is a top-tier, full-service Indian law firm. Established in 1991, at the start of India’s economic liberalisation, the firm has built a strong reputation for handling complex and high-stakes legal and commercial matters. The firm is organised around specialist practice areas and industry sectors. It works closely with leading Indian corporates, Fortune 500 companies, global financial institutions, and government and statutory bodies on important corporate, financing, and disputes mandates. JSA has a team of over 700 legal professionals, including 180+ partners, and operates from 10 offices across seven cities in India: Ahmedabad, Bengaluru, Chennai, Gurugram, Hyderabad, Mumbai, and New Delhi. The firm is consistently recognised as a top-tier practice by leading international legal directories, including Chambers & Partners (Asia-Pacific and Global), Legal 500, and AsiaLaw.
On 11.02.2026, the Bombay High Court allowed a Writ Petition filed by Garware Technical Fibres Ltd. ("GTFL") and quashed the decision of City & Industrial Development Corporation of Maharashtra Ltd. ("CIDCO")...
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On 11.02.2026, the Bombay High Court allowed a Writ Petition filed by Garware Technical Fibres Ltd. (“GTFL”) and quashed the decision of City & Industrial Development Corporation of Maharashtra Ltd. (“CIDCO”) to re-qualify a bidder who was earlier disqualified for not meeting a mandatory eligibility criteria under the Bid.

While allowing the Writ Petition, the High Court, amongst others, held that (i) the terms of the Bid did not permit CIDCO to revisit its earlier decision of disqualifying a bidder; and (ii) CIDCO’s actions of re-qualifying an ineligible bidder cannot be justified on the grounds of ensuring wider participation and procurement of a better price in the Bid.

The High Court emphasised that public interest requires a tendering authority to act strictly within the framework of the Bid conditions. A public body such as CIDCO cannot conduct a bidding process in an arbitrary manner.

Accordingly, the High Court held that CIDCO’s decision to re-qualify and permit the ineligible bidder to participate in the financial bidding is bad in law.

The High Court’s Order reinforces the law that bids should be conducted in a transparent and fair manner. Further, while the powers of the judicial review in contractual matters are limited, a writ court exercising jurisdiction under Article 226 of the Constitution of India is entitled to examine the decision-making process of an authority, if the same is arbitrary.

The content of this article is intended to provide a general guide to the subject matter. Specialist advice should be sought about your specific circumstances.

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