Case Law[2025] ZAGPPHC 299South Africa
Working on Fire v Minister of the Department of Forestry, Fisheries and Environment and Another (2023/112430) [2025] ZAGPPHC 299; 2026 (1) SA 315 (GP) (12 March 2025)
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Working on Fire v Minister of the Department of Forestry, Fisheries and Environment and Another (2023/112430) [2025] ZAGPPHC 299; 2026 (1) SA 315 (GP) (12 March 2025)
Working on Fire v Minister of the Department of Forestry, Fisheries and Environment and Another (2023/112430) [2025] ZAGPPHC 299; 2026 (1) SA 315 (GP) (12 March 2025)
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sino date 12 March 2025
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case
Number: 2023-112430
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER
(3)
REVISED.
DATE:
12/3/25
SIGNATURE:
In
the matter between:
WORKING
ON FIRE
APPLICANT
and
MINISTER
OF THE DEPARTMENT OF
FIRST RESPONDENT
FORESTRY,
FISHERIES AND ENVIRONMENT
THE
DIRECTOR- GENERAL: THE DEPARTMENT,
SECOND RESPONDENT
OF
FORESTRY, FISHERIES AND ENVIRONMENT
JUDGMENT
RamaweleAJ
Introduction
[1]
This is an application for the payment of an amount of R29 482 325,92
(Twenty-Nine
Million, Four Hundred and Eighty-Two Thousand, Three
Hundred and Twenty Five Rand, Ninety Two Cents) and other ancillary
relief,
which amount constitutes the Value Added Tax (VAT) allegedly
due/ owing and payable to the Applicant.
Background
[2]
The First Respondent and Applicant entered into a Memorandum of
Agreement for a seven-year
period commencing on 1 April 2014 and
ending on 31 March 2021. Upon the expiry of the seven-year Agreement,
the parties entered
into a further Memorandum of Agreement on 3 May
2021 for a six-month period commencing on 6 April 2021 until 5
October 2021. The
Applicant was appointed as a single source Service
Provider on a working on programme.
[3]
The services that the Applicant would render, included, inter alia,
the management
of the programme, including financial management,
corporate governance, human resources, information technology and
legal matters.
The Applicant was further required to assess,
identify, assume and accept vulnerability of the risk, limited to
veldfire management
risk, reputational risk, life, property,
environmental and social risk.
[4]
The Memorandum of Agreement also provided that the costs of the
project were the actual
costs incurred by the service provider and
that the costs of the project would not be more than R350 000 000.
The Memorandum of
Agreement further provides that the total costs of
the project is inclusive of VAT and that the Applicant was required
to ensure
that the project deliverables and other related activities
are inclusive of VAT, where VAT is applicable.
[5]
In terms of the Memorandum of Agreement, the Applicant was required
to employ Extended
Public Works Programme employees (EPWP) and pay
such employees after which the Respondent would re-imburse the
Applicant for the
expenses incurred. The participants were employed
in terms of the Ministerial Determination No: 4 Public Works
Programme as contained
in Government Gazette No: 35310 of May 2012.
Their remuneration was paid in terms of the EPWP wage rates under the
Expenditure
Line item and contained in the approved Project
Performance Plan (PPP).
[6]
The Applicant employed the EPWP participants and paid them in
accordance with the
Memorandum of Agreement. The Applicant then
raised invoices in the amount of R196 548, 839,46 which did not,
according to the Applicant,
include VAT. The Department paid these
invoices.
[7]
The Applicant states that it did not include VAT in the EPWP wages
because Dr Christo
Marais, Chief Director Natural Resource,
Management of the Respondents had advised them in an email dated 19
April 2021 that the
budgeted amount excludes VAT.
[8]
In his email dated 19 April 2021 Dr Marais stated as follows:
Hallo Colleagues
"Attached hereto
find the revised project performance framework for the three Wofire
sub programmes.
The following are
aspects to be considered when finalizing the deliverables rates: The
initial draft of the performance framework
was split up as per our
meeting on Friday the 16
th
April.
There are therefore as
a least two sheets for each sub-programme. The spreadsheets as per
the excel are as follows…"
[9]
In the aforesaid email, Dr Marais states that "
note that EPWP
employment costs do not have a weight as actual payments will be
claimed
". This accords with the Memorandum of Agreement
which provides that the Applicant shall employ the EPWP employees and
remunerate
them. It is clear from the above that Dr Marais did not
refer to any payment of VAT in his email. After the Applicant had
remunerated
the EPWP employees as agreed, the Applicant claimed
reimbursement from the Respondents. The Respondents duly reimbursed
the Applicant.
[10]
It is common cause that the Applicant did not include VAT in the
wages and salaries that were
paid to the EPWP employees.
[11]
The Applicant apparently obtained legal opinion that VAT should have
been included in the wages.
The Applicant then revised the invoices
and included VAT. The Respondents did not pay the revised invoices
and refused to pay VAT.
SARS is allegedly demanding VAT payable on
the EPWP wages from the Applicant.
[12]
Clause 4.1 of the Memorandum of Agreement provides that "
The
Project's budget of R350 000 000,00 (VAT inclusive) will be aligned
to the approved Project Performance Plan
".
[13]
It is common cause that the amount claimed by the Applicant exceeds
the budget. It is further
common cause that there is an unspent
amount in the sum of R23 155 797, 23 from the budget allocated to the
Project.
[14]
The amount claimed in this application is the sum of R29 482 325,92
which is the amount demanded
by SARS from the Applicant.
Issues
to be decided
[15]
The issue for determination in these proceedings are as follows:
(a)
Whether a party who has not levied VAT for services rendered may upon
realising the mistake
revise an invoice and include VAT; and
(b)
Whether a budget may be exceeded where parties have agreed that a
budget should not exceed
a stipulated amount.
Submissions
by the Applicant
[16]
The Applicant contends that the amount owed is determined having
regard to the terms of the agreement,
and that the obligations
between the parties remain binding despite the fact that a defective
Tax invoice was sent to the Respondents.
In other words, the
Applicant contends that the Respondent is obliged to pay its invoices
which were subsequently revised as long
as the contract subsists
between them.
[17]
It was contended that on a proper interpretation of section 10(3) of
Value-Added TAX
[1]
,
consideration includes VAT but that it does not absolve the
Respondents from paying the balance of their account for services
rendered.
[18]
The Applicant thus concedes that wages and salaries paid to the EPWP
employees should have included
VAT. I understand the Applicant's
submission to be that even if it is accepted between the parties that
"
consideration
" includes VAT, the Respondent is
still bound to pay the revised invoices including VAT.
[19]
It was further argued that the VAT Act makes provision for the
correction of a VAT invoice where
an error has occurred in
stipulating the amount of consideration payable in a VAT invoice. The
Applicant further contended that
VAT is payable on the underlying
obligation pursuant to which the VAT invoice was raised and that the
new invoice is neither a
substitution nor a novation of that
obligation.
Submissions
by the Respondents.
[20]
The Respondents resist payment on the basis that the Memorandum of
Agreement provides that the
total cost of the project is inclusive of
VAT and that the Applicant was required to ensure that the project
deliverables and other
related activities included VAT and do not
exceed the budgeted amount.
[21]
The Respondents submit that the Applicant made a unilateral error and
is therefore not entitled
to the relief it seeks.
[22]
To the extent that the Applicant relies on Estoppel and Waiver, such
were not pleaded and cannot be relied upon.
Evaluation
and Analysis
[23]
The question arises whether the Applicant's claim is based on any
breach of the terms and conditions
of the Memorandum of Agreement or
in terms of the peremptory provisions applicable for the payment of
VAT as contended by the Applicant.
[24]
As it will become apparent below, the Applicant's cause of action is
unclear.
[25]
Section 7 of Value Added Tax provides that "
subject to the
exemptions, exceptions, deductions and adjustments provided for in
this Act, there shall be levied and paid for the
benefit of the
National Revenue Fund a tax, to be known as value added tax-
(a)
on the supply of any vendor of goods or services supplied by him on
or services supplied
by him on or after the commencement date in the
course or furtherance of any enterprise carried on by him;
(b)
..................
[26]
The main purpose of the Value Added Tax is to provide for taxation in
respect of the supply of
goods
[2]
.
Any vendor who supplies goods and services within the meaning of
Value Added Tax Act is required to register and pay value added
tax.
[27]
The Applicant submits that it is required to levy tax on its invoices
in terms of section 10(3)
of the VAT Act.
[28]
Section 10(3) of the VAT Act provides that
(3) "for the
purposes of this Act the amount of any consideration
is a consideration referred to in this
section shall be-
(a)
to the extent that such consideration is a consideration in money,
the amount of money;
and
(b)
to the extent that such consideration is not consideration in money,
the open market value
of that consideration".
[29]
The Vat Act defines consideration:
"in relation to
the supply of goods or services to any person, includes any payment
made or to be made (including any deposit
on any returnable container
and tax), whether in money or otherwise, or any act or forbearance,
whether or not voluntary, in response
to, or for the inducement of,
supply of any goods or services, whether by that person or by other
person, but does not include
any payment made by any person as a
donation to any association not for gain: provided that a deposit
(other than a deposit on
a returnable container), whether refundable
or not, given in respect of a supply of goods or services shall not
be considered as
payment made for the supply unless and until the
supplier applies the deposit as consideration for the supply or such
deposit is
forfeited".
[30]
In
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni
[3]
,
the Supreme Court of Appeal held that:
"interpretation
is the process of attributing meaning to the words used in a document
...... Whatever the nature of the document,
the consideration must be
given to the language used in the light of the ordinary rules of
grammar and syntax; the context in which
the provision appears; the
apparent purpose to which it is directed and the material known to
those responsible for its production.
Where more than one meaning is
possible each possibility must be weighed in the light of all these
factors. The process is objective
and not subjective. A sensible
meaning is to be preferred to one that leads to insensible or
unbusinesslike results or undermines
the apparent purpose of the
document. Judges must be alert to, and guard against, the temptation
to substitute what they regard
as reasonable, sensible or
businesslike for the words actually used. To do so in regard to a
statute or statutory instrument is
to cross the divide between
interpretation and legislation ..."
[4]
[31]
In the matter of Cool Ideas 1186 CC v. Hubbard and Another
[5]
,
the Constitutional Court stated that:
"A fundamental
tenet of statutory interpretation is that the words in a statute must
be given their ordinary grammatical meaning,
unless to do so would
result in absurdity. There are three important interrelated riders to
this general principle, namely;
(a)
that statutory provisions should always interpreted purposively;
(b)
the relevant statutory provision must be properly contextualised; and
(c)
all statutes must be construed consistently with the Constitution,
that is, where
reasonably possible, legislative provisions ought to
be interpreted to preserve their constitutional validity. This
proviso to
the general principle is closely related to the purposive
approach rereferred to in (a)
[6]
"
[32]
It is important to note that the dispute between the parties is not
about the interpretational
meaning of "
consideration
".
The dispute is whether the Respondent is obliged to pay VAT which was
previously not included in the invoices which were
submitted by the
Applicant to the Respondent and paid.
[33]
Section 64(1) of the VAT Act states that "
any price charged
by any vendor in respect of any taxable supply of goods or services,
shall for purposes of this Act be deemed
to include any tax payable
in terms of section 7(1)
". Section 64(1) (a) of the VAT Act
further provides that "
such tax would be deemed to have been
included in the price in respect of such supply, whether or not the
vendor has included tax
in such price
".
[34]
The words in the above provision are clear that any price charged by
a vendor in respect of any
taxable supply of goods or services, shall
for purposes of the VAT Act be deemed to include VAT. In this
application this deeming
provision does not only work in favour of
SARS but also the Respondents.
[35]
As I said above, these provisions are meant to facilitate the
collection of tax and not impede
it. It is further meant to avoid
unnecessary disputes between SARS and vendors on whether a vendor has
charged VAT on its price.
The responsibility is on the vendor to
ensure that its price includes VAT where VAT is chargeable. If a
party shirks its responsibility
and fail to include VAT in its
taxable price, such party would be deemed to have included VAT. The
recovery of VAT from the party
that has paid an invoice without the
inclusion of VAT is a dispute that should be resolved between the
parties themselves.
[36]
It is plainly obvious that SARS would be faced with a herculean task
which would be difficult
to overcome if it were to determine whether
parties have complied with their respective obligations. In any
event, it is not the
duty of SARS to determine whether a supplier of
goods has an enforceable contract against third parties. Nor is it
the duty of
SARS to determine whether a vendor has not made a mistake
when issuing an invoice to another party. Such an interpretation
would
defeat the purpose of the VAT Act and render it unworkable. It
would adversely affect the collection of tax by SARS.
[37]
I am therefore of the view that the fact that the Applicant may not
have levied tax on its invoices
is irrelevant for the purpose of its
obligation towards SARS. The Applicant is expected to ensure that it
collects VAT due to SARS
by insisting that its contracting party
performs its obligations under the contract. Failure to do so does
not excuse its liability
towards SARS.
Waiver
and estoppel
[38]
The Applicant raised waiver and estoppel in its contentions. The
Applicant did not persist with
its contention on waiver and there is
no evidence in this application justifying its consideration. The
Applicant's decision not
to persist with waiver is understandable
under the circumstances. I am further satisfied that such a decision
was well taken and
is correct.
[39]
In respect of estoppel, the Applicant seemed to rely on the email
written by Dr Marais for its
contention that it was advised by him
not to levy tax on the payment of EPWP wages.
[40]
There is no need for me to consider whether estoppel applies under
these circumstances because
Dr Marais stated that there were aspects
to be considered when finalising the deliverables rates. Dr Marais
did not make any representation
which is of material significance to
the issues in this application. Even if I am wrong on this issue, it
was held in Aris Enterprise
(Finance) Pty) Ltd v Protea Assurance Co
Ltd
[7]
that "
the
essence of the doctrine of estoppel by representation is that a
person is precluded, i.e estopped from denying the truth of
a
representation previously made by him to another person if the
latter, believing in the truth of the representation, acted thereon
to its prejudice
"
[8]
.
[41]
As I have stated above, Dr Marais made no representation which is
prejudicial to the Applicant.
Further, Dr Marais has not even given
any evidence denying what he had said in the email. Dr Marais cannot
be estopped when he
is not denying what he had written in the email.
[42]
Reliance on estoppel by the Applicant is thus misplaced.
[43]
It is not the Respondents' case that Dr Marais did not say what the
Applicant purports him to
have said. The Respondents' case is that
the Applicant is not entitled to be granted the relief sought because
the amount claimed
would exceed the Project's budgeted amount. In
respect of the alternative relief sought, the Respondents submit that
the Applicant
is not entitled to any sum of money because all
invoices are, in terms of the Memorandum of Agreement, inclusive of
VAT.
[44]
I now proceed to deal with whether the Applicant is entitled to the
relief sought.
[45]
As I have already set out above, Clause 4.1 of the Memorandum of
Agreement provides that the
Project's budget of R350 000 000,00 (VAT
inclusive) will be aligned to the approved Project Performance Plan.
The Memorandum of
Agreement sets out various activities to be
performed by the Applicant i.e management of ground operations,
incident command system,
working on fire programme and others. These
were the obligations of the Applicant which the Applicant was obliged
to perform and
be paid within the budgeted amount.
[46]
The Applicant stated in its papers that it had made an error by not
including VAT in its invoices
but then abandoned this submission when
the Respondent countered by submitting that it was its unilateral
mistake. The Applicant
then changed tack and nailed its colours to
the mast by relying on the fact that it was entitled to payment
because of its obligations
towards SARS and secondly, that the amount
of R23 155 797, 23 falls with the allocated budget.
Claims
of R29 482 325, 92 alternatively R23 155 797,23
[47]
In the Notice of Motion, the Applicant claims payment of the amount
of R29 482 325, 92 from the
Respondents. During argument, the
Applicant submitted that the amount of R23 155 797,23 which is within
the Project's budget, should
be paid or tendered to it.
[48]
The Applicant further submitted that the remaining balance of R6 326
528,70, which exceeds the
allocated budget is also payable on the
basis that it had paid the wages and salaries of the EPWP employees
without including VAT.
[49]
The Respondent contended that the Applicant is not entitled to
payment of the entire amount claimed
for reasons stated above. The
parties made submissions during the hearing about the alternative
prayers i.e the payment R23 155
797, 23 and R6 326 528,70
respectively. The Respondent did not object to this approach which
was not in accordance with the prayers
in the Notice of Motion.
[50]
In
Montesse
Township and Investment Corporation (Pty) Ltd and Another v Gouws and
Another
[9]
the Appellate Division
stated that
"I am not aware
of any general proposition that a Plaintiff who has two or more
remedies at his disposal must elect at a given
point of time which of
them he intends to pursue, and that, having elected one, he is taken
to have abandoned all others. Such
a situation might well arise where
the choice lies between two inconsistent remedies and the Plaintiff
commits himself unequivocally
to the one or other of them".
[51]
In this application, the Applicant is not seeking different remedies,
it is the same remedy with
the lesser amount in the alternative. It
is trite that even in motion proceedings this should have been
pleaded in the alternative
to the main relief sought.
[52]
The alternative relief sought by the Applicant does not in any way
prejudice the Respondent.
If such failure to plead the alternative
relief constitutes a procedural defect, the evidence presented cured
the defect. The Respondents
elected to oppose the application without
putting the Applicant to the task of amending its prayers. It should
also be noted that
the main relief sought, and the alternative relief
thereof, do not constitute two distinct causes of action.
[53]
I am therefore of the view that even though the Applicant prayed for
the payment of the amount
of R23 155 797,23 in the alternative, such
a relief is not incompetent where the parties had fully argued the
point and the opposing
party had no objection to such a point being
raised.
Is
the Applicant entitled to payment of the amount of R29 482 325 92,00.
[541
The main relief sought by the Applicant is for payment of the sum of
R29 482 325 92,00.
[55]
As I have indicated above, the Applicant struggled to find a cause of
action on which it bases
its application for the payment of VAT.
Initially, the Applicant stated that it had made an error in not
including VAT in its invoices
and later raised estoppal and
half-heartedly waiver. The issue of mutual mistake, common mistake or
rectification does not arise
because it has neither been raised nor
pleaded in the papers. Eventually, the Applicant submitted in the
main that it seeks payment
of VAT because of its tax obligation
towards SARS. But this does not constitute a recognisable cause of
action. The Applicant's
liability towards SARS is of no concern to
the Respondents. As a business enterprise involved in such an
important project involving
the public purse, the Applicant should
and is expected to know its tax obligations.
[56]
It defies logic and does not make business sense for a party to
submit a tender of this magnitude
without any knowledge of its tax
obligations. Although this is not in the papers, it is fair and
reasonable to assume that the
Applicant would previously have been
involved in such projects requiring the payment of VAT.
[57]
It is not in dispute that the invoice that was presented to the
Respondent was according to the
Memorandum of Agreement, to be VAT
inclusive.
[58]
In
Ally
v Courtesy Wholesalers (Pty) Ltd
[10]
it was held that the obligations imposed by the terms of a contract
are meant to be performed, and if, they are not performed at
all, or
performed late or performed in the wrong manner, the party on whom
the duty of performance lay (the debtor) is said to
have committed a
breach of the contract or, in the first two cases, to be in mora,
and, in the last case, to be guilty of positive
malperformance
[11]
.
[59]
I know of no general proposition that a contracting party in the
position of the Respondent should
make its contracting party aware of
one of the terms of the contract which both parties are aware of. A
party who does not include
VAT on its invoices under circumstances
where it should have done so, cannot blame its contracting party
about its own reckless
mistake. In any event, the invoices were
supposed to be VAT inclusive, and this is how the Respondent
understood them to be. It
was not unreasonable for the Respondent to
believe that the invoices included VAT. Section 64(1) of the VAT Act
also supports the
contention of the Respondents that the invoice paid
to the Applicant included VAT or at least is deemed to have included
VAT.
[60]
Any cause of action for the recovery of VAT by the Applicant must
have addressed this deeming
provision which the Applicant did not
even attempt to do.
[61]
The
Public
Finance Management Act No: 1 of 1999
("the
PFMA Act") provides for the roll-over of unspent budget from the
preceding year to the following year
[12]
.
Contrary to the Applicant's submissions, the unspent budget is not
available at all times to a department because the PFMA Act
as well
as the Treasury Regulations govern how it should be allocated.
Section 53(4) places the responsibility on the accounting
officer of
a state organ to ensure that expenditure of the public entity is in
accordance with the approved budget and the PFMA
further makes
provision for unspent budget to be returned to the National Revenue
Fund.
[62]
I am of the view that an organ of state cannot spent public funds
merely because such funds are
within the allocated budget. I
therefore disagree with the Applicant that it is entitled to payment
of the amount of R23 155 797,
23 simply because it falls within the
allocated budget. The Applicant must identify a cause of action in
terms of which it relies
upon for the payment of VAT by the
Respondent and has failed to do so.
[63]
I accordingly find no basis for the payment of R29 482 325, 92 to the
Applicant and this claim
should therefore fail.
Is
the Applicant entitled to payment of the amount of R6 326 528,70
[64]
It is common cause that the payment of the amount of R6 326 528,70 to
the Applicant would fall
within the allocated budget of R350 000 000.
[65]
For the reasons stated above in respect of my take on the payment of
the amount of R29 482 325,
92 I am of the view that this alternative
claim should also suffer the same fate.
[66]
For all these reasons the application is dismissed with costs, those
costs to include the costs
of two counsel, where so employed.
RATHAGA
RAMAWELE
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION OF THE HIGH COURT,
PRETORIA
For
the Applicant: M Dewrance SC with Mark Smith instructed by Cliffe
Dekker Hofmeyr
For
the Respondent: V Notshe SC with Mandia Mkhatswa instructed by The
State Attorney, Pretoria
[1]
Act No: 89 of 1991
[2]
See: Preamble to the Value Added Tax Act
[3]
2012 (4) SA 593 (SCA)
[4]
ld para 18
[5]
2014 (4) SA 474
CC
[6]
Id para 28
[7]
[1981] ZASCA 25
24 March 1981
[8]
Id para 28
[9]
1965 (4) SA 373 (A)
[10]
1996 (3) SA 134 (N)
[11]
Id 149F-150H
[12]
Section 31(2}(g) of the PFMA
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