Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 160South Africa
BP Southern Africa (Pty) Ltd v Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service (Appeal) (2021/49805) [2024] ZAGPPHC 160 (1 March 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
1 March 2024
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## BP Southern Africa (Pty) Ltd v Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service (Appeal) (2021/49805) [2024] ZAGPPHC 160 (1 March 2024)
BP Southern Africa (Pty) Ltd v Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service (Appeal) (2021/49805) [2024] ZAGPPHC 160 (1 March 2024)
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sino date 1 March 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
Case
No.
2021/49805
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED.
DATE:
1 March 2024
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
BP
SOUTHERN AFRICA (PTY)
LTD
Applicant
and
THE
COMMISSIONER FOR THE
SOUTH
AFRICAN REVENUE
SERVICE
Respondent
#####
##### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
WILSON
J:
1
The applicant, BP, seeks leave to appeal
against my judgment of 12 January 2024. In that judgment, I dismissed
BP’s appeal
under section 47 (9) (e) of the Customs and Excise
Act 91 of 1964 (“the Customs Act”) against determinations
made under
the Act by the respondent, the Commissioner. Those
determinations were that BP did not qualify for refunds of duty paid
on fuel
BP says was exported to Zimbabwe.
I also referred to
trial BP’s review of the Commissioner’s further decision,
taken in terms of 88 (2) (a) (i) of the
Customs Act, to levy payment
in lieu
of forfeiture on the allegedly exported fuel.
2
BP takes no issue with the reference to trial, and has in fact
issued its declaration in the trial proceedings that I have ordered.
BP says, however, that I ought to have referred the appeal to trial
as well. It argues that there is a reasonable prospect that
a court
of appeal will find that I should have done so, and will reverse my
order.
3
I cannot agree. The trigger for a referral to trial is a
dispute of fact that is material to the relief sought. In relation to
the
review, there plainly was such a dispute. That dispute was about
whether BP claimed refunds on fuel it claimed had been exported
to
Zimbabwe with the intent to defraud the Commissioner. For the reasons
I gave in my 12 January judgment, that dispute was irresolvable
on
the papers.
4
The question of BP’s entitlement to the refunds
themselves – the subject matter of the appeal – was
different.
In order to demonstrate that it was entitled to the
refunds, BP had to show that the fuel at issue had been exported as
provided
for in rebate Items 623.23 and 671.07 of Schedule 6 to the
Customs Act. That meant that BP had to show that the fuel had
actually
left the country, and that BP had otherwise complied with
the requirements applicable to the relevant Items.
5
For there to have been a dispute of fact on this issue, BP had
to make out a positive factual case by way of admissible evidence
that (a) the fuel had left the country and (b) that the export had
taken place in the manner provided for in the relevant Items.
This BP
failed to do. Not only that, but it was clear from the papers that BP
did not (and still does not) really know whether
the fuel left the
country or whether the requirements set out in the relevant Items
were complied with. In particular, BP cannot
say whether the
consignees in Zimbabwe to whom it says it exported the fuel actually
received the fuel. Nor can BP say whether
the fuel was conveyed there
by a licenced remover of goods. This is notwithstanding the fact that
BP does not qualify for a refund
under the relevant Items unless it
keeps a record that the fuel has been received by the consignee and
ensures that the fuel is
conveyed by a licenced remover of goods.
6
BP did neither of these things. BP instead relied on what were
referred to before me as “CN2” documents. These are
documents
normally generated by the Commissioner which confirm that a
particular consignment has reached and crossed a border post. But
there
was no serious dispute that the relevant CN2 documents placed
before me, and on which BP relied to prove export, did not in fact
relate to the fuel BP says it exported, or even to the border post at
which BP says the fuel crossed into Zimbabwe.
7
The Commissioner said the CN2s were not legitimate CN2s at
all, but forgeries produced by someone else. BP did not authenticate
the CN2s it relied on. It also did nothing to gainsay the
Commissioner’s allegation that the CN2s were forged, save to
assert
that it was not the source of any fraud. But even if the CN2s
were genuine, and even if, on their face, they related to one of BP’s
fuel exports, that still would not have demonstrated, even
prima
facie
, that the fuel was exported as required by the relevant
Items. BP would still have had to have demonstrated that the fuel was
conveyed
by a licenced remover of goods, and that BP had proof that
the consignee received it. BP does not so much allege that these
requirements
were met.
8
In these circumstances, it cannot be said that BP has made a
positive factual case by way of admissible evidence either that (a)
the fuel ever crossed the border or that (b) if and when it did so,
the fuel was exported in compliance with the requirements applicable
to the relevant Items.
9
The question that naturally arises in this context is whether
BP put up a
prima facie
factual version that was capable of
creating a dispute – in other words, whether there was any
positive factual case that
BP qualified for the refunds it claimed.
The answer, in my view, is clear. There was no such case. If there
was no such case, there
could have been no real and material dispute
of fact. If there was no real and material dispute of fact, then
there was nothing
to refer to trial.
10
Mr. Joubert, who appeared together with Mr. Louw and Mr. du
Bruyn for BP, could not really challenge these conclusions. He was
accordingly
unable to convince me that there is a reasonable prospect
that another court might find that I ought to have referred BP’s
section 47 (9) (e) appeal to trial.
11
It is principally for that reason that the
application for leave to appeal must fail. There are, however, three
further issues which
I should address. The first is BP’s
submission that I lacked jurisdiction to entertain the merits of the
dispute, because
all BP had asked me to do was consider the
application for a referral to trial. I found in my 12 January
judgment that Rule 6 (5)
(g) of the Rules of this Court, which
governs the exercise of a court’s discretion to refer an
application to trial, entails
a court first forming a view on whether
an application can properly be decided on the papers. That, I found,
entailed the proposition
that a court dealing with an application for
a referral to trial has jurisdiction to consider and decide the
merits of an application
if a referral to trial is inappropriate.
This was exactly what the Commissioner asked me to do. There can,
accordingly, be no merit
in BP’s further argument that I
decided an issue that the parties did not raise.
12
Mr. Joubert nonetheless argued that my
consideration of the section 47 (9) (e) appeal on its merits cannot
be reconciled with the
decision of the Constitutional Court in
Mamadi
v Premier of Limpopo Province
2024 (1)
SA 1
(CC). However, I fail to see the connection.
Mamadi
was about whether it is permissible to dismiss a case statutorily
required to have been brought on motion simply because foreseeable
disputes of fact have developed. The Constitutional Court found that
it was not. This case is different. I dismissed BP’s
application for referral to trial and its section 47 (9) (e) appeal
because BP had failed to make out a positive factual case from
which
a factual dispute could genuinely arise. There is nothing in
Mamadi
that prevents me from dismissing the application in those
circumstances.
13
Second, Mr. Joubert suggested that my
decision would have been different if I had admitted a chunk of new
evidence BP sought leave
to introduce in the main application. But
none of that evidence went to the critical factual issue: viz.
whether the fuel BP says
it exported actually crossed the border in a
manner that complied with the requirements applicable to the relevant
Items. The evidence
was instead aimed at demonstrating that the
Commissioner’s systems through which it monitors the export of
fuel are not fit
for purpose. But any defects in the Commissioner’s
systems that might have been proved plainly do not translate into a
positive
factual case that the fuel actually crossed the border. It
was for BP to make out a case that the fuel was exported, not for the
Commissioner to prove that it was not.
14
Finally, it was argued that the fact that
BP’s appeal in this matter is part of a trio of cases –
the other two of which
are or will be instituted as trial actions
that BP hopes to consolidate with this case –
constitutes a compelling reason to grant leave to appeal against my
refusal to refer the appeal to trial. I cannot agree. I know
very
little about the other two matters, the stage that they have reached,
or the issues that arise in them. There is accordingly
nothing to
compel me to grant leave to appeal merely on the possibility that
BP’s appeal, if successful, might one day allow
it to
consolidate this matter with the other two.
15
There are, for all of these reasons, no prospects of success
in the appeal BP wishes to mount, and no other compelling reason to
detain an appellate court with it.
16
The application for leave to appeal is dismissed with costs,
including the costs of two counsel, where employed.
S
D J WILSON
Judge
of the High Court
This
judgment was prepared by Judge Wilson. It is handed down
electronically by circulation to the parties or their legal
representatives
by email, by uploading to the electronic file of this
matter on Caselines, and by publication of the judgment to the South
African
Legal Information Institute. The date for hand-down is deemed
to be 1 March 2024.
HEARD
ON:
29
February 2024
DECIDED
ON:
1 March
2024
For the
Applicant:
AP
Joubert SC
C Louw
SC
LF du
Bruyn
Instructed
by Edward Nathan Sonnenbergs
For the
Respondent:
J Peter
SC
Instructed
by MacRobert Inc
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