Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 467South Africa
Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service v Buthelezi and Others (B5917/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 467; 87 SATC 571 (10 May 2024)
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service v Buthelezi and Others (B5917/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 467; 87 SATC 571 (10 May 2024)
Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service v Buthelezi and Others (B5917/2023) [2024] ZAGPPHC 467; 87 SATC 571 (10 May 2024)
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sino date 10 May 2024
FLYNOTES:
TAX – Due or payable –
Preservation
order
–
SARS
contends that confirmation by authorised official of affidavit
advanced reasonable grounds that basis existed to authorise
application – Application was authorised in conformity with
section 163(1) – SARS set out evidence that respondents
have
sought to evade tax liability – Evidence not satisfactorily
rebutted – Preservation order was and remains
a justified
measure – Preservation order confirmed and made final –
Tax Administration Act 28 of 2011
,
s 163(1).
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE NO: B5917/2023
(1)
REPORTABLE: YES/NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES/NO
(3)
REVISED
DATE: 10 May 2024
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
THE
COMMISSIONER FOR THE
Applicant
SOUTH
AFRICAN REVENUE
SERVICE
and
BHEKINKOSI
NICHOLUS
First Respondent
BUTHELEZI
EMHLOPE
INTOMBI HOLDINGS
Second Respondent
(PTY)
LTD
SIBUSISO
GERALD NCUBE
Third Respondent
KHANJRA
AYYUBIA
Fourth Respondent
RUHULAMIN
KHANJRA
COAL (PTY) LTD
Fifth Respondent
ARTINOS
SHOSHORE
Sixth Respondent
PHAMART
COAL SUPPLIERS
Seventh Respondent
(PTY)
LTD
MOHIT
VERMA
Eighth Respondent
RAMP
RESOURCES (PTY) LTD
Ninth Respondent
PETER
ROBERT PONTON
Tenth Respondent
DISTINCTIVE
CHOICE 1277 CC
Eleventh Respondent
ADVANCE
INDUSTRIAL
Twelfth Respondent
SOLUTIONS
(PTY) LTD
KWANDA
DHALMINI
Thirteenth Respondent
QUELME
LOGISTICS CC
Fourteenth Respondent
BLACK
ROCK RESOURCES (PTY)
Fifteenth Respondent
LTD
BRUCE
MSIZI MHLANGA
Sixteenth Respondent
ZANELE
GLORIA MHLANGA
Seventeenth Respondent
BM
COAL (PTY) LTD
Eighteenth Respondent
GOLDEN
ROYAL
CONSTRUCTION
(PTY) LTD
Nineteenth Respondent
ABRAM
MOLOTSTI MAPHOTO
Twentieth Respondent
RAISIBE
EVELYN MAPHOTO
Twenty First Respondent
SETUMISHI
BUILDING
Twenty Second Respondent
CONSTRUCTION
AND
ENTERPRISE
CC
UNIT
7 RENA (PTY) LTD
Twenty Third Respondent
WELLINGTON
NYAPADI
Twenty Fourth Respondent
SAIDI
KARIYATI
Twenty Fifth Respondent
SOLOMON
MANYELETI LAMOLA
Twenty Sixth Respondent
MANYELETI
CONSULTING (PTY)
Twenty Seventh Respondent
LTD
MAGOGUDI
CONSTRUCTION
Twenty Eighth Respondent
PROJECT
CC
Delivered:
This judgment was prepared and authored by the Judge whose name is
reflected and is handed down electronically by circulation
to the
Parties / their legal representatives by email and by uploading it to
the electronic file of this matter on CaseLines. The
date of the
judgment is deemed to be 10 May 2024.
JUDGMENT
UNTERHALTER J
[1]
The applicant, the Commissioner for the South
African Revenue Service (SARS) sought and obtained a provisional
preservation order
(the preservation order) in terms of s 163 of the
Tax Administration Act 28 of 2011 (TAA) against 28 respondents.
The preservation
order was granted on 24 October 2023 by Koovertjie J
against all the respondents. Among the respondents cited were
the 20
th
–
23
rd
respondents: Mr Maphoto, Mrs Maphoto, Setumishi
Building Construction & Enterprise CC (Setumishi), and Unit7Rena
(Pty) Ltd (Unit7)
(collectively, the Setumishi respondents). Mr and
Mrs Maphoto are husband and wife. Mrs Maphoto is a member of
Setumishi and was
a director of Unit7. The Setumishi respondents, as
they were entitled to do in terms of the provisional preservation
order, have
anticipated the return day of the preservation order.
They seek to have the preservation order discharged. SARS moves to
have the
preservation order made final as against the Setumishi
respondents.
[2]
The Setumishi respondents raised an objection to
the preservation order that requires consideration at the outset.
Section 163(1)
of the TAA requires that a senior SARS official may
authorise an
ex parte
application
to the high court for the preservation of assets. That authority, for
present purposes, contemplates that there is an
amount of tax that is
due and payable or that the official on reasonable grounds is
satisfied that an amount of tax may be due
or payable. We are here
concerned with the second type of authorisation. The Setumishi
respondents contend that the senior SARS
official, Mr Posthumus, who
authorised the
ex parte
application that resulted in the preservation
order, failed to aver that he was satisfied that an amount of tax may
be due and payable.
Hence the application was defective from the
outset and must be dismissed.
[3]
Mr Posthumus deposed to a confirmatory affidavit
in the
ex parte
application.
He stated that he is a senior SARS official and that he authorises
the application for a preservation order. He then
references the
supporting affidavit of Ms Seopela and states: ‘I confirm the
contents thereof’. This supporting affidavit
is a lengthy
document. Ms Seopela’s affidavit sets out the amount of tax
that may be due in respect of each of the Setumishi
respondents, and
the basis for her computation. Mr Posthumus deposed to a further
confirmatory affidavit in which he confirmed
the correctness of the
replying affidavit of Mr Klingenberg in so far as its contents
related to him. Mr Klingenberg sets out the
potential tax liability
of the Setumishi respondents.
[4]
The affidavits of Mr Posthumus do not in terms
state that on reasonable grounds he is satisfied that an amount of
tax may be payable
by the Setumishi respondents. However, in
confirming the contents of Ms Seopela’s affidavit in the
context of his authorisation
of the application, he is advancing
reasonable grounds upon which it can be inferred that he was
satisfied that a basis existed
to authorise the application. Those
grounds are supported by his further confirmatory affidavit in
respect of what Mr Klingenberg
has had to say concerning the tax
liability of the Setumishi respondents. Mr Posthumus’
confirmatory affidavits were deposed
to by him to support his
authorisation of the application. Those affidavits advance reasons
for the tax liability of the Setumishi
respondents. They could only
have been advanced in support of his authorisation of the application
if he was satisfied that they
provided reasonable grounds to consider
that tax may be due or payable by the Setumishi respondents. And the
affidavits upon which
Mr Posthumus relies do, as I shall explain,
provide reasonable grounds upon which Mr Posthumus was placed in a
position to form
that view. On this analysis, Mr Posthumus’
affidavits set out a sufficient basis upon which he authorised the
application
for the preservation order in compliance with s 163(1).
[5]
In the course of argument, I raised the question
as to whether Mr Posthumus should be afforded an opportunity to
clarify his position.
This he has done in a further affidavit. He
there made it plain that his reliance on the contents of the
affidavit of Ms Seopela
permitted him to be satisfied on reasonable
grounds that he should authorise an application to seek the
preservation order. Counsel
for the Setumishi respondents was
doubtful that such an affidavit could rescue what was not plainly
stated in the founding affidavit.
I am doubtful that this is so, as
authority is generally capable of ratification. But I need not decide
this aspect of the matter
because, as I read Mr Posthumus’ most
recent affidavit, he simply clarified what he had already stated as
to the basis upon
which he authorised the application. I therefore
find that the application brought by SARS for a preservation order
was authorised
in conformity with s 163(1).
[6]
I turn next to consider the contention of the
Setumishi respondents that the application of SARS for the
preservation order was
predicated upon the involvement of the
respondents, including the Setumishi respondents, in an unlawful
syndicated scheme concerning
the transportation and sale of coal to
Eskom. SARS, they submit, failed to establish a relationship between
the Setumishi respondents
and the other respondents cited in the
application. Nor, it is argued, has SARS established how the
Setumishi respondents participated
in, and benefitted from, the
syndicated scheme. SARS in its answering affidavit in the
anticipation application reversed
course and no longer relied upon
the involvement of the Setumishi respondents in the scheme to support
the preservation order.
The Setumishi respondents argue that this
change is fatal to the case of SARS. If the preservation order was
procured on the basis
of the Setumishi respondent’s
participation in a scheme, for which there is no evidence, the
preservation order must be dismissed.
[7]
The position of SARS is this. The extent of the
respondents’ participation in the unlawful has not been
determined. It remains
the subject of investigation. It was
referenced in the supporting affidavit to provide background
information. The preservation
order was sought on the basis of the
failure by each of the respondents to comply with their obligations
under the tax legislation,
as to which a detailed case was made out.
[8]
Even if, as the Setumishi respondents contend,
SARS placed reliance upon the scheme to secure the preservation
order, it does not
follow that the absence of proof that the
Setumishi respondents participated in the scheme or benefited from it
would render the
preservation order insupportable. A fair reading of
the affidavit filed in support of the preservation order indicates
that SARS
relied upon a case that identified breaches by each of the
Setumishi respondents of their obligations to render full and
truthful
tax returns reflecting their taxable income, and, in the
case of Unit 7, its failure to charge or declare VAT on the supplies
it
made. This case does not rest upon the unlawful scheme. The
issue is thus whether the breaches alleged by SARS warranted the
imposition of the preservation order, without regard to the alleged
scheme. The invocation of the scheme in the supporting affidavit
of
SARS is not dispositive of the case brought by SARS for the
preservation order.
[9]
I turn to consider whether there is a case made
out that the breaches alleged by SARS require the confirmation of the
preservation
order. Central to the substantive defence offered by the
Setumishi respondents is the claim that SARS has identified
transactions
as income, when they were short term loans extended and
then repaid. The tax debts of the Setumishi respondents, upon which
SARS
relies, is claimed to be considerably overstated because short
loans made by Mr and Mrs Maphoto to Setumishi and Unit 7 and then
repaid should not have been treated as income.
[10]
Before assessing this defence, SARS takes the
point that although Mrs Maphoto claims to have been authorised to
depose to the answering
affidavits filed on behalf of Unit 7, she
cannot have been so authorised because the resolution of Unit 7, upon
which reliance
is placed, was invalid. Mrs Maphoto had already
resigned as a director of Unit 7 at the time that the resolution,
bearing her signature
as a director, was taken. The resolution, dated
17 October 2023, issues from a meeting of the board of directors of
Unit 7 and
reflects the signature of Mrs Maphoto. It appears that Mrs
Maphoto had resigned as a director on 26 September 2023. Her
concurrence
thus had no efficacy. However, two other directors signed
the resolution. SARS makes out no case that these directors could not
authorise Mrs Maphoto to depose to affidavits on behalf of the
company. The resolution also appointed attorneys to act for Unit
7 in
the proceedings. No attack is made on that appointment. There is no
showing by SARS that the resolution was invalid, even
if it is shorn
of Mrs Maphoto’s concurrence. As a result, the objection cannot
be sustained.
[11]
The Setumishi respondents, as I have recounted,
set out at some length in their affidavits the basis upon which they
contend that
the probable tax debt is considerably exaggerated by
SARS. In the supporting affidavit, SARS alleged that the probable tax
debt
was R31 969 392.43. That was revised in SARS’s
replying affidavit to a probable tax debt of R14 730 446.95.
In a supplementary answering affidavit, Mrs Maphoto references the
further analysis of the tax advisors of the Setumishi respondents
in
respect of this probable tax debt. The analysis engages an exercise
for each of the Setumishi respondents comparing, for each
tax period,
the tax declaration, the amounts received as per third party data,
and how much of the difference is not made up of
income. Once the
amounts, treated by SARS as income when they are not, are taken into
account, it is claimed that the probable
tax debt of the Setumishi
respondents is R711 241, 97. A considerably reduced probable tax
debt that should not have led SARS
to make use of the drastic
measures of the preservation order, but rather to use its ample
powers of audit to secure payment of
what may be found, ultimately,
to be due and payable.
[12]
What does the work in this analysis are the
amounts received by the Setumishi respondents that are said not to be
income, but short
term loans extended and repaid. In the answering
affidavit of the Setumishi respondents, Mrs Maphoto seeks to set
out
transactions that are not gross income. The exercise
is a tabulation of the flow of funds, year by year, into the bank
accounts
of the Setumishi respondents.
[13]
The difficulty with this exercise is the
following. First, it is not apparent that each loan and every loan
was repaid to the lenders,
and how the net borrowings and repayments
are reconciled in every year. Second, there is an absence of
documentary evidence supporting
loan agreements and the terms on
which the loans were extended and repaid. Granted, these were loans
provided to entities controlled
by Mrs Maphoto, and some informality
may be expected in such circumstances. But it would nevertheless be
expected that at least
the corporate entities, as separate persons,
would have some documentation to support their agreement to the loan
funding. Third,
the financial statements of Setumishi and Unit 7 do
not reflect that loans were made to them, and no provision is made
for the
repayment of the loan amounts. It was submitted that the
short term nature of these loans would have meant that they were
repaid
over a short period and so have no nett impact on the
financial position of Setumishi or Unit 7. It is however impossible
on the
papers to verify that the loans were all repaid in this way.
And at least some working papers should have been available to
substantiate
this claim. In addition, loan repayments should have
been reflected as operating expenses of Setumishi and Unit 7, but
their financial
statements do not do so. Fourth, the income tax
returns of Setumishi and Unit 7 do not record the loans that are now
relied
upon. Fifth, there is an absence of evidence to support the
loans that are claimed to have been received from third parties, and
these loans also cannot be reconciled with the financial statements
of Setumishi and Unit 7. In sum, there is a paucity of
corroborative evidence as to the loans made and repaid, beyond the
say so of Mrs Maphoto. And the tax advisors employed by the
Setumishi
respondents do not offer further elucidation.
[14]
SARS has also identified irregularities in the VAT
returns submitted by Unit 7. Unit 7, on the analysis offered by SARS,
in its
VAT returns claimed input tax but disclosed no output tax,
notwithstanding the supplies it made. The claimed input
tax in respect of capital goods also does not appear to chime with
the company’s financial statements and income tax returns.
This
has resulted in what SARS describes as ‘estimated income VAT
prejudice’. The Setumishi respondents, and in particular
Unit
7, have not properly dealt with these averments.
[15]
I have
had regard to
eTradex
[1]
and
Hamilton
[2]
.
A
preservation order is an intrusive order. It is not to be granted
simply because a taxpayer is liable or is likely to become liable
for
tax. The purpose of the order is set out in s 163(1). It is to
prevent any realisable assets from being disposed of or removed
which
may frustrate the collection of the full amount of tax that is due or
payable or which a senior SARS official, on reasonable
grounds, is
satisfied may be due or payable. The preservation order must be
required to secure the collection of tax. It does not
suffice that
the order may simply have some utility. One way to assess what is
required is to consider what risks might arise absent
the grant of
such an order, on the evidence before the court.
[16]
The Setumishi respondents contend that SARS has
failed to make out a case that there is risk of the removal or
dissipation of assets.
The businesses conducted by Setumishi and Unit
7 require their assets to remain in place. The transactions in issue
were conducted
in the ordinary course of business. And there is no
risk of the removal of assets to frustrate the collection of tax.
[17]
This case, however, is not simply a dispute as to
the quantification of tax liability. There has been a failure to
declare taxable
income and render proper returns. The defence offered
by the Setumishi respondents as to the loans made and repaid has not
been
adequately established to negate the shortfall of declared
taxable income. This is compounded by what appears to be a deliberate
failing to calculate the correct amount of VAT and make proper VAT
returns. Once this is so, the Setumishi respondents are burdened
with
the likelihood that they have sought to hide from SARS their true
taxable income and the extent of the liability of Unit 7
to pay VAT.
In other words, the conduct of the Setumishi respondents is not
likely to have resulted from inadvertence, insouciance
or negligence.
Rather, they contend that their returns are supportable, when they
are not. And this gives rise to the risk that
their deliberate
obfuscation of their tax liability will extend to the treatment of
their assets which will be used by SARS to
collect the full amount of
tax owing by the Setumushi respondents.
[18]
This risk is compounded by the fact that the
relationship between the Setumushi respondents is in essence a family
enterprise. The
manner in which loans were paid and repaid, on the
version of the Setumishi respondents, indicates little respect for
any formal
separation between these respondents. The
curator
bonis
in his affidavits has drawn
attention to the manner in which inter account transfers have taken
place between the Setumishi respondents
and their use of shared
expenses. It requires little foresight to mark out the risk
that the Setumishi respondents could
apply the same disregard for
their separate personhood to move assets and mask their proper
disclosure, as they have done with
respect to their tax returns.
[19]
In these circumstances, I consider that a
preservation order was required, and remains so. This is not an
ordinary case of a dispute
over a tax liability that may be payable.
It is a case in which SARS has set out evidence that the Setumishi
respondents have sought
to evade their tax liability. That evidence
has not been satisfactorily rebutted. And in such circumstances, a
preservation order
is required because there is an appreciable risk
that the Setumishi respondents will treat their assets which will be
used to satisfy
their tax liability in the same way that they sought
to hide from sight their taxable income and VAT liability.
\
[20]
The Setumishi respondents submit that there was no
justification for the appointment of the
curator
bonis
and that he has exercised his
powers to compromise the business conducted by Setumishi and Unit 7.
They complain that the
curator bonis
has failed to pay taxes and honour debit orders,
and more generally to co-operate with the Setumishi respondents. The
curator bonis
has
filed affidavits and preliminary reports. The affidavits set out a
detailed rebuttal of the complaints levelled against him.
As
important, a case has been made out that the
curator
bonis
has introduced procedures for the
payments made by the Setumishi respondents; he has regulated the
relationship between the Setumishi
respondents and taken measures to
ensure proper accounting. This will assist to determine the tax
liability of the Setumishi respondents
and ensure that assets are
properly disclosed that may be used to satisfy such liability. On the
evidence, this appointment has
not caused either Setumishi or Unit 7
to be significantly compromised in their business prospects. I find
that the appointment
of the
curator
bonis
was warranted, and remains so.
[21]
The Setumishi respondents complain that SARS, and
in particular Mr Posthumus who authorised the application, has
breached the duty
to preserve the secrecy of taxpayer information
contrary to s 69(1) of the TAA. This has occurred because once SARS
was not in
a position to rely upon the Setumishi respondents’
participation in an unlawful scheme with the other respondents, there
was no basis to disclose the taxpayer information of the Setumishi
respondents to the other respondents cited in the application.
SARS
answers this complaint by invoking s 69(2)(c) of the TAA. This
provision states that the disclosure of taxpayer information
is not
prohibited by a person who is a current SARS official if done by
order of court. The court order granted by Koovertjie J
required the
order, together with a copy of the application, to be served on all
the respondents. The application disclosed the
tax information of the
Setumishi respondents to the other respondents cited. And thus, SARS
submits, the disclosure was lawful
because it was done under the
authority of a court order.
[22]
SARS’ submission is technically correct. But
it fails to square up to the fact that once SARS apprehended that it
could not
maintain that the Setumishi respondents formed part of the
unlawful scheme, there was every reason to make some provision in the
order to protect the Setumishi respondents from having their taxpayer
information disclosed to the other respondents. This SARS
did not do.
SARS sought and procured a court order that did not provide this
protection, perhaps still considering, when the order
was sought,
that there was a sufficient basis to link all the respondents to the
scheme. I consider however that this want of care
on the part of SARS
cannot serve to invalidate the preservation order. That would be a
disproportionate sanction given, as I have
found, that the
preservation order was and remains a justified measure.
[23]
In the course of the oral argument before me, some
time was devoted to the duration of the preservation order, and
whether security
might not be given in substitution of the order. The
parties have engaged one another on the question of security and have
not
come to terms. I do not consider it appropriate to resolve their
differences on this issue. However, I emphasised to SARS’
counsel that a preservation order of the kind before this court is an
intrusive order that should not endure for any longer than
necessary.
SARS indicated that it would not require the protections afforded by
the preservation order beyond 31 July 2024, and
I propose to so limit
its duration.
[24]
In the result the following order is made:
(i)
The provisional preservation order of 24 October
2023 (‘the preservation order’) as against the 20
th
,
21
st
,
22
nd
and
23
rd
respondents
is confirmed and made final;
(ii)
The preservation order shall endure until 31 July
2024 in respect of these respondents;
(iii)
The costs of opposing the preservation order shall
be paid by the 20
th
,
21
st
,
22
nd
and
23
rd
respondents
jointly and severally, the one paying the others to be absolved,
including the costs of two counsel
UNTERHALTER J
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
APPEARANCES
COUNSEL
FOR THE APPLICANT:
ADVOCATE
M MEYER & ADVOCATE MOLEA
INSTRUCTED
BY:
DIALE
MOGASHOA ATTORNEYS
COUNSEL
FOR THE
21
ST
,
22
ND
, 23
RD
AND 24
TH
RESPONDENTS:
ADVOCATE
L SIGOGO SC &
ADVOCATE
E MKHAWANE
INSTRUCTED
BY:
MGIBA
KGABI ATTORNEYS
DATE
OF HEARING:
02
MAY 2024
DATE
OF JUDGMENT:
10
MAY 2024
[1]
Commissioner,
South African Revenue Services v eTradex (Pty) Ltd 2015 (3) SA 604
(WCC)
[2]
Commissioner,
South African Revenue Service v Hamilton Holdings (Pty) Ltd &
others [2021] ZAGPPHC 138
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