Case Law[2024] ZAGPPHC 709South Africa
Turners Shipping (Pty) Ltd v Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service (2022/059481) [2024] ZAGPPHC 709 (23 July 2024)
Headnotes
of the parties’ contentions
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Turners Shipping (Pty) Ltd v Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service (2022/059481) [2024] ZAGPPHC 709 (23 July 2024)
Turners Shipping (Pty) Ltd v Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service (2022/059481) [2024] ZAGPPHC 709 (23 July 2024)
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sino date 23 July 2024
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REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION
PRETORIA
CASE
NO: 2022/059481
DOH:
14
November 2023
1)
REPORTABLE: NO
2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
3)
REVISED.
DATE: 23 JULY 2024
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
TURNERS
SHIPPING (PTY) LTD
Applicant
And
COMMISSIONER
FOR THE SOUTH AFRICAN
Respondent
REVENUE
SERVICE
JUDGMENT
THIS JUDGMENT HAS BEEN
HANDED DOWN REMOTELY AND SHALL BE CIRCULATED TO THE PARTIES BY E-MAIL
AND UPLOADING ON CASELINES. THE DATE
AND TIME OF HAND DOWN IS DEEMED
TO BE 10h00 23 JULY 2024
BAM
J
A
.
Introduction
1.
During
August 2021 up to June 2022, the respondent issued five
[1]
Letters of Intent (LsOI) to the applicant, informing it of the status
of the audit conducted by SARS into certain diesel fuel consignments
declared for export to Zimbabwean entities, between July and October
of 2018. The applicant had rendered services as clearing agent
in
respect of the consignments, acting on the instructions of Shell and
BP as its clients. The audit had uncovered various
infractions
of the Customs and Excise
[2]
(the Act) including acts of misrepresentations made by, amongst
others, the applicant to the respondent. Based on the audit findings,
the respondent held the prima facie view that the fuel had not been
exported and that the diesel refunds claimed by the applicant’s
principals, Shell and BP, pursuant to the purported exports, had been
unlawfully claimed. The applicant was informed of the Commissioner’s
intention to hold it liable, jointly and severally, with its
principals, for amounts, in lieu of forfeiture, as well as duties.
The applicant was further invited to answer several pointed questions
relating to its conduct, to enable the respondent to decide
on the
way forward.
2.
In August 2022, the respondent followed up
with several letters serving as addenda to the LsOI. In the letters,
the respondent expressed
the view that the applicant had played a
significant role in facilitating the ‘exports’ way beyond
that of an agent.
It was the Commissioner’s intention to hold
the applicant liable as exporter, in addition to any other basis.
Further, the
respondent held a view that the applicant had
participated in a scheme with Shell and BP, as envisaged in Sec 119B
of the Act,
for an undue tax benefit. The applicant was invited once
again to respond to various pertinent questions.
3.
The
applicant replied to the LsOI. The applicant held the view that there
was no legal basis on which the respondent could hold
it liable for
amounts, in lieu of forfeiture, nor for duties. In November 2022, the
respondent issued a demand for the amount of
R 109.6 million, being
the value of the consignments, in lieu of forfeiture. By then, the
amount of R 71 million, representing
duties attracted by the fuel
consignments, had already been collected from Shell. The present
application was filed on 14 December
2022, following the applicant’s
statutory notice in terms of Sec 96 of the Act. The parties had
further agreed to extend
the time for the applicant’s response
to the addenda pending a declarator from this court on the question
of the applicant’s
liability. It is against that brief setting
that the applicant came to seek the present declaratory order, that
the respondent
has no legal basis to hold it liable for amounts in
lieu of forfeiture, as set out in the five LsOI
[3]
.
The applicant relies on the provisions of Section 21(1)(c)
[4]
of the Superior Courts Act
[5]
in seeking the declarator. The respondent opposes the relief and asks
that the application be dismissed with costs. It is now appropriate
to introduce the parties and follow on with a brief sketch of the
background facts.
B. Parties
4.
The applicant, Turners Shipping (Pty) Ltd,
(Turners) is a private company duly incorporated in terms of the
company laws of South
Africa. Its registered address is noted in the
founding affidavit as 3[...] M[...] M[...] Avenue, Durban. Turners is
a customs
clearing agent and is duly licensed as such by the South
African Revenue Service. At the times material hereto, Turners had
offices
at various locations in South Africa, including Tarlton and
Beit Bridge border post, (BBR), but its clearing and forwarding
activities
are mainly centralised at its main place of business in
Durban.
5.
The
respondent is the Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service
and is appointed in terms of Sec 6 of the South African
Revenue
Service Act
[6]
.
The Commissioner is charged with, amongst others, the enforcement of
the Act. The Commissioner’s offices are located at
Lehae La
SARS, 2[...] B[...] Street, Nieuw Muckleneuk, Groenkloof, Pretoria.
In this judgment I use the Commissioner, SARS, and
the respondent to
refer to the same person.
C. Investigation
6.
The following details, originating from the
respondent’s LsOI are either common cause or were not seriously
challenged: During
the period beginning from July to October 2018,
the applicant, acting as clearing agent for Shell and BP framed and
submitted to
the Customs division of the respondent various invoices
and export bills of entry, representing that its clients Shell or BP,
had
sold excisable fuel goods (fuel consignments or simply fuel) to
Zimbabwean entities, ie, North Oil and Maps Enterprises. Shell or
BP
were declared as exporter/consignor of the goods and the foreign
entities as purchasers and consignee. In the course of time,
and in
circumstances not mentioned in the LsOI, the respondent’s
Syndicated Tax and Customs Crime Division: Illicit Trade
Unit
(Illicit Unit), decided to conduct an investigation into the
consignments and identified several violations of the Act. In
the
immediately following subparagraphs, I set out some of the findings:
7.1 The fuel was removed
from Tarlton pipelines, a facility owned by Transnet, which is not a
licensed warehouse, whereas, according
to the applicant’s
representation to the respondent, the fuel was removed from either
Shell or BP’s manufacturing warehouses.
There were no entries
for the removal of the fuel from either Shell’s of BP’s
manufacturing warehouses to Transnet’s
pipelines as required in
terms of Sec 19A of the Act and the rules.
7.2 In respect of each
transaction, two invoices were issued. The first invoice was issued
by Shell or BP, through the applicant.
This invoice represented ot
the respondent that a transnational sale between Shell or BP and the
Zimbabwean entity had taken place,
while Shell or BP issued a second
invoice to the local entity, the real purchaser of the fuel.
7.3 The applicant issued
the first invoices and framed the bills of entry for export, in
circumstances where it knew that its clients
had not sold fuel to the
Zimbabwean entities. This fact is asserted in each of the five
letters of intent and the applicant has
not denied it. The applicant
has also not denied its knowledge of the second invoice issued by the
principals.
7.4 The customs values
reflected on the pro-forma invoices submitted at the time of
clearance differed from the transactional values
captured on the
final invoices.
7.5 There was also no
licensed remover of goods in bond (ROG) declared in the necessary
forms, SAD 502.
7.6 The reference numbers
on acquittal documents, Consignment Notes (CN2), proved to be false.
Where the reference numbers existed,
it was found that they related
to different goods that had left South Africa through different
borders, on different dates, than
the dates of the fuel consignments.
The respondent concluded that the CN2s were false and could not have
been generated from SARS’
system as their system is designed to
issue a unique reference number for each consignment.
7.7 The Zimbabwean
entities — the declared purchasers and consignees —could
not be verified and their physical addresses
were found to be false.
None of the clearing agents responsible for clearing the goods on the
Zimbabwean side were registered with
the Zimbabwean Customs
authorities. The stamps used to authenticate the records from the
Zimbabwean side were false. One such stamp
was an old, damaged stamp
which had fallen into disuse in February 2017. In some records, the
stamp used was found to be that of
the Zimbabwean Environmental
authorities, instead of the Customs authorities.
7.8 The Shipshape system
used by the applicant for export entries reflected the colour yellow,
signifying that the creation of the
export entries had not been
completed, as opposed to the colour green for a complete export.
7.
On the basis of the aforementioned
anomalies and infractions, taking into account the applicant’s
responses, the respondent
concluded that there was no valid proof
that the fuel had been exported and accordingly made a determination
to that effect.
8.
There then followed the demands as alluded
to in the introduction of this judgment.
D. Summary of the
parties’ contentions
Applicant’s case
9.
The applicant’s case may be
summarised as follows:
9.1 There is no liability
for duties on the goods entered by the applicant for export as duties
were paid upon removal from the
manufacturing warehouse by Shel and
BP, in line with the duty at source system of rules.
9.2 When the refunds are
claimed and paid by set off, duties and levies in respect of goods,
other than those declared for export
by the applicant, are unpaid
with the result that the two-year limitation period in Sec 99(5) of
the Act comes to the assistance
of the applicant from the time the
duties on those other goods first became due.
9.3 Liability under Sec
76A of the Act to repay the duties refunded is confined to Shell and
BP, as the person(s) concerned, not
the applicant, as the latter is
not the person concerned.
9.4 The conduct of the
applicant in completing the invoice and framing the export entries
does not amount to dealing with the goods
irregularly or contrary to
the provisions of the Act.
On the basis of the
foregoing, the applicant cannot incur liability for payment in lieu
of forfeiture.
Respondent’s
case
10.
The respondent foregrounds his submissions
by stating that the applicant’s liability stems from joint and
several liability
as agent of Shell and BP in respect of whom the
applicant performed services. The respondent adds that prior to
engaging in any
interpretation of the provisions of the Act which may
give rise to the applicant’s liability as agent of Shell and
BP, there
is the question of analysis of the applicant’s
conduct, which gives rise to its liability, independently of its
relationship
with Shell and BP. The respondent then makes the
following submissions:
10.1 The applicant’s
own conduct and participation in the scheme of Shell and BP renders
it liable for the payment of the
export value of the goods in lieu of
forfeiture and the duties.
10.2 Although the duties
were paid on the fuel at the time it was removed from the
manufacturing warehouse, when the set-off is
claimed by Shell or BP —
by way of submission of the excise account — and allowed by the
Commissioner:
10.2.1 the duties become
unpaid; and
10.2.2 the duties in
respect of other goods are paid with the refund by way of set off.
10.3 When the
Commissioner makes a determination that the goods were not exported
as required for a refund and thus the refund was
not due, the
Commissioner is entitled to demand repayment of such refund and it is
recoverable as if it were the original duty
or charge on the goods.
10.4 The provisions of
Sec 99(2) operate to impose on the applicant the liabilities of Shell
and BP in respect of any demand made
under Secs 76A or 88(2)(a) of
the Act.
10.5 The period of two
years in Sec 99(5) is calculated from the time that the Commissioner
makes the demand under Sec 88(2)(a)
and Sec 76A and not from when the
refund is paid by way of set-off.
E. The issue
11.
The question to be answered as I see it is,
whether on the conspectus of the facts of this case, the respondent
has any legal basis
at all to hold the applicant liable for the
export value of the goods, in lieu of forfeiture. In the event the
court finds no legal
grounds on which the respondent may hold the
applicant liable, then the declaratory orders sought by the applicant
must be granted.
The converse applies where this court finds no legal
grounds to hold the applicant liable.
F. Legal Framework
12.
The
nature and architecture of the Act is usefully summarised in
Gaertner
and Others
v
Minister
of Finance and Others
[7]
.
I refer to the summary without repeating same in this judgment. In
order to properly answer the question posed by the applicant,
it is
necessary that one sets out very briefly the relevant provisions of
the Act and the Rules.
i) Liability of an
agent for obligations imposed on principal
13.
Section 99(1) provides:
‘
An
agent appointed by any master, container operator or pilot or other
carrier, and any person who represents himself or herself
to any
officer as the agent of any master, container operator or pilot or
other carrier, and is accepted as such by that officer,
shall be
liable for the fulfilment, in respect of the matter in question, of
all obligations, including the payment of duty and
charges, imposed
on such master, container operator or pilot or other carrier by this
Act and to any penalties or amounts demanded
under section 88 (2) (a)
which may be incurred in respect of that matter.
(2) (a) An agent
appointed by any importer, exporter, manufacturer, licensee, remover
of goods in bond or other principal and any
person who represents
himself to any officer as the agent of any importer, exporter,
manufacturer, licensee, remover of goods in
bond or other principal,
and is accepted as such by that officer,
shall be liable for the
fulfilment, in respect of the matter in question, of all obligations,
including the payment of duty and
charges, imposed on such importer,
exporter, manufacturer, licensee, remover of goods in bond or other
principal by this Act and
to any penalties or amounts demanded under
section 88 (2) (a) which may be incurred in respect of that matte
r:
Provided that, except if such principal has not been disclosed or the
name of another agent or his own name is stated on
the bill of entry
as contemplated in section 64B (6) or the principal is a person
outside the Republic, such agent or person shall
cease to be so
liable if he proves that-
(i) he was not a party to
the non-fulfilment by any such importer, exporter, manufacturer,
licensee, remover of goods in bond or
other principal, of any such
obligation;
(ii) when he became aware
of such non-fulfilment, he notified the Controller thereof as soon as
practicable; and
(iii) all reasonable
steps were taken by him to prevent such non-fulfilment.
(5) Any liability in
terms of subsection (1), (2) or (4) (a) shall cease after the
expiration of a period of two years from the
date on which
it was
incurred
in terms of any such subsection. (Own underline)
ii) Presumptions
14.
Sec 102 provides:
(4) ’If in any
prosecution under this Act or in any dispute in which the State, the
Minister or the Commissioner or any officer
is a party, the question
arises whether the proper duty has been paid or whether any goods or
plant have been lawfully used, imported,
exported, manufactured,
removed or otherwise dealt with or in, or whether any books,
accounts, documents, forms or invoices required
by rule to be
completed and kept, exist or have been duly completed and kept or
have been furnished to any officer, it shall be
presumed that such
duty has not been paid or that such goods or plant have not been
lawfully used, imported, exported, manufactured,
removed or otherwise
dealt with or in, or that such books, accounts, documents, forms or
invoices do not exist or have not been
duly completed and kept or
have not been so furnished, as the case may be, unless the contrary
is proved.
(5) If in any prosecution
under this Act or in any dispute in which the State, the Minister or
the Commissioner or any officer is
a party, it is alleged by or on
behalf of the State or the Minister or the Commissioner or such
officer that any goods or plant
have been or have not been imported,
exported, manufactured in the Republic, removed or otherwise dealt
with or in, it shall be
presumed that such goods or plant have been
or (as the case may be) have not been imported, exported,
manufactured in the Republic,
removed or otherwise dealt with or in,
unless the contrary is proved.
iii) Brief discussion
on the Control environment
a) Licensing of
warehouses
15.
The
Commissioner may license any place appointed for that purpose, as a
storage warehouse
[8]
,
for storage of dutiable imported or suitable locally produced goods;
as manufacturing warehouse for the manufacture of dutiable
goods from
imported or locally produced materials
[9]
.
It is the warehouse or the premises that are licensed, not the
person. However, the person in whose name the premises are licensed
is referred to as the licensee and incurs the obligations to comply
with the licence requirements. Licensed warehouses are control
environments and goods in a licensed warehouse are in a control
regime.
b) Removal of goods from
a warehouse
16.
The removal of goods from a warehouse is
regulated by Sec 20 (4), which is subject to the provisions of Sec
19A and the Rules made
thereunder. Sec 20 (4) provides that no goods
stored or manufactured in a warehouse shall be taken or delivered
from such warehouse
except in accordance with the rules and upon due
entry for any of the following purposes:
i)
home consumption and payment of any duty
thereon;
ii)
re-warehousing in another warehouse or
removal in bond; and
iii)
export from a warehouse.
17.
In terms of Sec 19A and the relevant rules,
the Commissioner may, by rule, prescribe the procedure, requirements
and documents relating
to the entry and removal of goods from and to
any warehouse or for export or for use under rebate of duty. The
provisions of Sec
19A are to be read in context with Sec 120 of the
Act which empowers the Commissioner to make rules relating to the
control of
storage and manufacture of goods in a warehouse, including
removal, importation, exportation or transit of goods.
c) Special rules
pertaining to removal of fuel levy goods
18.
The rules made under Sec 19A pertaining to
fuel levy goods, introduced what is known as the duty at source, DAS,
system of rules.
These rules create an exception in that unlike the
situation with other goods, where lability to pay duty is triggered
only for
home consumption, in respect of fuel levy goods the
obligation of the warehouse licensee to pay duty is triggered on
removal for
any of the three purposes in Sec 20 (4), namely, home
consumption; re-warehousing in another warehouse or removal in bond;
and
export from a warehouse. The duties paid are refunded to the
licensee when the movement is acquitted, meaning, when it is proved,
in line with the prescripts of the Act and the Rules that the goods
have been received in the country of their destination. Further,
in
terms of Sec 64F (2) (a), only a licensee of a customs warehouse or
licensed distributor of fuel shall be entitled to a refund
of
duties.
19.
Perhaps, it is useful to interpose before
moving further that the Act and the Rules either impliedly or
expressly, do not envisage
removal of fuel levy goods from a place
other than a licensed warehouse, such as Tarlton.
iv) Conduct offensive
to the Act, with reference to the facts of this case
a) Diversion
20.
No
one shall without permission of the Commissioner divert any goods for
export to a destination other than that declared on entry
for export
or for delivery of such goods or cause such goods to be delivered in
the Republic or any other country in the common
customs area
[10]
.
Where any person fails to comply with or contravenes any provision of
this subsection the goods shall be liable to forfeiture
in accordance
with this Act
[11]
.
b) Dealing with or in
goods contrary to the provisions of the Act and Forfeiture
21.
Anyone
who deals with or assists in dealing with any goods contrary to the
provisions of this Act
[12]
;
or makes or attempts to make any arrangement with a supplier,
manufacturer, exporter or seller of goods manufactured in the
Republic
or with any agent of any such supplier, manufacturer,
exporter or seller, regarding any matter to which this Act relates,
with
the object of defeating or evading the provisions of this Act,
shall be guilty of an offence
[13]
.
22.
Further Sec 87(1) provides that any goods
imported, exported, manufactured, warehoused, removed or otherwise
dealt with contrary
to the provisions of this Act or in respect of
which any offence under this Act has been committed shall be liable
to forfeiture
wheresoever and in possession of whomsoever found:
Provided that forfeiture shall not affect liability to any other
penalty or
punishment which has been incurred under this Act or any
other law, or liability for any unpaid duty or charge in respect of
such
goods.
c) False documents and
declarations
23.
Any
person who makes a false statement in connection with any matter
dealt with in this Act, or who makes use for the purposes of
this
Act, of a declaration or document containing any such statement
shall, unless he proves that he was ignorant of the falsity
of such
statement and that such ignorance was not due to negligence on his
part, be guilty of an offence and liable on conviction
to a fine, and
the goods in respect of which such false statement was made or such
false declaration or document was used shall
be liable to
forfeiture
[14]
.
d)
Specified offences
[15]
24.
In terms of Sec 86, Any person who:
(a) fails to advise the
Controller of the receipt of any amended prescribed invoice or any
credit note or debit note or of any change
in the circumstances or
particulars of whatever nature as declared in any prescribed invoice,
which would increase the duty on
such goods or exclude them from any
rebate or refund or other privilege under this Act;
(d) issues two or more
different prescribed invoices in respect of the same goods or fails
to issue an amended prescribed invoice
where any particulars declared
in any prescribed invoice in respect of any goods have changed in any
manner whatever;
shall be guilty of an
offence and liable on conviction to a fine, and the goods in respect
of which such offence was committed shall
be liable to forfeiture.
v) Seizure
25.
Sec 88 (2)(a)(i) provides, if any goods
liable to forfeiture under this Act cannot readily be found, the
Commissioner may, notwithstanding
anything to the contrary in this
Act contained, demand from any person who imported, exported,
manufactured, warehoused, removed
or otherwise dealt with such goods
contrary to the provisions of this Act or committed any offence under
this Act rendering such
goods liable to forfeiture, payment of an
amount equal to the value for duty purposes or the export value of
such goods plus any
unpaid duty thereon, as the case may be.
G. Application
i) The Applicant’s
conduct
26.
The
applicant framed invoices reflecting transnational sales of fuel by
Shell or BP to a Zimbabwean entity (ies). The applicant
further
framed export bills of entry representing Shell or BP (its
principals) as the exporter of fuel to Zimbabwean entity (ies)
as
consignee and purchaser. Each of these entries reflected false
information, which to the knowledge of the applicant was contrary
to
the local and the true sale, as represented by the second invoice
issued by Shell or BP, to the local purchasers. These assertions
are
made in each and every LOI sent to the applicant and are not placed
in dispute by the applicant
[16]
.
At the time material hereto, the applicant had offices in Tarlton,
where the fuel was being delivered by Shell to the local
entity.
There the applicant issued the first invoice and gave it to the local
South African purchaser. The applicant knew that
its clients had not
sold fuel to the Zimbabwean entities but to the local entities.
27.
In
dealing with the export bills of entry and invoices reflecting Shell
as exporter and seller, the applicant simply expressed the
view that
it is not a party to the commerciality of the transaction
[17]
.
It also said that it issued the invoice for customs clearance. In
response to the same question, the applicant further expressed
that
Shell decided to be the exporter in terms of an agreement with the
applicant
[18]
.
Accordingly, the following conclusions are competently drawn:
27.1 By reason of the
bill of entry and invoice reflecting an export to Zimbabwe, the
delivery by Shell in South Africa constituted
diversion of goods in
violation of Sec 18(9).
27.2 Both the bill of
entry and the first invoice are intentionally false and constitute an
offence in terms of Sec 84(1).
27.3 Further, the goods
became liable for forfeiture by reason of the applicant’s own
conduct, Secs 18A (9)( c), 87 (1) and
88 (2)(a) of the Act.
28.
In terms of the last mentioned
provision, 88 (2) (a), the Commissioner is entitled, notwithstanding
anything to the contrary in
this Act contained, to demand from any
person who imported, exported, manufactured, warehoused, removed
or
otherwise dealt with such goods contrary to the provisions of this
Act or committed any offence under this Act
rendering such goods liable to forfeiture, payment of an amount equal
to the value for duty purposes or the export value of such
goods.
ii) Unpaid duty in
respect of the diesel declared for export
29.
Refunds
along with rebates and drawbacks are provided for in Sec 75. The
section provides that subject to the provisions of the
Act and to any
conditions the Commissioner may impose, in respect of any excisable
goods or fuel levy goods manufactured in the
Republic, if duly
entered for export and exported in accordance with such entry, a
refund of the duties (excise duty, fuel levy
or Road Accident Fund
levy) actually paid at the time of entry for home consumption shall
be granted as specified in schedule 6.
Section 77
[19]
,
Rule 19A4.05, and the notes to the items, 623.23
[20]
and 671.07
[21]
provide for set-off of certain amounts.
30.
Working
on the basis of the spirit of the Sec 77, Rule 19A4.05 and the items,
that the duties were indeed accounted for upon removal
from the
manufacturing warehouse, when the refund is claimed through the
process of set-off on the principal’s monthly excise
account,
the duties initially paid are refunded and operate as payment by way
of set-off for other fuel removed from the warehouse
as reflected in
the monthly excise account. Given the Commissioner’s
determination that the fuel was not exported in this
case, the refund
was unlawfully claimed and wrongfully allowed. The Commissioner is
thus entitled to demand and reclaim the duties
as provided for in Sec
76A
[22]
.
It may be added that the fact that the refund was unlawfully claimed,
does not mean that it was not paid. The refund was allocated
to
discharge liability in respect of other goods on the excise account.
iii) Obligation to
repay the refunds
31.
The person concerned referred to in Sec 76A
is the person to whom the refund was paid. However, the applicant
incurs liability on
the basis of the following:
i)
when the Commissioner demands repayment of
duty in terms of Sec 76A(1), he demands it from the person to whom
the refund was paid
as exporter of the goods; the licensee whom
exported the goods. This is liability of the exporter. However, the
applicant, by reason
of the relationship between it and its
principals, falls within the definition of exporter.
ii)
where the principal does not repay the
amount of refund demanded, the provisions of Sec 76A (1) expressly
provide that the amount
shall be refunded ‘as if it were the
duty or charge concerned. Thus, to the extent that the amount
demanded is not duty,
it is deemed to be duty for purposes of
recoverability; and
iii)
the provisions of Sec 99(2) impose
liability on the applicant as agent of its principal, not only for
payment of duty but,
‘
for
the fulfilment, in respect of the matter in question, of all
obligations, including the payment of duty and charges, imposed
on
such importer, exporter, manufacturer, licensee, remover of goods in
bond or other principal by this Act and to any penalties
or amounts
demanded under section 88 (2) (a) which may be incurred in respect of
that matter’.
iv) Section 99(5) Time
Period
32.
Where the demand is made for
repayment of refunded duties in terms of 76A, liability arises at the
time of the demand. Similarly
where the demand is made for payment in
terms of Sec 88(2)(a) for either the amount in lieu of forfeiture or
unpaid duties, liability
arises at the time of demand. The LsOI
foreshadowed the demands being made. The demands were indeed made on
29 November 2022, well
within the two year period set out in Sec
99(5). As such the provision does not exclude the applicant’s
liability in the
circumstances of this case.
33.
It is on the basis of the reasoning
as demonstrated in this judgment that I conclude that the
Commissioner has grounds to hold the
applicant liable for amounts
payable in lieu of forfeiture. The order sought by the applicant
cannot be granted.
H. Order
34.
The application is dismissed with
costs. Such costs shall include the costs of two counsel where so
employed.
N.N
BAM
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT, PRETORIA
Date
of Hearing
:
14 November 2023
Date
of Judgment:
23 July 2024
Appearances
:
Applicant’s
Counsel
:
Adv
J.P Vorster SC with him Adv
Adv
L.K Olsen
Instructed
by:
EVH
Inc Van Hyssteen
℅
Klagsbruin,
Edelstein, Bosman Du Plessis Inc
Nieuw
Muckleneuk, Pretoria
Respondent’s
Counsel:
Adv
J Peter SC with him Adv K Boshomane
Instructed
by:
MacRobert
Attorneys
Brooklyn,
Pretoria
[1]
I
note that the applicant refers to four letters of intent whereas
there were five, which includes the letter of intent to raise
debt,
dated 10 June 2022. Nothing however, turns on the number of these
letters and their labelling.
[2]
Act
91 of 1964.
[3]
The
four letters of intent may be identified thus:
-
Reference 21/CAS 0005/04 dated 25 August
2021, confirmed in the letter of demand dated 29 November 2022;
-
Reference 21/CAS0006/04 dated 2 September
2021, in the letter of demand dated 29 November 2022
-
Reference 21/CAS0007/04 dated 2 September
2021, confirmed in the letter of demand dated 29 November 2022;
-
Reference 21/CAS0122/12 dated 10 September
2021, confirmed in the letter of demand dated 29 November 2022. The
fifth letter is
the letter of intent to raise debt
[4]
21.
(1) A Division has jurisdiction over all persons residing or being
in, and in relation to all causes arising and all offences
triable
within, its area of jurisdiction and all other matters of which it
may according to law take cognisance, and has the
power—
(c) in its
discretion, and at the instance of any interested person, to enquire
into and determine any existing, future
or contingent right or
obligation, notwithstanding that such person cannot claim any relief
consequential upon the determination.
[5]
Act
10 of 2013.
[6]
Act
34 of 1997.
[7]
(12632/12)
[2013] ZAWCHC 54
;
2013 (6) BCLR 672
(WCC);
2013 (4) SA 87
(WCC);
[2013] 3 All SA 159
(WCC) (8 April 2013), paragraphs 17 – 49.
[8]
The
Act uses the words licensed customs and excise warehouse. For ease
of reading, this judgement uses the word warehouse as short
for
licensed customs and excise warehouse.
[9]
Sec
19 of the Act.
[10]
Sec
18A(9)(a).
[11]
Sec
18A(9)(c).
[12]
Sec
83(1)(a).
[13]
Sec
83(1)(c).
[14]
Sec
84 (1).
[15]
Sec
86 (1).
[16]
Wightman
t/a J W Construction v Headfour (Pty) Ltd and Another (
66/2007)
[2008] ZASCA 6
;
[2008] 2 All SA 512
(SCA);
2008 (3) SA 371
(SCA) (10
March 2008), paragraph 13
[17]
Caselines
002-212 paragraph 21.1.1.
[18]
Caselines
002-190, paragraph 59.
[19]
A
licensee of a customs and excise warehouse who, in terms of the
rules, is permitted to pay any duty monthly or quarterly, and
who-
(i)
Paid any duty for which he was not liable;
or
(ii) granted any
provisional refund in terms of section 75 (1A); or
(iii) becomes entitled
to a refund in terms of item 534.00 of Schedule No. 5 or any item of
Schedule No. 6 may, subject to the
approval of the Commissioner, at
any time within a period of two years from the date on which that
duty was paid, …, set
off such duty, … against that
particular duty for which such licensee subsequently becomes liable.
[20]
There
has to be entry or deemed entry for home consumption;
Payment of duty by a
licensee of a customs and excise manufacturing warehouse;
Exported (including
supply as stores for foreign going ships).
Compliance with Sec 19A
and its rules.
Compliance with Note 9
of Schedule 6, Part 1F;
The goods are exported
by the licensee;
Proof of export having
been obtained.
[21]
There
has to be entry or deemed entry for home consumption;
Payment of duty by a
licensee of a customs and excise manufacturing warehouse
Exported including
supply as stores to foreign going ships.
The goods are exported
by such licensee of such warehouse;
Compliance with Sec 19A
and its rules;
Compliance with Note 10
of Schedule 6 Part 3;
Proof of export having
been obtained.
[22]
If
the Commissioner, purporting to act under the provisions of section
75 or 76, pays to any person by way of a refund or drawback
any
amount which was not duly payable to that person under those
provisions or which was in excess of the amount due to that
person
by way of a refund or drawback under those provisions, that amount
or the excess, as the case may be, shall be repaid
by the person
concerned to the Commissioner upon demand, failing which it shall be
recoverable in terms of this Act as if it
were the duty or charge
concerned or part of such duty or charge, as the case may be.
sino noindex
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