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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## QI Logistis (Pty) Ltd v Commissioner for South African Revenue Services (35089/2020)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 792 (8 August 2024)
QI Logistis (Pty) Ltd v Commissioner for South African Revenue Services (35089/2020)
[2024] ZAGPPHC 792 (8 August 2024)
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sino date 8 August 2024
HIGH
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
CASE
NO: 35089/2020
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO.
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED.
DATE:
8 AUGUST 2024
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
QI
LOGISTIS (PTY) LTD
Applicant
and
THE
COMMISSIONER FOR SOUTH
AFRICAN
REVENUE SERVICES
Respondent
Summary:
Taxation – Customs & Excise – Clearing Agent
remaining liable for import duties payable on imported diesel unless
and until sufficient proof that diesel had been exported is supplied
to SARS - In this case, in respect some 67 consignments
of
diesel, insufficient records had been kept and insufficient
“acquittal documents” had been lodged with SARS to prove
that the diesel had been exported. Demands of payment of duties
in excess of R14 million together with penalties and forfeiture
amounts in excess of R 20 million had been issued by SARS. Clearing
Agent sought to have these reviewed and set aside. Clearing
Agent
failed to prove incorrectness of decision to issue demand and still
failed to prove exporting of the diesel. Review
application
refused. Punitive costs order granted on the basis of scurrilous and
unwarranted attack on SARS.
ORDER
The
application is dismissed with costs on the scale as between attorney
and client.
JUDGMENT
This
matter has been heard in open court and is otherwise disposed of in
terms of the Directives of the Judge President of this
Division. The
judgment and order are accordingly published and distributed
electronically with the effective date thereof
being 8 August 2024.
DAVIS,
J
Introduction
[1]
The
importation of goods into South Africa attracts import duties unless
the goods are imported for purposes of export to other
countries.
In such a case, upon submission of the necessary “acquittal
documents”, proving the exporting of the
goods, the liability
ceases. Depending on the circumstances, a clearing agent,
submitting documents on behalf of importers,
shares this liability.
[2]
The
applicant is such a clearing agent and it was alleged that, in
respect of 67 consignments of imported goods, it could not
sufficiently
account for the successful exporting thereof to Zimbabwe
and Botswana. SARS
[1]
accordingly demanded payment from the applicant of some R14 million
of import duties and payment of some R20 million comprising
of
interest, penalties and forfeiture amounts.
[3]
In this
application, the applicant sought to have the decision to issue the
demand reviewed and set aside.
The
applicant’s case
[4]
The
applicant has been registered as a clearing agent since 2008.
As such it is routinely instructed by importers, transporters,
shippers and exporters to prepare and process customs clearance
documentation “through SARS”. It thereby acts
as a
clearing and forwarding agent
[2]
.
[5]
The
matter in question relates to “RIT documentation”
[3]
prepared by the applicant and submitted to SARS on behalf of Black
Knight Oil Traders (Pty) Ltd, Corporate Treasury Solutions,
Elkrus
Freight Dynamics (Pty) Ltd, Iltech Energy (Pty) Ltd, Manong
Management Consultants (Pty) Ltd, Masaula Trading and Logistics
(Pty)
Ltd, Rence Oil and Gas (Pty) Ltd and Zakhele Supply.
[6]
The purpose of
submitting the RIT documentation was to obtain the authority to
“proceed to border”, meaning that the
goods mentioned in
the RIT documentation would enter into South Africa with the sole
purpose of being transported to a border from
whence it would be
exported again from South Africa to a specified foreign country.
[7]
The goods in
question, all related to consignments of diesel.
[8]
The applicant
stated that, in the “normal course of business” it
obtained the relevant export documentation, proving
that the imported
diesel had indeed been exported. As such, it attracted no
liability for payment of import duties.
[9]
The
applicant stated that, when it received the proof of export
documents, also called by the parties the “acquittal
documents”,
it “
had
no reason to think or suspect that there could or would be any
problems with the documentation
”
[4]
.
It was therefore surprised
[5]
to
receive a “notice of intention to raise a debt” (NOI)
from the office of the SARS Lebombo Border Post on 11 February
2019.
In terms of the NOI SARS expressed the intention to hold the
applicant liable for customs duties, penalties and RAF
and fuel
levies in an amount in excess of R47 million for alleged
contraventions of sections 18(13), 75(19), 88(2)(a) and 91 of
the
Customs and Excise Act
[6]
(the
Act).
[10]
Despite the
applicant’s response to the NOI, it received a second NOI on 9
April 2019 relating to 26 consignments on behalf
of Rence Oil and Gas
(Pty) Ltd. The amount sought to be raised in this NOI was over
R12 million.
[11]
Despite the
applicant’s protest that the second NOI appears to be a partial
duplication of the contents of the first NOI,
SARS subsequently
issued a letter of demand on 3 July 2019. It is this letter
which forms the basis of this application.
In
it, payment of R14 199 139, 35 is demanded in respect of
customs duties and R20 881 336, 00 in respect of
penalties
and forfeiture amounts.
[12]
The
applicant’s case is that, save for the submission of the RIT
documentation, it had nothing further to do with the transportation,
sale or export of the diesel. It further accepted and contended
that the acquittal documentation were all in order and that
it
therefore has not attracted any liability to SARS as claimed.
[13]
The
applicant further contended that SARS had not furnished it with any
reasons for having raised the duties and penalties and that
its
decision to do so, should be reviewed under PAJA
[7]
and be set aside.
[14]
The
applicant also complained that, despite SARS having provided a
breakdown of the amounts claimed, it had failed to provide sufficient
details of the basis of its claim. The applicant accused SARS
of “…
evidently
demonstrating bias and acting in pursuance of some undisclosed
unlawful motive, steadfastly ignoring the provisions of
section 99(2)
of the Act
”
[8]
.
[15]
The breakdown
provided to the applicant by SARS was as follows:
Customs
duty
R109 434.60
RAF
Levy
R5 280 219.45
Fuel
Levy
R8 809 485.30
Penalties
R396 000.00
Forfeiture
ito section 88(2)(a)
R20 485 366.00
Total
R35 080 475.35
The
law
[16]
The
Supreme Court of Appeal (the SCA) has described the purpose of the
Act as follows: “
The
object of that Act (insofar as it relates to import duty) is to
ensure that duty is collected on goods that are imported into
this
country and its provisions are mainly directed towards that end
”
[9]
.
[17]
Where,
as in this matter, multiple parties are involved in such importation,
including importers and a clearing agent, the SCA continued
as
follows: “
It
is not surprising that liability for the payment of duty should be
imposed upon more than one person …
”
[10]
.
[18]
Both the Court
and the Act were alive to the fact that it cannot be assumed that
only one person would undertake the process of
importing goods,
keeping it either in a bonded warehouse or directly transporting the
goods to the next border post and thereafter
exporting it.
[19]
The
scheme of the Act is therefore that duties become payable when goods
are imported into the country, but the liability is suspended,
if the
goods are “removed in bond”(RIB) or “removed in
transit”(RIT) and the liability would cease should
the goods
actually be exported, with the result that its entry into the customs
area was simply temporary or transitional
[11]
.
[20]
This much is
clear from Section 18 of the Act. Section 18(1)(a)(i) and (v)
provide that “…
any
importer or any clearing agent licensed in terms of section 64B,
appointed by such importer … may enter such goods for
removal
in bond and may remove such goods or cause such goods to be removed –
(aa) … to any place in the Republic
appointed as a place of
entry or warehousing under this Act or to any place outside the
Republic: Provided that any goods which
are in transit through the
Republic … may only be so entered and removed or caused to be
so removed by such licensed clearing
agent …
”.
[21]
Section 18(2)
then further provides that “
In
addition to any liability for duty incurred by any person under any
provision of this Act, but subject to the provisions of section
99(2), the person who enters any goods for removal in bond and who
removes or causes such goods to be so removed shall, subject
to the
provisions of subsection (3) be liable for the duty on all goods
which are so entered and so removed in bond
”.
[22]
In terms of
section 18(3)(b) any person who is liable for duty as contemplated in
section 18(2) must obtain valid proof that liability
has ceased as
specified in paragraph 18(1)(a)(i) or (ii) within a prescribed
period. Proof of such information and documents
relating to the
removal (exporting) of the goods (the acquittal documents) must be
kept available for inspection.
[23]
Goods
imported for removal in bond or for removal in transit for export may
not be directed to a destination other than the destination
declared
upon the importation of the goods without the permission of the
Commissioner of SARS
[12]
.
[24]
In terms of
section 18(13)(a)(iii), where any person fails to comply with or
contravenes this portion of the Act, the goods so imported
shall be
liable to forfeiture.
[25]
A clearing
agent licensed as such as contemplated in terms of section 64B of the
Act shall be liable for customs duties in respect
of any entry made
or bill of entry delivered.
[26]
Section
99(2) of the Act confirms that a clearing agent shall not only be
liable for the duties in question, but also be liable
for the
fulfillment of all the obligations of the importer or exporter,
including penalties. These penalties and forfeiture
are, in
turn, provided for in section 88(2)(a) of the Act
[13]
.
[27]
In terms of
section 99(2) of the Act however, the liability of a clearing agent
shall cease “…
if
he proves that – (i) he was not a party to the non-fulfillment
by any such importer, exporter … remover of goods
in bond …
(ii) when he became aware of such non-fulfillment, he notified the
Controller thereof as soon as practicable and
(iii) all reasonable
steps were taken by him to prevent such non-fulfillment
”.
Was
the law complied with and has the applicant’s liability ceased?
[28]
The scope of
the enquiry regarding the above question had been widened by the
applicant beyond what has been set out above, by the
applicant having
introduced new matter in its replying affidavit. Due to the fact that
SARS had delivered a duplicating affidavit
in respect of the new
matter, its introduction as well as SARS’ further affidavit
were, in the interests of justice, allowed.
[29]
The further
evidence introduced by the applicant in its replying affidavit,
primarily consisted of two affidavits by Messrs Lewis
and Makwenyane
respectively. These affidavits indicated that the applicant was
a “sub-agent” of a “main
agent”, Biocharl
Logistics (Pty) Ltd or other “unnamed clearing agents”.
[30]
The further
evidence was presented in an attempt to indicate that, in respect of
line items 1 -18, 47 and 48 of SARS’ schedule
of documents
relating to the various consignments, the export of the diesel
relating to these consignment had ostensibly been verified
by an
officer of the Customs office in Komatipoort. SARS was further
accused of not having disclosed certain correspondence
between the
parties. Reliance was also placed on the absence of disclosure
of a number of the entries in question having
been captured,
allegedly for export (or “exit”) on the SARS Service
Manager System (the SMS), ostensibly proving exportation.
[31]
The widening
of the scope was therefore an attempt to show that SARS’ own
documentation showed that the diesel in question
had been exported
and that SARS failed to acknowledge this. Insofar as the applicant
sought to rely on this evidence as part of
its case (i.e as if part
of its founding papers) then the duplicating affidavit thereto should
be treated as if an answering affidavit
to the supplemented case.
[32]
I shall
firstly deal with this widened scope of the applicant’s case.
In the replying affidavit, complaints were expressed
that in respect
of at least 13 consignments SARS’ SMS system would show that
these had been exported. In the duplicating
affidavit screenshots of
all 13 SMS entries were produced. Of these, only one (line item
67) showed that the consignment
was in fact successfully exported.
SARS readily conceded that this was an “inadvertent error”
by the investigative
team.
[33]
In respect of
the remainder of the 12 entries, although ten of them had been marked
with the message “
automated
manifest has successfully been marked for exit …
”,
this only indicated that the consignments had been logged as such at
the border post, but did not prove that they had indeed
been
exported.
[34]
Insofar as
“vouchers of correction” appear to have been passed on
two of the line items that had only been done months
after the letter
of demand (one even after the application had been launched) and even
in respect of these two consignments, the
RIB entries had not yet
been cancelled.
[35]
The applicant
had also argued that its liability should have been reduced in
respect of five further consignments (line items 19,
20, 21, 22, and
23). This argument was based on “DP” (duty paid)
entries made in respect of these consignments.
If this was
correct, it purported to indicate that the consignments had not been
exported, but that the requisite duties had been
paid.
Had this been correct however, Vouchers of Correction, would have
been issued whereby the entries would have
been cancelled, but this
had not happened. It was only in respect of line item 19 that
such cancellation had in fact taken
place, but then only 10 months
after the launch of the application.
[36]
In order to
understand the reference to “line items”, a word of
explanation is necessary: the 67 consignments in respect
of which
SARS held the applicant liable were listed in a schedule which
initially comprised of 92 items. In the schedule each consignment
is
indicated by a set of entries in a separate horizontal line. Each
line contains particulars under various headings for separate
vertical columns. These in turn refer to the name of the clearing
agent involved, the client, the border post of entry and the
reference number of the entry, the value of the consignment, the
quantity of diesel and a calculation of the duties, the amount
of the
RAF and the fuel levies payable and the total liability, thereby
making up a separate “line item” for each consignment.
In
SARS’ internal system, should a full and valid set of acquittal
documents have been produced, a line item would have been
removed by
having the liability “canceled”. This is done by a
Voucher of Correction (VOC). In the alternative,
should a
consignment not have been exported, then the full duty should have
been paid and this should also be reflected as such.
[37]
The schedule
containing all abovementioned line items had been attached to the
letter of intent dated 11 February 2019 and which,
as stated therein,
had been furnished by SARS to the applicant in terms of section 3(2)
of PAJA in order to afford the applicant
the opportunity to respond
to SARS’
prima
facie
audit findings.
[38]
Before finally
dealing with the evidence subsequently tendered by the applicant, one
should also bear in mind that SARS had already
in its letter of
demand referred to earlier, furnished the following reasons why the
liability had been imposed subsequent to having
considered the
applicant’s response to the invitation to deal with the prima
facie findings: “
Further
to the notice of intent dated 2019/02/11 of which we did receive a
response on your letter dated 2019-02-12 and the response
from Custom
Consulting Dispute Resolution Specialist, Ref M. Maritz / db/
MAT4103, the matter has been decided as herein below
…
”
[39]
A background
was then provided, referring to the initial documents submitted by
the applicant whereafter initial findings are described
thus: “
Upon
analysing the said documents out office established that some of the
entries were not marked for arrival and exit at both ports
of exit
which is Beitbridge border post, for goods removed in transit (RIT)
and Botswana borders, for goods removed in Bond (RIB).
On the
27
th
August 2018 and 26
th
September 2018 letters requesting documents regarding movements of
the trucks/hauliers concerned were sent and to date no response
has
been received from your office providing such documents or clarity of
issues raised thereof. Lebombo Management acknowledges
receipt
of all communications, however this did not provide any clarity on
the issue raised of failure to proof that good have
reached their
final destination. It is in light of failure on your part to
provide legitimate information/documents requested
that the
Commissioner has decided to proceed with a letter of demand which is
due and payable on or before 12
th
July 2019
”.
[40]
Thereafter, an
“application of the law to the facts” exercise followed
with reference to section 18(13) of the Act and
the entry of the
diesel consignments through the Lebombo border post into South
Africa. The following was also pointed out
to the applicant:
“
According
to the provisions of section 75(19), the goods in question were
entered under rebate of duty, meaning that payment of
duties were
deferred upon evidence shown to the Commissioner that the goods were
exported outside the Republic. In terms
of Rule 18.07 this
office has requested the documentation to prove that the goods that
were removed to a place in a customs common
area have been duly
entered at that place, and further that those that were destined in
Africa beyond the borders of common customs
area have been duly taken
out that area
”.
[41]
The letter
continued by setting out, in tabular form, the calculation of the
amounts mentioned in paragraph 15 above before concluding
with
references to the remedies available to the applicant.
[42]
It is against
this background that the evidence and the applicants’ claim
that the decision should be reviewed on the following
grounds (as set
out in the concluding paragraphs of its founding affidavit) should be
assessed: “
In
view of the above it is respectfully submitted that the decision to
hold the applicant liable … borders on the absurd
and should
be reviewed and set aside. Evidently the respondents’
approach is that the applicant, being a clearing agent,
is an easy
target and scapegoat. This is irrational, unlawful and invalid
as it is not supported in law and there is no factual
substantiation
for the conduct and it should be reviewed and set aside
”.
[43]
In the heads
of argument delivered on behalf of the applicant, the grounds of
review are somewhat less emotionally set out.
These were that
the respondent had erred in fact and in law in having concluded that
the applicant retained any liability despite
its mandate having been
terminated after the importation of the diesel and by having
concluded that the applicant’s liability
had not ceased as
contemplated in section 99 of the Act.
[44]
Part of SARS’
case against the applicant was that it had failed to keep and furnish
records in terms of section 18(3) of the
Act to show that goods
cleared by it as RIB or RIT have subsequently been exported out of
the country. On the evidence presented,
this claim was clearly
substantiated. The fact that the applicant could not, even
after the launch of the application prove
the exporting of all but
two of the consignments (which was in one instance even only done
after the fact) confirms that SARS’
impugned decision was
therefore both rational and factually correct.
[45]
The
applicant’s case that its involvement in the importing of the
diesel was limited to the clearance of the diesel for entry
and not
how the diesel was subsequently dealt with by the “main
clearing agent” and its principals, ignores the provisions
of
the Act.
[46]
The fact that,
in some instances, the “main clearing agent” or the
applicant’s principals may subsequently have
caused vouchers of
correction to be passed, changing entries in respect of some of the
consignments to DP (duty paid) only proved
that the diesel referred
to in those entries had never been exported as the applicant had
initially submitted to SARS that it would.
This new ground of
seeking to avoid liability occurred and only came to the fore based
on facts alleged to have occurred after
the impugned decision had
already been taken. Should these facts be established (which it
had not yet sufficiently been done)
then some adjustment may be
notionally be claimed as the duties in question had been paid, but
that does not mean that the decision,
based on the facts at the time,
had incorrectly been taken.
[47]
In addition to
the above, in the duplicating affidavit, SARS dealt extensively with
an analysis of those acquittal documents which
had (only) been
furnished in the applicant’s replying affidavit. Although
the documents produced by the witness Lewis
might on the face of it
show completion of some export documents, they still fell short of
proving actual exporting. The
same applies to the documents
supplied by Mr Dobby Makwenyane. The stamps or signatures
ascribed to customs officials on
covering letters of documents
submitted to them and on which these witnesses and the applicant
relied, merely proved an acknowledgment
of receipt. After such
receipt, the relevant customs official “goes into” the
SMS system and then needed to verify
that all processes have been
completed. As already indicated above, this verification
indicated that the processes have not
been completed to the extent
that SARS could have been satisfied that the diesel consignments have
actually been exported. In fact,
in some instances, falsification of
export documentation was discovered.
[48]
I therefore
find no evidence supporting the applicant’s claims referred to
in paragraph 38 above. The failure by the applicant
to produce
acquittal documents after the NOIs had been issued also indicate that
the release of liability as provided for in section
99(2) of the ACT
had not occurred. Although the applicant in its papers sought to rely
on this section, it had not produced any
evidence that it had taken
all reasonable steps to prevent non-fulfillment of the exporting
requirements or that it had reported
to the customs controller any
such non-fulfillment, as required by the section. As a clearing
agent, the applicant’s liability
incurred upon importation of
the diesel therefore never terminated. It must follow that the review
application must fail.
Costs
[49]
Costs should
follow the event. It is trite that a court has a discretion regarding
the award of costs and the scale thereof. In
this case, the applicant
has, on numerous occasions in its papers, accused SARS and its
officials of unlawful conduct. Scurrilous
accusations were made of
allegedly falsely targeting the applicant. These allegations are
defamatory and were made without a factual
basis. Irrespective of the
applicant’s views of the correctness of the impugned decision,
the subsequent unwarranted attack
made on oath in court papers, merit
a sanction as a measure of this court’s disapproval of such
conduct by a litigant. In
the exercise of the court’s
discretion, a punitive costs order will therefore be issued.
Order
[50]
Consequently, the following order
is made:
The
application is dismissed with costs on the scale as between attorney
and client.
N DAVIS
Judge of the High Court
Gauteng Division,
Pretoria
Date
of Hearing: 13 May 2024
Judgment
delivered: 8 August 2024
APPEARANCES:
For the Applicants:
Advocate J M
Barnard
Attorney for the
Applicants:
VFV Attorneys,
Pretoria.
For the Respondent:
Adv M P D Chabedi
SC
Attorney for the
Respondent:
Ledwaba Maswai
Attorneys,
Pretoria
[1]
SARS is used Interchangeably as a reference to the Commissioner for
the South African Revenue Service or the South African Revenue
Service itself.
[2]
Par 6.1 of the Founding Affidavit.
[3]
“Removal in transit” documentation.
[4]
Par 8.1.3 of the Founding Affidavit.
[5]
Par 8.1.5 of the Founding Affidavit.
[6]
91 of 1964.
[7]
The
Promotion of Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000
.
[8]
Par 10.1 of the Founding Affidavit.
[9]
Standard
General Insurance v Commissioner for Customs and Excise
2005 (2) SA 166
(SCA) at [27].
[10]
Ibid.
[11]
Section 75
(19) of the Act provides as follows: “
No
person shall, without the permission of the Commissioner, divert any
goods entered under rebate of duty under any item of Schedule
No. 3,
4 or 6 or for export for the purpose of claiming a drawback or
refund of duty under any item in Schedule No. 5 or 6 to
a
destination other than the destination declared on such entry or
deliver such goods or cause such goods to be delivered in
the
Republic otherwise than in accordance with the provisions of this
Act and, in the case of goods entered the goods or on whose
behalf
the goods were entered
”.
[12]
[12]
Section 18
(13)(a)(i).
[13]
Section 88(2)(a)(i):
“
If
any goods liable for forfeiture under this Act cannot readily be
found, the Commissioner may …. Demand from any person
who
imported, exported, warehoused, removed or otherwise dealt with such
goods contrary to the provisions of 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 …
”.
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