Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 36South Africa
Commissioner for the South African Revenue Services v Khagiso Afrika Holdings (PTY) LTD and Others (49048/2021) [2023] ZAGPPHC 36 (16 January 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
16 January 2023
Headnotes
SUMMARY OF RELEVANT FACTS
Judgment
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## Commissioner for the South African Revenue Services v Khagiso Afrika Holdings (PTY) LTD and Others (49048/2021) [2023] ZAGPPHC 36 (16 January 2023)
Commissioner for the South African Revenue Services v Khagiso Afrika Holdings (PTY) LTD and Others (49048/2021) [2023] ZAGPPHC 36 (16 January 2023)
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sino date 16 January 2023
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IN THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG PROVINCIAL DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE NO: 49048/2021
(1)REPORTABLE:NO
(2)OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)REVISED: NO
(4) DATE: 16 January 2023
Signature:
In
the matter between:
COMMISIONER
FOR THE SOUTH AFRICAN
Applicant
REVENUE
SERVICES
And
KHAGISO
AFRIKA HOLDINGS (PTY) LTD
1
st
Respondent [Registration Number: 2[…]]
KIMBERLEY
DANIELLE ANANTHAN
2
nd
Respondent
[Identity
Number: 9[…]]
ZAMAHLI
GROUP HOLDINGS (PTY) LTD
3
rd
Respondent
[Registration
Number: 2[…]]
JADORE
MIGLIORE (PTY) LTD
4
th
Respondent [Registration Number: 2[…]]
LEEANN
MAGDALENE DEVAR
5
th
Respondent
[Identity
Number: 8[…]]
ZIMDEHLA
PROJECTS (PTY) LTD
6
th
Respondent
[Registration
Number: 2[…]]
GOLDEN
MILE TRADING 571 CC
7
th
Respondent
[Registration
Number: 2[…]]
JAN
HENDRIK VAN VUUREN
8
th
Respondent
[Identity
Number: 7[…]]
PARVILOR
(PTY) LTD
9
th
Respondent
[Registration
Number: 2[…]]
RODNEY
MPHO MOROLE
10
th
Respondent [
Identity
Number: 7[…]]
ERESA
(PTY) LTD
11
th
Respondent
[Registration
Number: 2[…]]
JOHANNES
FREDRIK JANSE VAN RENSBURG
12
th
Respondent
BRUMMER
[Identity
Number: 8[…]]
AFRIKA
BALLISTIC TECHNOLOGIES (PTY) LTD
13
th
Respondent
[Registration
Number: 2[…]]
XOLANI
COLLEN MZOBE
14
th
Respondent
[Identity
Number: 8[…]]
INBINATHAN
KISTIAH
15
th
Respondent
[Identity
Number: 8[…]]
CONNELIA
CAPITAL HOLDINGS (PTY) LTD
16
th
Respondent
[Registration
Number: 2[…]]
AES
LIGHTING (PTY) LTD
17
th
Respondent [Registration Number: 2[…]]
PRANISHA
BAGBATSING
18
th
Respondent [Identity Number: 8[…]]
GLOBAL
TECH INNOVATIONS (PTY) LTD
19
th
Respondent
[Registration
Number: 2[…]]
NITHESH
DEONANNAN
20
th
Respondent
[Identity
Number: 7[…]]
SPIRIT
OF AFRICA MARKET (PTY) LTD
21
st
Respondent
[Registration
Number: 2[…]]
VISHEN
SOOKOO
22
nd
Respondent
[Identity
Number: 8[…]]
JUDGMENT
nyathi
j
A.
INTRODUCTION
[1]
The applicant
herein, the Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service
(“SARS”) obtained a provisional preservation
order in
terms of section 163 of the Tax Administration Act 28 of 2011
(hereafter “the TAA”). The provisional preservation
order
was granted
ex
parte
and
in chambers as envisaged by the TAA, by the Honourable Justice Mabuse
on 25 October 2021.
[2]
The
provisional order was granted in respect of all realizable assets
listed in Schedules A, B and C of the court order. A
curator
bonis
was
also appointed.
[3]
A return date
was set, and later extended to 23 May 2022.
[4]
Prior to the
extended return date, on 7 April 2022, the twenty-first (“SOA”)
and twenty-second respondents (“Mr
Sookoo”), launched an
urgent anticipation application seeking inter alia a discharge from
the provisional preservation order.
This urgent anticipation
application was heard by this court on 28 April 2022 with the
Honourable Madam Justice Van der Schyff
determining that the matter
was not urgent in respect of these respondents. They were ordered to
pay the costs consequent upon
that application.
[5]
The applicant now seeks an order confirming
the provisional preservation order in terms of section 163 of the TAA
as against the
following respondents:
5.1
7
th
Respondent;
5.2
8
th
Respondent;
5.3
9
th
Respondent;
5.4
10
th
Respondent;
5.5
14
th
Respondent;
5.6
Spirit
of Africa Market (‘SOA’); and
5.7
Mr
Sookoo
[6]
SARS further seeks an order confirming the
securities provided by the remaining respondents regarding their
probable tax liability
that may be raised by SARS after it concludes
its audit investigations, with the curator
bonis
maintaining limited supervisory powers over the security provided and
these respondents undertaking not to dispose, encumber or
alienate
the assets tendered as security.
[7]
Only the 21st and 22nd respondents are
opposing the relief sought. In fact,
the SOA and Mr Sookoo
seek the discharge of the rule and the dismissal of the application
for a preservation order, with costs on
a punitive scale.
SUMMARY
OF RELEVANT FACTS
The
following facts are gleaned from the applicant’s founding
affidavit.
[8]
During the state of disaster declared as a
result of the Covid-19 pandemic, the first respondent, Khagiso Afrika
Holding (Pty) Ltd
(“Khagiso Afrika”) was awarded a tender
by the South African Police Service (“SAPS”) for the
procurement
of Personal Protective Equipment (“PPE”), for
a supply of respiratory masks at R30.94 per mask, 5 litre
disinfectants
at R1 225.80 per unit and sanitised wipes at
R480.00 per unit.
[9]
Between 24 March 2020 to 25 April 2020,
Khagiso Afrika issued about 23 invoices to SAPS without charging any
output VAT on the supply
of masks. The amounts charged on each
invoice varied from R97,200.00 to R58,674,000.00.
[10]
During the period from 02 April 2020 to 4 May 2020, and
consequent upon Khagiso Afrika having issued the above-mentioned
invoices,
SAPS paid into Khagiso Afrika’s First National Bank
account number 6[...], a total amount of R134,470,900.00 from SAPS.
[11]
Immediately on receipt of the funds from SAPS, Khagiso Afrika
immediately funnelled about R108, 873, 194.50 of the above-mentioned
amount to other respondents herein. On 15 and 16 April 2020 the total
amount of R11,3 million is paid into SOA’s account
by Khagiso
Afrika. On that same date the exact same amount is paid over by SOA
into the account of Eco-Solution Project Management
(Pty) Ltd
(“Eco-Solutions”) without declaring any output VAT from
the aforementioned amount.
[12]
During the relevant tax period (04/2020), SOA submitted its
VAT201 return declaring a total output VAT of R47,961.00.
[13]
SARS calculated the probable VAT liability
payable from the aforementioned payment from Khagiso Afrika to be
R4,113,691.17, excluding
the understatement penalties leviable of up
to 200% of the under-declared probable tax, a 10% penalty and
interest for the late
payment of taxes.
[14]
On 25 October 2021 Mabuse J granted the
provisional preservation order and appointed a curator
bonis
.
The rule
nisi
is opposed by the 21
st
and 22
nd
Respondents.
[15]
On 7 December 2021 the curator advised that
“
respondent 22 has provided
sufficient security to satisfy any potential SARS tax assessment.”
B.
ISSUES FOR DECISION
[16]
Did SARS meet the requirements for making a
final preservation order in terms of section 163 of the TAA?
[17]
Was there any basis for holding Mr Sookoo
personally liable for any debt owed by SOA?
[18]
Did SARS fail to disclose a material fact
to the court that granted the provisional preservation order, to wit,
that SOA had no
assets at the time when the order was granted? And;
[19]
If, flowing from the lack of assets to
preserve, there could be no risk of dissipation of assets?
[20]
In the final analysis, the crisp question
therefore, is whether or not the provisional order should be made
final.
D
.
DISCUSSION
[21]
As stated above, Khagiso Afrika is the main
company in this intricate scheme. It was the recipient and main
distributor of funds
to the other companies including SOA. Having
received payment of R134, 410, 900.00 from the SAPS tender
for PPEs Khagiso
Afrika paid out a total of about R108, 873, 194.50
of those funds to associated companies. SOA alone received R11, 130,
000.00 in two tranches.
[22]
The sole director of SOA is Mr Sookoo who
has full access and direct control of its FNB Bank account. The
applicants have in their
founding affidavit in support of the
preservation application conceded that SOA failed to declare any
Value Added Tax (VAT) emanating
from these payments. This,
notwithstanding that SOA was a registered VAT vendor under the
Value-Added Tax Act No 89 of 1991, and
was accordingly obliged to
declare output VAT concerning these amounts.
[23]
The respondents have attempted to downplay
the seriousness of their conduct and the legal ramifications relating
to failures to
comply with their statutory obligations and to declare
output VAT. In an attempt to justify their failures, the applicants
are
now contending that the net result of the relevant transaction
was that SOA played the “connecting middleman” between
supply and demand and that it made not a cent of profit therefrom.
[24]
The abovementioned contention by the
respondents is not based on any known legal or tax principles and
ignores that the obligation
to declare amounts for VAT or income tax
purpose is statutorily imposed and not voluntarily made and certainly
not dependent on
whether a taxpayer made or realized any profit or
not.
[25]
SARS’ audit is still on-going and has
not been concluded. SARS is yet to issue a letter of audit findings,
a matter that will
take place after the audit has been concluded in
accordance with SARS’ internal procedures. What is however
apparent from
the above, is that VAT liability is likely to ensue
from inter alia the above transactions, which may be due or payable
by SOA.
The further issues arising may relate to liability for income
tax.
E.
Synopsis of relevant facts and modus operandi
[26]
Khagiso Afrika was awarded a tender
by SAPS for the procurement of PPEs, for a supply of respiratory
masks at R30.94 per mask, 5
litre disinfectants at R1,255.80 per unit
and sanitised wipes at R480.24 per unit;
[27]
Between 24 March 2020 to 25 April 2020,
Khagiso Afrika issued about 23 invoices to SAPS without charging any
output VAT on the supply
of masks. The amounts charged on each
invoice varied from R97,200.00 to R58,674,000.00.
[28]
During the period from 02 April 2020 to 4
May 2020, and consequent upon Khagiso Afrika having issued the
above-mentioned invoices,
SAPS paid into Khagiso Afrika's First
National Bank account number 6[...], a total amount of
R134,470,900.00 from SAPS.
[29]
On receipt of the funds from SAPS, Khagiso
Afrika immediately funnelled about R108,873,194.50 of such funds to
the other respondents,
as follows:
29.1
between
28 May 2020 and 13 July 2020, an amount of R5,731,623.00 was
transferred into Zamahli Group Holdings (Pty) Ltd’s FNB
account
number 6[...];
29.2
between
25 April 2020 and 18 May 2020, an amount of R2,467,744.00 was
transferred into Jadore Migliore (Pty) Ltd’s FNB account
number
6[...];
29.3
between
02 April 2020 and 15 April 2020, an amount of R12,533,305.00 was
transferred into Parvilor (Pty) Ltd’s FNB account
number
6[...];
29.4
between
04 April 2020 and 24 April 2020, an amount of R33,611,750.00 was
transferred into Eresa (Pty) Ltd’s FNB account number
6[...];
29.5
between
03 March 2020 and 28 July 2020, an amount of R8,198,509.50 was
transferred into Cool Hashtag (Pty) Ltd’s FNB account
number
6[...];
29.6
between
25 April 2020 and 28 July 2020, an amount of R4,581,500 was
transferred into Africa Ballistic Technologies (Pty) Ltd’s
FNB
account number 6[...];
29.7
between
3 May 2020 to 28 July 2020, an amount of R7,214,358.00 was
transferred into Calm Holdings (Pty) Ltd’s FNB account
number
6[...];
29.8
between
01 July 2020 and 13 July 2020, an amount of R3,746,925.00 was
transferred into Connelia Capital Holdings (Pty) Ltd’s
FNB
account number6[...];
29.9
between
24 March 2020 to 24 April 2020, an amount of R2,380,000.00 was
transferred into AES Lighting (Pty) Ltd’s FNB account
number
6[...];
29.10
between
30 March 2020 to 05 July 2020, an amount of R5,914,500.00 was
transferred into Global Tech Innovations (Pty) Ltd’s
FNB
account number 6[...]; and
29.11
between
15 April 2020 and 16 April 2020, an amount of R11,130,000.00 was
transferred into SOA’s FNB account number 6[...].
[30]
The amount paid to SOA in the amount of
R11,130 000.00 is particularly relevant in the present proceedings
and the following is
important in the adjudication of the present
application:
30.1
On
16 and 17 April 2020, SOA paid the amount of R11,130000.00 to
Eco-Solutions without declaring any output VAT from the
aforementioned
amount;
30.2
During
the relevant tax period (04/2020), SOA submitted its VAT 201 return
declaring a total output VAT of R47,961.00. The impression
created
was that the aforesaid represented the total taxable supplies, which
is false. Thus SOA's declaration in its VAT declaration
was false;
30.3
A
false declaration in a VAT 201 return constitutes tax evasion as
contemplated by section 235(1)(a) of the TAA. By making a false
declaration in its VAT 201 tax return SOA has contravened the
aforesaid provisions;
30.4
SARS
calculated the probable VAT liability payable from the aforementioned
payment form Khagiso Afrika to be R4,113,691.17, excluding
the
understatement penalties leviable of up to 200% of the under-declared
probable tax, a 10% penalty for
false
declaration in its VAT 201 tax return
SOA
has contravened the aforesaid provisions;
(emphasis
added)
30.5
SARS
calculated the probable VAT liability payable from the aforementioned
payment form Khagiso Afrika to be R4,113,691.17, excluding
the
understatement penalties leviable of up to 200% of the under-declared
probable tax, a 10% penalty and interest for the
late
payment of taxes.
Just
based on the aforesaid, SOA’s estimated VAT liability exceed
R12 million.
(emphasis added)
[31]
SARS preliminary investigations into the
assets of SOA as reflected in SARS’ founding papers revealed
that it owned the properties
described below and as SARS is still
investigating the assets of the respondents as part of its full
investigations, namely:
31.1
an
immovable property situated at 1[…] S[…] Street, A[…]
Estate, Centurion. The aforementioned property is
now valued at
R800,000.00.
31.2
movable
properties described as the Range Rover Evoque with vehicle letters
and registration number N[…] and Mercedes Benz
C190 with
vehicle letters and registration number N[…].
[32]
The respondents now contend that the above
assets belong to Mr. Sookoo and his wife.
[33]
Section 163 empowers SARS to approach the
court on an
ex parte
basis to apply for an order to preserve any assets of a taxpayer or
another person, subject to the conditions and exceptions as
may be
specified in the preservation order. The initial preservation order
is usually a provisional preservation order which comes
into effect
immediately. The court will then grant a
rule
nisi
which calls on the affected party
or parties to appear on the return date to address it on why the
provisional order should not
be made final or discharged.
[34]
For SARS to succeed in its application for
a preservation order it has to meet the following requirements:
34.1
a
tax amount should be due or payable or the SARS official should on
reasonable grounds be satisfied that it may be due or payable;
34.2
there
should be realisable assets, directly or indirectly linked to the
respondents, from which SARS may collect the tax amount
(owing by the
respondents or on reasonable grounds will be due and payable by
them);
34.3
the
realisable assets may be disposed of or removed which may frustrate
the collection of the full amount of tax of these respondents;
and
34.4
a
preservation order is required in order to prevent the 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 on
reasonable grounds the official is satisfied may be due
or payable).
[35]
The above-mentioned
modus
operandi
by the respondents of
funnelling funds immediately on receipt, points to clear proof of a
disposal, removal or concealment of assets,
alternatively, a
propensity to dispose, remove or conceal assets of their assets.
[36]
SARS’s suspicion is that the
above-mentioned transfer of funds between the respondents, were a
mere ploy orchestrated to use
juristic
persona
as conduits by creating multiple layers of transfers, before
disposing of such funds.
[37]
SARS’s analysis and cross-referencing
of the transactions contained in the above-mentioned bank statements
of the respondents
revealed that the descriptors in those statements
are a ruse meant to conceal the true identity of the recipients of
the funds
transferred by these respective respondent companies. There
are numerous examples of this scheme which SARS flagged as requiring
further investigation.
[38]
One of the examples is: Khagiso Afrika’s
bank statements reflect payments made to AES Lighting described as
“Blue Collar.”
Immediately on receipt of the funds, AES
made payments described as “loan payments”, “Yaya’s
lighting”
and “Ashvir”.
[39]
Furthermore, SOA bank statements annexed by
Mr Sookoo in his founding affidavit to the application show a bank
balance of R77,91,
a clear indication that SOA immediately after it
received funds from Khagiso Afrika there were no trading activities.
[40]
Clear evidence of inexplicable channelling
of funds back and forth by and between the respondents in the
preservation application
is justification for the confirmation of a
preservation order. In the present case, more than R108 million was
channelled between
the companies in a manner that points to
dissipation. In particular, based on the disguised descriptions of
the relevant transactions
in the companies’ bank accounts. It
is noteworthy that the specific transaction to SOA was simply
classified as “payment”
in the bank accounts of Khagiso
Afrika and SOA.
F.
The law:
[41]
Section 163 (1) of the TAA regulates the
grant of a preservation order and provides that: “
A
senior SARS official may, in order 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 the official on
reasonable grounds is satisfied may be due or payable,
authorise an
ex parte application to the High Court for an order for the
preservation of any assets of a taxpayer or other person
prohibiting
any person, subject to the conditions and exceptions as may be
specified in the preservation order, from dealing in
any manner with
the assets to which the order relates.”
[42]
The requirement to be met by SARS to
succeed in its application for a preservation order are the
following:
42.1
that
a tax amount is due or payable or the official on reasonable grounds
is satisfied may be due or payable;
42.2
there
are realisable assets, directly or indirectly linked to the
respondents, from which SARS may collect the tax amount (owing
by the
respondents or on reasonable grounds will be due and payable by
them);
42.3
the
realisable assets may be disposed of or removed which may frustrate
the collection of the full amount of tax of these respondents;
and
42.4
a
preservation order is required in order to prevent the 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 on
reasonable grounds the official is satisfied may be due
or payable).
[43]
In
Commissioner
for the South African Revenue Service v Van Zyl
[1]
,
the manner in which funds were questionably channelled through
companies was similarly questionable. There the court held as
follows:
“…
I
further find, on a conspectus of all the evidence and voluminous
documentation, but in particular, with reliance on the vast sums
of
money which have been channelled back and forth between various
entities and respondents, that SARS had been justified in being
concerned about further such manipulation of funds and transfers,
amounting to dissipation of assets from one taxpayer to another
or to
an undisclosed third party, all of which might frustrate the recovery
of tax debts. Resorting to the mechanism created by
section 163 of
the TAA can, in these circumstances, not amount to an abuse of
process.”
[2]
[44]
In
the matter of
Commissioner,
South African Revenue Service v Tradex (Pty) Ltd and Others
[3]
the court held as follows:
“
I
do not think that ‘required’ in s 163(3) entails proof of
such an intention on the part of the taxpayer. However,
SARS is
required to show, I think, that there is a material risk that assets
which would otherwise be available in satisfaction
of tax will, in
the absence of a preservation order, no longer be available. The fact
that the taxpayer bona fide considers that
it does not owe the tax
would not stand in the way of a preservation order if there is the
material risk that realisable assets
will not be available when it
comes to ordinary execution. An obvious case is that of a company
which, believing it owes no tax,
proposes to make a distribution to
its shareholders.”
[45]
The
court in the
Tradex
matter further held
[4]
that: “
The
existence of material risk that assets will be diminished is, as I
have said, the obvious example. It is in such circumstances
that the
court could conclude that preservation would confer a ‘substantial
advantage’ (i.e. over the position that
would prevail without
the order) and that there was thus ‘an element of need’
(cf. the Clutchco case supra)”
[46]
Mr Sookoo’s affidavit is styled also
as an answering affidavit to the SARS’s founding affidavit in
the preservation
application, it however, does not engage with the
allegations made by SARS in its founding affidavit. Mr Sookoo’s
response
is to state that:
46.1
SOA
had no assets to be preserved and the assets listed in SARS’
founding affidavit in the preservation application belong
to him and
not SOA;
46.2
that
there was no risk of dissipation as SOA did not have assets to
preserve; and
46.3
lastly,
that because SARS had not concluded its audit raising a tax debt,
there is no risk for holding him personally liable.
[47]
Mr Sookoo’s submissions do not hold
water due to the following: It is undisputable that SOA received the
R 11 130 000.00
from Khagiso Afrika. It follows that SOA is
likely to be assessed and held liable for VAT and Income Tax.
[48]
By virtue of Mr. Sookoo being under preservation, the
provisions of section 163(3)(b) of the TAA have
been met insofar as
the assets registered in his names are concerned;
[49]
In terms of section 163(1) read with section
163(3) of the TAA, the assets preserved by the provisional
preservation order extend
beyond those of the affected assets set out
in the provisional order and even those that are not specified in the
order including
assets if transferred to the respondents in the
preservation application, would be realisable even after the
preservation order
has been granted. Mr Sookoo is related to SOA and
any of his assets attached for preservation, are for SOA’s
imminent tax
liability;
[50]
By his own admission, Mr Sookoo has played an
active role in the payment of the R11,130,000.00 to SOA and then
immediately from
SOA to Eco-Solutions, and therefore he may be held
jointly and severally liable for SOA’s imminent tax liability
as envisaged
by sections 155 and 180 of the TAA;
[51]
As in the case of the other respondents,
the bank accounts of SOA shows no business activity until SAPS
started paying Khagiso and
the funds were round tripped between the
respondents and other entities that SARS is also in investigating.
This points to the
propensity to dissipate assets by SOA, and such
eventuality is in any event confirmed by Mr Sookoo’s statement
that SOA currently
has a mere R77,91 in its bank account, the more
reason for SARS to preserve assets of related persons and entities
from which SOA’s
tax liability may be paid.
G.
Conclusions
[52]
Mr Sookoo’s assertion that he merely
played an intermediary role is patently untrue, he seems to be
actively involved in and
has intimate knowledge of the business
affairs of SOA including a few PPE deals SOA concluded. He also
played an active role in
all the engagements between SARS and SOA.
[53]
Mr Sookoo’s defence that SARS has
failed to disclose a material fact to the court that granted the
provisional preservation
order, to wit, that SOA had no assets at the
time the order was made is intended to mislead. The systematic
funnelling of funds
was designed to achieve this scenario amongst
other objectives.
[54]
Having regard to all the above facts it is
clear that the applicant has made a case for the confirmation of the
provisional preservation
order against the SOA and Mr. Sookoo.
H.
Costs
[55]
As is customary, costs shall follow the
cause. Nothing justifies a different decision in this case.
I.
Order
(i)
The provisional preservation order granted
on 25 October 2021 against SOA and Mr. Sookoo, is hereby confirmed
with costs.
(ii)
A draft order was agreed upon as regards
the remainder of the respondents in totality, with more specific
provisions is hereby made
an order of court and incorporated by
reference. It is annexed hereto marked “X”.
J.S.
NYATHI
Judge of the High Court
Gauteng
Division, Pretoria
Date
of Judgment: 16 January 2023.
Date
of hearing: 23 May 2022
Appearances
On
behalf of the Applicant: Majang Attorney
Counsel:
Adv. Lindelani Sigogo SC
with
him: Adv. Lindeni Kalipa
On
behalf of Respondents 11 and 12: Kruger & Okes Inc Attorneys
Counsel:
Adv. H.P. West SC
On
behalf of Respondents 1-6, 13-16, 19-20: Shaun Pillay Attorneys
Counsel:
Adv. Rudolf Maastenbroek
With
him: Adv. M. Van der Westhuizen
On
behalf of Respondents 21 and 22: Ulrich Roux attorneys
Counsel:
Adv Rudolf Mastenbroek
With
him: Adv Mariq van der Westhuizen
Delivery:
This judgment was handed down electronically by
circulation to the parties’ legal representatives by email, and
uploaded on
the CaseLines electronic platform. The date for hand-down
is deemed to be 16 January 2023.
[1]
2022
JDR 0305 (GP)
[2]
Commissioner
for the South African Revenue Service v Van Zyl 2022 JDR 0305 (GP)
at
p22, para 9.20,
[3]
Commissioner,
South African Revenue Service v Tradex (Pty) Ltd and Others
2015 (3)
SA 596
at p606B-D
[4]
At
p606 E-F
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