Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 417South Africa
Adidas International Trading AG (Switzerland) and Another v Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service [2023] ZAGPPHC 417; 2019/28878 (6 June 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
6 June 2023
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Adidas International Trading AG (Switzerland) and Another v Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service [2023] ZAGPPHC 417; 2019/28878 (6 June 2023)
Adidas International Trading AG (Switzerland) and Another v Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service [2023] ZAGPPHC 417; 2019/28878 (6 June 2023)
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sino date 6 June 2023
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE NO:2019/28878
1. REPORTABLE:
NO
2. OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES:
NO
3. REVISED.
SIGNATURE:
DATE: 6 JUNE 2023
In the matter of:
adidas
INTERNATIONAL TRADING AG (Switzerland)
First Applicant
adidas
SOUTH AFRICA (PTY)
LTD
Second Applicant
AND
THE
COMMISSIONER FOR THE SOUTH AFRICAN
REVENUE
SERVICE
Respondent
JUDGEMENT
THIS
JUDGEMENT HAS BEEN HANDED DOWN REMOTELY AND SHALL BE CIRCULATED TO
THE PARTIES BY E-MAIL. THE DATE AND TIME OF HAND DOWN IS
DEEMED TO BE
6 JUNE 2023
A.
Introduction
1.
This is an opposed application for referral
to trial, in terms of Rule 6 (5) (g) of the Uniform Rules of Court.
In their application,
the applicants concede that some disputes of
fact were foreseeable; however, what has now arisen points to
fundamental and wide
ranging disputes of fact, rendering the matter
incapable of resolution on motion. The applicants submit that a
referral to trial
is apposite owing to the complexities involved, the
diverse character of the business interests and complicated questions
which
are steeped in accounting.
2.
The respondent, SARS, says the application
ought to be dismissed as the disputes of fact were not only
foreseeable but were foreseen
and are covered in over six years’
worth of correspondence exchanged between the parties. That
correspondence is annexed
to and dealt with in the founding
affidavits. The respondent, in addition to the years of
correspondence demonstrating disputes
of fact, points to several
instances in which the applicants could have and should have applied
for trial but failed to do so.
Instead of applying for the referral
timeously, SARS says the applicants simply escalated commitment,
continued to file various
voluminous pleadings which required the
respondent to deal with and answer. It was only at the judicial case
management meeting
of 10 June 2022 that the applicants changed course
and decided they no longer wished to continue with motion
proceedings, having
wasted valuable time, resources and costs, which
could have been avoided had the applicants abided by the general rule
of applying
for referral timeously. Placing reliance on various
authorities, the respondent further submits that the review component
of the
applicants’ application was incompetent to start with,
as the appeal contemplated in the Act is an appeal in the widest
sense,
which envisages a complete rehearing of the matter with or
without additional evidence.
B. Background
3.
A high level background of how the parties
arrived at this point is necessary. According to SARS, on 25 March
2013, it issued a
letter of audit findings to the applicants. In the
letter, SARS identified that aSA and aITBV had engaged in a simulated
exercise
which had led to underpayment of duty. The details of such
simulation, according to SARS, were dealt with comprehensively in its
letter. In April 2019, following an exchange of correspondence
covering primarily the same issues for well over six years, the
applicants brought their main application, having foreseen the
disputes of fact.
C. Merits
4.
The relevant aspects of the order sought by
the applicants in their Notice of Motion reads:
1.That the High Court
directs that it has jurisdiction…..
2. The Commissioner’s
determination giving rise to the debt raised against the applicants
in his demand dated 1 June 2018
is hereby set aside on appeal, as
contemplated by the Customs and Excise Act, 1964.
3. In addition, (or in
the alternative) to prayer 2, the Commissioner’s demand of 1
June 2018 is hereby set aside on review
as contemplated by Rule 53,
read with the provisions of the
Promotion of Administrative Justice
Act, 3 of 2000
and is declared invalid as contemplated in section 172
(1) of the Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996.
5.
In broad fashion, the applicants identify
the disputes of fact as follows:
(i)
the alleged simulation;
(ii)
sale for export; and
(iii)
quantum.
6.
In respect of the alleged simulation, the
applicants submit that SARS’ case against them is based on
allegations of tax evasion
and/or fraud. On the question of the sale
for export, the applicants say the trial court will have to
determine,
inter alia
,
questions surrounding ownership and risk in the goods coupled with
whether duty was paid on the basis of delivery-duty-paid (DDP),
as
claimed by the applicants, or on the basis of delivery ex-ship as
contended by SARS. Finally, with regard to quantum, the applicants
contend that they do not owe anything to SARS while SARS seeks to
recover a large amount of money from them. All of these issues
combined, contend the applicants, militate in favour of a referral to
trial so that the issues are properly ventilated and the
applicants
are afforded the opportunity to properly answer to the allegations of
fraud themselves. I may record that the amount
SARS seeks to recover
is set out in the pleadings as roughly R1.8 billion.
7.
Referring
to the Notice of Motion, the applicants submit, with reference to the
Constitutional Court reasoning in
Mamadi
and Another
v
Premier
of Limpopo Province and Others
[1]
,
that a court does not have a discretion under Rule 6 (5) (g) to
dismiss an application brought in terms of Rule 53 on the basis
that
disputes of fact were reasonably anticipated on paper. The applicants
submit that not all the disputes were foreseeable. However,
what has
now arisen are wide ranging disputes, which cannot be resolved on
Motion. Secondly, it is common cause that review proceedings
are
normally instituted by way of motion, so that the applicant does not
launch proceedings in the dark while the other side has
daylight
vision with regard to the issues pertinent to the application.
Thirdly, placing reliance on various authorities, the applicants
contend that in any event, a court not counsel is best suited to
decide whether a matter is to be referred to trial. It is the
applicants’ submission that the order sought by SARS simply
shuts the doors of court in their faces, which is Constitutionally
untenable in light of section 34 of the Constitution, 1996.
8.
SARS began its case by making reference to
the issues identified in its letter of March 2013. It referred to the
disputes as identified
in that letter. They are:
(i)
whether adidas SA (aSA) was the importer as
opposed to adidas International Trading BV (aITBV), which was
declared as the importer
when the goods were cleared for home
consumption; and
(ii)
whether the ‘second sale’ i.e.,
the sale from aITBV to aSA, was concluded before the goods were
shipped to South Africa.
9.
SARS contends that the applicants had
sought to create the impression that the goods were imported into
South Africa by aITBV for
later sale from their warehouse, as if
aIBTV was a local supplier and its sales to aSA took place after the
goods had been imported
into South Africa when invoices were
generated. To that extent, the transaction was simulated to give the
appearance of a later
sale when in fact the sale between aITBV and
aSA was the sale which gave rise to the export to and import into
South Africa. SARS
further contends that aITBV had no physical
presence in South Africa and had no staff. Everything that aITBV
would have been required
to do, were it genuinely selling its goods
locally in South Africa after importation, was in fact done by
employees of aSA and
the warehouse, UTI, which dealt with the local
employees of aSA.
10.
These contentions, says SARS, are set out
in the founding affidavit. They came as no surprise to the applicants
because they were
dealt with expressly in correspondence over a
number of years, prior to the main application; this correspondence
is attached to
and referred to in the founding affidavit. In addition
to the letter of 25 March 2013, SARS refers to,
inter
alia
, its letters of 21 October 2015
and 1 June 2018, where SARS relied on exactly the same audit findings
as set out in the letter
of 25 March to make its determination and
raise the debt.
11.
With regard to the third dispute dealing
with quantum, SARS contends that the dispute pertains to the
methodology adopted by SARS
in determining the customs value. This
dispute was known to the applicants well before they instituted the
proceedings. The material
disputes continued throughout the
correspondence exchanged by the parties, submits SARS. Yet on 26
April 2019, the applicants brought
this application comprising 1312
pages, including a forensic accountant’s report, having known
about the material disputes
of fact. The respondents conclude that
the disputes of fact were not only foreseeable, they were known to
the applicants.
12.
On the applicants’ failure to
timeously apply for referral to trial, the respondent refers, by way
of examples, to the applicants’
filing of their supplementary
affidavit on 31 October 2019 after receiving the record furnished in
terms of Rule 53. According
to the respondent, the applicants did not
rely on any document furnished as part of the record. Instead, they
further escalated
the disputes with a further forensic accountant’s
report. The respondent says it must be accepted that, at that stage,
the
applicants had clearly elected to press on with the application,
as the respondents had to deal with the founding papers and file
an
answering affidavit.
13.
On 10 September 2020, the respondent filed
its answering affidavit which raised the disputes of fact
foreshadowed in the correspondence
exchanged over six years prior to
the application. Yet on 2 August 2021, the applicants delivered a
further 650 pages worth of
a reply, together with an application
running to almost 200 pages to strike out various passages in the
answering affidavit. In
responses to a supplementary affidavit filed
by the respondents to correct certain annexures and respond to the
criticisms raised
against its answering affidavit, the applicants
filed a further 26 pages of a supplementary replying affidavit
bringing the total
record to 2270 pages. On 10 June 2022, at judicial
case management, the applicants indicated for the first time that
they no longer
wished to pursue the matter by way of motion and that
they intended to apply for referral to trial. This, after many years
of wasted
resources, time and costs.
D. The law
14.
The discretion vested in the court when
dealing with the question of hearing of oral evidence is set out in
Pahad Shipping CC
v
Commissioner for the South African
Revenue Services,
and was expressed by
the Court as follows:
‘
In
terms of rule 6(5)(g) a court has a wide discretion in regard to the
hearing of oral evidence where an application cannot properly
be
decided on affidavit…[20] However, it has been held in a
number of cases that an application to refer a matter to evidence
should be made at the outset and not after argument … As was
stated by Corbett JA in
Kalil
at 981E-F the rule is a salutary general rule. Unnecessary costs and
delay can be avoided by following the general rule. But Corbett
JA
also stated that the rule is not inflexible. In
Du
Plessis and another NNO v Rolfes Ltd
[1996]
ZASCA 45
,
1997 (2) SA 354
(A) at 366G-367A this court dealt with an
application which was made for the first time during argument in this
court. The application
was dismissed but it is implicit in the
judgment that, in appropriate circumstances, this court may decide
that a matter should
be referred to evidence even where no
application for such referral had been made in the court below..’
[2]
15.
In
Mamadi
,
the court reasoned:
‘
Does
a litigant who brings a review in terms of rule 53, and thus on
motion where disputes of fact are reasonably foreseeable, act
in an
impermissible way? Quite plainly not. Litigants are constitutionally
entitled to make use of rule 53 in review proceedings,
in order to
properly give effect to their section 34 rights. 36 It therefore
cannot be that a litigant can be penalised through
the use of rule
6(5)(g), merely because rule 53 was utilised. It follows that a court
does not have a discretion under rule 6(5)(g)
to dismiss an
application brought in terms of rule 53 on the basis that reasonably
anticipated disputes of fact arise on the papers.
…[44] This
does not mean that an applicant in a rule 53 application is entitled,
as of right, to have a matter referred
to oral evidence or trial.
General principles governing the referral of a matter to oral
evidence or trial remain applicable. Litigants
should, as a general
rule, apply for a referral to oral evidence or trial, where
warranted,
as
soon as the affidavits have been exchanged.
Where timeous application is not made, courts are, in general,
entitled to proceed on the basis that the applicant has accepted
that
factual disputes will be resolved by application of
Plascon-Evans
…A
court should however proceed in a rule 53 application with
caution….’
[3]
(own emphasis)
E. Discussion and
Conclusion
16.
The complaint raised by SARS is valid,
given the history of correspondence, and the exchanges of lengthy
affidavits. It cannot be
taken lightly. Having said, the principle
espoused in
Pahad
makes plain that the court is vested with a wide discretion when it
comes to hearing of oral evidence, where an application cannot
be
properly decided on affidavit. That an applicant must act timeously
is beyond dispute as can be seen from the two decisions
quoted in
this judgment. In this case, the applicants missed several
opportunities to apply for the referral of the matter to trial.
Even
after receiving the record and the answering affidavit, the
applicants simply escalated their commitment and continued to
exchange pleadings in circumstances where the disputes were clearly
foreseen.
17.
There is also the contention raised by the
respondent to consider, i.e., that the Act makes provision for an
appeal in the widest
sense as opposed to a review, as espoused in
Pahad
:
‘
The
parties dealt with the case as if it was an appeal in the wide sense,
i.e., as if it was a complete re-hearing of the case and
a fresh
determination of the merits of the case. Correctly so, in my view,
for the following reasons: (a) The Act does not require
of the
respondent to hear evidence, to give any reasons for his
determination or to keep any record of proceedings. As was held
in
Tikly
at 592B-C these considerations militate completely against the
‘appeal’ being an appeal in the strict sense. (b) It
is
implicit in the provisions of s 65(4)(c)(ii)(bb) to the effect
that the determination by the respondent cease to be in
force from
the date of a final judgment by the high court or this court that the
court must itself make a determination upon appeal
to it. That
eliminates the appeal being a review in the sense set out in (iii)
above (see
Tikly
591H-592A). (c) As there is no provision for a hearing before the
determination of the transaction value by the respondent, the
legislature must, in my view, have intended ‘appeal’ to
be an appeal in the wide sense.’
[4]
18.
The applicants say their Notice of Motion
makes plain that they had brought a review. It seems to me that for
purpose of deciding
whether to refer the matter to trial there are
further considerations beyond the question of whether a review was
properly brought.
These are, first, the matter is by no means a
simple one. Second, that there are material disputes of fact is
conceded by both
parties. Third, the applicants are accused of
engaging in a simulated transaction with the result that they
underpaid tax. This
allegation, according to the applicants, points
to fraud. Fourth, the amounts in issue are by no means negligible.
For all these
reasons, it seems to me that in order to do justice,
the matter must be referred to trial. With regard to the failure to
apply
timeously for the referral and whatever conduct the applicants
engaged in which can be directly attributed to having wasted costs,
time and resources, is something that can be dealt with by the trial
court by way of an appropriate costs order. The answer is
not to
close the door to the applicants at this stage.
G. Order
19.
This matter is referred to trial.
(i)
The Notice of Motion shall stand as a
simple summons.
(ii)
The applicants shall deliver a declaration
in terms of rule 20 within one month from date of this order.
(iii)
Thereafter the rules and time periods for
the conduct of actions provided for in the Uniform Rules of court
shall apply to the further
conduct of the matter.
NN BAM
JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT,
PRETORIA
DOH:
13 SEPTEMBER 2022
DOJ:
6 JUNE 2023
Appearances:
For
Applicant:
Adv
A.P Joubert SC
Adv
E Muller
Instructed
by:
Backer
McKenzie Inc
Rivonia
℅
Andrea
Rae Attorneys
Colbyn,
Pretoria
For
Respondent:
Adv
J Peter SC
Adv
N.K Nxumalo
Instructed
by:
Klagsbrun
Edelstein Bosman Du Plessis Inc
New
Muckleneuk, Pretoria
[1]
[2022]
ZACC 2
, paragraph 43.
[2]
(529/08)
[2009] ZASCA 172
;
[2010] 2 All SA 246
(SCA) (2 December 2009),
paragraphs 19-20.
[3]
Note
1
supra
at paragraphs 43-44.
[4]
Paragraph
14.
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