Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 597South Africa
Trustees of the CC Share Trust and Others v Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service (38211/21) [2023] ZAGPPHC 597; 86 SATC 84 (24 July 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
24 July 2023
Headnotes
a 100% interest in. The taxpayers responded to the queries. They say they did not hear from SARS again, until nearly a year later. On 21 January 2020, SARS notified each taxpayer in terms of section 42(1) of the TAA, that it would conduct an audit in respect of the tax consequences of the AMR
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Trustees of the CC Share Trust and Others v Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service (38211/21) [2023] ZAGPPHC 597; 86 SATC 84 (24 July 2023)
Trustees of the CC Share Trust and Others v Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service (38211/21) [2023] ZAGPPHC 597; 86 SATC 84 (24 July 2023)
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sino date 24 July 2023
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG LOCAL
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE NO:
38211/21
(1) REPORTABLE: NO
(2) OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: NO
(3) REVISED: NO
DATE: 24/07/2023
SIGNATURE
In
the matter between:
THE
TRUSTEES OF THE CC SHARE TRUST
First Applicant
THE
TRUSTEES OF THE CC INVESTMENT TRUST
Second Applicant
THE
TRUSTEES OF THE LSC SHARE TRUST
Third Applicant
THE
TRUSTEES OF THE LSC INVESTMENT TRUST
Fourth Applicant
THE
TRUSTEES OF THE JCCD SHARE TRUST
Fifth Applicant
THE
TRUSTEES OF THE JCCD INVESTMENT TRUST
Sixth Applicant
and
THE
COMMISSIONER FOR THE SOUTH AFRICAN
REVENUE
SERVICE
Respondent
JUDGMENT
Manoim J
Overview
[1]
The genesis of this case is a dispute between the applicant trustees
who are taxpayers,
and the respondent, the Commissioner for South
African Revenue Service (“SARS”). The original issue in
that dispute
was whether the applicants had been correctly assessed
by SARS. They maintained they have not. But the purpose of the
present case
before me is not to consider the merits of that dispute.
Rather it is a prior jurisdictional dispute hence its presence in
this
court and not the Tax Court. The applicants want to have the
assessments set aside because they argue they were made unlawfully
for want of compliance by SARS with its own statutes. They had
also requested the Commissioner to withdraw the assessments.
This the
Commissioner refused to do. This latter decision is also a subject of
the review. I will from now on refer to the trustees
as taxpayers.
[2]
SARS denies it has acted unlawfully. But it has taken the dispute a
step further.
It says the taxpayers should not be in this court as
they have failed to exhaust their internal remedies. SARS seeks to
have the
application dismissed on this basis alone. To summarise:
there are three disputes between the taxpayers and SARS; (i) a
dispute
about whether the taxpayers have been correctly assessed;
(ii) a dispute about whether SARS followed the correct process prior
to levelling the assessments; and (iii) a dispute about whether the
taxpayers were required to exhaust their internal remedies instead
of
coming to this court. This case concerns only the latter two
disputes.
[3]
If the taxpayers succeed in their review that is the end of the
adverse assessments
– as the time taken for SARS to issue a new
assessment has lapsed.
[1]
If
SARS is correct in its preliminary objection, the case in this court
would end and the taxpayers would have to explore their
internal
remedies, which effectively means following the objection process set
out in terms of section 104 of the Tax Administration
Act, 28 of 2011
(“TAA”) and if unsuccessful, litigating in the Tax Court.
Background
[4]
The taxpayers are trustees of six trusts. These trusts directly and
indirectly own
interest in companies in a group known as the
Amalgamated Metals Recycling (“AMR”). In 2016, Insimbi, a
JSE listed
company expressed an interest in buying some of the
companies that formed part of the AMR group by acquiring them from
the taxpayers.
To achieve this objective the taxpayers adopted what
they termed a “…
disposal methodology that gave effect
to their commercial objectives
”. Stripped of its jargon it
meant doing the transactions in way that avoided that they considered
avoided liability for capital
gains tax. I will refer to these
transactions as the AMR transactions.
[5]
The AMR transactions were implemented between July and December 2016
and thus in the
taxpayers’ 2017 tax year. SARS issued its
original assessments for that tax year on 28 February and 9 March
2018. In
February 2019 SARS sent queries to the taxpayers about
entities that they collectively held a 100% interest in. The
taxpayers responded
to the queries. They say they did not hear from
SARS again, until nearly a year later. On 21 January 2020, SARS
notified
each taxpayer in terms of section 42(1) of the TAA, that it
would conduct an audit in respect of the tax consequences of the AMR
transactions in the 2017 tax year.
[2]
SARS requested information from the taxpayers which they say they
provided the next month.
[6]
But then came the events that triggered this case. On 30 July 2020
SARS issued each
taxpayer with a notice in terms of section 80J (1)
of the Income Tax Act, 58 of 1962 (ITA), inviting the taxpayers to
give reasons
to SARS, why it should not apply the general
anti-avoidance Rule in Part IIA of Chapter III of the ITA.
[7]
Briefly, Part IIA of the Income Tax Act, 58 of 1962 (“ITA”)
deals with
the general anti-avoidance rules known as GAAR. SARS
applies this provision when it considers that a taxpayer has entered
into an arrangement designed to avoid anticipated tax liability. One
of the tests applied is that the arrangement is conducted
in a manner
that ‘[…]
lacks
commercial substance in whole or in part
.’
[3]
[8]
The letter of 30 July is one of the two letters whose contents are
crucial to the
case. As I explain later, this letter, on SARS
version, is purportedly compliant with two sections of the statutes –
section
80J of the ITA and section 42(2)(b) of the TAA. I will refer
to it neutrally as the “July letter”.
[9]
Since compliance with section 42(2)(b) is central to the dispute I
set out its contents
in full:
“
(2) Upon
conclusion of the audit or a criminal investigation, and where –
a) the audit or
investigation was inconclusive, SARS must inform the taxpayer
accordingly within 21 business days; or
(b) the audit
identified potential adjustments of a material nature, SARS must
within 21 business days, or the further period that
may be required
based on the complexities of the audit, provide the taxpayer with a
document containing the outcome of the audit,
including the
grounds for the proposed assessment or decision referred to in
section 104 (2).”
[10]
The taxpayer’s right to respond to a notice in terms of section
42(2)(b) is contained in
section 42(3) which states:
“
(3) Upon
receipt of the document described in subsection (2) (b), the taxpayer
must within 21 business days of delivery of the document,
or the
further period requested by the taxpayer that may be allowed by SARS
based on the complexities of the audit, respond in
writing to the
facts and conclusions set out in the document.”
[11]
Section 80J of the ITA is a longer provision, but its terms are also
relevant to the dispute:
80J Notice
(1) The Commissioner
must, prior to determining any liability of a party for tax under
section 80B, give the party notice that he
or she believes that the
provisions of this Part may apply in respect of an arrangement and
must set out in the notice his or her
reasons therefor.
(2) A party who
receives notice in terms of subsection (1) may, within 60 days after
the date of that notice or such longer period
as the Commissioner may
allow, submit reasons to the Commissioner why the provisions of this
Part should not be applied.
(3) The Commissioner
must within 180 days of receipt of the reasons or the expiry of the
period contemplated in subsection (2) –
a) request additional
information in order to determine whether or not this Part applies in
respect of an arrangement;
(b) give notice to the
party that the notice in terms of subsection (1) has been withdrawn;
or
(c) determine the
liability of that party for tax in terms of this Part.
(4) If at any stage
after giving notice to the party in terms of subsection (1),
additional information comes to the knowledge of
the Commissioner, he
or she may revise or modify his or her reasons for applying this Part
or, if the notice has been withdrawn,
give notice in terms of
subsection (1).
[12]
(Although the two sections seem to suggest two different routes to
inform the taxpayer of a potentially
adverse outcome, SARS argues
that with the exception of the time periods, they are sufficiently
similar to be combined in a single
notice. I return to this argument
later once I conclude the chronology.)
[13]
The taxpayers’ attorneys, Werksmans, replied to the July letter
in October that same year.
The response was detailed whilst at the
same time pointing out what the attorneys alleged were errors
contained in the notice.
SARS did not concede this. Instead,
SARS described the Werksman’s letter as comprehensive but
flawed. The backhanded
compliment seems to serve two purposes. First,
that SARS did not accept the critique of its application of GAAR but
at same time
wanting to make the point that the taxpayers had engaged
fully with SARS’ contentions and thus a riposte to suggestions
that
they had not been given the right to be heard.
[14]
In response to the October letter, SARS requested further information
in terms of section 80J
(3) of the ITA. SARS says this was because it
had become evident that additional information was required. These
additional request
were made on two occasions; on 30 November 2020
and 25 January 2021. The taxpayers responded twice; on 18 January
2021 and 11 February
2021.
[15]
Then came the second letter crucial to these proceedings. SARS wrote
to the taxpayers on 25 March
2021 a letter headed “
Finalisation
of audit: Restructuring and sale of AMR Group Year of
assessment:2017
. I will refer to this letter from now on as the
March letter.
[16]
In the March letter SARS sets out its reasons for rejecting the
taxpayers’ responses and
why it considered that GAAR applied to
the transactions. In paragraph 6 of the letter is a table which
contains a summary and explanation
of the proposed adjustments.
In
essence the table sets out an amount for the capital gain. This is
followed by a calculation of the tax liability which is expressed
as
a percentage of the capital gain. Finally, there is
an amount
for the understatement penalty, which is calculated as 75% of the tax
liability. On the same day SARS sent out separately
a letter of
assessment to each taxpayer setting out the relevant adjustment and
penalties.
[17]
After receiving these letters – dated 25 March 2021 –
which the taxpayers term the
“first decision”, their
attorneys wrote back to SARS on 20 April 2021 requesting that the two
communications received
by each taxpayer i.e., the March letter and
the assessment letter be withdrawn. This request was based on section
9 of the TAA
which states that a decision of a SARS official may be
withdrawn, inter alia, at the request of the relevant person. On 26
April
2021 SARS responded and refused the requests. The taxpayers
refer to these decisions as the second decisions.
[18]
The subject of the taxpayers’ review is for the court to review
and set aside the first
and second decisions or put differently, the
March letter and the letter of 26 April 2021. The taxpayers contend
that the March
letter did not comply with the requirements specified
in section 42(2)(b) of the TAA. That justified them asking SARS to
reconsider
its decision. When SARS refused to do so it thus failed to
comply with section 9 of the TAA, and this gave rise to the second
reviewable
decision.
[19]
To support their allegations of unlawful administrative action the
taxpayers rely on The Promotion
of Administrative Justice Act, 3 of
2000, (“PAJA”) and in the alternative raise a legality
review. In relation to the
first decision – the non-compliance
with section 42(2)(b), the taxpayers contend that they were denied
audi alteram partem.
They say this right was compromised in
these respects:
a.
Their right to receive an audit outcome letter;
b. The
right to be able to consider an audit outcome letter;
c. The
right to respond to the audit outcome letter; and
d. The
right to have SARS consider their response to the letter.
[20]
What the taxpayers seek to portray is that SARS embarked on an
incomplete process. But SARS does
not rely on the 25
th
March letter as the one that complies with section 42(2)(b). Instead,
it relies on the earlier July letter. This letter is headed
“
Section
80J Notice”
. Granted it makes no reference to section
42(2)(b). But according to Dr Marcus, who was the senior specialist
from SARS responsible
for the investigation, the letter was: (i) sent
on the conclusion of the audit (recall this is one of the
requirements in section
42(2)(b); and (ii) was a combination of both
a section 80J notice, and a section 42(2)(b) notice, despite the fact
that the letter
does not say so in express terms.
[21]
The taxpayers dispute this and call it a
post hoc
reconstruction. Marcus however responds by saying that when
performing a GAAR exercise, SARS combines both notices in one and
that the taxpayers’ attorneys who are specialists in this area,
ought to have known this. In argument SARS counsel have performed
a
comparative exercise to contend that the July letter, despite not
mentioning section 42(2)(b), conforms to all the requirements
made
out in that section. SARS thus argues that the failure to expressly
indicate that letter was also issued in terms of section
42(2(b),
elevates form over substance.
[22]
What distinguishes the July letter from the 25 March letter, is that
the July letter invites
the taxpayers to: “
[..] submit
reasons why the provisions of Part IIA of the Income Tax Act should
not be applied
” and further, why any understatement penalty
should not be imposed. Also, SARS gives the taxpayers 60 days to
respond. It
points out that this period is in terms of section 80J,
but it redounds to the benefit of the taxpayers as it is longer than
the
21 days for a response provided by section 42(2)(b).
[23]
But the taxpayers have subsequently argued that if the July letter
purports to comply with section
42(2)(b) then it is deficient on
other grounds.
[24]
First, it is argued that to comply with section 42(2)(b) the notice
has to come after audit has
been concluded. They make two arguments
in this respect. Firstly,
ex
facie
the letter itself it says: “
SARS
has completed a ‘preliminary audit in respect of certain of the
transactions”
.
The taxpayers state that a preliminary audit is not an audit that has
been concluded.
[4]
Next, they
make a contextual argument. Because subsequent to the July letter
SARS requested further information from them which
they provided,
this suggests the audit could not have been concluded in July.
[25]
The taxpayers next ground was that the July letter was deficient
because it did not set out the
amount that had been assessed. It was
only later in the March letter, to which the taxpayers were not
invited to respond, that
their tax liability was set out in a
table.
[5]
[26]
The position of the taxpayers at the end of the argument appears to
be this. Neither the March
letter nor the July letter comply with
section 42(2)(b). The March letter did not give them the right to
respond, hence it was
not compliant with the 21 day requirement of
the section, and they were denied their right to be heard. The July
letter whilst
giving the taxpayers an opportunity to respond is also
non-compliant with the section because the audit had not yet been
concluded
at that time, and in addition, no amount for the assessment
was stipulated. Thus, irrespective of which letter purports to
be the section 42(2)(b) notice they have been denied
audi
. The
only difference is that in relation to the March letter they were
given no further opportunity to respond before the assessment
and
hence the denial of
audi
was absolute. While they were given
an opportunity to respond to the July letter, this was inadequate
because it was given to them
prematurely (the investigation had not
been concluded) and without all the facts (no assessment amount was
stipulated) and hence
was inadequate and accordingly again a denial
of
audi
. But SARS does not rely on the March letter as its
compliance with section 42(2)(b). The taxpayers must accept this
fact. This
then leads to further consideration of the July letter.
That entails an examination of what constitutes adequate
audi.
[27]
Although a number of cases were cited which deal with the
significance of
audi
they were not in point as the July letter
cannot be construed as an outright denial of
audi
. Both
sections 80J and 42(2)(b) create an iterative process. The taxpayer
is given SARS’ initial view and then given
an opportunity to
respond to it, then there are further requests for information before
a final view is adopted.
[28]
Here a decision that the taxpayers also relied on from the Federal
Court of Australia which was
cited with approval by the SCA in the
Phambili
Fisheries
case
[6]
has been more helpful
because it deals with the test of the adequacy of
audi
in an iterative administrative process.
[29]
In that case,
Ansett
Transport Industries (Operations) Pty Ltd v Wraith
[7]
,
the court explained this in two ways. First, it explained the
rationale for doing so:
“
[The]
decision-maker [must]) explain his decision in a way which will
enable a person aggrieved to say, in effect: 'Even though
I may not
agree with it, I now understand why the decision went against me. I
am now in a position to decide whether that decision
has involved an
unwarranted finding of fact, or an error of law, which is worth
challenging.
[30]
Then it explained, and hence relevant to the present case, the
threshold for the adequacy of
reasons:
“
This requires
that the decision-maker should set out his understanding of the
relevant law any findings of fact on which his conclusions
depend
(especially) if those acts have been in dispute and the reasoning
processes which led him to those conclusions. He should
do so in
clear and unambiguous language, not in vague generalities or the
formal language of legislation. The appropriate length
of the
statement covering such matters will depend upon considerations such
as the nature and importance of the decision, its complexity
and the
time available to formulate the statement.”
[31]
But as this decision contemplates in order to determine adequacy this
requires an exercise in
examining the facts. SARS contends in its
argument on the merits of the review that it has given adequate
audi
.
However, it argues this point does not need to be decided now given
its preliminary objections to which I now turn.
SARS
in limine
objections
[32]
SARS argues that the review is incompetent on two grounds. First, the
case cannot be considered
without a direction from this court in
terms of section 105 of the TAA. Although belatedly such a direction
was sought, SARS argues
that the threshold to get such a direction
has not been made out in the papers. Secondly, relief is incompetent
because the taxpayers
have failed to exhaust their internal remedies
as required in terms of section 7(2) of PAJA. Both statutes require
the taxpayers
to show that exceptional circumstances exist.
Section
105 of the TAA
[33]
This section states:
“
A
taxpayer may only dispute an assessment or ‘decision’ as
described in section 104 in proceedings under this Chapter,
unless a
High Court otherwise directs”
[34]
Section 105, in its current form, is relatively recent. Prior to this
as the SCA explained in
the leading case on this section,
Rappa
Holdings
:
[8]
“
Pre-amendment,
the taxpayer could elect to take an assessment on review to the high
court instead of following the prescribed procedure.
That is no
longer the case. The amendment was meant to make clear that the
default rule is that a taxpayer had to follow the prescribed
procedure unless a high court directs otherwise.”
[9]
[35]
Section 105 must then be the point of departure before I consider any
other issues. Without a
direction as contemplated in that section the
High Court does not have jurisdiction over a case of this nature.
Again, in
Rappa,
the SCA followed an earlier decision of the Constitutional Court in
the
Standard
Bank
case which held that where there is a jurisdiction challenge this
must be decided first.
[10]
[36]
The taxpayers did not deal with this section in their notice of
motion or in their founding affidavit.
It was raised by SARS in its
answering affidavit, and it was only dealt with by the taxpayers in
their replying affidavit, although
it is apparent from the tone of
this affidavit that this was a reluctant concession. Nevertheless, at
the same time they also amended
their notice of motion to include the
following relief:
“
To
the extent necessary, the applicants are exempted, in terms of
section 7(2)(c)
of the
Promotion of Administrative Justice Act, 2000
,
from exhausting their internal remedies; and it is directed that this
review may proceed in terms of
section
105
of the
Tax Administration Act, 2011
.”
[11]
[37]
Even this formulation – with its ‘
extent necessary’
qualification - exhibits the taxpayers ambivalence about the need for
them to get a direction. But be that as it may, the reluctance
is now
history. Granted SARS contended that this change of direction could
not be made in a replying affidavit. The taxpayers contended
in
response that this was not a new case being made out to justify the
amended relief, as the same issues had already been raised
in the
founding papers. I am prepared to accept that this is the case and go
on to the fundamental issue which is whether a case
for a direction
in terms of
section 105
or under
section 7(2)(c)
of PAJA has been
sufficiently made out.
[38]
Section 105
does not stipulate what the threshold test should be. But
this has now been clarified in
Rappa
.
[39]
There the court held, referring to
section 105
that:
“
Its
purpose is to make clear that the default rule is that a taxpayer may
only dispute an assessment by the objection and appeal
procedure
under the TAA and may not resort to the high court unless permitted
to do so by order of that court.
The
high court will only permit such a deviation in exceptional
circumstances
. This much is
clear from the language, context, history and purpose of the
section.”
(My underlining)
[40]
Similarly, in terms of
section 7(2)(c)
of PAJA the test for a court
to exempt a party from following internal remedies is “
exceptional
circumstances”
. Thus, although SARS has raised both
section
105
of the TAA and
section 7(2)(c)
of PAJA, and formally they
constitute separate enquiries, the analysis under both will be the
same, given the identical threshold,
albeit the one emerges from case
law and the other from the language of the text.
Exceptional
circumstances – the law
[41]
I turn now to what case the taxpayers have made out for exceptional
circumstances. In their replying
affidavit the taxpayers set out
three grounds for exceptional circumstances. These are:
a) The
nature of the dispute is purely legal. The High Court is on this
argument in as good a position to decide
the matter as the Tax Court;
b) Both
parties have fully argued their legal positions; and
c) The
issue in the case are such as to have a bearing on SARS future
practice and later cases.
[42]
Only the first point is relevant. The second point is merely a
rationale for not having made
the argument in founding papers and the
third, is an attempt to add some flesh to the first but is not
distinctive.
[43]
The nub of the argument then is that if SARS has not complied with
the requirements of
section 42(2)(b)
of the TAA, this is a purely
legal issue and hence qualifies as an exceptional circumstance. The
taxpayers rely on
FP (Pty) Ltd
where Cloete J, sitting in the
Tax Court held that:
“
In my view the
decision in Absa in fact reinforces SARS' argument that the
taxpayer's review application to the Tax Court, when
there is already
an appeal pending before it, constitutes an irregular step. Even if
one assumes that the taxpayer had no procedural
control over the
referral of the appeal to the Tax Court it remained open to it and
still does to approach the High Court or leave
to institute a review
application in that court while simultaneously seeking a stay of the
appeal proceedings pending the determination
of the review. The
taxpayer's complaint that it was deprived of fair administrative
action particularly in view of the stance adopted
by SARS in respect
of
s 42
and s I06 of the
TAA
should qualify as an 'exceptional circumstance’ since it goes
to the root of the taxpayer's constitutionally entrenched
s 33
right
although it is not for me but the High Court to make a determination
in this regard.
"
[12]
(My underlining)
[44]
The
ABSA
case that Cloete J refers to, is the decision in this division by
Sutherland DJP in
ABSA
Bank v Commissioner for the South African Revenue Services
.
[13]
That case like the present one concerned the application of a
section
80J
letter and its aftermath in the form of an assessment. Whilst no
challenge to compliance with
section 42(2)(b)
was raised, the
taxpayer did seek the withdrawal of the 80J notice in terms of
section 9
of the TAA. The court found that the dispute between the
taxpayer and SARS, which turned on whether the taxpayer had knowledge
of what SARS construed a tax avoidance, was a purely legal dispute.
This was because SARS had accepted that the taxpayer was ignorant
in
its
section 80J
notice, hence the court found that there was no
dispute of fact. The case therefore turned purely on a point of law.
The court
then went on to consider what constituted exceptional
circumstances and concluded that: “
Exceptional
circumstances include a dispute that turns wholly on a point of
law.”
[14]
The court then found it had jurisdiction to review the letters of
assessment and to review the decision to refuse to withdraw the
section 80J
notices.
[45]
But SARS argues that the
Rappa
case, decided after the ABSA
decision, puts an end to this argument that a pure dispute of law
amounts to an exceptional circumstance.
The
Rappa
decision
makes it clear that the default position is that tax disputes reside
in the specialist tribunals created by the legislature.
Thus, the
mere fact that a dispute raises a pure point of law does not, of its
own, create exceptional circumstances.
[46]
As the court explained:
“
Rappa contends
that it may circumvent the appeal procedure under the TAA by taking
the assessments on review to the high court because
its attack is
directed at the legality of the assessments on grounds of review and
not on their merit. But, as I shall endeavour
to show, that is no
reason, without more, to simply circumvent the appeal procedure,
which involves a complete reconsideration
of the assessments.
[15]
[47]
In
Rappa
the court went on to consider the case law on the nature of the tax
court. Courts have held that the tax court is not a court of
appeal
in the ordinary sense. Instead, it is a court of revision which has
powers and functions that are unique. (
Africa
Cash and Carry v Commissioner, SARS)
[16]
[48]
This analysis led the court in Rappa to observe that:
“
This
wide power of revision of the tax court includes the power to
determine the legality of an assessment on grounds of review.”
[17]
Exceptional
circumstances test post Rappa
[49]
Post Rappa the law is now clear. The default rule is that disputes
are to be heard in the tax
court. This means the applicant must
make out a case for exceptional circumstances and the mere fact that
the case simply
raises a question of law does not suffice to
constitute an exceptional circumstance.
[50]
The taxpayers as was noted earlier reluctantly made their case out in
this point and then only
in replying papers. For this reason, as SARS
points out, their arguments have shifted during the course of the
case. First, they
had argued that the tax court lacked review
jurisdiction over the subject matter of the reviews in this matter.
That argument was
not made subsequently but what then emerged in the
second set of heads of argument is that even though both courts may
have jurisdiction
it would be appropriate for the High Court to
assume jurisdiction because their review point is good. But as SARS
points out prospects
for success do not justify failing to exhaust
internal remedies. Such an approach was rejected by the SCA in
Nichol
and Another v Registrar of Pension Funds and Others
.
[18]
That case dealt with
section 7(2)
of PAJA but as a matter of
principle it is equally applicable here.
[51]
In
Nicho
l the court stated:
“
It is based on
the proposition that Nichol is entitled to be exempted from complying
with the requirements of
s 7(2)(a)
of PAJA and exhausting his
internal remedies merely because —so it is contended —
his case on the merits of the main
application is strong. This cannot
be so. Taken to its logical conclusion, such an approach would defeat
the purpose of
s 7(2)
, which requires an applicant for judicial
review to have exhausted his or her internal remedies before
resorting to review proceedings.
Allegations
of procedural or substantive administrative irregularities per se are
not 'exceptional' in review proceedings
.”
[19]
(My
underlining)
[52]
What then are exceptional circumstances in this case? In
Rappa
the court quotes the decision of Thring J in
MV Ais Mamas Seatrans
Maritime v Owners, MV Ais Mamas,
where the court discussed the
meaning:
“
1. What is
ordinarily contemplated by the words "exceptional circumstances"
is something out of the ordinary and of an
unusual nature; something
which is excepted in the sense that the general rule does not apply
to it; something uncommon, rare or
different...
2. To be exceptional
the circumstances concerned must arise out of, or be incidental to,
the particular case.
3. Whether or not
exceptional circumstances exist is not a decision which depends upon
the exercise of a judicial discretion: their
existence or otherwise
is a matter of fact which the Court must decide accordingly.
4. Depending on the
context in which it is used, the word 'exceptional' has two shades of
meaning: the primary meaning is unusual
or different; the secondary
meaning is markedly unusual or specially different.”
[20]
[53]
The shifting sands of the taxpayers’ arguments in this matter
can be summarised as follows:
a)
If the March letter is the
section
42(2)(b)
notice, then it fails to comply with the section because it
did not allow the taxpayers their right to respond in terms of
section 42(3).
Hence since it was at the same time accompanied
by the assessment letter, they were denied
audi
alteram partem
.
b)
But
this argument must fail on the facts
.
SARS contends the July letter constituted the
section 42(2)(b)
notice
although admittedly not labelled as such. SARS version on this must
be accepted on a
Plascon-
Evans
approach.
[21]
Once this is the
case any further debate on the contents of the March letter is
irrelevant – it is the wrong target.
c)
However, this does not decide the case. This is because even
if the correct candidate for the
section 42(2)(b)
notice is the
earlier July letter, the taxpayers raise other points as to why it
was not compliant with the section in two respects;
(i) it was
premature, because the audit had not been concluded; and (ii) most
latterly, in the final note from the taxpayers, it
is argued that the
July letter did not specify an amount and hence was non -compliant
and thus if they were correct on this interpretation,
would be a pure
point of law.
[54] I
will deal with the last point first. This is because it is a purely
legal point and it is novel as well,
and hence, may, arguably, have
some claim to being exceptional. The taxpayers argue that when
section 42(2
)(b) refers to SARS obligation in the
section 42(2(b)
notice to
include “[…] the grounds for the proposed
assessment or decision…”
this means the proposed
amount must be specified. This was not done in the July letter,
although as I indicated, was set out in
a table in the later March
letter. They argue that the purpose for stipulating an amount is that
the taxpayer can in its response
in terms of
section 42(3)
respond to
errors without having to go through the internal objection and appeal
process.
[55]
SARS contends the term ‘
grounds’
contemplate
‘reasons’ not an ‘amount’. As support for
this it points out that where the legislature intends
to state
amounts it does so. Thus, in
section 96(1)
, which deals with
assessments, the various items that must be stated in the assessment
are listed. Amongst these listed is that
contained in sub-paragraph
(d) which states “
[…] the amount of the assessment
”.
This is to be clearly distinguished from
grounds
which are
referenced again in
section 96(2)
where the following is stated:
“
In addition to
the information provided in terms of subsection (1) SARS must give
the person assessed –
a) in the case of an
assessment described in
section 95
or an assessment that is not fully
based on a return submitted by the taxpayer, a statement
of
the grounds for the assessment
.”
(My
underlining)
[56]
Thus, if in the same section of the TAA, the concepts of
amounts
and
grounds
are used distinctively, then one can assume the
same approach can be taken to the interpretation of
section 42(2)(b).
Put simply, if the legislature had intended that the 42(2)(b) notice
must include the amount it would have said so expressly. It
is
therefore reasonable to assume, SARS argues, that the term grounds
for the assessment does not mean the amount of the assessment.
[57]
I agree with this interpretation. Apart from this giving the term
‘
grounds’
its
ordinary grammatical meaning it also accords with the language of
section 42(3)
which provides for the response of the taxpayer to the
receipt of a
section 42
notice.
[22]
Here
the taxpayer is given the right to respond to the “
facts
and
conclusions
set out in the document
”.
This suggests a shade of meaning for grounds as a set of facts and
conclusions, not necessarily an amount.
[58]
Nor is the taxpayers argument that the meaning in a section
concerning an assessment cannot be
used to interpret a different
section of the Act persuasive.
[59]
As Kellaway writes in his textbook on statutory interpretation:
“
Where the
legislature uses the same word in the same enactment it should be
given the same meaning”
[23]
.
[60]
As authority for this proposition, he cites what Steyn JA held in
Minister of Interior v Machadorp Investments (Pty) Ltd
:
“
[…] it
may reasonably be supposed that out of a proper concern for the
intelligibility of its language, it would intend the
word to be
understood, where no clear indication to the contrary is given, in
the same sense throughout the enactment
”
[61]
Kellaway goes on to state:
“
South African
courts have also said that a word which has a meaning as used in a
provision of a statute should be construed as having
the same sense
throughout the statute unless it is obvious that the intention of the
legislature is that it should have a different
or wider or restricted
meaning.”
[24]
[62]
There is no reason why the legislature should have intended to give
an extended meaning to the
term
grounds
in section 42(2)(b) to
include amount, having clearly intended to restrict its meaning in
section 96 by referring to these terms
separately. Thus, to the
extent that the taxpayers raise what might be considered a pure point
of law, and one arguably exceptional
because of its uniqueness, I do
not consider this point of interpretation to be correct and thus so
decisive that it should clinch
the argument in their favour of
justifying a section 105 direction.
[63]
The remaining points on the July letter are not pure points of law
because they raise issues
of mixed facts and law. Thus, the taxpayers
allegation that the audit had not been concluded by the time of the
July letter, is
denied in the answering affidavit by SARS deponent Dr
Marcus and is therefore a fact in dispute. Moreover, this is not
simply a
matter of what he said in the answering affidavit. In the
July letter the second paragraph states: “
SARS has completed
its preliminary audit”
.
[64]
Granted the taxpayers relying on the
Wightman
case try to argue that the bare denial in the answering affidavit is
insufficient because the subsequent correspondence between
SARS and
the taxpayers suggests the contrary.
[25]
Further they argue that the word ‘
preliminary’
is antithetical to the notion of conclusion. But this is not
necessarily the case. Equally valid is the point SARS makes that the
term ‘
preliminary
’
merely acknowledges the nature of the iterative process, because
following the notice SARS would still consider any representations
made by the taxpayers.
[65]
Nevertheless, whether it was genuinely final or not is a question of
fact that cannot be decided
on the papers. The decision on finality
of an audit is one to be made by SARS not the taxpayers. What the
taxpayers are suggesting
then is that SARS is not bona fide on this
point. But this does not assist them in extracting a pure point of
law. It still remains
a mixed question of fact and law and hence does
not on the case law meet the grounds of being exceptional.
[66]
Finally, the point is taken that the reasons given were not adequate.
Testing this proposition
requires engaging with the issues SARS sets
out in the July letter as well as the responses from the taxpayers
and SARS final view
expressed in its March letter. This what
the Australian Federal Court explained in
Ansett Transport
Industries.
[67]
It is precisely the type of enquiry best suited to the specialist
court because the question
of adequacy cannot be decided without
engaging with reasoning of both sides on the core issue raised by
GAAR – which is whether
the arrangement ‘[…]
lacks
commercial substance in whole or in part
.” This issue then
is a mixed question of fact and law and does not meet the
exceptionality threshold.
[68]
Nor is the burden of requiring parties to exhaust internal remedies a
technical machination to
deny a party their day in court. There
are important policy grounds for doing so as the Constitutional Court
has explained
in
Koyabe
.
[26]
I mention only some of them relevant here. They are;
undermining the autonomy of the administrative process; prematurity;
and the need to benefit from specialist knowledge.
Alternative
for the taxpayers
[69]
All the issues raised by the taxpayers can be decided in terms of the
provisions of the TAA.
First the objection process and then failing
that the right to appeal.
[70]
Nor are the taxpayers prejudiced from having to go through a whole
appeal if they might succeed
on their review point. As was held by
Binns-Ward in
Forge
Packaging
the
rules of the Tax Court allow a party to argue a point of law before
the appeal is decided.
[27]
[71]
Nor do the taxpayers require SARS to withdraw its decision in terms
of section 9 of the TAA.
That section makes it clear that an
objection and appeal can be made without the need for a withdrawal
because this process is
excluded by the language of that section.
[28]
SARS correctly
argues that there is nothing that the taxpayers could obtain from a
withdrawal that they could not get from
the objection and appeal
process. I therefore do not consider there is any basis for this
relief either, given the nature of the
internal remedies available to
them.
[72]
The concern of the taxpayers in this matter seems less about whether
they have an adequate remedy
by following their internal remedies in
terms of the TAA than the fact, oft cited in their heads of argument,
that by going that
route they are prejudiced by having to follow the
‘pay now argue later principle’. That may be a burden to
them, but
it is not one relevant to whether this court should
exercise its jurisdiction in terms of section 105. That is the fate
of all
taxpayers who dispute a SARS assessment – it is not a
basis for exceptional circumstances.
Conclusion
[73]
SARS succeeds in its preliminary objections. The taxpayers have not
made out a case for this
matter to be heard in the High Court in
terms of section 105 of the TAA. For the same reasons but by a
different mechanism they
have not made out a case for why they have
not exhausted their internal remedies in terms of the TAA, and thus
they have not complied
with section 7(2) of PAJA. Despite their
initial contentions to the contrary these are threshold issues which
they must meet and
for the reasons I have given, they have not done
so. The application fails.
[73]
Costs should follow cause. This was the type of case that required
the engagement of two counsel.
Hence, I award costs on this basis.
ORDER:-
[74]
In the result the following order is made:
1.
The
application is dismissed.
2. The
applicants, jointly and severally, the one paying the others to be
absolved, are liable for the costs of
the respondent, including the
costs of two counsel.
N.
MANOIM
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION
PRETORIA
Date
of hearing: 02 May 2023 – 03 May 2023 ( The case we heard in
Johannesburg)
Date
of judgment: 24 July 2023
Appearances:
Counsel for the
Applicants:
V Maleka SC
J Boltar
T Scott
Instructed
by.
Werksmans
Attorneys
Counsel
for Respondent:
G
Marcus SC
M
Mbikiwa
Instructed
by:
RW
Attorneys
[1]
I
make no finding that this is the case. This is the import of one of
the arguments made by the trustees’ counsel during
the hearing
before me.
[2]
Section 42(1) states: “
A
SARS official involved in or responsible for an audit under this
Chapter must, in the form and in the manner as may be prescribed
by
the Commissioner by public notice, provide the taxpayer with a
notice of commencement of an audit and, thereafter, a report
indicating the stage of
completion
of the audit”.
[3]
Section
80A(a)(ii).
[4]
The
subsection refers to
conclusion
of the audit not
completion,
but
I don’t understand that the taxpayers make anything of this
point; their focus is on the choice of the word preliminary.
[5]
This
is contained in paragraph 6 of the March letter which I referred to
earlier in paragraph 16.
[6]
Minister
of Environmental Affairs & Tourism v Phambili Fisheries (Pty)
Ltd
2003 (6) SA 407
(SCA) par 40
[7]
[1983]FCA 179; (1983)48 ALR 500, 507
[8]
Commissioner
for South African Revenue Services v Rappa Resources (Pty) Ltd
2023
JDR 0861 (SCA)
[9]
Ibid
paragraphs
17- 18.
Rappa
was decided in 2023, sometime after the pleadings in this case had
closed, and the initial heads of argument were filed. SARS
places
much reliance on this decision, and it explains why the parties
arguments have shifted during the course of this litigation
in
response and hence the filing of several further sets of heads of
argument.
[10]
Competition
Commission of South Africa v Standard Bank of South Africa
[2020] ZACC 2
;
2020 (4) BCLR 429
CC (Standard Bank).
[11]
This
became paragraph 2A of the amended notice of motion.
[12]
Commissioner
for the South African Revenue Service v FP (Pty) Ltd
[2021] ZATC 8
;
84 SATC 321
paragraphs 57-58.
[13]
2021(3)
SA513(GP). I was advised from the Bar that this decision has been
the subject of an appeal to the SCA but at the time
of this decision
the outcome is not known.
[14]
Ibid
paragraph 49.
[15]
Rappa
,
supra, paragraph 12.
[16]
[2019]
ZASCA 148; 2020 (2) SA 19 (SCA)
[17]
Rappa
,
supra, paragraph 14.
[18]
2008(1)
SA 383 SA, paragraphs 23-24.
[19]
Ibid,
paragraph 24.
[20]
2002 (6) SA 150
(C) at 156H- 157C.
[21]
Plascon-Evans
Paints Ltd v Van Riebeeck Paints (Pty) Ltd
1984 (3) SA 623 (A).
[22]
The
Oxford dictionary defines ‘grounds’ as “
factors
forming a basis for action or for the justification of a belief
.
“
[23]
EA
Kellaway, “
Principles
of legal Interpretation of statutes, contracts and wills”
.
(Butterworths), paragraph 7.4
[24]
Ibid.
[25]
Wightman
t/a JW Construction v Headfour (Pty) Ltd
[2008] ZASCA 6
;
2008 (3) SA 371
(SCA) par 13.
[26]
Koyabe
v Minister of Home Affairs 2010(4) SA 327 (CC) paragraphs 36-38.
[27]
Forge
Packaging (Pty) Ltd v The Commissioner of the South African Revenue
Service
[2022]
ZAWCHC 119
(13 June 2022) paragraph 44. The learned judge referred
to Tax Court rule 42 read with Uniform rule 33(4).
[28]
This section states:
9
Decision or notice by SARS
(1)
A decision made by a SARS official or a notice to a specific person
issued by SARS under a tax Act,
excluding a decision given effect
to in an assessment or a notice of assessment that is subject to
objection and appeal
, may in the discretion of a SARS official
described in paragraph (a), (b) or (c) or at the request of the
relevant person, be
withdrawn or amended by-
a)
the SARS official;
(b)
a SARS official to whom the SARS official reports; or
(c)
a senior SARS official.
(my underlining)
sino noindex
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