Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 1209South Africa
Citibank, N.A. South African Branch and Another v Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service (2022/043103) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1209; 2024 (1) SA 429 (GP); 87 SATC 321 (20 September 2023)
Headnotes
employees’ tax from such remuneration as their employer.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Citibank, N.A. South African Branch and Another v Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service (2022/043103) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1209; 2024 (1) SA 429 (GP); 87 SATC 321 (20 September 2023)
Citibank, N.A. South African Branch and Another v Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service (2022/043103) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1209; 2024 (1) SA 429 (GP); 87 SATC 321 (20 September 2023)
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# REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA,
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
Case
No:
2022-043103
REPORTABLE: NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:NO
REVISED:
NO
DATE:
20 September 2023
In
the matter between:
CITIBANK,
N.A.
First
Applicant
SOUTH
AFRICA BRANCH
CITIGROUP
GLOBAL MARKETS (PTY) LTD
Second
Applicant
and
THE
COMMMISSIONER
Respondent
FOR
THE SOUTH AFRICAN REVENUE SERVICE
# JUDGEMENT
JUDGEMENT
MOOKI AJ
1
The first applicant (“Citibank SA”)
is a corporation chartered in the United States of America.
It carries on the business of a bank in
South Africa by means of a branch.
Citibank
SA is a part of Citigroup Inc (“Citigroup”), a global
group of companies with fiscal branches throughout the
world.
Citibank SA is registered for value-added tax in South Africa.
2
The second applicant is a private company
registered in accordance with South African law.
It too is part of Citigroup Inc. It is a
wholly owned subsidiary of Citigroup Financial Products Incorporated
(USA).
The second
applicant is a member of the Johannesburg Stock Exchange.
It is also registered for value-added tax.
3
The respondent is the Commissioner for the
South African Revenue Service.
The
respondent is responsible for the administration of the Value-Added
Tax Act No 89 of 1991, together with the
Tax Administration Act No 28
of 2011
.
4
The applicants seek the following relief:
1
It
is
declared
that
payments
made
by
the
first
and
second applicants
to
the
Citigroup
home
country
entities,
in
relation
to seconded employees, comprise the
reimbursement of salary costs paid to the first and second
applicants’ employees on behalf
of the first and second
applicants, which fall outside the scope of value- added tax, and
which are exempt from section 7 (1) (c)
of the Value-Added Tax Act No
89 of 1991 (as amended) and (“VAT Act”) in terms of
section 14 (5) (d) of the VAT Act;
2.
The respondent is ordered to pay the
applicants’ costs including the costs of two counsel, where so
employed;
3.
Further and/or alternative relief.
5
The respondent opposes the relief being
sought.
6
Citigroup has a global presence. Persons
employed by members of
Citigroup
are seconded to constituents of Citigroup in other countries. The
constituent companies are described as “Home Country
Entities.”
A Home Country Entity in a country may second its employees to a Home
Country Entity in a different country. A
Home Country Entity
concludes an assignment agreement with employees who are to be
seconded to another Home Country Entity.
7
I describe the Home Country Entity that
seconds an employee as “the Sending Home Entity.” The
Home Country Entity that
receives an employee is “the Receiving
Home Entity.”
8
The Sending Home Entity and the Receiving
Home Entity conclude an “Intra-City
Service
Agreement”
concerning
the
seconding
of
employees.
There
is a further Citigroup constituent company that is involved in the
seconding of employees. This company is called “Citigroup,
N.A.”
9
The relationships among the Citigroup
constituent companies and the agreements mentioned above are material
to a determination of
the relief sought by the applicants.
10
The assignment agreement stipulates as
follows. The Sending Home Entity lends the services of the seconded
employees to the Receiving
Home Entity. The lending is done in terms
of an inter-company agreement between the Sending Home Entity and the
Receiving Home
Entity. The inter-company agreement is “for the
supply of employee services.”
11
The assignment agreement also provides
that: a seconded employee will be on an “expatriate
assignment.” A person seconded
by the Sending Home Entity
remains an employee of the Sending Home Entity in that “During
this time you will not be an employee
of [the Receiving Home Entity].
A seconded
employee
is
also
not
an
employee
of
Citigroup,
N.A.
Citigroup,
N.A.
administers the “expatriate salary and benefits” of a
seconded employee. It does so “as agent” of the
Sending
Home Entity.
12
The following appears in the intra-city
agreement:
12.1
Citibank SA is described as “Service
Recipient”, with the counterparty described as “Service
Provider.”
12.2
The “Standard Pricing Method”
is “Cost plus mark-up – includes salaries, benefits,
incentive comp (sic),
and other expenses related to personnel engaged
in the rendering of Services […]”
13
The
applicants
make
the
case
as
described
below
in
connection
with
the
relief that they seek.
14
The
applicants
are
a
Receiving
Home
Entity
in
relation
to
the
seconded
employees.
15
The applicants contend that the seconded
employees are employees of the applicants, for the following reasons:
15.1
The seconded employees place their
productive capacity at the disposal of the applicants and furthered
the enterprise of the applicants
in the course of their employment.
15.2
The applicants have the right of
supervision and control over the seconded employees for the duration
of their secondment to the
applicants.
15.3
Applicants paid the Sending Home Entity for
the supply of the seconded employees’ services to the
applicants, who in turn
made payment to the seconded employees. The
amount so paid were at all relevant times equal to the remuneration
due by the Sending
Home Entity to the seconded employees, and no
mark-up thereon was charged or paid.
15.4
The seconded employees received
remuneration for the supply of their services to the applicants, and
the applicants deducted and
withheld
employees’
tax
from
such
remuneration
as
their
employer.
16
The
seconded
employees
are
employees are also employed by the Sending
Home Entity.
17
The applicants say they are not liable for
value-added tax on the supply by the seconded employees’ of
services to the applicants.
That
is because value-added tax is not payable in respect of a supply by a
person of services contemplated in proviso (iii)(aa)
to the
definition of “enterprise”, i.e., the rendering of
services by an employee to his employer in the course of
his
employment, to the extent that remuneration is paid to such employee.
18
In terms of s 7(1)(a) read with proviso
(iii)(aa) to the definition of “enterprise” in s 1 of the
VAT Act, no VAT may
be levied on the supply by the seconded
employees’ of services to the applicant.
19
The applicants say services rendered by the
seconded employees are not “imported” services.
They further contend that, and even if the
services are “imported services”, VAT that would be
chargeable in terms of
s 7(1)(c) of the VAT Act is not payable where
the seconded employees provide services to the applicants in the
course of their
employment with the applicants, as contemplated in s
14(5)(d) of the VAT Act.
20
The applicants conclude that no value-added
tax is chargeable or payable
by
the applicants to SARS on (in respect of) the services supplied (to
the applicants) by the seconded employees.
21
The applicants say that the system by which
the applicants engage seconded employees, with the home entity paying
the seconded employees
and the applicants in turn paying the home
entity, result in the following outcome:
21.1
There is no imported services in relation
to the seconded employees.
21.2
The seconded employees render services of
an employee to his employer in the course of their employment.
21.3
The reimbursement payments fall outside the
scope of VAT.
21.4
Applicants are not liable for value-added
tax in terms of section 7(1)(c).
22
The respondent maintains an opposite
stance. The case for the respondent is as detailed below.
23
The question, according to the respondent,
is not whether seconded employees are employees in terms of South
African law.
The
question is whether the applicants are liable to pay VAT on such
imported services. These entail, amongst others, determining
whether
the applicants are employers of seconded employees in terms of the
definition of employer in the relevant tax acts.
24
The respondent says it is not the case that
being an employee in labour law equates to being an employee for the
purposes of the
VAT issue in this case.
25
The respondent disputes that the seconded
individuals are employees of
the
applicants; that [the Sending Home Entity] pays the salaries of these
individuals on behalf of the applicants; and that the
applicants
reimburse the [Sending Home Entity].
26
The seconded individuals are supplied in
terms of “
Intra-Citi agreements
”
which indicate that the seconded individuals are supplied by the
relevant [Sending Home Entity] as service provider to Citibank
SA.
The payments made by Citibank SA in terms of these agreements are
payments made to the service provider, the [Sending Home
Entity], for
the seconded employees as payment made for a service in terms of the
relevant service agreement.
27
In addition, the applicants contend that
the secondment is achieved by the conclusion of an assignment
agreement, which expressly
confirms that seconded individuals remain
employees of the [Sending Home Entity] and that salaries are
administered by Citigroup
NA on behalf of the employer, the [Sending
Home Entity].
28
There is no support that seconded employees
report directly to the applicants or are under the supervision and
control of the “South
African operations”. The
individuals remain employees of the [Sending Home Entity] during the
expatriate assignment.
29
The respondent contends that tax
legislation defines “employees” differently from what
constitutes an employee for labour
law purposes. The seconded
personnel are not employees for purposes of the VAT Act or the Fourth
Schedule to the Income Tax Act.
30
The applicants pay the Citigroup Home
country entities.
Those
entities are not employees as defined in the Fourth Schedule to the
Income Tax Act.
31
The respondent says the applicants do not
pay remuneration for services rendered by its employees.
32
The respondent makes the following further
contentions regarding payments by the applicants, with reference to
the intra-city service
agreements between the applicants and the
Sending Home Entity:
Payments
by Citibank SA are payments for a service in terms of a service
agreement, and such payments do not constitute the recovery
of a
disbursement.
33
The intra-city service agreements do not
indicate that “the service
provider”
is obliged to pay salaries to seconded employees on behalf of the
applicants. The agreements do not support the
contention that the
seconded employees are employees of the applicants, or that a
“Citigroup Home country entity” pays
the salary, related
contributions and travel costs of seconded employees.
34
The respondent also points out that,
according to the intra-city service agreements, payments by the
applicants in relation to the
seconded employees do not constitute
the cost of the salary and other contributions
without
a “markup” and that the standard pricing method for every
product or service furnished by the relevant “Citigroup
Home
country entity” is “cost plus applicable markup”.
Analysis
35
The applicants do not deal with the meaning
of “employer” or “employee”, as defined in
paragraph 1 of the
Fourth Schedule to the Income Tax Act, in
addressing the nature of the relationship between the applicants and
the seconded employees.
This would have been expected to be factored
into
the
applicants’ persuasion of the court as to the nature of the
relationship between the applicants and the seconded employees.
36
The applicants were expected to show why
the court ought to have regard, in determining the nature of the
relationship between the
applicants and the seconded employees, to
the definition of “employer” and “employee”
only according to
the labour laws. This was not done. I agree with
the contention on behalf of the respondent that, given that the
relief deals with
a taxation issue, and that this issue requires
consideration of the meaning
of
the concepts “employee”, “employer”, and
“remuneration”; that these concepts are dealt with
in the
taxation statutes for purposes of the subject matter of the relief
sought.
37
The relevant legislation provides as
detailed below.
38
Section 7(1)(c) of the VAT Act provides as
follows:
“
(1)
Subject to the exemptions, exceptions, deductions and adjustments
provided for in this Act, there shall be levied and paid for
the
benefit of the National Revenue Fund a tax, to be known as the
value-added tax […]
(c)
on the supply of any imported
services by any person on or after the commencement date …”
39
Section 1 defines “
imported
services”
as:
“
a
supply of services that is made by a supplier who is resident or
carries on business outside the Republic to a recipient who is
a
resident of the Republic to the extent that such services are
utilized or consumed in the Republic otherwise than for the purpose
of making taxable supplies”.
40
Section 14(5)(d) of the VAT Act provides as
follows: […]
“
(5)
The tax payable in terms of section 7(1)(c) shall not be payable in
respect of –
(d)
a supply by a person of services as
contemplated in terms of proviso (iii)(aa) to the definition of
‘enterprise’ in
section 1”.
41
The proviso reads as follows:
“
Provided
that – (iii)(aa) the rendering of services by an employee to
his employer in the course of his employment or the
rendering of
services by the holder of any office in performing the duty of his
office, shall not be deemed to be the carrying
on of an enterprise to
the extent that any amount constituting remuneration as contemplated
by the definition of ‘remuneration’
in paragraph 1 of the
Fourth Schedule to the Income Tax Act is paid or is payable to such
employee or office holder, as the case
may be
”.
42
An “
employee”
is defined in paragraph 1 of the Fourth
Schedule to the Income Tax Act as:
“
(a)
any person (other than a company) who receives any remuneration or to
whom any remuneration accrues;
(b)
any person who receives any
remuneration or to whom any remuneration accrues by reason of any
services rendered by such person to
or on behalf of a labour broker;
(c)
any labour broker;
(d)
any person or class or category of
person whom the Minister of Finance by notice in the Gazette declares
to be an employee for the
purposes of this definition; or
(e)
any personal service provider”
43
The applicants must show that proviso
(iii)(aa) to the definition of “enterprise” applies as
regards the relationship
between the applicants and the seconded
employees, for the applicants not to otherwise be liable for VAT. The
proviso stipulates
as follows:
“
Provided
that – (iii)(aa) the rendering of services by an employee to
his employer in the course of his employment or the
rendering of
services by the holder of any office in performing the duty of his
office, shall not be deemed to be the carrying
on of an enterprise to
the extent that any amount constituting remuneration as contemplated
by the definition of ‘remuneration’
in paragraph 1 of the
Fourth Schedule to the Income Tax Act is paid or is payable to such
employee or office holder, as the case
may be
”.
44
The applicants must show that:
44.1
The applicants are “employers”
as contemplated in the proviso.
44.2
The
seconded
employees
are
“employees
of
the
applicants”,
also
as
contemplated in the proviso.
44.3
The
seconded
employees
render
services
in
the
course
of
their
employment with the applicants.
44.4
The applicants pay the seconded employees
“remuneration.”
45
An “
employer”
is defined in paragraph 1 of the Fourth
Schedule as:
“
any
person … who pays or is liable to pay to any person any amount
by way of remuneration, and any person responsible for
the payment of
any amount by way of remuneration to any person under the provisions
of any law or out of public funds …
or out of funds voted by
Parliament or a provincial council”.
46
“
Remuneration
”
is defined inter alia as:
“
any
amount of income which is paid or is payable to any person by way of
any salary, leave pay, wage, overtime pay, bonus, gratuity,
commission, fee, emolument, pension, superannuation allowance,
retiring allowance or stipend, whether in cash or otherwise and
whether or not in respect of
services rendered,
[…].
47
The definition of “employer”
contemplates that the “person” being paid by an employer
must be a natural
person. This construction is consistent with the
meaning of “remuneration”, namely “
any
salary, leave pay, wage, overtime pay, bonus, gratuity, commission,
fee, emolument, pension, superannuation allowance, retiring
allowance
or stipend, […]”
. The
categorization connotes application only to natural persons.
48
The
applicants referenced the decision of the Labour Appeal Court in
Denel (Pty) Ltd v Gerber
[1]
to
substantiate their contention that the seconded employees are
employees of the applicants. Denel is authority for the proposition
that one considers the substance, not labels, in determining whether
there is an employment relationship between parties.
49
The applicants refer to “supervision
and control” over performance as an element in considering
whether there is an
employment relationship. This is the language
found in paragraph (ii) of the definition of “remuneration”
in paragraph 1 of the Fourth Schedule to
the Income Tax Act.
50
The respondent took issue with the claim by
the applicants that the seconded
employees
are
under
supervision
and
control
of
the
applicants.
The applicants did not substantiate what constitutes “supervision
and control” of the seconded employees.
For example, they say
nothing about what restrictions, if any, the applicants impose on
seconded employees; such restrictions would
include how much leave
etc. the seconded employees may take. That is the usual form of
“supervision and control” that
an employer has over an
employee. The decision in Denel requires the applicants to have gone
further in justifying why, according
to the applicants, the seconded
employees are employees of the applicants. An assertion that the
seconded employees are under the
supervision and control of the
applicants is precisely the form that the court in Denel said must be
avoided.
51
The applicants, in using the formula of
“supervision and control” in relation to the seconded
employees, did nothing
more but recite the wording of a statute.
52
The applicants do not address the
assignment agreement other than in general terms, by saying the
seconded employees are also employed
by the home country entities in
terms of their contracts of employment. This does not address the
specific injunction in the assignment
agreement that seconded
employees do not become employees of the entity to which they have
been assigned.
53
Applicants do not make payments to seconded
employees. They pay the Sending Home Entity. Citibank, N.A., in
making payments to seconded
employees, does so as “agent”
of the Sending Home Entity.
54
The obligation of the applicants to pay the
Sending Home Entity arises from a reading of both the assignment
agreement and the inter-city
agreement. The assignment agreement
stipulates to the seconded employees that the Sending Home Entity
“lends” the services
of the seconded employees to the
Receiving Home Entity, with the seconded employees remaining
employees of the Sending Home Entity.
55
The high point to the applicants’
case about seconded employees being employees of the applicants is
the unsubstantiated assertion
that the seconded employees are under
the supervision and control of the applicants. The applicants
referenced issuing the seconded
employees with IRP 5 certificates.
There was no further explanation such as, for example, how the salary
of the seconded employees
is treated in the light of the fact that
the Sending Home Entity, according to the assignment agreement,
remains liable for the
salary of the seconded employees; paid by
Citigroup,
N.A. as agent of the Sending
Home Entity.
56
The
respondent submitted that there is no live dispute and that the court
ought to refuse exercising its discretion to grant declaratory
relief
on this account. The mere absence of a live dispute is not a bar to a
court considering whether to grant declaratory relief.
[2]
The
applicants raise an important issue which, in the court’s view,
merits the court considering the relief sought. The respondent’s
response to the issues raised by the applicants demonstrate that the
applicants have raised a weighty issue.
57
The respondent has applied to strike
various averments as inadmissible hearsay. It is unnecessary to
address this application given
my conclusion that the applicants have
not made out a case for the relief sought.
58
The application faulters at two levels.
First, the applicants have not shown that they are “employers”
of the seconded
employees. Second, the applicants have not shown that
payments by the applicants to the Sending Home Entity constitute
“remuneration”
within the meaning contemplated
in proviso (iii)(aa) to the definition of
“enterprise.”
59
I make the following order:
(a)
The application is dismissed.
(b)
The
applicants
are
ordered
to
pay
costs,
including
the
costs
of
two
counsel.
Omphemetse
Mooki
Judge of the High
Court (Acting)
Heard
on:
7
August 2023
Delivered
on:
20
September 2023
For the Applicants:
P A Swanepoel SC
(together with C A Boonzaaier)
Instructed
by:
Cliffe
Dekker Hofmeyr Inc.
For
the Respondent:
F
Southwood SC (together with A Louw), heads also drawn by A
Pantazis.
Instructed
by:
Dyason
Inc.
[1]
[2005]
9 BLLR 849
(LAC)
[2]
Ex
Parte Nell
1963
(1) SA 754
(A)
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