Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 1766South Africa
Sawadogo General Trading C.C. v Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service (33023/2017) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1766 (23 September 2023)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
23 September 2023
Headnotes
the applicant’s appeal concerning SARS' determination of a tariff rebate in terms of section 44(9)(e) of the Customs and Excise Act, 91 of 1975.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Sawadogo General Trading C.C. v Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service (33023/2017) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1766 (23 September 2023)
Sawadogo General Trading C.C. v Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service (33023/2017) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1766 (23 September 2023)
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sino date 23 September 2023
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE
NO:
33023/2017
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED: YES
Date:
23 September 2023
In
the matter between:
SAWADOGO
GENERAL TRADING C.C.
Applicant
and
THE
COMMISSIONER FOR THE SOUTH
AFRICAN
REVENUE SERVICE
Respondent
JUDGMENT
# DE VOS AJ
DE VOS AJ
[1]
The applicant seeks an order compelling the respondent to comply with
an order granted by
this Court on 19 January 2021. The order upheld
the applicant’s appeal concerning SARS' determination of a
tariff rebate
in terms of section 44(9)(e) of the Customs and Excise
Act, 91 of 1975.
[2]
The order provided that –
“
1. The appeal is
upheld
2. The matter is referred
back to the Customs National Appeal Committee for rectification of
the material errors and re-consideration
of the matter
3. The Customs National
Appeals Committee must substantiate their finding with comprehensive
reasons, and if a determination is
made, the basis on which the
determination is calculated and the calculation must be set out
clearly.
4. The issue of costs is
reserved pending the finalisation of the appeal before the Customs
National Appeals Committee.”
[3]
Effectively, the judgment identifies five errors which SARS had made
and mandated SARS to
correct and, once corrected, reconsider the
amounts due by the applicant. The Court referred the matter back to
the Custom and
Excise National Appeal Committee (“Appeals
Committee”) to correct certain errors and reconsider SARS’
determination.
[4]
The judgment resolved a rebate tariff dispute between the parties.
The context within which
the dispute arose is the applicant’s
import of worn clothing for the manufacture of wiping rags and
cleaning cloths. The
applicant holds an import permit and a rebate
permit. The rebate grants a full rebate of customs duty for a
specific volume of
worn clothing. The volume of worn clothing that
the applicant was permitted to import in a year was set out in the
rebate permit.
The applicant claimed a full rebate for its imports.
[5]
However, in 2014, SARS conducted an audit. The outcome of the audit
was that the volume
imported was more than what the rebate covered.
In other words, there were imports which were not covered by the
rebate. SARS picked
up other discrepancies relating to missing
invoices and the difference between the bill of entries and the bond
registers.
[6]
As a result of these discrepancies, SARS issued a letter of demand
claiming R 33 201 952.24.
The applicant appealed against this demand.
The appeal resulted in a reduced letter of demand from SARS. The
reduced amount was
R 21 1331 473.76. The amount was again
reduced, and SARS ultimately claimed an amount of R 15 881 549.51.
[7]
Shortly after the judgment was handed down, the applicant wrote to
SARS asking for the implementation
of the order. SARS respondent that
its original determination had not been set aside by the Court, the
Appeals Committee lacked
jurisdiction to entertain the matter, and
the Court order was erroneously granted, or it contained a patent
error. SARS' position
was that it would not comply with the order but
that it would apply for an order in terms of rule 42 of the Uniform
Rules of Court.
[8]
The applicant again wrote, asking for compliance with the court
order. It appears that SARS
then had an about-turn as it wrote to the
applicant, indicating that the matter is receiving attention. The
applicant heard nothing
more and lodged a contempt application. After
the applicant's contempt application was launched, SARS issued its
alleged redetermination
outcome of the proceedings before its Appeals
Committee.
[9]
The redetermination is dated 21 August 2021. The redetermination
required the applicant
to pay R 15 881 549.51, which was
the amount SARS had determined was due and payable prior to the
redetermination. In
short, the redetermination yielded the same
amount – to the cent – to be payable by the applicant.
Despite SARS having
to make five changes – the outcome remained
unaltered.
[10]
The applicant contends that this was no redetermination by SARS but
rather that SARS conducted an impermissible
internal review of the
order of this Court. SARS contends that its redetermination is proof
of its implementation of the order
of this Court. The dispute between
the parties requires a consideration of the redetermination.
[11]
SARS’ redetermination is presented in the format of a report
from its Appeal Committee. The redetermination
report states that
pursuant to the order of 21 January 2021, SARS had to attend to the
rectification of material errors and reconsider
the matter,
substantiate the findings with substantive reasons, and in the event
a determination is calculated that the calculation
be set out
clearly. The report then has the telling heading: "Our response
– alleged errors". Under this heading,
SARS then considers
the substance of the errors as identified in the replying affidavit
and “considers” these objections.
[12]
SARS rejects the errors one by one.
[13] To
highlight the way in which SARS dealt with the errors, I highlight
paragraph 24:
“
The ‘alleged’
error with regard to Bill of Entry 00233 (2011) equally falls away
and therefore is moot.”
[14] It
is on the face of the report clear that SARS did not correct the
errors as directed by this Court but
rather reconsidered them as they
were “alleged errors”. It was not for SARS to respond to
alleged errors. It was not
open to SARS to “consider” the
alleged errors. SARS was to implement the court order.
[15]
The concluding paragraph in the report reads as follows –
“
We submit
therefore that appellant’s appeal in as far as the issues of ‘5
errors’ is concerned is without basis,
and does not find
support in any of the documentation relating to the matter.”
[16]
SARS, in its own redetermination, does not correct the errors but
rather finds the errors to be "without
basis". The errors
were raised in pleadings, debated and adjudicated by this Court. It
was no longer open to SARS to disagree
as to the existence of the
errors. If it sought to do so, it ought to have launched a Rule 42
rectification, a rescission or appealed
the judgment. SARS did not do
so and was therefore bound by the order of this Court.
[17] In
addition to the clear wording of SARS' redetermination, the applicant
points to SARS' redetermination
yielding the same amount as its
original determination: R 15 881 549.51. Common sense
dictates that if five errors are
to be corrected, the determination
will alter consequently. The fact that the amount has not altered, in
fact has remained identical
- to the cent – indicates that SARS
did not conduct a recalculation.
[18]
The Court considers SARS' position. SARS pleaded two positions:
first, it contended that the judgment is
vague and cannot be
implemented and, secondly, that “SARS has fully complied with
the court order of 19 January 2021”.
[19]
The
allegation that the order is vague and cannot be implemented runs
into peremption. The respondent, if it believed the order
to be
vague, ought to have availed itself of the remedies available to
challenge the vagueness. In fact, the respondent identified
these
remedies and indicated its intention to exercise these remedies in
correspondence with the applicant. The respondent specifically
indicated its intention to rely on Rule 42 to rectify the order.
However, having threatened to invoke the remedies, the respondent
acted to the contrary and decided to implement the order. In so
doing, it is not available for the respondent to argue the same
point
in this forum. It has accepted the order and sought to implement the
order. It is barred from arguing the order cannot be
implemented by
peremption.
[1]
[20] In
addition to the issue of peremption, the applicant highlighted that
SARS’ two positions were mutually
destructive. SARS cannot
contend simultaneously that the order is unimplementable due to
vagueness and that it has implemented
the order. SARS’
defences, as pleaded, present two contradictory factual positions and
are mutually destructive.
[21]
In its oral submissions, SARS pressed the second point (that it
had complied with the order). The Court
considers that the amount
remained constant and that SARS' own documents expressly reject the
basis of the errors. These indicate
that SARS did not conduct a
redetermination but rather rejected the errors and presented the same
amount to the applicant.
[22]
The applicant's notice of motion requests an order seeking compliance
with the order as well as a finding
of contempt. At the hearing,
however, the applicant persisted only with the compliance relief. The
Court, therefore, only considers
the compliance relief and does not
express itself regarding the issue of contempt.
[23]
The applicant requested this Court to grant an order permitting it to
"set the matter down upon notice
as a matter of urgency for
contempt" proceedings in the event that the respondent does not
comply with this court order. The
Court declines to grant this relief
as it would fetter the discretion of any Court having to consider the
urgency of such contempt
proceedings in the event they become
necessary.
[24]
The applicant has requested costs on a punitive scale. It points to
the fact that it had to launch contempt
proceedings to ensure
compliance with a court order. The Court weighs the seriousness of
SARS' non-compliance with a court order
and its attempt to defend its
non-compliance. Whilst the Court concludes the applicant is entitled
to its costs, it finds no basis
for a punitive cost order. The
applicant is, however, entitled to the costs of two counsel, as the
matter is weighty and the principles
at play are vital to the
enforceability of the rights in the Constitution.
Order
[25] As
a result, the following order is granted:
a) The
respondent is directed and compelled to forthwith implement or comply
with paragraphs 2 and 3 of the order
of this Court dated 19 January
2021.
b) The
respondent is granted ten days from the date of this order to
implement or comply with the court order
of 19 January 2021 referred
to in paragraph (a), failing which the applicant may set the matter
down upon notice for contempt of
Court or other relief, with or
without the amplification of the papers.
c) The
respondent is to pay the applicant’s costs on an attorney and
client scale, which scale shall include
the costs occasioned by the
employment of two counsel.
I de Vos
Acting Judge of the High
Court Gauteng Division, Pretoria
Delivered:
This judgment is handed down electronically by uploading it to the
electronic file of this matter on CaseLines.
As a courtesy gesture,
it will be sent to the parties/their legal representatives by email.
Counsel for the
applicant:
VP Ngutshana
M Molea
Instructed by:
Omphile Kedijang
Attorneys
Counsel for the
Respondent:
SK
Hassim
SC
KD Magano
Instructed by:
Maponya
Incorporated
Date of the
hearing:
7 August 2023
Date of judgment:
23 September 2023
[1]
Venmop
275 (Pty ) Ltd v Cleveland Projects (Pty) Ltd
2016 (1) SA 78
(GJ)
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