Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 1791South Africa
Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service v Majestic Silver Trading 275 (Pty) Ltd and Others (B445/2023) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1791 (11 October 2023)
Headnotes
Summary: On the anticipated return day of a provisional preservation order in terms of section 163 of the Tax Administration Act, it was partially confirmed and partially discharged. The basis for confirmation was that the tax liability was undisputed and that it had been proven that, should a court appointed curator not take control of relevant taxpayers’ assets and ancillary relief not be granted, the recovery of the long outstanding tax debt might be compromised. In the instance of the eighth respondent, where these aspects were absent, the provisional order was discharged.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service v Majestic Silver Trading 275 (Pty) Ltd and Others (B445/2023) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1791 (11 October 2023)
Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service v Majestic Silver Trading 275 (Pty) Ltd and Others (B445/2023) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1791 (11 October 2023)
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sino date 11 October 2023
HIGH
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
CASE
NO: B445/2023
NOT
REPORTABLE
NOT
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES
REVISED
11/10/23
In
the matter between:
THE
COMMISSIONER FOR THE SOUTH AFRICAN REVENUE SERVICE
Applicant
And
MAJESTIC
SILVER TRADING 275 (PTY) LTD
First
Respondent
ZAHEER
CASSIM N. O.
Second
Respondent
NGWANE
ROUX SHABANGU N. O.
Third
Respondent
PROE
SHABANGU N. O.
Fourth
Respondent
STEMBILE
ALPHONSINA SHABANGU N. O.
Fifth
Respondent
NONZAMO
PERSERVERENCE SHABANGU N.O.
Sixth
Respondent
NGWANE
ROUX SHABANGU
Seventh
Respondent
NONZAMO
PERSERVERENCE SHABANGU
Eighth
Respondent
COMPANY
AND INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY COMMISSION
Ninth
Respondent
ABSA
BANK LTD
Tenth
Respondent
Summary
:
On the anticipated return day of a
provisional preservation order in terms of section 163 of the Tax
Administration Act, it was
partially confirmed and partially
discharged. The basis for confirmation was that the tax
liability was undisputed and that
it had been proven that, should a
court appointed curator not take control of relevant taxpayers’
assets and ancillary relief
not be granted, the recovery of the long
outstanding tax debt might be compromised
.
In the instance of the eighth
respondent, where these aspects were absent, the provisional order
was discharged
.
ORDERS
1.
The provisional preservation order granted on 14
February 2023 against the third, fourth, fifth and sixth respondents
(in their
capacity as trustees of the Roux Shabangu Family Trust) and
against the seventh respondent is confirmed.
2.
The provisional preservation order granted on 14
February 2023 against the eighth respondent is discharged.
3.
The
curator bonis
is authorised, in order to give effect to this
order in respect of taxes due by the Roux Shabangu Family Trust and
Mr Ngwane Roux
Shabangu (the taxpayers) in terms of a tax assessment
of such a taxpayer, to dispose of any or all such taxpayer’s
assets,
by means of auctions or out of hand sales, in order to secure
the collection of taxes and in satisfaction of such taxpayer’s
tax debts and to hold those proceeds in trust pending an application
by the applicant to have those proceeds declared executable
for the
tax debts of any of the taxpayers.
4.
The auctions and/or out of hand sales referred to
above should take place on the following basis:
4.1
Any auction sale must be advertised, at the very
least, as well as ins required in the event of a sale in execution,
and in the
case of moveable assets, an advertisement must be
published at least five (5) business days in advance of the auction;
4.2
Any out of hand sale may take place without prior
notice, but such sale will only take effect after expiry of four (4)
business
days after notice of the sale has been given to any of the
taxpayers who may have an interest in the said assets;
4.3
None of the encumbered assets over which a
financial institution has real rights, in the form of mortgage bonds,
shall be realized
and sold and transferred by the
curator
bonis
without the consent and
authorization of the relevant financial institution.
5.
The third, fourth, fifth and sixth respondents in
their aforesaid capacities and the seventh respondent, jointly and
severally,
are ordered to pay the costs of the Commissioner of the
South African Revenue Service in respect of the application against
them,
including the costs of the anticipated opposed return day.
6.
The Commissioner of the South African Revenue
Service is ordered to pay the costs of the eighth respondent,
including her costs
incurred in respect of the opposed anticipated
return day.
7.
It is noted that the provisional preservation
order granted against the first and second respondents has been dealt
with separately
from the orders against the remaining respondents by
way of separate orders and extended return dates.
J
U D G M E N T
This
matter has been heard in open court and is otherwise disposed of in
terms of the Directives of the Judge President of this
Division. The
judgment and order are accordingly published and distributed
electronically.
DAVIS,
J
Introduction
[1]
On 14 February 2023
this court, per Le Roux AJ, on application by the Commissioner of the
South African Revenue Services (SARS)
granted a provisional
preservation order (the preservation order) in terms of section 163
of the Tax Administration Act 28 of 2011
(the TAA) against a company,
a trust and certain individuals who are all taxpayers with
outstanding tax debts in terms of the TAA
(except for the eighth
respondent). The outstanding debt exceeds R60 million, the bulk
of which is over 5 years old.
All the taxpayers involved sought
to have the preservation order discharged on an anticipated return
day thereof.
The
taxpayers involved
[2]
Due to the fact that
a number of role-players feature in both the preservation order and
the related litigation, it is apposite
to identify them at the outset
as this will assist in the evaluation of the matter. The
parties shall be referred to as in
the initial application.
[3]
The first respondent
is the principal taxpayer involved and owes the largest tax debt.
It is a company called Majestic Silver
Trading 275 (Pty) Ltd
(Majestic Silver). Shortly after SARS had obtained a civil
judgment against Majestic Silver, in terms
of section 173 and 174 of
the TAA in March 2022 for some of the company’s tax debt (at
the time around R29 million), Mr Ngwane
Roux Shabangu (Mr Shabangu)
as authorised director of Majestic Silver, took steps to have
Majestic Silver placed in voluntary business
rescue.
[4]
The first business
rescue practitioner (BRP) nominated by Mr Shabangu at the time, was
his attorney, Mr Etienne Jacques Naude (Naude).
At a subsequent
meeting of creditors, Mr Chetty, on behalf of SARS objected to Mr
Naude’s appointment, citing a conflict
of interest. Mr
Naude subsequently resigned on 15 August 2022. He was replaced
by a Mr Zaheer Cassim, with whom the
curator appointed by the court
in terms of the preservation order had interacted prior to the
anticipation of that order.
Mr Cassim then featured as the
second respondent. Subsequent to judgment having been reserved
regarding the anticipation
of the preservation order and its
confirmation or discharge, Mr Cassim has been replaced by Messrs
Thomas George Nell and Gideon
Johannes Slabbert as the current BRPs.
[5]
The third, fourth,
fifth and sixth respondents are the trustees of another taxpayer, the
Roux Shabangu Family Trust, IT 484/05 (the
Trust).
[6]
The remainder of
trustees are made up by Mr Shabangu as seventh respondent and Mrs
Shabangu as eighth respondent. Insofar
as SARS also claims the
setting aside of the business rescue proceedings of Majestic Silver
as being “a sham”, the
Companies and Intellectual
Property Commission has been cited as the ninth respondent.
[7]
An issue which has
arisen during the course of the anticipation of the preservation
order and the exchange of heads of argument,
was the issue regarding
Majestic Silver’s opposition to the order and who may represent
it. The application for anticipation
of the preservation order
was launched by the first to eighth respondents. The principal
affidavit delivered in support thereof
was deposed to by Mr
Shabangu. In it, he styled himself as the managing director of
Majestic Silver and the authorised trustee
of the Trust. In
support of this, he produced resolutions taken at the outset by the
board of directors and later the trustees,
respectively. In
SARS’s answering affidavit it was however pointed out that,
from date of commencement of business
rescue proceedings, a company’s
directors were divested of their powers of control and management of
the company, which would
include representation thereof in a matter
such as the present. In reply, Mr Shabangu conceded that “…
insofar as
Majestic is concerned, Majestic is currently under business rescue
and its business rescue practitioner has full management
control over
it subject to the curator’s approval on certain aspects
”
.
He, however went on to “…
deal
fully with Majestic’s opposition to the granting of the
preservation order and the setting aside thereof …
”
.
[8]
At the commencement
of hearing argument in the matter, the court was informed that none
of four points
in
limine
which
have up to then featured in the papers (and in extensive heads of
argument, on which the court had prepared as it was obliged
to do),
would be proceeded with. This included the concession that Mr
Shabangu could not represent Majestic Silver or the
(then) BRP.
This much was also confirmed by the BRP’s response to a request
by Mr Shabangu, made after the launch of
the anticipation application
and the receipt of SARS’s opposition thereto, for consent to
continue with opposition to SARS’s
application on behalf of the
company. The papers indicated that, in response to that
request, purportedly made in terms of
section 133 of the Companies
Act, Mr Cassim declined to do so, stating his fear that such consent
may be perceived to compromise
his obligations of being impartial and
independent. He preferred to wait until the then original
return day of 1 June 2023,
rather than take active steps to
anticipate that return day.
[9]
This left an
unforeseen anomaly as the return day in respect of the principal (and
largest) tax debtor would only take place on
1 June 2023 (in the
unopposed motion court) but the anticipated return day in respect of
the remainder of respondents had, by direction
of the deputy judge
president, been set down for hearing in a different court on 29 May
2023. This court was assuaged regarding
its concern about this
anomaly by assurances that there was no indication that there would
be any opposition on 1 June 2023 on
behalf of Majestic Silver and the
BRP. At the court’s request, the parties undertook to
inform the court as to the
outcome of the matter on 1 June 2023.
As it turns out, the issue of opposition on behalf of Majestic Silver
and the BRP took
an unexpected turn on 31 May 2023, when a notice of
intention to oppose confirmation of the preservation order was
delivered on
behalf of the company and the BRP. This led to an
extension of the rule nisi against them to 31 August 2023, with costs
and
with directions to file opposing papers by 30 June 2023. Lo and
behold, on 29 June 2023 the opposition was withdrawn.
[10]
The
procedural anomaly has now further been exacerbated by new opposition
being raised by the new BRP’s mentioned in paragraph
4 above.
They have now, by notice dated 14 September 2023 indicated that,
despite this court having granted leave to SARS
on 14 February 2023
in terms of section 133 of the Companies Act to proceed with its
application
[1]
, the point should
be revisited, presumably in opposition to the setting aside of the
business rescue proceedings, being relief
sought by SARS on the
return day
[2]
. As
mentioned earlier, the relief sought against Majestic Silver and the
(new) BRP’s has followed its own trajectory,
separate from that
of the preservation order anticipated by the remainder of taxpayers.
[11]
Having cleared the
decks of the procedural aspects pertaining to the role-players and
their positioning in the various skirmishes,
one can deal with the
issues pertaining to the confirmation or discharge of the
preservation orders against the remaining taxpayers.
Their fate
still remained, despite the extended separate rule nisi involving
Majestic Silver, closely linked to the outstanding
tax debt owed by
it.
Summary
of the preceding chronological history and the extent of the
outstanding tax debt which led to the application for a preservation
order
[12]
Pursuant to income
tax and VAT audits of the Trust for the 2006 to 2010 tax years, an
assessment was made by SARS on 27 September
2012.
[13]
Shortly thereafter,
SARS re-assessed Mr Shabangu’s nil income tax returns and
issued an additional assessment in an amount
of R6,4 million on 29
November 2012.
[14]
From 2013 onwards
SARS’ Enforcement Investigative Audit unit has attempted to
finalise investigative audits into the tax affairs
of Majestic
Silver, the Trust and Mr Shabangu, which audits still remain active
due to outstanding information and documentation.
[15]
In July 2019 Mr
Mahlangu submitted an application to compromise tax debts in terms of
section 200 of the TAA in respect of himself
and “the Shabangu
Group” of companies, including the Trust. This
application was declined on 9 October 2019.
[16]
On 14 October 2019 a
fresh application to compromise tax debts together with a deferral of
payment was made, which was followed
up with a meeting with the SARS
Debt Management officials dealing with the tax affairs of Mr Shabangu
and the Shabangu Group.
The applications were declined on 15
January 2020 for failure to meet the requirements of section 168 of
the TAA.
[17]
On 21 February 2020
Mr Shabangu and the Shabangu Group once again applied for a
compromise of tax debt, which application was declined
in 10 June
2020 for yet again failing to meet the requirements of the TAA.
[18]
On 29 June 2020 Mr
Shabangu and the Shabangu Group made another application to SARS,
this time for an installment payment arrangement.
This was
followed by a revised application on 4 August 2020, which the SARS
accepted on 7 August 2020.
[19]
Apparently this
payment arrangement was not feasible as on 11 December 2020 Mr
Shabangu and the Shabangu Group applied for an extension
to submit a
new application for deferral of the outstanding tax debt. This
was pursuant to an unsuccessful damages claim
pursued by Mr Shabangu
in the Supreme Court of Appeal against the Department of Public
Works, the outcome of which Mr Shabangu
had hoped would lead to a
settlement and payment of his and the Shabangu Group’s total
tax debt. This application was
declined on 15 March 2021.
[20]
By the end of that
year, and after various correspondences and meetings with SARS, Mr
Shabangu for the first time claimed that a
forensic auditor would be
appointed to evaluate the tax liability.
[21]
When nothing was
forthcoming in this regard, the Commissioner obtained the civil
judgments referred to in paragraph 3 above on 1
March 2022. Two
days later Mr Naude (the short-lived BRP) wrote to SARS, indicating
that a tax expert would be appointed
“to verify the accuracy of
the assessments”.
[22]
Some three weeks
later, Majestic Silver wrote to SARS, again requesting a deferral of
payment, a suspension of the payment obligations
while the deferral
is considered and a withdrawal of the civil judgment. This was
followed in April 2022 by similar requests
by the Trust and other
members of the Group.
[23]
The various requests
were all considered and declined on 9 September 2022. By this
time Majestic Silver was already in business
rescue. SARS therefore
informed the BRP on 20 September 2022 by way of a claims summary that
Majestic Silver’s tax liability
was at that time R
36 301 688,44 with the last two cycles of VAT returns then
still outstanding. Since the second
meeting of creditors in
terms of the business rescue proceedings on the next day, 21
September 2022, urgent enquiries made to the
BRP by SARS via its
attorneys, inter alia regarding payment, remained unanswered until
the publication of the business rescue plan
on 17 October 2022.
[24]
The business rescue
plan was not adopted at the meeting held on 14 November 2022 at which
time the meeting was postponed to 30 November
2022 to afford
creditors the opportunity to consider a fresh proposal by ABSA, who
is Majestic Silver’s largest creditor.
The meeting was
thereafter postponed from time to time with no resolution by the time
of the granting of the preservation order
on 14 February 2023.
[25]
At the time of the
granting of the preservation order, the total tax debt of the
relevant taxpayers amounted to R65 493 725,18.
Despite prior intimations of a possible forensic audit, none has
materialised and there is no current pending challenges to the
already issued assessments. As things stand, the tax liability
of the taxpayers, including the Trust and Mr Shabangu, is
undisputed. The question now is whether assets should be
preserved (and liquidated by the curator) in order to discharge
these
debts and to prevent an under-recovery of the tax debts.
The
law relating to preservation orders under section 163 of the TAA
[26]
The section itself
provides as follows:
“
163(1)
A senior SARS official may, in order to prevent any realizable assets
from being disposed or removed which may frustrate
the collection of
the full amount of tax that is due or payable or the official on
reasonable grounds is satisfied may be due or
payable, authorize an
ex parte application to the High Court for an order for the
preservation of any assets of a taxpayer or other
person prohibiting
any person, subject to the conditions and exceptions as may be
specified in the preservation order, from dealing
in my manner with
the assets to which the order relates …
(1)
The court to which
an application for a preservation order is made may –
(a)
make a provisional
order having immediate effect;
(b)
simultaneously
grant a rule nisi calling upon the tax payer or other person upon a
business day mentioned in the rule to appear
and to show cause why
the preservation order should not be made final;
(c)
upon application
by the taxpayer or other person, anticipate the return day …
(d)
upon application
by SARS, confirm the appointment of the curator bonis …
(7)
The court, in granting the preservation order may make ancillary
orders regarding how the assets must be dealt with, including
-
(c)
realizing the assets in satisfaction of the tax debt …
”
.
[27]
The
respondents have branded a judgment by Rogers J in
SARS
v Tradex (Pty) Ltd and Others
[3]
(Tradex)
as
having “…
a
direct bearing on this matter and constitute good authority regarding
a court’s approach to preservation orders in terms
of section
163 of the TAA
”
.
[28]
After having
considered the various meanings of the wording of the section in
question, the learned judge (as he was then) concluded
(at par [35]
of that judgment)
“
SARS
is required to show, I think, that there is a material risk that
assets which would otherwise be available in satisfaction
of tax
will, in the absence of a preservation order, no longer be
available. The fact that the taxpayer bona fide considers
that
it does not owe the tax would not stand in the way of a preservation
order if there is a material risk that realizable assets
will not be
available when it comes to ordinary execution. An obvious case
is that of a company which, believing it owes
no tax, proposes to
make a distribution to its shareholders
”
.
[29]
In the present case,
the indebtedness of the taxpayers are beyond doubt. Relying on
Tradex
however, the
respondents argue that, despite proving indebtedness “
it
remains for the applicant to demonstrate an appreciable risk that
assets available for the collection of tax will be diminished
”
.
This appears to be a correct summation of the law if that
“diminishing” will result “…
in
the frustration of the collection of the full amount of tax …
”
(to resort back to
the wording of the section).
Ad
the risk of dissipation
[30]
SARS has made
extensive allegations regarding the apparent dissipation of assets by
Majestic Silver rather than making payment of
its taxes. Its
own repeated applications for deferral of payment whilst paying other
creditors or making inter-company transfers
within the Shabangu Group
are examples hereof but, as the consideration of the preservation
order of Majestic Silver (represented
by its current BRP’s) is,
as previously explained, not before this court, I should make no
pronouncements thereon.
There are, however, instances relating
to the conduct of Majestic Silver which involve either Mr Shabangu or
the Trust. I
shall refer to the most prominent of those
hereunder.
[31]
Mr Shabangu was used
to drawing R300 000.00 per month for himself from Majestic
Silver’s accounts as a “management
fee”. He
continued doing so despite a BRP having been appointed to manage the
business of Majestic Silver. This
apparently led to differences
of opinion between him and the first BRP and the withdrawals have
since been stopped. Also,
where Majestic Silver has failed or
refused to deliver its VAT reconciliation or to make VAT payments,
these have now been made
since Mr Naude has been replaced as BRP.
SARS’ argument is that, unless control over Majestic Silver’s
finances
is placed outside the control of Mr Shabangu, as in the case
of a BRP or the court appointed curator, payments constituting
dispositions
will continue to be made to other parties than to SARS.
I yet again point out that SARS’ objective is to have the
business
rescue proceedings terminated on the extended return day of
the preservation order against Majestic Silver. This would then
also allow the liquidation of assets of that taxpayer in order to
effect payment of tax to take place as contemplated in paras
15 and
16 of the preservation order.
[32]
What exacerbates the
issue of withholding of tax, is that significant portions of Majestic
Silver’s unpaid tax debt are made
up of unpaid PAYE and UIF
payments. This means that Majestic Silver is retaining funds
deducted from its employees and, rather
than paying these funds over
to SARS, pay other creditors.
[33]
SARS has already, in
an attempt to prevent the above, appointed Majestic Silver’s
bankers as third parties as provided for
in the TAA in an attempt to
collect payment to SARS in respect of monies paid into Majestic
Silver’s accounts, but to no
avail. Majestic
Silver, on its own version as disclosed to the curator, owes ABSA
R121 million in respect of loans
for which Majestic Silver had bonded
various immovable properties, a further R43 million on a term loan
and yet another R3 million
in respect of vehicle finance. In
addition, Majestic Silver was, at the time of disclosure to the
curator, indebted to the
City of Tshwane for over R15 million in
respect of accounts due relating to its various immovable properties.
[34]
A further fear of
dissipation was the increase of “investment in associates”
of about R11 million in the period leading
up to Mr Shabangu placing
Majestic Silver in business rescue. This means that assets have
been transferred from the principal
taxpayer in the matter under
consideration, to other entities in the Shabangu Group, at the
instance of Mr Shabangu as the group’s
controlling mind.
At the same time, Mr Shabangu, being another taxpayer under
consideration, has not discharged his own tax
debt of some of R21, 5
million. In similar fashion, Majestic Silver’s “related
party loans” have increased
with millions of Rands.
[35]
Mr Shabangu’s
involvement in the Shabangu Group and the Trust has, to date, not
benefited any tax recovery. So, for
example, is Mr Shabangu the
sole director of JB Property Fund (Pty) Ltd which owes the Trust
almost R9 million. None of these
funds have been repaid to the
Trust to be utilized for the payment of tax debts. Mr Shabangu
is also the sole director of
JB Holdings (Pty) Ltd (in fact Mr
Shabangu is a director of 65 companies), who is the sole shareholder
of Majestic Silver. Despite
this, that shareholder has exerted no
pressure on Majestic Silver to pay to taxes.
[36]
In the initially
proposed business rescue plan in respect of Majestic Silver, a
previously undisclosed asset of the Trust was championed
as the
solution to Majestic Silver’s problems. The proposal was
this: it was alleged that the Trust owned previously
undisclosed
shares in a “related entity” (according to the BRP
Cassim), being Villa Del Country Estate (Pty) Ltd.
The proposal
in the plan was that these shares would be sold for an amount of R110
million of which R92 million would be lent to
Majestic Silver.
In Mr Cassim’s report, he indicated, that “…
insofar as
the offer may not be bona fide and, in order to avoid any unnecessary
delays, I have made provision for the scenario
that, in the event
that the shares are not sold before the end of April 2023, the plan
provides for the realization of all and/or
certain of Majestic’s
assets and/or business and/or equity …
”
.
Needless to say, neither the sale of shares nor the influx of R92
million has materialised. Although the business rescue
plan has
not yet been approved, the BRP report confirms exactly what SARS
fears: the only controls that prevent the dissipation
(or at least
alienation) of assets of Majestic Silver, is the current business
rescue proceedings and the overarching control exercised
by the court
appointed curator in terms of the preservation order.
[37]
Turning now more
directly to the risk of recovery of tax debt from Mr Shabangu.
There is no dispute that he controls a vast
number of companies and
is the controlling mind of the Shabangu Group. The extent of
his personal shareholding of members
of the Group is unknown. He owns
an immovable property at 332 Sandalwood Drive, Newlands, Pretoria
which had been purchased for
R1. 25 million and which is bonded to
Standard Bank for the same amount. There are no less than 15
vehicles linked via eNatis
records to Mr Shabangu. None of the
deferrals of payment of tax made by Mr Shabangu could be approved due
outstanding tax
returns. None of the third party or so-called
agency appointments issued by SARS have netted anything. Of
those bank
statements of Mr Shabangu which SARS had managed to
obtain, it became clear that Mr Shabangu spends up to R 1 million per
month
on personal expenses such as clothes, restaurants, hotels,
purchases at Makro as well as paying the financing of the purchase of
luxury vehicles such as a BMW X7 M5 and a BMW X6 M Competition.
In comparison to this ongoing expense from only partially
disclosed
income, Mr Shabangu has only paid R75 000.00 of his total
outstanding debt of over R21 million. SARS fears that,
if a court
appointed curator is not finally appointed to take control over and
realise Mr Shabangu’s assets, the recovery
of tax debt will be
frustrated.
[38]
The Trust has an
outstanding arrears income tax debt of just under R7 million.
At the time the Trust made a previous application
for deferral of
payment of tax, it had made a transfer of R 3, 46 million of its
funds to JB Property Fund (Pty) Ltd (under the
control of Mr
Shabangu) which it had not disclosed to SARS. Despite the
refusal of the deferral application, no tax payment
has taken place
since. The Trust owns certain immovable property, being an erf
in Doornkloof 391 JR purchased for an amount
of R1, 9 million but
bonded to Lamna Financial (Pty) Ltd for R4 million; an erf in Irene
Extension 49 purchased for R3,1 million
and bonded to Nedbank for the
same amount; and two unbonded properties in Siyabuswa D Extension 2
and Riamarr Park, Bronkhorstspruit,
purchased for far lesser amounts
(R195 000.00 and R200 000.00) respectively. According
to management statements
of the Trust obtained by SARS, the Trust
does not appear to have any movable assets. This leaves the
debt due to it by the
related entity referred to above and the
previously undisclosed, but allegedly vastly valuable and easily
disposable shares in
Villa Del Country (Pty) Ltd as the only
realizable assets. SARS fears that if control is not exercised
by way of a final
preservation order, taking control of these assets
out of the hands of the Trust (and Mr Shabangu), the recovery of
unpaid tax
debts will be compromised.
The
respective taxpayers’ reasons why the preservation order should
not be made final
[39]
The respective
taxpayers’ reasons for the discharge of the provisional
preservation order have been succinctly summarized
in heads of
argument delivered on their behalf. It is worth quoting it:
“
57.
In an affidavit delivered in support of the anticipation of the
return date provided for in the order, the respondents contend,
inter
alia, that the order stands to be set aside on 3 main grounds:
57.1
the applicant was not justified in seeking the order on an ex parte
basis;
57.2
the applicant did not, in its founding affidavit in the preservation
application, make out a case for the granting of an order
in terms of
section 163 of the TAA; and
57.3
the order was sought for an ulterior purpose, being a purpose other
than to prevent any realizable assets from being disposed
of or
removed, which may frustrate the collection of the full amount of the
tax payable to the applicant
”
.
Ad
the ex parte nature of the initial application
[40]
The first of the
respondents’ contentions is not so much based on the ex parte
nature of the initial application, but the
accusation that, in having
approached the court on an ex parte basis, SARS had not displayed the
required uberrirma fides.
This, in turn, is based on the
accusation that SARS had not made full disclosure in its affidavit of
the preceding events.
[41]
The ex parte
application consists of some 620 pages. Of this, the founding
affidavit comprises of 95 pages and it is supported
by three
confirmatory affidavits, two by SARS specialists and one by one of
SARS’s attorneys. The confirmatory affidavits
were
necessary to confirm the interactions with the taxpayers as well as
the applications, reports and correspondence exchanged,
which formed
part of the annexures to the founding affidavit.
[42]
The alleged
non-disclosures complained of by the respondents which were
ultimately argued, principally relate to three aspects.
These
were the 10 year history of “interactions” between the
parties, the issue of a “trigger event” being
the
business rescue plan of 17 October 2022 and the delay between that
date and the date of the ex parte application as well as
the alleged
non-disclosure of the civil judgments against Majestic Silver and the
Trust in March 2022. The rest of the argument
was that SARS had
disclosed “only the bare minimum” and had not explained
why it hasn’t proceeded with execution.
[43]
Dealing with the
“bare minimum” issue first I think it can hardly be said
in the circumstances that 600 pages constitute
a “bare
minimum”. The complaint by the respondents that the
founding affidavit only referred to annexures in
a general fashion,
leaving it to the court to “trawl” through the annexures
may be procedurally valid, but does not
mean that insufficient
disclosure had been made. A perusal of the founding affidavit
and the references to annexures indicate
that even this criticism has
been overstated.
[44]
Similarly, where
references has been made to the “interactions” over 10
years without detailing every step of every
interaction or every
detail of every deferral application or its rejection, does not, in
the context of this case, amount to a
non-disclosure or any attempt
at preventing relevant facts to come to the attention of the court.
Significantly, the respondents
have not produced a single “smoking
gun” which had not been disclosed and which would have meant
the end of the application.
[45]
The highwater-mark
was the reference to the civil judgments obtained against Majestic
Silver and the Trust. Upon scrutiny
of the affidavits afresh,
in addition to that which had already been summarized in paras 12 –
25 above, it appears that the
compliant is not actually that the
civil judgments had not been disclosed (they had, in paragraphs 48,
50, 51, 90.2 of the founding
affidavit and in par 14 of Annexure SARS
12 thereto) but that no attachment had taken place in pursuance
thereof. SARS has
explained the interaction with the taxpayers’
attorney from shortly after the judgments have been taken, including
the taxpayers
(unrealized) threat of rescission, up to the business
rescue proceedings, sufficiently to my mind.
[46]
Similarly, the delay
between the judgments and the initial business rescue plan proposed
and the subsequent events have also, to
my mind, sufficiently been
explained by SARS, even with reference to its frustration at the
proposed inflow of R92 million which
would have extinguished all the
respondents’ tax debts not having materialised.
[47]
The second objection
by the taxpayers centers around the lack of proof of actual
dissipation and the accusation that execution,
rather than section
163 procedures, would have been more appropriate. As to the
former, actual dissipations have taken place
(examples of which I
have referred to in the paragraphs dealing with Mr Shabangu’s
expenses, his control over the Shabangu
Group and the Trust) but
moreover, from a reading of the papers and the various discrepancies
in the accounts of the taxpayers,
particularly that of Mr Shabangu
and the members of the Shabangu Group itself, it appears that assets,
particularly in the form
of transfers and loans, regularly take
place, either before or after applications for compromise or for
deferral of payment of
tax, without any actual payment ever being
made to SARS. In similar fashion as where a curator in an
insolvent estate takes
control of the estate to secure some benefit
for creditors, the movement of money out of the account of a taxpayer
without justification
or record keeping being disclosed to SARS upon
enquiry,
create the reasonable
apprehension that the collection of tax debts may be frustrated if a
curator is not appointed. The past
history of “interaction”
with SARS to which the respondents refer, have certainly not proven
the opposite, resulting
therein that SARS’ fear of dissipation
rather than payment, is reasonable.
[48]
In expansion of their argument against the existence of a fear of
dissipation, the respondents refer to the fact that they have,
more
than once, tendered security for payment of the tax debts.
These tenders were every time, however, not from assets which
SARS
now seek to attach, but by way of tenders from third parties over
which SARS has no control. Of the tenders one was
made by LB
Tax Consulting on 27 January 2020 in support of one of the deferral
applications. It was made on behalf of Mr
Shabangu “and
all related/connected companies”. It referred to a then
outstanding tax debt of R39 403 395,80
and proposed that,
pending the finalisation of the litigation between members of the
Shabangu Group and the Department of Public
Works (from which Mr
Shabangu believed sufficient funds would be realised to pay all tax
debts), portions 2 and 7 of the Farm Groothoek
106 belonging to
Zedbee Plaza (Pty) Ltd would be sold for R16 million and that “a
part payment will be made towards a tax
debt”. In the
end, no sale took place, no payment was made and by 15 December 2022
that property became bonded in the
amount of R4 million, despite the
deferral having been accepted by SARS (in respect of the Trust) on 7
August 2020. The second
“tender” by way of a sale
was the one contained in the business rescue plan already referred to
in respect of the Del
Villa Del Country Estate (Pty) Ltd property
(and the shares of the trust held therein) as referred to in para 36
above.
[49]
As for the last point of objection to the preservation order being
made final, the “ulterior motive” alleged by the
respondents appears to be the allegation that SARS seeks to, under
the guise of a preservation order, obtain an “execution
mechanism”. There is nothing “ulterior” or
clandestine about SARS’ application. In is notice,
it
already envisaged that, after assets have been seized and preserved
by the curator, the court will be requested to authorise
the sale and
disposal thereof to pay tax debts. I am mindful of the comments
made by Rogers J in
Tradex
at par [73] that section 163 is in itself not an execution
mechanism. The learned judge continued in his judgment after
this comment to refer to the levying of execution “in the
ordinary manner”. Whilst this is of course so, I do
not
find that course to be a bar to the combination of relief sought in
this matter. What would it benefit SARS to attach
the various
properties Mr Shabangu and the Trust (most of which are encumbered)
and to proceed bit by bit to attempt to sell them
when it appears
that there are other assets (shares and funds) which can only be
traced and secured by a curator and which can
then constitute a
viable recovery of tax debt, particularly where previous attempts of
execution via third party appointments of
the taxpayers’
bankers have failed? I find that the matter is distinguishable
on the facts from that in
Tradex
and that the additional relief, in conjunction with a final order in
terms of section 163 of the TAA, is justified in this case.
I
certainly do not find that the taxpayers’ accusation of an
ulterior motive is justified, let alone that SARS’ attempts
to
recover tax in this manner should result in a discharge of the
preservation order, which is what the respondents claim.
The
order against Mrs Shabangu
[50]
No allegation of dissipation of assets have been made against the
eighth respondent, Mrs Shabangu and, although she may be a taxpayer,
she does not have an outstanding tax debt.
[51]
SARS’ only reason for having cited Mrs Shabangu in this matter
is that SARS is unsure as to whether she and Mr Shabangu were
married
to each other in community of property or not. SARS says it
could not locate an ante-nuptial contract registered
in the Deeds
Office and, as a result, suspected that the marriage may be in
community of property.
[52]
SARS, however, in the founding affidavit filed on its behalf, already
conceded that, in all returns delivered by Mr Shabangu, he
has
indicated that he was married out of community of property.
This has been accepted by SARS over the years and it has
not made any
allegation that any assets have been distributed by Mr Shabangu to
Mrs Shabangu and neither has SARS made out a case
against her as an
“other person” as contemplated in section 163 of the TAA.
[53]
The court is therefore left with Mr Shabangu’s version, coupled
with a vague inference made by SARS that a joint estate may
be
involved. Although it is so that the Shabangus have not, in
their affidavits expressly dealt with their marital property
regime,
in their replying affidavits it was indicated that Mrs Shabangu was
independently represented by attorneys (and not by
Mr Shabangu as he
has been doing in respect of the other respondents or as one may have
expected as the counterpart of a joint
estate) and she has delivered
a confirmatory affidavit in this regard.
[54]
Despite the fact that the property marital regime issue of Mr and Mr
Shabangu may therefore not have been dealt with unequivocally,
I find
that SARS has not, both in respect of the issue of a possible joint
estate and in respect of the requirements of section
163 of the TAA
regarding dissipation, satisfied the onus on its in respect of Mrs
Shabangu. It must follow that the preservation
order against
her should be discharged, with costs.
[55]
In respect of the other two taxpayers, that is Mr Shabangu and the
Trust, I find that the defences put up by them have not convinced
the
court that the preservation order should not have been granted and
should not be made final. This includes the additional
relief
initially sought by SARS, included in paragraph 15 and 16 of the
preservation order. In this regard I also find no
cogent reason
why costs should not follow the event.
Orders
[56]
The following is
made.
1.
The provisional preservation order granted on 14
February 2023 against the third, fourth, fifth and sixth respondents
(in their
capacity as trustees of the Roux Shabangu Family Trust) and
against the seventh respondent is confirmed.
2.
The provisional preservation order granted on 14
February 2023 against eighth respondent is discharged.
3.
The
curator bonis
is authorised, in order to give effect to this
order in respect of taxes due by the Roux Shabangu Family Trusts and
Mr Ngwane Roux
Shabnagu (the taxpayers) in terms of a tax assessment
of such a taxpayer, to dispose of any or all such taxpayer’s
assets,
by means of auctions or out of hand sales, in order to secure
the collection of taxes and in satisfaction of such taxpayer’s
tax debts and to hold those proceeds in trust pending an application
by the applicant to have those proceeds declared executable
for the
tax debts of any of the taxpayers.
4.
The auctions and/or out of hand sales referred to
above should take place on the following basis:
4.1
Any auction sale must be advertised, at the very
least, as well as ins required in the event of a sale in execution,
and in the
case of moveable assets, an advertisement must be
published at least five (5) business days in advance of the auction;
4.2
Any out of hand sale may take place without prior
notice, but such sale will only take effect after expiry of four (4)
business
days after notice of the sale has been given to any of the
taxpayers who may have an interest in the said assets;
4.3
None of the encumbered assets over which a
financial institution has real rights, in the form of mortgage bonds,
shall be realized
and sold and transferred by the
curator
bonis
without the consent and
authorization of the relevant financial institution.
5.
The third, fourth, fifth and sixth respondents in
their aforesaid capacities and the seventh respondent, jointly and
severally,
are ordered to pay the costs of the Commissioner of the
South African Revenue Service in respect of the application against
them,
including the costs of the anticipated opposed return day.
6.
The Commissioner of the South African Revenue
Service is ordered to pay the costs of the eighth respondent,
including her costs
incurred in respect of the opposed anticipated
return day.
7.
It is noted that the provisional preservation
order granted against the first and second respondents has been dealt
with separately
from the orders against the remaining respondents by
way of separate orders and extended return dates.
N
DAVIS
Judge
of the High Court
Gauteng
Division, Pretoria
Date of Hearing: 29 May
2023
Judgment delivered: 11
October 2023
APPEARANCES:
For
the Applicant:
Adv
M P van der Merwe SC together with
Adv
A Louw
Attorney
for the Applicant:
Mac
Robert Inc Attorneys, Pretoria
For
the Respondents:
Adv
D van Niekerk
Attorney
for the Respondents:
Burrows
Attorneys, Sandton
[1]
Par
26 of the order of Le Roux, AJ
[2]
Par
27 of the order of Le Roux, AJ
[3]
2015
(3) SA 596
(WCC).
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