Case Law[2023] ZAGPPHC 1855South Africa
Nu Africa Duty Free Shops (Pty) Ltd v Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service (25788/2022) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1855 (27 October 2023)
Headnotes
liable in terms of s64B and s99(2) as clearing agent and bonded warehouse. These findings were based on the absence of proof to the Respondent that the goods reflected on the declaration had been exported and that the goods were nowhere to be found.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Nu Africa Duty Free Shops (Pty) Ltd v Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service (25788/2022) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1855 (27 October 2023)
Nu Africa Duty Free Shops (Pty) Ltd v Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service (25788/2022) [2023] ZAGPPHC 1855 (27 October 2023)
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sino date 27 October 2023
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION,
PRETORIA
CASE NO: 25788/2022
REPORTABLE: YES/NO
OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES: YES/NO
REVISED: YES/NO
Date: 27 October 2023
In
the matter between:
NU
AFRICA DUTY FREE SHOPS (PTY) LTD
APPLICANT
And
THE
COMMISSIONER FOR THE SOUTH
RESPONDENT
AFRICAN
REVENUE SERVICE
JUDGMENT
du plessis aj
[1]
This
is an order to review and set aside certain decisions made by the
Respondent in terms of the Customs and Excise Act.
[1]
[2]
The
Applicant is a licensee of a bonded warehouse and a clearing agent in
terms of the Customs and Excise Act
[2]
(the "Customs Act"). The Respondent is the Commissioner of
the South African Revenue Services, and the administrative
head of
the South African Revenue Services ("SARS").
[3]
The Respondent raised customs duties, value added
tax and VAT interests for goods sold
ex
works
by the Applicant to a customer.
The Respondent also raised a forfeiture penalty of R435 120 in terms
of s 88(2) of the Customs Act.
At the centre of this dispute is the
forfeiture penalty. The Applicant alleges that the decision to raise
the penalty is unreasonable
and unlawful and that the same
irregularities vitiate the decision of the internal administrative
appeal committee to uphold the
decision. They seek relief to declare
the decision unconstitutional and unlawful and for the reviewing and
setting aside of the
decision in terms of PAJA and/or on the grounds
of legality.
# Background
Background
[4]
On 5 March 2021, the Applicant sold a consignment
of liquor for export to Prime Crowns
ex
works
. Prime Works is a consignee or
importer in Zimbabwe. In terms of the agreement, Prime Crown was
responsible for transporting bonded
goods, using their authorised and
licensed remover, from the premise in South Africa to the port of
entry/exit and from the port
of entry/exit to a foreign country
strictly under SARS rules and regulations. It was up to Prime Crowns
to comply with safety rules
and regulations during transit up to the
port of entry and beyond. The truck loaded with the goods was to be
sealed, the seals
recorded, and not broken unless under customs
supervision.
[5]
Prime Crowns appointed Mega Bursts as the remover
of goods. Mega Bursts is registered at the Respondent as a remover of
goods. The
Applicant states that it had no reason to take issue with
Mega Bursts being appointed, as they have previously transported a
consignment
from the Applicant to Zimbabwe, and the Respondent
approved this.
[6]
When the first truck arrived to load the goods on
9 March 2021, a representative of the Applicant sent the first truck
that came
away, as it was not acceptable to export the consignment
(it had a Zimbabwe number plate). Another truck arrived the next day
with
a Gauteng number plate. The driver's licence and the passport
information of the driver corresponded with the information the
Applicant
received from Prime Crowns.
[7]
The goods were then loaded onto the truck in the
presence of the Prime Crowns representative. The Applicant took all
the necessary
and reasonable steps to ensure the goods were secured
and sealed in the truck when leaving the warehouse. The Applicant
recorded
the details in the custom clearance forms but omitted to
enter the subcontractor's details. It is for this reason that they
paid
the administrative penalty later.
[8]
Once the liquor left the warehouse, the Applicant
avers it had no control or knowledge over what occurred between the
truck leaving
and being inspected by the border. It was, however,
informed on 14 March 2021 that the truck arrived at the border but
had to be
parked until the duties were paid to the Zimbabwean
authorities. It was informed on 13 April 2021 that the truck passed
the first
border post.
[9]
On 14 April 2021, during a random border
inspection five weeks after leaving the warehouse, the truck was
stopped inside the customs
control area for physical and document
inspection. A representative of the Applicant was present. The
Respondent noticed that the
truck was different from what had left
the warehouse, with a different driver. However, the export
documentation was what the Applicant
had given the driver who left
the premises. What is more, energy drinks instead of the declared
liquor consignment were found in
the truck.
[10]
The truck was then handed over to the SARS's
Illicit Trade Unit for further investigation. This investigation
confirmed that the
truck that arrived at the border had an NW and not
a GP number plate, and that no alcohol was found on the truck, nor
anything
else that indicated that the goods were exported. The
documents used during this investigation were from the truck driver
and/or
the Applicant's representative.
[11]
After this investigation, on 19 April 2021, the
Respondent sent a letter to the Applicant requesting documents for
the consignment
of alcohol. The Respondent also informed the
Applicant what happened at the border. The Respondent requested the
Applicant provide
all the information on or before 27 April 2021. The
Respondent states that the Applicant did not provide the Respondent
with this
information.
## (i)Letter of intent to raise debt
(i)
Letter of intent to raise debt
[12]
On 6 July 2021, the Respondents sent a letter of
intent to the Applicant. The letter of intent (LOI) sets out the
following:
i.
It made a
prima
facie
finding
on whether the Customs Act has been complied with and found that the
goods were not exported from South Africa to Zimbabwe;
the goods were
introduced into the South African market without the payment of the
applicable duties and VAT. Ss 18A(9)(a) and
20(4) read with Rule
20(4) of the Customs Act have been breached or not complied with, and
the conduct constitutes an offence in
terms of ss 80(c) and (o) and
s83 of the Act. The goods have been dealt with irregularly as
contemplated by s 87(1) of the Act;
s 44(4), which holds the
manufacturer, owner, seller or purchaser of any excisable goods
liable for the duty of such goods until
the goods have been duly
entered and the duty due thereon paid.
This means the Applicant
is liable for payment of duties, VAT and forfeiture amounts of the
goods not found, and this allows the
Respondent to demand payment of
an amount equal to the export value of such goods plus unpaid duty.
ii.
Mega Burst Oil and Fuels
submitted that their company is registered to trade in petroleum, and
they have truck horses and tankers.
Their registered remover bond is
for removal or fuel. The company is also unaware of the transaction
and does not know how the
alcohol will fit in a tanker.
[13]
The Respondent makes it clear that it gave the
Applicant an opportunity to make representation before raising the
penalty, which
it did not do. However, the Applicant states it could
not make representations by the deadline to challenge the penalty, as
its
senior employees contracted Covid-19.
## (ii)Letter of demand
(ii)
Letter of demand
[14]
In the absence of the Applicant supplying reasons,
the Respondent, on 23 July 2021, issued a letter of demand ("LOD")
to the Applicant, requiring them to pay the duties, interest, and
forfeiture penalty. In the LOD the Respondents stated that it
was
satisfied that there was sufficient evidence to prove the
prima
facie
findings and that the Applicant
is therefore held liable in terms of s64B and s99(2) as clearing
agent and bonded warehouse. These
findings were based on the absence
of proof to the Respondent that the goods reflected on the
declaration had been exported and
that the goods were nowhere to be
found.
[15]
The Applicant replied five days later, conceding
the duties, VAT and VAT Interest but not the forfeiture penalty. They
also denied
being involved in the diversion of goods.
# The reasons for the
decision
The reasons for the
decision
## (i)Initial reasons for a forfeiture penalty
(i)
Initial reasons for a forfeiture penalty
[16]
On 12 August 2021, the Applicant's attorneys
addressed a letter to the Respondent, clarifying the Applicant's
concession and confirming
payment, indicating that the Applicant
disputed liability for the forfeiture penalty, requesting a
suspension of payment, and requesting
reasons for the Respondent's
decision. Reasons were provided five days later. The reasons were as
follows:
i.
The Applicant sold and
declared goods in bond to a foreign entity and thus remains liable
for the non-fulfilment of the obligations
as per provisions of ss
64B, 98, 99(1) and (2) of the Customs Act; there was an intentional
act, purposefully aimed at defrauding
the State; the Applicant failed
to comply with ss 64B and 99(2) of the Customs Act and was liable for
the forfeiture penalty.
[17]
The Applicant says that these are not reasons.
They thus launched a PAIA request to understand the basis on which
the forfeiture
penalty was imposed, but they were refused the
information.
## (ii)Appeal Committee reasons
(ii)
Appeal Committee reasons
[18]
After that, the Applicant's attorneys lodged an
internal appeal against the Commissioner's decision, where they set
out the factual
background and denied that they were liable for the
forfeiture penalty. They stated that the reasons that were given were
inadequate
and that the reasons did not indicate whether the
Respondent considered joint liability.
[19]
The Appeal Committee gave the following
reasons for its decision:
i.
The goods were not exported
and introduced into the South African market without payment of
duties and VAT; ss 18A(9)(a) and 20(4)
read with Rule 20(4) had not
been complied with (which constitutes an offence); the goods were
dealt with irregularly as contemplated
in s 87(1) of the Customs Act;
the Applicant is liable for the payment of the duties, VAT and
forfeiture penalty in terms of ss
44(8) and 88(2)(a) as the goods
could not be found; the Applicant is liable in terms of ss 64B(5) and
99(2).
Thus, the prima facie
evidence shows that they may have contravened the above sections, as
well as ss 103 and 44A and 39(4) of the
Value Added Tax Act 89 of
1991.
[20]
In coming to these decisions, the Applicant avers
that the Respondent and the Appeal Committee only had
prima
facie
evidence that they may have
violated the provisions and did not have evidence to support a firm
finding that the Applicant violated
these Acts. The reasons also did
not state that the Applicant was involved in diverting the goods (and
that there was no evidence
to this effect).
[21]
The internal appeal committee ("Appeal
Committee") upheld the forfeiture penalty and refused the
Applicant's request to
suspend payment. The Applicant made the
payment of the forfeiture penalty under protest.
## (iii)This application
(iii)
This application
[22]
When the Applicant brought the proceedings, the
Respondent gave further reasons. The Applicant states that it is
impermissible for
a decision-maker to supplement or give different
reasons for a decision in their answering affidavit. The
decision-maker is bound
to the reasons it provides when making its
decision.
[23]
The new reasons include:
i.
The truck inspection at the
border was the Applicant's;
ii.
The three bills of entry had
one invoice number – but this was not relied on to impose the
penalty;
iii.
It had asked Mega Bursts
whether it had a relationship with Prime Crowns and Mr Sibara (Prima
Crowns' representative). Mega Burst
stated that it had no
relationship with them. However, the Respondent never relied on this
correspondence in the LOD or its reasons
(nor was this brought to the
Applicant's attention).
iv.
It and the Appeal Committee
did find that the Applicant was involved in the diversion of goods in
that:
a.
Even after the Applicant submitted its appeal, it
did not provide the Respondent with enough evidence that it was not
involved in
the diversion; it did not provide the Respondent with an
explanation and evidence to support its assertion that it was not
part
of diverting the goods from being exported; it merely asserts it
was not part of diverting the goods but supplied no information
to
demonstrate this; thus the Appeal Committee was not persuaded about
the Applicant's alleged lack of involvement in the diversion
process.
b.
Also, with the facts before the Respondent, and
the Applicant's failure to provide the Respondent with evidence to
dispute its involvement
in the diversion entirely, the Respondent
concluded that the Applicant was involved in the diversion.
[24]
The Respondent avers that the Applicant is
incorrect. They have provided this information as background to
demonstrate what the
investigation process entailed and what
information the Respondent took into account when making the
decision.
[25]
Even if these were the reasons provided, the
Applicant states that the decision is arbitrary and irrational as:
i.
The Respondent merely asserts
without foundation that the Applicant was involved in diverting the
goods;
ii.
It has no direct or
circumstantial evidence to make such an assertion – in fact –
they do not have
prima
facie
evidence
of such;
iii.
The Respondent requires the
Applicant to disprove its assertion and provide evidence to its
satisfaction that the Applicant was
not involved in the diversion of
the goods – which requires the Applicant to prove a negative.
iv.
Instead, the Respondent, as
the alleging party, must prove, with evidence, that the Applicant was
involved in a diversion of the
liquor.
[26]
However, these were
not
the reasons for imposing the penalty
and upholding the appeal.
[27]
I
did not consider the above reasons for the decision to decide on this
matter. The reason for the decision is thus the reasons
as set out
above. What is left is for this court to determine whether the
decision to impose the forfeiture penalty and the appeal
committee's
decision to uphold the penalty are administrative actions that comply
with the Promotion of Administrative Justice
Act
[3]
or, if not, whether they adhere to the principle of legality.
# The arguments: grounds
for review
The arguments: grounds
for review
[28]
The Applicant goes to great lengths to say it was
bona fide
in
transacting with Prime Crowns and Mega Burst. The omission of certain
information on the clearance document was a bona fide error.
The
Applicant has no information on what happened with the truck that
left the warehouse, and they do not have any evidence of
what
happened with the goods. They state categorically that the Applicant
did not divert the goods; they do not know about the
diversion and
are not involved. They also note that there was no direct contention
that the Applicant diverted the goods or acted
fraudulently. However,
the appeal committee seems to suggest that they have such evidence,
but they do not say what it is based
on.
[29]
They also state that the reasons given were not
adequate. Adequate reasons would have included how the decision-maker
understands
the law, the findings it makes, the reasoning process it
had and how it links with the evidence and giving unambiguous reasons
with the appropriate level of detail. Instead, they quote the law but
do not say how they applied it, and they make tentative factual
findings with no explanation of how it is linked to evidence or say
indeed that they have evidence. This while it is undisputed
that the
Applicant did not divert the goods.
[30]
Giving reasons is an important element of an
administrative action captured in s 33(2) of the Constitution and
laying the foundation
of a culture of justification that our
Constitution seeks to foster. It serves as the justification for the
administrative action.
This is then given effect in terms of s 5 of
PAJA. Reasons explain the decision. In this case, the Respondent set
out the law that
its decision is informed by, the facts it is based
on, and how it came to its conclusion. While this might not be the
reasons that
the Applicant wanted, it is the reasons.
[31]
The Applicant points out that the Respondent lists
the contraventions in various sections without stating that the
Applicant's conduct
resulted in the contraventions. With this in
mind, the Applicant avers that the decision taken by the Respondent
to impose the
forfeiture penalty and the Appeal Committee's decision
to uphold the penalty are unlawful and unconstitutional. They state
so for
the following reasons:
i.
The decisions are arbitrary
insofar as the Respondent accepted Mega Burst's version that it did
not know Prime Crowns, rather than
The Applicant's version, with no
justification for doing so – like cases are not treated alike;
ii.
The decision was unlawful and
irrational in terms of s6(2)(e)(iii) and s6(2)(f)(ii)(cc) of PAJA, in
that the Respondent and the
Appeal Committee failed to consider
relevant factors, including
a.
That The Applicant was not involved in diverting
the goods, and that Mega Burst is the registered remover of goods,
which is relevant
for joint and several liability in terms of s
64D(3A)(b);
b.
Whether to impose joint liability with Mega
Bursts;
iii.
The penalty has a
disproportionate impact on the Applicant and is unreasonable (s
6(2)(h) PAJA) because the Applicant acted in good
faith and was not
responsible for the diversion and
iv.
The decisions are materially
influenced by an error of fact (s 6(2)(e)(iii) and s6(2)(i)) in that
they were involved in the diversion.
[32]
They thus seek an order declaring the initial
decision and appeal decision to be connotationally invalid and to
review and set aside
the decisions.
[33]
The
essence of the Respondent's argument is that there was
prima
facie
evidence
that it presented to the Applicant for response. When the Applicant
did not respond, it sent a letter of demand and raised
the forfeiture
amount. The amount was raised because as an exporter of the goods,
even on an ex-work basis, the Applicant had a
duty to prove that the
goods were indeed exported, and if failed to do so. There is thus no
merit in the contention that the decision
by the Respondent is
unconstitutional and unlawful and should be reviewed and set aside.
It maintains that it conducted the investigation
with an open and
inquisitive mind, as is expected of them.
[4]
# Discussion
Discussion
## (i)The Customs Act
(i)
The Customs Act
[34]
The Respondent found that the following provisions
have not been complied with, which constitutes an offence. These are
ss 18A(9)(a)
and 20(4) read with Rule 20(4)
18A.
Exportation of goods from customs and excise warehouse - (9) (a) No
person shall, without the permission of the Commissioner,
divert any
goods for export to a destination other than the destination declared
on entry for export or deliver such goods or cause
such goods to be
delivered in the Republic or any other country in the common customs
area.
S 20. Goods in customs
and excise warehouses - (4) Subject to section 19A, no goods which
have been stored or manufactured in a
customs and excise warehouse
shall be taken or delivered from such warehouse except in accordance
with the rules and upon due entry
for any of the following purposes-
[…]
(d) export from customs
and excise warehouse (including supply as stores for foreign-going
ships or aircraft).
Rule 20.04 The licensee
of any customs and excise warehouse into which goods are received
shall ensure that such goods have been
duly entered for warehousing
in such warehouse and, unless proof that such goods have been so
entered is in his possession at the
time of receipt of such goods, he
shall keep such goods separated from other goods in such warehouse
and make a written report
to the Controller forthwith.
[35]
These three provisions deal with when goods are
exported from a customs and excise warehouse, the goods may not be
diverted to another
destination than what is declared without the
permission of the Respondent. The goods may further only be removed
following the
proper procedure as laid down in the Act. S 18(9)(b)(i)
has a deeming provision where goods are deemed to be diverted where
there
was no permission to divert it, and the person concerned fails
to produce valid proof and other information and documents to the
Commissioner.
[36]
Liability of the Applicant was premised on the
following provisions:
64B. Clearing
agent licences (5) A licensed clearing agent shall be liable in
respect of any entry made or bill
of entry delivered as contemplated
in section 99 (2).
S99 (2) (a)
An agent appointed by any importer, exporter, manufacturer, licensee,
remover of goods in bond or other
principal and any person who
represents himself to any officer as the agent of any importer,
exporter, manufacturer, licensee,
remover of goods in bond or other
principal, and is accepted as such by that officer, shall be liable
for the fulfilment, in respect
of the matter in question, of all
obligations, including the payment of duty and charges, imposed on
such importer, exporter, manufacturer,
licensee, remover of goods in
bond or other principal by this Act and to any penalties or amounts
demanded under section 88 (2)
(a) which may be incurred in respect of
that matter: Provided that, except if such principal has not been
disclosed or the name
of another agent or his own name is stated on
the bill of entry as contemplated in section 64B (6) or the principal
is a person
outside the Republic, such agent or person shall cease to
be so liable if he proves that—
(i) he was not a party to
the non-fulfilment by any such importer, exporter, manufacturer,
licensee, remover of goods in bond or
other principal, of any such
obligation;
(ii) when he became aware
of such non-fulfilment, he notified the Controller thereof as soon as
practicable; and
(iii) all reasonable
steps were taken by him to prevent such non-fulfilment.
[37]
These provisions deal with the liability of the
clearing agents, the responsibility for paying taxes and fees, and
penalties and
charges, including that in s 88(2) of the Act.
[38]
The Respondent states that the goods were dealt
with irregularly in terms of s 83, which states
83. Irregular
dealing with or in goods.—Any person who—
(a) deals or assists in
dealing with any goods contrary to the provisions of this Act; or
(b) knowingly has in his
possession any goods liable to forfeiture under this Act; or
(c) makes or attempts to
make any arrangement with a supplier, manufacturer, exporter or
seller of goods imported or to be imported
into or manufactured or to
be manufactured in the Republic or with any agent of any such
supplier, manufacturer, exporter or seller,
regarding any matter to
which this Act relates, with the object of defeating or evading the
provisions of this Act, shall be guilty
of an offence and liable on
conviction to a fine not exceeding R20 000 or treble the value of the
goods in respect of which such
offence was committed, whichever is
the greater, or to imprisonment for a period not exceeding five
years, or to both such fine
and such imprisonment, and the goods in
respect of which such offence was committed shall be liable to
forfeiture.
[39]
In other words, engaging in any dealings with
goods contravening the Act is an offence, and the goods are then
subject to forfeiture.
[40]
Liability for forfeiture is dealt with in s 87,
which states
87. Goods
irregularly dealt with liable to forfeiture.—(1) Any
goods imported, exported, manufactured, warehoused,
removed or
otherwise dealt with contrary to the provisions of this Act or in
respect of which any offence under this Act has been
committed
(including the containers of any such goods) or any plant used
contrary to the provisions of this Act in the manufacture
of any
goods shall be liable to forfeiture wheresoever and in possession of
whomsoever found: Provided that forfeiture shall not
affect liability
to any other penalty or punishment which has been incurred under this
Act or any other law, or liability for any
unpaid duty or charge in
respect of such goods.
[41]
The penalty was levied in terms of s 88(2)(a)(i),
that states that
If any goods liable to
forfeiture under this Act cannot readily be found, the Commissioner
may, notwithstanding anything to the
contrary in this Act contained,
demand from any person who imported, exported, manufactured,
warehoused, removed or otherwise dealt
with such goods contrary to
the provisions of this Act or committed any offence under this Act
rendering such goods liable to forfeiture,
payment of an amount equal
to the value for duty purposes or the export value of such goods plus
any unpaid duty thereon, as the
case may be.
[42]
In other words, if the goods are liable to
forfeiture but cannot be located, the Respondent can demand payment
from any persons
involved in importing, exporting, manufacturing,
warehousing, removing or otherwise dealing with the goods contrary to
the Act.
It emphasises the seriousness of dealing with goods
irregularly under the Act.
[43]
Duties were levied in terms of s 44 of the Customs
Act, which provides
(8) The manufacturer,
owner, seller or purchaser of any excisable goods or fuel levy goods
shall, subject to the provisions of Chapter
VII, be liable for the
duty on such goods, and his liability shall continue until such goods
have been duly entered and the duty
due thereon paid.
[44]
And all this constitutes an offence in terms of s
80
80. Serious
offences and their punishment. —(1) Any person who—
(c) removes or assists in
or permits the removal of goods in contravention of any provision of
this Act;
(o) contravenes the
provisions of section 4 (12A) (b), 18 (13), 18A (9), 20 (4)bis, 21
(3) (d), 35A (2), (3) and (4), 37 (9), 37A
(1) (c), 37A (4) (a), 48
(1A) (b), 54 (2), (3) and (4), 60 (1), 63 (1), 75 (7A), 75 (19), 88
(1) (bA), 99A, 113 (2), 113 (8) (c),
114 (2A) or 114 (2B);
## (ii)Administrative review
(ii)
Administrative review
[45]
The
legality principle is part of the "rule of law", one of the
founding values of the Constitution,
[5]
and considered a fundamental principle of constitutional law.
[6]
Legality applies to all the exercise of public power. It acts as a
safeguard should an action not qualify as an administrative
action
for the purpose of PAJA.
[7]
Since the decision in this case is an administrative action, it is
unnecessary to go into this inquiry.
[46]
With the facts clearly set out along with the
provisions, it must now be determined whether the Respondent acted in
line with the
prescripts of PAJA.
### Arbitrary and irrational
Arbitrary and irrational
[47]
The Applicants state that decision-making requires
that like cases be treated alike. The Respondent and the Appeal
Committee violated
these administrative justice principles, as they
treated the Applicant differently from Mega Burst. This is because
the Respondent
accepted the version of Mega Bursts that it was
unaware of the transaction, that it only transports fuel, and does
not know Prime
Crowns. This was accepted without any further
investigation or interrogation.
[48]
In
answering, the Respondent stated that it had no reason to probe
further if the version provided was accurate and that it was
not for
the Respondent to second guess or corroborate a version that a party
provided during its investigation process. In fact,
the Respondent
stated, that when a party provides the Respondent with information,
it accepts that information as is unless there
is a reason why it
should disbelieve the information it has been given.
[8]
[49]
In contrast, in relation to the Applicant, the
Respondent and the Appeal Committee imposed and upheld the forfeiture
penalty against
the Applicant. The Applicant avers that the
Respondent was unsure about the Applicant's version, whether it was
involved in the
diversion of goods, and now seeks to negate the
Applicant's version. The Respondent thus second-guessed the Applicant
and now seek
to corroborate a version that was provided by them, and
they did not accept the Applicant's information, while it had no
reason
to disbelieve the information it had been given. Thus, like
cases were not treated alike: the Respondent accepted Mega Bursts
version
on its say-so, rejecting the Applicant's version, and in the
answering affidavit required the Applicant to prove a negative.
[50]
Further reasons for irrationality include that
Mega Bursts alleges that it only transports oil and petrol. However,
in February
2021, custom clearance documents attached to the
Applicant's affidavit show that Mega Bursts transported liquor. If
the Respondent
interrogated Mega Burst, it would have come across
this information on their systems, giving them a reason to disbelieve
what Mega
Burst said in their emails.
[51]
The Respondent denies this in the answering
papers. It repeats that Mega Burst informed them that they only
transport oil and fuel
and send documents to prove it, and this was
communicated to the Applicant in the LOI and LOD and the Appeal
Committee outcome.
[52]
The
essence of the Applicant's argument is that the Respondent did not
treat like cases alike in that they treated Nu Africa differently
from Mega Burst. As authority, the Applicant relies on the English
Privy Council case of
Matadeen
v MGC Pointu
,
[9]
that states
Their Lordships do not
doubt that such a principle is one of the building blocks of
democracy and necessarily permeates any democratic
constitution.
Indeed, their Lordships would go further and say that treating like
cases alike and unlike cases differently
is a general axiom of
rational behaviour. It is, for example, frequently invoked by
the courts in proceedings for judicial
review as a ground for holding
some administrative act to have been irrational.
[53]
It thus rests on the idea of equality before the
law.
[54]
The Applicant states that the Respondent accepted
Mega Burst's version without further interrogation and required Nu
Africa to prove
its version – this is unequal treatment. The
Respondent disagrees, saying it investigated with an open and
enquiring mind.
It is not in dispute that Nu Africa sold the
consignment to Prime Crown for export and that Nu Africa finalised
all the information
and signed off on it before sending it to the
border. The truck driver provided the SARS border officials with a
manifest completed
and signed by Nu Africa, and the truck was
inspected in the presence of a Nu Africa agent representative. Mega
Burst denied being
able to transport alcohol and said they did not do
business with Prime Crown. This is what its decision was based on. On
appeal,
Nu Africa did not provide sufficient information as to why
they should not be liable in these instances in terms of s18A.
[55]
This
is not arbitrary or irrational. In general, s18A attaches liability
for the payment of duty upon the person who exports the
goods.
[10]
S18A(9)(a) prohibits the diversion of goods, and s18A(9)(b)(i) deems
the goods to be diverted if there was no permission granted
for the
diversion and the person concerned failed to produce valid proof and
other information and documents for inspection to
the Commissioner
(Respondent). The Applicant was the exporter of the goods. In terms
of the Customs Act, the Applicant is deemed
to have diverted the
goods. The Respondent asked for valid proof and other information
that it was not so diverted in line with
s18A(9). When it did not
receive the information, it deemed the goods diverted. On appeal, it
considered the information and remained
with its decision. Not so
much because it rejects the Applicant's version, it seems, but rather
because it does not deem its version
to absolve it from the deeming
provision.
[56]
The
ex
works
provision
also does not help the Applicant in this regard.
Ex
works
means
that the buyer assumes all responsibility for the goods once all the
cargo is packed in export packaging and collected. It
places a
minimum obligation on the seller.
[11]
The seller's obligation is limited to making the goods available for
collection at its premises, along with other obligations that
a
seller normally has, namely supplying invoices and other documents,
pay and costs incurred in placing the goods at the buyer's
disposal.
The risk of loss and damage is on the buyer.
[12]
[57]
Ex works
only
pertains to the relationship between the buyer and the seller and
does not absolve the seller from its liability in the Customs
Act. In
terms of the Act, the seller (the Applicant in this case) remains
liable until the goods are exported. If the goods are
not exported,
and the Applicant cannot prove that the goods were exported, then the
liability remains. This is further bolstered
by the fact that the
Applicant remained involved in the process since it kept in touch
with Mega Burst regarding the whereabouts
of the trucks and had a
representative present at the border.
[58]
Accordingly, the decision of the Respondent to
impose and uphold the forfeiture penalty is not arbitrary, irrational
and unlawful
on this ground.
### Failure to consider
relevant considerations and irrationality
Failure to consider
relevant considerations and irrationality
[59]
The Respondent and the Appeal Committee had to
consider all relevant considerations for a lawful decision to impose
a penalty, the
Applicant states. However, they failed to take into
consideration various factors, as is clear from their reasons,
namely:
i.
They had no evidence before
them to make a finding that the Applicant was not involved in
diverting the goods.
ii.
They did not consider whether
Mega Bursts, as a registered remover of goods, should have been held
jointly and severally liable
for the forfeiture penalty in terms of s
64D(3A)(b) read with s 64D(6)(a) of the Customs Act. They merely
accepted Mega Burst's
say so that it had no relationship with Mr
Sibara or Prime Crowns.
[60]
The Respondent and the Appeal Committee should
have considered these factors in reaching their decisions, and none
of the documents
shows that they have.
[61]
The Respondent respond to this effectively as
follows:
ex works
do
not absolve the Applicant from liability – s 18A(9)(a) of the
Customs Act also places liability on the exporter. It cannot
merely
pass the blame on Mega Burst. It is uncontested that the goods were
not exported, and it was for the Applicant to prove
that the goods
were exported. Absent this, the Applicant is liable for the
forfeiture amount in terms of s88(2)(a).
[62]
S 6(2)(e)(iii) of PAJA provides for review if "the
action was taken because irrelevant considerations were taken into
account
or relevant considerations were not considered". This
speaks to a failure of the administrator to apply their minds.
[63]
Where
the legislature has not given guidelines on what needs to be taken
into account when exercising a discretion, it is for the
court to
decide which considerations are relevant while being careful not to
become the administrator.
[13]
In
MEC
for Environmental Affairs and Development Planning v Clarison's
CC
[14]
the court stated:
The law remains, as we
see it, that when a functionary is entrusted with a discretion, the
weight to be attached to particular factors,
or how far a particular
factor affects the eventual determination of the issue, is a matter
for the functionary to decide, and
if he acts in good faith (and
reasonably and rationally) a court of law cannot interfere.
[64]
In terms of s 6(2)(f)(ii) of PAJA
A court or tribunal has
the power to judicially review an administrative action if the action
itself is not rationally connected
to
[…]
(cc) the information
before the administrator; or
[65]
Rationality
requires that the decision be objectively capable of furthering the
purpose for which the power was given and for which
the decisions
were purportedly taken. This must, importantly, be supported by the
evidence and information before the administrator
and the reasons
given for it. In
Carephone
v Marcus NO
[15]
it
was explained that the test requires
in one way or another,
asking the question: is there a rational objective basis justifying
the connection made by the administrative
decision-maker between the
material properly available to him and the conclusion he or she
eventually arrived at?
[66]
In this case, the Respondent considered the
representations from the Applicant and Mega Burst and concluded that
the Applicant should
be responsible for the penalty fee because the
Applicants could not show that the goods were exported, and did not
present enough
information to refute the deeming provision that the
goods were so diverted.
[67]
The Applicant states that they did so on no
evidence that the Applicant was involved in diverting the goods nor
considering joint
liability of Mega Burst. However, s 18A(9) of the
Customs Act holds the Applicant as exporter liable for the
exportation of the
goods. If the goods were not exported, and the
Applicant cannot account for it, it is liable. The Respondent then
may, in terms
of s 88(2)(a)(i), demand payment of an amount of the
goods so diverted. This the Respondent did, based on the information
before
it, as set out above.
[68]
The Respondent thus acted lawfully and rationally
in this respect.
### Disproportionate
Disproportionate
[69]
The Applicants state that the forfeiture penalty
is disproportionate in that the Applicant was not involved in the
diversion of
the goods, and the Respondent and the Appeal Committee
never found it was; the Applicant had previous interactions with Mega
Bursts
before it was appointed by Prime Crowns, and had no reason to
doubt its appointment; the Applicant conceded its error in completing
the customs clearance documentation and accepted its liability for
the duties, VAT and VAT interest.
[70]
The Respondent answered that the amount is equal
to the amount of alcohol that was diverted by the Applicant and that
was not exported
to Zimbabwe, and they were custodians of the goods
until they were meant to reach their final destination.
[71]
But, the Applicant replies, neither the Respondent
nor the Appeal Committee found that the Applicant diverted the
liquor, and they
had no evidence of this. The goods were further sold
ex works
,
and Prime Crowns was responsible as the appointed remover of goods.
The Applicant took no control over the goods once they left
its
premises and took the appropriate steps within its power to ensure
that the goods arrived at their destination.
[72]
Thus, the penalty is disproportionate and
unreasonable and should be set aside in terms of s 6(2)(h) of PAJA.
[73]
Again, the Respondent states that the fact that
the goods were exported
ex works
is irrelevant. S 88(2)(a) also holds the exporter
liable for the payment of the forfeiture amount. This is even more so
since the
Applicant was beneficially interested in how the goods are
exported and kept in touch with various representatives, plus had a
representative at the border. This is because they have a financial
interest and was aware of s18A of the Customs Act.
[74]
A reasonable decision is rational and
proportional. This means considering the nature of the decision, the
impact of the decision
on those affected by it, and whether other
means would be used to achieve the same purpose which does not have
an adverse impact
(or a less adverse impact) on those affected by it.
[75]
S 6(2)(h) states:
A court or tribunal has
the power to judicially review an administrative action if the
exercise of the power or the performance
of the function authorised
by the empowering provision, in pursuance of which the administrative
action was purportedly taken,
is so unreasonable that no reasonable
person could have so exercised the power or performed the function.
[76]
In
Medirite
(Pty) Limited v South African Pharmacy Council,
[16]
the Supreme Court of Appeal recognised proportionality as a ground of
review within the ambit of s 6(2)(h), finding that the rule
in that
instance was unreasonable as it was disproportional to the end it
sought to achieve.
It has
been stated that 'proportionality is a constitutional watchword' and
[…] unreasonable administrative action includes
'those that
are oppressive in the sense that they "have an unnecessarily
onerous impact on affected persons or where the means
employed
(albeit for lawful ends) are excessive or disproportionate in their
result"'.
[17]
[77]
The Applicant avers that the penalty
disproportionately impacts the Applicant, who acted in good faith and
was not responsible for
the diversion. The Respondent states, as
before, that if the Applicant cannot show that it had permission to
divert the goods,
it is deemed diverted contra the Act's provisions
and, therefore, liable. This might be so, the Applicant admits, with
the duties,
but not with the penalty. In the case of the penalty, the
Respondent has a discretion whether to levy it or not.
[78]
Based on the above reasoning, the
ex
works
provision is applicable between
the Applicant and the buyer and does not give the Applicant a way out
of the provisions of the Customs
Act, in terms of which it is liable.
The discretion to levy or not is not prescribed by the Customs Act.
In terms of the provisions
cited above, the Respondent is entitled to
levy the forfeiture penalty when the goods were diverted. The
decision is not so unreasonable
that no reasonable person could have
so exercised the power or performed the function.
### Influenced by a material
error of fact
Influenced by a material
error of fact
[79]
There is no evidence to demonstrate that the
Applicant was involved in the diversion, and it was not for The
Applicant to prove
a negative. The Respondent and the Appeal
Committee are thus mistaken about whether the Applicant was involved
in a diversion.
This fact is uncontentious and objectively
verifiable, which finds a review based on a material mistake of fact.
[80]
S 6(2)(i) A court or tribunal has the power to
judicially review an administrative action if the action is otherwise
unconstitutional
or unlawful.
[81]
Mistakes
of fact as a ground of review must be carefully considered not to
blur the distinction between review and appeal. In
Dumani
v Nair
[18]
Cloete JA, in a separate concurring opinion, stated that as a ground
of review, "mistake of fact" does not entitle a
reviewing
court to consider the matter afresh or to substitute its view as to
what the finding should be. The ground can only be
employed where the
fact is established, meaning it is uncontentious and objectively
verifiable.
[19]
However, where
the functionary had to exercise judgment, such as assessing contested
evidence or the weighing up of evidence, it
is not reviewable.
[20]
[82]
This
case falls in the latter category, where the Respondent gathered
information, weighed it, and decided based on the facts. It
did
consider the Applicant's version that it was not involved in the
goods, but this was not enough to refute the deeming provision.
The
Applicant's reliance on
MV
'TARIK III' Credit Europe Bank N.V. v The Fund Comprising the
Proceeds of the Sale of the MV Tarik III
[21]
is
misplaced – that case dealt with a claim in terms of an
agreement and the question on whom the onus rests on proving the
termination of the contract. It does not deal with a deeming clause.
[83]
In this case, a deeming provision deems the
Applicant to have diverted the goods without permission, which, in
the structure of
the Act, makes the Applicant liable under certain
circumstances. In other words, if the goods are diverted back into
South Africa
without the permission of the Respondent, the Applicant
breached the Customs Act. This is set out in the LOI, LOD and Appeal
Committee
reasons. The decision is lawful.
# Conclusion
Conclusion
[84]
The
Applicant stated that the
Biowatch
-principle
[22]
should apply, should they not be successful, as they were enforcing
their constitutional right to just administrative action. Normally,
costs follow the event, but a judge has a discretion as to whether to
make a cost award and what that award should be.
Biowatch
is
applicable in constitutional litigation, where a private party seeks
to assert a constitutional right against the government.
In terms of
Biowatch
,
even if such a party is unsuccessful, each party should bear its own
costs. The focus is on the issues, and whether they advance
constitutional justice, not just for the party before the court, but
for the wider society. This is not such a case. I see no reason
to
depart from the rule that cost follows the result.
# Order
Order
[85]
I, therefore, make the following order:
1.
The application is dismissed, with costs.
WJ DU PLESSIS
ACTING JUDGE OF THE HIGH
COURT
Delivered: This
judgement is handed down electronically by uploading it to the
electronic file of this matter on CaseLines.
It will be sent to the
parties/their legal representatives by email.
Counsel
for the Applicant:
Mr
M De Beer
Instructed
by:
Savage
Jooste and Adams
Counsel
for the Respondent:
Mr
M Musandiwa
Instructed
by:
MacRobert
Attorneys
Date
of the hearing:
04
September 2023
Date
of judgment:
27
October 2023
[1]
91
of 1964
[2]
91
of 1964.
[3]
3
of 2000.
[4]
Public
Protector v Mail and Guardian Ltd
2011
(4) SA 420 (SCA).
[5]
S
1(c).
[6]
Fedsure
Life Insurance v Greater Johannesburg Transitional Metropolitan
Council
[1998] ZACC 17
;
(1999
(1) SA 374
(CC) para 68.
[7]
Hoexter,
C. (2021).
Administrative
Law in South Africa
,
Juta and Company Ltd. p 357.
[8]
Supplementary
Answering Affidavit, para 22 p 001-253.
[9]
[1998]
UKPC 9
at 8 – 9.
[10]
Standard
General Insurance Company Ltd v Commissioner for Customs &
Excise
[2004]
2 All SA 376
(SCA).
[11]
J
Coetzee “Incoterms: Development and legal nature – A
brief overview” (2002) 13
Stell
LR
155
at 120.
[12]
Srivastava,
Ajendra, and Ajendra Srivastava. "Standard Trade Terms."
Modern
Law of International Trade: Comparative Export Trade and
International Harmonization
(2020):
51-78.
[13]
Hoexter,
C. (2021).
Administrative
Law in South Africa
,
Juta and Company Ltd. p 440.
[14]
2013
(6) SA 235
(SCA) para 22.
[15]
[1998]
ZALAC 11.
[16]
Medirite
(Pty) Limited v South African Pharmacy Council
[2015]
ZASCA 27.
[17]
Medirite
(Pty) Limited v South African Pharmacy Council
[2015]
ZASCA 27
para 20.
[18]
Dumani
v Nair
[2012]
ZASCA 196; 2013 (2) SA 274 (SCA); [2013] 2 All SA 125 (SCA)
[19]
See
discussion of this in Hoexter, C. (2021).
Administrative
Law in South Africa
,
Juta and Company Ltd. 425.
[20]
Airports
Company South Africa v Tswelokgotso Trading Enterprises CC
[2018]
ZAGPJHC 476;
2019 (1) SA 204
(GJ) para 12.
[21]
(1294/2021)
[2022] ZASCA 136; [2022] 4 All SA 621 (SCA)
[22]
Biowatch
Trust v Registrar Genetic Resources
(2009
(6) SA 232
(CC).
sino noindex
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