Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 34South Africa
Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service v Van Zyl and Others (37351/2020) [2022] ZAGPPHC 34 (27 January 2022)
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service v Van Zyl and Others (37351/2020) [2022] ZAGPPHC 34 (27 January 2022)
Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service v Van Zyl and Others (37351/2020) [2022] ZAGPPHC 34 (27 January 2022)
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sino date 27 January 2022
HIGH
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
(1)
REPORTABLE: NO.
(2)
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
(3)
REVISED.
DATE:
27 JANUARY 2022
CASE
NO: 37351/2020
In
the matter between:
THE
COMMISSIONER FOR THE SOUTH
AFRICAN
REVENUE SERVICE
Applicant
and
LOUIS
DANIEL VAN ZYL
First
Respondent
HERMAN
ENGELBRECHT LUBBE
Second
Respondent
CORNEL
SUSAN VAN ZYL
Third
Respondent
SUNELDA
VAN
ZYL
Fourth
Respondent
EXPRESS
MODEL TRADING 123 (PTY) LTD
Fifth
Respondent
WILLA
SUSANNA SCHONBORN N.O
Sixth
Respondent
DORETHEA
SOPHEA VISAGIE N. O
Seventh
Respondent
VIKING
PONY PROPERTIES 135 (PTY) LTD
Eighth
Respondent
ENSEMBLE
TRADING 428 (PTY) LTD
Ninth
Respondent
THE
TRUSTEES OF THE MALUBE TRUST
Tenth
Respondent
ZELPY
2132 (PTY)
LTD
Eleventh
Respondent
J
U D G M E N T
This matter has been heard in
open court and disposed of in the terms of the Directives of the
Judge President of this Division. The
judgment and order are
accordingly published and distributed electronically.
DAVIS, J
[1]
Introduction
At issue in this application was
the confirmation of a provisional preservation order granted in terms
of section 163 of the Tax Administration
Act 28 of 2011 (the TAA).
The initial order was granted on 11 August 2020 and extended from
time to time. In the meantime,
a curator had been appointed.
The curator has performed the necessary investigations and has filed
two reports. The confirmation
of the provisional preservation
order was opposed by various respondents.
[2]
The role players
2.1
The applicant is the
Commissioner of the South African Revenue Service (SARS). SARS
was represented in the matter by a “senior
SARS official” as
provided for in section 163 of the TAA who in turn, acted on
investigations performed by SARS’ Illicit Economy
Unit (the IEU).
2.2
The first respondent is
one Louis Daniel van Zyl (Van Zyl). He and the second
respondent, one Hermanus Engelbrecht Lubbe (Lubbe)
were the
controlling minds and directors of a number of companies which had
submitted fraudulent Value Added Tax (VAT) returns.
Based on
these fraudulent returns, vast VAT refunds were claimed and obtained
from SARS.
2.3
The remainder of the
respondents fall into two groups. They were all, according to
SARS, recipients or beneficiaries of proceeds
of the illegally
obtained VAT refunds.
2.4
The first group of the
remaining respondents are Van Zyl’s previous wife, their daughter
and a company called Viking Pony Properties
135 (Pty) Ltd
(Viking Pony). These respondents featured as the third, fourth and
eighth respondents respectively. They
were represented by Adv
Goodman SC together with Adv Acker. These respondents
counter-applied for the discharge of the provisional
preservation
order. For convenience’s sake this group of respondents shall
be referred to as the “Van Zyl group”.
2.5
The second group of
respondents consist of another company, Express Model Trading 123
(Pty) Ltd (Express Model) and a trust, the Malube
Trust, represented
by its trustees. Adv. Bester appeared for Lubbe and these
respondents, being the fifth and tenth respondents.
I shall
refer to this group of respondents as the “Lubbe group”.
2.6
The first respondent
had been sequestrated and, due to a heart condition, was unable to
attend the proceedings.
2.7
The trustees of the
Sulalla Trust feature as the sixth and seventh respondents and two
other companies, Ensemble Trading 428 (Pty)
Ltd (Ensemble Trading)
and Zelpy 2132 (Pty) Ltd (Zelpy 2132) feature as the ninth and
eleventh respondents. The roles of these
respondents shall be
described hereinlater.
[3]
The fraudulent
scheme
3.1
As set out in an
extensive affidavit by an operations specialist of the IEU, Van Zyl
operated a scheme whereby fraudulent VAT returns
were submitted by
companies under his control between 2006 to 2014. When SARS
became suspicious about the validity of the VAT
refunds claimed based
on these returns, third party verification of the underlying invoices
were conducted. This established
that fictitious invoices were
generated for purposes of claiming undue VAT refunds. This was
principally done by Van Zyl through
two companies, Greenbridge Future
Contracts (Pty) Ltd and RZP Zelpy 5427 (Pty) Ltd.
3.2
Based on the above, the
refunds were reversed and the amounts demanded back from the
companies. In addition, SARS authorised
audits of all the
taxpayers who either participated in or benefitted from the scheme.
3.3
Van Zyl has, in an
affidavit furnished to the South African Police Services, admitted to
the manufacturing of false invoices, having
been assisted therein by
Lubbe. Notably, Van Zyl has been described by his daughter (the
fourth respondent) as “an accountant
and tax practitioner”.
3.4
The investigation by
SARS indicated that the VAT refunds paid by SARS prior to the
discovery of the scheme had resulted in an unusual
flow of funds
between various companies and individuals. In order to analyse
the flow of funds, bank statements of all the
persons and entities
who ultimately became respondents in this application, were obtained,
analyzed and reconciled with each other
by way of cross-referencing.
3.5
An extensive table
listing the amounts respectively received and transferred back by the
various respondents between each other revealed
that some R 228
million had flowed into their accounts, while some R150 million had
again flowed out of their accounts. In
some instances, one bank
account was shared by six different companies. This appeared to
have been purposely done in order
to distribute the fraudulently
obtained VAT refunds, as most of the companies involved did not even
trade.
3.6
In addition to the ebb
and flow of funds, the investigations revealed that the following
amounts, constituting VAT refunds, were paid
directly to each of the
respondents in this matter:
L D van Zyl
R21 288 371, 08
Expense account Van Zyl
R 1 868 507, 44
H E Lubbe
R 809 806, 00
C S Van Zyl
R 423 477, 98
S Van Zyl
R 958 501, 00
Express Model Trading 135
R 9 213 382, 44
Ensemble Trading 428
R 234 000,
00
Sulalla Trust
R 211 890, 20
Viking Pony Properties 135
R 68 197, 37
Total:
R 35 076 133, 57
3.7
The audit finding
further indicated that, apart from the tax liability of the companies
which had claimed the illicit VAT refunds,
those other individuals
and companies who had received funds had either failed to declare
these funds or have under-declared their
income. They each had
outstanding or estimated tax liabilities.
[4]
The tax liabilities
4.1
In the instance of
Express Model and Zelpy 2132 tax assessments have already been issued
and the tax due on date of the launch of
the application by these two
companies were already R 40 509 707, 54 and R 887 771,
69 respectively.
4.2
In addition, based on
the flow of funds and receipt of illicit VAT refunds, the respondents
were otherwise estimated to be liable
for tax debt as follows:
Taxpayer
Income declared
Under declaration
Estimated tax debt that may be due
L D van Zyl
7 548 983, 00
21 288 371, 08
8 515 348, 43
CS van Zyl
3 941 174, 00
10 806 173, 31
4 322 469, 32
S van Zyl
2 383 065, 00
7 069 938, 63
2 827 975, 45
H E Lubbe
2 319 399, 00
6 764 516, 54
2 705 806, 62
Express Model
-
9 213 382, 44
2 579 747, 08
Sulalla Trust
-
7 363 609, 38
2 945 443, 75
Viking Pony
13 792 197, 00
3 291 260, 31
1 391 552, 89
Ensemble Trading
-
-
683 520, 00
Malube Trust
-
2 333 509, 00
933 403, 60
Zelpy 2123
-
10 246 550, 11
2 989 864, 25
Total: R 29 895 131, 40
4.3
Based on the tax
liability of Greenbridge Future Trading (Pty) Ltd and RZP Zelpy 5427
(Pty), SARS has issued certified statements
of tax due in terms of
section 172 of the TAA against Van Zyl, with reliance on section 180
of the TAA for his personal liability
for some these taxes in the
amounts of R 12 167 016, 63 and R 18 436 584, 06
respectively. These certificates
had been endorsed in the
Western Cape High Court in cases 19 327/2019 and 19 328/
2019 respectively. When the liquidators
of the Greenbridge
Group sought to sequestrate Van Zyl, SARS successfully intervened,
based on these claims. As a result of
this intervention Van Zyl
was, despite vehement opposition, provisionally sequestrated on 2
July 2020, also in the Western Cape Division
of this Court.
4.4
In similar fashion as
with Van Zyl, SARS has also obtained judgments against Lubbe in
respect of his personal liability for some of
the tax debts of
another two companies, Express Model Trading 723 (Pty) Ltd and
RZP Zelpy 4996 (Pty) Ltd. The certificates
issued in terms of
section 172 of the TAA against Lubbe in respect of these companies
are in the amounts of R 9 759 903,
23 and R 10 920 909,
94, endorsed in cases 2014/2019 and 2013/2014 respectively in the
Western Cape Division of this Court.
4.5
The extent of the
estimated probable tax liabilities of the remainder of the
respondents, as listed in paragraph 4.2 above, are without
the
inclusion of understatement penalties of up to 200% and without
interest, both of which should still be added.
[5]
The preservation
order and its consequences
5.1
On 11 August 2020 SARS
obtained a provisional preservation order against the respondents as
contemplated in section 163 of the TAA.
The provisional order
also made provision for the appointment of a curator bonis.
5.2
After his appointment,
the curator ensured that service of the order took place on the
respondents. Hereafter, as already mentioned,
Mrs Van Zyl (the
third respondent) launched a counter-application for the discharge of
the provisional order. She did so in
her personal capacity and
as a director of Viking Pony. A similar counter-application was
launched by her daughter (the fourth
respondent). At the end of
October 2020, SARS responded to these applications.
5.3
Only in April 2021 did
Lubbe, is his personal capacity, and on behalf of the fifth and tenth
respondents, oppose confirmation of the
provisional order.
5.4
The curator bonis has
filed two reports. He has, in the performance of his
obligations and the discharge of his duties, been
in regular contact
with those respondents who are natural persons. This has, inter
alia, resulted in the release of funds to
Mrs Van Zyl and her opening
a new Capitec bank account into which she could make deposits and
withdraw funds.
5.5
The curator has
discovered that Mrs Van Zyl was the director of various companies and
a trustee of various trusts. She however,
declined to provide
particularity hereof to either the curator or via her opposing
affidavit, to this court. The curator could
establish that Mrs
Van Zyl has loaned and advanced an amount of R 2,2 million to a
company Propergreen (Pty) Ltd (Propergreen) from
which she receives
interest payments. No contract underpinning this loan nor any
financials were however produced in respect
of this company, nor was
any detail furnished about Propergreen’s income or the source of
the interest payments. Mrs Van
Zyl also had investments of R 2
million which had, on maturity it seems, been reinvested. She
was also found to be the owner
of more vehicles than disclosed in her
opposing affidavit. With the curator’s consent, an immovable
property belonging to
Viking Pony was sold and the proceeds kept in
trust by Mrs Van Zyls’ attorney (this sale had been at an advanced
stage by the time
the curator had been appointed).
5.6
Ms Van Zyl (the fourth
respondent) is a director of a dormant company, Outpost Holding 12
(Pty) Ltd, which she failed to disclose
in her opposing affidavit.
She apparently also trades in Crypto-currency, but both the extent
thereof and the profits appear
to now be inaccessible.
5.7
In similar fashion as
with Ms Van Zyl, Lubbe failed to disclose in his opposing affidavit
that he is a member of a close corporation
Brainwave Projects 2403 CC
(now apparently dormant). His affidavit also does not disclose
that he has loaned some R 2,6 million
to this close corporation as
start-up capital. To date, no documentation has been produced
regarding either this loan or the
close corporation’s activities.
At some stage it was alleged that the business of the close
corporation had been sold for
R 970 000, 00 but the flow of the
proceeds of this sale is as absent as any documentation confirming
this, save for an unsigned
sale agreement. In respect of the
companies of which Lubbe was still a director, namely Southern Star
(Pty) Ltd and RZP Zelpy
4996 (Pty) Ltd, he has produced unaudited
financial statements reflecting zero assets and liabilities. In
respect of the Malube
Trust, Lubbe could not provide the curator with
any bank or financial statements. He did, however, confirm that
Express Model
has paid certain “profit shares” to the Malube
Trust. In addition, it has been established that the same
company paid rentals
to the trust in respect of a property or
properties rented by Van Zyl and Lubbe, but ownership or further
particularity of these
properties could not yet be established.
5.8
In similar fashion as
with Mrs Van Zyl, the curator has released access to Lubbe’s
current account to him to enable him to pay his
monthly expenses of
which he has provided the curator with a breakdown.
[6]
The Van Zyl Group’s
position
6.1
As already indicated,
Van Zyl has been sequestrated (at least provisionally) and the
control of his estate vested as a result thereof,
in the hands of the
Master or a provisional trustee. SARS therefore no longer seeks
confirmation of the preservation order
as the hand of the insolvency
law has taken care of control of his estate.
6.2
Mrs and Ms Van Zyl
initially contemplated anticipating the return day of the
preservation order as applicants in an application for
the discharge
thereof. The release of funds by the curator as referred to
above has somewhat ameliorated their position and,
after case
management, the matter proceeded as a third court application,
inserted into my roll by arrangement with the Judge President
and
Deputy Judge President of this Division.
6.3
The grounds of
opposition to the confirmation of the preservation order initially
raised by Mrs Van Zyl in her affidavit (with which
Ms Van Zyl largely
made common cause), have been distilled in subsequent Heads of
Argument to the following:
6.3.1
The preservation order
sought is an abuse of the provisions of section 163 of the TAA;
6.3.2
The order and
appointment of a curator was unnecessary and “
grossly
invasive
”;
6.3.3
The order constitutes
an overreach in relation to the tax debt;
6.3.4
SARS failed to disclose
all material facts when the initial order was sought.
[7]
The Lubbe group’s
position
7.1
Lubbe denied any
knowledge of VAT fraud perpetrated by Van Zyl inter alia via the
companies of which Lubbe was a director and/or the
financial manager.
7.2
The remainder of the
“topics” that featured in the Lubbe group of respondents’
opposition to the preservation order were listed
by their counsel as
being:
7.2.1
No realizable assets;
7.2.2
No risk of dissipation;
7.2.3
Should the order be
confirmed, it would have no practical utility;
7.2.4
The application amounts
to an abuse of section 163 of the TAA.
[8]
The Law
8.1
Section 163(1) of the
TAA provides as follows: “
A
senior SARS official may, in order to prevent any realisable assets
from being disposed of 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 any manner with
the assets to which the order relates
”.
8.2
Section 163(3)
extends the ambit of the order in relation to assets as follows: “
A
preservation order may be made if required to secure the collection
of the tax referred to in subsection (1) and in respect of –
(a)
realisable
assets seized by SARS under subsection (2) [providing for seizure,
safeguarding and the appointment of a curator bonis
in whom attached
assets shall vest];
(b)
the realizable
assets as may be specified in the order and which are held by the
person against whom the preservation order is being
made;
(c)
all realizable
assets held by the person, whether it is specified in the order or
not; or
(d)
all assets which, if
transferred to the person after the making of the preservation order,
would be realizable assets
”
.
8.3
Regarding the status of
a tax debt certified by SARS, section 172(1) of the TAA provides as
follows: “
If a
person has an outstanding tax debt, SARS may, after giving the person
at least 10 business days’ notice, file with the clerk
or registrar
of a competent court a certified statement setting out the amount of
tax payable and certified by SARS as correct
”.
8.4
Section 174 of the TAA
then further provides that a certified statement filed in terms of
section 172 “
must
be treated as a civil judgment lawfully given in the relevant court
in favour of SARS
”.
8.5
In terms of section 180
of the TAA, in the event of a senior SARS official being satisfied
that a person who controls or is regularly
involved in the management
of the overall financial affairs of a taxpayer is or was negligent or
fraudulent in respect of the tax
debt of such a taxpayer, such a
person can be held personally liable for any such outstanding tax
debt.
8.6
Rogers J, in the matter
of
Commissioner,
South African Revenue Services v Tradex (Pty) Ltd and Others
2015 (3) SA 596
(WCC) at 606 B-D, held as follows in explaining the
approach to the suspicion of a respondent’s dissipation of assets
with the
intention of frustrating an SARS’ claim against it:
“
I do not think that ‘required’
in s 163(3) entails proof of such an intention of the part of the
taxpayer. However, 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 the 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
”.
8.7
In the matter of
Metcash Trading Ltd
v Commissioner, South African Revenue Services & Another
2001(1) SA 1109 (CC) at para 60 it was held by Kriegler J:
“
First, the public interest in
obtaining full and speedy settlement of tax debts in the overall
context of the Act is significant.
In their affidavits the
Commissioner and the Minister mentioned a number of public policy
considerations in favour of a general system
whereby taxpayers are
granted no leeway to defer payment of their taxes. These are in
any event well-known and self-event.
Ensuring prompt payment by
vendors of amounts assessed to be due by them is clearly an important
public purpose
”.
8.8
The court in the matter
of
Commissioner for
the South African Revenue Service v Van Der Merwe
:
In Re:
Ex parte
Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service
2014
JOL 31647
(WCC) held that:
“
The basis on which a
preservation order, in terms of Section 163(3), may be made is “if
required to secure the collection of tax
”.
The court went on to state as
follows:
“
Whilst the grant of a
preservation order may be considered harsh, there are compelling
reasons within the context of your constitutional
democracy why steps
which assist the fiscus securing the collection of tax are required,
which include court orders to preserve assets
so as to secure the
collection of tax
”.
The court further stated that:
“
It follows therefore that for a
court to determine whether a preservation order is required to secure
the collection of tax in terms
of section 163(3), it does not need to
be shown that the grant of the order is required as a matter of
necessity, or to prevent dissipation
of the assets. Rather, in
making the assessment as to whether to grant the order or not, the
Court must be appraised of the
available facts in order to arrive at
a conclusion, reasonably formed on the material for it, as to whether
a preservation order
is required or not to secure the collection of
tax. These facts must not amount to a statement of the
applicant’s opinion,
but must illustrate an appropriate connection
between the evidence available and the nature of the order sought
”.
8.9
This court has in
CSARS
v Badenhorst t/a S.A Global Trading
(5123/2013, 56971/2013) [2015] ZAGPPHC 1085 (13 October 2015)
confirmed, with reference to section 190(5) of the TAA at paras 57
and 58: “
If SARS
pays to a person by way of a refund any amount which is not properly
payable to the person under a tax Act, the amount is
regarded as tax
that is payable by the person to SARS from the date on which it is
paid to the person. Even if VAT had been
paid out incorrectly
by SARS, it still remains the collection of tax. The only
manner SARS can recover some of its owned by
the insolvent … is t
claim it from the persons and entities to which it has been paid …
and the relevant respondents to which
it has been dissipated
”.
8.10
Regarding the exercise
of a court’s discretion pertaining to the granting of a
preservation order, the case of
Commissioner,
South Africa Revenue Service v Tradex (Pty) Ltd and Others
(above) is particularly apposite for purposes of the current
application. In that case the court explained the approach to
section 163 preservation orders, to be the following:
“
[37] The question whether a
preservation order is ‘required’ and whether the court should
exercise its discretion to grant one,
calls for a consideration of
the specific terms of the order sought by SARS. The question
whether a preservation order is required
cannot be answered in the
abstract. The practical utility of the actual terms must be
assessed
”.
[9]
Evaluation
9.1
In order not to the
adjudicate the issue of the preservation of assets sought in this
case “in the abstract”, it is convenient
to start with the person
who had, by his own admission, fraudulently orchestrated the VAT
refunds. That is Van Zyl. Until
17 December 2017 he was
married to Mrs Van Zyl. She was not an employee of the company
in which Van Zyl had orchestrated the
illicit refunds, yet she
received R 2 041 514.29 from that company over a two year
period. In the affidavit by the
IEU operations specialist, SARS
claims that the transfers to Mrs Van Zyl simply do not make
commercial sense and that “
the
only plausible explanation of these unusual financial transactions
was [that they] were intended to disguise money laundering
and tax
evasion
”.
9.2
In a long-winded answer
to these allegations, winding its way through accusations of
confirmation figures and detail supplied by SARS
and through a
partial history of Mrs Van Zyl’s investments, maturity thereof,
re-investment, sales of immovable properties leading
up to her
current residence in Hartenbosh, there was no actual denial of these
allegations. A further significant aspect is
that the direct
payment or transfer of unlawfully obtained funds to her own account
as referred to in paragraph 3.6 above was never
directly addressed by
her.
9.3
Furthermore, the
undocumented loans to Propergreen (Pty) Ltd (discovered by the
curator) and to Viking Pony (as admitted by Mrs Van
Zyl in her
affidavit), lend credence to the fact that, absent a preservation
order, millions of Rands were (and may still be) transferred
to
entities without SARS’ knowledge and in respect of which disclosure
is or may be withheld. Such transfers and non-disclosures
would
surely frustrate the recovery of tax as contemplated in section 163
and the concern of the senior SARS official seems entirely
justified.
9.4
However, there appears
to be merit in Mrs Van Zyl’s argument that the extent of the
preservation order amounts to overreaching.
The preservation of
assets in excess of R20 million in respect of an estimated tax debt
which, from all indications received from
SARS’s counsel, amount to
some R12 million, appears excessive.
9.5
In similar fashion as
her mother, Ms S Van Zyl only gave partial explanations for the funds
received. One glaring example is
the R 900 000,00 single
payment received from RZP Zelpy 5427 (Pty) Ltd (trading as
Greenbridge Grain), one of the major role-players
in the illicit VAT
refund scheme. There was, upon a scrutiny of Ms Van Zyl’s
affidavit, no actual denial of the channeling
of funds to her
accounts, nor of her estimated tax debt. The findings by the
curator relating to the estimated value of her
assets in the region
of R 5, 5 million were also left intact. Contrary to the
position of her mother, the total estimated tax
debt and interest of
R8, 4 million, exceed the amount of her preserved assets and the
question of overreach does not apply to her.
9.6
The position of Viking
Pony is even simpler: its sole immovable asset has been sold with the
consent of the curator and the net proceeds
of R 2,15 million is
being held in trust by the attorneys involved. As this amount
is still short of the estimated tax debt
which, together with
interest, amount to R 2, 67 million, the preservation of the proceeds
will ensure that no frustration of recovery
occurs until the final
assessment and payment of this company’s tax debt.
9.7
Once it has been
determined, as indicated above, that persons (or entities) who have
received proceeds of illicitly obtained VAT refunds
and who could not
or would not disclose either particularity or cogent reasons for
these receipts and who thereafter transferred
large portions of these
funds, in some cases amounting to huge sums of money, to other
entities in circumstances which are either
clandestine (in the
instances of non-disclosure) or, again, without detail or
substantiating documentation, then the inferences of
money laundering
or tax evasion, drawn by SARS, appear to be justified. Against
this background, complaints of abuse of the
statutory mechanisms and
the alleged invasiveness thereof, pale into insignificance. The
conduct of the curator to release
funds and accounts to allow for
daily expenses and allowing the sale of Viking Pony’s immovable
property to proceed, further militates
against findings of abuse or
unnecessary invasion.
9.8
Much was also made by
counsel for these respondents that no actual dissipation has been
proven which would justify the granting of
a preservation of assets
to prevent such dissipation. He argued that not all funds
received were ill-gotten gains and that
it cannot be said that all
onward payments amounted to dissipation. Reliance was also
placed on the following extract from
the judgment of
Commissioner:
South African Revenue Service v Tradex (Pty) Ltd and Others
(supra) wherein the Court indicated that there must be a material
risk that assets will be dissipated in order to justify the granting
of a final preservation order. Rogers J stated:
“…
However, SARS is required
to show, I think, that there is a material risk that asses which
would otherwise be available in satisfaction
of tax will, in the
absence of a preservation order, no longer be available
”.
9.9
However, the facts in
respect of which the statement in above portion of judgment have been
made, are to be distinguished from the
present facts. In the
present matter SARS was confronted by a massive fraudulent scheme,
perpetrated by Van Zyl, though entities
controlled by Lubbe, followed
by dissipation (at that stage at least) of the proceeds of the
illicit refunds through various entities,
all controlled or managed
by Van Zyl, his family and Lubbe. It took detailed and
meticulous investigation from SARS to distill
the facts of which only
the most pertinent have been summed up above. Had the
money-laundering, once detected and traced, stopped
there, there
might have been more force to this leg of the Van Zyl respondents’
argument, but when disclosure of details of money-laundering
(for
that is what it is once the inferences referred to earlier have not
been dispelled) remain absent to a court-appointed curator
(and to
the court itself) then, in my view, preservation of what is needed to
secure a tax debt is “required”, in the words of
section 163, to
avoid frustration of recovery of whatever else may have been left
undisclosed. A further example of conduct
which confirm that
SARS cannot put much stock on the exculpatory versions of these
respondents, is Ms Van Zyl’s contention that
some R 2, 3 million of
the funds which she had been accused of having received was a
graduation gift. The graduation gift on
which she relies, was
made in 2016, which post-dates the flow of funds on which SARS
initially relied. The dissipation by way
of distribution of
funds combined with the selective manner of furnishing purported
explanations or of not making disclosures when
called for,
constitute, in my view, sufficient “compelling reasons” as
contemplated in
CSARS
v Van der Merwe
(at
para 8.8 above) as to why “
steps
which assist the fiscus in securing the collection of tax
are
required
”.
(my empahasis)
9.10
The Lubbe-group of
respondents’ position is slightly different: whilst they also
contend that a preservation order is not “required”
as there is
no fear of dissipation and that SARS’ resort to section 163
constitutes an abuse, the principal contention is that
there are no
realizable assets and a confirmation of the order would therefore
have no practical effect. In heads of argument,
the reference
to realizable assets was occasionally replaced with an alleged
absence of “any material assets”.
9.11
The lastmentioned
contention is not entirely correct: there is at least the one
immovable property, an erf in Worcester. Taking
this into
account, as well as certain motor vehicles, and deducting Lubbe’s
total liabilities (excluding his tax liabilities),
the curator has
determined a net asset position of R 1, 210 616, 21.
9.12
In similar fashion as
with the Van Zyl’s, the curator had requested Lubbe to disclose his
income and expenditure and his assets
and liabilities. He was
also requested to provide all books and records under his control
relating to his affairs and that
of the respondents. His
current bank account was released from the preservation order to
allow for the deposit of his salary
and processing of his debit
orders.
9.13
Lubbe has two vehicles
and one trailer and the curator was furnished with the purchase
prices and financing thereof. However,
Lubbe stated that the
one vehicle he gifted to a female friend and the other, a Hilux
“bakkie” and a trailer, belongs to his
mother “as he owed her
money that he borrowed from her a few years ago”. The same
apparently applies to his household items.
This debt arose
subsequent to the sale of a family farm which had, by way of a bond,
financed a bottle store previously operated
by Lubbe.
9.14
Lubbe declared a
loan account in his favour against Brainwave Projects 2403 CC in an
amount of R 2 656 789, 20 but declared
that the close
corporation, was dormant since September 2017. No particularity
or documentation in confirmation of any of this
has been furnished to
the curator.
9.15
Apparently relying on
CSARS v Tradex (Pty)
Ltd
(above), Lubbe
tendered the registration of an interim caveat against his immovable
property “until the dispute has been finalised”.
SARS
argued that, absent a cession of the proceeds of any sale of the
property, the caveat will only serve to prevent further
encumbrance
or transfer of the property should Lubbe sell it.
9.16
Lubbe is a bookkeeper
and despite this and his directorship of the companies involved in
the VAT fraud scheme, he pleads being agnostic
about Van Zyl’s
doings. Nonetheless, even such negligent abdication of his
fiduciary duties as a director, render him liable
to SARS in respect
of the tax liability of the companies. This liability has been
confirmed by court orders in respect of which
none of the TAA
internal procedures have been initiated and which have become
undisputed and final.
9.17
Lubbe’s explanation
of his role in Van Zyl’s scheme is at the same time both
unconvincing and facilitative. Either way,
it amounts, at best,
to a gross abdication of the duties and responsibilities as a
director of companies. He put it thus in
his opposing
affidavit: “
My
role was that of a “passive partner” and I was only requested by
the First Respondent to provide a company within which the
trading
could take place. Being the sole director and shareholder of
the Fifth Respondent, we decided to use the Fifth Respondent
as the
corporate vehicle for the proposed trading
”.
The rest, as they say, is history. Lubbe’s reliance on
delegation authorities provided for in the
Companies Act 71 of 2008
and on Van Zyl does not justify his total abdication of control and
responsibility. Whatever ignorance Lubbe may now plead,
has
therefore been overtaken by events, resulting in an outstanding tax
liability.
9.18
What little Lubbe
actually does disclose, is how he acquired the presently owned
immovable property. It was financed from the
proceeds of the
sale of his previous residence, the proceeds of a disability benefit
and the current bond. The acquisition
of an asset need not,
however, to have been by way of illicit refunds to make it subject to
a preservation order.
9.19
Another point which
Lubbe tried to make is that neither Express Model nor the Malube
Trust have any assets and neither could the curator
(to date) locate
any such assets.
9.20
Both groups of
respondents allege that the application and the reliance on section
of 163 of the TAA constitute an abuse of process.
SARS is
accused as having launched the application solely to put Van Zyl
under pressure and “to bring matters to a head”.
The fact
that Van Zyl had been sequestrated in separate proceedings refutes
the first premise of this allegation. I further
find, on a
conspectus of all the evidence and voluminous documentation, but in
particular, with reliance on the vast sums of money
which have been
channelled back and forth between various entities and respondents,
that SARS had been justified in being concerned
about further such
manipulation of funds and transfers, amounting to dissipation of
assets from one taxpayer to another or to an
undisclosed third party,
all of which might frustrate the recovery of tax debts.
Resorting to the mechanism created by
section 163
of the TAA can, in
these circumstances, not amount to an abuse of process.
[10]
Conclusions
10.1
SARS no longer seeks
confirmation of the order against the 9
th
Respondent and neither against Van Zyl, subsequent to his
sequestration, and therefore no preservation order need be confirmed
against
these respondents.
10.2
The sixth, seventh and
eleventh respondents have not opposed the confirmation of the
preservation order.
10.3
In the circumstances as
set out above, I find that the preservation order should be confirmed
against the Van Zyl group of respondents,
except that, in respect of
Mrs Van Zyl (the third respondent) the extent of the order should be
limited to R 12 million. As
to which assets should comprise
this preserved amount, I find it prudent to defer to the curator.
He has, by his conduct, proven
himself capable of exercising a
reasonable approach to dealing with the preserved assets to date.
The result is that the counter-application
for the total upliftment
of the provisional preservation order, must fail.
10.4
As far as the Lubbe
group of respondents is concerned, I am of the view that the
preservation order should be confirmed in respect
of the corporate
entities. Despite Lubbe’s assertions, there might reasonably
still be assets recoverable in these entities,
such as his loan
account. Insofar as Lubbe himself is concerned, should a caveat
as tendered by him, containing terms that
satisfy SARS be registered,
then I find that he is correct that there would be no further
practical use for any preservation order
on the facts as they
currently stand. The tender for a caveat was made in Lubbe’s
papers and repeated in open court and the
court is therefore entitled
to rely on such a tender in respect of any appropriate order
regarding the confirmation of the provisional
order. This would
constitute a “condition” of the preservation order as
contemplated in
section 163(1)
of the TAA.
[11]
Costs
The customary rule is that costs should follow the event
and I find no cogent reason to depart therefrom, save in respect of
Lubbe.
The replacement of the preservation order by a caveat
might appear to be a notional victory, but, if this self-imposed
obligation
had really been Lubbe’s intent, it could have been put
in place long ago. There is also no reason why no attempt had
been
made by him to pay his tax debt once it had become final.
The need to recover the tax debt and Lubbe’s own liability arose
from his own conduct and the facilitation of Van Zyl’s tax fraud by
way of corporate entities under Lubbe’s control. In
the
exercise of my discretion, I find that this notional “victory”
should not be rewarded with costs. No costs have been
claimed
against the unrelated nominal trustees of the trust involved.
[12]
Order
1.
The provisional
preservation order granted on 11 August 2020 is discharged as against
the first and ninth respondents.
2.
The provisional
preservation order granted on 11 August 2020 is confirmed and made
final as against the third to eighth, tenth and
eleventh respondents,
save that in the case of the third respondent, its extent shall be
limited to assets amounting to R 12 million.
3.
The provisional
preservation order granted on 11 August 2020 against the second
respondent is discharged on condition that the second
respondent,
within 60 days from date of this order or such longer period as may
be granted in writing by the South African Revenue
Service (SARS),
lodge with the relevant Registrar of Deeds, a caveat to be registered
in favour of SARS on such terms as SARS may
prescribe, over the
immovable property situated at 76 Sutherland Street, Worcester,
Western Cape Province, failing which the provisional
preservation
order shall become confirmed.
4.
The third, fourth and
eighth respondents’ counter-application is dismissed.
5.
The third to fifth,
eighth and eleventh respondents are, jointly and severally, ordered
to pay the applicant’s costs, including
the costs of two counsel.
N
DAVIS
Judge
of the High Court
Gauteng Division, Pretoria
Date
of Hearing: 22 September 2021
Judgment
delivered: 27 January 2022
APPEARANCES:
For
the Applicant:
Adv BH Swart SC together with
Adv K Kollapen
Attorney
for the Applicant:
VDT Attoneys,
Pretoria
For
the 3
rd
, 4
th
& 8th Respondents:
Adv R Goodman SC together with
Adv L Acker
Attorneys for the
Respondents:
Rauch Gertenbach Attorney, Pretoria
For
the 2
nd
, 5
th
& 10
th
Respondents: Adv BC Bester
Attorneys for the
Respondents:
Van der Merwe Inc, Pretoria
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