Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 245South Africa
East Rand Member District of Chartered Accountants and Another v Independent Regulatory Board for Auditors and Others (64848/19; 46298/20) [2022] ZAGPPHC 245 (11 April 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
11 April 2022
Headnotes
at para 24, that:
Judgment
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## East Rand Member District of Chartered Accountants and Another v Independent Regulatory Board for Auditors and Others (64848/19; 46298/20) [2022] ZAGPPHC 245 (11 April 2022)
East Rand Member District of Chartered Accountants and Another v Independent Regulatory Board for Auditors and Others (64848/19; 46298/20) [2022] ZAGPPHC 245 (11 April 2022)
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sino date 11 April 2022
IN THE
HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG DIVISION, PRETORIA)
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
Case
Number:
64848/19
and
46298/20
In
the matter between:
EAST
RAND MEMBER DISTRICT OF
CHARTERED
ACCOUNTANTS
First Applicant
BRITS,
RUDOLF
JOHANNES
Second Applicant
and
INDEPENDENT
REGULATORY BOARD
FOR
AUDITORS
First Respondent
CHAIRPERSON OF THE INDEPENDENT
REGULATORY
BOARD FOR AUDITORS
Second Respondent
CHIEF
EXECUTIVE OFFICER OF THE INDEPENDENT
REGULATORY
BOARD FOR AUDITORS
Third Respondent
MINISTER
OF
FINANCE
Fourth Respondent
JUDGMENT
JANSE
VAN NIEUWENHUIZEN J:
1.
The applicants brought two applications for the review and setting
aside of certain
fees prescribed by the first respondent, the
Independent Regulatory Board (“IRBA”) in terms of the provisions
of the Auditing
Profession Act, 26 of 2005 (“the Act’). The
review is based on the Promotion of Administrative Justice Act, 3 of
2000 (PAJA)
alternatively
on the constitutional doctrine of
legality.
2.
The 2019 application (“2019 review”) seeks the review and setting
aside of
the decisions in respect of the following five categories of
new fees or fee increases for the 2020 financial year:
2.1.
the payment of so-called “
assurance fees
” by registered
auditors doing so-called Category C assurance work (“the Category C
assurance fees”);
2.2.
the payment of three categories of fees connected to registered
auditors’ selection
of IRBA as their “
recognised controlling
body
” (“RCB”) as tax practitioners (“the tax practitioner
fees”);
2.3.
the imposition of penalties for two categories of transgressions of
IRBA’s regime
regarding assurance fees (“the penalties”);
2.4.
the increase of two categories of existing fees by more than consumer
price inflation
(“CPI”), being increases of 35% in respect of
registration renewal and 50% in respect of the re-registration (“the
drastic
increases in existing fees”); and
2.5.
the removal of the concession to registered auditors over the age of
65 in the form
of a 50% discount on their annual fees (“the removal
of the fee concession”).
3. The
2020 application (“the 2020 review”) concerns the same five
categories of fees in respect of the
2021 financial year and is
sought on the basis, primarily, that:
3.1.
the decisions to prescribe these five categories display the same
infirmities as in
the 2019 application; and
3.2.
the relevant fee decisions are premised (and thus dependent) on the
validity of the
decisions in respect of the 2020 financial year.
PARTIES
4. The
first applicant is East Rand Member District of Chartered Accounts, a
voluntary association with approximately
1 600 members. The
members of the first applicant are “
registered auditors
”
in terms of the Act.
5. The
second applicant passed away prior to the hearing of the matter and
the executor of his deceased estate
indicated that the estate does
not wish to persist with the application.
6. In the
result, the first applicant will be referred to as “the applicant”.
7. The
first defendant, IRBA, is a juristic person established in terms of
section 3 of the Act and must,
in terms of section 3(1)(a), exercise
its functions in accordance with the Act and any other relevant law.
OPPOSITION
8. In
opposing the relief claimed by the applicant, IRBA:
8.1.
raised three points
in limine
;
8.2.
alleged that the impugned decisions are not administrative action as
envisaged in PAJA;
8.3.
alleged that the 2019 review was launched outside the 180 days
prescribed in terms
of PAJA, and
8.4.
maintained that no grounds exist for the review and setting aside of
the impugned decisions.
POINTS
IN LIMINE
9. IRBA
raised the following points
in limine
:
9.1.
lis pendens
;
9.2.
impermissible incorporation; and
9.3.
non-compliance with rule 16A.
10. At the commencement of
the hearing IRBA indicated that it will only proceed with the
non-compliance with rule 16A point,
which point is only raised in
respect of the notice in the 2020 review.
Rule
16A notice
11. Rule 16A(1)(a) of
the Uniform rules of court compels any person who raises a
constitutional point in an
application to give notice
thereof to the registrar.
12.
It is common cause that the applicant issued a notice in compliance
with the provisions of rule
16A(1)(a).
13.
IRBA, however, maintains that the contents of the notice do not
comply with rule 16A(1)(b) due to
the fact that it lacks
particularity. Rule 16A(1)(b) reads as follows:
“
Such notice shall contain a
clear and succinct description of the constitutional issue
concerned.”
14.
The introductory paragraph of the 2020 notice reads as follows:
“
TAKE NOTICE THAT
the
first and second applicants’ notice of motion and founding
affidavit in the above matter raise the following constitutional
issues:
Whether the following
decisions taken by the first respondent (“IRBA”) ought to be
reviewed and set aside pursuant to the Promotion
of Access to
Administrative Justice Act, 2000 (Act 3 of 2000) (“PAJA”),
alternatively
the constitutional doctrine of legality:”
15.
Although the words “
Access to”
do not appear in PAJA, the
number of the Act makes it clear that the applicant is relying on
PAJA.
16.
The introduction is followed by a full description of the various
decisions that form the subject matter of
the 2020 review.
17.
Both parties relied on
Shaik v Minister of Justice and
Constitutional Development
[2003] ZACC 24
;
2004 (3) SA 599
CC in which the
Constitutional Court held at para 24, that:
“
The
purpose of the Rule is to bring to the attention of persons (who may
be affected by or have a legitimate interest in the case)
the
particularity of the constitutional challenge, in order that they may
take steps to protect their interests.
”
18.
The first
enquiry entails establishing who “
the
persons who may be affected
or
have a legitimate interest in the case”
are.
In
casu
it
is the persons who may have a legitimate interest in the 2020 review
are “
registered
auditors”
as
defined in the Act.
19.
Secondly, the notice must contain “
the particularity of the
constitutional challenge, in order
(for registered auditors to)
take steps to protect their interests.”
20.
The constitutional challenge is specified to be the right to
administrative action that is just
and fair. This right is enshrined
in section 33 of the Constitution and given effect to by the
provisions of PAJA.
21.
It is clear from the notice that the applicant in the
alternative
relies on the constitutional doctrine of legality.
22.
The decisions
forming the subject matter of the constitutional challenge is,
furthermore, set out in detail in the notice.
23.
Having regard
to the purpose of a Rule 16A notice, I am satisfied that the notice
contains sufficient particularity to enable a reasonable
registered
auditor to assess the impact of the challenge on his/her interests.
The point
in
limine
is,
accordingly, dismissed.
# DO
THE DECISIONS CONSTITUTE ADMINISTRATIVE ACTION UNDER PAJA?
DO
THE DECISIONS CONSTITUTE ADMINISTRATIVE ACTION UNDER PAJA?
24.
“
Administrative action”
is defined in section 1 of PAJA as follows:
“…
means
any decision taken, or failure to take a decision, by –
(a)
an organ of state, when
(i)
exercising a power in terms of the
Constitution or a provincial constitution; or
(ii)
exercising a public power or
performing a public function in terms of legislation; or
(b)
….
which adversely affects the
rights of any person and which has a direct, external effect, but
does not include-”
A list of nine categories that
are excluded from the definition follows. IRBA does not fall within
one of the stated categories.
25. IRBA does
not deny that it is an organ of State and that the impugned decisions
adversely affect the rights
of registered auditors and has a direct,
external effect.
26.
IRBA, however, maintains that in making the impugned decisions it
formulated policy and/or that the decisions
are at least
“
policy-laden or polycentric”
as
defined in
Minister of Transport NO v
Prodiba (Pty) Ltd
[2015] ZASCA 38
(“
Prodiba”)
and
therefore not administrative action. [Also see:
Shokela and
Others v MEC for Agricultural and Environmental Affairs
(KwaZulu-Natal) and Others
2010 (5) SA 574
KZP para 61]. I pause
to mention that the subject matter of the dispute in
Prodiba
was
the validity of a contract entered into consequent to a policy
decision by Cabinet to migrate from old drivers’ licences to
a new
card system. The policy decision was not translated into legislation.
27.
At para [26] of the
Prodiba
judgment, the Supreme Court of
Appeal held as:
[26] …The decision to
migrate to new technology on the scale envisaged in the agreement in
question is typically a policy-laden
or polycentric decision. The
Constitutional Court and this court have recognised the importance of
appreciating the proper role and
functions of the legislature, the
executive and the judiciary within the Constitution. In this regards
see Bato Star Fishing (Pty)
Ltd v Minister of Environmental Affairs
[2004]
ZACC 15
;
2004
(4) SA 490
(CC)
paras 46–48, Logbro Properties CC v Bedderson NO and
2003
(2) SA 460
(SCA)
para 20 and also Cora Hoexter ‘The future of Judicial review in
South African administrative law’
(2000)
SALJ
484
at
501. See also Minister of Home Affairs v Scalabrini Centre
2013
(6) SA 421
(SCA)
paras 57-59. Policy making is traditionally primarily the task of the
highest ranking officials in government, namely, the Cabinet
or its
constituent Ministers or, at provincial level, the executive council
or its individual members.”
28.
Although the Supreme Court of Appeal stated
in
Prodiba
that policy normally falls
within the functions of the Executive, the court emphasised in
Motala
v Master, North Gauteng Court
2019 (6)
SA 68
SCA, at para [67], that a case to case approach should be
followed:
“
[67] There is no simple
litmus test to determine when an action or decision is of an
'administrative nature'. It is therefore necessary,
in the light of
the facts of each particular case, to embark on 'a close analysis of
the nature of the power or function and its
source or purpose' —
per Wallis J in Sokhela, cited with approval by this court in
Scalabrini. In doing so, it should be
remembered, as was
stressed by the Constitutional Court in SARFU, that the source
of the power, albeit not necessarily decisive,
is an important factor
in this regard. Also important are the nature of the power, its
subject-matter, whether it involves the exercise
of a public duty,
and how closely it is related, on the one hand, to policy matters
which are not administrative and, on the other,
to the implementation
of legislation, which is...”
29.
In determining whether the impugned decisions are administrative
action it is, therefore, apposite to first of all
have regard to the
source of the power. The following sections of the Act provides for
the fees that were charged in terms of the
impugned decisions:
29.1. Section 25 of the Act
regulates the funding of IRBA and provides for the following sources
of funding:
“
(a) the
collection of prescribed fees;
(b)
all other monies which may accrue to the Regulatory Board from any
other legal source, including sanctions
imposed by the Regulatory
Board; and
(c)
moneys appropriated for that purpose by Parliament.”
29.2. Insofar as the source of
funding from prescribed fees is concerned, the relevant portions of
section 8 of the Act provides as
follows:
“
8 Functions with
regards to fees and charges. –
(1)
The
Regulatory Board must prescribe –
(a)
accreditation, registration, registration renewal and
re-registration fees;
(b)
annual
fees, or a portion thereof in respect of part of a year;
………
.
(2)
The Regulatory Board
may prescribe-
(a)
any
fees payable for the purpose of the education fund referred to in
section 7(2);
(b)
fees
payable for an inspection or review undertaken by the Regulatory
Board in terms of section 47; and
(c)
fees
payable for any other service rendered by the Regulatory Board.
(3)
The Regulatory Board
may grant exemption from payment of any fees referred to in
subsection (1) or (2).”
29.3.
Section 47 referred to in section 8(2)(b) and more specifically
47(1)(a) reads as follows:
“
47(1)(a) The
Regulatory Board, or any person authorised by it, may at any time
inspect or review the practice of a registered
auditor …
(b)
Despite the generality of paragraph (a), the Regulatory Board, or any
person authorised by it, must at least
every three years inspect or
review the practice of a registered auditor that audits a public
company as defined in section 1 of
the Companies Act, 2008 (Act No.
71 of 2008).
(2) The Regulatory Board may
recover the costs of an inspection under this section from the
registered auditor concerned.”
30.
In the result, the nature of IRBA’s power to
prescribe fees is to be found in the enabling legislation and the
purpose of prescribing
the fees is to implement the sections that
provides for IRBA’s funding. In deciding the tariff for each type
of fee, IRBA is not
formulating policy,
but is merely
implementing the provisions of the Act.
31.
The authority in
Grey’s Marine
Hout Bay (Pty) Ltd
v Minister of Public Works
[2005] ZASCA 43
;
2005 (6) SA 313
SCA
relied
upon by the applicant in support of its contention that the impugned
decisions are administrative action, aptly explains the
difference
between the execution and formulation of policy, to wit:
“
Administrative
action is … in general terms, the conduct of the
bureaucracy
(whoever the bureaucratic functionary might be) in carrying
out
the daily functions of the State, which necessarily involves the
application
of policy, usually after its translation into law, with direct and
immediate
consequences for individuals or groups of individuals.”
“
There
will be few administrative acts that are devoid of underlying policy
–
indeed, administrative action
is most often the implementation of policy
that
has been given legal effect – but the execution of policy is not
equivalent
to its formulation.”
32.
The impugned decisions are the implementation of policy that has been
given legal effect and not the formulation of policy.
Consequently,
the impugned decisions fall within the ambit of section 1(a)(ii) of
the definition of administrative action and PAJA
is applicable.
#
# DID
THE APPLICANT INSTITUTE THE 2019 REVIEW WITHIN 180 DAYS?
DID
THE APPLICANT INSTITUTE THE 2019 REVIEW WITHIN 180 DAYS?
33.
Section 7(1)(b) of PAJA, provides, in relevant part, that:
“
Any proceedings for
judicial review in terms of section 6(1) must be instituted without
unreasonable delay and not later than 180
days after the date … (b)
… on which the person concerned was informed of the administrative
action, became aware of the action
and the reasons for it or might
reasonably have been expected to have become aware of the action and
the reasons.”
34. In
casu
the
2019 review was launched on 28 August 2019, which implies that the
applicant
would be in breach of the time period in section 7(1)(b) of PAJA, if
it
had
been informed of the decisions or had become aware of the decisions
and
the
reasons for them before 1 March 2019.
35.
The traditional approach to determining when the 180-day period
commences, is
to ask the
question: When did the clock start ticking?
36. The applicant
contends that the clock started ticking once the fees were published
in
the Gazette. The dates of publication are:
36.1.
5 June 2019, for the Category C assurance fees; and
36.2.
1 March 2019, for the other impugned fee categories.
37. In support of
the aforesaid contention, the applicant relies on the following
passage in
Esau v Minister of Co-operative Governance and
Traditional Affairs
2021 (3) SA 593
SCA (
Esau”
):
“
[45] As
a general rule, policies that have been formulated and adopted by the
executive will not be ripe for review until they are
implemented,
usually after been given legal effect by some or other legislative
instrument. Two principles come into play in this
regard; first, that
in order for an exercise of public power to be ripe for review, it
should ordinarily be final in effect; and
secondly, that the decision
must have some adverse effect for the person who wishes to review it,
because otherwise its setting-aside
would be an academic exercise
which courts generally eschew.”
38. IRBA,
however, maintains that the clock started ticking on the date when
the applicant was informed of the decisions
and the reasons for the
decisions, which date precedes the publication in the Gazette.
39. In
Esau
the court did refer to an exception to the general rule referred
to
supra
. At para [46], the court stated the following;
“
[46] I
accept, however, that the mere fact that the impugned conduct
involves the formulation or adoption of policy does not necessarily
mean that it is not justiciable. If the application of a policy
infringes or threatens rights, it may be challenged on review. That
was the case in Minister of Health and Others v Treatment Action
Campaign and Others (No 2), in which a policy not to dispense a
drug
that prevented mother-to-child transmission of Hiv/Aids was found to
violate fundamental rights.”
40.
The question is therefore whether the decision in itself,
prior to publication, threatened any rights of the members of the
applicant.
This issue was discussed in
Rhino Oil and Gas
Exploration South Africa (Pty) Ltd v Normandien Farms (Pty) Ltd and
Another
2019 (6) SA 400
SCA from para [32] onwards, as follows:
“
[32] The situation is
clear: Normandien's rights have not been adversely affected by the
process so far, and it can point to no prejudice
on its part at this
stage.
[33] As a general
rule, a challenge to the validity of an exercise of public power that
is not final in effect is premature.
An application to review the
action will not be ripe, and cannot succeed on that account. Hoexter
explains the concept thus:
‘
'The idea behind the
requirement of ripeness is that a complainant should not go to
court before the offending action or decision
is final, or at least
ripe for adjudication. It is the opposite of the doctrine of
mootness, which prevents a court from deciding
an issue when it is
too late. The doctrine of ripeness holds that there is no point in
wasting the courts' time with half-formed
decisions whose shape may
yet change, or indeed decisions that have not yet been made.
There is a close connection
between prejudice and ripeness. Baxter states that 'the appropriate
criterion by which the ripeness of
the action in question is to be
measured is whether prejudice has already resulted or is inevitable,
irrespective of whether the
action is complete or not'.”
41.
In
casu
the
Act makes it clear when any decision on
“
prescribed”
fees will take effect. The Act defines
“
prescribe”
as
meaning
“
prescribe by notice in the
Gazette...”
. Prejudice can as a
result only be suffered by registered auditors once publication of
the decision in respect of fees takes place.
Prior to publication
there is not an infringement or a threat of an infringement of any
fundamental right.
42.
The approach in respect of prejudice is in accordance with the
finding of the Constitutional Court in
Camps
Bay Ratepayers’ and Residents’ Association and Another v Harrison
and Another
2011 (4) SA 42
CC
at
para [57]:
[57] Whether or not the
Supreme Court of Appeal was correct in its approach, first
raises the issue regarding the interpretation
of s 7(1)(b) of PAJA.
In terms of the section, the 180-day period starts to run when the
'person concerned . . . became aware of
the action and the reasons
for it'. Before 'the action' nothing happens. In the final analysis
it is awareness of 'the action' that
sets the clock ticking. That
raises the question: what 'action' did the legislature have in mind?
The answer, I think, is the 'administrative
action', and, according
to the definition of that term in PAJA, 'the decision' that is
challenged in the review proceedings. What
that decision entails is a
question that cannot be answered in the abstract. It must depend on
an evaluation of the facts.”
43.
Bearing in mind that an
“
administrative action”
in
PAJA encompasses two distinct concepts to wit, firstly a “
decision”
and secondly “
which adversely affects
the rights of any person and which has a direct, external effect”
,
the determination of fees by IRBA does not amount to an
administrative action until the fees have been prescribed i.e.
published.
44. In the
result, the clock started ticking once the fees were published in the
Gazette, which entails that the
2019 review was brought within the
180-day time limit contained in section 7(1)(b) of PAJA.
IMPUGNED
DECISIONS: 2019 REVIEW
45.
The following decisions form the subject matter of the 2019 review:
45.1. the payment of “
assurance
fees
” by registered auditors doing Category C assurance work;
45.2. tax practitioner
fees;
45.3. “the penalties”;
45.4. the
drastic increases in existing fees;
45.5 the removal of
the fee concession.
Category
C assurance work
46. On 5 June
2019 IRBA published Board Notice 82 of 2019 in the Government
Gazette. The notice was given in accordance
with the provisions of
Section 8(2)(b) of the Act and the heading of the notice refers to
“
Assurance
Fees Payable to the IRBA with Effect
from 1 April 2019”
47. The
methodology for calculating the fees is set out as follows:
“
1. For all fees categorised
as assurance, assurance fees are billed twice a year based on a
percentage of the total audit and other
assurance work invoiced by
the firm and declared every calendar year by the firm for each
registered auditor.”
As set out
supra
section
8(2)(b) of the Act provides for fees payable for an
inspection or review undertaken
by IRBA in terms of section 47.
48. Section 47(1)(b)
provides for a mandatory inspection or review ever three years in
respect of registered auditors
that audit a public company as defined
in
section 1
of the
Companies Act, 71 of 2008
.
49. In respect
of registered auditors that do not fall in the aforesaid category,
section 47(1)(a)
provides that IRBA may “
at any time inspect or
review”
their practices.
50.
Section
47(2)
empowers IRBA to recover “
the costs
of an
inspection under this section from the registered auditor concerned.”
51. In order to
differentiate between registered auditors that fall in
section
47(1)(a)
and those falling under 47(1)(b), IRBA created the following
categories:
51.1 Category A (high risk audits
and related assurance work), which refers to audits required by law,
which includes the audit of
public companies, referred to in section
47(1)(b) of the Act;
51.2 Category C (low risk)
is assurance work not included in Category A, like voluntary audits,
reviews that are required by
the
Companies Act, and
other assurance
work. It includes audits of non-public companies, per section
47(1)(a) of the Auditing Act.
52. The 2019
review only pertains to registered auditors falling within Category
C.
53. Insofar as
Category C auditors are concerned, there are a few glaring
inconsistencies between IRBA’s Board
Notice and the provisions of
the Act, namely:
53.1 the Act
does not provide for “
assurance”
fees;
53.2 section 8(2)(b)
provides for fees payable for an inspection or review, which entails
that the fee would be payable once
an inspection or review has been
conducted; and
53.3 Section 47(2) provides
for the recovery of “
the costs
” of an inspection from
the registered auditor, which implies that the “
fee”
in
section 8(2)(b) must at least be connected to the actual costs
incurred in inspecting the practice of a registered auditor.
54.
In view of the aforesaid, the applicant contends that the percentage
fee model, as distinct to the method of
recovering costs from
particular registered auditors for work done – is not authorised by
the enabling statute, is accordingly
ultra vires
the Act and,
therefore, unlawful and invalid.
55.
Mr Solomon SC, counsel for IRBA, to his credit, conceded that the
percentage fee model for “
assurance work”
does not accord
with the empowering provisions of the Act.
56.
In the premises, the decision to impose a percentage fee model in
respect of registered auditors that fall in
Category C is
ultra
vires
the Act and the applicant is entitled to an order
confirming that the decision is unlawful and invalid.
Tax practitioner fees
57.
The context of the introduction of the tax practitioner fees for the
2020 financial year is as follows:
57.1. All tax practitioners are
in terms of section 240 of the
Tax Administration Act
, Act 28
OF 2011 (“the Tax Act”) required to be registered with a
recognised controlling body (“RCB”).
57.2. Whilst the South African
Institute for Chartered Accountants (“SAICA”) had applied to the
South African Revenue Service
(“SARS”) to be recognised as an
RCB, IRBA was, by virtue of section 240A of the Tax Act, an RCB and
did not have to apply to
SARS for recognition.
Whilst the IRBA does not –
unlike SAICA and other organisations – have to meet any
requirements for recognition by SARS as an
RCB and does not have
similar administrative responsibilities, including the submission of
reports to SARS and continuous professional
development requirements
for tax practitioners.
57.3. SAICA decided to levy a
separate subscription fee on its members
(all chartered accountants in
South Africa) for those who decided to
elect SAICA to be their RBC
57.4. As a result of the fee now
levied by SAICA, some registered auditors
who were both members of
SAICA and tax practitioners, had decided
to indicate to SARS that
IRBA was their RCB and not SAICA, so as
to avoid the fee charged by
SAICA.
58. In Board
Notice 24 of 2019, dated 1 March 2019, IRBA prescribed the following
new fees for the 2020
financial year:
a. R1 050.00 in
respect of an application for recognition as a tax practitioner with
IRBA as RCB;
b. R2 100.00 as
an annual renewal fee payable by registered auditors who are
recognised as tax practitioners with
IRBA; and
c. R1
050.00 as an administration fee for reinstatement of a tax
practitioner recognition.
59. In a notice
dated 21 August 2018, IRBA explained that “
[t]he fee is to cover
the costs of administration, including the strengthening and
monitoring of compliance with IRBA’s Continuing
Professional
Development requirements in relation to tax practitioners.
”
60.
In determining the empowering provisions for the imposition of tax
practitioner fees, it is prudent to, first
of all, have regard to
section 8(1)(a) of the Act:
“
8(1)
The Regulatory Board must prescribe-
(a)
Accreditation, registration, registration renewal and
re-registration fees;”
.
61.
Such fees relate to the functions of IRBA as provided for in section
6 of the Act, which is to register persons
as registered auditors (or
registered candidate auditors).
62.
The Act does not contemplate the imposition of any fees in relation
to IRBA’s statutorily conferred position
as RCB for tax
practitioners.
63.
Notwithstanding the aforesaid, IRBA contends that the tax
practitioner fees were imposed to cover administration
costs in
relation to tax practitioners and that the imposition of such fees is
accordingly justified by section 8(2)(c) of the Act.
Section 8(2)(c)
provides as follows:
“
8(2) The Regulatory Board
may prescribe-
(b)
fees
payable for any other service rendered by the Regulatory Board.”
64.
The applicant contends that IRBA’s reliance on section 8(2)(c) of
the Act is not borne out by the facts.
65.
In this regard, the applicant refers to a meeting of MANCO on 18 July
2018, at which the current acting CEO of IRBA
(Mr Nagy) explained
that IRBA needed to charge the tax practitioner fee to remove the
possibility of “
arbitrage
” with SAICA, i.e. to discourage
registered auditors from indicating IRBA as their RCB. He noted
that the agreement seems
to be that “
we want to rather avoid the
people registering with us as Tax Practitioners… I do not think we
have the appetite to take this on.
”
66.
The director of standards (Ms Bailey) noted that “
[t]hese
Tax Practitioners can find another body
” whilst the director of
operations (Ms de Jager) stated that they should not “
come to
us
”. Mr Nagy expressed the view that “
we actually
want to get out of having to deal with non-assurance Tax stuff.
”
67.
In the 2019 record, functionaries of IRBA discussed the limited
effort required to regulate auditors who choose
IRBA as their RCB, as
follows:
67.1. All that is
required is uploading a form to the SARS website, for the process
is “
all automated
”;
67.2. In this regard,
IRBA’s finance director explained that “
[i]t is all automated
basically. So they do one tick and then Flow Centric does the rest
”.
From this remark, the applicant maintains that if a registered
auditor “
ticks
” on his or her registration form that they
choose IRBA as RCB for tax practitioner purposes, the rest of the
process is carried
out, without manual intervention, by IRBA’s
information technology system;
67.3. In a discussion
as to why IRBA has application and reinstatement fees for tax
practitioners, while SAICA only has
an annual fee, IRBA’s director:
standards remarked that “
SAICA does not have [application and
reinstatement fees], but that is to provide an addition[al]
disincentive I suppose
”. According to the applicant it is clear
that the real reason for the imposition of the fees is to discourage
registered auditors
from choosing IRBA as there RCB.
68.
In the result, the fees imposed by IRBA do not correlate with a
“
service rendered”
by it.
69.
Whilst IRBA admitted that it must justify the tax practitioner
fee with reference to services rendered, it, however,
failed to
provide any evidence to support its contention that expenses are
incurred in relation to tax practitioner registrations.
70.
Without a section in the empowering Act that makes provision for the
imposition of tax practitioner fees in their current
form, the
imposition of the fees is
ultra vires
the Act and similarly
unlawful and invalid.
Penalties
71.
The penalties imposed by IRBA, consist of:
71.1 a fixed
penalty for late submission of the assurance work affidavit and
supporting documents, introduced for
the 2020 financial year at
R2 500.00; and
71.2 a
percentage penalty for under-declaration of assurance fees,
introduced for the 2020 financial year at 5%
of additional fees due
as a result of under-declaration.
72.
The penalties are, a result, depended on the imposition of assurance
fees which fees have already been found
to be
ultra vires
the
Act. No other provision in the Act provides for penalties to be
imposed and the penalty decision suffers the same fate as the
decision in respect of assurance fees.
73.
Mr Solomon, once again to his credit, conceded that the imposition of
penalties for two categories of transgressions
of IRBA’s regime
regarding assurance fees is not authorised by the Act.
74.
This concession entails that imposition of penalties is
ultra
vires
and stands to be set aside.
# The
drastic increases in exiting fees
The
drastic increases in exiting fees
75.
In Board Notice 24 of 2019, the following increased fees were
prescribed as
payable from 1 April 2019:
a. the annual
renewal of registration fee increased from R6 000.00 to R8 100.00
(a 35% increase); and
b. the
administration fee for reinstatement increased from R2 720.00 to
R4 050.00 (an almost 50% increase).
76.
The applicant submitted that the decision falls to be set aside on
the grounds that it was taken:
c. for
reasons not authorised by the Auditing Act;
d. for an
ulterior purpose or motive;
e. after taking
into account irrelevant considerations;
f.
irrationally; and
g. within a
proper notice and comment procedure i.e. procedurally unfair.
77.
I propose to, first of all, deal with the ground of procedural
unfairness:
78. It is
common cause that IRBA did not afford registered auditors the
opportunity to comment on the decision
to drastically increases the
annual renewal and reregistration fees.
79.
IRBA, however, contends that:
h. the Act does
not require a consultative process; and
i.
that sufficient notice has at all times been furnished to registered
auditors appraising them of
changes in policy and fee structures.
80. In support
of its contention that the ambit and source of a consultative process
is to be found in the enabling
legislation, IRBA relies on the
following passage in
Du Preez and Another v Truth and
Reconciliation Commission
[1997] ZASCA 2
;
1997 (3) SA 204
(A) (“
Du Preez”)
at p 231 H – 232C:
“
What does the duty to act
fairly demand of the public official or body concerned? In answering
this question useful guidance may be
derived from some of the English
cases on the subject: In Doody v Secretary of State for the Home
Department and Other Appeals
[1993] 3 All ER 92
(HL) Lord Mustill
stated the following in a speech concurred in by the remaining
members of the Court (at 106
d-h
):
'What does fairness require in
the present case? My Lords, I think it unnecessary to refer by name
or to quote from, any of the often-cited
authorities in which the
Courts have explained what is essentially an intuitive judgment. They
are far too well known. From them,
I derive the following. (1) Where
an Act of Parliament confers an administrative power there is a
presumption that it will be exercised
in a manner which is fair in
all the circumstances. (2) The standards of fairness are not
immutable. They may change with the
passage of time, both in the
general and in their application to decisions of a particular type.
(3) The principles of fairness are
not to be applied by rote
identically in every situation. What fairness demands is dependent on
the context of the decision, and
this is to be taken into account in
all its aspects. (4) An essential feature of the context is the
statute which creates the discretion,
as regards both its
language and the shape of the legal and administrative system within
which the decision is taken. (5) Fairness
will very often require
that a person who may be adversely affected by the decision will have
an opportunity to make representations
on his own behalf either
before the decision is taken with a view to producing a favourable
result, or after it is taken, with a
view to procuring its
modification, or both. (6) Since the person affected usually
cannot make worthwhile representations without
knowing what
factors may weigh against his interests fairness will very often
require that he is informed of the gist of the case
which he has to
answer.'
IRBA
maintains that the Act creates the context in which the fairness
of the decision to prescribe fees should be considered. In this
regard,
only section 10 of the Act, which provides for the making of
rules by IRBA, provides for a consultive process. Absent any
provision
in the Act for a consultive process in respect
of decisions pertaining to fees, such process is, according to IRBA,
not a prerequisite for a valid fee determination.
81. On a clear reading of
the
Du Preez
matter, IRBA’s contention is, however, not
supported by Corbett CJ. At p 231 C – F, the learned Chief Justice
stated the following:
“
The audi principle
was described in the South African Roads Board case supra (at 10G-I)
as being
'. . . a rule of natural
justice which comes into play whenever a statute empowers a public
official or body to do an act or give
a decision prejudicially
affecting an individual in his liberty or property or existing
rights, or whenever such an individual has
a legitimate expectation
entitling him to a hearing, unless the statute expressly or by
implication indicates the contrary; . . .
'.
This formulation treats the
principle as a
rule
of natural justice which comes into play when the circumstances
stated above exist and is contrary to the view which requires
the
audi principle, if it is to apply, to be impliedly incorporated by
the statute in question. The latter view, which was followed
in, for
instance, the majority judgment in South African Defence and Aid Fund
and Another v Minister of Justice
1967
(1) SA 263 (A)
at
E 270B-H, has also been discarded (see Attorney-General, Eastern Cape
v Blom and Others
1988
(4) SA 645
(A)
at
661C-662I; South African Roads Board case supra at 10H-I).
In R v
Ngwevela
1954
(1) SA 123 (A)
at
131H Centlivres CJ stated that the audi principle should be enforced
unless it is clear that Parliament has expressly or by
necessary implication enacted that it should not apply or that there
are exceptional circumstances which would justify the Court's
not
giving effect to it.”
82.
In view of the aforesaid authority, IRBA’s stance that a
consultative process in compliance with the
audi alterem partem
principle was not a legal imperative for a valid fee
determination, is untenable and devoid of any legal justification and
falls to
be set aside in terms of section 6(2)(c) of PAJA.
83.
In view of the aforesaid finding, it is not necessary to consider the
remaining grounds of review.
#
# Removal of the
senior practitioner concession
Removal of the
senior practitioner concession
84. The
final fee category that the applicant seeks to review and set aside
concerns the removal of concessions that had
– since the inception
of IRBA in 2006 – been given to auditors over 65. The
concession was in the form of a 50% discount
on their individual
annual fees.
85.
In a notice dated 14 December 2018, IRBA advised as follows in
respect of the concession granted to registered
auditors over the age
of 65:
“
In
terms of
section 8
of the
Auditing Profession Act, 2005
, the
Regulatory Board must prescribe various fees payable to the
Regulatory Board.
In previous
years, the IRBA granted a concession to Ras over the age of 65 in the
form of a 50% discount on their individual annual
fees.
The IRBA’s
inspections have shown a continued decline in audit quality. This
increased risk requires to extent the scope of its
work. As a result,
the IRBA has resolved to remove any fee concessions.
With effect from
1 April 2019, all Ras will be invoiced for the same annual fee, the
amount of which will be communicated to RAs in
2019.”
86.
The applicant attacked the decision on various grounds but, once
again, the failure by IRBA, which failure is
common
cause, to engage in a consultative process prior to gazetting the
decision, renders the decision, for the same reasons stated
supra
,
reviewable on the ground that it was procedurally
unfair.
2020
REVIEW
87.
On 20 March 2020 IRBA published Board Notice 47 of 2020 in the
Gazette.
88.
The Notice prescribes the same fees in respect of tax practitioners,
imposes the same penalties, but changed
the description of the
penalties to “
administrative fees”
. Needless to say, the
“
administrative fees”
remain punitive in nature.
89.
Although the annual renewal of registration fee and the
administration fee for reinstatement were only increased
by 8%, the
base number to which the increases were added reflects the drastic
increases for the 2019 financial year.
90.
A third category of fee, to wit a reinstatement fee for tax
practitioner status, was increased by 400%, without
any consultative
process and suffers the same fate as the 2019 drastic increases of
the annual renewal of registration fee and the
administration fee for
reinstatement.
91.
The removal of the concession for senior registered auditors has been
carried through to the 2021 financial year.
92.
Although IRBA has failed to prescribe any “
assurance fees”
for
the 2021 financial year, registered auditors were informed via an
email from a certain Ms Naicker send on 29 May 2020, Ms Naicker
that
the same rates for assurance work as those published in Board Notice
82 of 2019 will be imposed.
93.
The applicant maintains that the failure by IRBA to prescribe
assurance fees, in accordance with the provisions
of section 8 of the
Act, for the 2021 financial year entails that IRBA is not legally
empowered to collect any assurance fees for
the 2021 financial year.
In the result the applicant prays for an order declaring that the
collection of the fees is unlawful.
94.
In the heads of argument filed on behalf of IRBA and in the address
by Mr …, this further ground of review
was not addressed. In its
heads of argument IRBA
maintained that the only difference
between the 2019 and 2020 applications is the year in respect of
which the fees were prescribed.
95.
The assurance fees prescribed in Board Notice 82 of 2019 stated that
the fees were “
payable
f
rom 1 April 2019 to 31 March
2020”
. The applicant is in the result correct that the
obligation to pay assurance seized on 31 March 2020. Absent a further
gazetted fee
determination in respect of assurance fees, IRBA is not
legally entitled to collect assurance fees.
REMEDY
96.
Once the decisions in respect of the fees are set aside, the court is
enjoined by Section 8(1) of PAJA to grant any
order that is just and
equitable.
97.
Once the applicant contends that repayment of the unlawfully levied
feed would be the natural consequence of
the unlawfulness of the
prescription of the fees levied against it. This, according to the
applicant, will undo the consequences
of the unlawful actions as if
they have never existed – which is the default remedy for exceeding
public powers.
98. IRBA did not
suggest any remedy but stated that the repayment of fees will create
financial havoc.
99.
The applicant indicated that it is for this very reason that it does
not seek an order directing IRBA to repay the
money unlawfully levied
against them, but rather for credits to be passed which can be
set-off against future liabilities owed to
IRBA.
100. The applicant
contended that the passing of credits will vindicate its rights and
afford effective
constitutional relief, whilst it would also acknowledge IRBA’s
economic reality
101. Although
the applicant initially sought an order in both applications that
IRBA
pass credits, within one month of
being ordered, Mr Oosthuizen during his address indicated that the
applicant is prepared to set
the date for the passing of credits to
commence with the inception of new financial year, to wit 1 April
2023. This will allow IRBA
enough time to budget for and implement a
system for the passing of credits.
102.
Mr Solomon
agreed that the time afforded
to IRBA will be fair and reasonable.
103.
In the result, I am satisfied that the remedy proposed by the
applicant is just and fair in the
prevailing circumstances and such
an order will follow.
## COSTS
COSTS
104. The
applicant urges this court to award costs on a punitive scale against
IRBA.
105. In support
of its request for a punitive costs order, the applicant submitted
that
the
following special considerations should be taken into account:
a.
the vexatious nature of IRBA’s opposition
to the relief sought in the applications; and
b.
the improper motive of certain of the
impugned decisions.
106.
In justifying a punitive cost order on the basis the vexatious nature
of IRBA’s opposition to the relief
claimed by the applicant, the
applicant relied on the following passage in
Re
Alluvial Creek Limited
1929 CPD 532
at
535”
“
Now
sometimes such an order is given because of something in the conduct
of a party which the court considers should be punished,
malice,
misleading the court and things like that, but I think
the
order may also be granted without any reflection upon the party where
the proceedings are vexatious
,
and
by vexatious I mean where
they have the effect of being vexatious
,
although the intent may not have been that they should be vexatious.
There are people who enter into
litigation with the most upright purpose and a most firm belief in
the justice of their cause
, and
yet those proceedings may be regarded as vexatious when they put the
other side to unnecessary trouble and expense which the
other side
ought not to bear.
”
(Emphases
added)
107.
Bearing the aforesaid in mind, the applicant submits that IRBA
resisted both the applications on “
quite
unjustified
”
grounds, which implies
that it has put the applicants to unnecessary trouble and expense.
[See:
Bergmann v Kontrakteur Reynecke
(Edms) Bpk
1973 (4) SA 35
SWA at 38D].
108.
The points
in limine
raised
by IRBA was no doubt unjustified and only served to add to the
already voluminous papers and to protract and prolong the time
spend
on preparing for the hearing of the matter. The decision not to
proceed with two of the points
in limine
at the hearing, only serves to confirm
the lack of merits in the points taken.
109.
The grounds on which the court upheld the review, to wit, the
decisions being
ultra vires
the
Act and procedurally unfair, are the most basic cornerstones of fair
administrative action. It should have been clear to IRBA
that the
opposition of the applications is a futile exercise.
110.
The following sentiment expressed by the Constitutional Court
in
MEC for Health, Eastern Cape and Another v Kirland Investments
(Pty) Ltd t/a Eye & Lazer Institute
2014 (3) SA 481
CC at
para [82], aptly applies to the opposition in
casu
:
”
[82] …. there is a
higher duty on the state to respect the law, to fulfil procedural
requirements and to tread respectfully when
dealing with rights.
46
Government is not an
indigent or bewildered litigant, adrift on a sea of litigious
uncertainty, to whom the courts must extend a procedure-circumventing
lifeline. It is the Constitution's primary agent. It must do right,
and it must do it properly.”
111.
Bearing the aforesaid standard imposed on an organ of state in
performing administrative actions in mind as well as the
unnecessary
costs occasioned by opposition of the applications and thereby
defending the undefendable, I agree that a punitive cost
order is
called for.
ORDER
112. The following order is
made:
112.1. The first respondent’s
determination of assurance fees, payable from 1 April 2019 to 31
March 2020 by registered auditors,
as prescribed in Board Notice 82
of 2019 contained in the Government Gazette dated 5 June 2019, is
reviewed and set aside.
112.2. The first respondent’s
determination of the following further categories of fees, payable
from 1 April 2019 to 31 March 2020
by registered auditors, as
prescribed in paragraphs 1.3, 2.1, 2.2, 2.3, 2.4, 8.1 and 8.2 of
Board Notice 24 of 2019 contained in
the Government Gazette dated 1
March 2019, is reviewed and set aside:
112.3.
application for recognition as a tax
practitioner with the first respondent as recognised controlling
body;
112.4.
annual renewal of tax practitioner status
payable by all registered auditors who are recognised as tax
practitioners with the first
respondent as recognised controlling
body;
112.5.
administration
fee for reinstatement of tax practitioner recognition;
112.6. penalties for late
submission of assurance work affidavit and supporting documents and
for the under-declaring of assurance
fees; and
112.7.
the
annual renewal of registration and the administration fee for
reinstatements insofar as it was increased with more than consumer
price inflation compared to the equivalent fees during the period 1
April 2018 to 31 March 2019.
113. The
decision taken by the first respondent, as published in Board Notice
24 of 2019 contained in the
Government Gazette dated 1 March 2019, in
terms of which the concession to registered auditors over the age of
65 in the form of
a 50% discount on their individual annual fees was
removed, is reviewed and set aside.
114. It
is declared that the first respondent did not prescribe assurance
fees payable from 1 April 2020 to
31 March 2021 by registered
auditors on the same basis as previously published in Board Notice 82
of 2019 in the Government Gazette
on 5 June 2019 and it was,
accordingly, not entitled to claim payment of such fees from
registered auditors.
115. The
first respondent’s determination of the following further
categories of fees, payable from 1 April
2020 to 31 March 2021 by
registered auditors, as prescribed in paragraphs 1.3, 2.1, 2.2, 2.3,
8.1 and 8.2 of Board Notice 47 of 2020
contained in the Government
Gazette dated 20 March 2020, is reviewed and set aside:
115.1.
application
fee for the first respondent to be a tax practitioner’s recognised
controlling body, payable on application
;
115.2. annual renewal fee payable
by tax practitioners who elected the first respondent as their
recognised controlling body; and
115.3.
administration
fee for reinstatement of tax practitioner recognition;
115.4. administration fees for
late submission of assurance work affidavit and supporting documents
and for the under-declaring of
assurance fees; and
115.5.
the annual renewal of registration and the
administration fee for reinstatements insofar as it was increased
with more than consumer
price inflation compared to the equivalent
fees during the period 1 April 2018 to 31 March 2019.
116.
The decision taken by the first respondent,
as published in Board Notice 47 of 2020 contained in the Government
Gazette dated 20 March
2020, in terms of which it failed to reverse
its previous decision to remove the concession to registered auditors
over the age of
65 in the form of a 50% discount on their individual
annual fees, and instead prescribing payment of the full individual
annual fees,
is reviewed and set aside.
117.
The first respondent is ordered to
pass
credits by no later than 1 April 2023 to all registered auditors in
respect of the following fees and penalties which were levied
on them
pursuant to Board Notice 82 of 2019 (contained in Government Gazette
dated 5 June 2019) and Board Notice 24 of 2019 (contained
in
Government Gazette dated 1 March 2019):
117.1.
all assurance fees which were calculated on
Category C assurance work;
117.2.
all fees in regard to the recognition of
tax practitioners with IRBA as recognised controlling body;
117.3.
all penalties in respect of assurance fees,
insofar as such credits have not already been passed;
117.4.
that
portion of the fees, set out in paragraphs 2.1 and 2.3 of Board
Notice 24 of 2019, which represents an increase of more than
consumer
price inflation compared to the equivalent fees during the first
respondent’s 2018/2019 financial year as contained in
Annexure
“JC14”
to the founding affidavit
under case no. 64848/19.
118. The
first respondent is ordered to
pass credits by no
later than 1 April 2023 to all registered auditors over the age of 65
years as of 1 April 2020 of 50% of the fee,
set out in paragraph 2.1
of Board Notice 24 of 2019 after the reduction of such fee pursuant
to paragraph 7.4 above.
119. The
first respondent is ordered to
pass credits by no
later than 1 April 2023 to all registered auditors in respect of the
following fees and penalties which were levied
on them pursuant to
Board Notice 82 of 2019 (contained in Government Gazette dated 5 June
2019) and Board Notice 47 of 2020 (contained
in Government Gazette
dated 20 March 2020):
119.1. all assurance fees which
were calculated on Category C assurance work;
119.2. all fees in regard to the
recognition of tax practitioners with IRBA as recognised controlling
body;
119.3. all administration fees in
respect of assurance fees; and
119.4. that portion of the fees,
set out in paragraphs 2.1 and 2.3 of Board Notice 47 of 2020, which
represent an increase of more
than consumer price inflation compared
to the equivalent fees during the first respondent’s 2018/2019
financial year.
120. The
first respondent is ordered to
pass credits by no
later than 1 April 2023 to all registered auditors over the age of 65
years as of 1 April 2021 of 50% of the fee,
set out in paragraph 2.1
of Board Notice 47 of 2020 after the reduction of such fee pursuant
to paragraph 9.4 above.
121. The first to
third respondents are ordered to pay the costs of the applications
under case no.
64848/19 and 46298/20
including
the costs of two counsel, on an attorney and client scale
.
N. JANSE VAN NIEUWENHUIZEN
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG DIVISION, PRETORIA
DATE
HEARD PER COVID19 DIRECTIVES
: 02 March 2022
DATE
DELIVERED PER COVID19 DIRECTIVES:
11 April 2022
APPEARANCES
Counsel
for the first applicant
Advocate
H F Oosthuizen SC
Advocate
D Smit
Instructed
by:
Serfontein, Viljoen & Swart
Counsel
for the respondents:
Advocate
R A Solomon SC
Advocate
P B Khoza
Instructed
by:
Mothle Jooma Sabdia Inc.
sino noindex
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