Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 259South Africa
Bechan and Another v SARS Customs Investigations Unit and Others (19626/2022) [2022] ZAGPPHC 259; 84 SATC 413 (28 April 2022)
Headnotes
Summary: Mandament van spolie – not available as a remedy to defeat the execution of a lawfully issued warrant – bare denial by applicant that relevant material found in vehicle notwithstanding contemporaneous photographic record of search establishing this – correct procedure for return of seized property to be followed set out in section 66 of The Tax Administration Act 28 of 2011 – application dismissed with costs.
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Bechan and Another v SARS Customs Investigations Unit and Others (19626/2022) [2022] ZAGPPHC 259; 84 SATC 413 (28 April 2022)
Bechan and Another v SARS Customs Investigations Unit and Others (19626/2022) [2022] ZAGPPHC 259; 84 SATC 413 (28 April 2022)
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sino date 28 April 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
Case No. 19626/2022
REPORTABLE:
YES
/NO
OF INTEREST TO OTHER
JUDGES:
YES/
NO
REVISED: YES
DATE: 28 APRIL 2022
In the matter between:
KAPEEL
BECHAN
First Applicant
BECHAN
CONSULTING (PTY) LTD
Second Applicant
And
SARS
CUSTOMS INVESTIGATIONS UNIT
First Respondent
SARS
TACTICAL INVESTIGATIONS UNIT
Second Respondent
TANYA
POTGIETER – SARS ILLICIT ECONOMY UNIT
Third Respondent
LINDIWE
SHIBINDI – TACTICAL INVESTIGATIONS UNIT
Fourth Respondent
MINISTER OF
POLICE
Fifth Respondent
HAWKS SPECIAL
INVESTIGATION UNIT
Sixth Respondent
Coram:
Millar J
Heard
on
:
26 April 2022
Delivered:
28 April 2022 - This
judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties' representatives by email, by being uploaded
to the
CaseLines
system of the GD and by release to SAFLII. The date and time for
hand-down is deemed to be 11H00 on 28 April 2022.
Summary:
Mandament van spolie
–
not
available as a remedy to defeat the execution of a lawfully issued
warrant – bare denial by applicant that relevant material
found
in vehicle notwithstanding contemporaneous photographic record of
search establishing this – correct procedure for
return of
seized property to be followed set out in
section 66
of The
Tax
Administration Act 28 of 2011
– application dismissed with
costs.
ORDER
It
is Ordered
:
1.
The application is dismissed.
2.
The First and Second Applicants are ordered to pay the costs of the
application
jointly and severally.
JUDGMENT
MILLAR
J
1.
On
28 March 2022, a warrant was issued in terms of
sections 59
and
60
of
the
Tax Administration Act
[1
]
in terms of which the Respondents (collectively referred to in this
judgment as ‘SARS’) were authorised to seize information
and documentation, including information saved or stored on
electronic devices at the premises of a particular taxpayer.
2.
On 29 March 2022, SARS arrived at the
premises of the taxpayer at approximately 11h25 in order to execute
the warrant. The particular
premises were in an office park shared
with a number of other companies. Access to the office park was
controlled. SARS were not
immediately granted access and were delayed
in entering the premises. During the period of delay, SARS observed
various people
carrying items from the office premises to motor
vehicles parked in the parking area.
3.
When SARS eventually obtained access to the
premises, besides finding the directors of the taxpayer, they also
found the applicant
(‘Mr. Bechan’) on the premises. He
was there purportedly to do business with a different entity but in
respect of whom
one of the directors of the taxpayer was also a
director.
4.
In executing the warrant, SARS also had
cause to look into the vehicles parked in the parking lot and
observed in a number of these
what appeared to be documents relating
to the taxpayer and which fell within the ambit of the warrant that
they were executing.
5.
It is the case for SARS that they asked Mr.
Bechan to open his motor vehicle, a Toyota Fortuner and that he had
informed them that
he was unable to do so as he did not have the
keys. Mr. Bechan for his part denied that he had ever refused to open
his vehicle
or that he had said that he did not have his keys and
asserted that he had immediately, when asked by SARS, handed both his
cell
phone and his vehicle’s keys to SARS.
6.
The execution of the warrant did not
proceed as smoothly or without incident as SARS had anticipated. The
result was that the execution
of the warrant was protracted. Both the
South African Police Service and the Hawks had to be called in to
assist SARS due to the
difficulty they were experiencing in the
execution of the warrant.
7.
Despite Mr. Bechan’s assertion that
he had handed his keys to SARS, SARS for reasons unknown to him, had
elected to procure
the services of a locksmith who had then proceeded
to open not only Mr. Bechan’s vehicle but other vehicles also
whose owners
had refused to open them. The vehicles were only opened
many hours later, after 22h00 that night, and the execution of the
warrant
only concluded sometime thereafter.
8.
Once Mr. Bechan’s vehicle was opened
items were removed from the vehicle and taken into custody and
inventoried by SARS. Mr.
Bechan denied being present when the vehicle
was opened and also that most of what was contained in the inventory
was in fact taken
from his vehicle and contended rather that the only
items that had been found there or removed were his or the Second
Applicant’s
property – the 15 items specifically listed
in the Notice of Motion.
9.
This contrasted with the specific inventory
made by SARS as items were removed from the vehicle and substantiated
with photographs
which showed his vehicle full of lever arch files
relating to the taxpayer and other businesses as well as various lap
top computers
laid out on the ground outside the vehicle. The SARS
inventory of electronic devices taken from Mr. Bechan’s vehicle
listed
10 laptops and 4 cellular telephones as well as 8 chargers.
10.
By the time the application was heard, all
the items originally claimed, as his property, by Mr. Bechan save for
4 had been made
available for return to him. The present application
proceeded for an order seeking the return of the remaining 4 items –
2 laptop computers and 2 cellular telephones.
11.
Mr. Bechan for his part disavowed any
knowledge of the other 8 laptops and 2 cellular telephones,
maintaining that these had not
been found in his vehicle.
12.
It is against this background that Mr.
Bechan brought an application for return of the 2 laptops and 2
cellular telephones claimed
by him. SARS for its part, when it became
apparent that Mr. Bechan was claiming the return of those items,
indicated that if it
were furnished with proof of ownership of those
devices by either Mr. Bechan or the Second Applicant, the devices
would be returned
to him.
13.
Notwithstanding the assertion by Mr. Bechan
that he was the owner of the property and required it in order to
make his living and
to conduct the business of the Second Applicant,
he was either unable or unwilling to furnish the proof of ownership
requested
by SARS and chose rather to proceed by way of urgent
application for a ‘
mandament van
spolie’
in order to obtain for
the return of the 2 laptops and 2 cellular telephones.
14.
It
was held in Anale Ngqukumba v The Minister of Safety and Security and
Others
[2]
case number that:
‘
10.
The essence of the
mandament
van spolie
is the restoration before all else of unlawfully deprived possession
of the possessor. It finds expression in the
maxim
spoliatus ante omnia restituendus est
(the despoiled person must be restored to possession before or else).
The spoliation order is meant to prevent the taking of possession
otherwise than in accordance with the law. Its underlying philosophy
Is that no one should resort to self-help to obtain or regain
possession. The main purpose of the
mandament
van spolie
is to preserve public order by restraining persons from taking the
law into their own hands and by inducing them to follow due
presses.’
15.
The basis upon which the application was
advanced was that the 2 laptops and 2 cellular telephones had been in
Mr. Bechan’s
undisturbed possession and that SARS had
unlawfully, in entering into his vehicle and removing the items,
dispossessed him of them.
16.
It was not disputed that the 4 particular
items were in Mr. Bechan’s vehicle when they were seized by
SARS. Is it questionable
whether Mr. Bechan was in possession of the
vehicle or the items in the vehicle at the time that SARS opened it
and seized what
was within? On his version, he had handed the keys to
SARS when they had requested them from him. On this basis he may have
voluntarily
relinquished possession of the vehicle and if this is so,
then the fundamental requirements for the
mandament
van spolie
being peaceful and
undisturbed possession would not be met – on this version.
17.
Having regard however to the version of
SARS, it is inherently more probable that Mr. Bechan did not
relinquish possession of the
motor vehicle and its contents
voluntarily by handing over his keys to SARS – the involvement
of both the SAPS and the Hawks
and the delay of at least 10 hours
before the vehicle was finally opened by the locksmith militate
against Mr. Bechan’s version.
18.
There is simply no other plausible reason
why SARS, in possession of a warrant and being able to prevent
persons and vehicles from
leaving the premises, would have delayed
hours, put themselves to additional and unnecessary administrative
procedures and costs
to procure a locksmith to open a vehicle for
which they already had the keys in their possession.
19.
On
the probabilities, Mr. Bechan, notwithstanding his version
[3]
,
which I do not accept, did not voluntarily relinquish possession
[4]
of the keys or the vehicle or its contents for that matter
[5]
.
There can be no doubt that Mr. Bechan was deprived of possession by
SARS.
20.
Was
SARS deprivation of Mr. Bechan’s possession of the 4 items in
his vehicle lawful or not? It is well established that the
mandament
van spolie
will only succeed in circumstances were the dispossession was
unlawful. If the dispossession of the property was lawful, then the
mandament
van spolie
will not be granted
[6]
.
21.
It was contended by SARS that although
neither Mr. Bechan nor his vehicle were specifically identified in
the warrant, the provisions
of
section 62(1)
of the
Tax
Administration Act was
applicable.
22.
The section reads as follows:-
‘
62
Search of premises not identified in warrant
(1)
If a senior SARS official has reasonable grounds to believe that
(a)
the relevant material referred to in
section 60
(1) (b) and included
in a warrant is at premises not identified in the warrant and may be
removed or destroyed;
(b)
a warrant cannot be obtained in time to prevent the removal or
destruction of the relevant material;
and
(c)
the delay in obtaining a warrant would defeat the object of the
search and seizure,
a SARS official may
enter and search the premises and exercise the powers granted in
terms of this Part, as if the premises had
been identified in the
warrant.’
23.
With this section being applicable, SARS
was entitled, in the execution of the warrant to ascertain whether
Mr. Bechan had in his
possession or under his control any of the
taxpayer material specified in the warrant. Their decision to search
him and his vehicle
was, in the circumstances of their earlier
observations of material being carried to motor vehicles while their
entry to the premises
was delayed, not unreasonable. It was argued by
SARS that in consequence Mr. Bechan was obliged to follow the
procedure set out
in
section 66
of the
Tax Administration Act for
the
return of his property. The section reads as follows:
’
66
Application for return of seized relevant material or costs of
damages
(1)
A person may request SARS to
(a)
return some or all of the seized
material; and
(b)
pay the costs of physical damage caused during the conduct of a
search and seizure.
(2)
If SARS refuses the request, the person may
apply to a High Court for the return of the seized material or
payment of compensation
for physical damage caused during the conduct
of the search and seizure.
(3)
The court may, on good cause shown, make the order as it deems fit.
(4)
If the court sets aside the warrant issued in terms of
section 60
(1)
or orders the return of the seized material, the court may
nevertheless authorise SARS to retain the original or a copy of
any
relevant material in the interests of justice.’
24.
Counsel
for Mr. Bechan argued that the warrant had to be construed as
narrowly as possible and that only those individuals and items
referred to in the warrant were subject to its execution by SARS. In
pursuing this argument, counsel argued that since the
Tax
Administration Act contained
no definition of ‘person’,
applying the ordinary rules of interpretation, ‘person’
properly interpreted
in the Act should be read interchangeably with
‘taxpayer’
[7]
and that properly construed the reference to ‘premises’
in
section 62
ought to be read to mean the premises of the taxpayer
in respect of whom the warrant had been issued. If this argument is
correct
then it would follow that the vehicle of Mr. Bechan, parked
in a general parking area, was not on the premises of the taxpayer
and SARS opening of the vehicle and seizure of the items therein
unlawful.
25.
The warrant provides for the seizure of
material relevant to the taxpayer at the specified premises. In its
terms, the warrant refers
to the physical street address where the
taxpayer conducted business and where Mr. Bechan found himself on the
day in question.
The description in paragraph 1 of the warrant of the
address/es where it was to be executed together with the description
of the
material forming the subject of the warrant in paragraph 7
make it clear that it is material relevant to the taxpayer that is
sought.
26.
In my view, the warrant in its terms
provides for the search anywhere on the premises identified in the
warrant – and this
would include vehicles parked on the
premises. To interpret the warrant as restrictively as in the manner
argued on behalf of Mr.
Bechan would serve to undermine its efficacy
– the very situation encountered by SARS in being delayed entry
to the premises.
However, even if it could be argued that the warrant
was not wide enough to cover Mr. Bechan’s vehicle, the
provisions of
section 62
would in any event in my view, have entitled
SARS to open the vehicle and take possession of the taxpayer
information in it.
27.
The parties were agreed that the costs
should follow the result.
28.
In the circumstances, I make the following
order: -
27.1 The
application is dismissed.
27.2 The First and
Second Applicants are ordered to pay the costs of the application
jointly and severally
A
MILLAR
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
HEARD
ON:
26 APRIL 2022
JUDGMENT
DELIVERED ON:
28 APRIL 2022
COUNSEL
FOR THE APPLICANTS:
ADV. I BREDENKAMP SC
ADV. S DAVIES
INSTRUCTED
BY:
FABER GOERTZ ELLIS AUSTEN INC.
REFERENCE:
MS. J FABER
COUNSEL
FOR THE RESPONDENTS:
ADV. C NAUDE
INSTRUCTED
BY:
VZLR INC.
REFERENCE:
MS. M LABUSCHAGNE
[1]
28
of 2011
[2]
2014
(5) SA 112
(CC) at 117D – 118A, see also Sithole v Native
Resettlement Board 1959(4) SA 115 WLD at 117
[3]
Plascon
Evans Paints Ltd v Van Riebeeck Paints (Pty) Ltd
[1984] ZASCA 51
;
1984 (3) SA 623
(A)
at 634E 635C.
[4]
“
possession”
– “The action or fact of possessing something; the
holding or having something as one’s own
or in one’s
control; actual holding or occupancy as distinct from ownership;
law
visible power or control over a thing” The Shorter Oxford
English Dictionary, Volume 2, 6
th
Ed, Oxford University Press, 2007
[5]
Stocks
Housing (Cape Pty Ltd) vs Chief Executive Director, Department of
Education and Cultural Services and Others
1996 (4) SA 231
(C) at
240B-C where the court said:
‘
The
element of unlawfulness of the dispossession which must be shown in
order to claim a spoliation order relates to the manner
in which the
dispossession took place, not to the alleged title or right of the
spoliator to claim possession. The cardinal enquiry
is whether the
person in possession was deprived thereof without his acquiescence
and consent. Spoliation may take place in numerous
unlawful ways. It
may be because It was by force or by stealth or deceit or by theft .
. .’
[6]
Wightman
t/a JW Construction v Headfour (Pty) Ltd and Another 2008 (3) SA 371
(SCA)
[7]
A
‘taxpayer’ is defined in
Section 151
as follows
‘
151
Taxpayer
In this Act, "taxpayer"
means
(a) a person who is or
may be chargeable to tax or with a tax offence;
(b) a representative
taxpayer;
(c) a withholding agent;
(d) a responsible third
party; or
(e)
a person who is the subject of a request to provide assistance under
an international tax agreement.’
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