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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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[2022] ZAGPPHC 285
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## Sookoo and Others v Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service and Another (49048/21)
[2022] ZAGPPHC 285 (3 May 2022)
Sookoo and Others v Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service and Another (49048/21)
[2022] ZAGPPHC 285 (3 May 2022)
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sino date 3 May 2022
REPUBLIC
OF SOUTH AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA
CASE
NO: 49048/21
REPORTABLE:
NO
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED:
NO
Date:
3 May 2022
In
the matter between:
VISHEN
SOOKOO
FIRST APPLICANT
SPIRIT
OF AFRICA (PTY) LTD
SECOND APPLICANT
ON
TRACK MOBILE (PTY) LTD
THIRD APPLICANT
and
COMMISSIONER
FOR THE SOUTH
AFRICAN
REVENUE SERVICE
FIRST RESPONDENT
JACQUES
VAN WYK N.O.
SECOND RESPONDENT
JUDGMENT
Van
der Schyff J
[1]
The applicants approached the urgent
anticipation of a preservation order handed down on 27 October 2021
insofar as it relates to
the first two applicants and for the
declaration of the preservation of the assets of the third applicant
as unlawful, and [apply/applied?]
for the assets to be released.
[2]
It is common cause that a provisional
preservation order was granted in this court on 27 October 2021 with
a return date of 28 February
2022. The preservation order followed an
ex parte
application by the South African Revenue Service (SARS). On 28
February 2022, the parties extended the return date to 23 May 2022
by
agreement.
The
applicant's case
[3]
The first applicant (VS) is the 22
nd
respondent in the preservation application and the second applicant
(SOA) is the 21
st
respondent in the preservation application. The third applicant is
not cited as a respondent in the preservation application or
the
preservation order. When the preservation order was granted, VS was a
director of the third applicant (OT). He resigned on
22 February
2022, and the change was effected by CIPC on 25 February 2022.
[4]
VS was served with the preservation order
on 4 November 2021. He states that he was only cited in his
representative capacity, unlike
other respondents who were cited in
their personal capacities. I pause to note that on the provisional
order handed down, VS is
not cited
nomine
officio. In
the founding affidavit to
the
ex parte
application, it is stated that VS is cited in his capacity as
director of SOA.
[5]
VS informs in the founding affidavit to
this urgent application that he used to be the sole director of SOA
but sold his shareholding
in SOA to his mother-in-law shortly before
the preservation order was obtained. However, his resignation as
director of SOA was
only effected on 28 October 2021 after the
preservation order was already granted, but before he claims he
became aware of the
order.
[6]
After being presented with the preservation
order, VS contacted his attorney, who, in turn, contacted the
curator. The curator allegedly
undertook not to freeze any of VS's
bank accounts. Still, on 9 November 2021, VS's personal bank accounts
and the account of OT
and other entities not cited in the
preservation order were frozen. In a meeting held on 10 November 2021
that VS attended, the
curator informed VS's attorney that the
accounts were frozen erroneously. By 16 November 2021, the bank
accounts were still frozen,
and creditors, which had to be paid by 12
November 2021, were only paid by 16 November 2021. Towards the end of
November 2021,
the curator indicated that he required security before
releasing the bank accounts. A further meeting was held with the
curator
on 1 December 2022 and the applicants provided security in
the value of approximately R6 million to the curator. The curator
indicated
that he was satisfied with the security, and the hold on
the bank accounts was released on 7 December 2021. Subsequent
meetings
were held with an auditor of SARS.
[7]
On 27 January 2022, the curator wrote to
VS's attorney indicating that he is still awaiting information
previously requested on
2 December 2021. VS claims, however, that the
documentation requested by the curator is unconnected with the assets
of SOA or himself
or the preservation of these assets. The
information requested relates specifically to the PPE deal that was
the subject of SARS'
attention. VS submits that the curator was
acting outside the scope of the preservation order and abusing his
preservation powers
to perform SARS audit functions for it.
[8]
Around 21 February 2021, VS had a telephone
conversation with the curator. The curator demanded weekly reports of
the creditors
and debtors of 'the four companies.' VS explained that
this demand was not in accordance with the agreement reached between
himself
and the curator since he already provided security for the
tax liability that SOA could potentially incur based on the PPE
transaction
referred to in the founding affidavit to the preservation
order.
[9]
Despite threats being made by the curator,
the applicants agreed to the extension of the preservation order.
Around 23 February
2022, a discussion ensued between VS's attorney
and SARS's attorney. VS explains that the proviso for agreeing to the
extension
of the preservation order was that his personal estate and
those of the companies not cited in the preservation order would be
released from curatorship. SARS's attorney allegedly indicated that
he was prepared to release VS and SOA from curatorship provided
that
sufficient security was put up but had to obtain instructions from
his client. VS was requested not to launch urgent court
proceedings
until the attorney for SARS had the opportunity to obtain
instructions. I pause to note that the extension of the return
date
was evidently agreed to before the applicants were informed as to
whether SARS accepted the proviso communicated to their
attorney.
[10]
On 15 March 2022, the curator again
demanded receiving the information requested on 2 December 2021
concerning the PPE transaction.
VS's attorney wrote to the curator,
informing him that VS was uncomfortable disclosing the requested
information to the curator's
office as the curator's mandate is to
preserve the assets of the cited parties and not to investigate the
merits of the matter.
On 23 March 2022, the curator threatened to
freeze the accounts again, and on 24 March 2022, one of VS's personal
accounts and
the accounts of four companies were again frozen.
[11]
VS states that the matter is urgent because
the effect of the preservation order became unbearable. He cannot set
up new deals because
of the negative impact of the preservation
order. Creditors are being paid late and, in some instances, not at
all. Potential business
partners avoid conducting business
proceedings with VS and the associated companies. Many people
dependent on the applicants' companies
have lost their livelihoods,
and VS and his wife have received death threats from people whose
livelihoods have been terminated.
[12]
The applicants claim that the curator acted
unlawfully because he froze accounts that he was not lawfully
permitted to freeze in
the first instance and refroze it again simply
because he has been refused information that he is not entitled to.
The applicants
are also prejudiced by SARS failing to communicate the
outcome of the audit that they are conducting. The applicants contend
that
the preservation order should not have been granted against them
in the first place because SOA had no assets, a fact SARS can be
assumed to have been aware of when it initially applied for the
preservation order.
SARS's
case
[13]
SARS admits from the onset that OT, the
third applicant, is not cited as a party to the preservation order
granted on 25 October
2021. SARS contends that the preservation order
was required to secure the collection of tax debts that may be due
and payable
by the respondents cited in the order. This tax debt
emanates from questionable awards made by the South African Police
Service
(SAPS) as part of the procurement of Personal Protective
Clothing (PPE) made during the National Disaster caused by the
Covid-19
pandemic. The nature of the suspicious relationship between
the various respondents who benefitted from the SAPS PPE awards, the
flow of funds amongst the respondents cited without any plausible
business or financial transactions, and the risks of tax evasion
are
explained in detail in the application for the preservation order.
[14]
SARS highlights that the applicants
challenge the provisional preservation application and ask for its
discharge, citing the allegation
of unlawful conduct on the part of
the
curator bonis.
They
rely on their alleged disputes with the curator concerning the
lawfulness or not of his conduct as a basis for seeking the
discharge
of the provisional order. SARS submits that the curator's conduct is
irrelevant in determining whether a provisional
preservation order
should be discharged or not. SARS proposes that allegations of
hardships or harm suffered by a litigant, which
are denied in the
present matter, can be alleviated through an order varying the
provisional preservation order but do not justify
the discharge of
the preservation order.
[15]
SARS contends that the applicants failed to
comply with s 11(4) of the Tax Administration Act 28 of 2011 (TAA).
The applicants failed
to give written notice to SARS of their
intention to institute the present application. Since litigation was
ongoing and alive
between the SOA, VS, and SARS, I believe
non-compliance with s 11(4), if any, can be condoned.
[16]
SARS disputes that the application is
urgent and avers that it is inappropriate to saddle the urgent court
with disputes relating
to a complex investigation in circumstances
where the audit investigation into an elaborate scheme of tax
invasion is not yet complete.
The applicants seek a final order
without establishing a clear right. Although the confirmatory
affidavits of the directors of
SOA and OT are attached, no company
resolutions authorising the participation of SOA and OT are attached.
Neither is it alluded
to in the confirmatory affidavits that such
resolutions were taken.
[17]
SARS informs the court that the
preservation application revolves around transactions emanating from
a PPE tender with the hallmark
of simulated transactions. Although
the audit investigation is not completed, there is a prima facie view
that tax adjustments
will be made in favour of the fiscus, and to
release the applicants' assets prematurely from the preservation
order would mean
that SARS runs a substantial risk of not collecting
such tax amount if it is not secured through a preservation order.
[18]
SARS holds that the curator is best suited
to address the issues relating to the interaction between the curator
and VS.
The
curator's case
[19]
The curator claims that he is entitled in
terms of the powers granted in the preservation order to request the
information he sought.
The curator explains that he indicated that he
was prepared provisionally to agree to R6 million security be
provided after which
the bank accounts would be unfrozen, but
indicated that the process still had to be followed. VS's personal
accounts were released
on 30 November 2021, and the business accounts
on 7 December 2021. The curator was informed that VS manages the
companies concerned
as a group. The curator states that the
information he sought is directly related to the court order. Because
the applicants failed
to provide him with the information, he was
entitled to freeze the accounts again in terms of the preservation
order.
The
applicant's reply
[20]
The applicants point out in reply that SARS
does not deny in their answering affidavit that SOA had no assets at
the time that the
preservation order was sought or that it failed to
point this out to the presiding officer.
[21]
The applicants' further contention that
neither of the respondents denies that he was cited in his
representative capacity is neither
here nor there in light of him
being cited in the founding affidavit to the main application in the
following manner:
'The Twenty-Second
Respondent is Vishen Sookoo ("Mr. Sookoo"), a major male
with identity number [xx] and currently residing
at [xx], Mr. Sookoo
is cited in this application in his capacity as director of Spirit of
Africa.'
Discussion
[22]
At the onset of the hearing, I indicated
that the issue of urgency would be determined within the factual
matrix of the application.
The application was issued on 7 April
2022. The respondents were afforded until 13 April 2022 to file
notices of their intention
to oppose and until 14 April 2022 to file
their answering affidavits. SARS filed its answering affidavit
outside the prescribed
time period but explained that it was
impossible to file the answering affidavit within the period
prescribed by the applicants.
[23]
I accept that the applicant reverted to
instituting this urgent application after the curator again froze
certain bank accounts
on 24 March 2022. It is common cause that the
curator reverted to freezing bank accounts of legal entities not
listed as respondents
on the preservation order.
[24]
Section 163 authorises SARS to approach the
court on an
ex parte
basis to apply for an order to preserve any assets of a taxpayer or
another person, subject to the conditions and exceptions as
may be
specified in the preservation order. The court to which an
application for a preservation order is made may make a provisional
preservation order having immediate effect and simultaneously grant a
rule
nisi
calling on the taxpayer or other person to appear and to show cause
why the preservation order should not be made final.
[25]
A preservation order is an invasive remedy.
The rule
nisi
calling on persons whose assets are seized to preserve it affords
affected parties with an opportunity to address the court either
on
the return date or on the date to which the return date is
anticipated. This process honours the principle of
audi
et alteram partem
.
[26]
The factual matrix of this application
requires differentiation to be made between the three applicants
before the court. VS and
SOA were duly cited as respondents in the
preservation order granted during October 2021. The return date was
extended by agreement.
A dispute of fact exists as to whether the
curator bonis
unconditionally lifted the hold on these two entities' bank accounts
and whether the lifting of the hold was conditional on VS
and SOA
providing information to the curator. The same applies to the dispute
as to whether the applicants were informed that they
had to provide
weekly reports despite providing security. This requires the
application of the well-known Plascon Evans principle,
and I am to
accept the curator's evidence in this regard.
[27]
The preservation order granted in October
2021 empowers the curator
bonis
to request any information about the companies' business and tax
affairs as may reasonably be required. Respondents are obliged
to
disclose all particulars of all transfers of assets to other persons
during such periods as the curator
bonis
may stipulate to enable the curator
bonis
to determine whether such transfers can and should be set aside, and
how the assets concerned can be secured pending the setting
aside
thereof.' Respondents are likewise obliged in terms of the
preservation order to disclose to the curator
bonis
particulars of all the business transactions wherein they were
involved to enable the curator to submit tax returns, VAT, and PAYEE
returns to the extent necessary to bring the tax affairs of the
concerned respondents and all the businesses conducted by them
up to
date. If DOA and VS believed that the curator's powers were
extensive, they could apply for the amendment or even termination
thereof.
[28]
I
have been referred to the judgment of
Peacock
Television (Pty) Ltd v Transkei Development Corporation
[1]
where Madlanga J, as he then was, held:
[2]
'
In
my view, what this boils down to is that the anticipation was brought
on the merits and the question is: can a litigant simply
anticipate a
return date at any time?
It
is so that Rule 6(8) does not stipulate any time limit within which
an affected person may anticipate a return day. The Rule
reads:
Any
person against whom an order is granted
ex parte
may
anticipate the return day upon delivery of not less than 24 hours'
notice.'
Though
the Rule be so worded, it cannot be that persons adversely affected
by a rule
nisi
obtained
ex parte
are
free, as of right, to anticipate the extended return day thereof
despite an extension or extensions of the rule
nisi
in
their presence. It seems to me that Rule 6(8) was meant to come to
the aid of a litigant who finds himself/herself
taken by
surprise
by an order granted
ex parte
. Once such
a litigant becomes aware of the order, he/she should then take steps
to avoid and/or ameliorate the effect thereof by
anticipating the
return day of the rule
nisi
. Rule 6(8) could never have
been meant to cover a situation like the one now before me. If
respondents, in circumstances like the
present, were to be
allowed to anticipate a return day as they please, the orderly
practice of this Court and the purpose thereof
would be defeated.
Such anticipation would amount to allowing respondents to avoid
having to properly set their matters down for
hearing on the opposed
roll. This would not only result in chaos, but it would also
prejudice those litigants who have set down
their opposed matters
properly and have waited their turn on the opposed roll.'
[29]
In the current application, the return date
was extended by agreement. After considering the facts of the matter,
I am of the view
that no exceptional circumstances have been
indicated that would justify anticipating the return date on an
urgent basis. I have
already indicated that I am bound to accept the
curator's evidence that he provisionally agreed to the upliftment of
the hold on
SOA and VS's bank account and replaced the hold because
he was not provided with the information he sought and to which he
is,
in his view, entitled in terms of the order. Both SARS and the
curator indicated that they were pressed for time due to the
truncated
periods within which they were required to file answering
affidavits. The underlying issues are complex, and the first and
second
applicants' discomfort and the alleged harm suffered by them
need to be considered within the broader interests protected by the
preservation order. If the second applicant is suffering undue
hardship, s 163(7)(d) of the TAA provides for a variation of the
preservation order. It empowers the court to make ancillary orders
regarding how the assets must be dealt with. The validity of
the
preservation order can be challenged on the return date.
[30]
The position regarding the third applicant,
OT, is somewhat different. The third applicant is not cited as a
respondent in the preservation
order. VS used to be a director of OT
but resigned on 22 February 2022. The change was affected by CIPC on
25 February 2022. VS's
wife is the sole shareholder of OT. I am of
the view that the fact that OT might have met the definition of
'related person' before
VS's resignation as director as provided for
in terms of
s 75
of the
Companies Act 71 of 2008
, is neither here nor
there since OT is not listed as a respondent in the preservation
order. Until a preservation order is obtained
against OT, no legal
ground underpins the preservation of OT's assets, and the
preservation thereof is unlawful. A court cannot
condone the
continuance of an unlawful act. The third applicant is entitled to
relief being granted on an urgent basis.
[31]
VS mentioned that the curator also froze
the bank accounts of other companies of which he is the director,
which are not cited as
respondents in the preservation order. Those
companies are separate legal entities, and they are also not cited as
applicants in
this application. VS cannot cry foul when the bank
accounts of those companies are dealt with as if it is his personal
bank accounts
and simultaneously seek the release of those bank
accounts on the basis that they are accounts of other legal entities
in an application
wherein those entities are not cited as applicants.
Because the companies are not applicants before this court, their
plight cannot
be considered, and relief cannot be granted in a
vacuum.
[32]
The second respondent, SARS, took issue
with the fact that it was cited as a respondent in this application,
where the applicants
mainly take issue with the curator's conduct.
SARS is a party with a vested interest in the assets that are being
preserved. The
third applicant was obliged to join SARS as a
respondent. SARS was made aware of the seizure of assets by the
curator belonging
to an entity against whom they did not obtain a
preservation order. They cannot merely shrug their shoulders and say
that it does
not concern them and that they are entitled to the costs
occasioned by opposing the application, where one of the applicants
succeeded
with the relief sought. Although a costs order will not be
granted against SARS as far as the relief sought by the third
applicant
is concerned, a costs order will also not be granted in
SARS's favour as far as the third applicant's application is
concerned.
[33]
The general principle that costs follow the
event, applies. The first and second applicants are not entitled to
costs since they
were unsuccessful in the relief they sought. The
third applicant is successful, but she only sought relief against the
curator.
Order
In
the result, the following order is granted:
1.
The third applicant's non-compliance with
the Uniform Rules of Court is condoned, and the application, as far
as the third applicant
is concerned, is heard on an urgent basis in
terms of Rule 6(12) (a);
2.
The preservation of assets of On Track
Mobile (Pty) Ltd is declared unlawful, and the second respondent is
ordered to release such
assets forthwith;
3.
The first and second applicant's
non-compliance with the Uniform Rules of Court is not condoned, and
the return day of the preservation
order handed down by this court on
27 October 2021 and extended on 22 February 2022 is not anticipated
but remains 23 May 2022;
4.
The second respondent is to pay the costs
of the third applicant, including the costs of two counsel;
5.
The first and second respondents' costs,
including costs of two counsel, where so employed, as far as it
relates to the first and
second applicants' application, are costs in
the preservation application.
E
van der Schyff
Judge
of the High Court
Delivered:
This judgement is handed down electronically by uploading it to the
electronic file of this matter on CaseLines. As a
courtesy gesture,
it will be sent to the parties/their legal representatives by email.
Counsel
for the applicant:
Adv. R Maastenbroek
With:
Adv. Van der Westhuizen
Instructed
by:
Ulrich Roux and Associates
For
the first respondent:
Adv. L Sigogo SC
With:
Adv. L Kalipa
Instructed
by:
Majang Inc.
For
the second respondent: Adv. B H Steyn
Instructed
by:
Rosendorff Reitz Barry
Date
of the hearing:
28 April
2022
Date
of judgment:
3 May 2022
[1]
1998 (2) SA 259 (Tk).
[2]
262D-H.
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