Case Law[2022] ZAGPPHC 344South Africa
Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service v Raphela and Others (2091/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 344 (16 May 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Pretoria)
16 May 2022
Judgment
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# South Africa: North Gauteng High Court, Pretoria
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## Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service v Raphela and Others (2091/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 344 (16 May 2022)
Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service v Raphela and Others (2091/2021) [2022] ZAGPPHC 344 (16 May 2022)
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sino date 16 May 2022
HIGH
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(GAUTENG
DIVISION, PRETORIA)
CASE
NO: 2091/2021
REPORTABLE:
NO.
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: NO
REVISED.
# In the matter between:
In the matter between:
THE
COMMISSIONER
FOR THE
Applicant
SOUTH
AFRICAN REVENUE SERVICE
#
# and
and
PHELADI
SUZAN RAPHELA
First Respondent
PSR
SOLUTIONS (PTY) LTD
Second Respondent
TBEMBEKA
KOEKI MDLULWA
Third Respondent
JUDGMENT
(In
Leave to Appeal and the Condonation Application)
This
matter has been heard by way of a virtual hearing and otherwise
disposed of in terms of the Directives of the Judge President
of this
Division. The judgment and order are accordingly published and
distributed electronically.
DAVIS,J
[1]
Introduction
For
ease of reference, the parties shall be referred to as in the main
application. On 29 March 2021 this court, by way of a written
judgment, confirmed a preservation order in terms of section 163 of
the Tax Administration Act 28 of 2011 (the TAA) against the
initial
third respondent, Mrs Mdlulwa. She was the funder of the first
respondent's company (PSR) who sold personal protective
equipment
(face masks) to the South African Police Service at 125% the cost
price. PSR, who is the second respondent, has an estimated
tax debt
of some R 14,5 million (before interest and penalties) and the funds
received from it by Mrs Mdlulwa, being a "repayment"
of the
funding in an amount of R33,154 million including a profit of some R
13 million (over 7 days) are, in terms of the preservation
order,
preserved for the recovery of this tax debt. On 7 March 2022 the
third respondent delivered an application for condonation
for the
late delivery of her application for leave to appeal. This judgment
is in respect of the application for condonation and
the application
for leave to appeal.
[2]
The
relevant appliciples to
condonation
applications:
2.1
Courts may, on good cause shown, condone any non-compliance with its
rules. See: Joubert,
LAWSA, Vol 14 at 11 and the cases cited at
footnote 1, read with Rule 27(3).
2.2
In considering applications for condonation, courts have a
discretion, to be exercised
judicially on a consideration of the
facts of each case.
2.3
Among the factors that the court has regard to are: the degree of
non compliance,
the explanation for the delay, the prospects of
success, the importance of the case, the nature of the relief, the
other party's
interest in finality, the convenience of the court, the
avoidance of unnecessary delay in the administration of justice and
the
degree of negligence of the persons responsible for the
non-compliance.
2.4
Generally, a court is reluctant to penalize a litigant for its
lawyer's conduct, but
there are limits beyond which a litigant cannot
escape the result of his or her lawyer's lack of diligence. See
Salojee v Minister of Community Development
1965 (2) SA 135
(A). Where a litigant relies on the ineptitude or negligence of his
or her lawyer, he or she should show that it is not to be imputed
to
him or her.
[3]
The basis upon which condonation is sought
The
third respondent, being an attorney herself, set out in paragraphs 19
- 25 of her founding affidavit to her application for
condonation,
what she termed "good cause" and "sufficient merits"
to condone the late delivery of her application
for leave to appeal.
In order to curtail the length of this judgment, I shall deal with
the evaluation of her allegations simultaneously
with the listing
thereof:
3.1
In paragraph 19 of her affidavit, the third respondent stated that,
upon receipt of the final preservation order, she had a
"very
lengthy discussion"
with her attorney during which she
instructed him to appeal the judgment. The third respondent stated
that, at the time, the att01ney
"was certainly placed in a
position to at least prepare a draft notice of application for leave
to appeal for my further input".
3.2
The application for leave to appeal had to be filed by 21 ApriI 2021.
After she had consulted with her attorney on 30 March
2021, the third
respondent stated that, as she "understands" it, her
attorney consulted with an advocate
"to
settle
and finalise the anticipated appeal documentation"
on 13
April 2021.
3.3
The next paragraph in the third respondent's affidavit 1s
significant, particularly
in respect of what it does not say and in
respect of its vagueness. It reads as follows:
"20.
I
personally followed up with my attorney from time to time to
ascertain when he anticipated
having the draft appeal
document ready for me to peruse and finalise.
He
continuously reassured me that he was attending to the matter and
that I would be in possession of a draft document in due course".
The third respondent, as an attorney would have known that all
this needed to have taken place before 21 April 2021. She did not
ensure that it did. She does not even refer to any enquiries as to
the draft that counsel was supported to prepare. Her paragraph
is
vague as to dates and it appears that this is purposely so.
3.4
Another curious feature of the third respondent's explanation is that
her attorney
apparently uploaded an unsigned notice of application
for leave to appeal on 28 June 2021. This was two months out of time
but
was in any event never signed. The practice directive requiring
invitation of the registrar of the appeals section was also not
followed. I, as the presiding judge, was blissfully unaware of the
intention to apply for leave to appeal and remained so until
the
condonation application was filed some nine months later.
3.5
The third respondent stated that she was also unaware of this
unsigned notice
being uploaded. She says in her affidavit, in dealing
with this:
"I advise that as a result of me currently living
in Barcelona, Spain, I was unable to sign the documentation before a
Commissioner
of Oaths".
There was at that stage no such
documentation to be signed.
3.6
Another unexplained curiosity of the third respondent's version, is
her allegation
that she had terminated her previous attorney's
mandate already on 20 May 2021. She does not say why. She does allege
that she
had appointed another attorney, Witz Inc
"immediately
upon the said termination".
She does not explain what
instructions she gave to this new attorney or what the attorney did.
All the while, according to the third
respondent, she must still have
been awaiting a draft application for leave to appeal. She alleges
that this new attorney informed
her that
"he had seen the
appeal that has been uploaded'.
This must chronologically have
been more than a month after his own appointment and, inexplicably,
by his predecessor whose mandate
had been terminated. It was also
done by way of a document unseen by the third respondent, yet she was
content to rely on this.
3.7
The mandate of Witz Inc was also terminated, on 17 January 2022. The
third respondent
does not explain why except that she was concerned
about the delay of a date of hearing. The third respondents' current
attorneys
"came on record'
on 24 January 2022. The third
respondent stated that it was only then that her "non-compliant"
Notice of Application for
Leave to Appeal
"was brought to her
attention"
and when she was advised to launch a
condonation application. She now relies on Rule 27(3) and claims that
good cause had been shown.
3.8
This is not the customary matter where a lay client can feign
innocence and
claim to be excused for her atto1ney's negligence - the
third respondent is herself an officer of this court. Where she had
initially
had counsel intructed to prepare a draft notice for her
perusal, which had thereafter to be served and filed on 21 April
2021,
then for her to be content that an unseen, unsigned notice
delivered by an unmandated attorney be merely "uploaded"
and
never served, a fact which she found out at an unspecified date
in 2021, smacks not only of gross negligence, but of disdain for
this
court's procedure.
3.9
I find that the third respondent has not crossed the first hurdles
necessary
for applications for condonation. She has given an
unsatisfactory and completely blameworthy explanation for her delay
and default.
3.10
The prospects of success of the third respondent's application for
leave to appeal is a relevant
factor. See, inter alia
Mbutuma v
Xhosa Development Corporation Ltd
1978 (1) SA 681
(A) and
Uitenhage Transitional
Local Council v SA Revenue
Service
2004 (1) SA 292
(SCA) at paragraph [11].
3.11
The third respondent does not even-deal-.wit this aspect in her
affidavit in support of her application
for condonation, but merely
annexes a copy of the non-compliant notice referred to above.
3.12
Adv Struwig, who appeared for the third respondent, valiantly raised
the following grounds in
this regard:
3.12.1
He reiterated the argument dealt with in the
judgment, namely the
third respondent's complaint that SARS had not made full disclosure
in the ex parte application for the provisional
preservation order
granted by Basson J and, had it done so, the order would never have
been granted. Two issues were concentrated
on in this regard: the
first was that the third respondent was labelled "the
mastermind" of the scheme to supply cheap
equipment to the SAPS
at exorbitant prices and secondly the allegation that she had
dissipated funds overseas, without mentioning
that she had the
necessary authority to do so. As pointed out in the judgment, whether
the third respondent had been the mastermind
or not is legally
irrelevant. The order is for preservation of assets in respect of the
principal taxpayer's liability, it is not
an attachment or attempted
recovery from the third respondent as a co-perpetrator as elsewhere
catered for in the TAA. Similarly,
the authority to transfer funds
out of the country is equally legally irrelevant. The fact remains
that when funds are expatriated
with or without authority, it
compromises SARS' recovery of tax. These points therefore create no
prospects of success on appeal
and I remain of the view that the
initial preservation order had correctly been granted.
3.12.2
The second point was that the preservation order
was too wide and
already authorises the curator to sell the third respondent's assets.
Not only was this objection to the order
not raised during the
hearing of the main application, but SARS has confirmed that the only
sale of assets which could take place,
could be after the taxpayer's
tax liability has been assessed and has remained unpaid and only
then, as part of a recovery process
in terms of the TAA. It would
also be limited to the funds received form PSR, and not in respect of
the third respondent's own
assets. This appears to be a correct
statement of the law and no appeal is necessary in this regard.
3.12.3
The issue of alleged disproportionality of the
amount sought to be
preserved was raised, but not in the fashion as discussed by
Sutherland J (as he then was) in
CSARS v Hamilton Holdings (Pty)
Ltd and Others
(referred to in paragraph 6.7 of the judgment) by
having regard to the possible extent of the taxpayer's tax liability.
The argument
was that, of the R33 million received by the third
respondent, R1 9 million was a "repayment" of the funds
advanced by
her and that the preservation order should have been
limited to her profit portion. The recipient of funds in
circumstances such
as these is not entitled to apply unilateral
set-off. The fact is that, prior to any "repayment", R 33
million of funds
were in hands of the taxpayer and those funds had
been paid over (or dissipated) to the third respondent. It is those
funds that
are preserved for purposes of recovery of the taxpayer's
tax liability. If the full amount is so recovered, the third
respondent
must look to the taxpayer for repayment of the funds
advanced. Similarly, as with the previous points, this issue raises
no real
prospects of success on appeal.
3.12.4
A last point was that the order also went too
wide in not only
preserving the R 33 million but "all" of the third
respondent's assets. She (rightly) claims she is
not liable for the
taxpayer's tax debts but that is not what the import of the order is.
Its import is to preserve assets of the
third respondent up to the
amount which has been disbursed to her by the taxpayer, i.e the R33
Million, as already pointed out
in paragraph 3.12.2 above.
3.13
Where a "good defence" or substantial prospects of success
can "compensate"
for a poor explanation for default (such
as in
Lazarus and Another v Nedcor Bank Ltd, Lazarus and Another v
Absa Bank Ltd
1999 (2) SA 782
(WLD)), this is clearly not the
case here. There are insufficient prospects of success on appeal and
therefore insufficient prospects
of success in the application for
leave to appeal that condonation should be granted.
[4]
Order
The application for
condonation is refused with costs.
N
DAVIS
Judge
of the High Court
Gauteng
Division, Pretoria
Date
of Hearing: 6 May 2022
Judgment
delivered: 16 May 2022
APPEARANCES:
For
the Applicant:
Adv. K D Magano
Attorney
for Applicant:
Ledwaba
Maswai Attorney, Pretoria
For
the 3
rd
Respondent:
Adv. H Struwig
Attorney
for yd Respondent:
Faber Goertz Ellis Austen Inc., Bryanston
c/o Phillip Venter
Attorney, Pretoria
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