Case Law[2024] ZAWCHC 423South Africa
Jaymat Enviro Solutions CC v Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service (7559/2024) [2024] ZAWCHC 423 (13 December 2024)
Headnotes
of the facts that were uncontroversial, if not common cause, and that gave rise to this review application.
Judgment
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## Jaymat Enviro Solutions CC v Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service (7559/2024) [2024] ZAWCHC 423 (13 December 2024)
Jaymat Enviro Solutions CC v Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service (7559/2024) [2024] ZAWCHC 423 (13 December 2024)
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sino date 13 December 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN
CASE
NO: 7559/2024
In
the matter between
JAYMAT
ENVIRO SOLUTIONS
CC
APPLICANT
And
THE
COMMISSIONER FOR THE SOUTH AFRICAN
RESPONDENT
REVENUE
Date
of hearing:
21 November 2024
Date of
judgment:
Judgment was handed down electronically
by circulation to the
parties’ representatives by email and released to SAFLII.
The date for handdown is deemed to
be 13 December 2024
JUDGMENT
[1]
This is a review application of a decision
by the Commissioner of the South African Revenue Service (“SARS”).
The applicant
is seeking a judicial review of SARS’s decisions
dated 22 September 2021, 28 September 2021 and 27 September 2021
respectively.
It is the applicant’s case that the
decisions amount to a failure on the part of SARS to record so-called
ETI credits on
the applicant’s statement of account. On
15 August 2023, the applicant directed to SARS a notice per
s11(4)
of
the
Tax Administration Act 28 of 2011
(“the TAA”). SARS
responded on 15 September 2023, providing a comprehensive response on
why the ETI credits were not
recorded on the applicant’s
statement of account. The applicant does not seek to set aside
the decision recorded in
SARS’s reply dated 15 September 2023,
but rather the decisions or, more precisely, the indecisions of 22
September 2021,
28 September 2021 and 27 September 2021.
[2]
This review application presents certain
distinct features, including the choice of the applicant not to
follow the procedure outlined
in uniform
rule 53
, and the fact that
although the applicant is seeking the review of SARS’s
decisions, it did not object or appeal against
SARS’s
assessment, nor did the applicant approach the Tax Court as
stipulated in Chapter 9 of the TAA. The applicant
contends that
SARS did not raise any objections to the (self) assessments it
submitted. However, SARS decided not to incorporate
the
assessments into the applicant’s statement of account. This
review application centres on SARS's choice to neither act
upon nor
acknowledge the assessments submitted by the applicant. Although this
application presents its own distinct features,
it represents yet
another decision in the ongoing series of rulings concerning the dual
jurisdiction of the High Court and the
Tax Court.
A
RELIEF APPLIED FOR
[3]
In its notice of motion the applicant
applies for an order in the following terms:
[a]
Reviewing and setting aside the respondent’s decisions dated 22
September 2021,
28 September 2021, and 27 September 2021 (“the
impugned decisions”) respectively.
[b]
Declaring the impugned decisions to be unlawful, inconsistent with s
165(3)(f) of
the Tax Administration Act 28 of 2011 (as amended) and
invalid.
[c]
To direct the respondent to capture the ETI Credits pursuant to the
revised EMP501
declarations in terms of s 165(3)(f) of the TAA,
within five business days of this order.
[d]
To direct the respondent to amend the ETI claimed by the applicant
for 1 March 2020
to 28 February 2021 to R3 097 135,94, as
per the revised EMP501 declarations.
[e]
That the respondent be required to make full payment of the following
amounts due
to the applicant pursuant to the revised EMP501
declarations together with interest thereon at the applicable legal
rate from the
date of filing to the date of final payment, within 21
business days of the date referred to in paragraph [d] above:
Period
Amount
2018/02 period
R80 420,44
2019/02 period
R763 821,05
2020/02 period
R1 832 723,73
Total
R2 676 965,22
[f]
To confirm that the 180-day period in terms of
s 7(1)(b)
of the
Promotion of Administrative Justice Act, 3 of 2000
begins to run from
15 September 2023.
[g]
That the respondent be ordered to pay the costs of this application
including the
cost of two counsel where so being employed, …’
[4]
The Commissioner opposed the relief applied
for and raised two preliminary but critical issues. Firstly, in
terms of
s 105
of the TAA, the applicant, as a taxpayer, can only
bring an application of this nature in the High Court if they are
able to demonstrate
“
exceptional
circumstances”
for avoiding the
“
default route”
of
approaching the Tax Court. It was submitted by Mr
Sholto-Douglas SC on behalf of the Commissioner that under
s 105
of
the TAA the High Court lacks jurisdiction to hear this matter. It
would also imply that the applicant has not used any of the
internal
remedies outlined in Chapter 9 of the TAA. Secondly, and in the
alternative, the respondent contended that in accordance
with
s 7(1)
of PAJA, proceedings for judicial review must be initiated without
unreasonable delay, and in any case, no later than 180 days
after the
applicant is notified of administrative action, or became aware of
the action and the reasons for it, or might reasonably
have expected
to have become aware of the action and the reasons for it. It
is uncontested that the aforementioned period
only commences after
the applicant has exhausted all the available internal remedies
timeously. Accordingly, it was submitted on
behalf of the respondent
that the applicant failed to exhaust its internal remedies and that
the delay in launching this application
was manifestly unreasonable
and exceeded the 180-day period provided for under
s 7(1)
of PAJA.
[5]
Notwithstanding the dispute resolution provisions
provided in Chapter 9 of the TAA and the existence of the Tax Court,
the High
Court’s jurisdiction is not ousted. Both the
High Court and the Tax Court retain jurisdiction. The essential
question for decision in this matter concerns whether the relief
claimed by the applicant constitutes a review or appeal in terms
of
the TAA or a review in terms of the Promotion of Administration of
Justice Act 3 of 2000 (“PAJA”).
[6]
At
the commencement of the proceedings, the Court heard argument from
both parties about the convenience of addressing the mentioned
preliminary points first. The Constitutional Court held In the
Competition Commission of South Africa v Standard Bank of South
Africa Limited
[1]
that when a
Court is confronted with a jurisdictional challenge, such a challenge
must be decided by the court at the outset.
[2]
As a result, I determined that the parties would only present
argument regarding the preliminary objections, and the Court
proceeded accordingly. The difficulty with the aforementioned
approach is that isolating the contextual background from the
preliminary points to be decided is not always practical.
Therefore, it will be necessary to provide a concise summary of
the
facts that were uncontroversial, if not common cause, and that gave
rise to this review application.
B
THE
EMPLOYMENT TAX INCENTIVE ACT 26 OF 2013
AND THE APPLICANT’S
ASSESSMENTS
[7]
The Employment Tax Incentive Act 26 of 2013
(“the ETI Act”) seeks to incentivise employers to employ
young individuals
between the age of 18 and 29 by providing a tax
incentive that enables employers to reduce the amount of employment
tax due by
them in respect of qualifying employees.
[8]
The
Employment Tax Incentive Act 26 of 2013
came into effect on 1 January 2014 and the purpose of the ETI Act, as
set out in the long title, is:
“
To
provide for an Employment Tax Incentive in the form of an amount by
which employees’ tax may be reduced; to allow for a
claim and
payment of an amount where employees’ tax cannot be reduced;
and to provide for matters connected therewith.”
[9]
The preamble to the ETI Act provides as
follows:
“
SINCE
the unemployment rate in the Republic is of concern to the
government;
AND SINCE government
recognises the need to share the costs of expanding job opportunities
with the private sector;
AND SINCE government
wishes to support employment growth by focusing on labour market
activities, especially in relation to young
workers;
AND SINCE government
is desirous of instituting an employment tax incentive,
BE IT THEREFORE
ENACTED by the parliament of the Republic of South Africa as
follows:”
[10]
The ETI is an incentive that eligible
employers may claim and is aimed at encouraging such employers to
employ young persons between
the ages of 18 and 29, and employees of
any age in special economic zones and in any industry identified by
the minister by notice
in the Government Gazette. Payment of the
incentive is contingent upon eligible employers being able to reduce
the employees’
tax due by them by the amount of the ETI that
they may claim, provided that they meet the requirements of the ETI
Act.
[11]
The Fourth Schedule to the Income Tax Act
58 of 1962 (hereinafter referred to as “the Fourth Schedule”)
requires every
employer to submit a monthly return to SARS, which
includes, among others details, the amount of employees’ tax
deducted
or withheld from employees’ remuneration for that
month. The ETI is deductible from the total employees’
tax
payable by the eligible employer and is claimed by submitting a
monthly EMP201 return. The employer is permitted to
include any amounts rolled over from previous months to the ETI for a
current month, subject to certain specific limitations outlined
in
s 9(4) of the ETI Act. In terms of s 10(1) of the ETI Act, at the end
of the period for which the employer is required
to render a return
in terms of paragraph 14(3)(a) of the Fourth Schedule, the employer
can claim from SARS an amount (“the
refund”) that
corresponds to the excess contemplated in s 9(1) of the ETI Act, in
the form and manner prescribed by SARS.
[12]
In respect of the present matter, SARS
prescribed that the refund must be claimed by way of an EMP501
declaration, which was required
to be submitted by 31 May 2018 in
respect of the 2018/02 EMP501 declaration, by 31 May 2019 in
respect of the EMP501 2019/02
declaration and by 31 May 2020 in
respect of the EMP501 2020/02 declaration. It is common cause that
the EMP501 declarations
are self-assessments as defined in s 1 of the
TAA . It is also common cause that the applicant filed its EMP501
declarations (hereinafter
referred to as “the original
declarations”) for the periods in question and claimed as
follows:
[a]
R6 259.00 – 2018/02 period;
[b]
R nil – 2019/02 period; and
[c]
R nil – 2020/02 period.
[13]
During September 2021, the Applicant
submitted revised EMP501 declarations in respect of the periods in
question (hereinafter referred
to as “the revised
declarations”) in terms of which it claimed:
[a]
R80 420,44 – 2018/02 period ;
[b]
R763 821,05 – 2019/02 period ; and
[c]
R1 832 723,73 – 2020/02 period .
[14]
On 9 November 2021, SARS conducted a
verification of the 2019/02 revised declaration. On 21 April 2022,
they advised that the verification
had been finalised and that no
adjustments had been made. The revised assessments do not reflect on
the applicant’s statement
of account. On 15 August 2023, the
applicant issued a notice in terms of s 11(4) of the TAA, demanding
that the ETI credits be
reflected on the applicant’s statement
of account and that payment of the refunds due to the applicant be
processed.
[15]
SARS responded on 15 September 2023, and
the gist of its response is to the effect that: First, by
virtue of the provisions
of s 9(4) of the ETI Act, the applicant was
precluded from submitting revised assessments; and, secondly, by
virtue of s 9(4) of
the ETI Act, any ETI refunds that may have been
due to the applicant were forfeited. Under the circumstances, SARS
contended that
‘the ETI will not be allowed as SARS stand by
our interpretation of Section 9(4) of the ETI Act’. The
aforementioned
statutory provisions and facts are undisputed.
The primary dispute in the review application revolves around the
interpretation
of the relevant provisions of the ETI Act.
C
THE
TAX ADMINISTRATION ACT
[16
]
The TAA provides inter alia for the
effective and efficient collection of tax, the alignment of the
administration provisions of
tax acts as well as any related
processes. In generic terms, the TAA’s provisions in this
review application are procedural,
whereas the ETI’s provisions
are substantive.
[17]
According
to
s 1
of the TAA, ‘“
assessment
”
means the determination of the amount of tax liability or refund, by
way of self-assessment by the taxpayer or assessment
by SARS.’
Sections
91
to
95
, in Chapter 8 of the TAA, provide for ‘original
assessments’, ‘additional assessments’, ‘reduced
assessments’, ‘jeopardy assessments’, and
‘estimated assessments’.
Section 91(2)
provides
that ‘“
if
a tax Act requires a taxpayer to submit a return which incorporates a
determination of the amount of a tax liability, the submission
of the
return is an original self-assessment of the tax liability”’
.
It is sufficient to state that all other assessments provided for in
s 91 to 95 of the TAA relate to SARS conducting an
assessment rather
than the taxpayer.
[3]
Furthermore, s91(2) relates to ‘the amount of a tax liability’,
not a credit.
[18]
Sections 104 and 105 of the TAA read as
follows:
“
104 Objection
against assessment or decision
(1)
A taxpayer who is aggrieved by an assessment made in respect of the
taxpayer
may object to the assessment.
(2)
The following decisions may be objected to and appealed against in
the
same manner as an assessment:
(a)
a decision under subsection (4) not to extend the period for lodging
an objection;
(b)
a decision under section 107 (2) not to extend the period for lodging
an appeal; and
(c)
any other decision that may be objected to or appealed against under
a tax Act.
(3)
A taxpayer entitled to object to an assessment or 'decision' must
lodge
an objection in the manner, under the terms, and within the
period prescribed in the 'rules'.
(4)
A senior SARS official may extend the period prescribed in the
'rules'
within which objections must be made if satisfied that
reasonable grounds exist for the delay in lodging the objection.
(5)
The period for objection must not be so extended-
(a)
for a period exceeding 30 business days, unless a senior SARS
official is satisfied that exceptional
circumstances exist which gave
rise to the delay in lodging the objection;
(b)
if more than three years have lapsed from the date of assessment or
the 'decision'; or
(c)
if the grounds for objection are based wholly or mainly on a change
in a practice generally
prevailing which applied on the date of
assessment or the 'decision'.
105 Forum for dispute
of assessment or decision
A taxpayer may only
dispute an assessment or 'decision' as described in section 104 in
proceedings under this Chapter, unless a
High Court otherwise
directs.’”
D
FIRST POINT
IN LIMINE
- SECTION 105 AND JURISDICTION OF THE
TAX COURT
[19]
Mr. Sholto-Douglas SC submitted that the
court lacks jurisdiction to hear the review application for two
reasons. First, the applicant
ought to have approached the Tax Court
as contemplated in s 105 of the TAA. Second, the applicant
furthermore, has not exhausted
its internal remedies as required by s
7 of PAJA. However, the applicant argues that SARS’s failure
and refusal to record
what the applicant contends to be final
assessments in the applicant’s statement of account and process
payment of the refund
allegedly due to the applicant constitutes a
“
decision”
as
defined in s 1 of PAJA, subject to the review of the High Court.
[20]
The applicant argues that it submitted a
revised (self) assessment, and since SARS consequently did not issue
any additional assessment,
it (SARS) is bound to accept, record and
act upon the revised (self) assessment. The applicant does not
intend to dispute
or appeal an assessment or decision as provided in
s 104 of the TAA. In this regard, the applicant relies upon the
provisions
of s 92 to the effect that if at any time SARS is
satisfied that an assessment does not reflect the correct application
of a tax
Act to the prejudice of SARS or the Fiscal, it must make an
additional assessment to correct the prejudice. If SARS is
dissatisfied
with the revised (self) assessment submitted by the
applicant, it cannot simply ignore the revised (self) assessment.
It
is statutorily obliged to issue additional assessments if it did
not agree with the revised (self) assessment. Mr Wilkin, who appeared
on behalf of the applicant, submits that SARS’s conduct in
refusing to give effect to the revised (self) assessment does
not
trigger the provisions of s 104 read together with 105 of the TAA.
[21]
The
applicant relies upon the judgment in Taxpayer M v Commissioner of
South African Revenue Services IT 45585 an unreported judgment
by
Dippenaar J in the Tax Court held at Megawatt Park, Johannesburg, in
which the Tax Court held that the taxpayer was entitled
to recover an
understated amount in terms of the ETI.
[4]
In paragraph 5 of Taxpayer M the following facts are recorded:
“
.
. . The appellant objected to its self-assessment and submitted a
revised EMP501 on 19 July 2018 (“the revised EMP501”),
in
order to correct the determination of its tax liability or refund as
contained in the original EMP501. In the revised EMP501,
the
appellant included the understated amount of R1 413 130 and requested
the respondent to refund that amount. The appellant further
requested
a reduced assessment of the employees’ tax payable by it for
the relevant period in terms of section 93(1)(d) of
the TAA . . . .”.
[22]
In contrast hereto, SARS submits that
s91(2) provides that if a taxpayer is to submit a return which
incorporates a determination
of the amount of tax liability, such a
submission is an “
original
self-assessment of tax liability”
.
Only SARS has the power to issue an additional assessment or a
reduced assessment. A reduced assessment, according
to s 93,
relates to instances where a taxpayer successfully disputes the
assessment under Chapter 9. This reduced assessment reflects
a
settlement or judgment pursuant to an appeal, or occurs when SARS is
convinced that there is an obvious, undisputed error in
an
assessment. None of the provisions of s 93 are applicable to
the facts in this review application.
[23]
If
the applicant lodged an objection to compel SARS to accept the
applicant’s self-re-assessment, it could have been addressed
on
an evidentiary basis following the usual verification process by
SARS. The TAA does not allow a taxpayer to revise an
assessment
independently. The applicant could not as a matter of law
revise assessments irrespective of the provisions of
the ETI. In GB
Mining and Exploration SA (Pty) Ltd v Commissioner for South African
Revenue Service
[5]
the Supreme
Court of Appeal held that:
“
[22]
A taxpayer my seek a reduction in the Commissioner’s assessment
in terms of s79A without objecting to the assessment
in terms of s
81. The Commission’s powered to reduce the assessment exists
“notwithstanding the fact that no objection
has been launched
or appeal noted”. In addition, the power of the Commissioner is
not restricted to it's mero motu exercise,
because the error in the
assessment has to be ‘proved to the satisfaction of a
commissioner’. To discharge this burden
of proof, a taxpayer
must place information before the Commissioner to substantiate the
error relied upon. In doing so, it may
rely upon an error that it
made in its return.
[23] The Commissioner may
therefore act in terms of s 79A to reduce and assessment in the
absence of an objection in terms of s
81 of the Act and my do so even
where it flows from incorrect information provided in the taxpayers
return. Can the taxpayer who
has been the cause of the incorrect
assessment by Commissioner instead claim to be “aggrieved”
thereby and object to
an assessment in terms of the s 81?.
[24] The statement that
the powers of the Commissioner under s79A can be exercised
“notwithstanding the fact that no objection
has been made”,
suggests that an alternative route for the taxpayer to follow is by
way of objection, and, If necessary,
appeal. That was the conclusion
of Hurt. J in JTC
1785 67 SATC 98
, where he said:
“…
The
fundamental object of tax legislation is to exact from each citizen
his due. What is “due” is, in each case (questions
of
penalty aside) strictly prescribed by statute and the amount of the
taxpayer's taxable income must, in the process of assessment,
be
accurately determined preparatory to the calculation of the amount
which he (or she) is required to hand over to the
fiscus
.
In that light, it is clear that a taxpayer whose taxable income has
been determined on an erroneous basis is always “
aggrieved”
,
even if a source of error is entirely attributable to him.”
[24]
In
Barnard Labuschagne v CSARS
[6]
the Constitutional Court held that a tax judgment was susceptible to
rescission and that the High Court should have considered
the
rescission if a case for rescission was made out. At para [44] and
[45] Rogers, AJ, as he was then states:
‘…
The
question posed by this court’s directions focused not on
disputes concerning the initial tax liability but on disputes
as to
whether the tax liability remained outstanding. In this case Sars
evidently considered that the tax liability had not subsequently
been
paid, hence the filing of the certified statement, but BLI
contended otherwise. If the payment dispute is not a matter
required
to be dealt with by way of objection in terms of ch 9, it is one of
those “defences” which the court in Kruger
II and Metcash
had in mind as being available to a taxpayer in rescission
proceedings.
[45] In the Minister’s
submissions the issue is said to be whether an objection to a
taxpayer’s own self-assessments
is a grievance falling within
the scope of ch 9. Clearly the answer to that question is yes, but it
is not the question which this
court asked the parties to address.
The question framed by this court was whether a grievance to the
effect that a certified statement
disregarded payments allegedly made
in respect of self-assessment fell within the scope of ch 9.’
[25]
The
finding that an objection to a taxpayer’s own self-assessments
constitutes a grievance falling within the scope of ch
9, maybe
obiter, yet it parallels the findings in GB Mining mentioned above.
Furthermore, the facts in this matter stand to be
distinguished from
the judgment in Taxpayer M v The Commissioner SARS
[7]
in which it was common cause that there was a bone fide error and s
93(1) was relevant. Mr. Sholto-Douglas SC argued that the applicant
should have objected to its own assessment and referred to paragraph
5 of the Taxpayer M judgment, in which it is recorded that
‘…The
appellant objected to its self-assessment and submitted a revised
EMP501…’.
D(i)
The default route
[26]
In
Forge Packaging (Pty) Ltd v Commissioner for the South African
Revenue Service
[8]
Justice
Binns-Ward with reference to the judgment in Absa Bank Limited and
another v Commissioner SARS,
[9]
held as follows at para [36]:
‘
As
Sutherland ADJP pointed out in Absa Ban, the concurrent jurisdiction
of the High Court is now confirmed in terms by the provisions
of Part
B of Chapter 9 of the TAA. Those provisions, read with s 117 (which
is in Part D of the Chapter), establish that the Tax
Court has
jurisdiction only in respect of tax appeals lodged unders s 107.
Appeals lodged under s 107 are appeals against assessments
or any of
the “decisions” referred to in s 104(2). Section 105 of
the TAA provides that [a]taxpayer may only dispute
an assessment or
“decision” as described in section 104 in proceedings [in
the Tax Court], unless [the] High Court
otherwise directs”.
There does no seem to me to be any cogent basis to question the
validity of Sutherland ADJP’s construction
of s 105 to the
effect that while the Tax Court is the “default route”
for appeal against assessment and “decisions”
the High
Court may direct otherwise if it deems meet.’
[27]
The
High Court should deem it meet to ‘otherwise direct’ only
when it is evident that the ‘default route’
would be less
appropriate. The current legislation gives a stronger indication that
the equivalent preceding provisions did, that
resort to the Tax Court
in seeking redress when the setting aside of an assessment is sought
is the ordinarily indicated course.
Good cause should be shown why an
exception should be allowed from the ordinarily indicated course.
One such an exception
case would be when the question for
determinations turns wholly on the point of law
[10]
.
[28]
The
applicant did not apply for a direction in terms of s 105 of the TAA
for this court to hear the matter. The applicant
seeks relief
in the form of an order to set aside SARS’s decision, which it
contends does not require the High Court to give
a direction as
provided for in s 105. Binns-Ward, J in Forge held that the
Court in the Absa Bank matter did not regard it
as necessary to file
a substantive application in terms of s 105 holding that such an
application for a direction could be brought
concurrently with the
application to the High Court for substantive relief. It is
evident from the judgments in ABSA and
Forge that nothing in the TAA
ousts the jurisdiction of the High Court to decide tax matters,
notwithstanding the establishment
by the Act of the Tax Court as a
specialised court specifically to deal with them. This is
further founded upon the judgment
by the Constitutional Court in
Metcash Trading Limited v Commissioner for the South African Revenue
Services and another
[11]
.
It is quite evident from these judgments that if a party wishes to
have an assessment set aside, an application for a direction
in terms
of s 105 is a jurisdictional factor to pursue in order to prosecute
proceedings to that end in any jurisdiction other
than in the Tax
Court.
[12]
D(ii)
Exception Circumstances
[29]
The words
‘exceptional circumstances’ appear both in s 105 of the
TAA and s 7(2)(b) of PAJA. In Erasmus v Commissioner
for South
African Revenue Services
[13]
,
Sher, J held that PAJA does not define exceptional circumstances. The
court in Erasmus examined different authorities in which
the term
‘exceptional circumstances’ was interpreted and concluded
that:
“…
Ultimately,
and by way of summary, it has been held that what needs to be shown
is that the circumstances are out of the ordinary,
such that they
render it inappropriate to require that the applicant should first
exhaust any alternative remedies that may be
available to them and
justify the intervention of the Court rather than of an alternative,
available forum.
Finally, it should be
pointed out that in endorsing the test espoused in MV Ais Mamas both
the Constitutional Court and the Supreme
Court of Appeal implicitly
adopted two corollaries that flow from it (as is apparent in the
extract they quoted from it) viz that
1) whether or not exceptional
circumstances exist is not a decision which depends on the exercise
of a judicial discretion, but
it is a matter of fact to be determined
on the evidence and 2)where a statutory provision directs that a
fixed rule shall be departed
from only in “exceptional
circumstances” effect will, generally speaking, best be given
to the intention of the legislature
by applying a strict rather than
a liberal meaning of the phrase, and by carefully examining the
circumstance relied upon as allegedly
being exceptional.’
[14]
D(iii)
Conclusion regarding joint jurisdiction.
[30]
In
the case of Commissioner, SARS v Rappa Resources (Pty) Ltd,
[15]
the Supreme Court of Appeal similarly confirmed five key
propositions. First, a taxpayer cannot circumvent the appeal
procedure
under that TAA by bringing an assessment on review to the
High Court merely because the attack is directed to the legality of
the
assessment. Second, an appeal to the tax court entails a complete
reconsideration of the assessment during which the taxpayer may
raise
objections on the grounds of any grievance of whatever kind.
Third,
the authority of the tax court to revise assessments encompasses the
ability to evaluate the legality of an assessment based
on review
grounds. Additionally, the tax court may, in accordance with section
105, address any legal issues that emerge from tax
disputes,
including the review of assessments or other decisions.
Fourth,
a deviation from s 105 will only be permitted in exceptional
circumstances, and the High Court lacks jurisdiction in tax
disputes
unless it directs otherwise. Fifth, it is neither advisable nor
possible to establish precise rules or definitions as
to what would
constitute exceptional circumstances. Each case must be decided based
on its own unique facts.
[31]
The
Supreme Court of Appeal reaffirmed this in Commissioner, South
African Revenue Service v Absa Bank Ltd and Another
[16]
when the Court referred with approval to the following as stated by
Ponnan JA in Rappa:
“
The
purpose of s 105 is clearly to ensure that, in the ordinary course,
tax disputes are taken to the tax court. The High Court
consequently
does not have jurisdiction in tax disputes unless it directs
otherwise. In Wingate-Pearse it was put as
follows:
"Tax
cases are generally reserved for the exclusive jurisdiction of the
tax court in the first instance. But it is settled
law that a
decision of the Commissioner is subject to judicial intervention in
certain circumstances. . . . In its amended form,
s 105 thus makes it
plain that unless a High Court otherwise directs, an assessment may
only be disputed by means of the objection
and appeal process.'
[32]
It would lead to uncertainty and injustice
if the applicant’s submission was correct, suggesting that
unless SARS raises an
objection to, or issues, or provides an
additional assessment in terms of s 92, any self-assessment would
automatically, or by
default, become final and binding in the absence
of an additional assessment issued by SARS. Moreover, this
argument misses
the point. Section 91(2) refers tax liability and not
a credit. On this basis, I cannot accept that the relief applied for
in this
review application does not fall within the alternative
dispute and appeal procedure envisaged in the TAA.
[33]
I
enquired from both parties regarding the applicant’s preference
to pursue relief in the High Court rather than the Tax Court.
Mr.
Sholto-Douglus SC submitted that it could be argued that the
procedure in the Tax Court is more protracted and expensive compared
to a review application before the High Court. He submitted, however,
that if an appeal to the Tax Court involves a matter of law
only, the
president of that court is required to make the decision
independently. If the facts are common cause there is
no
barrier preventing the Tax Court so constituted, from dealing with
the appeal on a stated case
[17]
.
If the applicant is correct that this review relates only to a matter
of law, the Tax Court can entertain the application as expeditiously
and effectively as the High Court. The nature of the dispute and the
relief applied for in the specific context of the current
matter is
inappropriate for the High Court. This is particularly so given that
the applicant did not even use the advantage afforded
to an applicant
in terms of r 53 of the Uniform Rules.
[34]
In
South African Human Rights Commission v Standard Bank of South Africa
Ltd and Others
[18]
the
Constitutional Court held regarding the concurrent jurisdiction of
the High Court over matters that could also be heard in
the
Magistrate’s Court as follows:
“
[29]
The assumption of jurisdiction should not be confused with the manner
in which a court decides to exercise its jurisdiction.
There is no
discretionary power to decline the assumption of jurisdiction over a
matter within the jurisdiction of a court. But
how a court decides to
exercise the jurisdiction it enjoys is a separate issue. That issue
includes considerations as to whether
in exceptional circumstances
jurisdiction is not exercised by reason of, for example, abuse of
process or the stay of proceedings
pending some other form of dispute
resolution, or on grounds of comity. In certain special
circumstances, a South African court
may take the view that
considerations of comity dictate that a matter is best left for
adjudication by a foreign court which has
a closer connection to the
matter.’
[35]
There are no exceptional circumstances
justifying a departure from the default route. The subject matter and
the relief applied
for is best left for adjudication to the Tax
Court, which has a closer connection to the matter. I am further
unconvinced that
the review exclusively deals only with a legal
issue. The review does not concern only an issue of legality. By
submitting “replacement”
returns, the applicant, in
effect, objected to its own self-assessment, which objection was not
upheld by SARS. If the correct
default route had been followed, the
usual objection and appeal processes would have been triggered, the
factual outcome of which
we would never know. In order to succeed,
the applicant must, in addition, persuade the court of exceptional
circumstances that
warrant the substitution of SARS decision with
that of its own. I will return to this aspect hereunder.
[36]
This has two ramifications for the
applicant. Its failure to have objected to its own self
assessment consequently means that
it did not adhere to the internal
remedies provided for in the TAA. Secondly, there is no
application or case made out for
any direction in terms of s 105.
If the correct procedure had been to object to its self-assessment,
it would have been inescapably
so that it would have formed the
subject of an assessment, objection or appeal as envisaged in terms
of s 104 of the TAA. Moreover,
the applicant has not demonstrated the
existence of exception circumstances as envisaged in s 105 of the TAA
or utilised the internal
remedies as provided for in the TAA and no
relief is sought in terms of s 105. Binns-Ward, J refused the
application in Forge for
a direction in terms of s 105 of the TAA and
struck the application from the roll. I intend to grant a similar
order.
SECTION 7(2) OF PAJA
[37]
The second preliminary point must be
resolved if I am mistaken in my assertion that the High Court lacks
jurisdiction. The applicant
contends that SARS’s letter of 30
January 2023 was not a final decision by SARS, since it is
self-evident from the letter
that the applicant’s assessment
was subject to an audit. On 15 September 2023, the
applicant received a letter
from SARS informing them of the decision
and reasons behind it. The applicant contends that this was the first
time they had knowledge
of the decision. SARS contended,
however, that the onus fell on the applicant to demonstrate that the
application was launched
within a reasonable time. Despite the
fact that the letter by SARS on 31 January 2023 referred to a
different time period,
the subject matter was related to a similar
decision based on the same reasoning. The applicant did not
request any reasons
in its s 11(4) notice, since it knew SARS’s
reasons. This is evident from the fact that the applicant relied on
the judgement
in the Taxpayer M matter in the s11(4), which,
according to the applicant, supports its contention on the merits of
the review
application. Thus, the applicant had sufficient reasons to
allow it to either file an objection or launch review proceedings
earlier.
[38]
The applicant calculates the 180-day period from
the date on which SARS responded to the applicant’s s 11(4)
notice on 15
September 2023. On the other hand, SARS submits that
this contention is untenable for the reason that, as a matter of
logic, the
applicant could not institute a s11 notice until it knew
what relief it intended to pursue and on the applicant’s
version,
it ought reasonably to have been aware of the reasons.
[39]
The
Constitutional Court in Sasol Chevron Holdings Limited v C,SARS
[19]
quoted the following passage from the judgment of the SCA in the same
matter, with approval:
“
[28]
However, the counter-argument advanced by counsel for Sasol Chevron
and the reasoning of the [High Court] on this score must
be tested
with reference to the following fundamental considerations.
First, as was submitted on behalf of the Commissioner,
SARS’
letter of 26 March 2018 was no more than a recapitulation of the
position that SARS had consistently adopted since
2016. The
letter itself makes explicit reference to the earlier decision –
termed the ruling – made on 6 December
2017, as are virtually
all the subsequent letters from SARS to Sasol Chevron. SARS’
letter of 6 December 2017, in turn,
makes reference to the ruling
made on 7 November 2016 in which the background facts are
comprehensively set out, Sasol Chevron’s
request summarised,
the relevant statutory framework set out and, finally, the decision
(ruling) – supported with comprehensive
reasons – is
articulated.
[29]
In contending that the impugned decision was not taken on 26 March
2018, counsel for the Commissioner called into his aid the
decision
of this Court in Aurecon South Africa (Pty) Ltd v City of Cape
Town
[20]
in which Maya ADP
said the following:
‘
The
decision challenged by the City and the reasons therefor were its own
and were always within its knowledge. Section 7(1)
unambiguously refers to the date on which the reasons for
administrative action became known or ought reasonably to have become
known to the party seeking its judicial review. The plain
wording of these provisions simply does not support the meaning
ascribed to them by the court a quo, i.e. that the application must
be launched within 180 days after the party seeking review
became
aware that the administrative action in issue was tainted by
irregularity. That interpretation would automatically
entitle
every aggrieved applicant to an unqualified right to institute
judicial review only upon gaining knowledge that a decision
(and its
underlying reasons), of which he or she had been aware all along, was
tainted by irregularity, whenever that might be.
This result is
untenable as it disregards the potential prejudice to the respondent
(the appellant here) and the public interest
in the finality of
administrative decisions and the exercise of administrative
functions. Contrary to the court a quo’s
finding in this
regard, the City far exceeded the time frames stipulated in section
7(1) and did not launch the review proceedings
within a reasonable
time. In that case, it clearly needed an extension as envisaged
in section 9(1)(b) without which the
court a quo was otherwise
precluded from entertaining the review application.’”
[40]
The relief applied for in this application
is a “package deal” despite spanning more than three tax
periods. The status
of the assessments turns on the same issue
regarding SARS and the applicant’s different interpretation of
s 9(4) and 10(3)
of the ETI Act. The applicant was made aware of
SARS’s reasons for the decision in correspondence to the
applicant dated
16 May 2022. SARS’s position and reasons for it
remained unchanged. Therefore, the delay in instituting the
application is
manifestly unreasonable and, in any event, exceeds the
maximum 180-day period allowed as a maximum under section 7(1) of
PAJA.
JUDICIAL REVIEW AND
REMEDIES
[41]
Section 8 of PAJA provides that the Court
may grant an order that is just and equitable. This includes the
provision in s 8(1)(c)(ii)(aa)
that allows for substitution or
variation of the administrative action correcting the defect arising
from it, but only in
“
exceptional
cases”
. The applicant does
not address any exceptional circumstances in its founding affidavit,
but deals with this only superficially
on the basis that should this
Court agree with its interpretation of the ETI, that it is a foregone
conclusion that relief should
be granted.
[42]
The
SCA in Gauteng Gambling Board v Silverstar Development Ltd and
others
[21]
held that a case
was deemed exceptional when upon proper consideration of all the
relevant facts, a court was persuaded that a
decision to exercise a
power had not to be left to the designated functionary. How that
conclusion was reached was not statutorily
dictated, but rather, it
would depend on established principles guided by the constitutional
imperatives that administrative action
had to be lawful, reasonable
and procedurally fair.
[43]
The
Constitutional Court in Trencon Construction (Pty) Ltd v Industrial
Development Corporation of South Africa Ltd and Another
[22]
held that even if exceptional circumstances exist, substitution can
only be ordered if it is deemed just and equitable. This necessitates
a consideration of the fairness of substitution to all the parties
involved. The applicant does not allege the existence of any
exceptional circumstances in the founding affidavit. In reply, the
applicant alleges that the stance adopted by SARS in its answering
demonstrates that if the matter were remitted back to SARS, the
outcome would be a ‘foregone conclusion’.
[44]
The court is not in as good position to
determine the accuracy of the revised EMP 501 returns, and thus,
substitution relief would
not be appropriate. First, this court is
thus unable to determine whether the revised EMP 501 reconciles with
the EMP 201 forms
submitted for the relevant periods, particularly in
circumstances where the EMP 201 returns do not form part of the
papers filed.
Secondly, prayer 5, the notice of motion, seeks an
order for SARS to make payment of certain amounts to the applicant.
The relief
goes beyond a mere declaration that the applicant should
be allowed to revise its EMP 501 returns. It presupposes that the
amounts
the applicant wishes to submit in the revised EMP 501 are
correct. The relief if granted, would deprive SARS of the opportunity
to audit and revise. The court simply lacks the evidence required to
arrive at such a conclusion.
[45]
Given that the matter only proceeded in
respect of the preliminary points, I am precluded at this stage from
making any final determination
regarding the applicant’s
entitlement to what is commonly referred to as a substitution order.
However, the nature of the
relief applied for is a relevant and vital
factor in deciding how the court should exercise its jurisdiction.
The relief applied
for by the applicant is couched in the form of a
review application, but, in reality, the applicant seeks declaratory
relief and
a monetary judgment. The relief that the applicant
seeks, which aims to substitute SARS’s decision, in as far as a
decision was taken, falls within the jurisdiction of the Tax Court.
The complexity of the arguments raised before this Court
regarding
the correct process of submitting re-assessments and raising
objections thereto and the consequence flowing from it only
emphasises why this application should have been brought before the
Tax Court.
COSTS
[46]
The parties were ad idem that the costs
should follow the result. I believe that the engagement of
senior counsel was justified
given the complexity of the matter, the
amount involved and the importance of the issues to be decided.
A cost order on scale
C in terms of Rule 67A read together with Rule
69(3) is appropriate.
[47]
Considering the aforementioned I therefore
grant the following order:
(1)
The application is struck from the roll for
a lack of jurisdiction.
(2)
The applicant is ordered to pay the costs
of the respondent on scale C.
VAN
DEN BERG AJ
Applicant
Adv KD Williams
Pieterse
Sellner Erasmus TRM TAX
Respondent
Adv A R Sholto-Douglas SC
State
Attorney, Cape Town
[1]
Competition
Commission of South Africa v Standard Bank of South Africa
Limited;
Competition Commission of South Africa v Standard Bank of South
Africa Limited; Competition Commission of
South Africa v Waco
Africa (Pty) Ltd and others
2020 (4) BCLR 429
(CC) para 200.
[2]
Id para 200
“
Where
the jurisdiction of the court before which a review application is
brought is contested, a ruling on this issue must precede
all other
orders. This is because a court must be competent to
make whatever orders it issues. If a court lacks
authority to
make an order it grants, that order constitutes a nullity.
Scarce judicial resources should not be wasted
by engaging in
fruitless exercises like making orders which cannot be enforced.”
[3]
‘s
91
Original assessments
(1)
If a tax Act requires a taxpayer to submit a return which does not
incorporate a determination of the amount of a tax liability, SARS
must make an original assessment based on the return submitted
by
the taxpayer or other information available or obtained in respect
of the taxpayer.’
Section
92 provides for Additional assessments, s 93 for Reduced
assessments, s 94 for Jeopardy assessments and s 95 for Estimation
of assessments.
[4]
Taxpayer
M v Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service (IT 45585)
[2022] ZATC 6
;
85 SATC 53
(14 January 2022)
[5]
76 SATC 347
[6]
2022(5) SA 1
(CC)
[7]
2019 JDR 2667
(TC) also referred to as 2017 Tax Court case 5493.
[8]
[2022] JOL
54036
(WCC) at para [26]. Also see
Forge
Packaging (Pty) Ltd v The Commissioner for the South
African Revenue Service 2022 JDR 1634 (WCC)
[9]
[2021]
ZAGPPHC 127 (11 March 2021) 2021 (3) SA 513 (GP).
[10]
Forge ebit at [37]
[11]
2001 (1) SA 1109
(CC) at para 43 to 47.
[12]
Forge
ibid
at [32].
[13]
[2024] 1 All SA 153
(WCC)
[14]
Erasmus ibid at
[41] to [42]
[15]
2023 (4) SA 488
(SCA)
[16]
2024(1) SA 361
(SCA)
[17]
Section 118(3) of
the TAA and Forge
ibid
at para [24] to [43]
[18]
2023
(3) SA 36 (CC)
[19]
2024
(3) SA 321
(CC) at para [19].
[20]
Aurecon South
Africa (Pty) Ltd v City of Cape Town
[2015] ZASCA 209
;
2016 (2) SA
199
(SCA) (Aurecon) at para 16.
[21]
2005
(4) SA 67 (SCA)
[22]
3025
(5) SA 245 (CC)
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