Case Law[2022] ZAWCHC 144South Africa
Commissioner for the South African Revenue Services v Esibonga Investment (Pty) Ltd and Others (16177/21) [2022] ZAWCHC 144 (29 July 2022)
Headnotes
by their attorneys trust account. SARS did not respond to the proposal.
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Commissioner for the South African Revenue Services v Esibonga Investment (Pty) Ltd and Others (16177/21) [2022] ZAWCHC 144 (29 July 2022)
Commissioner for the South African Revenue Services v Esibonga Investment (Pty) Ltd and Others (16177/21) [2022] ZAWCHC 144 (29 July 2022)
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sino date 29 July 2022
IN THE HIGH COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN CAPE
DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
CASE NO: 16177/21
In the matter between
THE
COMMISSIONER FOR THE SOUTH
APPLICANT
AFRICAN
REVENUE SERVICES
AND
ESIBONGA
INVESTMENT (PTY) LTD
FIRST RESPONDENT
SIVALUTCHMEE
MOOLIAR N.O
SECONDEND
RESPONDENT
EBRAHIM
MEHNAAZ N.O.
THIRD RESPONDENT
ITAI
CHATAURWA
FOURTH RESPONDENT
LIONEL
MARAY TABANI MUHLANGA
FIFTH RESPONDENT
TERRENCE
MUDIWA MUSARURWA N.O.
SIXTH RESPONDENT
PARTSON
MUNYARADZI N.O.
SEVENTH RESPONDENT
GARY
OWEN WATSON
EIGHT RESPONDENT
LESLEY
WATSON
NINTH RESPONDENT
TAKUDZA
TALENT MUSVANGA
TENTH RESPONDENT
SIMON
TAVAGUTA HOMENGA
ELEVENTH RESPONDENT
TANYARDZWA
JOY NYAMARAI
TWELFTH RESPONDENT
FABIOLA
GONYE
THIRTEENTH
RESPONDENT
AMOS
PHIRI
FOURTHEENTH RESPONDENT
LIZAAN
ENGELBRECHT
FIFTHEETH RESPONDENT
LYTON
REID
SIXTEENTH RESPONDENT
GALARD
MASANGO
SEVENTIETH RESPONDENT
DENSON
MUVANDI
EIGHTEETH RESPONDENT
Date of Hearing:
19 May 2022
Date of Judgment:
29 July 2022 (to be delivered via email to the respective counsel)
JUDGMENT
THULARE
J
[1]
On the return day a rule
nisi
the 11
th
and 12
th
respondent (the respondents) opposed the confirmation. A provisional
order as envisaged in section 163 of the Tax Administration
Act, 2011
(Act No. 28 of 2011) (the Act) was granted amongst others over an
immovable property which fell within the estate of
the respondents,
and further, a
curator
bonis
(the curator)
was appointed over the estate of the respondents.
[2] The respondents
opposed the confirmation on the basis that there was no evidence that
their assets were reliable assets in terms
of section 163 of the Act,
that the preservation order was unnecessary and that the relief
obtained exceeded the bounds section
163 of the Act. The applicant
(SARS) in its reply contended
in limine
that the respondents
erred in opposing the confirmation and that their relief lay in
section 163(9) of the Act, and that the respondents’
failure to
adequately explain the connection of the first respondent (Esibonga)
rendered it imperative that their entire estate
remain under
curatorship in the hands of the curator.
[3] The issue was whether
the rule
nisi
stood to be discharged in respect of the
respondents.
[4] The background facts
on Esibonga and the involvement of most of the respondents in this
matter, including the respondents in
this application, are contained
in my judgment dated 2 December 2021 and are not worth repeating. The
respondents’ case was
that the application related to the tax
affairs of Esibonga and that the respondents had no knowledge in
regard to Esibonga’s
business, income tax affairs, debtors or
otherwise. Upon receipt of the rule
nisi,
the respondents
proposed to settle the matter in order to secure the release of their
home from the order and tendered a guarantee
to SARS backed by
immediately available cash funds to be held by their attorneys trust
account. SARS did not respond to the proposal.
[5] The respondents
received communication from the curator that all their rights, title
and interest to all property, including
money, had been divested as
set out in the preservation order. The respondents’ case was
that the position adopted by the
curator was that he had been
effectively appointed curator over all of their assets was not borne
out by any of the facts set out
in the founding affidavit and that
the curator had, on an
ex parte
basis taken control of their
entire lives without any basis to do so and without their knowledge.
[6] The respondents’
case was further that their estate was not a realizable asset for the
purpose of section 163 of the Act
as there was no jurisdictional
basis for SARS to lay claim thereto to satisfy Esibonga’s case.
This was so because the tax
debt concerned was that of Esibonga and
that the respondents had no affiliation with Esibonga and that
according to them there
was no case made out in the founding
affidavit that they should be liable for its debts. The submission
was that the high water
mark of SARS’ case was that the
respondents may be indebted to Esibonga in terms of the provisions of
the
Insolvency Act, 24 of 1936
, and that, should the liquidators of
Esibonga claim such monies this could be utilized to satisfy
Esibonga’s tax debt. The
assets that formed the subject of the
preservation order appeared to be their entire estate whereas SARS
contended that only monies
paid to attorneys on their behalf by
Esibonga should form the basis of the preservation order. These
monies were payments made
to a firm of attorneys in connection with
the transfer of their home. There was no case made out that any of
their other assets
should be preserved to satisfy Esibonga’s
tax debt.
[7] The case was further
that SARS did not make out a case that there was any risk that the
respondents’ home would be dissipated
to obstruct the
collection of Esibonga’s tax debt. There was also no basis
provided that any of the other assets in their
estate would be
dissipated. The offer to place the sum, equal to the amount paid by
Esibonga to attorneys in connection with the
transfer of their home,
in trust with their attorneys to serve as security for any claims
that SARS and/or Esibonga’s liquidators
may have against them
would ameliorate any risk of prejudice to SARS pursuant any
dissipation of any of their assets.
[8] The respondents’
case was that the order exceeded the ambit of an order in respect of
specific assets that may be realizable
in order to satisfy a tax
debt, in that it vested their entire estate in the curator which
included shareholding of loan accounts,
bank accounts, member’s
interests, movable and immovable assets that they may own.
Effectively SARS had without their knowledge
caused their entire
estate to vest in the curator without any basis therefor and the
relief also exceeded that foreshadowed in
the supporting affidavits.
The purpose of the application was restricted to preserve the
immovable and movable properties of the
respondents specified in
schedule A to the notice of motion and the only asset in schedule A
in which the respondents had interest
was their home. The order that
was granted exceeded the provisions of section 163 of the Act and the
purpose of the application
as set out in SARS founding affidavit and
in the context it constituted an abuse and stood to be set aside.
[9] Section 163 (4) (b)
of the Act provides:
“
163
Preservation order
(4) The court to which an
application for a preservation order is made may-
(b) simultaneously grant
a rule
nisi
calling upon the taxpayer or other person upon a
business day mentioned in the rule to appear and to show cause why
the preservation
order should not be made final.”
[10] A rule
nisi
was
granted. It called for the respondents to show cause why the
preservation order should not be made final. The respondents answered
the call, which the court made at the instance of SARS. They are
proper before the court. SARS cannot be heard to now seek to refer
them to section 163(9). SARS has a provisional order in its favour.
It does not have a final preservation order. SARS argument
that the
proper procedure was for the applicant to seek relief as envisaged in
section 163(9), and not as per an order granted
in its favour is
simply untenable.
[11]
There were monies, R200 900-00 to be precise, paid to attorneys
by Esibonga on behalf of the respondents, and it was payments
in
connection with the transfer of their home. Esibonga’s tax debt
is not in dispute.
Section
163 (1) of the Act authorizes the preservation of any assets of a
taxpayer or other person. The person to whom monies are
paid or on
whose behalf monies are paid by a taxpayer, for reasons unknown to
the taxpayer, without more, is indebted to the taxpayer
and may be
such “other person” as envisaged in section 163. The
circumstances entertained a reasonable belief that
Esibonga used the
respondents to hide its assets. SARS should be allowed to investigate
in furtherance of the collection of outstanding
taxes. The
respondents’ assets were under the circumstances, susceptible
to a provisional order against them. The suggestion
that there was no
case made out that any of their assets should be preserved to satisfy
Esibonga’s debt stands to be rejected.
[12] In my view, it was
necessary to place the respondents’ property beyond their
control and into the hands of the curator
pending the outcome of the
application for the order [
Fraser v Absa Bank Ltd (National
Director of Public Prosecutions as Amicus Curiae
[2006] ZACC 24
;
2007 (3) SA 484
(CC)]. The purpose of that preservation order was to secure the
collection of tax. The purpose of the curator was to investigate
the
whereabouts of Esibonga’s assets and the assets of the
respondents, amongst others, and to take control thereof in order
to
secure the collection of tax. The various transactions of Esibonga
and the involvement of the respondents formed part of a
modus
operandi
intended to hide assets realizable for purposes of
satisfying Esibonga’s tax debt to SARS and the full facts
regarding these
transactions remained to be investigated. SARS,
through the curator, needed to investigate how and on what basis the
R200 900-00
was placed at the disposal of the respondents or for
their benefit. The appointment of a curator was necessary.
[13] The only applicable
transaction in respect of the respondents was for the property,
defined as Unit 13, Fourway Crest (ST27340/2019).
The firm of
attorneys identified from the bank statements of Esibonga were Kapp
van Wyk van Zyl, Krugersdorp, for the amount already
indicated. It
must be borne in mind that SARS case against the respondents was that
they were operating an illegal money laundering
scheme. Esibonga was
a conduit for that purpose. SARS is entitled to exercise due
diligence in order to ensure that it does not
find itself entangled
in dirty money to cleanse the respondents on a tax evasion scheme.
SARS has a duty to have and show care
and conscientiousness in their
work and in how they execute their responsibilities. Section 237 of
the Constitution of the Republic
of South Africa, 1996 (Act No. 108
of 1996) (the Constitution) provides as follows:
“
Diligent
performance of obligations
237. All constitutional
obligations must be performed diligently and without delay.”
[14] The respondents
elected not to set out any facts which may stand as a valid answer to
the money laundering allegations, or
at least provide a satisfactory
explanation for Esibonga to pay for its transactions and the source
for the money it intended to
use as security. In an alleged illegal
money laundering and unlawful tax evasion scheme, a person in the
position of the respondents
in my view, owes it to SARS to answer
allegations of impropriety and an explanation of their dealings with
the conduit which is
the tax debtor, as part of SARS’s purpose,
which is to ensure the effective and efficient collection of tax. The
respondents
were wrong to expect to show SARS the money, and for SARS
to look the other side and walk away. The respondents clearly do not
understand our values as a country. Section 1 (c) of the Constitution
provides as follows:
“
Republic
of South Africa
1.
The Republic of South
Africa is one, sovereign, democratic state founded on the following
values:
(c) Supremacy of the
constitution and the rule of law.”
In the battle for the
soul of SARS, the rule of law must trump shekel.
[15] In my view, the
Court order dated 01 October 2021, which was the rule
nisi,
spoke for itself and meant what it said. The provisional order was
granted in respect of the respondents’ specified assets
as set
out in terms of Schedule A which was attached to the judgment. It was
also in respect of that immovable property that the
Registrar of
Deeds was authorized to register caveat notices. In this context, I
understand the curator to also have been appointed
to take control of
that property, and in whom the rights, title and interest vested,
including but not limited to what was further
set out in that order.
Schedule A, in respect of the respondents, was Unit 13, Fourway Crest
(ST27340/2019).
[16] For these reasons I
make the following order:
1.
The provisional
preservation order against the respondents in respect of Unit 13,
Fourway Crest (ST27340/2019) is confirmed.
2.
The respondents to pay
the costs
DM
THULARE
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
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