Case Law[2022] ZAWCHC 163South Africa
Forge Packaging (Pty) Ltd v The Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service (21634/2021) [2022] ZAWCHC 163 (26 August 2022)
High Court of South Africa (Western Cape Division)
26 August 2022
Headnotes
of the procedures for appeal (s 106). If still aggrieved, the taxpayer may appeal either to the tax board or to the tax court established in terms of Part D of Chapter 9 of the Act (s 107). The objection and appeal procedures are prescribed in the rules made under s 103 of the Act. Section 107(5) provides that the SARS and the taxpayer may attempt to resolve the dispute through alternative dispute resolution under procedures specified in the rules. [3] The applicant duly advanced its objections in the manner contemplated in Part B of Chapter 9 of the Act. It (i) objected to the revised assessments (without first requesting better or additional reasons,
Judgment
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# South Africa: Western Cape High Court, Cape Town
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## Forge Packaging (Pty) Ltd v The Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service (21634/2021) [2022] ZAWCHC 163 (26 August 2022)
Forge Packaging (Pty) Ltd v The Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service (21634/2021) [2022] ZAWCHC 163 (26 August 2022)
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sino date 26 August 2022
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
(WESTERN
CAPE DIVISION, CAPE TOWN)
Case
No. 21634/2021
Before:
The Hon. Mr Justice Binns-Ward
Date
of hearing: 25 August 2022
Date
of judgment: 26 August 2022
In
the matter between:
FORGE
PACKAGING (PTY)
LTD
Applicant
and
THE
COMMISSIONER FOR THE
SOUTH
AFRICAN REVENUE SERVICE
Respondent
JUDGMENT
(Application
for leave to appeal)
BINNS-WARD
J:
[1]
The
applicant, which is a taxpayer that is seeking to have set aside
revised assessments of its taxable income issued by the South
African
Revenue Service in respect of its 2014, 2015 and 2016 financial
years, has applied for leave to appeal against the judgment
of this
court refusing to entertain its application to challenge the
Commissioner’s decisions in review proceedings.
[1]
The history of the applicant’s endeavours to challenge the
revised assessments in review proceedings is set out in the principal
judgment. I do not understand the applicant to take issue with that
account, and it is therefore not necessary to revisit it in
detail.
It is nevertheless appropriate for present purposes to give a potted
recapitulation of the background.
[2]
Part B of Chapter 9 of the Tax Administration Act 28 of 2011 (‘the
Act’) regulates objections and appeals by taxpayers who are
aggrieved by an assessment. In summary, it provides for a series
of
steps. The taxpayer first lodges an objection to the assessment (s
104). SARS must inform the taxpayer of its decision in respect
of the
objection. The notice of the decision by SARS must state the basis
for the decision and provide a summary of the procedures
for appeal
(s 106). If still aggrieved, the taxpayer may appeal either to the
tax board or to the tax court established in terms
of Part D of
Chapter 9 of the Act (s 107). The objection and appeal procedures are
prescribed in the rules made under s 103 of
the Act. Section 107(5)
provides that the SARS and the taxpayer may attempt to resolve the
dispute through alternative dispute
resolution under procedures
specified in the rules.
[3]
The applicant duly advanced its objections in the manner contemplated
in Part B of Chapter 9 of the Act. It (i) objected to the revised
assessments (without first requesting better or additional reasons,
as allowed in terms of Rule 6), (ii) was provided with SARS’s
decision in respect of the objections, (iii) accepted SARS’s
decision in part, (iv) lodged an appeal against those aspects of the
revised assessments in respect of which it persisted with
its
objections and (v) unsuccessfully attempted to resolve the disputes
through alternative dispute resolution.
[4]
The applicable rules provide for an exchange of documents akin to
pleadings
for the purposes of defining the issues in an appeal under
the Act. SARS is required to deliver a ‘Statement of grounds of
assessment and opposing appeal’, as prescribed in terms of Rule
31 of the rules. The aggrieved taxpayer is thereupon required,
in
terms of Rule 32, to deliver its statement of grounds of appeal, in
which it must set out the grounds upon which it is appealing
and
state the legal grounds and facts in the rule 31 statement that it
admits and those that it contests.
[5]
SARS duly
delivered its statement in terms of Rule 31 in the Tax Court. The
applicant, however, failed to respond with a statement
in terms of
Rule 32. Instead, it brought a substantive application for judicial
review in the Tax Court. The Commissioner then
applied in the Tax
Court for the striking out of the review application as an irregular
step. The Tax Court struck out the review
application but stayed
further proceedings in the pending appeal for 30 calendar days to
allow the applicant, if so advised, and
with the required leave, to
institute a review application in the High Court within that
period.
[2]
[6]
The stay granted by the Tax Court required the applicant to institute
proceedings in the High Court by 18 November 2021, failing which the
hold on the appeal pending in that court would fall away. The
applicant did not institute proceedings in the High Court within the
period afforded to it by the Tax Court. It did so only on
17 December
2021. It sought the relief described in paragraph 1 of the principal
judgment. In the meantime, it also delivered its
statement of grounds
of appeal in the Tax Court.
[7]
Section 105 of the Act provides that ‘[a]
taxpayer may only
dispute an assessment or “decision” as described in
section 104 in proceedings under this Chapter,
unless a
(sic)
High Court otherwise directs
’
It is
noteworthy that, prior to being substituted by s 52 of Act 23 of
2015,
s 105
of the
Tax Administration Act used
to read ‘
A
taxpayer may not dispute an assessment or “decision” as
described in
section 104
in any court or other proceedings, except in
proceedings under this Chapter
or
by application to the High Court for review
’.
(Underlining supplied for emphasis. The underlined words were excised
in the amendment.) Thus, whereas a taxpayer previously
could mount a
review challenge to an assessment in the High Court as of right, it
now can do so only if it obtains an appropriate
direction from the
High Court permitting it to deviate from ‘the default route’.
[8]
The
applicant, however, failed to seek a direction in terms of s 105 of
the Act permitting it to challenge the revised assessments
in review
proceedings in its notice of motion. The omission occurred
notwithstanding the express reminder in the Tax Court’s
judgment that it would require such leave.
[3]
Its legal representatives appeared to labour under the misconception
that it enjoyed a free-standing entitlement under s 6 of the
Promotion of Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000 (‘PAJA’)
to institute review proceedings. The Commissioner took the
point
that, in the absence of a direction in terms of s 105, the taxpayer
was precluded from challenging the assessments other
than in
proceedings under Part B of Chapter 9 of the Act. It was only when it
became evident during argument that the jurisdictional
point taken by
the Commissioner found favour with the court that the applicant’s
counsel, at my prompting, moved orally from
the bar for the required
direction.
[9]
For the reasons fully set out in the principal judgment, this court
declined
to grant relief in terms of s 105 of the Act. The effect is
that the disputes about the revised assessments, including any
questions
concerning their legality, fall to be determined not in a
judicial review application, but in the already pending appeal in the
Tax Court.
[10]
It is firmly established that issues susceptible to challenge in
judicial review proceedings
may competently be decided by the tax
court in the context of appeal proceedings in that court; see the
full court judgments in
Kommissaris van Binnelandse Inkomste v
Transvaalse Suikerkorporasie Bpk
1985 (2) SA 668
(T) at 671H-676E
and
South Atlantic Jazz Festival (Pty) Ltd v Commissioner, South
African Revenue Service
2015 (6) SA 78
(WCC) at para 21-24 and
the judgment of Van Winsen J in
ITC 936
(1962) 24 SATC 361
, to
which extensive reference was made in
Transvaalse
Suikerkorporasie
. The full court’s judgment in
Transvaalse
Suikerkorporasie
was confirmed on further appeal on grounds that
are not currently pertinent, but it was nevertheless noteworthy that
the Appellate
Division’s judgment did not demur from the views
expressed in the passage of the full court’s judgment to which
I have
referred, see
Kommissaris van Binnelandse Inkomste v
Transvaalse Suikerkorporasie Bpk
1987 (2) SA 123
(A).
[11]
It is
apparent from the judgment of the Tax Court
[4]
that the applicant - apparently not appreciating that the
Commissioner’s objection went to the
procedural
means by which the applicant sought to prosecute its objections to
the legality of the impugned decisions in that court, not to
its
right to rely on their alleged
substance
– relied on
South
Atlantic Jazz Festival
loc.
cit. to contend that the Tax Court should dismiss the Commissioner’s
objection to its review application in that court.
[5]
The applicant was then content to argue strenuously that the Tax
Court should decide the issues that it now argues should
appropriately
be heard only in the High Court. Its change of stance
has not been explained.
[12]
This
court’s refusal to give a direction in terms of s 105 of the
Act that would have resulted in the possible hearing (subject
to
delay issues
[6]
) of a challenge
to the impugned assessments on review in this court while parallel
proceedings in the Tax Court on the same issues
remained current
implied that the taxpayer was held to what Sutherland ADJP, in
Absa
Bank Ltd and Another v Commissioner, SARS
[2021] ZAGPPHC 127 (11 March
2021), 2021 (3) SA 513
(GP) in para 25,
aptly described as ‘
the
default route’
.
The question was not whether this court had the jurisdiction to
determine any of the issues in the appeal already pending in the
Tax
Court (that it does have jurisdiction is settled;
Metcash
Trading Limited v Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service
and Another
[2000] ZACC 21
(24 November
2000); 2001 (1) SA 1109
(CC);
2001 (1)
BCLR 1
(CC), especially at para 43-47); it was whether the applicant,
exceptionally
,
should be permitted to avail of this court’s jurisdiction
instead of using the tailor-made mechanisms provided in Part B
of
Chapter 9 of the Act.
[13]
This court’s approach in principle to the question was
encapsulated in para 37 of
the principal judgment. This court then
applied the principle stated there to the peculiar facts of the
current matter in para
38-46 and 50 of the principal judgment.
[14]
The questions now before the court in the application for leave to
appeal are those posited
by the potentially two-fold enquiry
prescribed in
s 17(1)(a)
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
,
viz
.
whether the contemplated appeal would have a reasonable prospect of
success; or whether there is some other compelling reason
why the
appeal should be heard, including conflicting judgments on the matter
under consideration. If I am unable to form a positive
opinion in
respect of either of those questions, I am bound by the provision to
refuse the application.
[15]
The
application is brought on a multitude of grounds. Taken together,
they, in essence, amount to a reiteration of the argument
advanced by
the taxpayer in the principal case, and I therefore do not propose to
address them point by point. The central pillar
of the argument is
that proceedings in the Tax Court inhibit the applicant’s
entitlement to vindicate its right to administrative
justice under s
33 of the Constitution and PAJA. For the reasons explained in the
principal judgment and in the cases mentioned
in paragraph 10 above,
as well as in the applicant’s own argument before the Tax Court
mentioned earlier,
[7]
there is
no substance in the argument.
[16]
In any event, as noted in the principal judgment, the applicant faces
delay-related problems
in mounting a review under PAJA that it does
not face when raising the same grounds in its tax appeal. The
applicant sought in
the application for leave to appeal to argue that
it would not need to obtain condonation in terms of s 9 of PAJA for a
review
in terms of s 6 of the Act because its appeal in the Tax Court
was an ‘
internal remedy
’ within the meaning of s 7
of PAJA and the time spent prosecuting it fell to be omitted from the
180-day time bar computation.
There is no merit in the argument. It
is not only wrong, but self-defeating. It is evident from
s 105
of
the
Tax Administration Act that
review proceedings in the High Court,
if permitted, exceptionally, are an alternative to appeal proceedings
in the Tax Court. And,
in any event, were the pending appeal in the
Tax Court indeed properly characterised as an ‘
internal
remedy
’, a PAJA review would ordinarily not be
entertainable until the applicant had exhausted that remedy, which in
this case it
has not.
[17]
The determination whether to give a direction in terms of s 105 of
the Act is of a discretionary
nature. Accepting that the character of
the discretion is of the wide sort, rather than one involving the
exercise of discretion
in the narrow or strict sense, the position
remains that another court would, on appeal, be circumspect about
interfering with
the decision unless it was clearly wrong. The
principal judgment canvasses in detail how this court came to its
decision. A dispassionate
reconsideration of those reasons has left
me unpersuaded that there is a reasonable prospect that an appellate
court would hold
that the decision was wrong. The real issue in this
case is the extent of the applicant’s contested tax liability,
and the
Tax Court is the forum best equipped to determine that; cf.
Africa Cash & Carry (Pty) Ltd v CSARS
[2019] ZASCA 148
(21
November 2019);
[2020] 1 All SA 1
(SCA);
2020 (2) SA 19
, in para
52-53.
[18]
I am also
unpersuaded that there is any other compelling reason why an appeal
against this court’s judgment should be entertained,
and none
was contended for in the written grounds for the application for
leave to appeal. There is nothing in the principal judgment
that
prevents the applicant from pursuing all its objections to the
impugned decisions in the already pending appeal in the Tax
Court.
There are no conflicting judgments in point.
[8]
The case does not involve any undecided point of important legal or
public interest.
[9]
Furthermore,
and in any event, as noted by Cachalia JA in
Caratco
(Pty) Ltd v Independent Advisory (Pty) Ltd
[2020]
ZASCA 17
(25 March
2020); 2020 (5) SA 35
(SCA) in para 2, ‘
the
merits remain vitally important and are often decisive
’
when evaluating whether there is a compelling reason why an appeal
should be heard.
[19]
The application for leave to appeal is therefore refused with costs,
including the fees
of two counsel.
A.G.
BINNS-WARD
Judge
of the High Court
APPEARANCES
Applicant’s
counsel:
Ruan
Kotze
Applicant’s
attorneys:
Theron & Partners
Stellenbosch
Norman Wink &
Stephens
Cape Town
Respondent’s
counsel:
A.R. Sholto-Douglas SC
T.S. Sidaki
Respondent’s
attorneys:
Mathopo Moshimane Mulangaphuma Inc
Practising as DM5
Incorporated
Cape Town
[1]
Forge
Packaging (Pty) Ltd v The Commissioner for the South African Revenue
Service
[2022] ZAWCHC 119
(13 June 2022).
[2]
Commissioner
for the South African Revenue Service v FP (Pty) Ltd
[2021] ZATC 8
(19 October 2021).
[3]
In
para 57 of the Tax Court’s judgment.
[4]
Note
2 above, at para 34-37.
[5]
See
para 42 - 43 of the Tax Court’s judgment.
[6]
See
para 47-51 of the principal judgment.
[7]
In
para 11 above.
[8]
The
applicant’s counsel referred to
A
Way to Explore v Commissioner for South African Revenue Services
[2017] ZAGPPHC 541 (23 August
2017); 80 SATC 211.
That is not a
conflicting judgment; see note 2 in para 4 of the principal
judgment.
[9]
In
argument, the applicant’s counsel sought to argue that the
matter did give rise to questions of important legal or public
interest. When I asked why, if he believed that to be the case, the
applicant was seeking leave to appeal to the full court rather
than
the Supreme Court of Appeal, he replied that that was ‘for
strategic reasons’. He was not forthcoming with any
particularity as to what such ‘strategic reasons’ might
be.
sino noindex
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