Case Law[2024] ZACC 19South Africa
Thistle Trust v Commissioner for the South Africa Revenue Service (CCT 337/22) [2024] ZACC 19; 2024 (12) BCLR 1563 (CC); 2025 (1) SA 70 (CC); 87 SATC 103 (2 October 2024)
Constitutional Court of South Africa
2 October 2024
Headnotes
Summary: Income Tax Act 58 of 1962 — Section 25B — Section 26A — conduit principle — capital gains tax — beneficiaries
Judgment
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## Thistle Trust v Commissioner for the South Africa Revenue Service (CCT 337/22) [2024] ZACC 19; 2024 (12) BCLR 1563 (CC); 2025 (1) SA 70 (CC); 87 SATC 103 (2 October 2024)
Thistle Trust v Commissioner for the South Africa Revenue Service (CCT 337/22) [2024] ZACC 19; 2024 (12) BCLR 1563 (CC); 2025 (1) SA 70 (CC); 87 SATC 103 (2 October 2024)
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sino date 2 October 2024
FLYNOTES:
TAX – Capital gains tax –
Conduit
principle
–
Disposal
of properties – Trust receiving proceeds as beneficiary of
group of vesting trusts – Distributing proceeds
to natural
persons – Contending that capital gains taxable in hands of
ultimate beneficiaries – Conduit principle
does not apply
throughout multi-tier trust structure – Capital gains are
taxable once distributed to second-tier trust
– Income Tax
Act 58 of 1962, s 25B and para 80(2) of Eighth Schedule.
CONSTITUTIONAL
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
Case
CCT 337/22
In
the matter between:
THE
THISTLE
TRUST
Applicant
and
COMMISSIONER
FOR THE SOUTH AFRICAN
REVENUE
SERVICE
Respondent
Neutral citation:
The Thistle Trust v Commissioner for the South African Revenue
Service
[2024] ZACC 19
Coram:
Bilchitz AJ, Chaskalson AJ,
Madlanga J, Majiedt J,
Mathopo J, Mhlantla J, Theron J and Tshiqi J
Judgments:
Chaskalson AJ (majority): [1] to [93]
Bilchitz AJ
(dissenting): [94] to [141]
Heard
on:
8 February 2024
Decided
on:
2 October 2024
Summary:
Income Tax Act 58 of 1962 — Section 25B
— Section 26A — conduit principle —
capital gains tax — beneficiaries
Tax
Administration Act 28 of 2011
— understatement
penalties —
bona fide
inadvertent error
ORDER
On
appeal from the Supreme Court of Appeal (hearing an appeal from the
Tax Court of South Africa, Gauteng):
1.
The application for leave to appeal is granted.
2.
The appeal is dismissed.
3.
There is no order as to costs in the appeal.
4.
The conditional application for leave to cross appeal
is
dismissed.
5.
The respondent is ordered to pay the applicant’s
costs in the
cross appeal, including the costs of two counsel.
JUDGMENT
CHASKALSON AJ
(Majiedt J, Mathopo J, Mhlantla J, Theron J and
Tshiqi J concurring):
Introduction
[1]
The conduit principle in relation to the taxation of trusts
and beneficiaries has been adopted by our courts from English law.
It governs how amounts distributed from a trust to its beneficiaries
will be characterised for purposes of taxation. The
conduit principle treats a trust as a conduit for the transfer
of taxable amounts into the hands of beneficiaries. It
provides
for the amounts in question to be taxed on the basis that their
nature, for the purposes of tax law, does not change in
the process
of distribution from the trust to the beneficiaries, and that they
are ordinarily taxed in the hands of the true beneficial
owner.
[2]
In this matter,
this Court must decide how the conduit principle applies to the
taxation of capital gains distributed to beneficiaries
through
multiple trusts in a tiered trust structure. To do so, we must
consider not only the conduit principle but also the
interpretation
of the relevant provisions of the Income Tax Act
[1]
(ITA), namely sections 25B and 26A of the ITA read with
paragraph 80(2) of the Eighth Schedule (paragraph 80(2)).
[3]
Sections 25B and 26A are headed “Income of trusts
and beneficiaries of trusts” and “Inclusion of taxable
capital gain in taxable income”, respectively. During the
2014 to 2016 tax years, which is the period relevant to this
matter,
these sections read as follows:
“
25B
(1)
Any amount received by or accrued to or in favour of any person
during any year of
assessment in his or her capacity as the trustee
of a trust, shall . . . to the extent to which that amount has been
derived for
the immediate or future benefit of any ascertained
beneficiary who has a vested right to that amount during that year,
be deemed
to be an amount which has accrued to that beneficiary, and
to the extent to which that amount is not so derived, be deemed to be
an amount which has accrued to that trust.
(2)
Where a beneficiary has acquired a vested right to any amount
referred to in subsection
(1) in consequence of the exercise by the
trustee of a discretion vested in him or her in terms of the relevant
deed of trust,
agreement or will of a deceased person, that amount
shall for the purposes of that subsection be deemed to have been
derived for
the benefit of that beneficiary.
.
. .
26A
There shall be included in the taxable income of a person for a year
of assessment the taxable
capital gain of that person for that year
of assessment, as determined in terms of the Eighth Schedule.”
[4]
In relevant part, paragraph 80(2) read as follows during
the 2014 to 2016 tax years:
“
[W]here
a capital gain is determined in respect of the disposal of an asset
by a trust in a year of assessment during which a trust
beneficiary .
. . has a vested interest or acquires a vested interest (including an
interest caused by the exercise of a discretion)
in that capital gain
but not in the asset, the disposal of which gave rise to the capital
gain,
the
whole or the portion of the capital gain so vested—
(a)
must be disregarded for the purpose of calculating the aggregate
capital gain or aggregate
capital loss of the trust; and
(b)
must be taken into account for the purpose of calculating the
aggregate capital gain
or aggregate capital loss of the beneficiary
in whom the gain vests.”
Parties
[5]
The applicant is
the Thistle Trust (Thistle). Thistle is a registered
inter
vivos
[2]
discretionary trust and a South African tax resident. Thistle
is a beneficiary of 10 vesting trusts described as the Zenprop
Group
(Zenprop). Zenprop is a property developer and property owner.
In the course of its business, it frequently buys
and sells
properties. The respondent is the Commissioner for the South
African Revenue Service (SARS).
Factual
background
[6]
In the 2014, 2015 and 2016 tax years, Zenprop disposed of
assets and realised capital gains, the proceeds of which it
distributed
to Thistle. Thistle, in turn, distributed the
proceeds of those capital gains to the natural persons who were its
beneficiaries.
The proceeds of the capital gains were all
passed through the multi-tiered trust structure to the ultimate
beneficiaries within
the same tax years in which they were realised.
Acting on legal advice received, Zenprop and Thistle did not account
for
the capital gains in their tax returns for the 2014, 2015
and 2016 tax years. They were advised that the relevant amounts
were capital gains which, in terms of the common law
conduit principle and the relevant provisions of the ITA, were
taxable
as capital gains in the hands of the ultimate beneficiaries.
The beneficiaries accounted for the capital gains in their
tax
returns and paid the capital gains tax for which they would have been
liable in respect of these capital gains.
[7]
In the 2014 to
2016 tax years, the individual beneficiaries were liable for
capital gains tax on only 33.3% of their respective
net capital
gains for each year of assessment.
[3]
As an
inter
vivos
trust,
Thistle was liable for capital gains tax on 66.6% of its net capital
gain for each year of assessment.
[4]
[8]
SARS conducted a tax audit of Thistle. It took the
position that on a proper application of the ITA, liability for the
capital
gains realised by Zenprop had passed from Zenprop to Thistle
as the direct beneficiary of Zenprop, but did not pass further from
Thistle to its beneficiaries. It accordingly held Thistle
liable for capital gains tax in respect of the amount of the capital
gains distributed to it by Zenprop. On 21 September 2018,
SARS raised additional assessments in which it claimed
capital gains
tax from Thistle for these amounts. The additional assessments
raised by SARS also imposed understatement
penalties on Thistle in
respect of the undeclared capital gains tax.
[9]
On behalf of Thistle, its attorneys objected to the additional
assessments. In the objection, Thistle’s attorneys
stated—
“
having
regard to the provisions of section 25B of the ITA and
paragraph 80(2) of the Eighth Schedule to the ITA . . .
the
capital gains . . . ought not to have been taxed as our client
derived no taxable income in this regard, and such gains were
properly taxable in the hands of our client’s beneficiaries
under those provisions of the ITA mentioned.”
[10]
In addition to its
primary objection to the additional assessment, Thistle also objected
to the imposition of understatement penalties
in the assessment.
Thistle contended that, even if the additional assessment was
correct, its failure to account for these
capital gains in its tax
returns was a
bona
fide
(good
faith) inadvertent error within the meaning of section 222(1) of
the Tax Administration Act
[5]
(TAA) and therefore could not give rise to understatement penalties.
[11]
SARS disallowed Thistle’s objection. In
March 2021, Thistle appealed to the Tax Court, challenging the
additional
assessments raised by SARS.
Litigation
history
Tax
Court
[12]
By the time of the
hearing before the Tax Court, section 25B(1) of the ITA had
been amended by section 28 of the
Taxation Laws Amendment Act
[6]
(2020 Amendment Act) to read as follows:
“
Taxation
of trusts and beneficiaries of trusts
(1)
Any amount (
other than an amount of a capital nature which is not
included in gross income
or an amount contemplated in
paragraph 3B of the Second Schedule) received by or accrued
to or in favour of any person
during any year of assessment in his or
her capacity as the trustee of a trust, shall, subject to the
provisions of section 7,
to the extent to which that amount has
been derived for the immediate or future benefit of any ascertained
beneficiary who has
a vested right to that amount during that year,
be deemed to be an amount which has accrued to that beneficiary, and
to the extent
to which that amount is not so derived, be deemed to be
an amount which has accrued to that trust.
(2)
Where a beneficiary has acquired a vested right to any amount
referred to in subsection (1)
in consequence of the exercise by
the trustee of a discretion vested in him or her in terms of the
relevant deed of trust, agreement
or will of a deceased person, that
amount shall for the purposes of that subsection be deemed to have
been derived for the benefit
of that beneficiary.”
(Emphasis added.)
[13]
The Tax Court
held that the amended wording of section 25B could not be read
retrospectively to inform the proper interpretation
of the section
during the 2014 to 2016 tax years. It emphasised the wide and
unqualified meaning of the words “any
amount” in
subsections (1) and (2) of section 25B in its form during
the 2014 to 2016 tax years. It interpreted
these words to
include capital gains and accordingly held that section 25B
applied to the taxation of the relevant capital
gains. Relying
on section 25B and the
Armstrong
[7]
and
Rosen
[8]
decisions of the Appellate Division which introduced the
conduit principle into South African law, the Tax Court
held
that the capital gains were not taxable in the hands of Thistle,
but were taxable as capital gains in the hands of the beneficiaries.
Therefore, it upheld Thistle’s appeal.
Supreme
Court of Appeal
[14]
SARS appealed to
the Supreme Court of Appeal. That Court upheld the appeal
on the primary liability of Thistle for capital
gains tax, but it
dismissed SARS’ claim for understatement penalties.
[9]
[15]
The Supreme Court
of Appeal noted that, while
Rosen
had
established that the conduit principle was of general
application in tax law,
Rosen
had also cautioned that
it ought only to be applied in appropriate circumstances.
[10]
The Supreme Court of Appeal held that the facts of the
present case did not present appropriate circumstances for
the
application of the conduit principle.
[11]
[16]
Relying on its
judgment in
Milnerton
Estates
,
[12]
the Supreme Court of Appeal confirmed that the Eighth Schedule
of the ITA was to be treated as providing a self contained
method for determining matters relating to the capital gains that had
to be included in a taxpayer’s taxable income.
[13]
It pointed out that when section 25B was introduced in the
Income Tax Act in 1991, capital gains tax did not exist in
South
Africa. From this, it concluded that section 25B was not
intended to apply to capital gains and that the reference
to “any
amount” in section 25B did not include taxable capital
gains. Flowing from this conclusion, it held
that the treatment
of Thistle’s tax liability was to be determined only in
accordance with paragraph 80(2).
[17]
The Supreme Court of Appeal upheld SARS’ argument that
the capital gains realised by the disposal of properties by Zenprop
were taxable in the hands of Thistle and not in the hands of the
ultimate beneficiaries. This, so it held, flowed from the
fact
that Thistle had not itself disposed of any capital asset or
determined any capital gain. Thistle had only distributed
moneys that vested in it from Zenprop as of right and in these
circumstances the conduit principle did not apply in terms of
paragraph 80(2).
[18]
Although the
Supreme Court of Appeal found that SARS was correct to
raise the additional assessment imposing capital gains
tax on Thistle
in respect of the 2014 to 2016 tax years, it held that Thistle could
not be liable for understatement penalties.
In its judgment, it
stated that SARS had conceded at the hearing that the understatement
by Thistle was a
bona
fide
inadvertent
error.
[14]
In terms of
section 222 of the TAA, this precluded the imposition of any
understatement penalties.
In
this Court
[19]
Thistle applies for leave to appeal against the decision of
the Supreme Court of Appeal. SARS has filed a
conditional
counter-application for leave to appeal against the
decision of the Supreme Court of Appeal in respect of
understatement penalties.
The counter-application is
conditional upon Thistle’s appeal failing.
Thistle’s
submissions
Jurisdiction
[20]
Thistle originally submitted that this matter engages the
jurisdiction of this Court by invoking both a constitutional issue
and
an arguable point of law of general public importance which ought
to be considered by this Court. The constitutional issue
upon
which Thistle relied was an issue of retrospectivity and its
implications for the rule of law. In this regard, it argued
that the judgment and order of the Supreme Court of Appeal
retrospectively applied the 2020 amendment to section 25B
of the
ITA to the tax dispute which concerned the 2014 to 2016 tax years.
[21]
In arguing its jurisdiction case at the hearing, however,
Thistle relied less on the retrospectivity point and more on the
argument
that this case raises an arguable point of law of general
public importance which ought to be considered by this Court.
The
point of law concerns the proper interpretation of section 25B
and paragraph 80(2) against the application of the common
law
conduit principle. Thistle submits that this is a point of law
of general public importance, because it will affect the
capital
gains tax liability of all trusts in tiered trust structures in
respect of tax years prior to the amendment of section 25B
of
the ITA by the 2020 Amendment Act.
Merits
[22]
Thistle argues that liability for the capital gains tax lies
with the individual beneficiaries in terms of the common law conduit
principle, the provisions of section 25B of the ITA and the
proper application of paragraph 80(2) of the ITA.
[23]
Thistle traces the history of the conduit principle since its
introduction into South African law in 1938 and relies on
Armstrong
and
Rosen
. It argues that the
conduit principle is a rule of common law that applies to the
taxation of trusts. Therefore,
it must not only inform the
interpretation of the relevant provisions of the ITA but also apply
to the taxation of the relevant
capital gains, unless the ITA has
clearly excluded or qualified such application.
[24]
Thistle contends that there is nothing in the ITA that
excludes or qualifies the application of the conduit principle to the
capital
gains in this case. It takes issue with the emphasis of
the Supreme Court of Appeal on the fact that Thistle had not
disposed of any asset itself and disputes that Thistle had not
determined any capital gain. Regarding the latter, it points
to
the wide meaning of “determined” as it is used in the
Eighth Schedule and emphasises that the conduit principle
means
that the proceeds of the sale of an asset by a trust retain their
character as capital gains after they have been distributed
to the
beneficiaries of that trust.
[25]
Apart from the
conduit principle, Thistle relies on the deeming provision in
section 25B of the ITA.
[15]
It argues that in terms of section 25B the capital gain of
Zenprop is deemed to be the capital gain of Thistle when
it was
distributed to Thistle and then deemed to be the capital gain of the
beneficiaries when it was distributed further from
Thistle to the
beneficiaries. It contends that even if section 25B was
introduced into the ITA prior to capital gains
tax, “any
amount” in section 25B(1) and (2) must now be
interpreted to include capital gains. In this
regard, Thistle
emphasises not only the wide meaning of the words “any amount”
but also the fact that section 26A
of the ITA expressly includes
taxable capital gains in the taxable income of a taxpayer.
[16]
[26]
Thistle argues that the answer to the question in the present
case is to be found in section 26A, read with section 25B.
It maintains that SARS is wrong to focus on paragraph 80(2),
because section 26A is the taxing provision and the purpose
of
the Eighth Schedule is merely to quantify the amount of capital
gains tax, and not to allocate liability to particular
taxpayers for
payment of that tax.
[27]
Finally, Thistle argues that even without section 25B,
paragraph 80(2) entitles it not to be taxed on the relevant
capital
gains. This is because paragraph 80(2) must be
interpreted as an attempt to codify the conduit principle.
Thus,
by application of the conduit principle, when a capital
gain is attributed from Zenprop to its beneficiary, Thistle, which
is
itself a trust, the conduit is not blocked, but continues to allow
that capital gain to be distributed from Thistle to its beneficiaries
in whose hands it will be taxed as a capital gain.
[28]
Such an interpretation, Thistle argues, flows both from the
application of the conduit principle and the wide meaning of
“determined”
in the Eighth Schedule. Accordingly,
when the conduit principle applies to the distribution of a capital
gain from Zenprop
to Thistle, a capital gain is determined in the tax
accounts of Thistle. In terms of the wording of
paragraph 80(2)(a)
and (b), when Thistle distributes the
capital gain so determined to its beneficiaries, it must be
disregarded for the purposes
of calculating the aggregate capital
gain or loss of Thistle, but must rather be taken into account in
determining the aggregate
capital gains or losses of the
beneficiaries.
SARS’
submissions
Jurisdiction
[29]
SARS submits that leave to appeal should be refused because no
constitutional issue is raised, the appeal is untenable on its merits
and it is not in the interests of justice to grant leave to appeal.
It maintains that the Supreme Court of Appeal did
not interpret
the ITA retrospectively.
Merits
[30]
SARS submits that section 25B does not apply to capital
gains, only to other income that is relevant for income tax
purposes.
It emphasises that section 25B was introduced
into the ITA at a time when capital gains tax did not exist in South
Africa
and accordingly could not, originally, have been intended to
apply to capital gains. Instead, section 26A and the
Eighth
Schedule to the ITA should be interpreted to make clear that
all matters relating to the calculation of the taxable capital gain
of a trust are to be determined in accordance with the
Eighth Schedule.
[31]
SARS points out that paragraph 80(2) contains its own
codification of the conduit principle which differs from that
found
in section 25B. It argues that paragraph 80(2)
makes clear that the conduit principle cannot operate beyond the
first beneficiary trust in a multi tiered trust structure.
In support of this argument, it highlights the differences
between
the wording of paragraph 80(2) and section 25B. It
also relies on the explanatory memorandum to the Revenue
Laws
Amendment Bill of 2008 (2008 explanatory memorandum) which
indicates that the purpose of the amendment to paragraph 80(2)
by the Revenue Laws Amendment Act 60 of 2008 (2008 Amendment)
was to ensure that a second level trust in a tiered trust
structure could not avoid liability for capital gains tax on the
proceeds of a capital gain it received from its vesting trust,
by
distributing the relevant amount to its beneficiaries.
Cross appeal
SARS’
submissions
[32]
In its conditional cross appeal, SARS denies that it made
the concession attributed to it in the judgment of the Supreme Court
of Appeal. It accepts, however, that its counsel did not
advance the argument before the Supreme Court of Appeal
on
the issue of whether Thistle’s failure to account for the
capital gains it distributed to its beneficiaries amounts to
a
bona
fide
inadvertent error within the meaning of section 222 of
the TAA. In respect of that issue, SARS submits that Thistle
did not have reasonable grounds for its reliance on its tax
position. As it intentionally adopted this position, its
“error”
cannot be described as a
bona fide
inadvertent error and it should be held liable for the understatement
penalties.
[33]
SARS argues that Thistle’s understatement should be
treated as one that is subject to penalties in terms of item (iii),
alternatively item (ii) of the table in section 223(1) of
the TAA. These items respectively deal with the following
cases—
(a)
“[n]o reasonable grounds for ‘tax position’ taken;”
and
(b)
“[r]easonable care not taken in completing return.”
Thistle’s
submissions
[34]
Thistle submits that it has not made any understatement and so
there can be no understatement penalties. In the alternative,
it argues that even if the appeal fails, the cross appeal must
be dismissed because any error in its original return falls
within
the category of “
bona fide
inadvertent error” in
section 222 of the TAA, and accordingly, it is not an error
which gives rise to any penalties.
Analysis
and legal framework
Main
application
Jurisdiction
and leave to appeal
[35]
Thistle’s
application for leave to appeal engages this Court’s general
jurisdiction in terms of section 167(3)(b)(ii)
of the
Constitution as the application raises arguable points of law of
general public importance. The points of law raised
concern the
proper interpretation of section 25B and paragraph 80(2)
and the application of the common law conduit
principle.
As Thistle submits, these points of law are of general public
importance because they will affect the capital
gains tax liability
of trusts in tiered trust structures in respect of all tax years up
to 2021.
[17]
They will
also have implications for other trusts and their beneficiaries in
cases that are affected by the application of
the conduit principle.
[36]
Thistle’s proposed appeal will determine the outcome of
a multi million rand tax dispute. The issues that it
raises are of general public importance and transcend the interests
of the parties to the dispute. They have implications
for the
tax liability of trusts and beneficiaries in countless other
disputes. The arguments Thistle raises are substantial.
These arguments were upheld by the Tax Court before its decision
was overturned by the Supreme Court of Appeal.
With
two competing decisions, it is accordingly clear that the interests
of justice require leave to appeal to be granted.
Merits
of the main application
The
origins of the conduit principle and its incorporation into
South African law
[37]
As stated above,
the conduit principle has been adopted into our law from English
common law. Its origins are usually traced
to the judgment of
the Privy Council in
Syme
,
[18]
where the Privy Council considered the taxation of income derived
from a newspaper business owned by a vesting trust whose trustees
immediately distributed the profits of the newspaper business to the
beneficiaries of the trust. The relevant tax statute
of the
Australian State of Victoria taxed income “derived from
personal exertion” at a lower rate than income derived
from
property. It was common cause that, in the hands of trustees,
the profits of the newspaper business would have been
characterised
as income “derived from personal exertion”. The
Privy Council had to decide whether this income
lost its
tax privileged status once it was distributed to the
beneficiaries.
[38]
In
Syme
, Lord Sumner made the following statements
which are generally understood to be the first formulation of the
conduit principle:
“
It
does not follow when the appellant receives the cheque for his share
. . . that the connection between his income and the newspaper
business is lost.
.
. .
What
was the produce of personal exertion in the trustee’s hands
till they part with it does not, in the instant of transfer,
suffer a
change, and become the produce of property and not of personal
exertion, as it passes to the hands of the
cestui
que
[(beneficiary)]
trust.”
[19]
[39]
Following
Syme
,
various English,
[20]
Australian,
[21]
and
Canadian
[22]
courts adopted
similar approaches to the taxation of trustees and beneficiaries.
[40]
The
first significant South African judgment to apply the
conduit principle was
Armstrong
.
There, the Appellate Division held that dividends paid to a
trust and distributed to the beneficiary of the trust did
not lose
their character as dividends through being distributed to the
beneficiary. Accordingly, they were not taxable income
in the
hands of the beneficiary because dividends were not, at the time,
taxable income. In reaching its conclusion, the
Appellate Division invoked the judgment of the Privy Council
in
Syme
and
stated that the argument that the distributions deriving from
dividends should be treated as taxable income in the hands of
the
beneficiaries did not accord with the scheme of the then applicable
Income Tax Act.
[23]
That scheme was—
“
that
income derived from companies should, in the hands of the true
recipients of it, be free of the tax which has already been
deducted
at the source [i.e. through the company tax paid by the company
declaring the dividends]. And the clear intention
of the Act
can only be effectively and generally carried out by exempting the
person ultimately receiving such moneys. In
the simple case I
am now examining, namely, that of a trio comprising a company, the
intervening trustee, and the beneficiary it
is manifest that in the
truest sense the beneficiary derives his income from the company, for
that income fluctuates with the fortunes
of the company and the
trustee can neither increase nor diminish it, he is a mere ‘conduit
pipe’.”
[24]
[41]
In
Rosen
,
the Appellate Division held that
Armstrong
did not
merely interpret the relevant provisions of the Income Tax Act.
Rather, it established the conduit principle
as a common law
principle applicable to the taxation of trusts and beneficiaries
where appropriate, albeit one that was always
subject to a contrary
intention in the proper construction of the revenue statute.
[25]
The Appellate Division stated:
“
The
[conduit] principle rests upon sound and robust common sense; for, by
treating the intervening trustee as a mere administrative
conduit pipe, it has regard to the substance rather than the
form of the distribution and receipt of the dividends.”
[26]
[42]
A review of the
Commonwealth and South African cases shows that the conduit principle
was developed to address two separate
issues in the context of tax
statutes that did not address these issues directly. The first
issue concerned the identification
of the taxpayer who was liable to
taxation on particular income – was it to be the trustee or the
beneficiary? In that
context, the conduit principle was used as
a mechanism to ensure that income of a particular nature was taxed in
the hands of its
true beneficial owner.
[27]
[43]
The second issue
was to protect legislative choices in respect of the favourable or
prejudicial income tax treatment of particular
categories of income.
In this regard, the conduit principle operated to ensure that
income of a particular nature that
was earned by a trust and
distributed to its beneficiaries did not lose its tax privileged
or tax prejudiced nature in
the process. Thus,
Armstrong
and
Rosen
involved
the income tax exemption then in place in respect of dividends.
In both these cases, dividends distributed to the
beneficiaries by
the vesting trusts that received the dividends as shareholders did
not lose their tax exempt status in the
hands of the
beneficiaries. Similar concerns are evident in the Commonwealth
decisions.
[28]
[44]
For present
purposes, it is important to emphasise two points. First, when
referring to the conduit principle as being based
on “robust
common sense”, the Appellate Division in
Rosen
was
dealing with a situation where application of the conduit principle
was necessary to protect a legislative choice to treat
dividends as
non taxable income. In the present case, there is no issue
of any need to protect a legislative choice
as to the favourable or
prejudicial income tax treatment of particular categories of income
or accruals. On the contrary,
absent a clear indication to the
contrary in the ITA, “robust common sense” would militate
against the application
of the conduit principle to the capital
gains distributed by a trust. This is because the legislature
has chosen to
tax the capital gains of a trust at twice the rate of
those of an individual
.
[29]
Application
of the conduit principle to treat capital gains that are distributed
on a discretionary basis from a trust to a natural
person as capital
gains taxable in the hands of the natural person, not the trust,
would appear to subvert the legislative intention
of taxing capital
gains realised by trusts at the higher rate.
[45]
Second, the South
African and Commonwealth judgments used the conduit principle to
answer questions of which taxpayer was to
be taxed on particular
income and whether that income retained its tax privileged or tax
prejudiced status only because the taxation
statutes with which they
were concerned did not address these issues directly. When a
taxation statute addressed either of
these issues directly, the case
no longer became an exercise in applying the conduit principle.
Instead, it became an
exercise in giving effect to the direct
legislative intention expressed in the statute.
[30]
[46]
In South Africa,
the Income Tax Act of 1991
[31]
(1991 Act) represents a watershed in relation to the conduit
principle. The 1991 Act, for the first time, introduced
into the ITA provisions dealing specifically with the taxation of
trusts. Since 1991, questions relating to the taxation
of
trusts and beneficiaries under the ITA have accordingly become
questions of the interpretation of the relevant provisions of
the ITA
that deal directly with trusts and beneficiaries. Common law
principles relating to the conduit principle may
inform these
questions of interpretation, particularly where the ITA does not
expressly regulate the respective tax treatment of
trusts and
beneficiaries. However, the exercise remains primarily one of
statutory interpretation.
The
provisions of the ITA dealing directly with the taxation of trusts
[47]
The 1991 Act
was a legislative response to the decision of the Witwatersrand Local
Division in
Friedman
.
[32]
There, the court held that a trust was not a taxable entity under the
ITA. Following
Friedman
,
the ITA was amended by the 1991 Act to address the taxation of
trusts directly.
[48]
The 1991 Act introduced the following amendments into the
ITA dealing with the taxation of trusts—
(a)
the definition of “person” in the ITA was amended to
include a “trust fund”;
[33]
and
(b)
section 25B was inserted into the Act to provide expressly for
the application of the conduit
principle in relation to the taxation
of a “trust fund”.
[34]
[49]
Further amendments relevant to the taxation of trusts were
introduced into the ITA by the Income Tax Act 141 of 1992—
(a)
a definition of “trust” was inserted into the ITA;
[35]
(b)
the definition of “person” was amended again so that it
now expressly included under
subparagraph (c) “any trust”;
and
(c)
Section 25B was amended into the form that it retained at the
time of the transactions relevant
to the present case.
[36]
[50]
The next major development in the amendment of the ITA
relevant to the application of the conduit principle took place in
2001 when
capital gains tax was introduced by the
Taxation Laws
Amendment Act 5 of 2001
which—
(a)
inserted
Section 26A
into the ITA;
[37]
(b)
introduced the Eighth Schedule to the ITA to set out the
manner
in which a taxable capital gain is to be determined;
(c)
provided in paragraph 10
of the Eighth Schedule that natural persons were to be taxed on
25% of their net capital gain
and
inter
vivos
trusts
(as part of the residual category of “any other case”) at
50% of their net capital gain;
[38]
and
(d)
in paragraph 80 of the Eighth Schedule to the ITA,
specifically addressed the application of the conduit principle in
relation to capital gains tax.
[51]
The wording of
paragraph 80(2) during the 2014 to 2016 tax years has been set
out above.
[39]
Prior to
2008, the introductory wording of paragraph 80(2) had stated
“where a capital gain arises in a trust”.
The
2008 Amendment replaced this wording with “where a capital
gain is determined in respect of the disposal of an asset
by a
trust”.
The correct tax treatment
of the proceeds of capital gains realised by Zenprop and distributed
to Thistle and then on to its beneficiaries
[52]
SARS argues that
section 25B
cannot be applied to taxable
capital gains because it was introduced at a time when those gains
were not taxable. This argument
is unpersuasive. At all
times since capital gains became taxable,
section 26A
has made
it clear that taxable capital gains form part of taxable income.
Accordingly, absent contrary indications in the
ITA,
section 25B
would have to be interpreted on the basis that capital gains are
taxable income and fall within the phrase “any amount”
in
section 25B.
[53]
However, there are clear indications in the ITA that the
application of the conduit principle to the taxation of capital
gains
in the hands of trusts and beneficiaries is governed not by
section 25B
, but by paragraph 80.
[54]
As pointed out above,
Section 26A
states that:
“
There
shall be included in the taxable income of a person for a year of
assessment the taxable capital gain of that person for that
year of
assessment, as determined in terms of the Eighth Schedule.”
[55]
If the
Eighth Schedule said nothing about liability for the taxation of
capital gains arising out of the disposal of assets
by trusts, it
would have been arguable that
section 25B
(as a specific
provision addressing the conduit principle and the taxation of
trusts) should govern the application of the conduit
principle to the
taxation of capital gains realised by the sale of assets by a
trust. However, paragraph 80 addresses
itself pertinently
to the conduit principle and the liability for taxation on capital
gains realised by the sale of assets by a
trust. Therefore, it
is the specific provision that applies. Paragraph 80 must
have been included in the Eighth
Schedule for some purpose. It
cannot be interpreted as though everything that it provides is to be
rendered irrelevant because
the pre existing deeming provision
in
section 25B
overrides paragraph 80. Therefore,
paragraph 80 governs how the conduit principle is to be applied
to establish
which taxpayer is liable for taxation on the capital
gains realised by the sale of assets by a trust.
[40]
[56]
Thistle argues
that the Eighth Schedule was added to the ITA only to quantify
capital gains, not to determine which taxpayer
is liable to be taxed
on those capital gains. It is correct that paragraph 80 is
not a stand alone provision as
SARS argued. Like all other
provisions of the Eighth Schedule, paragraph 80 must be
read with
section 26A.
As a general rule, the taxing
provision is
section 26A
and the Eighth Schedule concerns
itself primarily with questions of the quantification of taxable
capital gains.
[41]
However, paragraph 80 is a provision of the Eighth Schedule
that clearly goes beyond questions of quantification.
It seeks
to identify the taxpayer who is liable for capital gains tax on a
capital gain realised by the disposal of an asset by
a trust and
distributed to a beneficiary in the same year of assessment in which
the disposal took place. It must be interpreted
accordingly.
[57]
As has been pointed out above, in the tax years 2014 to 2018,
paragraph 80(2) stated the following in relevant part:
“
(2)
[W]here a capital gain is determined in respect of the disposal of an
asset
by
a trust
in a year of assessment during which a trust beneficiary . . . has a
vested interest or acquires a vested interest (including an
interest
caused by the exercise of a discretion) in that capital gain but not
in the asset, the disposal of which gave rise to
the capital gain,
the whole or the portion
of the capital gain so vested—
(a)
must be disregarded for the purpose of calculating the aggregate
capital gain or aggregate
capital loss of
the trust
; and
(b)
must be taken into account for the purpose of calculating the
aggregate capital gain
or aggregate capital loss of the beneficiary
in whom the gain vests.”
[42]
(Emphasis added.)
[58]
Applying paragraph 80(2) to the present case, we see the
following:
(a)
Zenprop (which is a group of trusts) disposed of an asset and
determined a capital gain which vested in Thistle (which is also
a trust) and which, in turn, distributed the amount of that
capital
gain to Thistle’s beneficiaries.
(b)
Zenprop disposed of the asset and a capital gain was determined
in
respect of that disposal. Thistle is the beneficiary of
Zenprop. Therefore, the capital gain had to be taken into
account in determining the aggregate capital gain of Thistle and
disregarded for the purposes of determining Zenprop’s aggregate
capital gain.
(c)
In terms of paragraph 6
of the Eighth Schedule, the relevant capital gain was
therefore included as part of Thistle’s
aggregate capital
gain.
[43]
(d)
Thistle then vested the amount of the capital gain in its
beneficiaries. However, Thistle had not realised the capital
gain by disposing of an asset; Zenprop had disposed of the asset.
Therefore, Thistle could not be “the trust” referred to
in subparagraph (a) of paragraph 80(2). Zenprop
was
the only trust that could be “the trust” contemplated in
subparagraph (a).
(e)
Consequently, Thistle could not receive the benefit of having
the
capital gain disregarded for the purposes of the determination
of its aggregate capital gain.
[59]
Thistle argues
that paragraph 80(2) was capable of an interpretation that
allowed Thistle to escape liability for capital gains
tax by
distributing it to its beneficiaries in the same tax year as it was
distributed to Thistle. In this regard, Thistle
emphasises the
wide meaning of “determined” in the Eighth Schedule.
[44]
It argues that the capital gain distributed to it by Zenprop
could be said, through the operation of the conduit principle
and paragraph 80(2), to have given rise to a capital gain
determined in the accounts of Thistle. Accordingly, Thistle
could be seen as “the trust” referred to in
subparagraph (a) when it distributed that capital gain to its
beneficiaries.
[60]
Thistle is correct
that, given the wide meaning of the word “determined” in
the Eighth Schedule, the effect of
paragraph 80(2) is that
a capital gain is determined in the accounts of Thistle. However,
the flaw in the Thistle argument
is that paragraph 80(2) is
framed so as to identify “the trust” with reference to
the fact that it is the trust
that disposed of the asset, and not
with reference to the fact that it is a trust in whose accounts the
capital gain was determined.
Recognising this problem, counsel
for Thistle suggested that paragraph 80(2) should be read as
though the phrase “in
respect of the disposal of an asset”
was a parenthetical clause with commas before and after it. But
there are no commas
before or after these words in paragraph 80(2)
and there are no indications in the ITA that the relevant phrase
should be
read as a parenthetical clause. If a statute is not
framed in a form that lends itself to the interpretation desired by a
litigant, they cannot ask the Court notionally to perform linguistic
surgery on the statute by adding or removing commas until
the desired
interpretation is achieved.
[45]
[61]
Thistle’s strained interpretation is also to be avoided,
because it is inconsistent with the apparent purpose of the
2008 Amendment
to paragraph 80(2), namely to prevent the
conduit principle from operating in relation to capital gains beyond
the first beneficiary
trust in a multi tiered trust structure.
[62]
The 2008 Amendment changed the introductory wording of
the paragraph from “where a capital gain arises in a trust”
to “where a capital gain is determined in respect of the
disposal of an asset by a trust”. Prior to the
2008 Amendment,
through the operation of paragraph 80(2),
the capital gain realised by the sale of assets by Zenprop and
distributed to Thistle
could be said to be a capital gain which,
after distribution by Zenprop, “arose” in Thistle.
By sequential operation
of paragraph 80(2), this capital gain
would then have had to be disregarded for the purposes of calculating
the aggregate
capital gain of Thistle and taken into account for the
purposes of calculating the aggregate capital gain of its
beneficiaries.
[63]
In other words, prior to the 2008 Amendment,
paragraph 80(2) provided for the conduit principle to apply
through
multi tiered trusts all the way to the ultimate
beneficiaries. As we have seen above, following the 2008
Amendment,
paragraph 80(2) prevented the conduit principle from
operating beyond the first beneficiary trust in a multi tiered
trust
structure. Therefore, on a linguistic analysis of the
2008 Amendment, its clear purpose was to confine the operation
of the conduit principle in this fashion. If the 2008 Amendment
is interpreted in the manner urged by Thistle, it is
difficult to
identify any change that the amendment made to the meaning of
paragraph 80(2) or any other purpose served by
the
2008 Amendment.
[64]
The purpose attributed above to the 2008 Amendment is
confirmed by the 2008 explanatory memorandum. It stated
the
following in respect of the amendment that was ultimately made to
paragraph 80(2) with the enactment of the 2008 Amendment:
“
Some
commentators have suggested that a capital gain arising under
paragraph 80(2) can be attributed through multiple discretionary
trusts. This view
has
not been accepted
and the amendment clarifies this by referring to a capital gain
determined in respect of the disposal of an asset by a trust instead
of a capital gain arising in a trust.” (Emphasis added.)
[65]
In
New
Clicks
,
[46]
Chaskalson CJ stated:
“
In
S v
Makwanyane and Another
I
had occasion to consider whether background material is admissible
for the purpose of interpreting the Constitution. I concluded
that
‘
where
the background material is clear, is not in dispute, and is relevant
to showing why particular provisions were or were not
included in the
Constitution, it can be taken into account by a Court in interpreting
the Constitution’.
Although
it is not entirely clear whether the majority of the Court concurred
in this finding, none dissented from it. I have
no reason to
depart from that finding and, in my view, it is applicable to
ascertaining ‘the mischief’ that a statute
is aimed at
where that would be relevant to its interpretation. This would
be consistent with the decisions of the Appellate
Division in
Attorney
General,
Eastern Cape v Blom and Others
and
Westinghouse
Brake & Equipment (Pty) Ltd v Bilger Engineering (Pty) Ltd
and the cases from other
jurisdictions referred to in
Makwanyane’s
case.”
[47]
[66]
Since
New
Clicks
,
this Court has frequently had regard to explanatory memoranda to
bills in the process of identifying the purpose of a statute
or an
amendment to a statute.
[48]
So too, has the Supreme Court of Appeal, including in numerous
cases involving revenue statutes.
[49]
[67]
There is a limit
to the weight that can be placed on an explanatory memorandum for the
purposes of interpreting a statute.
The rule of law dictates
that the law should be certain and predictable so that individuals
are able to organise their affairs
around the law and individuals
must have ready access to the law for that purpose.
[50]
In order to be predictable, the law must first be accessible.
[51]
If the meaning of a law depends entirely on historical research into
what was and was not said in an explanatory memorandum
issued decades
earlier and not easily capable of identification and location, that
undermines accessibility of the law and will
potentially undermine
the rule of law.
[68]
Taxation
legislation represents a special category of laws in respect of which
people proactively organise their affairs to conform
to the
predictable consequences of the law. It might therefore be
thought that particular caution should be applied before
using
explanatory memoranda to inform the interpretation of tax laws.
However, both parties before us invoked explanatory
memoranda in
support of their competing interpretation arguments and the practice
of using explanatory memoranda to identify the
purpose of revenue
statutes is well established.
[52]
It is therefore appropriate to have regard to the 2008 explanatory
memorandum to identify the purpose of the 2008 Amendment.
[69]
To sum up: the wording of paragraph 80(2) shows that the
provision applies the conduit principle only to the first beneficiary
trust in a multi tiered trust structure. It is not
reasonably possible to interpret paragraph 80(2) to allow the
conduit principle to run through a multi tiered trust structure
to attribute liability for capital gains tax in respect of
the
disposal of an asset to a beneficiary beyond the first beneficiary of
the trust that realised the capital gain by disposing
of that asset.
The legislative history of paragraph 80(2) and the 2008
memorandum both confirm that paragraph 80(2)
was amended into
its present form for the purpose of preventing the conduit principle
operating through multiple discretionary
trusts in a tiered trust
structure. Paragraph 80(2) must be interpreted
accordingly.
[70]
The reasoning above interprets the relevant provisions of the
ITA in their form during the 2014 to 2016 tax years without recourse
to the 2020 amendment of section 25B of the ITA. Thistle’s
retrospectivity concerns about the Supreme Court
of Appeal
judgment are accordingly not relevant to this interpretation.
The
second judgment
[71]
My Colleague, Bilchitz AJ, takes issue with my
interpretation of paragraph 80(2). In his judgment (the
second judgment)
he raises three different concerns with my
interpretation of paragraph 80(2). First, the second
judgment invokes the
contra fiscum
(presumption that law
is not unjust, inequitable or unreasonable) rule of statutory
interpretation. Second, it suggests that
the interpretation
adopted above is premised on an irrational distinction between the
operation of the conduit principle in relation
to capital gains
distributed through multi tiered trust structures and the
operation of the conduit principle in relation
to all other
forms of income distributed through multi tiered trust
structures. Finally, the second judgment suggests
that this
interpretation flies in the face of the robust common sense upon
which the conduit principle rests. I respond
to each of
these concerns in turn.
[72]
The second
judgment presents the
contra
fiscum
rule
as “
based
upon the idea that no tax can be imposed upon a subject of the
[s]tate without words in legislation clearly evincing an intention
to
lay a burden on him or her”.
[53]
Having regard to this foundation of the
contra
fiscum
rule,
I have doubts as to whether it is even relevant to the present case.
The rule
applies
to the interpretation of fiscal statutes to determine whether a
particular type of income or activity is subject to tax
under the
statute. It is not designed to answer questions as to which
taxpayer is going to be held liable for a tax that
is unambiguously
imposed by the statute. The present case falls into the latter
category, not the former category.
There is no debate whether
the capital gain realised by the disposal of assets by Zenprop should
be subject to capital gains tax.
The question is whether
Thistle or the beneficiaries should be held liable for capital gains
tax on the amount in question.
[73]
Even assuming that
the
contra
fiscum
rule
is applicable to the
present dispute, it would not, in my view, assist Thistle. This
rule
is not a rule of
statutory interpretation that applies to override ordinary principles
of statutory interpretation. It is
a presumption of statutory
interpretation that applies only where ambiguity in fiscal
legislation cannot be resolved by the ordinary
methods of statutory
interpretation. This has been confirmed most recently by the
Supreme Court of Appeal in
Telkom
,
[54]
with which the second judgment takes issue. It was, in fact,
also confirmed by the Supreme Court of Appeal in
NST Ferrochrome
,
[55]
a case which the second judgment apparently seeks to enlist in
support of a stronger application of the
contra
fiscum
rule.
This is clear from the very passage of
NST Ferrochrome
relied
upon in the second judgment,
[56]
when that passage is read in its full context:
“
Where
there is doubt as to the meaning of a statutory provision which
imposes a burden, it is well established that the doubt is
to be
resolved by construing the provision in a way which is more
favourable to the subject, provided of course the provision is
reasonably capable of that construction. (See, for example,
Fundstrust
(Pty) Ltd (in Liquidation) v Van Deventer
1997
(1) SA 710
(A) at 735G-H;
Willis
Faber Enthoven (Pty) Ltd v Receiver of Revenue and Another
[1991] ZASCA 163
;
1992 (4) SA 202
(A) at
216C.)
But,
where any uncertainty in a statutory provision can be resolved by an
examination of the language used in its context, there
is no rule of
interpretation which requires that effect be given to a construction
which is found not to be the correct one merely
because that
construction would be less onerous on the subject
.”
[57]
(Emphasis added.)
[74]
For the reasons I have set out above, there is no ambiguity in
the meaning of paragraph 80(2) of the sort that would allow
recourse to the
contra fiscum
rule. The meaning of
paragraph 80(2) since the 2008 Amendment is clear when the
language of the provision is interpreted
in the context of the ITA as
a whole and having regard to the clear purpose of the 2008 Amendment.
[75]
It is correct that the interpretation that I have adopted
above creates a distinction between the operation of the
conduit principle
under paragraph 80(2) in relation to
capital gains distributed through multi tiered trust
structures and the operation
of the conduit principle under
section 25B in relation to all other forms of income distributed
through multi tiered
trust structures to the ultimate
beneficiary that receives the income in the year of assessment.
During the hearing, counsel
for SARS was invited to explain the
purpose served by such a distinction but he did not take up this
invitation.
[76]
The second
judgment suggests
that as
SARS failed to offer an explanation for the distinction, “the
construction of the provision proposed by [SARS] would
render the
provision irrational and arbitrary”.
[58]
This is unfair to
SARS. Thistle did not allege that if paragraph 80(2) was
interpreted to apply the conduit principle
to capital gains
differently to the manner in which section 25B applied the
conduit principle to all other forms of income,
this differential
treatment would be irrational or otherwise unconstitutional. As
a result, the issue of why section 25B
and paragraph 80(2)
applied the conduit principle differently was not canvassed on
the papers. SARS was never challenged
on the papers to produce
evidence to show that there is a rational basis for this
differentiation as between income and capital
gains, and simple trust
structures and multi tiered trust structures. That being
the case, we cannot conclude that the
distinction is irrational
simply because counsel for SARS failed to offer an explanation for
the distinction at the hearing.
At most we can conclude that
counsel had understandably failed to prepare for a question on an
issue that was not raised on the
pleadings, and was therefore unable
to answer that question on the spur of the moment in the hearing.
[77]
There may well be
a rational basis for distinguishing between “ordinary”
income and capital gains when it comes to the
application of the
conduit principle to multi tiered trusts. For
example, the distinction may serve to limit trustees’
capacity
to avoid capital gains tax in multi tiered tax structures by
making targeted distributions through the structure
to “net
off” capital losses in the multi tiered trust structure
against capital gains in that structure.
Little point is served
by speculating further in this regard. The rationality of the
distinction was not canvassed on the
papers (or even in the
arguments). It cannot now be invoked by this Court as the basis
for an interpretation judgment.
[59]
[78]
Finally, I take
issue with the proposition that robust common sense requires full
application of the conduit principle to all situations.
To the
extent that the conduit principle rests on robust common sense,
it does not assist Thistle at all. As I have
pointed out above,
the Commonwealth and South African cases show that the
conduit principle was developed to address two separate
concerns
of “common sense” in the context of tax statutes that did
not address these issues directly.
[60]
The first was a concern to subject the true beneficial owner of
particular income to taxation on that income. The second
was a
concern to protect legislative choices in respect of the favourable
or prejudicial income tax treatment of particular categories
of
income.
[79]
Absent provisions
in the ITA dealing with the application of the conduit principle to
the taxation of capital gains realised by
the disposal of assets by a
trust, neither of these concerns would have assisted Thistle, which
is a discretionary trust.
The authorities on the conduit
principle consistently refused to apply the principle to the
distributions from a discretionary
trust to its beneficiaries because
the beneficiaries of the discretionary trust were held not to be the
true beneficial owners
of amounts that vested in the discretionary
trust before being distributed to the beneficiaries.
[61]
[80]
Moreover, as pointed out above, the present
case does not involve any need to protect legislative choices in
respect of the favourable
tax treatment of particular types of
income. The only legislative choice that appears to be relevant
in the present case
is the legislative choice to tax the capital
gains of
inter vivos
trusts
at twice the rate of the capital gains of individuals. That
legislative choice is one which, absent the provisions
of
paragraph 80(2), would have militated strongly against any
application of the conduit principle to capital gains tax.
[81]
For these reasons, I am not persuaded by the second judgment
to change my interpretation of paragraph 80(2). The
concerns
raised in the second judgment appear to me to be misplaced.
The appeal must fail.
The
cross appeal
[82]
The dismissal of Thistle’s appeal raises SARS’
claim to understatement penalties and the conditional application for
leave to cross appeal.
Jurisdiction
[83]
The conditional
cross appeal engages this Court’s general jurisdiction.
The phrase “
bona
fide
inadvertent
error” in section 222 of the TAA is open to different
plausible interpretations.
[62]
As a result, the dispute over the correct interpretation raises an
arguable point of law. This point of law is of obvious
public
importance, because it will affect how SARS and the courts approach
the imposition of understatement penalties in thousands
of future tax
cases. It will also affect the attitude that SARS takes to
individual taxpayers who understate their income
in even more cases
that do not reach the level of disputes before the Tax Court.
Leave to appeal in the
cross appeal
[84]
Notwithstanding the public importance of determining the
proper interpretation of section 222, it is not in the interests
of
justice to grant leave to appeal.
[85]
If this Court is to hand down a judgment on the meaning of
“
bona fide
inadvertent error” in section 222,
it will effectively have to do so sitting as the court of first and
last instance
in relation to this issue. The Tax Court did
not reach the issue of penalties, because it upheld Thistle’s
case
on the merits. The Supreme Court of Appeal did
not reach the issue of penalties, because SARS did not argue the
issue and was understood to have conceded the issue.
[86]
It is undesirable
for this Court to have to determine a legal point of public
importance in a matter where it has no reasoned judgment
on the issue
from the preceding courts.
[63]
If SARS had a strong case in respect of its claim for penalties in
this matter, it may nevertheless have been in the interests
of
justice for this Court to entertain that claim, but SARS has no
sustainable case for penalties.
[87]
As pointed out
above, SARS pins its case for the penalties which it claims to
item (iii), alternatively item (ii) of the
table in
section 223 of the TAA. These are the categories of “[n]o
reasonable grounds for ‘tax position’
taken” and
“[r]easonable care not taken in completing return”. SARS
bears the onus of proving the facts
that would bring the
understatement of Thistle within either of these categories.
[64]
It has no reasonable prospects of discharging this onus.
[88]
In respect of item (iii), the tax position taken by
Thistle in relation to the conduit principle was one taken on
legal
advice. It may have been a tax position that this Court
has found to be incorrect, but it cannot be said to be a tax position
which Thistle had no reasonable grounds to take. The tax
position was not just reasonable, it was a tax position that was
upheld by the Tax Court in a reasoned judgment that engaged with
the conduit principle and the relevant provisions of
the ITA.
To his credit, counsel for SARS declined to submit that there were no
reasonable grounds for the Tax Court
to have reached the
conclusion that it did.
[89]
In relation to
item (ii), SARS argues that although Thistle was advised on its
tax position, the advice Thistle received pointed
out that SARS held
a contrary view. On this basis, SARS argues that if Thistle had
taken reasonable care in completing its
return, it would have ignored
the advice given to it and followed the stated SARS position which
that advice expressly considered
and rejected. This argument is
based on the proposition that no taxpayer can act reasonably on
advice that differs from SARS’
statements of its interpretation
of tax legislation. The argument would elevate SARS to the
status of an authority that can
decree the only reasonable
interpretations of tax legislation. It is an untenable
argument. In
Marshall
,
[65]
SARS advanced a similar argument in relation to the relevance of an
interpretation note it had issued to explain its view on an
issue of
VAT law. This Court rejected that argument in emphatic terms:
“
Missing
from this reformulation is any explicit mention of a further
fundamental contextual change, that from legislative supremacy
to
constitutional democracy. Why should a unilateral practice of
one part of the executive arm of government play a role
in the
determination of the reasonable meaning to be given to a statutory
provision? It might conceivably be justified where
the practice
is evidence of an impartial application of a custom recognised by all
concerned, but not where the practice is unilaterally
established by
one of the litigating parties. In those circumstances it is
difficult to see what advantage evidence of the
unilateral practice
will have for the objective and independent interpretation by the
courts of the meaning of legislation, in
accordance with
constitutionally compliant precepts. It is best avoided.”
[66]
[90]
It follows that SARS’ understatement penalties claim
will fail on simple factual grounds irrespective of how this Court
may
determine the meaning of “
bona fide
inadvertent
error”. In the circumstances it is not in the interests
of justice for this Court to sit as court of first
and last instance
to determine a legal issue that will have no bearing on the outcome
of the appeal. Leave to appeal must
therefore be refused in the
conditional counter application.
Costs
[91]
In
Marshall
,
this Court applied the
Biowatch
[67]
principle in favour of a taxpayer who raised constitutional issues in
the context of an application for leave to appeal that did
not have
good prospects of success.
[68]
In the present matter, Thistle has advanced arguments of substance,
even if they have not been accepted in this judgment.
One of
the issues raised by Thistle was a constitutional issue relating to
retrospectivity of statutes and the judgment of the
Supreme Court
of Appeal. In view of my conclusions, I have found it
unnecessary to address that constitutional
issue, but I do not
suggest that Thistle acted frivolously in raising it. In the
circumstances,
Biowatch
applies in favour of
Thistle and it should not be ordered to pay the costs of the appeal.
[92]
Biowatch
does not apply in favour of SARS because it is
an organ of state. SARS must accordingly pay the costs of the
cross appeal.
Those costs will include the costs of two
counsel.
Order
[93]
The following order is made:
1.
The application for leave to appeal is granted.
2.
The appeal is dismissed.
3.
There is no order as to costs in the appeal.
4.
The conditional application for leave to cross appeal
is
dismissed.
5.
The respondent is ordered to pay the applicant’s
costs in the
cross appeal, including the costs of two counsel.
BILCHITZ AJ
(Madlanga J concurring):
[94]
I have had the
pleasure of reading the judgment authored by my
Colleague Chaskalson AJ (first judgment). The first
judgment analyses the language of paragraph 80(2) of the
Eighth Schedule of the Income Tax Act
[69]
(ITA) and finds that it, unambiguously, admits of only one
interpretation – that, in relation to capital gains tax, the
conduit principle does not apply throughout a multi-tier trust
structure and capital gains are taxable once distributed to
a
second-tier trust. The first judgment reasons that this
interpretation is supported by the text of the provision as well
as
an explanatory memorandum released by Parliament relating to the
relevant amendments to the legislation in 2008.
I,
unfortunately, cannot agree with the approach my Colleague adopts to
the interpretation of this paragraph. The text, purpose,
context and presumptions of statutory interpretation require
construing the provision to give full effect to the conduit principle
such that capital gains are taxed in the hands of the ultimate
beneficiaries. That interpretation does not arbitrarily block
the application of the conduit at the second tier trust or
distinguish between capital gains and other taxable amounts without
any good reason.
[95]
This case raises important questions surrounding the
interpretation of fiscal legislation in the constitutional era.
The second
interpretation that I argue for is to be preferred in
light of the interpretive approach adopted by our courts to statutory
interpretation
in the constitutional era – for this reason, I
proceed as follows. First, I outline the key principles
relating to
statutory interpretation and emphasise the important
requirement that, where there is ambiguity, statutes should be
interpreted
to preserve their constitutionality. Secondly, I
indicate how this requirement interacts with the principles that this
Court
has developed in relation to the rule of law. In
particular, I seek to show how statutory provisions should be
interpreted,
where reasonably possible to do so, to avoid rendering
them arbitrary, or irrational – and, in a manner that discloses
a
legitimate purpose and that conforms with common sense.
Thirdly, I seek to show how these principles interact with the
contra fiscum
rule in the constitutional era.
Lastly, I apply these principles to paragraph 80(2) of the
Eighth Schedule of the ITA.
I find that there are significant
ambiguities in the drafting of the text of this paragraph and that
the purpose and context largely
support the second interpretation.
Given the existence of two reasonably possible interpretations, the
one I prefer is that
interpretation which construes the provision in
a manner that is rational and non arbitrary – and, in
accordance with
the
contra fiscum
rule, in favour of the
taxpayer. I rely on my Colleague’s outline of the
background to this dispute, litigation history
and the submissions of
the parties.
Statutory
interpretation in the constitutional era
[96]
Given this case
concerns the interpretation of key statutory provisions, it is
important to commence with the approach our courts
have adopted in
this regard. Detailed consideration was given to the question
of statutory interpretation in
Endumeni
,
[70]
where Wallis JA wrote the following:
“
Interpretation
is the process of attributing meaning to the words used in a
document, be it legislation, some other statutory instrument,
or
contract, having regard to the context provided by reading the
particular provision or provisions in the light of the document
as a
whole and the circumstances attendant upon its coming into
existence. Whatever the nature of the document, consideration
must be given to the language used in the light of the ordinary rules
of grammar and syntax; the context in which the provision
appears;
the apparent purpose to which it is directed and the material known
to those responsible for its production. Where
more than one
meaning is possible each possibility must be weighed in the light of
all these factors.”
[71]
[97]
The approach
adopted in
Endumeni
does not specifically
engage with the constitutional context in which statutory
interpretation must take place.
[72]
Langa DP gave expression to this shift when he wrote the
following in
Hyundai
:
[73]
“
The
purport and objects of the Constitution find expression in section 1
which lays out the fundamental values which the Constitution
is
designed to achieve. The Constitution requires that judicial
officers read legislation, where possible, in ways which
give effect
to its fundamental values.
.
. .
Accordingly,
judicial officers must prefer interpretations of legislation that
fall within constitutional bounds over those that
do not, provided
that such an interpretation can be reasonably ascribed to the
section.”
[74]
[98]
More recently, in
Cool Ideas
,
[75]
my Colleague Majiedt J brought these various strands of the
approach to constitutional interpretation together when he wrote:
“
A
fundamental tenet of statutory interpretation is that the words in a
statute must be given their ordinary grammatical meaning,
unless to
do so would result in an absurdity. There are three important
interrelated riders to this general principle, namely:
(a)
that statutory provisions should always be interpreted purposively;
(b)
the relevant statutory provision must be properly contextualised; and
(c)
all statutes must be construed consistently with the Constitution,
that is, where
reasonably possible, legislative provisions ought to
be interpreted to preserve their constitutional validity. This
proviso
to the general principle is closely related to the purposive
approach referred to in (a).”
[76]
Statutory
interpretation and the fundamental value of the rule of law
[99]
As
is evident from the above quotations, the constitutional context in
South Africa has fundamentally shifted the manner in
which
legislation must be interpreted by judges. Statutes must be
construed in such a way so as to preserve their constitutionality
which, for instance, affects the purpose of a provision that may be
considered to be legitimate. As Langa DP wrote in
Hyundai
(quoted
above), a central injunction is for judicial officers to interpret
legislation in light of the fundamental values of the
Constitution.
Section 39(2) of the Constitution requires a focus on
interpretation in light of the spirit, purport and
objects of the
Bill of Rights. However, it remains of great importance to
interpret legislation in light of other fundamental
values too.
[77]
In the context of this case, in particular, I draw attention to the
fundamental value of the rule of law contained in section 1(c)
of the Constitution.
[78]
[100]
As my Colleague
Chaskalson AJ eloquently writes, the rule of law requires that
law be certain, predictable and allow individuals
to organise their
affairs around it. That, in turn, requires that the law be
accessible and as clear as possible in order
that people can easily
ascertain what the law requires of them.
[79]
[101]
In addition to
these elements, is the importance of rationality.
[80]
Sadly, Ackermann J recently passed away – in tribute to
his legacy, I quote here his succinct capturing of the
nature of the
constitutional state he envisaged South Africa as becoming in
Makwanyane
:
[81]
“
We
have moved from a past characterised by much which was arbitrary and
unequal in the operation of the law to a present and a future
in a
constitutional State where State action must be such that it is
capable of being analysed and justified rationally.
The idea of
the constitutional State presupposes a system whose operation can be
rationally tested against or in terms of the law.
Arbitrariness, by its very nature, is dissonant with these core
concepts of our new constitutional order.”
[82]
[102]
Parliament, as the
primary legislative organ of a representative democracy, is required
to act rationally. As this Court held
in
Law
Society of South Africa
:
[83]
“
The
constitutional requirement of rationality is an incident of the rule
of law, which in turn is a founding value of our Constitution.
The
rule of law requires that all public power must be sourced in law.
This means that [s]tate actors exercise public
power within the
formal bounds of the law. Thus, when making laws, the
legislature is constrained to act rationally. It
may not act
capriciously or arbitrarily. It must only act to achieve a
legitimate government purpose. Thus, there must
be a rational
nexus between the legislative scheme and the pursuit of a legitimate
government purpose.”
[84]
[103]
As is evident from the above quotation, the requirement to act
rationally involves the following components: (a) the Legislature
must not act arbitrarily; (b) a legislative provision must seek
to achieve a legitimate government purpose; and (c) there
must
be a nexus between the legislative provision and the legitimate
government purpose. These requirements in my view, are
not only
applicable when challenging the validity of legislation, but also to
the interpretation thereof. How then do these
requirements
interact with the duty on judicial officers to interpret legislation
so as to preserve constitutional validity?
[104]
The logical
consequence of this discussion is that, where it is reasonably
possible to do so, provisions in legislation should be
interpreted so
as to be rational and non arbitrary. That requires
legislation to be construed in a way that is consonant
with a
legitimate government purpose, and demonstrative of a nexus between
the legislative means adopted and its purpose.
Litigants are
thus subject to a burden to demonstrate in what way the
interpretation they propose construes the provision in such
a way
that it is rational and non-arbitrary. That also conforms with
their duty to engage with the purpose behind a legislative
provision
when advancing an interpretation thereof. Where there are two
possible interpretations, preference should be given
to an
interpretation of legislation that renders provisions non arbitrary
and rational rather than one that simply upholds
a naked exercise of
legislative power. In short, in the constitutional era,
legislation should be interpreted to accord with
the requirements
that this Court has articulated in relation to the rule of law.
That too harmonises the constitutional
imperatives discussed above
with the well known common law presumption that statutory law is
not unjust, inequitable or unreasonable.
[85]
Contra
fiscum rule, the rule of law and statutory interpretation
[105]
This approach also
accords with what has become known as the
contra fiscum
rule
(that legislation must be interpreted against the fiscus). The
rule originated from the idea that legislation giving
effect to
taxation involves the exercise of significant power over individuals
– as a result, just like in criminal matters,
the Legislature
has a duty to ensure that the law is clear and those subject to the
law understand what is required of them.
Where rules are
ambiguous, they should be interpreted in favour of the taxpayer.
[86]
As held in
Glen
Anil Development Corporation
,
[87]
the
contra fiscum
rule is “but a
specific application of the general rule that all legislation
imposing a burden upon the subject should, in
the case of an
ambiguity, be construed in favour of the subject”.
[88]
[106]
The reasoning
related to the rule of law provides a strong foundation for this rule
in the sphere of taxation. There is nothing
constitutionally
suspect about taxation per se: indeed taxation is a feature of
all societies and is a duty individuals owe
both to the state – to
ensure it can perform its functions – and to each other.
In addition to their
important social function, tax laws
significantly affect how individuals and juristic entities organise
their economic affairs.
As such, they must be expressed clearly
and in a manner that enables individuals and juristic entities to
follow them.
[89]
This
idea was expressed by Majiedt JA (as he was then) and Davis AJA
in the minority judgment in
Daikin
as follows:
“
In
the case of fiscal legislation, an appropriate standard is the
contra fiscum
rule
which is based upon the idea that no tax can be imposed upon a
subject of the [s]tate without words in legislation clearly
evincing
an intention to lay a burden on him or her.”
[90]
[107]
This
statement follows an earlier recognition of the rule in
NST Ferrochrome
.
[91]
There, the Supreme Court of Appeal stated:
“
Where
there is doubt as to the meaning of a statutory provision which
imposes a burden, it is well established that the doubt is
to be
resolved by construing the provision in a way which is more
favourable to the subject, provided of course the provision is
reasonably capable of that construction.”
[92]
[108]
In the more recent
case of
Telkom
,
[93]
the Supreme Court of Appeal also recognised the
existence of the
contra fiscum
rule in South African law
but narrowed its scope significantly. After having quoted the
above dictum from
NST Ferrochrome
,
it then went on to approve of a quotation from a Master’s
dissertation. That quotation, recognised the consistency
of the
rule with the values of the Constitution. However, it also
stated the following: “to the extent that following
analysis, a
purposive approach ultimately yields two constructions which are both
equally plausible, it is submitted that the
contra fiscum
rule should apply and the
court should ultimately conclude in favour of the taxpayer”.
[94]
The requirement here of equal plausibility is in tension with
the statements of the rule that simply requires an interpretation
to
be reasonably possible before it is applied. Moreover, it is
difficult to apply: it will be a rare case where judges will
deem two
interpretations equally plausible.
[109]
There are also different axes upon which plausibility is
measured: one interpretation may accord better with the manner in
which
a provision is phrased; another may give better effect to the
context and yet another may better accord with its purpose. It
may be that all are not equally plausible but each may be a
reasonably possible interpretation of the statute. The standard
of a “reasonably possible” construction aligns with the
dicta in
Hyundai
and
Cool Ideas
quoted above. It
is also, in my view, more consistent with the value of the rule of
law in requiring Parliament to ensure
that fiscal legislation that
imposes burdens on subjects is clear, rational and capable of being
followed.
[110]
There is also no
excuse for arbitrary rules in the realm of taxation. Whilst the
Legislature no doubt wishes to raise revenue,
specific provisions and
distinctions must clearly be capable of justification in realising a
legitimate government purpose and
being a non-arbitrary and
justifiable means to achieve that purpose. Indeed, in
Prinsloo
,
[95]
the Court held as follows regarding the requirement of rationality
when differentiation is made between individuals and groups:
“
In
regard to mere differentiation the constitutional state is expected
to act in a rational manner. It should not regulate
in an
arbitrary manner or manifest ‘naked preferences’ that
serve no legitimate governmental purpose, for that would
be
inconsistent with the rule of law and the fundamental premises of the
constitutional state.”
[96]
Interpreting
paragraph 80(2) of the Eighth Schedule
[111]
I agree with my
Colleague Chaskalson AJ’s analysis that, in the context of
capital gains tax, paragraph 80(2) of
the Eighth Schedule
(as it read between 2014 and 2016) is the applicable provision to
determine in whose hands a capital gain
must be taxed. It is
hard to understand why this provision would be necessary if
section 25B were directly applicable.
At the same time, as
will be discussed further below, where reasonably possible to do so,
provisions in tax legislation should
be interpreted harmoniously with
one another and in a holistic manner, rather than be construed to
embody internally inconsistent
legal positions.
[97]
[112]
The question then
becomes whether paragraph 80(2) is clear and no interpretation
other than the one my Colleague arrives at
is reasonably possible.
In my view there is significant ambiguity in paragraph 80(2)
when construed in light of the
applicable principles and how it
applies to multi tier trust structures. That ambiguity is
borne out by the differences
between SARS and the legal opinions of
senior tax advisors relied on by the applicant as well as academic
commentary on the provision
which is divided on its interpretation
and implications.
[98]
I
now outline the relevant provisions and then demonstrate why a
different interpretation to that adopted in the first judgment
should
be afforded to the provision.
[113]
Paragraph 80(1) – as it read between 2014 and 2016 –
was worded as follows:
“
Subject
to paragraphs 68, 69, 71 and 72, where a capital gain is determined
in respect of the vesting by a trust of an asset in
a trust
beneficiary . . . who is a resident, that gain—
(a)
must be disregarded for the purpose of calculating the aggregate
capital gain or aggregate
capital loss of the trust; and
(b)
must be taken into account for the purpose of calculating the
aggregate capital gain
or aggregate capital loss of the beneficiary
to whom that asset was so disposed of.”
[114]
Paragraph 80(2) – as it read between 2014 and 2016 –
stated the following:
“
[W]here
a
capital
gain
is
determined
in respect of the disposal of an asset by
a
trust
in a year of assessment during which
a
trust beneficiary . . . has a vested interest or acquires a vested
interest (including an interest caused by the exercise of a
discretion) in that capital gain but not in the asset, the disposal
of which gave rise to the capital gain, the whole or the portion
of
the
capital
gain
so
vested—
(a)
must be disregarded for the purpose of calculating the aggregate
capital gain or aggregate
capital loss of
the trust
; and
(b)
must be taken into account for the purpose of calculating the
aggregate capital gain
or aggregate capital loss of the beneficiary
in whom the gain vests.” (Emphasis added.)
The
conduit principle
[115]
It was common
cause that these provisions are clearly designed to apply the
conduit principle to capital gains tax. The
first judgment
has offered a clear and learned exposition of the background and
elements of the conduit principle – it does
not, however,
engage much with the reasoning and purpose behind the principle.
Armstrong
[99]
dealt with a company distributing non-taxable dividends to a trust
which then distributed them to the main beneficiary. It
was
argued that the beneficiary had no direct legal relationship with the
company, and so the funds received no longer retained
the character
of dividends and hence were taxable. Stratford CJ found
that the trust was in fact just a “conduit
pipe” to the
beneficiary and the dividends retained their tax exempt
character. In making this finding, he essentially
identified
two rationales. The first was to prevent double-taxation given
that the company had already been taxed before
distributing the
dividends.
[100]
The
second was that “in the truest sense the beneficiary derives
his income from the company, for that income fluctuates
with the
fortunes of the company and the Trustee can neither increase nor
diminish it, he is a mere ‘conduit pipe’”.
[101]
That rationale essentially considers the nature of the intermediary
trust as a central consideration in applying the principle.
[116]
That rationale was
elaborated upon by the Appellate Division in
Rosen.
[102]
In that case, the Appellate Division had to deal with a
distribution of dividends from a discretionary trust to a
beneficiary.
Trollip JA articulated the conduit principle
as follows—
“
In
effect the Legislature in those provisions has adopted a principle
that can be conveniently termed the conduit principle: the
registered
shareholder is regarded as a mere conduit-pipe for passing the
dividends on to the deemed shareholder, the true recipient
of them,
in whose hands they consequently retain their identity and character
as dividends.”
[103]
[117]
Trollip JA went on to articulate the rationale behind the
conduit principle as follows:
“
The
[conduit] principle rests upon sound robust common sense; for, by
treating the intervening trustee as a mere administrative
conduit
pipe, it has regard to the substance rather than the form of the
distribution and receipt of the dividends.”
[104]
[118]
Elaborating upon
this reasoning, I would add that the substantive reasoning and common
sense involved, emerge from considering the
nature of trusts.
The Trust Property Control Act
[105]
defines a trust as follows:
“‘
trust’
means the arrangement through which the ownership in property of one
person is by virtue of a trust instrument made
over or bequeathed—
(a)
to another person, the trustee, in whole or in part, to be
administered or disposed
of according to the provisions of the trust
instrument for the benefit of the person or class of persons
designated in the trust
instrument or for the achievement of the
object stated in the trust instrument; or
(b)
to the beneficiaries designated in the trust instrument, which
property is placed
under the control of another person, the trustee,
to be administered or disposed of according to the provisions of the
trust instrument
for the benefit of the person or class of persons
designated in the trust instrument or for the achievement of the
object stated
in the trust instrument,
but
does not include the case where the property of another is to be
administered by any person as executor, tutor or curator in
terms of
the provisions of the Administration of Estates Act, 1965 (Act
66 of 1965).”
[119]
What is
immediately evident from this definition is that a trust holds
property for the benefit of another person or class of persons.
That fundamental dimension of a trust emerges as well from academic
commentary on the common law. Hahlo, in his seminal article,
for instance, writes that “the characteristic feature of the
trust is . . . the separation between the control which ownership
gives and the benefits of ownership”.
[106]
In addition, De Waal writes that “[i]n the most general
sense, a trust is an arrangement under which one person
is bound to
hold or administer property on behalf of another person or for an
impersonal object and not for his own benefit”.
[107]
The conduit principle essentially recognises this point through
embodying the position that, if particular sums of money
flow through
a trust, as long as they are distributed to the beneficiaries in the
same tax year, they are taxed in the hands of
the beneficiaries.
This is logical – and prioritises substance over form –
in the sense that a trust does not
hold the funds it receives for its
own
purposes but for the
purposes of its beneficiaries. The intervening trusts also add
no value to the funds received.
The fact that funds pass
through one trust or several trusts is irrelevant to who in fact
benefits from those funds. Once
a trust distributes the funds
to a beneficiary, it is the beneficiary in whom those funds vest and
who should be liable for taxation.
[120]
Contrary to the reasoning in the first judgment, this
rationale applies equally to a vesting trust and a discretionary
trust where
a distribution is made in the same tax year. In a
vesting trust, the capital gain will be vested in the beneficiaries
once
it is realised. In a discretionary trust, the trustees
will have a discretion whether to vest the capital gain in the
beneficiaries.
If they fail to do so in a particular tax year,
clearly they retain the asset in that trust and it must be taxed in
that trust
in that year. If, however, they distribute the
capital gain in that tax year to the beneficiary, then they do not
hold onto
the asset and vest the gain in the actual beneficiary of
the trust. That is what happened in the
Rosen
case and
why Trollip JA referred to the conduit principle as giving
effect to the substance rather than the form of the distribution.
In the context of this case, as paragraph 80(2) indicates, what is
important is for a beneficiary to have a vested interest in
the
capital gain – it expressly includes an interest “caused
by the exercise of a discretion”.
[121]
Whilst the conduit principle was developed by our courts in
the past, the Legislature specifically chose to embody the principle
in section 25B of the ITA. When capital gains tax was
introduced into South African law, a specific provision –
paragraph
80 – applied the conduit principle to capital gains.
There was no compulsion on the legislature to do so – it
could
have provided that capital gains would be taxed in the hands of the
entity which disposes of an asset and realises the capital
gain.
The context in which paragraph 80(2) of the Eighth Schedule
must be interpreted is thus one in which the
Legislature specifically
chose to apply the conduit principle to capital gains tax.
It is thus respectful of the legislative
intent to apply that
principle properly.
[122]
The difficulty that has arisen in this case concerns the
application of the conduit principle in the context of
multi-tier
trust structures. The applicant contends that
intervening trusts remain conduits so long as distributions to
beneficiaries
happen in the same tax year as the capital gain arrives
in the account of the intervening trust. The respondent,
however,
contends that the conduit is effectively blocked at the
first beneficiary to whom the capital gain is distributed – in
the
case of a multi-tier trust structure, that would render the
second-tier trust liable for taxation on capital gains received.
Their argument is rooted in a construction of the language of
paragraph 80(2).
Text
[123]
I do not consider paragraph 80(2) to be a model of clear legal
drafting: difficulties in interpretation arise from the use of the
passive voice, indefinite articles, lack of punctuation and
complexity of the drafting. There are two reasonable
constructions
of the provision: the first, which is the holding of
the first judgment, requires the capital gain to be determined
in the
same trust that disposes of the asset. The trust
referred to in the first line of the provision thus is the first-tier
trust
and it is the trust referred to in sub-paragraph (a). The
beneficiary would on this reading be the second-tier trust.
This interpretation focuses on reading the words “disposal of
an asset” together with “by a trust”, thus
linking
the capital gain with the disposal of the asset. The conduit
pipe would be blocked once a distribution is made to
a second-tier
trust and taxation on capital gains in multi-tier structures would
take place in relation to second tier trusts
and not the
ultimate beneficiaries.
[124]
In my view, a second plausible reading is to see the provision
as applying to any trust – including a second-tier
trust – which receives a capital gain from the disposal of an
asset. If that trust distributes the capital gain to
a
beneficiary, it is only the ultimate beneficiary that is taxed.
That reading requires linking the word “determined”
in
the first line with “by a trust” which can be any trust
(first, second or third-tier) which, in its financials,
reports on
such a capital gain. Put differently, “determined”
and “by a trust” would link up thus:
“where a
capital gain is determined . . . by a trust”. Whether the
determination is by a trust in Zenprop’s
position (the
first-tier), Thistle’s position (the second-tier) or by one
further down in the tiered trust structure, it
will still be “
in
respect of the disposal of an asset
” as required by
paragraph 80(2). On this reading, the disposal does not
have to be done by the same trust as the
trust in which the gain is
“determined”. This reading appears to me to be
plausible even without the insertion
of parenthetical commas after
the word “determined” and the word “asset”.
[125]
The words “disposal of an asset”, in this context,
are critical both to explain how the capital gain arose but, also
importantly, in their statutory context, to distinguish
paragraph 80(2) from paragraph 80(1). The latter provision
regulates circumstances where a trust vests an asset in a beneficiary
and acquires a capital gain in that process; whereas paragraph
80(2)
addresses circumstances where a capital gain is realised from the
disposal of an asset and distributed to a beneficiary.
The
latter provision is simply not clear as to whether the disposal of
the asset has to be by the same trust that made the capital
gain or
whether the reference to disposal of an asset was added by the
2008 Amendment simply to explain the circumstances
in which the
provision applies and distinguish the provision from
paragraph 80(1). The indefinite article before the
first
use of the word “trust” confirms the ambiguity relating
to which trust in a multi tier structure is being
referenced.
Purpose
[126]
This reading becomes even more plausible when we consider the
purpose of the provision. It is admitted by the respondent that
the goal of the provision is to apply the conduit principle to
capital gains from one trust to the beneficiary of that trust.
The respondent, however, contended that the conduit stops at a
second-tier trust in a multi tier structure. It however,
made no effort on the papers to justify its reading or suggest any
purpose for why the conduit principle should be restricted to
the
second tier in a multi tier structure. During the
oral hearing, when asked, the respondent’s counsel
could not
provide any rational basis for this restriction – indeed, as
indicated above, the very point of the conduit principle
is for tax
to be levied on the ultimate beneficiary. Counsel for the
respondent could also not explain why there is a differentiation
between capital gains tax – where the conduit principle stops
at the second tier trust – and other forms of accruals,
such as dividends and interest, for instance, where it does not.
Without any rationale or purpose suggested, the construction
of the
provision proposed by the respondent would render the provision
irrational and arbitrary.
[127]
This is not merely, as the first judgment finds, an
understandable failure by the respondent’s counsel to respond
to a surprise
question in an oral hearing. Instead, it goes to
the heart of the approach adopted by SARS throughout when approaching
the
interpretation of section 25B and paragraph 80(2).
As was indicated above, a central feature of the approach to
statutory interpretation in the constitutional era is the need to
understand the purpose of a provision and construct the wording
in
that light. Where the respondent makes no effort to demonstrate
how its construction would realise a legitimate purpose,
then it
fails to make out a central dimension of its own case. Without
such a purpose or rationale, the reading advocated
for by a party
becomes arbitrary and irrational.
[128]
Indeed, SARS’ responses to the applicant have been
replete with a statement of its approach without justifying its
stance
in terms of any purpose sought to be achieved by its proposed
interpretation. In its letter disallowing an objection to its
assessment that the second-tier trust was liable for tax, it stated
the following:
“
If
a trust makes a capital gain during the year, and vests it in another
trust, paragraph 80 deems the gain to be made by the
other trust
(beneficiary). However, paragraph 80 does not apply if
this other trust (beneficiary) distributes the gain
to its
beneficiaries. This is due to the fact that the second trust
did not dispose of the asset and did not make the original
capital
gain. The second trust cannot distribute the gain to its
beneficiaries for tax purposes. Even though the beneficiaries
may become entitled to the gain in law, the second trust is still
taxed on the gain.”
[129]
This reasoning
makes little sense when one considers that paragraph 80 is a
legislative encapsulation of the conduit principle.
The whole
point of the principle, as indicated above, is that an intermediary
entity which distributes a gain to a beneficiary
is a mere conduit
and does not hold onto the amount it receives. If we attempt to
apply SARS’ statement to dividends
such as in the cases of
Armstrong
and
Rosen
,
a company obviously generated the dividends and distributed them to a
second trust. If the logic of SARS is to be applied,
then they
should be taxed at the level of the second trust – but,
the conduit principle, that the legislature has
enshrined in statute,
has recognised that they are taxed in the hands of the ultimate
beneficiaries. There is no attempt
to explain why the conduit
should be blocked in relation to capital gains but not in relation to
dividends or interest.
[108]
[130]
The interpretation
I adopt utilises the rationales behind the conduit principle to
understand the meaning of paragraph 80(2).
[109]
As was common cause, the Legislature sought to give effect to the
conduit principle through this provision. Given the
rationale
behind the principle is not to reify intervening trusts but to tax
accruals in the hands of the ultimate beneficiaries,
there is no good
reason why the Legislature should be understood arbitrarily to
restrict the operation of the principle to the
second-tier trust in a
multi-tier trust structure. If, as the first judgment suggests,
the Legislature wished to tax capital
gains at the higher rate
applicable to trusts, it is unclear why it should have legislatively
incorporated the conduit principle
at all. Indeed, had there
been no intermediary trust or the gain vested immediately in the
beneficiaries were Thistle to
have been constituted as a vesting
trust, then the capital gain would have been taxed in the hands of
the beneficiaries.
If the Legislature had wished to tax capital
gains at the higher rate applicable to trusts, then, it failed to
adopt an efficient
means to achieve that end. An interpretation
of the provision rooted in such a purpose would thus fail to construe
the provision
in a manner that meets the constitutional standard of
rationality.
[131]
The first judgment
also speculates that the rationale for distinguishing capital gains
may be to address tax-avoidance strategies
that could be utilised in
complex multi tier trust structures in this regard. As the
first judgment indicates, this
rationale is entirely speculative and
goes beyond the papers – the respondent, which is well placed
to understand the
rationale for the particular legislative provision,
failed to make out even a rudimentary case for what the purpose was
behind
the interpretation it proposed. Moreover, such a
speculative rationale also again fails to explain why the full
application
of the conduit principle only gives rise to tax avoidance
concerns in relation to capital gains: multi-tier trust structures
could
presumably be used to avoid tax in relation to other categories
of monetary accruals.
[110]
It is unclear why the Legislature allows for the application of the
conduit principle at all, if its goal was to counteract
tax avoidance
with this provision.
Context
[132]
Apart from purpose, the interpretive principles adopted by the
courts require an examination of various contextual factors.
Paragraph 80(2) appears in the context of the Eighth Schedule
that deals with capital gains tax. It also co-exists with
section 25B in the ITA. The latter provision, it is common
cause, applies the conduit principle to all other forms of income
throughout a multi-tier trust structure. If we are to construe
the provisions of the Income Tax Act harmoniously, it would
seem that
section 25B and paragraph 80(2) should be interpreted to
reinforce one another, rather than as enshrining different
approaches
to the conduit principle in the same statutory scheme. That is
particularly the case given that there seems to
be no good reason for
interpreting paragraph 80(2) differently.
[133]
Apart from the statutory context, we now also have subsequent
evidence that the relationship between section 25B and paragraph
80(2)
was regarded by the Legislature as being unclear in its
application to multi-tier structures. Indeed, a further
amendment
to section 25B and paragraph 80(2) was given
effect to in 2020. The subsequently amended section 25B
reads
as follows—
“
any
amount (other than an amount of a capital nature which is not
included in gross income or an amount contemplated in paragraph
3B of
the Second Schedule) received by or accrued to or in favour of any
person during any year of assessment in his or her capacity
as a
trustee of the trust, shall, subject to the provisions of section 7,
to the extent to which that amount has been derived for
the immediate
or future benefit of any ascertained beneficiary who has a vested
right to that amount during that year, be deemed
to be an amount
which has accrued to that beneficiary, and to the extent to which
that amount is not so derived, be deemed to be
an amount which has
accrued to that trust.”
[134]
The 2020 amendment to paragraph 80(2) reads as follows—
“
[s]ubject
to paragraphs 64E, 68, 69 and 71, where a trust determines a capital
gain in respect of the disposal of an asset in a
year of assessment
during which a beneficiary of that trust (other than any person
contemplated in paragraph 62 (a) to (e)) who
is a resident has a
vested right or acquires a vested right (including a right created by
the exercise of a discretion) to an amount
derived from that capital
gain but not to the asset disposed of, an amount that is equal to so
much of the amount to which that
beneficiary of that trust is
entitled in terms of that right—
(a)
must be disregarded for the purpose of calculating the aggregate
capital gain or aggregate
capital loss of the trust; and
(b)
must be taken into account as a capital gain for the purpose of
calculating the aggregate
capital gain or aggregate capital loss of
that beneficiary.”
[135]
What is evident from section 25B is that it now expressly
excludes capital gains from the application of the conduit principle
therein.
The language in paragraph 80(2) is also modified
to make it clearer that the conduit is stopped at the immediate
beneficiary
of the trust that disposes of an asset and realises a
capital gain. The amended text of paragraph 80(2) utilises
express
language that identifies the trust disposing the asset as
being the same trust that determines the capital gain. It also
directly links the beneficiary to the trust disposing of the asset.
[136]
The 2020 explanatory memorandum indicates the intention
expressly to exclude section 25B from applying to capital gains,
and
for paragraph 80 to govern capital gains. Whilst it
does not explain the modification of the language in paragraph 80(2),
that amendment happened at the same time as section 25B was altered
and these two sections should be read in harmony with one another.
It is thus clear that the Legislature considered it necessary to
amend the ITA so as to make its intention clear that the conduit
principle be restricted to the immediate beneficiary of the trust
that disposes of an asset and realises a capital gain –
namely,
the second-tier trust in a multi-tier trust structure. The
unavoidable inference is that the prior position was not
clear –
and, indeed, reading section 25B and paragraph 80(2)
harmoniously would have required the full application
of the conduit
principle. It is, in my view, impermissible for this Court
to re write the legislation retrospectively
to cure an ambiguity
in favour of the fiscus rather than the taxpayer – as was held
by the Tax Court.
[137]
Much is made by
the first judgment of the 2008 explanatory memorandum which, it
is claimed, evinces a clear intention for the
conduit to be stopped
at the second tier trust. It seems to me that limited
weight should be placed on such a memorandum:
the Legislature is
duty-bound due by the requirements of the rule of law to ensure that
the legislation it passes is as clear as
possible and enables
individuals to know how to order their affairs. The Legislature
must, in the legislative instrument
itself, say what it means and
cannot cure an ambiguity by relying on an explanatory memorandum.
This is particularly so where
there is very limited treatment of this
issue in the explanatory memorandum. In particular, no
explanation is given in the
2008 explanatory memorandum for the
purpose of limiting the conduit principle or reasons for the
differentiation in this regard
between the taxation of capital gains
and other monetary gains. The memorandum simply asserts the
legal position it seeks
to arrive at without explaining the rationale
for doing so which, ultimately, should be the purpose of an
“explanatory”
memorandum.
[111]
[138]
Indeed, this Court
has, for instance, utilised an explanatory memorandum in
Assign Services
[112]
to ascertain the purpose of legislative provisions rather than the
meaning of the provisions themselves.
[113]
Where an explanatory memorandum fails to articulate the
rationale for a provision but simply asserts an interpretation
of the
statutory provision, the weight to be attached to such a document is
very limited. Reference to such an explanatory memorandum
alone cannot cure an ambiguity in the language of the provision
itself and dislodge the need to interpret legislation in light
of the
applicable interpretive principles and in a manner so as to preserve
its constitutionality.
[139]
As I have indicated, we are required to interpret legislation
in such a way that ensures conformity with the Constitution and its
foundational values. This Court should be hesitant to
adopt an interpretation of legislation that renders sections thereof
arbitrary and involving distinctions that have no rational purpose.
As I have discussed above, the
contra fiscum
rule
requires that fiscal legislation must be clear and, in the event of
an ambiguity, interpreted to favour the tax subject.
We are
thus duty bound in light of the interpretive principles I have
discussed to prefer the interpretation that renders this
legislation
rational, non-arbitrary and in favour of the taxpayer. That
interpretation is the second one I have explicated
that does not
arbitrarily restrict the operation of the conduit principle in the
context of capital gains tax. I have sought
to show why this
interpretation is preferable when the text of paragraph 80(2) is
construed in light of its statutory context
and in relation to its
manifest purpose.
[140]
Apart from the
need to construe legislation in a non-arbitrary and rational manner,
I believe this reasoning also conforms to the
equities involved:
given the lack of clarity of the legislation relating to multi-tier
trust structures, it is unjust and inequitable
retrospectively to
impose a large tax bill on a second-tier trust. Indeed, expert
tax advisors were unable to ascertain its
true meaning (as was
evident from the differing opinions in this case), and academics have
noted the lack of clarity in this regard.
[114]
The Tax Court and the Supreme Court of Appeal
reached completely different conclusions about the applicable
tax
regime. In these circumstances, once again, it is equitable to
adopt an interpretation in favour of the taxpayer.
[141]
For these reasons, had I commanded the majority, I would have
found in favour of the applicant and upheld the appeal. In
these
circumstances, there would be no need to decide the
cross-appeal though I concur with the reasoning of my
Colleague Chaskalson AJ
in that regard.
For the Applicant:
W
Trengove SC, T Emslie SC, C Steinberg SC and M Sibanda
instructed by Werksmans Attorneys
For the Respondent:
M A
Chohan SC and L Kutumela instructed by Madiba Motsai Masitenyane
and Githiri Attorneys
[1]
58 of 1962.
[2]
An
inter
vivos
trust
is a trust
created
during the lifetime of the founder of the trust through a contract
between that founder and the trustee(s) of the trust
who will
administer the trust for the benefit of the beneficiaries. It
is distinguished from a testamentary trust which
is created in terms
of the will of a testator who wants their estate, or a part thereof,
to be administered in trust for beneficiaries
identified in the
will.
[3]
ITA Eighth Schedule paragraph 10(a) prior to amendment by Act 13 of
2016.
[4]
ITA Eighth Schedule paragraph 10(c) prior to amendment by Act 13 of
2016.
[5]
28 of 2011.
[6]
23 of 2020.
[7]
Armstrong
v Commissioner for Inland Revenue
1938
AD 343
at 348-9 (
Armstrong
).
[8]
Secretary
for Inland Revenue v Rosen
[1971]
1 All SA 180
(A);
1971 (1) SA 172
(A) (
Rosen
)
at 188C and 190H 191A.
[9]
Commissioner,
South African Revenue Service v The Thistle Trust
[2022] ZASCA 153
;
2023
(2) SA 120
(SCA) (Supreme Court of Appeal judgment).
[10]
Rosen
above n 8 at 190H-191A.
[11]
Supreme Court of Appeal judgment above n 9 at paras 24-5.
[12]
Milnerton
Estates Ltd v Commissioner, South African Revenue Service
[2018]
ZASCA 155
;
2019 (2) SA 386
(SCA) (
Milnerton
Estates
)
at para 22.
[13]
Supreme Court of Appeal judgment above n 9 at para 21.
[14]
Id at para 29.
[15]
The wording of section 25B of the ITA at the relevant time is
quoted in [3] above.
[16]
The wording of section 26A of the ITA at the relevant time is
quoted in [3] above.
[17]
The 2020 Amendment Act amended
section 25B
to make clear that the deeming provision in section 25B does
not apply to capital gains. That amendment
took effect on
1 January 2021 and thus applied to the 2021 tax year and
subsequent tax years.
[18]
Syme v
Commissioner of Taxes
(Vic)
[1914] UKPCHCA 6
;
[1914] AC 1013
;
(1914) 18 CLR 519
(
Syme
).
[19]
Id at 525-6.
[20]
See for example
Baker
v Archer Shee
[1927]
UKHL 1
;
[1927]
AC 844
(
Baker
)
;
Archer
Shee v Garland
[1930]
UKHL 2
;
[1931] AC 212
(
Garland
);
and
Nelson
v Adamson
[1941]
2 KB 12.
[21]
See for example
Charles
v Federal Commissioner of Taxes
[1954] HCA
16
;
(1954)
90 CLR 598
(
Charles
)
and
Federal
Commissioner of Taxation v Tadcaster Pty Ltd
[1982] WASC 206
;
(1982)
61 FLR 402
(
Tadcaster
).
[22]
See for example
Minister
of National Revenue v Trans
Canada
Investment Corporation
1955
CanLII 80
(SCC);
[1956] SCR 49
(
MNR
);
Pan American
Trust Co v Minister of National Revenue
1949
CanLII 594 (CA EXC)
; [1949] Ex CR 265; and
Shortt
& Quinn v Minister of National Revenue
1960
CanLII 745 (CA EXC)
; [1960] Ex CR 414
.
[23]
40
of 1925.
[24]
Armstrong
above
n 7 at 348-9.
[25]
Rosen
above
n 8 at 187G-189B.
[26]
Id at 188B.
[27]
Thus one sees detailed debates in the judgments as to where true
beneficial ownership of the taxable income lies. These
debates
have arisen in the context of discretionary trusts and/or trusts
with multiple beneficiaries. See for example
Baker
above
n 20;
Garland
above
n 20;
Executor
Trustee and Agency Co of South Australia Ltd v Deputy Federal
Commissioner of Taxes
[1939] HCA
35
;
(1939)
62 CLR 545
;
In
Re Young, The Trustees Executors and Agency Co Ltd v Young
[1941]
VicLawRp 47
;
[1942]
VLR 4
(
Young
)
;
and
Stannus
v Commissioner of Stamp Duties
[1946]
NZGazLawRp 112
;
[1947]
NZLR 1
.
[28]
As we have seen,
Syme
above n 18 involved the
distinction between income generated through personal exertion by a
trust and which the tax authorities
wanted to tax at the higher rate
applicable to income derived from property when it was distributed
to beneficiaries.
MNR
above n 22 concerned the
status of dividends distributed by a trust to its beneficiaries.
Other Commonwealth conduit principle
cases deal with a concern not
to treat trust distributions as changing the nature of “[income
derived from] foreign possessions
other than stocks, shares and
rents” (
Baker
above n 20. In
terms of the applicable tax legislation, income of that nature was
subject to higher taxation); receipts
of a capital nature (
Charles
above n 21. At the
time, receipts of a capital nature were not subject to Federal
income tax in Australia); or prescribed
dividends being dividends
paid by an Australian company and derived by a non-resident company
(
Tadcaster
above n 21. Prescribed
dividends were not entitled to the privileged tax treatment
generally accorded to dividends).
[29]
ITA Eighth Schedule paragraph 10(a) and paragraph 10(c)
prior to amendment by Act 13 of 2016.
At
the time relevant to the present case, natural persons were taxed on
33.3% of their net capital gains whereas
inter
vivos
trusts
were taxed on 66.6% of their net capital gains.
[30]
See for example
Tindal
v Federal Commissioner of Taxation
[1946]
HCA 26
;
(1946) 72 CLR 608
where the High Court distinguished
Syme
on
the basis that the new definition of “income from personal
exertion” in the Income Tax Amendment Act 1936 made
clear that
it was only income derived from a business carried on by the
taxpayer themself that was entitled to tax privileged
treatment.
[31]
129 of 1991.
[32]
Friedman
NNO v Commissioner for Inland Revenue: In re Phillip Frame Will
Trust v Commissioner for Inland Revenue
1991
(2) SA 340
(W) (upheld on appeal in
CIR
v Friedman NNO
1993
(1) SA 353 (A)).
[33]
The definition of “person” in its amended form provided:
“
‘
person’
includes the estate of a deceased person
and
any trust fund consisting of cash or other assets which are
administered and controlled by a person acting in a fiduciary
capacity, where such person is appointed under a deed of trust or by
agreement or under the will of a deceased person
.”
(The italicised wording was added by the amendment).
[34]
In its original form in 1991, section 25B stated the following:
“
Income
of trust funds and beneficiaries of trust funds
(1)
Any income received by or accrued to or in favour of any person in
his
capacity as the trustee of a trust fund referred to in the
definition of ‘person’ in section 1, shall, subject
to the provisions of section 7, to the extent to which such
income has been derived for the immediate or future benefit
of any
ascertained beneficiary with a vested right to such income, be
deemed to be income which has accrued to such beneficiary,
and to
the extent to which such income is not so derived, be deemed to be
income which has accrued to such trust fund.
(2)
Where a beneficiary has acquired a vested right to any income
referred
to in subsection (1) in consequence of the exercise by
the trustee of a discretion vested in him in terms of the relevant
deed of trust, agreement or will of a deceased person, such income
shall for the purposes of that subsection be deemed to have
been
derived for the benefit of such beneficiary.
(3)
Any deduction or allowance which may be made under the provisions of
this Act in the determination of the taxable income derived by way
of any income referred to in subsection (1) shall, to
the
extent to which such income is under the provisions of that
subsection deemed to be income which has accrued to a beneficiary
or
to the trust fund, be deemed to be a deduction or allowance which
may be made in the determination of the taxable income derived
by
such beneficiary or trust fund, as the case may be.”
[35]
The definition, inserted by Act 141 of 1992, was the following:
“
‘
[T]rust’
means any trust fund consisting of cash or other assets which are
administered and controlled by a person acting
in a fiduciary
capacity, where such person is appointed under a deed of trust or by
agreement or under the will of a deceased
person.”
[36]
See [3] above.
[37]
The wording of section 26A is set out in [3] above.
[38]
ITA Eighth Schedule paragraph 10(a) and paragraph 10(c)
in its original form. As pointed out above, by the
time
of the years of assessment relevant to the present case,
paragraph 10(a)
and paragraph 10(c) had been amended so that
natural
persons were taxed on 33.3% of their net capital gains whereas
inter
vivos
trusts
were taxed on 66.6% of their net capital gains. In its
present form, paragraph 10 of the Eighth Schedule
taxes
natural persons on 40% of their net capital gains and
inter
vivos
trusts
on 80% of their net capital gains.
[39]
See [4] above.
[40]
There is a general presumption that a statute should not be
interpreted so as to render tautologous the inclusion of individual
words in the statue. See
Commissioner
for Inland Revenue v Golden Dumps (Pty) Ltd
[1993]
ZASCA 89
;
1993 (4) SA 110
(A) at 116F-117A. This presumption
applies
a
fortiori
(for
the stronger reason) to an interpretation that would render
tautologous an entire paragraph of a statute.
[41]
In this respect we are not persuaded by SARS’ reliance on
Milnerton
Estates
to
argue that the Eighth Schedule must be viewed in isolation when
it comes to matters concerning capital gains tax because
it
“provides a self-contained method for determining whether a
capital gain or loss has arisen”. Para 22
of
Milnerton Estates
upon which SARS relies
in this regard is plainly an
obiter
dictum
(non-binding
observation made in passing) – writing for a unanimous Court,
Wallis JA pertinently stated:
“
[O]n
its face the Schedule
seems
to provide a self-contained method for determining whether a capital
gain or loss has arisen. Again
I
refrain from any definitive decision on the point
,
but it may be an answer to the concern expressed by counsel.”
(Emphasis added.)
[42]
When subparagraph (a) refers to “the trust” this
can only be the trust that disposed of the asset. That
is the
only trust to which the subparagraph refers directly and the use of
the definite article in “
the
trust” means that
the subparagraph must be referring to the trust to which it has
already referred i.e. the trust that disposed
of the asset.
[43]
Paragraph 6 states:
“
Aggregate
capital gain
A
person’s aggregate capital gain for a year of assessment is
the amount by which the sum of that person’s capital
gains for
that year and any other capital gains which are required to be taken
into account in the determination of that person’s
aggregate
capital gain or aggregate capital loss for that year, exceeds the
sum of—
(a)
that person’s capital losses for that year; and
(b)
in the case of a natural person or special trust, that person’s
or special trust’s
annual exclusion for that year.”
[44]
There is no definition of “determined” or
“determination” in the ITA but the terms are used in the
Eighth Schedule in a broad sense. See for example the
definitions of “base cost”, “capital gain”,
“capital loss”, “net capital gain” and
“proceeds” in paragraph 1 of the Eighth Schedule.
See also paragraph 6 which addresses the “determination”
of a taxpayer’s aggregate capital gain.
[45]
Mahano
v Road Accident Fund
[2015]
ZASCA 23
;
2015 (6) SA 237
(SCA) at para 14.
[46]
Minister
of Health N.O. v New Clicks South Africa (Pty) Limited (Treatment
Action Campaign as Amici Curiae)
[2005]
ZACC 14
;
2006 (2) SA 311
(CC);
2006 (1) BCLR 1
(CC) (
New
Clicks
).
[47]
Id at paras 200-1 (footnotes omitted).
[48]
See for example
Assign
Services (Pty) Ltd v National Union of Metal Workers of South Africa
[2018]
ZACC 22
;
2018 (5) SA 323
(CC);
2018 (11) BCLR 1309
(CC) (
Assign
Services
)
at para 66 and
Merafong
Demarcation Forum v President of the Republic of South Africa
[2008] ZACC 10
;
2008 (5)
SA 171
(CC);
2008 (10) BCLR 969
(
Merafong
)
at para 30.
[49]
See for example
City
Power SOC Ltd v Commissioner, South African Revenue Service
[2020] ZASCA 150
;
2022
(1) SA 121
(SCA) at paras 6-7;
Commissioner,
South African Revenue Services v Tourvest Financial Services (Pty)
Ltd
[2021]
ZASCA 61
;
2021 (5) SA 86
(SCA) at para 14;
Benhaus
Mining (Pty) Ltd v Commissioner, South African Revenue Service
[2019] ZASCA 17
;
2020
(3) SA 325
(SCA) at para 35; and
Commissioner,
South African Revenue Service v Big G Restaurants (Pty) Ltd
[2018] ZASCA 179
;
2019
(3) SA 90
(SCA) at para 16.
[50]
Beadica
231 CC v Trustees, Oregon Trust
[2020]
ZACC 13
;
2020 (5) SA 247
(CC);
2020 (9) BCLR 1098
(CC) at para 81and
Affordable
Medicines Trust v Minister of Health
[2005]
ZACC 3
;
2006 (3) SA 247
(CC);
2005 (6) BCLR 529
(CC)
(
Affordable
Medicines Trust
)
at
para 108.
[51]
In Bingham
The
Rule of Law
(
Penguin
Books
,
London 2010) at p 37
Lord Bingham
frames his first principle of the rule of law as follows:
“
The
[a]ccessibility of the [l]aw . . . [t]he law must be accessible and
so far as possible intelligible, clear and predictable.”
[52]
See the judgments of the Supreme Court of Appeal cited in
n 49 above. The widespread use of memoranda to identify
the
purpose of revenue statements may be linked to the fact that members
of the public and tax professionals have easy access
to the
explanatory memoranda for the revenue statutes going back to 1997 on
the SARS website.
[53]
The
Commissioner for the South African Revenue Services v Daikin Air
Conditioning (Pty) Limited
[2018]
ZASCA 66
; 2018 JDR 1072 (SCA) (
Daikin
)
at para 32.
[54]
Telkom
SA SOC Ltd v Commissioner, South African Revenue Service
[2020] ZASCA 19
;
2020
(4) SA 480
(SCA) (
Telkom
)
at paras 18-20.
[55]
NST
Ferrochrome (Pty) Ltd v Commissioner for Inland Revenue
[2000] ZASCA 171
;
2000
(3) SA 1040
(SCA) (
NST
Ferrochrome
).
[56]
At [107] of the second judgment.
[57]
NST
Ferrochrome
above
n 55 at para 17.
[58]
At [126] of the second judgment.
[59]
Phillips
v National Director of Public Prosecutions
[2005]
ZACC 15
;
2006 (1) SA 505
(CC);
2006 (2) BCLR 274
(CC) at paras
38-42.
[60]
At [42] and [43].
[61]
See for example
Garland
above
n 20; and
Young
above
n 27.
Rosen
above
n 8 applied the conduit principle to a discretionary trust but it
based its recognition of beneficiaries of a
discretionary
trust as being entitled
to take advantage of the conduit principle not on general principles
of application of the conduit principle,
but rather on the specific
definition of “shareholder” in the ITA and on the
authorities on “deemed shareholders”
under the ITA.
See
Rosen
at
185D-186F and 189H-191A.
[62]
SARS
contends that a deliberate decision to take a tax position that is
ultimately shown to be incorrect cannot be an “inadvertent
error”. Thistle counters by arguing that even if the tax
position is deliberately taken, the error as to its incorrectness
can be an “inadvertent error”.
[63]
Dormehl
v Minister of Justice
[2000]
ZACC 4
;
2000 (2) SA 987
(CC);
2000 (5) BCLR 471
at para 5 and
Bruce
v
Fleecytex Johannesburg CC
[1998]
ZACC 3
;
1998 (2) SA 1143
(CC);
1998 (4) BCLR 415
at para 8.
[64]
Section 129(3) of the TAA.
ABC
Mining (Pty) Ltd v Commissioner, South African Revenue Service
[2021] ZATC 12
at para
84.
[65]
Marshall
N.O. v Commissioner, South African Revenue Service
[2018] ZACC 11
;
2018 (7)
BCLR 830
(CC);
2019 (6) SA 246
(CC) (
Marshall
).
[66]
Id at para 10.
[67]
Biowatch
Trust v Registrar Genetic Resources
[2009]
ZACC 14; 2009 (6) SA 232 (CC); 2009 (10) BCLR 1014 (CC).
[68]
Marshall
above
n 65 at para 14.
[69]
Above
n 1.
[70]
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
[2012]
ZASCA 13
;
[2012] 2 All SA 262
(SCA);
2012 (4) SA 593
(SCA)
(
Endumeni
).
The
approach adopted in
Endumeni
received
approval by this Court in the context of contracts in
Airports
Company South Africa v Big Five Duty Free (Pty) Ltd
[2018]
ZACC 33
;
2019 (2) BCLR 165
(CC);
2019 (5) SA 1
(CC) at para 29.
[71]
Endumeni
id at para 18.
[72]
See
Davis
“Interpretation of Statutes: Is It Possible to Divine a
Coherent Approach?” (2020) 3
The
South African Judicial Education Journal
at
11.
[73]
Investigating
Directorate: Serious Economic Offences v Hyundai Motor Distributors
(Pty) Ltd In re: Hyundai Motor Distributors
(Pty) Ltd v Smit N.O.
[2000] ZACC 12
;
2000
(10) BCLR 1079
(CC);
2001 (1) SA 545
(CC); (
Hyundai
).
[74]
Id at paras 22-3.
[75]
Cool
Ideas 1186 CC v Hubbard
[2014]
ZACC 16; 2014 (4) SA 474 (CC); 2014 (8) BCLR 869 (CC).
[76]
Id
at para 28.
[77]
See
Van Staden “The theoretical (and constitutional) underpinnings
of statutory interpretation” in Strydom and Botha
Selected
Essays on Governance and Accountability Issues in Public Law
(SUN
Press, Cape Town 2020) at 23.
[78]
Section
1(c) states:
“
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.”
[79]
See
Affordable
Medicines Trust
above
n 50 at para 108.
[80]
Rationality
also can help enable individuals to understand the purpose behind
legislation and so empower them to organise their
lives
around
the
law more efficiently.
[81]
S v
Makwanyane
[1995]
ZACC 3; 1995 (3) SA 391 (CC); 1995 (6) BCLR 665 (CC).
[82]
Id
at para 156.
[83]
Law
Society of South Africa v Minister of Transport
[2010] ZACC 25; 2011 (1)
SA 400 (CC); 2011 (2) BCLR 150 (CC).
[84]
Id
at para 32.
[85]
See
Telkom
above
n 54 at para 22.
[86]
A
detailed but older engagement with the rule is contained in Dison
“The Contra Fiscum Rule in Theory and Practice”
(1976)
93
SALJ
159.
For some more recent discussion, see Ashton “Towards a
Jurisprudence of Corruption: Reformulating the Contra Fiscum
Principle for the Purposive Approach” (2019) 136
SALJ
749
and Seligson “Judicial Forays in Statutory Construction:
Endumeni
and
its Impact on the Interpretation of Fiscal Legislation” (2021)
12
Business
Tax and Company Law Quarterly
8.
[87]
Glen
Anil Development Corporation Ltd v Secretary for Inland Revenue
1975 (4) SA 715 (A).
[88]
Id
at 727.
[89]
There is a tension here between the complexity of tax legislation
and clarity: nevertheless, even where complex provisions are
at
stake, the Legislature has a duty to be as clear as possible so that
taxpayers can regulate their affairs. What is required,
this
Court has held in
Affordable
Medicines Trust
above
n 50 at para 108, is “reasonable certainty, and not
perfect lucidity”.
[90]
Daikin
above
n 53
at
para 32.
[91]
NST
Ferrochrome
above
n 55.
[92]
Id at
para
17. The additional wording quoted by the first judgment simply
expands upon this statement and what is meant by the
provision being
reasonably capable of such a construction. As will become
evident, the key difference between this judgment
and the first
judgment is over whether paragraph 80(2) is reasonably capable
of the construction advanced by the applicant.
[93]
Telkom
above n 54.
[94]
Id
at para 19.
[95]
Prinsloo
v Van der Linde
[1997]
ZACC 5; 1997 (3) SA 1012 (CC); 1997 (6) BCLR 759 (CC).
[96]
Id at para 25.
[97]
S
v Rens
[1995]
ZACC 15
;
1996 (1) SA 1218
;
1996 (2) BCLR 155
at para 17;
S
v Dlamini, S v Dladla; S v Joubert; S v Schietekat
[1999]
ZACC 8
;
1999 (4) SA 623
;
1999 (7) BCLR 771
at para 84; and
Matatiele
Municipality v President of the Republic of South Africa
[2006] ZACC 2
;
2006 (5)
BCLR 622
(CC);
2006 (5) SA 47
(CC) at para 51.
[98]
Compare Haupt
Notes
on the South African Income Tax Act
(H
& H Publications, Cape Town 2022) at para 21.20.4, who
supports the approach of SARS with Horak “Taxation of
Trusts:
Continued Application of the Conduit Pipe Principle” (2018) 4
Business
Tax and Company Law Quarterly
at
27-8, who recognises that the amendments have created various
uncertainties about the application of the conduit principle
in
multi-tier structures (and supports the position in this judgment).
[99]
Armstrong
above n 7.
[100]
Although
counsel on both sides were asked at the hearing about the
possibility of double taxation in relation to capital gains
if SARS’
interpretation was adopted, neither sought to engage further on this
matter. In light of there being other
grounds for the finding
below, it is not necessary to discuss this rationale further.
[101]
Armstrong
above n 7 at
349.
[102]
Above n 8.
[103]
Id
at 186H.
[104]
Id
at
188D.
[105]
57 of 1998.
[106]
Hahlo
“The Trust in South African Law”
(1961) 78
SALJ
195
at 195.
[107]
De
Waal “The Core Elements of the Trust: Aspects of English,
Scottish and South African Trusts Compared”
(2000) 117
SALJ
548
at 548: De Waal goes on to develop a more sophisticated account
focused on various core elements of a trust.
[108]
The
same problem emerges with the reasoning of the Supreme Court of
Appeal at para 25 of its judgment (above n 9).
[109]
Given the paucity of submissions on behalf of SARS, the first
judgment engages in a very limited way with the purpose of the
provision. It, in fact, seeks to read off purpose from the
linguistic analysis conducted in paragraph 63 and thus
elides
the difference between the purpose of a provision with the legal
position the provision gives effect to. Construing
legislation
purposively requires utilising the rationale behind a provision to
understand its meaning rather than the other way
around.
The
same problem is evident in the first judgment’s discussion of
the explanatory memorandum which I discuss below.
[110]
The
2020 explanatory memorandum in fact engages with just such
possibilities at 11-2.
[111]
As indicated above,
the
first judgment also at [63] and [69] conflates the legal position
with the purpose for the legal position.
[112]
Assign
Services
above
n 48 a
t
para 66.
[113]
It also used an explanatory memorandum for a similar purpose;
Merafong
above n 48 at para 30.
[114]
Above
n 98.
sino noindex
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