Case Law[2023] ZACC 30South Africa
Sasol Chevron Holdings Limited v Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service (CCT 149/22) [2023] ZACC 30; 2023 (12) BCLR 1525 (CC) ; 2024 (3) SA 321 (CC); 86 SATC 456 (3 October 2023)
Constitutional Court of South Africa
3 October 2023
Headnotes
Summary: Promotion of Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000 (PAJA) — delay in instituting application for review — section 7(1) of PAJA — 180-day period — leave to appeal refused
Judgment
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## Sasol Chevron Holdings Limited v Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service (CCT 149/22) [2023] ZACC 30; 2023 (12) BCLR 1525 (CC) ; 2024 (3) SA 321 (CC); 86 SATC 456 (3 October 2023)
Sasol Chevron Holdings Limited v Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service (CCT 149/22) [2023] ZACC 30; 2023 (12) BCLR 1525 (CC) ; 2024 (3) SA 321 (CC); 86 SATC 456 (3 October 2023)
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sino date 3 October 2023
CONSTITUTIONAL
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
Case CCT 149/22
In
the matter between:
SASOL
CHEVRON HOLDINGS
LIMITED
Applicant
and
COMMISSIONER
FOR THE SOUTH
AFRICAN
REVENUE
SERVICE
Respondent
Neutral
citation:
Sasol Chevron Holdings
Limited v Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service
[2023]
ZACC 30
Coram:
Zondo CJ,
Maya DCJ, Kollapen J, Madlanga J,
Majiedt J, Makgoka AJ, Rogers J, Theron J and Van
Zyl AJ
Judgments:
Theron J (unanimous)
Heard
on:
4 May 2023
Decided
on:
3 October 2023
Summary:
Promotion of Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000 (PAJA) —
delay in instituting application for review — section 7(1)
of
PAJA — 180-day period — leave to appeal refused
ORDER
On
appeal from the Supreme Court of Appeal (hearing an appeal from the
High Court of South Africa, Gauteng Division, Pretoria):
1.
Leave to appeal is granted.
2.
The appeal is
dismissed
with
costs.
JUDGMENT
THERON
J (Zondo CJ, Maya DCJ, Kollapen J, Madlanga J,
Majiedt J, Makgoka AJ, Rogers J, and Van
Zyl AJ
concurring):
Introduction
[1]
This
matter concerns the interpretation and application of two statutes
and some of the regulations that relate to them. The
first is
section 7(1) of the Promotion of Administrative Justice Act
[1]
(PAJA). The second relates to the procedures for the granting
of Value Added Tax (VAT) refunds to qualifying purchasers
conducting business in export countries in terms of the
regulations
[2]
(Export
Regulations) issued under section 74(1) read with paragraph (d) of
the definition of “exported” in section 1
of the
Value Added Tax Act
[3]
(VAT Act).
Background
[2]
The applicant is Sasol Chevron
Holdings Limited (Sasol Chevron), a joint venture company. Two
joint venture partners, Middle
East and India (Pty) Ltd (previously
known as Sasol Synfuels International (Pty) Ltd) and Chevron GTL Ltd,
each hold a 50% share
in Sasol Chevron. Sasol Chevron is a
foreign company that is not resident in South Africa. The
respondent is the Commissioner
for the South African Revenue
Service (Commissioner).
[3]
Sasol
Catalyst is a division of Sasol South Africa Ltd (previously known as
Sasol Chemical Industries (Pty) Ltd). During
2014, Sasol
Catalyst, a vendor as contemplated in the VAT Act,
[4]
supplied, on a flash title basis,
[5]
certain movable goods (catalysts of a specific nature and makeup
manufactured for a Gas to Liquid plant situated in Nigeria)
to Sasol Chevron. The supply, on an ex works basis, was by
way of a sale of the goods (initial sale), which were kept
in a
warehouse at the Durban Harbour, a designated commercial port
for the purposes of the Export Regulations. While
the
goods were still at the Durban Harbour, Sasol Chevron onsold them to
Escravos Gas to Liquids Project (Escravos),
a
joint venture operating in Nigeria and the end purchaser and
user of the catalysts,
for
export by Escravos to its plant in Nigeria.
[4]
It is the initial sale agreement
that is under the spotlight in these proceedings. Sasol
Catalyst issued VAT zero-rated invoices
to Sasol Chevron dated
20 August 2014, 22 September 2014, 22 October 2014,
24 November 2014
and 2 December 2014,
respectively. Sasol Catalyst, being the vendor, elected to
supply the goods to Sasol Chevron
at the VAT zero rate. That
being the case, the VAT consequences of the transaction were governed
by Part Two – Section
A of the Export Regulations.
[5]
Regulation
8 prescribes procedures for a vendor who elects to supply movable
goods at the zero rate to a qualifying purchaser, where
the goods are
initially delivered to a harbour in the Republic before being
exported. Regulation 8 must be read with regulation 15(1)(a),
which provides that, in order to qualify for a VAT zero rating,
the goods must be exported within 90 days from the date
of the
tax invoice.
[6]
For various reasons not relevant to this matter, Sasol Chevron
did not export the goods within 90 days of the date of
the tax
invoices, as required by the Export Regulations.
[6]
By
letter dated 30 January 2015, Sasol Catalyst applied to the South
African Revenue Service (SARS) for a binding private ruling
in terms
of section 41B of the VAT Act,
[7]
read with section 79 of the Tax Administration Act
[8]
(Tax Act), to extend the period for the exportation of the goods from
South Africa as contemplated in section 11(1)(a)(ii)
[9]
of the VAT Act read with regulation 15(1) in respect of the
invoices issued by Sasol Catalyst to Sasol Chevron.
[10]
This letter was followed by another, dated 18 March 2015,
in which a further extension was requested.
[7]
On 30 June 2015, Sasol Catalyst
issued new and revised tax invoices in substitution of those
previously issued, in which VAT was
levied at a standard rate of
15%. Sasol Chevron paid the VAT levied by Sasol Catalyst.
The goods were, in the interim,
exported on 24 April 2015.
[8]
On
6 July 2015, Sasol Catalyst applied to SARS in terms of section 44(9)
of the VAT Act
[11]
for the extension of the period within which to submit an application
to the VAT Refund Authority (VRA) for a refund of the VAT
paid in
respect of Sasol Catalyst’s revised tax invoices.
[9]
On 7 November 2016, SARS responded to Sasol
Catalyst’s request and ruled as follows:
(a)
No extension was granted to Sasol Catalyst
of the 90 day period envisaged in regulation 15(1)(a) to export
the goods from the
Republic reflected in the invoices of 20 August,
22 September and 22 October 2014. This was because Sasol
Catalyst did
not submit a timeous written application in terms of
regulation 15(2)(f)(i). Extensions were, however, granted in
respect
of the goods reflected in the invoices of 24 November
and 2 December 2014.
(b)
No extension was granted to Sasol Catalyst
for the 90-day period envisaged by regulation 15(1)(a) within which
Sasol Catalyst should
have applied for an extension to export the
goods from the Republic of South Africa, as such an application is
not envisaged in
regulation 15(2)(f)(ii).
(c)
No extension was granted in terms of
regulation 6(6)(b) for the period within which an application must be
made for a VAT refund,
as the goods were not exported from the
Republic within 90 days from the date of the tax invoices.
[10]
On 13 June 2017, SARS modified its 7
November 2016 ruling, in the following terms:
(a)
SARS adhered to its previous ruling that no
extension was granted to Sasol Catalyst of the 90-day period to
export the goods from
the Republic for the invoices dated 20 August
2014 and 22 September 2014 but now granted an extension not only in
respect of the
goods reflected in the invoices of 24 November and 2
December 2014 but also in respect of the goods reflected in the
invoice dated
22 October 2014.
(b)
An extension was granted to Sasol Catalyst
of the 90-day period within which Sasol Catalyst should have applied
for an extension
to export the catalysts.
(c)
SARS did not alter its previous ruling
refusing to grant an extension of the period for making an
application for a VAT refund.
[11]
Sasol Catalyst made further
representations to SARS to reconsider the application by Sasol
Chevron to submit the application for
a refund of the VAT paid by
Sasol Chevron on the goods sold by Sasol Catalyst. In a letter
dated 6 December 2017, SARS
stated that Sasol Chevron was not
entitled to a refund.
[12]
Further
correspondence was exchanged between the parties, culminating in a
letter dated 26 March 2018 from SARS to Sasol Chevron
in which SARS
reaffirmed its previous stance, as communicated to Sasol Catalyst’s
attorneys in its letter of 7 November
2016. For Sasol Chevron,
SARS provided its reasons in the correspondence dated 26 March 2018
and, therefore, that date is
relevant for the purposes of the
calculation of the 180 day period provided for in section 7(1)
of PAJA.
[12]
[13]
On Friday, 21 September 2018, Sasol
Chevron filed a review application under PAJA in the High Court of
South Africa, Gauteng Division,
Pretoria (High Court). It was
served on SARS on the next business day, 25 September 2018. In
the application, Sasol
Chevron sought, inter alia, an order to review
and set aside SARS’ decision of 6 December 2017 to the effect
that it was
not entitled to a VAT refund, as envisaged by
section 11(1)(a)(ii)(bb) read with regulation 6 of Part 1 of the
Export Regulations.
[14]
SARS raised a preliminary objection to the review
application on the ground that Sasol Chevron had not complied with
section 7(1)
of PAJA.
The High Court
dismissed the objection and upheld the review, finding, inter alia,
that the review
application
was instituted
on 21 September 2018, the 179
th
day after reasons were provided. The High Court held that
the relevant correspondence from SARS was that of 26 March 2018,
because this was when
SARS first provided reasons for its
ruling
.
[15]
On appeal, the Supreme Court of
Appeal confirmed that the time period within which to institute a
review application starts to run
from the date on which the reasons
for the administrative action became known to the applicant. It
further held that the
decision sought to be reviewed and the reasons
therefor were communicated to Sasol Chevron on 6 December 2017, which
was the date
from which the 180-day period began running.
Consequently, the review application was instituted outside of
the 180 day
period prescribed in section 7(1) of PAJA.
Jurisdiction and leave to
appeal
[16]
PAJA
gives effect to section 33 of the Constitution and it follows that
matters relating to its interpretation and application will
be
constitutional matters.
[13]
Moreover, the interpretation of the VAT regime as it pertains
to export goods is an arguable point of law of general public
importance. The VAT regime affects all exporters of goods and
is therefore of general public importance. More broadly,
the
manner in which SARS collects tax revenue is a matter of concern to
all citizens. The issue is also arguable, as evidenced
by the
High Court’s interpretation of the applicable legislation which
diverges from SARS’ practice in terms of the
Export
Regulations.
[17]
It is thus in the interests of
justice to grant leave to appeal.
The VAT issues, if
this Court
reaches
them,
involve
complex regulatory questions that would be considered for the first
time by this Court.
Issues
[18]
The issues to be determined are:
(a)
Did Sasol Chevron bring its review
application within the period of 180 days stipulated by section
7(1)(b) of PAJA? Relatedly,
when is an application “instituted”
for purposes of PAJA?
(b)
On a proper application of the Export
Regulations, was Sasol Chevron entitled to an extension of time
within which to claim a refund
of the VAT levied on a supply of
export goods?
Merits
[19]
The reasoning of the Supreme Court
of Appeal appears from the following paragraphs of its judgment:
“
[28]
However, the counter-argument advanced by counsel for Sasol Chevron
and the reasoning of the [High Court] on this score must
be tested
with reference to the following fundamental considerations. First,
as was submitted on behalf of the Commissioner,
SARS’ letter of
26 March 2018 was no more than a recapitulation of the position that
SARS had consistently adopted since
2016. The letter itself
makes explicit reference to the earlier decision – termed the
ruling – made on 6 December
2017, as are virtually all the
subsequent letters from SARS to Sasol Chevron. SARS’
letter of 6 December 2017,
in turn, makes reference to the
ruling made on 7 November 2016 in which the background
facts are comprehensively set
out, Sasol Chevron’s request
summarised, the relevant statutory framework set out and, finally,
the decision (ruling) –
supported with comprehensive reasons –
is articulated.
[29]
In contending that the impugned decision was not taken on 26 March
2018, counsel for the Commissioner called into his aid the
decision
of this Court in
Aurecon
South Africa (Pty) Ltd v City of Cape Town
,
[14]
in which Maya ADP said the following:
‘
The
decision challenged by the City and the reasons therefor were its own
and were always within its knowledge. Section 7(1)
unambiguously refers to the date on which the reasons for
administrative action became known or ought reasonably to have become
known to the party seeking its judicial review. The plain
wording of these provisions simply does not support the meaning
ascribed to them by the court a quo, i.e. that the application must
be launched within 180 days after the party seeking review
became
aware that the administrative action in issue was tainted by
irregularity. That interpretation would automatically
entitle
every aggrieved applicant to an unqualified right to institute
judicial review only upon gaining knowledge that a decision
(and its
underlying reasons), of which he or she had been aware all along, was
tainted by irregularity, whenever that might be.
This result is
untenable as it disregards the potential prejudice to the respondent
(the appellant here) and the public interest
in the finality of
administrative decisions and the exercise of administrative
functions. Contrary to the court a quo’s
finding in this
regard, the City far exceeded the time frames stipulated in
section 7(1) and did not launch the review proceedings
within a
reasonable time. In that case, it clearly needed an extension
as envisaged in section 9(1)(b) without which
the court a quo
was otherwise precluded from entertaining the review application.’
[30]
Aurecon was cited with approval by the Constitutional Court in
City
of Cape Town v Aurecon South Africa (Pty) Ltd
,
[15]
in which the following was stated:
‘
On
a textual level, the City’s contention confuses two discrete
concepts: reasons and irregularities. Section 7(1) of
PAJA does
not provide that an application must be brought within 180 days after
the City became aware that the administrative action
was tainted by
irregularity. On the contrary, it provides that the clock
starts to run with reference to the date on which
the reasons for the
administrative action became known (or ought reasonably to have
become known) to an applicant.’
Thus, section 7(1)
explicitly provides that the proverbial clock begins to tick from the
date on which the reasons for the administrative
action became known
(or ought reasonably to have become known) to the applicant, in this
instance, Sasol Chevron.
[31]
There is, to my mind, considerable force in the contentions advanced
on behalf of the Commissioner. On this score, it
is instructive
to keep at the forefront of one’s mind that the fact that the
parties continued to exchange further correspondence
beyond
6 December 2017 cannot detract from the truism that SARS’
impugned decision was taken on 6 December 2017. What
is more,
is that this is the very decision that Sasol Chevron sought to
have reviewed and set aside. And yet no attempt
was made by
Sasol Chevron in its founding papers to explain any correlation
between the decision of 6 December 2017 and SARS’
letter of 26
March 2018 to support its belated contention that in instituting its
review application on 21 September 2018, it was
still within the time
frame prescribed by section 7(1) of PAJA.”
[16]
[20]
The reasoning of the Supreme Court
of Appeal is unassailable and is endorsed by this Court. In a
letter dated
6 December 2017, the
Commissioner
explained
that the refund was denied because, in his view,
Sasol
Chevron was not entitled to a refund of the VAT levied on the supply
of goods as it had not exported the goods within the
time required by
regulation 15(1)(a) and the Commissioner had not granted an extension
of this period. This explanation was
given in response to a
request for an extension of the time within which to make the
application and with reference to the earlier
reasons furnished.
[21]
The
reasons
provided by SARS as to why Sasol Chevron was not entitled to a refund
were set out in paragraphs one to three of the letter.
In
essence, these were that Sasol Catalyst had elected to supply the
goods at the zero rate as contemplated in Part 2
of the Export
Regulations. Because the goods were not exported within the
prescribed 90 day period, VAT at the standard
rate had to be
applied to the supply of goods.
[17]
In view of the fact that Sasol Catalyst had elected to export
the goods under Part 2 of the Export Regulations, Part
1, under
which regulation 6 resides, was not applicable to the export of the
goods.
[22]
These reasons were sufficient for
the purposes of PAJA. Based on the content of the
Commissioner’s letters of 7 November
2016 and 6 December 2017,
Sasol Chevron was in a position to formulate an objection and it
did not need the further
explanation
that was furnished in the 26 March 2018 letter.
The 26 March 2018 letter did not contain new reasons –
it
was an elaboration of the reasons given on 6 December 2017.
If this Court were to hold that the 180 days in section
7(1) of PAJA
only begins to run when a reviewing party is satisfied with the
reasons given to it, this would enable parties –
especially
well-resourced parties – to indefinitely extend the period in
section 7(1) by simply requesting additional reasons.
This is
counterintuitive to the purpose of section 7(1), which is to promote
certainty regarding the lawful status of administrative
decisions.
[23]
This Court agrees with the Supreme
Court of Appeal that the finding in relation to section 7(1)(b) of
PAJA is
dispositive of the matter, and that
it is thus not necessary to adjudicate the remaining issues in this
matter.
Order
[24]
The
following
order is made:
1.
Leave to appeal is granted.
2.
The appeal is
dismissed
with
costs.
For
the Applicant:
P A Swanepoel
SC, F B Pelser and O Lugabazi instructed by Cliffe
Dekker Hofmeyr Incorporated.
For
the Respondent:
A R Sholto-Douglas
SC and T S Sidaki instructed by Ledwaba Mazwai Attorneys.
[1]
3 of 2000.
[2]
Regulations issued in terms of section 74(1) read with paragraph (d)
of the definition of “exported” in section 1 (1)
of the Value-Added Tax Act, 1991, GN R316
GG
37580, 2 May 2014.
[3]
89 of 1991.
[4]
A
“vendor” is “
any
person who is or is required to be registered under [the VAT Act]”.
[5]
“F
lash
title” is defined in the Export Regulations as—
“
a
supply of movable goods by a vendor to a qualifying purchaser
contemplated in paragraph (f) of the definition of ‘qualifying
purchaser’ and that qualifying purchaser subsequently supplies
the movable goods to another qualifying purchaser and ownership
of
the goods vests in the first mentioned qualifying purchaser only for
a moment before the goods are sold to such other qualifying
purchaser.”
[6]
Regulation 15(1)(a) of the Export Regulations, which sets out the
general rule for export time periods applicable to Section
A of
Parts One and Two and Section B of Part Two, provides:
“
Subject
to the exceptions listed in subparagraph (2), movable goods must be
exported from the Republic within 90 days from the
earlier of the
time an invoice is issued or the time any payment of consideration
is received by the vendor. In the case
of Part One, the
movable goods must be exported within 90 days from the date of the
tax invoice.”
[7]
In terms of section 41B, the Commissioner may issue a VAT ruling,
which is “
a
written statement issued by the Commissioner to a person regarding
the interpretation or application of this Act”.
[8]
28
of 2011.
[9]
Section 11(1)(a)(ii) provides as follows—
“
(ii)
the goods have been exported by the recipient and the supplier has
elected
to supply the goods at the zero rate as contemplated in Part
2 of the regulation referred to in paragraph (d) of the definition
of ‘exported’ in section 1: Provided that—
(aa)
where a supplier has supplied the goods to the recipient in the
Republic
otherwise than in terms of this subparagraph, such supply
shall not be charged with tax at the rate of zero per cent; and
(bb)
where the goods have been removed from the Republic by the recipient
in accordance
with the regulation referred to in paragraph (d) of
the definition of ‘exported’ in section 1, such tax
shall be
refunded to the recipient in accordance with the provisions
of section 44(9)”
[10]
The
issues relating to the November and December invoices were
subsequently resolved.
[11]
Section 44(9) provides that “[t]he Commissioner may make or
authorise a refund of any amount of tax which has become refundable
to any person under the provisions of any regulation referred to in
paragraph (d) of the definition of ‘exported’
in section
1”.
[12]
In
terms of section 7(1) of PAJA,
review
proceedings must be instituted no later than 180 days after the date
that internal remedy proceedings have been concluded
or, where no
such remedy exists, after the date that “the person concerned
was informed of the administrative action, became
aware of the
action and the reasons for it or might reasonably have been expected
to have become aware of the action and the
reasons”.
[13]
Bato
Star Fishing (Pty) Ltd v Minister of Environmental Affairs and
Tourism
[2004] ZACC 15
;
2004 (4) SA 490
(CC);
2004 (7) BCLR 687
(CC) at para
25.
[14]
Aurecon
South Africa (Pty) Ltd v City of Cape
Town
[2015]
ZASCA 209
;
2016 (2) SA 199
(SCA) (
Aurecon
)
at para 16.
[15]
City of
Cape Town v Aurecon South Africa (Pty) Ltd
[2017] ZACC 5
;
2017 (6) BCLR 730
(CC);
2017 (4) SA 223
(CC) at para
41.
[16]
Commissioner,
South African Revenue Service v Sasol Chevron Holdings Limited
[2022] ZASCA 56
at paras 28-31.
[17]
This is in terms of regulation 16(3). If the vendor does not
have timeous documentary proof of compliance with the conditions
for
supplying goods at the zero rate, the vendor must account for output
tax on the supply. In terms of regulation 16(3),
the output
tax is calculated by applying the tax fraction to the consideration
for the supply.
sino noindex
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