Case Law[2023] ZACC 39South Africa
Casino Association of South Africa and Others v Member of the Executive Council for Economic Development Environment Conservation and Tourism and Others (CCT 322/22) [2023] ZACC 39; 2024 (5) BCLR 611 (CC) (29 November 2023)
Constitutional Court of South Africa
29 November 2023
Headnotes
Summary: Confirmation of the order of constitutional invalidity granted by the High Court — North West Gambling Act 2 of 2001 — Sections 84(1)(e), 87(1)(a), and 87(3) of the North West Gambling Act — Regulation 73(1) of the North West Gambling Regulations 2002
Judgment
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## Casino Association of South Africa and Others v Member of the Executive Council for Economic Development Environment Conservation and Tourism and Others (CCT 322/22) [2023] ZACC 39; 2024 (5) BCLR 611 (CC) (29 November 2023)
Casino Association of South Africa and Others v Member of the Executive Council for Economic Development Environment Conservation and Tourism and Others (CCT 322/22) [2023] ZACC 39; 2024 (5) BCLR 611 (CC) (29 November 2023)
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sino date 29 November 2023
CONSTITUTIONAL
COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
Case
CCT 322/22
In
the matter between:
CASINO
ASSOCIATION OF SOUTH AFRICA
First Applicant
PEERMONT
GLOBAL (NORTH WEST) (PTY) LIMITED
Second Applicant
SUN
INTERNATIONAL (SOUTH AFRICA) LIMITED
Third Applicant
and
MEMBER
OF THE EXECUTIVE COUNCIL FOR
ECONOMIC
DEVELOPMENT, ENVIRONMENT,
CONSERVATION
AND TOURISM
First Respondent
MEMBER
OF THE EXECUTIVE COUNCIL FOR
PROVINCIAL
TREASURY
Second Respondent
NORTH
WEST GAMBLING BOARD
Third Respondent
MINISTER
OF FINANCE
Fourth Respondent
Neutral
citation:
Casino Association of South
Africa and Others v Member of the Executive Council for Economic
Development Environment Conservation
and Tourism and Others
[2023]
ZACC 39
Coram:
Zondo CJ,
Kollapen J, Madlanga J, Majiedt J,
Makgoka AJ, Potterill AJ, Rogers J, Theron J and
Van Zyl AJ
Judgments:
Makgoka AJ (unanimous)
Heard
on:
11 May 2023
Decided
on:
29 November 2023
Summary:
Confirmation of the order of constitutional invalidity granted by
the High Court — North West Gambling Act 2 of 2001 —
Sections
84(1)(e), 87(1)(a), and 87(3) of
the North West Gambling Act —
Regulation
73(1) of the
North West Gambling Regulations 2002
Section
228(1)(a) of the Constitution — Provincial Tax Regulation
Process Act 53 of 2001 — Imposition of tax and levies
by Member
of the Executive Council — Application of the dominant purpose
test to determine whether a charge amounts to a
tax or levy —
Sufficient nexus is required between the impugned charge and the
regulatory scheme of the statute to determine
whether the charge is a
tax
ORDER
On
application for confirmation of the order of constitutional
invalidity granted by the High Court of South Africa, North West
Division, Mahikeng:
1.
The
declaration of constitutional invalidity made by the
High
Court of South Africa, North West Division, Mahikeng,
is confirmed in the
terms set out in paragraph 2 of this order.
2.
Sections
84(1)(e), 87(1)(a), and 87(3)
of
the
North West Gambling Act 2 of 2001 are declared
invalid to the extent that they purport to authorise the Member of
the Executive
Council for Economic Development, Environment,
Conservation and Tourism, to impose gambling levies as a tax as
contemplated in
section 228(1)(a) of the Constitution.
3.
The
declaration of invalidity takes effect from 23 January 2020.
4.
The first and
second respondents, jointly and severally, are ordered to pay the
second and third applicants the difference between:
(a)
the gambling
levies that the second and third applicants have paid pursuant to
regulation 73(1) of the
North West Gambling Regulations
2002
, from 23 January 2020
to the date of this judgment; and
(b)
the gambling levies that would have been payable during
the period mentioned above, had regulation 73(1) not been amended.
5.
The first and second respondents, jointly and
severally, are ordered to pay interest on the amounts referred to in
paragraph 4 above,
as follows:
(a)
in respect of the gambling levies already
paid by the second and
third applicants by the date on which the application in the
High Court was served, such interest to
be at the prescribed
rate from the date of service of the application on the respondents
to the date of payment;
(b)
in respect of the gambling levies not yet paid by the
second and third applicants by the date on which the application in
the High Court
was served, such interest to be paid at the
prescribed rate from the date of each payment by the applicants.
6.
The first, second and third respondents, jointly and severally, are
ordered to
pay the first, second, and third applicants’ costs,
including the costs of two counsel.
JUDGMENT
MAKGOKA AJ
(Zondo CJ, Kollapen J, Madlanga J, Majiedt J,
Potterill AJ, Rogers J, Theron J
and Van Zyl AJ
concurring):
Introduction
[1]
These
are proceedings in terms of section 172(2)(d) of the Constitution
[1]
for confirmation of an order of constitutional invalidity granted by
the High Court of South Africa, North West Division,
Mahikeng
(High Court). The High Court declared certain empowering
provisions in the North West Gambling Act
[2]
(NW Gambling Act) invalid and unconstitutional. The provisions
concerned are sections 84(1)(e), 87(1)(a) and 87(3), which
empower
the Member of the Executive Council for Economic Development,
Environment, Conservation and Tourism (MEC for Tourism) to
make
regulations prescribing the gambling levies that licensed casino
operators in North West are required to pay. The order
of the
High Court followed an amendment (impugned amendment) to
regulation 73(1) of the North West Gambling Act 2 of 2001:
North West
Gambling Regulations
[3]
(Regulations) by the MEC for Tourism, relying on the empowering
provisions.
[2]
As
this matter relates to the confirmation of an order of constitutional
invalidity by the High Court, this Court’s jurisdiction
is
engaged. In terms of section 167(5) of the Constitution,
this Court makes the final decision on whether a provincial
Act is
constitutional and must confirm any order of constitutional
invalidity made by either the High Court or the Supreme Court
of
Appeal before that order has any force. However, this Court
must still conduct its own evaluation and satisfy itself that
the
impugned provisions do not pass constitutional muster before
confirming the order of invalidity.
[4]
[3]
The first applicant, the Casino Association of South Africa
(CASA), is a voluntary association that represents various licensed
casino operators across the country. CASA’s members
operate 36 of the 38 operational casinos in South Africa, including
all four of the casinos in the North West. Peermont Global
(North West) (Pty) Limited (Peermont), the second applicant, is
a
casino licensee which owns and operates two casinos in Mmabatho,
North West, namely, Palms Casino and Rio Casino. The third
applicant, Sun International (South Africa) Limited (Sun
International), is licensed to operate the Sun City Casino, North
West,
and was, until February 2022, licensed to operate the Carousel
Casino in Hammanskraal, Gauteng.
[4]
The MEC for Tourism is the first respondent. The second
respondent is the Member of the Executive Council for Provincial
Treasury
(MEC for Treasury). The third respondent is the North
West Gambling Board (Board). The Board is established in terms
of section 3 of the NW Gambling Act and is responsible for, among
others, the oversight and control of gambling activities in North
West, including the collection of levies and fees imposed on gambling
licensees in the Province. The fourth respondent is
the
Minister of Finance. He is the only respondent who does not
participate in these proceedings.
The
impugned amendment
[5]
Regulation 73(1) of the Regulations prescribes the gaming
levies payable by casino licensees. Prior to its amendment, the
regulation read as follows:
“
A
licensee shall pay a gaming levy in relation to each of its licensed
casinos at the following rates depending on the licensee’s
gross gaming revenue.
Gross Gaming
Revenue (per month) where the taxable revenue in the tax period-
Rate of levy
Does not exceed R4
million
4% of each R1 of the
taxable
Revenue
Exceeds R4 million but
does not
exceed R8 million
R160 000 plus 7%
of the amount by which the taxable
revenue exceeds R4
million
Exceeds R8 million but
does not
exceed R12 million
R440 000 plus 8%
of the
amount by which the
taxable
revenue exceeds R8
million
Exceeds R12 million
R760 000 plus 10%
of the
amount by which the
taxable
revenue exceeds R12
million”
[6]
Subsequent to its amendment, the regulation reads as follows:
“
A
licensee shall pay a gaming levy in relation to each of its licensed
casinos of the following rates, depending on the licensee’s
gross gaming revenue.
Gross Gaming
Revenue (per month) where the taxable revenue in the tax
period-
Rate of levy
Does not exceed R6
million
6% taxable revenue
Exceeds R6 million,
but less than
R10 million
R360 000 plus 8%
of the
amount above R6
million
Exceeds R10 million,
but less than R15 million
R680 000 plus 10%
of the
amount above R10
million
Exceeds R15 million
R1 180 000
plus 12% of the
amount above R15
million”
[7]
As can be seen from this comparison, the effect of the
impugned amendment was to substantially increase the gambling levies
payable
by licenced casino operators, including the applicants, in
the North West Province. In terms of regulation 74(2) of the
Regulations,
these gambling levies are payable on the seventh day of
the month and licensees who fail to pay a levy on or before the
prescribed
date are liable to pay a penalty. There is also no
grace period for gambling levy payments and failure to pay timeously
may
result in a suspension of licences and criminal charges.
Regulation 74(2) also requires licensees to submit monthly returns
to
the Board, and simultaneously to pay the Board any gaming levies that
are due. Regulation 75(1) stipulates that if a gaming
levy is
not paid in accordance with regulation 74, a penalty is payable at 1%
per day up to a maximum of 100%.
[8]
Peermont and Sun International have, as a result of these
provisions, paid the levies under protest in accordance with the
impugned
amendment and subject to full reservation of their rights,
including the right to claim repayment of the difference between the
levies that would have been payable had regulation 73(1) not been
amended.
[9]
The impugned amendment was a culmination of a process that
commenced in November 2018, when the Board published for comment a
proposed
amendment to regulation 73(1) in terms of which there would
be a levy increase. CASA raised several objections to the
proposed
amendment and made extensive representations to the Board.
On 15 February 2019, the MEC for Tourism promulgated a second version
of the amendment to regulation 73(1) which merely corrected
typographical errors in the draft published in November 2018.
[10]
There were various developments between February 2019 and
January 2020, the importance of which relate to the review
proceedings.
However, in view of the conclusion I reach, it is
unnecessary to detail these developments. Suffice it to say, on
23
and 24 January 2020, the MEC for Tourism relying on the empowering
provisions, promulgated the impugned amendment, which was, in
all
material respects, the same as the first proposed amendment published
in November 2018. On 3 February 2020, the Board
notified
casino licensees in the Province of the impugned amendment and that
they should pay the prescribed amended tariffs with
effect from 1
February 2020.
Constitutional
and statutory framework
[11]
It is necessary to set out the constitutional and statutory
framework within which the application has to be considered. Section
228 of the Constitution reads as follows:
“
Provincial
taxes
(1)
A provincial legislature may impose—
(a)
taxes, levies and duties other than
income tax, value-added tax,
general sales tax, rates on property or customs duties; and
(b)
flat-rate surcharges on any tax, levy
or duty that is imposed by
national legislation, other than on corporate income tax, value-added
tax, rates on property or customs
duties.
(2)
The power of a provincial legislature
to impose taxes, levies, duties
and surcharges—
(a)
may not be exercised in a way that
materially and unreasonably
prejudices national economic policies, economic activities across
provincial boundaries, or the national
mobility of goods, services,
capital or labour; and
(b)
must be regulated in terms of an Act
of Parliament, which may be
enacted only after any recommendations of the Financial and Fiscal
Commission have been considered.”
[12]
The
Provincial Tax Regulation Process Act
[5]
(Process Act) is the legislation envisaged in section 228(2)(b) of
the Constitution to regulate the powers of Provincial Legislatures
to impose taxes, levies and duties. In section 1, “provincial
tax” is defined as “a tax, levy or duty,
or a flat-rate
surcharge on the tax base of a tax, levy or duty that is imposed by
national legislation, which a Province may impose
in terms of
section 228 of the Constitution”. The Process Act
entails various intergovernmental processes, which
involve the
Minister of Finance and other organs of state and interested persons,
including the Budget Council and the Financial
and Fiscal Commission,
both of which are statutory bodies. In the
First
Certification
judgment, this Court held that section 228 includes gambling
taxes in the Provinces’ general taxing powers.
[6]
[13]
Section
228 must be read with section 120 of the Constitution, which
specifies the manner in which taxes or levies may be imposed
by a
Provincial Legislature. In terms of section 119, only a
provincial MEC for Treasury may introduce a “money Bill”
in a Provincial Legislature. In terms of section 120(1), a Bill
is a “money Bill” if it: (a) appropriates
money; (b)
imposes provincial taxes, levies, duties or surcharges; (c) abolishes
or reduces, or grants exemptions from, any
provincial taxes, levies,
duties or surcharges; or (d) authorises direct charges against a
Provincial Revenue Fund.
[7]
[14]
The upshot of the constitutional and statutory framework
outlined above is that an MEC may not introduce a provincial tax by
way
of regulation, and a provincial Act may not purport to empower an
MEC to do so. It is against this framework that the empowering
provisions of the NW Gambling Act have to be considered. They
read as follows:
Section
84(1)(e):
“
The
Responsible Member may, in consultation with the Board, by notice in
the
Provincial Gazette
make regulations regarding
. . .
(e)
any matter pertaining to gambling levies and fees.”
Section
87(1)(a):
“
A
holder of a license shall be liable to, at such intervals as may be
prescribed, pay a gambling levy which shall be calculated
on such
basis and at such rate as may be prescribed and be payable in the
manner and before the date as prescribed: Provided that
different
rates may be so prescribed in respect of different types of
licenses.”
Section
87(3):
“
The
Responsible Member may, with the concurrence of the Member of the
Executive Council responsible for finance, by notice in the
Provincial Gazette
make regulations prescribing the
matters in respect of which gambling levies and fees shall be payable
and the tariffs relating
thereto.”
[15]
Section 3 of the NW Gambling Act provides for the
establishment of the Board as a juristic person. Section 4 sets
out the
powers and functions of the Board, which, among others,
include: (a) overseeing gambling activities in the Province; (b)
exercising
such powers and performing such functions and duties as
may be assigned to the Board in terms of the Act or any other law;
and
(c) inviting applications for licences and considering such
applications. The Board also has the power to make and enforce
rules for the conduct of its proceedings and hearings, and to consult
with any person or employ consultants regarding any matter
relevant
to the performance of its functions on such terms and conditions as
it may determine.
[16]
Section
21 of the NW Gambling Act identifies three sources of funding for the
Board: (a) monies transferred from the Department
of Economic
Development, Environment, Conservation and Tourism (Department);
[8]
(b) annual Board administrative fees and investigation fees charged
in respect of applications for licences and registration; and
(c)
money accruing to the Board from any other service.
Litigation
history
High
Court
[17]
In July 2020, the applicants launched an application in the
High Court seeking an order reviewing and setting aside the impugned
amendment. In addition, “to the extent necessary”
the applicants sought an order declaring the empowering provisions
to
be unconstitutional and invalid. The applicants contended that
the decision to promulgate the impugned amendment was unlawful
and
reviewable on the following grounds.
[18]
First, the empowering provisions were unconstitutional as
they: (a) delegate legislative power to impose provincial taxes
or
levies to the Provincial Executive, in breach of section 228(1) of
the Constitution and the principle of separation of powers (section
228 challenge), and (b) assign “plenary legislative power”
from the Legislature to the Executive, without adequate
guidance to
the Executive as to how the power should be exercised (delegation of
plenary power challenge). Second, in the
event it was found
that the empowering provisions do not authorise the imposition of
provincial taxes and levies and thus do not
contravene section 228(1)
of the Constitution, the applicants asserted that the impugned
amendment itself amounts to an unconstitutional
imposition of tax.
Third, in breach of section 87(3) of the NW Gambling Act, the
MEC for Treasury did not concur in
the impugned amendment
(section 87(3) challenge).
[19]
In the alternative, the applicants challenged the amendment by
way of a review application. They complained about the
lawfulness
and fairness of the process by which the amendment was
promulgated (review challenge).
[20]
In opposition, the respondents relied on a number of technical
defences, including: CASA’s lack of standing; lack of authority
of CASA’s deponent to the founding affidavit; and the alleged
misjoinder of the Minister of Finance. On substance,
the
respondents contended that a gaming levy as contemplated in
regulation 73 is not a provincial tax as contemplated in the
definition
of “provincial tax” in section 1 of the
Process Act, as it is not imposed by the national Gambling Act or any
other
national legislation, but by the NW Gambling Act.
[21]
In
its judgment, the High Court referred to sections 43(b) and 104(1) of
the Constitution as vesting legislative authority in the
Provincial
Legislature.
[9]
The Court
also noted that sections 119 to 124 of the Constitution set out the
process for the introduction and passing of
provincial legislation.
The Court then alluded to the trite principle that the
Legislature (including a Provincial Legislature)
is generally
entitled to delegate subordinate regulatory authority to other
bodies, including the Executive, subject to constitutional
controls.
The Court recited at length the relevant judgments of this
Court in this respect.
[10]
The High Court went on to mention the applicants’
assertion that the empowering provisions were at odds with the
constitutional
controls,
[11]
that the delegation implicated the applicants’ right to
property, and recited this Court’s jurisprudence on this
topic.
[12]
[22]
The
High Court concluded that the empowering provisions are
unconstitutional and invalid on the basis that they impermissibly
delegated
law-making power to the MEC for Tourism. It
accordingly directed the respondents to pay the second and third
applicants,
together with interest, the difference between: (a) the
gambling levies that the second and third applicants had paid and
would
have paid in terms of the impugned amendment, from the date of
the amendment to the date of the Court’s judgment; and (b)
the
gambling levies that would have been payable during this period had
regulation 73(1) not been amended.
[13]
[23]
Having reached this conclusion, the High Court did not
consider the other grounds raised by the applicants, namely: (a) the
section
228 challenge and its alternative challenge; (b) the section
87(3) challenge; or (c) the review challenge.
In
this Court
Applicants’
submissions
[24]
The
applicants submit that the High Court’s order of invalidity
should be confirmed by this Court as the empowering provisions
unconstitutionally delegate powers to the Provincial Executive to
impose taxes and levies in contravention of section 228 of the
Constitution. In this regard, the applicants rely on this
Court’s decision in
Shuttleworth
[14]
where it was emphasised that “the dominant purpose” of a
statute must be considered to determine whether a charge amounts
to a
tax or levy.
[25]
The applicants argue that various provisions of the NW
Gambling Act illustrate that the dominant purpose of the statute is
to authorise
the raising of revenue for the provincial fiscus, rather
than to regulate conduct. Consequently, the applicants contend
that
the provisions are unconstitutional and must be declared
invalid. The applicants further submit that even if this Court
were
to find that the NW Gambling Act does not unconstitutionally
delegate taxing powers to the MEC for Tourism, the provisions
nevertheless
constitute an impermissible and unconstitutional
delegation of plenary law-making power to the Provincial Executive,
as held by
the High Court. This is because, the applicants
argue, it is unconstitutional to assign unfettered discretionary and
plenary
legislative powers to the Executive, as done by the North
West Legislature in this instance in terms of the empowering
provisions.
[26]
Lastly,
the applicants argue that the MEC for Tourism’s decisions,
including her regulation-making powers, are subject to
administrative
law prescripts. In particular, the applicants submit that
rule-making and regulation-making constitute administrative
action
and are thus reviewable under the Promotion of Administrative Justice
Act
[15]
(PAJA). To the
extent that the impugned amendment is not subject to PAJA, the
applicants submit that it is nonetheless subject
to the principle of
legality. The applicants, accordingly, complain about the
lawfulness and fairness of the process by which
the amendment was
promulgated and as a result argue that the impugned amendment should
be reviewed and set aside.
Respondents’
submissions
[27]
The first to third respondents oppose confirmation of the
declaration of constitutional invalidity. In the event of this
Court
confirming the constitutional invalidity of the impugned
provisions, the respondents submit that the declaration of invalidity
should be suspended for 24 months to enable the Provincial
Legislature to remedy the defects.
[28]
As a
preliminary point, the respondents argue that the applicants were
inordinately late in their challenge to the Regulations.
The
assertion is that the Regulations were initially introduced in 2002.
If the imposition of the gambling levies in
regulation 73(1) was
impermissible, it was so from the outset. Thus, the respondents
submit that the review challenge, if
brought under PAJA, should have
been brought within 180 days of their obtaining knowledge of
regulation 73(1) as initially promulgated.
[16]
Thus, the 180-day limit imposed by section 7 of PAJA had long
passed. In the circumstances, the respondents submit
that there
was a delay in launching the review application. Absent an
application in terms of section 9(1) of PAJA for the
extension of the
period, the High Court had no jurisdiction to hear the matter.
[29]
With regard to the substance of the applicants’ section
228 constitutional challenge, the respondents’ contentions are
these. It is the design of the NW Gambling Act, and
the Legislature’s choice, to create a flexible regulatory
scheme that grants the MEC for Tourism wide regulation-making powers
in respect of any matter that may be necessary or expedient
to
prescribe in order to achieve the objectives of the Act. The
provisions of the NW Gambling Act and its purpose would be
frustrated
were the MEC for Tourism not empowered to impose levies and
fees. In particular, the Province’s ability
to generate
revenue would be seriously compromised by the curtailment of the MEC
for Tourism’s powers. The respondents
also contend that
section 228(1) only applies to provincial taxes imposed by national
legislation. Thus, argue the respondents,
the empowering
provisions do not constitute a tax, but a regulatory measure.
[30]
In answer to the delegation of plenary power challenge, the
respondents submit that the imposition of levies and fees by the MEC
for Tourism is not plenary in nature in that it is regulated by
regulation 73 which is a subordinate piece of legislation promulgated
in terms of section 84. The regulation and any amendments to it
do not pass, amend or repeal the NW Gambling Act.
The
judgment of the High Court
[31]
As mentioned, the High Court declared the empowering
provisions unconstitutional and invalid. The High Court arrived
at the
latter conclusion on a misconceived basis. It
erroneously thought that the respondents’ Counsel had conceded
during
argument that the empowering provisions unconstitutionally
delegated law- making power to the MEC for Tourism. The
Judge
had misunderstood the nature of the concession made by Counsel.
[32]
The concession concerned a different “delegation”,
namely, that the MEC for Treasury was not entitled to
delegate
her concurrence powers to the Treasury Head of Department in
terms of section 87(3) of the NW Gambling Act. The concession,
therefore, had nothing to do with the delegation of plenary powers to
the Executive. Other than this erroneous basis for
its
conclusion, the High Court’s judgment does not proffer any
reasoning for its conclusion that the empowering provisions
are
unconstitutional and invalid.
[33]
There
is another feature of the High Court’s judgment that warrants
comment. It is the failure by the Court to consider
and
determine all the constitutional grounds before it – contrary
to what has been cautioned in
Jordaan
[17]
and in
Spilhaus
.
[18]
In
Jordaan
,
this Court held that where the constitutionality of a provision is
challenged on a number of grounds and the court upholds one
such
ground, it is desirable that it should also express its opinion on
the other challenges. This is necessary in the event
of this
Court declining to confirm the ground upheld by the High Court.
[19]
And in
Spilhaus
,
this Court said “[l]itigants are entitled to a decision on all
issues raised, especially where they have an option of appealing
further. The court to which an appeal lies also benefits from
the reasoning on all issues.”
[20]
Issues
[34]
The issues before this Court are whether:
(a)
the applicants unduly delayed in their application;
(b)
the empowering provisions and/or the impugned amendment
authorise the
imposition of taxes or levies in contravention of section 228(1) of
the Constitution;
(c)
the empowering provisions constitute an unconstitutional
delegation
of plenary legislative power from the Legislature to the Executive,
without adequate guidance to the Executive as to
how the power must
be exercised;
(d)
the MEC for Tourism’s decision to amend regulation
73(1) is
reviewable under PAJA or the principle of legality; and
(e)
the levies paid by the respondents pursuant
to the impugned
regulation should be repaid.
Respondents’
delay objection
[35]
I dispose of the respondents’ preliminary PAJA delay
objection. The applicants do not challenge the gambling levies
as they were before the amendment. The respondents’
objection would have some force had the applicants sought to impugn
the pre-amendment regulation 73. The applicants’
challenge is limited to the regulation post-amendment. The
impugned amendment was promulgated on 24 January 2020. The
application was launched on 17 July 2020, well within the 180-day
period prescribed in section 7 of PAJA. There is therefore no
merit in this objection.
Section
228 challenge
Is
the NW Gambling Act, as a provincial Act, exempt from complying with
the Process Act?
[36]
Before I consider whether the empowering provisions and/or the
impugned amendment authorise the imposition of taxes or levies in
contravention of section 228(1),
I consider
an issue related to section 228. It is the respondents’
contention
that
a “provincial tax” is confined to a tax imposed by
national legislation, so that the NW Gambling Act, being a provincial
Act, did not need to comply with the Process Act. The
definition of “provincial tax” in the Process Act is “a
tax, levy or duty, or a flat-rate surcharge on the tax base of a tax,
levy or duty that is imposed by national legislation, which
a
Province may impose in terms of section 228 of the Constitution”.
Based on this definition, the respondents argue
that a “provincial
tax” is confined to a tax imposed by national legislation, so
that the NW Gambling Act, being a
provincial Act, did not need to
comply with the Process Act.
[37]
This contention is unsustainable. Section 228 of the
Constitution envisages that a Provincial Legislature may impose two
forms
of provincial taxes, namely (a) taxes, levies and duties (other
than income tax, value-added tax, etc.); and (b) flat-rate surcharges
on any tax, levy or duty that is imposed by national legislation.
Therefore, the reference to “national legislation”
in
section 228(1) refers to national legislation which imposes a tax,
levy or duty and upon which a provincial flat-rate surcharge
is
imposed by a Province. In other words, section 228(1)(b)
envisages the imposition of a surcharge by a Provincial Legislature
upon a national tax, levy or duty.
[38]
The
contention that the reference to “imposed by national
legislation” in the Process Act’s definition of
“provincial
tax” means that a provincial tax is confined
to a tax, levy or duty imposed by the national legislation has no
merit.
First, it would mean that section 228(1) of the
Constitution envisages the imposition of a provincial tax by a
Provincial Legislature
but only where the tax is imposed by national
legislation. That cannot be, as a Provincial Legislature has no
authority to
enact national legislation.
[39]
In
addition, such an interpretation would permit Provinces to impose
taxes and levies without limitation, and in particular, without
complying with the requirements in section 228(2) of the
Constitution
or the Process Act, provided they do so by way of provincial
legislation. But the limitations on “the power of a
provincial
legislature” to impose taxes, levies, duties and
surcharges is expressly provided for in section 228(2), pursuant to
which
the Process Act is enacted. What is more, such an
interpretation would render section 228(1)(a) nugatory.
[40]
The definition of “provincial tax” in the Process
Act is intended to give effect to section 228(1) of the Constitution.
Thus, although the definition of “provincial tax”
is not sub-categorised as (a) and (b), it should be read –
in
line with section 228(1) of the Constitution – as follows: “(a)
a tax levy or duty; or (b) a flat-rate surcharge
on the tax base of a
tax, levy or duty that is imposed by national legislation”.
Section 228(1)(b) of the Constitution, like
the second part of the
definition of “provincial tax”, is a flat- rate
surcharge imposed by a Province on top
of any tax, levy or duty
imposed by national legislation. The reference to national
legislation does not apply to the type
of taxes and levies envisaged
by section 228(1)(a) of the Constitution and in the first part of the
definition of “provincial
tax”.
[41]
If the NW Gambling Act
purports to
empower the MEC for Tourism – a member of the Provincial
Executive – to impose a provincial tax or levy
within the
meaning of section 228(1)(a) and within the meaning of the first part
of the definition of “provincial tax”
in the Process
Act, such provision would thus be in violation of the Constitution
and the Process Act. It is therefore necessary
to consider
whether regulation 73(1) constitutes a provincial tax, and whether
the NW Gambling Act purports to authorise the imposition
of a
provincial tax, within the meaning of the Constitution and the
Process Act. It is to these questions I now turn.
Do
the impugned provisions of the NW Gambling Act authorise the
imposition of a tax and does regulation 73(1) impose a tax?
[42]
It
is settled that the power of taxation and appropriation of government
funds are reserved for Legislatures, and that the Executive
has no
power to raise taxes itself. This Court in
Fedsure
[21]
pointed out that when the Legislature exercises the power to raise
taxes or rates or determines appropriations to be made out of
public
funds, “it is exercising a power that under our Constitution is
a power peculiar to elected legislative bodies.
It is a power
that is exercised by democratically elected representatives after due
deliberation”.
[22]
[43]
This Court in
Shuttleworth
affirmed the principle and expanded on its rationale:
“
[
T]he
manner and the extent to which national taxes are raised and
appropriated must yield to the democratic will as expressed in
law.
It is the people, through their duly elected representatives, who
decide on the taxes that residents must bear.
An executive
government may not impose a tax burden or appropriate public money
without due and express consent of elected public
representatives.
That authority, and indeed duty, is solely within the remit of the
Legislature. This accords with
this Court’s decision in
Fedsure
,
as well as the Canadian Supreme Court decision in
Eurig
Estate
.
Both cases hold that the primary object of the limits on how to raise
national taxes or appropriate revenue, as our Constitution
does in
relation to a money Bill, is to ensure that there is “no
taxation without representation”. It is plain
that in our
jurisdiction a decision or law that purports to impose a tax will be
invalid to the extent of its inconsistency with
the limits imposed by
the Constitution or other law.”
[23]
(Footnotes omitted.)
[44]
Much as the power of taxation by the
national government is constitutionally regulated, so it is in
respect of the provincial sphere
of government. Section 226(1)
of the Constitution establishes, for each Province, a Provincial
Revenue Fund into which all
revenues raised or received by the
provincial government in question must be paid. In terms of
section 226(2), money may
be withdrawn from a Provincial Revenue Fund
only: (a) in terms of an appropriation by a provincial Act; or (b) as
a direct charge
against the Provincial Revenue Fund, when it is
provided for in the Constitution or a provincial Act.
[45]
An evaluation of our jurisprudence
on
whether a charge is a tax as contemplated by the Constitution
or merely a regulatory charge
reveals that this is
never an easy task. In
Shuttleworth
this
Court grappled with that question
.
The
issue there was
whether
a particular amount charged by the Reserve Bank as an exit charge
upon a resident transferring capital out of this country
was a tax or
a regulatory charge. After
an excursus of local
and foreign authorities, writing for the majority, Moseneke DCJ
formulated the test as follows:
“
So,
aside from mere labels, the seminal test is whether the primary or
dominant purpose of a statute is to raise revenue or to regulate
conduct. If regulation is the primary purpose of the revenue
raised under the statute, it would be considered a fee or a
charge
rather than a tax. The opposite is also true. If the
dominant purpose is to raise revenue then the charge would
ordinarily
be a tax. There are no bright lines between the two. Of
course, all regulatory charges raise revenue.
Similarly, ‘every
tax is in some measure regulatory’. That explains the
need to consider carefully the dominant
purpose of a statute imposing
a fee or a charge or a tax. In support of this basic
distinguishing device, judicial authorities
have listed
non-exhaustive factors that will tend to illustrate what the primary
purpose is.”
[24]
[46]
The
Deputy Chief Justice went on to consider a number of cases, which he
said give “open-ended but helpful guidelines”
on
determining the dominant purpose of a particular piece of
legislation. Those guidelines must be weighed carefully on a
case- by-case basis to arrive at a correct decision.
[25]
Those cases included
Permanent Estate
,
[26]
Israelsohn
,
[27]
I L
Back
,
[28]
Maize
Board
,
[29]
and
Gaertner
.
[30]
[47]
In
Permanent
Estate
,
a tax was said to be identifiable by the fact that money is paid into
a general revenue fund for general purposes and no specific
service
is given in return for payment.
[31]
In
Israelsohn
,
the Appellate Division held that the charge in question was a tax
because it was subject to the general machineries of tax assessment
and collection.
[32]
In
I L
Back
,
there was a fee rather than a tax, because its purpose was to empower
the Minister to impose a fee for services and facilities
he had to
provide.
[33]
In
Maize
Board
,
the measure was found not to be a tax because it was “not
imposed on the public as a whole or on a substantial sector thereof”
and its proceeds were not used for public benefit, but largely to
cover administrative costs.
[34]
In
Gaertner
,
this Court considered the primary and secondary functions of customs
and excise duties and held that, although the regulatory
aspect of
the duties served an important public function, the statute in
question was “essentially fiscal”.
[35]
[48]
More
recently, the Supreme Court of Appeal had occasion to consider the
issue in
Randburg
Management District
.
[36]
It held that the dominant purpose of a municipal levy payable
by landowners to the municipality’s general revenue fund
for
general public use and to enable provision of municipal services, was
in the nature of a tax or levy. This was because
the levy had
as its dominant purpose the raising of revenue to fund the provision
of services by the municipality.
[37]
In
Pioneer
Foods
,
[38]
the Western Cape Division of the High Court held that a tariff on
wheat imports payable under the Customs and Excise Act
[39]
had as its main function the imposition of taxes paid into a general
revenue fund.
[40]
[49]
In
Shuttleworth
,
although the Deputy Chief Justice refers to the “dominant purpose
of a statute”, a careful consideration of the
judgment reveals
that, in coming to the conclusion that the exit charge imposed
pursuant to the impugned exchange control legislation
was not a tax,
the dominant purpose of the exit charge itself was determinative.
[41]
[50]
This
is consistent with the position in Canada, where a “sufficient
nexus” is required between a governmental levy with
the
characteristics of a tax, and a regulatory scheme of a statute, to
determine whether a charge is regulatory, as opposed to
a tax.
[42]
In
Greenhouse
Gas
,
the Canadian Supreme Court reiterated the “two-step approach
for determining whether a governmental levy is connected to
a
regulatory scheme”
[43]
as set out in its judgment in
Westbank
:
[44]
“
The
first step is to identify the existence of a relevant regulatory
scheme. If such a scheme is found to exist, the second
step is
to establish a relationship between the charge and the scheme
itself.”
[45]
[51]
As
also pointed out in
Greenhouse
Gas
,
in
every case, the court must scrutinise the scheme in order to identify
the primary purpose of the levy on the basis of the
Westbank
test.
[46]
[52]
The upshot of the above is this. The fact that the
dominant purpose of a statute is regulatory is not determinative of
the
enquiry. It must further be determined whether the impugned
charge has a sufficient nexus with the regulatory scheme of the
statute in question. This analysis might reveal that, even
though the dominant purpose of the statute as a whole is regulatory,
the dominant purpose of the impugned provision is not part of that
regulatory scheme but is instead the imposition of a tax.
With
this in mind, I turn to the NW Gambling Act.
Does
the NW Gambling Act provide for a regulatory scheme?
[53]
The NW Gambling Act’s long title
says
that
it is enacted “to provide for the
regulation of gambling activities in the Province”.
Chapter II makes provision for the establishment of the Board,
with its powers and functions mainly aimed at regulating gambling
in
the Province. Chapter III deals with licensing in general, and
Chapter IV regulates hearings, investigations and enquiries
relating
to gambling. Chapter V sets out miscellaneous provisions
pertaining to licensing in general, including the power
of the Board
to suspend and revoke licences
of licensees that
have overdue levies.
Chapter XI makes provision for
the appointment of inspectors, as well as setting out their powers
and functions.
[54]
These are strong indicators that the dominant purpose
of the NW Gambling Act as a whole is regulatory. It authorises
the Board
to
regulate
gambling in the Province.
I
therefore conclude that the primary or dominant purpose of the NW
Gambling Act is regulatory in nature.
Is
there a sufficient nexus between the gambling levies and the
regulatory scheme of the NW Gambling Act?
[55]
In
Westbank
,
it was said that the required nexus with the scheme will exist “where
the charges themselves have a regulatory purpose”.
[47]
I consider six aspects in respect of the gambling levies.
[56]
First, the preamble of the NW
Gambling Act says that “gambling provides a significant source
of public revenue for the Province”
and that “the
levying of such taxes has to be dealt with in terms of the Provincial
Legislation”
.
This clearly
shows that the purpose of imposing the gambling levies is more than
the regulation of gambling by funding the Board.
[57]
Second, section 21 provides that
the Board is funded by monies transferred from the Department headed
by the MEC for Tourism.
Thus, the Board is not directly funded
by gambling levies. The Department therefore has a discretion
to decide upon the amount
of funds to allocate to the Board from time
to time.
[58]
Third,
section 87(1)(f) provides
that levies “shall be paid to the Board for the benefit of the
Provincial Revenue Fund”, while
section 87(2) provides that
gambling levies “shall be a debt due to the Provincial
Administration”. It is worth
reiterating here that
section 226(1) of the Constitution establishes a Provincial Revenue
Fund for each Province into which all
revenues raised or received by
the provincial government in question must be paid.
[59]
Fourth, section 89(1) describes the gambling levies as
a tax, by empowering the MEC for Tourism to enter into agreements
with the
provincial government to regulate and coordinate the levying
and collection of “gambling levy or any similar tax”.
[60]
Fifth,
the
gambling levies are imposed upon the casino licence holders and
are
paid into a general revenue fund – the Provincial Revenue Fund
– for general purposes of
benefitting
the population in the Province as a whole.
[48]
The revenue generated from the gambling levies is clearly meant to
support the provincial government’s activities in
general.
[61]
Sixth,
there is no dispute that the gambling levies generate
significant revenue for the Province. The levies received by
the Board
from licensees, and paid across to the Provincial Revenue
Fund, far exceed the grants received by the Board from the Provincial
Government, and a sizeable portion of the revenue generated by means
of gambling levies and taxes is thus used for purposes other
than
funding the operations of the Board. To illustrate the point,
in the 2016 and 2017 financial years, the amount collected
by the
Board and paid over to the Provincial Revenue Fund exceeded the
amounts paid by the Department to the Board by more than
R70 million
and R40 million respectively.
[62]
In
my judgment, the above serve as ample evidence that
the
dominant purpose of the impugned provisions of the NW Gambling Act –
sections 84(1)(d), 87(1)(a) and 87(3) – and
of regulation 73(1)
has nothing to do with regulating gambling in the Province.
It is well-established that influencing behaviour is a valid
purpose for a regulatory charge. The gambling levies imposed
by
regulation 73(1) are not aimed at, or connected to, influencing or
altering any behaviour. Rather, they are revenue- generating
charges, whose purpose is to raise funds for the Province. This
is not connected to the regulatory scheme of the NW Gambling
Act, and
thus, the gambling levies cannot be characterised as regulatory in
nature.
Despite
the dominant purpose of the statute being regulatory, the impugned
provisions stand out with strong characteristics of a
tax.
According to Christians et al:
[49]
“
Existing
Canadian jurisprudence does not indicate whether there is a
restriction on surplus net revenues when the role of a fee
is to
advance a regulatory purpose. . . . However, significant
revenue could be ‘a strong indication that the levy
was in pith
and substance a tax’. In that case, a court would likely
consider whether the fee was in substance a colourable
device for
raising revenue for general purposes.”
[50]
(Footnotes omitted.)
[63]
In the present case, there is indubitably significant revenue
to the Province generated by the gambling levies imposed by
regulation
73(1).
It is common cause on the
papers that the gambling levies are raised as
general revenue
for the Province’s general service delivery obligations.
For example, the Board’s Annual Report
for the year 2016/2017
shows that the taxes and levies collected by the Board for the 2016
and 2017 financial years totalled R120 784 869
and
R138 619 580, respectively. The report also shows
that similar amounts, i.e. R119 799 149 and R139 001 688,
respectively, were transferred from the Board to the Provincial
Revenue Fund for those financial years. This is also evident
in
the Board’s Annual Reports for the 2014/2015; 2015/2016 and
2018/2019 financial years.
[64]
For these reasons, I conclude that there is no sufficient
nexus between (a) the gambling levies authorised by the impugned
provisions
of the NW Gambling Act and imposed by regulation 73(1) on
the one hand and (b) the regulatory scheme of the NW Gambling
Act on the other hand. It follows that the gambling levies are
constitutionally invalid.
[65]
The order of the High Court declaring the empowering
provisions unconstitutional and invalid must therefore be confirmed.
Having
reached this conclusion, it is not necessary to consider
the review challenge, or whether the empowering provisions constitute
an impermissible delegation of plenary powers, as found by the High
Court.
Remedy
[66]
What remains is to consider the remedy, in particular, whether
Peermont and Sun International are entitled to the repayment
of
the gambling levies unlawfully imposed and paid pursuant to the
impugned amendment. It is common cause that the second
and
third applicants paid the gambling levies under protest. Once
the declaration of unconstitutionality and invalidity of
the
empowering provisions is confirmed, the impugned amendment must be
deemed as if it was never promulgated. It must be
set aside as
a natural consequence. Peermont and Sun International thus paid
more in respect of the gambling levies than
was legally required.
[67]
Accordingly,
they claim repayment of the difference between the levies paid
pursuant to the impugned amendment and the levies that
would have
been paid had the impugned amendment not been promulgated. Their
claim is based on the
condictio
indebiti
(an action in terms of which a plaintiff may recover what she or he
has paid a defendant by mistake).
In
First
National Industrial Bank,
[51]
the
Appellate Division recognised that
the
condictio
indebiti
is not confined to the recovery of monies paid involuntarily because
of a mistake, but that it is “also available when the
payment
(or indeed any performance), although deliberate, perhaps even
advised, was nevertheless involuntary because it was effected
under
pressure and protest”.
[52]
In
the present case, it is common cause that
Peermont
and Sun International
paid
the unlawful gambling levies
expressly
under
protest,
and
only
because
of the severe consequences attached to non-payment of the levies,
including the revocation of a license.
[53]
[68]
In
addition to the
condictio
indebiti
as a basis for repayment, Peermont and Sun International also
invoke the power of this Court to order a just and equitable
remedy
under section 172(1)(b) of the Constitution. They are correct.
Just and equitable relief should generally be
aimed at correcting or
reversing the consequences of unconstitutional action. In
Allpay
(No 2)
,
[54]
this Court articulated what it referred to as the “
corrective
principle”
as
follows:
“
Logic,
general legal principle, the Constitution, and the binding authority
of this Court all point to a default position that requires
the
consequences of invalidity to be corrected or reversed.”
[55]
[69]
Applying that principle to the present case, the consequences
of invalidity can only be corrected if the gambling levies paid
pursuant
to the unlawful amended regulation 73(1) are repaid to
Peermont and Sun International. Repayment is a just and
equitable
order under section 172(1)(b) of the Constitution.
However, in the context of this case, not all the taxes and levies
imposed
and paid in terms of the Regulations are repayable. The
reason is that Peermont and Sun International did not seek to impugn
the taxes and levies imposed in terms of the empowering provision
other than those imposed pursuant to the January 2020 amendment.
Accordingly, it is only with effect from that date that gambling
levies paid by them should be reckoned. In other words,
the
declaration of invalidity does not affect the regulations as they
existed before the promulgation of the impugned amendment.
Costs
[70]
The
applicants have succeeded in having the High Court’s order of
invalidity confirmed.
It
is the norm to award costs in favour of a successful applicant for
confirmation.
[56]
There
is no reason in these proceedings why the respondents should not be
ordered to pay the applicants’ costs.
Order
[71]
In the
result, the following order is made:
1.
The declaration of constitutional
invalidity made by the
High Court of South Africa, North West
Division, Mahikeng,
is confirmed in the terms set
out in paragraph 2 of this order.
2.
Sections
84(1)(e),
87(1)(a), and 87(3)
of the
North West Gambling Act 2 of 2001 are declared invalid
to the extent that they purport to authorise the Member of the
Executive
Council for Economic Development, Environment, Conservation
and Tourism, to impose gambling levies as a tax as contemplated in
section 228(1)(a) of the Constitution.
3.
The declaration of
invalidity takes effect from 23 January 2020.
4.
The first and second
respondents, jointly and severally, are ordered to pay the second and
third applicants the difference between:
(a)
the gambling levies
that the second and third applicants have paid pursuant to regulation
73(1) of the
North West Gambling Regulations 2002
,
from 23 January 2020 to the date of this judgment; and
(b)
the gambling levies that would have been payable during the
period mentioned above, had regulation 73(1) not been amended.
5.
The first and second respondents, jointly and
severally, are ordered to pay interest on the amounts referred to in
paragraph 4 above,
as follows:
(a)
in respect of the gambling levies already paid by the
second and third applicants by the date on which the application in
the High Court
was served, such interest to be at the prescribed
rate from the date of service of the application on the respondents
to the date
of payment;
(b)
in respect of the gambling levies not yet paid by the
second and third applicants by the date on which the application was
served
in the High Court, such interest to be paid at the
prescribed rate from the date of each payment by the applicants.
6.
The first, second and third respondents, jointly and
severally, are ordered to pay the first, second, and third
applicants’
costs, including the costs of two counsel.
For
the Applicants:
F
Snyckers SC and M Mbikiwa instructed by Webber Wentzel Attorneys
For
the First to Third Respondents:
L
Montsho Moloisane SC, K T Bokaba and Z Mahamba instructed by
State Attorney
[1]
Section
172(2)(d) of the Constitution provides:
“
[a]ny
person or organ of state with a sufficient interest may appeal, or
apply, directly to the
Constitutional
Court
to confirm or vary an order of constitutional invalidity by a court
in terms of this subsection.”
[2]
2 of 2001.
[3]
North West Gambling Regulations, GN 353
Provincial
Gazette 5823
,
25 November 2002.
[4]
Phillips
v Director of Public Prosecutions, Witwatersrand Local Division
[2003]
ZACC 1
;
2003 (3) SA 345
(CC);
2003 (4) BCLR 357
(CC) at para 8.
[5]
53 of 2001.
[6]
Ex
Parte Chairperson of the Constitutional Assembly: In re
Certification
of the Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996
[1996] ZACC 26
;
1996 (4) SA 744
(CC);
1996 (10) BCLR 1253
(CC) at
para 442.
[7]
See section 120 of the Constitution.
[8]
This is the current name of the Department which, in the NW Gambling
Act, is referred to as the Department of Economic
Development and Tourism.
[9]
Casino
Association of South Africa v MEC for Economic Development,
Environment, Conservation and Tourism
unreported
judgment of the High Court, Case No: M374/2020 (7 October 2022)
(High Court judgment) at para 7.
[10]
Id at para 8.
[11]
Id at paras 9-10.
[12]
Id at paras 11-13.
[13]
Id at para 18.4.
[14]
South
African Reserve Bank v Shuttleworth
[2015]
ZACC 17;
2015
(5) SA 146 (CC); 2015 (8) BCLR 959 (CC).
[15]
3 of 2000.
[16]
Section 7(1) of PAJA provides:
“
(1)
any proceedings for judicial review in terms of section 6(1) must be
instituted
without unreasonable delay and not later than 180 days
after the date—
(a)
subject to subsection (2)(c), on which any
proceedings instituted in terms of internal remedies as contemplated
in subsection
(2)(a) have been concluded; or
(b)
where no such remedies exist, on which 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.”
[17]
S v
Jordaan (Sex Workers Education and Advocacy Task Force and others as
amici curiae)
[2002]
ZACC 22
;
2002 (6) SA 642
;
2002 (11) BCLR 1117
(CC).
[18]
Spilhaus
Property Holdings (Pty) Limited v MTN
[2019]
ZACC 16; 2019 (4) SA 406 (CC); 2019 (6) BCLR 772 (CC).
[19]
Jordaan
above
n 17 at para 21.
[20]
Spilhaus
above n 18 at para 44.
[21]
Fedsure
Life Assurance Ltd v Greater Johannesburg Transitional Metropolitan
Council
[1998] ZACC 17; 1999 (1) SA 374 (CC); 1998 (12) BCLR 1458 (CC).
[22]
Id at para 45.
[23]
Shuttleworth
above n 14 at para 42.
[24]
Shuttleworth
above
n 14 at para 48.
[25]
Id
at para 52.
[26]
Permanent
Estate and Finance Co Ltd v Johannesburg City Council
1952 (4) SA 249 (W).
[27]
Israelsohn
v Commissioner for Inland Revenue
1952 (3) SA 529
(A).
[28]
The
Master v I L Back
1983 (1) SA 986 (A).
[29]
Maize
Board v Epol (Pty) Ltd
[2008]
ZAKZHC 99; 2009 (3) SA 110 (D).
[30]
Gaertner
v Minister of Finance
[2013] ZACC 38; 2014 (1) SA 442 (CC); 2014 (1) BCLR 38 (CC).
[31]
Permanent
Estate
above n 26 at 259.
[32]
Israelsohn
above
n 27 at 539F-G.
[33]
I L
Back
above n 28 at 1002-1003.
[34]
Maize
Board
above
n 29 at para 27.
[35]
Gaertner
above
n 30 at paras 54-5.
[36]
Randburg
Management District v West Dunes Properties
[2015]
ZASCA 135; 2016 (2) SA 293 (SCA).
[37]
Id
at para 29.
[38]
Pioneer
Foods (Pty) Ltd v Minister of Finance
[2017]
ZAWCHC 110; 2019 (1) SA 273 (WCC).
[39]
91
of 1964.
[40]
Id
at para 21.
[41]
Shuttleworth
above n 14 at paras 48, 53, 56, 57 and 60.
[42]
In
Reference
re Greenhouse Gas Pollution Pricing Act
2021 SCC 11
(
Greenhouse
Gas
)
at para 213. See also
Westbank
First Nation v British Columbia Hydro and Power Authority
[1999] 3 SCR 134
(
Westbank
)
at para 44 and
620
Connaught Ltd v Canada (Attorney General
)
2008 SCC 7
;
[2008] 1 SCR 131
at para 24.
[43]
Greenhouse
Gas
Id
at para 213.
[44]
Westbank
above
n 42
at
para 43.
[45]
Id
at para 44.
[46]
Greenhouse
Gas
above
n 42 at para 218.
[47]
Westbank
above n 42 at para 44.
[48]
Section
87(1)(f) of the NW Gambling Act.
[49]
Christians, Hewson and Jarda “The Pan-Canadian Carbon Tax: A
Constitutional Perspective” in Salassa Boix
Aspectos
Constitucionales Controvertidos De La Tributación Ambiental
/
Controversial
Constitutional Aspects of Environmental Taxation
(2018),
available at
https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=3099588
.
[50]
Id
at 26.
[51]
Commissioner
for Inland Revenue v First National Industrial Bank Ltd
[1990]
ZASCA 49; 1990 (3) SA 641 (A).
[52]
Id
at
647C-D.
[53]
Section 88 provides for penalties and interest for the failure to
pay gambling levies or fees when due. It makes any licence
holder who fails to pay levies or fees as prescribed liable for a
penalty of 1% per day up to a maximum of 100%, plus interest
at the
prescribed rate. It also empowers the Board to revoke or
suspend the licence of any licensee whose unpaid levies
or fees have
been overdue for a period of 45 days.
[54]
Allpay
(No 2)
Consolidated
Investment Holdings (Pty) Ltd v Chief Executive Officer of the South
African Social
Security
Agency (No 2)
[2014] ZACC 12; 2014 (4) SA 179 (CC); 2014 (6) BCLR 641 (CC).
[55]
Id
at para 30.
[56]
Gaertner
above
n 30 at para 87.
sino noindex
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