Case Law[2025] ZASCA 37South Africa
JT International Manufacturing South Africa (Pty) Ltd v The Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service (1330/2023) [2025] ZASCA 37; 2025 (6) SA 414 (SCA) (4 April 2025)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
4 April 2025
Headnotes
Summary: Interpretation: Customs and Excise Act 91 of 1964 – twelve imported consignments of cigarette tobacco entered under rebate code 460.24 not entered into SAD 500 ZRW forms as required by rule 19A.09(c) – whether the Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service has a discretion to exempt non-compliance with the provisions of rule 19A.09(c) in terms of s 75(10)(a) of the Customs and Excise Act.
Judgment
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## JT International Manufacturing South Africa (Pty) Ltd v The Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service (1330/2023) [2025] ZASCA 37; 2025 (6) SA 414 (SCA) (4 April 2025)
JT International Manufacturing South Africa (Pty) Ltd v The Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service (1330/2023) [2025] ZASCA 37; 2025 (6) SA 414 (SCA) (4 April 2025)
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sino date 4 April 2025
FLYNOTES:
TAX – Customs and excise –
Import
duties
–
Consignments
of cigarette tobacco – Entered under rebate code –
Requirements of Rule 19A.09(c) – Failure
by employee of
applicant to complete forms – Commissioner permitted to ex
post facto exempt applicant from compliance
with prescribed
conditions – Commissioner has discretion to exempt
non-compliance – May exercise discretion in
favour of, or
against, granting exemption – Customs and Excise Act 91 of
1964, s 75(10)(a).
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Reportable
Case
no: 1330/2023
In
the matter between:
JT
INTERNATIONAL MANUFACTURING SOUTH AFRICA
(PTY)
LTD APPELLANT
and
THE
COMMISSIONER FOR THE SOUTH
AFRICAN
REVENUE SERVICE
RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
JT International Manufacturing South Africa
(Pty) Ltd v The Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service
(1330/2023)
[2025] ZASCA 37
(4 April 2025)
Coram:
ZONDI AP and SMITH and KOEN JJA and MUSI and PHATSOANE AJJA
Heard:
12 March 2025
Delivered:
4 April 2025
Summary:
Interpretation: Customs and Excise Act 91 of 1964 – twelve
imported consignments of cigarette tobacco entered under
rebate code
460.24 not entered into SAD 500 ZRW forms as required by rule
19A.09(c) – whether the Commissioner for the South
African
Revenue Service has a discretion to exempt non-compliance with the
provisions of rule 19A.09(c) in terms of s 75(10)(
a
) of the
Customs and Excise Act.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Gauteng Division of the High Court
,
Pretoria (Flatela J, sitting as a court of first instance):
1
The appeal is upheld with costs.
2
The order of the high court is set aside and replaced with the
following order:
‘
(a)
It is declared that s 75(10)(
a
)
of the Customs and Excise Act 91 of 1964 authorises the Commissioner
of the South African Revenue Service (the respondent) to
ex
post facto
exempt the applicant from compliance with the conditions prescribed
by rule 19A.09(c);
(b)
The respondent shall pay the applicant’s costs pertaining to
the separated issue.’
JUDGMENT
Zondi
AP (Smith and Koen JJA and Musi and Phatshoane AJJA concurring):
Introduction
[1]
The issue in this appeal is whether s 75(10)(
a
) of the Customs
and Excise Act 91 of 1964 (the Act) authorises the respondent, the
Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service
(the
Commissioner),
ex post facto
to exempt the appellant, JT
International Manufacturing South Africa (Pty) Ltd, from compliance
with the conditions prescribed
by rule 19A.09(c). The appellant
contends that the proviso to s 75(10)(
a
) does empower
the Commissioner to exempt non-compliance with the rule. The
Commissioner disagrees. He contends that the exemption
powers granted
to him by the proviso do not extend to condoning such non-compliance.
Background
facts
[2]
During the period 7 January 2011 to 25 July 2011, the appellant
imported a total of 12 consignments of cigarette tobacco
from
Switzerland. It duly entered each consignment of the tobacco by
completing and submitting the SAD 500 form to the Commissioner.
The
appellant declared and paid the ‘ordinary’ customs duty
plus VAT thereon, as reflected on the form. The SAD 500
form declared
that the goods were imported under the rebate code 460.24. This is
the rebate code relating to the excise duty on
cigarette tobacco in
Part 2A of Schedule 1 to the Act. After customs clearance, the
tobacco was transported by road from the port
of entry to the
appellant's manufacturing warehouse in Wadeville, Germiston. The
appellant, however, failed to complete or submit
SAD 500 forms (ZRWs)
in respect of the consignments prior to or upon delivery of the
tobacco to the manufacturing warehouse, within
30 days after the
entry of goods on SAD 500 forms, as required by rule 19A.09(c).
[3]
The explanation for the default is that the appellant’s
employee, Mr Mahlalela, who was responsible for ensuring
that the
ZRWs were timeously completed and submitted to the Commissioner,
failed to do so in respect of the relevant consignments.
His job
involved administering the movement of imported tobacco from the port
of entry to the warehouse. He is no longer employed
by the appellant
and could not be contacted to obtain his explanation. His then
manager, Ms Obermeyer, records that Mr Mahlalela
had told her, after
the failure to file the ZRWs became known to the appellant, that he
had completed all the documents which he
understood were required to
be completed. Ms Obermeyer had not been aware of his failure at the
time and believed that Mr Mahlalela,
who had been employed for some
considerable time and was in constant contact with the clearing
agent, was aware of all the customs
requirements and had complied
with them.
[4]
In the course of a post clearance audit conducted by the Commissioner
in January 2012, it was discovered that ZRWs had
not been completed
or submitted for the shipments at the relevant time. The Commissioner
gave notice of its intention to claim
from the appellant the Part 2A
excise duty in respect of the cigarette tobacco. In response, the
appellant explained the failure
and expressed regret for the error.
It attached newly created ZRW declarations for the months in
question, each dated 10 February
2012. It explained that it had full
records of the import of dutiable goods and manufacturing of the
final product and invited
the Commissioner to inspect these. It
averred that at no point was the revenue owing to the
fiscus
at risk, and that the appellant could account for its excise
declarations. In conclusion, it asked among others, for absolution
from payment of the Schedule 1 Part 2A duty. The Commissioner turned
down the appellant's request. It stated that the appellant
was
not entitled to the rebate because it had not complied with rule 19
A.09(
c
). It demanded payment.
[5]
On 16 April 2012, the appellant made a formal request for the
Commissioner to exercise his discretion in terms of s 75(10)(a)
of
the Act to exempt the appellant retrospectively from the requirement
to file the ZRWs. On 12 October 2012, the Commissioner
rejected the
exemption application on the ground that s 75(10)(
a
) found no
application to the present circumstances,
i.e.
that the
Commissioner was not empowered by that provision to grant the relief
sought. On 22 November 2012, the appellant lodged
an internal
administrative appeal in terms of ss 77A to 77HA of the Customs Act
against the Commissioner’s decisions to claim
excise duty and
VAT amounting to R60 946 051.34, and to refuse to exercise the s
75(10)(
a
) power to exempt the appellant from compliance.
[6]
On 10 September 2013, the Commissioner notified the appellant of the
decision of the Customs and Excise National Appeal
Committee (the
National Appeal Committee) dismissing the appeal. The sole basis for
this dismissal was that s 75(10) did not provide
a legal basis for
the claimed exemptions. The relevant part of the National Appeal
Committee’s decision reads:
‘
Section 75(10)
does not provide for application for condonation for non- compliance.
What is in issue here is a request for condonation
for non-compliance
and not an application for exemption from prior compliance as
envisaged by s 75(10). As a result, the duty of
the Commissioner to
exercise a power in favour of [the Appellant] falls away. In the
circumstances, duty and VAT remain due and
payable.’
And
further:
‘
In conclusion,
based on the committee's interpretation of s 75(10), there is no
legal basis for SARS to exercise its discretion
in condoning
non-compliance after importation, and the schedule must therefore
stand. Your appeal is therefore disallowed.’
[7]
After giving the requisite notice to the Commissioner, the appellant
on 17 April 2014, brought an application in the Gauteng
Division of
the High Court, Pretoria (the high court) in which it, among others,
sought the following relief:
‘
1
Declaring that (a) under s 75(1)(
b
)
of the Customs and Excise Act 61 of 1964 ‘’(the Customs
Act)’’ the Applicant has a right to a rebate of
the
excise duty under tariff item 104.35.10 (sub-heading 2403.10.30) in
Part 2A of Schedule 1 to the Customs Act on the consignments
of
tobacco which the applicant imported during the period January 2011
to July 2011, being those consignments reflected in the
first three
columns of the schedule, such excise duty (in sum of R53 461 449.02)
being reflected under column 7 . . . and (b) the
Applicant is not
liable for the payment of the additional value-added tax ‘’(VAT)’’
in terms of the Value-Added
Tax Act 89 of 1991 (in the sum of R7 484
602.32) as reflected in column 9 . . .
2
Reviewing and setting aside the Respondent’s decisions to:
(a) demand
payment by the Applicant in respect of the said imports of additional
excise duty of R53 461 449.02 and VAT
of R7 484 602.32, amounting to
R60 946 051.34 in total, and interest thereon; and
(b) refuse to
exercise the discretion afforded to him in section 75(10)(
a
)
of the Customs Act to exempt the Applicant from compliance with the
conditions prescribed by Rule 19A.09(c) of the rules promulgated
in
terms of the Customs Act in relation to the entry of the said imports
into a licensed manufacturing warehouse on a form SAD
500 (ZRW)
within 30 days of the date of entry on form SAD 500 (GR)
and replacing the said
decisions of the Respondent with an Order to the effect that:
(c) no such amounts
as set out in (a) above are payable by the Applicant; or in the
alternative,
(d) that the
Applicant be exempted from compliance with the provisions of Rule
19A.09(c) referred to in (b) above;
or, in the event that
this Court is not prepared to grant the relief in paragraphs (c)
and/or (d) above, remitting the matter to
the Respondent and
directing him to make a fresh decision as to whether to claim the
additional duty and VAT, and whether to exercise
his discretion under
section 75(10)(
a)
of the Customs Act, as requested by the
applicant.’
[8]
By agreement between the parties, the high court made a separation
order in terms of rule 33(4) of the Uniform Rules of
Court providing
for the following issue to be adjudicated by the court separately
(the separated issue):
‘
1 Whether
section 75(10)(
a
)
of the Customs and Excise Act, 91 of 1964 or the common law
authorises the Respondent to
ex
post facto
exempt the Applicant from compliance with the conditions prescribed
by Rule 19A.09(
c
).
2 directing that all
further proceedings be stayed until the separated issue has been
disposed of . . .’.
The
high court’s findings
[9]
The high court decided the separated issue in favour of the
Commissioner. It held that the exemption power granted to
the
Commissioner under s 75(10)(
a
) applies exclusively to
circumstances where goods had been duly imported under rebate of
duty, but the importer/manufacturer later
decided to use the goods in
a different manner. It reasoned that if the Commissioner were to
grant a concession using s 75(10)(
a
), it would lead to
the floodgates for similar exemptions being opened. It accordingly
dismissed the application and ordered each
party to pay its own
costs.
Submissions
of the parties
[10]
The appellant submitted that the provisions of s 75(10)(
a
) of
the Act are wide enough to exempt compliance with rule 19A.09(c) in
relation to the timeous submission of ZRWs for the twelve
imported
consignments of tobacco and that being so, there is no basis to
justify the restrictive interpretation contended for by
the
Commissioner. The appellant argued that s 75(10) allows for the
exemption of ‘any such person’ from ‘the
provisions
of’ the subsection. The proviso, so ran the argument, permits
the Commissioner to decide that any one or more
of those requirements
need not be complied with, without endangering the entitlement to a
rebate and this he can do before the
entry in question, or after
entry has already occurred. This was so, proceeded the argument,
because ‘entry’ is not
an event which only takes place
when the goods land at the port of entry. It is a process which is
completed 30 days after the
completion of the ZRW, which is a
condition to be met in order to get a rebate.
[11]
In argument, the Commissioner submitted firstly, that the conditions
in s 75(10)(
a
) must be met before goods are allowed to be
entered under rebate of duty. He argued that the proviso to the
subsection only gives
him powers to exempt a person from the
provisions of the subsection where the intended use of duly imported
goods changes after
the importation. It does not give him
powers to condone non-compliance with the conditions. Secondly,
the Commissioner
submitted that the subsection has limited scope and
does not authorise him to exempt an importer/manufacturer from
non-compliance
with the substantive requirements of a rebate item and
those of any note or rule linked to it. In developing his argument,
the
Commissioner emphasised that the provisions of s 75 governing
rebates, drawbacks and refunds are subdivided into two categories.
Some of these provisions such as s 75(1)(
b
) and its proviso,
read with item 460.24 and rule 19A.09(c), deal with substantive
requirements, in that they prescribe what, how
and when it is to be
done. On the other side of the coin are conditions which set out the
preconditions for the goods to be eligible
for treatment under a
rebate or refund item.
[12]
The Commissioner argued that rule 19A.09(c) constitutes a
‘substantive requirement’ and is not a condition
that
must be met before entry can be made as contemplated by s 75(10)(
a
).
That being the case, the Commissioner argued, that he has no powers
to exempt a person from its provisions. The Commissioner
submitted
that s 75(10)(
a
) is about preconditions which must be met
before the goods are entered under rebate. It has no bearing on rule
19A.09(c) which
he argued deals with the substantive requirement of
rebate item 460.24, which regulates the process that only takes place
after
the entry of the goods under rebate.
[13]
In support of this proposition the Commissioner cited H C Cronje,
Custom and Excise Service, Commentary (vol 2) who states
the
following at 10-24:
‘
The requirements
specified in subsection (10) are peremptory and must be complied with
before the goods specified in the relevant
item of Schedule 3, 4 or 6
may be entered or acquired under rebate of duty. These requirements
include the furnishing of security
as the Commissioner may require
and other conditions such as registration or premises and plant, and
so forth as may be prescribed
by the rules for section 75 or the
notes to any such Schedules and are applicable, for example, to
Schedule 3, item 470.03 of Schedule
4 and certain items of Schedule
6. Furthermore, certain items also require approval by the
Commissioner, for instance item 412.21
and 480.25, or approval of a
formula (item 607.04), in which case such approval or permit must be
obtained before the goods are
entered or acquired under rebate of
duty. ‘’Acquired’’ could include entry on
forms DA 32 and 33, DA 62,
DA 510, DA 600 and DA 610.’
[1]
The
issues
[14]
The dispute revolves around the correct interpretation of s 75(10)(
a
)
of the Act read with rebate item 460.24 in which rule 19A.09(c) is
listed as one of the requirements to be met to qualify for
a rebate.
The question is about the circumstances in which the Commissioner may
exercise his exemption powers under this subsection.
The question is
not whether the Commissioner should have exercised his discretion in
favour of granting the rebate, but rather
whether the Commissioner
was correct to determine that he does not have powers to condone
non-compliance with the relevant provisions.
[15]
The proper approach to statutory interpretation is well established.
The interpretation of s 75(10)(
a
)
requires the examination of the text, the context and the purpose of
its provisions. They must be considered holistically.
[2]
The
applicable statutory provisions
[16]
Section 75 is located in Chapter X of the Act, which deals with
‘
Rebates, refunds and drawbacks of duty
.’ It
regulates specific exceptions to the ordinary rules pertaining to
duty, whereby the person, who is otherwise responsible
for the duty
need not pay it from the outset (a rebate) or having paid it, may
recover it from the
fiscus
(a refund or drawback).
[17]
The starting point in undertaking this interpretive exercise is s
75(1). It provides as follows:
‘
Specific
rebates, drawbacks and refunds of duty
(1)
Subject
to the provisions of this Act and to any conditions which the
Commissioner may impose-
(a)…
(
b
) any imported
goods described in Schedule 4 shall be admitted under rebate of
any customs duties, excise duty . . .
applicable in respect of such
goods at the time of entry for home consumption thereof, or if duly
entered for export and exported
in accordance with such entry, to the
extent stated in, and subject to compliance with the provisions of
the item of Schedule 4
in which such goods are specified;
(
c
)...
(
d
)…
Provided that any rebate,
drawback or refund . . ., shall only be granted as expressly provided
in Schedule 4, 5 or 6 in respect
of any item of such Schedule’.
[18]
Section 75 and its Schedules 3,4,5 and 6 in respect of rebates,
refunds and drawbacks of duty relate to the duty payable
or paid
under Schedule 1. Part 1 and Part 2A of Schedule 1 to the Act govern
customs duty payable on certain imported goods. Payment
of excise
duty on locally manufactured goods is governed by Part 2 of Schedule
1.
[19]
Imported cigarette tobacco is classifiable in tariff heading
2403.19.30 of Part 1 of Schedule 1 to the Act and liable
to customs
duty, payable on importation thereof. VAT is also payable on the
imported tobacco in terms of s 7(1)(
b
) read with s 13(2)(
a
)
of the Value Added Tax Act 89 of 1991. Completed cigarettes
containing tobacco are themselves subject to the payment of the
specific
excise duty prescribed by item 104.35.05 of Part 2A of
Schedule 1.
[20] Section
75(1)(
b
) concerns the entitlement to a rebate, refund or
drawback and the question whether a person is so entitled, is
determined by the
provisions of the item of the Schedule in which
goods subject to such rebate, refund or drawback are specified. In
this case the
entitlement to a rebate, refund or drawback is subject
to compliance with the provisions of the rebate item 460.24 of
Schedule
4, Part 2, in which the imported cigarette tobacco is
specified.
[21] Section
75(10)(
a
) sets out the requirements that must be complied with
before the goods specified in the relevant item of Schedule 3, 4 or 6
may
be entered or acquired under rebate of duty. It provides:
‘
No
goods may be entered or acquired under rebate of duty until the
person so entering or acquiring them has furnished such security
as
the Commissioner may require and has complied with such other
conditions (including registration with the Commissioner of his
premises and plant) as may be prescribed by rule or in the notes to
Schedule 3, 4, or 6 in respect of any goods specified
in any
item of such Schedule: Provided that the Commissioner may, subject to
such conditions as he may in each case impose, exempt
with or without
retrospective effect, any such person from the provisions of this
subsection.’
[22] Non-compliance
with the requirements of the relevant provisions of the section is
not fatal as the Commissioner may,
subject to such conditions as he
may in each case impose, exempt with or without retrospective effect,
any such person, from the
provisions of subsection 10(
a
).
[23] The goods
under consideration in this matter are listed in Schedule 1 Part 2A.
The appellant entered them in SAD 500
under rebate of duty item
460.24. Rebate item 460.24 is listed in Schedule 4 Part 2. To qualify
for a rebate under item 460.24
the following requirements must be
met:
(a)
the provisions of rule 19A.09(c) must be complied
with;
(b) all other
provisions of the Customs and Excise Act pertaining to locally
manufactured excisable goods must be complied
with;
(c) the goods must
have been imported by a licensed manufacturer into a storage (OS) or
manufacturing warehouse; and
(d) the goods must
be removed by such licensed manufacturer or a licensed remover as
contemplated in rule 64D.
[24] Non-compliance
with the rebate item 460.24 consisted of a failure to enter the goods
in ZRW as required by rule 19A.09
(c). This rule provides that ‘the
liability for duty in terms of Section A of Part 2 of Schedule 1,
cleared in terms of the
provisions of rebate item 460.24 by a
licensed manufacturer or a licensed supplier (SOS warehouse licensed
for denaturing of spirits)
on Form SAD 500(GR or X GR) shall cease
upon entering the goods into a licensed warehouse for locally
manufactured goods on a Form
ZRW within 30 days from the entering on
a Form SAD 500.’
[25] As regards the
text of the section, it is significant to note that the exercise of
the exemption power conferred on the
Commissioner by the proviso to s
75(10)(
a
) does not depend on whether the relevant conduct
constitutes a failure to comply with a ‘pre-condition’ or
a ‘substantive
requirement’ of the provisions governing
rebates as contended by the Commissioner. The section does not
draw this distinction.
It simply stipulates that ‘the
Commissioner may, subject to such conditions as he may in each case
impose, exempt with or
without retrospective effect any such persons
from the provisions of this subsection.’
[26] Section
75(10)(
a
), properly interpreted, affords the Commissioner
powers to exempt an importer/manufacturer, who has failed to comply
with the requirements
of rule 19A.09(c), from complying with its
provisions. The non-compliance relates to the consignments of
tobacco that were
already entered under rebate of duty. The imported
tobacco was entered on the SAD 500 form under rebate of duty. What
was omitted
was their entry into the RWZ within the period prescribed
by rule 19A.09(c). ‘Entry’ is not an event. It is a
process
happening in various stages of the import duty and excise
duty ecosystem. I do not find any indication in s 75 that
non-compliance
with rule 19A.09 was intended to be excluded from its
operation. If that was the case, it would result in an
importer/manufacturer
being deprived of a right to claim a rebate.
That this is not the intention of s 75 is not surprising, because the
purpose of introducing
rebate item 460.24 as stated in the
Explanatory Memorandum was to avoid double taxation. Section
75(10)(
a
) provides a mechanism through which double taxation
may be avoided. To interpret s 75(10)(a) as contended by the
Commissioner runs
counter to the purpose for which rebate provision
was enacted.
[27] The ambit of
the subsection is much wider, and the Commissioner is not restricted
to granting exemptions only in instances
where the intended use of
duly imported goods has changed after importation. Instances of
non-compliance referred to in s 75(10)(
a
) may include failures
to furnish security that may be required by the Commissioner, and to
comply with other conditions as may
be prescribed by the rule or in
the notes to Schedule 3, 4 or 6 in respect of any goods specified in
any item of such Schedule.
[28] The subsection
covers the nature of the appellant’s non-compliance, namely,
its failure to have complied with the
requirements of a rebate item
460.24 in so far as it relates to rule 19A.09(c) appearing in
Schedule 4 Part 2.
[29] The proviso to
s 75(10)(
a
) permits the Commissioner to decide that any one or
more of the requirements that are set out in the main provisions of s
75(10)(
a
) need not be complied with, with or without depriving
the appellant of its right to claim a rebate. The Commissioner may do
so
before the entry in question, or after it has already occurred.
The determination that the Commissioner has a discretion under the
proviso to s 75(10)(
a
) to exempt non-compliance does not mean
that he is compelled to grant exemption. He may exercise his
discretion in favour of, or
against, granting exemption.
Order
[30] In the result
the following order is made:
1 The appeal is
upheld with costs.
2 The order of the
high court is set aside and replaced with the following order:
‘
(a) It
is declared that s 75(10)(
a
)
of the Customs and Excise Act 91 of 1964 authorises the Commissioner
of the South African Revenue Service (the respondent) to
ex
post facto
exempt the applicant from compliance with the conditions prescribed
by rule 19A.09(c);
(b) The respondent
shall pay the applicant’s costs pertaining to the separated
issue.’
D
H ZONDI
ACTING
PRESIDENT
Appearances
For
the appellant: MW
Janisch SC
Instructed
by: Webber
Wentzel Attorneys, Johannesburg
Honey Attorneys,
Bloemfontein
For
the respondent: JA
Meyer SC and
LG Kilmartin SC
Instructed
by:
The State Attorney, Pretoria
The State Attorney,
Bloemfontein
[1]
H C Cronje: Customs and Excise Service last updated September 2024.
[2]
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
[2012]
ZASCA 13
;
2012 2 ALL SA 262
(SCA); 2012 (4) SA 593 (SCA) para
18.
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