Case Law[2024] ZASCA 20South Africa
Bechan and Another v SARS Customs Investigations Unit and Others (1196/2022) [2024] ZASCA 20; 2024 (5) SA 1 (SCA); 86 SATC 557 (5 March 2024)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
5 March 2024
Headnotes
Summary: Search and seizure – Tax Administration Act 28 of 2011 (the TAA) – interpretation – ss 59(1) and 60(1) – execution of a warrant against third parties on premises identified in the warrant – s 61(3)(a) of TAA – permits search of anything on the premises identified in the warrant including motor vehicle parked on the premises on suspicion that it contains material relevant to the taxpayer.
Judgment
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## Bechan and Another v SARS Customs Investigations Unit and Others (1196/2022) [2024] ZASCA 20; 2024 (5) SA 1 (SCA); 86 SATC 557 (5 March 2024)
Bechan and Another v SARS Customs Investigations Unit and Others (1196/2022) [2024] ZASCA 20; 2024 (5) SA 1 (SCA); 86 SATC 557 (5 March 2024)
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sino date 5 March 2024
--FLYNOTES:
-TAX – Search and seizure – Execution of warrant –
Warrant
issued on basis that there was reason to believe taxpayer
committed various tax offences – Execution of warrant
against third parties on premises identified in warrant –
Provisions of Act permits search of anything on premises
identified in warrant including motor vehicle parked on premises
on suspicion that it contains material relevant to taxpayer
–
SARS had a statutory right to dispossess appellant's property –
Tax Administration Act 28 of 2011
,
s 61(3)(a).
THE SUPREME COURT OF
APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Reportable
Case no: 1196/2022
In the matter between:
KAPEEL BECHAN
FIRST
APPELLANT
BECHAN CONSULTING
(PTY) LTD
SECOND
APPELLANT
And
SARS CUSTOMS
INVESTIGATIONS UNIT FIRST
RESPONDENT
SARS TACTICAL
INVESTIGATIONS UNIT SECOND
RESPONDENT
TANYA POTGIETER ─
SARS ILLICIT ECONOMY UNIT THIRD RESPONDENT
LINDIWE SHIBINDI ─
SARS ILLICIT ECONOMY UNIT FOURTH RESPONDENT
MINISTER OF
POLICE
FIFTH RESPONDENT
HAWKS SPECIAL
INVESTIGATION UNIT
SIXTH RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
Bechan
and Another v SARS Customs Investigations Unit and Others
(1196/2022)
[2024] ZASCA 20
(05 March 2024)
Coram:
PETSE DP, MBATHA and MATOJANE JJA and
KATHREE-SETILOANE and KEIGHTLEY AJJA
Heard:
22 November 2023
Delivered:
05 March 2024
Summary:
Search and seizure – Tax
Administration Act 28 of 2011 (the TAA) – interpretation –
ss 59(1) and 60(1) –
execution of a warrant against third
parties on premises identified in the warrant – s 61(3)
(a)
of TAA – permits search of
anything on the premises identified in the warrant including motor
vehicle parked on the premises
on suspicion that it contains material
relevant to the taxpayer.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Gauteng Division of the
High Court, Pretoria (Millar J, sitting as court of first instance):
The appeal is dismissed
with costs, including those of two counsel.
JUDGMENT
Kathree-Setiloane AJA
(Petse DP, Mbatha and Matojane JJA and Keightley AJA concurring):
[1]
The first appellant is Mr Kapeel Bechan. He is the sole director of
the second appellant,
Bechan Consulting (Pty) Ltd.
[1]
The first and second respondents are divisions within the South
African Revenue Service (SARS), whilst the third and fourth
respondents
are SARS officials attached to the SARS’ Illicit
Economy Unit, also a division of SARS.
[2]
The appellants applied to the Gauteng Division of the High Court,
Pretoria (high court) for relief, by way of the
mandament
van spolie
(spoliation),
compelling SARS to return certain items seized, purportedly
unlawfully, from Mr Bechan’s motor vehicle during
the execution
of a warrant in respect of Bullion Star (Pty) Ltd (Bullion Star). The
high court dismissed the application.
[2]
On 28 March 2022, SARS applied to the high court without notice to
the appellants
for a warrant in terms of s 59 of the Tax
Administration Act 28 of 2011 (the TAA).
[3]
The high court issued the warrant, in terms of s 60 of the TAA,
[4]
on the basis that there was reason to believe that Bullion Star had,
amongst others, committed various tax offences. The warrant
authorised SARS officials to search the premises identified as 62
Wessels Road, Rivonia, Johannesburg (the premises). It furthermore
authorised them, ‘in carrying out the search and seizure of the
premises, to open or cause to be opened or remove and open,
anything
which the officials suspect to be relevant material
[5]
of Bullion Star’.
Execution of the
warrant
[3]
There is a factual dispute on the papers in relation to the execution
of the warrant.
Since these are motion proceedings in which the
appellants sought final relief in the high court, the
Plascon-Evan’s
rule
applied.
[6]
This was confirmed
by the Constitutional Court in
Thint
(Pty)
Ltd v National Director of Public Prosecutions (Thint),
[7]
in the
context of a factual dispute concerning the execution of a search and
seizure warrant in terms of
s 29
of the
National Prosecuting
Authority Act 32 of 1998
. The Constitutional Court held as follows in
that case:
‘
The
latter disagreements are different because they are factual disputes
concerning what happens during the execution of a warrant.
Where a
party challenges the lawfulness of a warrant’s execution on
notice of motion and disputes of fact arise, that party
remains the
applicant, and the prosecution must accordingly be treated as the
respondent under the
Plascon-Evans
rule.
As far as this category of factual disputes is concerned, it is the
state’s version that must be accepted. That is the
approach I
take to the various factual disagreements arising in these two
applications which relate to the execution of the warrants.’
The matter must,
therefore, be adjudicated on SARS’ version. The appellants
conceded this during argument in the appeal.
[4]
SARS’ version of the events is that on 29 March 2022 its
officials arrived at
the premises at
approximately
11h25 but were granted access only at approximately 11h50. Whilst
SARS officials were at the gate awaiting access
to the premises, they
saw people removing items from the building and placing them in
vehicles. They were, however, unable to identify
the nature of these
items.
[5]
Upon entering the premises, SARS officials noticed a Toyota Fortuner
motor vehicle
with registration number HV07BBGP (the Fortuner) parked
on the premises. They saw numerous files and notebooks as well as
electronic
equipment inside the Fortuner. Upon being informed that Mr
Bechan owned the Fortuner, SARS officials requested him to unlock it
to enable them to search for material relevant to Bullion Star. When
Mr Bechan indicated that he could not find its keys, SARS
officials
obtained the services of a locksmith to unlock the Fortuner (and
other vehicles on the premises). On opening it, they
invited Mr
Bechan to participate in and be present during, the search.
[6]
SARS compiled inventories of the items found in the Fortuner. These
included: 10 laptop
computers, four cellular phones and various
financial documents pertaining to Bullion Star, including purchase
files and bank statements.
However, in their notice of motion, the
appellants claimed the return of only two laptop computers and two
cellular phones. Despite
the exchange of numerous letters in which
SARS tendered the return of the seized items on proof of ownership,
the appellants disavowed
any knowledge of the other laptops and
cellular phones.
In the high court
[7]
On 4 April 2022, the appellants applied to the high court for the
return of the items
listed in paragraph 2 of the notice of motion by
way of the spoliation remedy. To succeed in this application, the
appellants had
to satisfy the high court that they were in peaceful
and undisturbed possession or had
quasi
possession
of the property, and that SARS deprived them of their possession
forcibly or wrongfully.
[8]
The
appellants contended, in this regard, that SARS had unlawfully seized
their property of which they were in peaceful and undisturbed
possession; that the seized property was not found on the premises
but was stored in the Fortuner which was parked in ‘a
general
carpark’ outside the premises; and that the scope of the
warrant was limited to Bullion Star’s property for
the
specified period of assessment, and did not extend to their property.
[8]
SARS opposed the application. Its core defence was that it did not
unlawfully dispossess
the appellants of the items in question,
because it had acted in accordance with the terms of a validly issued
warrant under
s 60
of the TAA. It pointed out that it had returned
some items to the appellants but was unwilling to return the two
laptop computers
and two cellular phones (referenced above) because,
without access to their passwords,
[9]
it was unable to determine whether they contained material relevant
to Bullion Star.
[10]
[9]
The high court held that SARS was entitled to search for and seize
items relevant
to Bullion Star as the warrant specifically authorised
its officials to search anywhere on the premises. This included
vehicles
parked on the premises. It furthermore held that to
interpret the warrant to limit its terms to Bullion Star, the
taxpayer referred
to in the warrant, would serve to undermine its
efficacy. The high court accordingly dismissed the application as
well as the application
for leave to appeal against its dismissal.
The appellants subsequently applied to this Court for leave to appeal
which was granted.
On appeal
[10]
The appellants conceded in their replying affidavit that the Fortuner
was parked on the premises.
Surprisingly, they contended, to the
contrary, in their heads of argument in the appeal that the Fortuner
was not parked on the
premises. This question was, however, put to
rest in the appeal when the appellants accepted, during argument,
that the Fortuner
was parked on the premises. They, nevertheless,
argued that the warrant only applied to the taxpayer (Bullion Star)
and not to
third parties, such as themselves, who happened to be on
the premises at the time of its execution.
[11]
[11]
Whether a warrant issued in terms of
s 60
of the TAA may be executed
against third parties depends on the interpretation of the warrant
read together with the search and
seizure provisions in the TAA.
[12]
The warrant largely mirrored the search and seizure provisions in
Part D
of the TAA.
[12]
SARS contended that on a reading of the warrant with the provisions
of
ss 59(1)
and
60
(1) of the TAA, it was location specific and
not taxpayer specific. Hence it could be executed against third
parties on the premises.
Section 59(1)
provides that:
‘
A
senior SARS official may, if necessary or relevant to administer a
tax Act, authorise an application for a warrant under which
SARS may
enter
a premises where relevant material is kept to search the premises and
any person present on the premises
and
seize relevant material.’ (Emphasis added.)
[13]
Section 60(1)
(b)
,
in turn, empowers a judge or magistrate to issue the warrant referred
to in s 59(1) of the TAA, if satisfied that there are reasonable
grounds to believe that, amongst others, relevant material likely to
be found
on the premises specified in
the application
may provide evidence of
the failure to comply or, the commission of an offence. (My
emphasis.) Properly construed,
these
provisions are location and not taxpayer specific. They contemplate
that persons other than the taxpayer may be present on
the premises
identified in the warrant and in possession of material relevant to
the taxpayer.
[14]
The phrase ‘to search the premises and any persons present on
the premises and seize relevant
materials’ in s 59(1) of
the TAA, is a clear indicator that SARS officials may, on the
authority of a warrant issued
under s 60, search the taxpayer as well
as any third parties on the premises, and seize any relevant material
in their possession.
It is immaterial that the seized items are
not in the possession of the taxpayer when seized. If they constitute
relevant
material as defined, they may be seized from a third party
who is on the premises.
[13]
[15]
Section 61(3) sets out the powers of a SARS official who executes a
warrant issued in terms of
s 60 of the TAA. It provides:
‘
The
SARS official may–
(a)
open or cause to be opened or remove in
conducting a search, anything which the official suspects to contain
relevant material;
(b) seize any relevant
material;
(c) seize and retain a
computer or storage device in which relevant material is stored for
as long as it is necessary to copy the
material required;
(d) . . .
(e)
if the premises listed in the warrant is a
vessel, aircraft, or vehicle, stop and board the vessel, aircraft, or
vehicle, search
the vessel, aircraft or vehicle or a person found in
the vessel, aircraft or vehicle and question the person with respect
to a
matter dealt with in a tax Act.’
[16]
Section 61(3) of the TAA does not limit the execution of a warrant to
the business of the taxpayer.
Properly construed, it contemplates
that in executing a warrant, SARS officials may search anything on
the premises identified
in the warrant, if they suspect that it
contains relevant material. This is clear from the ordinary
grammatical meaning of the
word ‘anything’
[14]
which is used in s 61(3)
(a)
.
This word is broad enough to include a search of vehicles parked on
the premises identified in the warrant.
[17]
Significantly, s 61(3)
(a)
of the TAA does not afford a SARS
official
carte blanche
in searching the property of third
parties who may be on the premises identified in the warrant. A SARS
official may only do so
if they suspect that the property of a third
party contains material relevant to the taxpayer. This interpretation
gives effect
to the manifest purpose of the search and seizure
provisions of the TAA, which is to obtain evidence against a taxpayer
if there
are reasonable grounds to suspect non-compliance with, or
tax offences under, a tax Act. As I see it, search and seizure
operations
on the premises identified in a warrant would be rendered
ineffectual if SARS officials were powerless, under the TAA, to
search
third parties for relevant material. This would be especially
so, in a case such as this, where material relevant to the taxpayer
was spirited away and placed in a vehicle belonging to a third party,
with impunity.
[18]
In a final attempt to overcome the insurmountable hurdles in their
case, the appellants contended
that the execution of the warrant was
unlawful, as SARS officials did not have reasonable and probable
cause to search the Fortuner.
I disagree. On the objective facts,
SARS officials had reasonable cause to suspect that the Fortuner
contained material relevant
to Bullion Star.
[15]
They saw files, notebooks, and electrical equipment inside the
Fortuner before searching it. In addition, whilst waiting to gain
access to the premises, they saw items being removed from the
building and being placed in vehicles parked on the premises.
[19]
The appellants sought to counter this by submitting that SARS
officials had to know with certainty,
before searching the Fortuner,
that it contained material relevant to Bullion Star. That the
executing officials could not know
this with any degree of certitude
did not mean that they had no probable cause to search the Fortuner.
In terms of s 61(3)
(a)
of the TAA, nothing more than a
suspicion that the Fortuner contained material relevant to the
taxpayer was required. Thus, in terms
of s 61(3)
(a)
of the
TAA, SARS was entitled to search and seize material from the Fortuner
on the suspicion that it contained material relevant
to Bullion Star.
[20]
Raising the threshold for the execution of search and seizure
warrants, as the appellants would
have it, would impact negatively on
their efficacy in bringing tax offenders to book. As investigation
tools, search and seizure
warrants play a vital role in achieving the
core objective of the TAA, which is to ensure the effective and
efficient collection
of tax.
[16]
[21]
In the context of the facts of this case, SARS had a statutory right
to dispossess the appellants
of the property found in the Fortuner.
They were, therefore, not entitled to the relief sought in the
spoliation application. For
these reasons, the appeal must fail.
[22]
For the sake of completeness, it is necessary to record that as
preparations for delivery of
this judgment were being made the
appellants’ attorneys advised the Court that on 2 February 2024
the high court set aside
the search and seizure warrant.
[17]
This was consequent on a separate application instituted by Bullion
Star. The Court was further advised by SARS’ attorneys
that it
was considering an appeal against that order. It is a
well-established general principle that this Court decides whether
the judgment appealed from is right or wrong according to the facts
in existence at the time it was given and not according to
new
circumstances that came into existence afterwards.
[18]
It follows that the subsequent setting aside of the warrant by the
high court is irrelevant to this appeal.
[23]
In the result, the following order is made:
The appeal is dismissed
with costs, including those of two counsel.
________________________
F
KATHREE-SETILOANE
ACTING
JUDGE OF APPEAL
Appearances
For the
appellants: A
E Bham SC (with T Scott)
Instructed by:
Faber
Goërtz Ellis Austen Inc, Pretoria
McIntyre
Van der Post, Bloemfontein
For the first to fourth
respondents: B H Swart SC (with S Maritz)
Instructed
by: VZLR
Inc, Pretoria
Webbers
Attorneys, Bloemfontein
[1]
The
first and second appellants are referred to collectively as ‘the
appellants’ in the judgment.
[2]
The
appellants cited SARS Customs Investigations Unit, SARS Tactical
Investigations Unit, Tanya Potgieter (SARS Illicit Economy
Unit) and
Lindiwe Shibindi (SARS Tactical Investigations Unit) as the first to
fourth respondents, respectively. The warrant
was, however, executed
at the behest of the Commissioner for SARS (the Commissioner). Thus,
the Commissioner ought to have been
cited in the application.
However, the first to fourth respondents did not take issue with the
incorrect citation of the Commissioner
and regarded him as properly
cited. The first to the fourth respondents are referred to
collectively as ‘SARS’ in
the judgment.
[3]
Section
59 of the TAA provides:
‘
(1)
A senior SARS official may, if necessary or relevant to administer a
Tax act, authorise an application for a warrant under
which SARS may
enter a premises where relevant material is kept to search the
premises and any person present on the premises
and seize relevant
material.
(2) SARS must apply
ex
parte
to a judge for the warrant, which application must be
supported by information supplied under oath or solemn declaration,
establishing
the facts on which the application is based.’
[4]
Section
60 of the TAA provides:
‘
(1)
A judge or magistrate may
issue
the warrant referred to in section 59(1) if satisfied that there are
reasonable grounds to believe that –
(a) a person failed to
comply with an obligation imposed under a tax Act, or committed a
tax offence; and
(b) relevant material
likely to be found on the premises specified in the application may
provide evidence of the failure to comply
or commission of the
offence.
(2) A warrant issued
under subsection 1 must contain the following –
(a) the alleged failure
to comply or offence that is the basis for the application;
(b) the person alleged
to have failed to comply or to have committed the offence;
(c) the premises to be
searched; and
(d) the fact that
relevant material as defined in section 1 is likely to be found on
the premises.
(3) The warrant must be
exercised within 45 business days or such further period as a judge
or magistrate deems appropriate on
good cause shown.’
[5]
‘
Relevant
material’ as defined in s 1 of the TAA ‘means any
information, document or thing that is foreseeably relevant
for tax
risk assessment, assessing tax, collecting tax, showing
non-compliance with an obligation under a tax Act or showing
that a
tax offence was committed’.
[6]
Plascon-Evans
Paints Ltd v Van Riebeeck Paints (Pty) Ltd
[1984] ZASCA 51
;
1984
(3) SA 623
(A) at 634E-635C.
[7]
Thint (Pty) Ltd v
National Director of Public Prosecutions, Zuma v National Director
of Public Prosecutions and Others
[2008]
ZACC 13
;
2008 (2) SACR 421
(CC);
2009 (1) SA 1
(CC);
2008 (12) BCLR
1197
(CC) para 10.
[8]
Setlogelo
v Setlogelo
1914
AD 221
;
Yeko
v Qana
1973
(4) SA 735 (A).
[9]
Section
61(7) of the TAA provides that ‘[n]o person may obstruct a
SARS official or a police officer from executing the
warrant or
without reasonable excuse refuse to give assistance as may be
reasonably required for the execution of the warrant’.
[10]
Section
61(3)
(c)
enables
a SARS official to ‘seize and retain a computer or storage
device in which relevant material is stored for as long
as is
necessary to copy the material required’.
[11]
This
contention was raised in the appellants’ replying affidavit
but not in their heads of argument.
[12]
The
rules of interpretation articulated in
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension v Endumeni Municipality
2012
(4) SA 593
(SCA) para 18 apply to the interpretation of the search
and seizure provisions of the TAA. In interpreting them, this Court
must
consider the ordinary grammatical meaning of the words used in
the provision, the context in which the provision occurs and the
apparent purpose of the provision.
[13]
See
fn 5 above for the definition of ‘relevant material’.
[14]
According
to the Oxford English Dictionary, the word ‘anything’ is
‘used to refer to a thing, no matter what’.
[15]
See
paragraphs 4 and 5 of the judgment.
[16]
Section
2 of the TAA.
[17]
Bullion
Star (Pty) Limited v The Commissioner for the South African Revenue
Service
Case
no. 18176/2022, unreported judgment of the Gauteng Division of
the High Court, Pretoria, dated 2 February 2024.
[18]
Weber-Stephen
Products Co v Alrite Engineering (Pty) Ltd
1992
(2) SA 469
(A) at 507C-D.
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