Case Law[2024] ZASCA 32South Africa
Cyril and Another v Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service (186/2023) [2024] ZASCA 32 (28 March 2024)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
28 March 2024
Headnotes
Summary: Practice – Appealability – application to review ruling on admissibility in criminal trial while trial still pending – leave given to complainant to intervene in review application – test for appealability – no final and definitive effect on review application – does not dispose of any portion of relief in review application – courts opposed to piecemeal adjudication – interests of justice not supporting appealability – no jurisdiction to entertain appeal – not appealable.
Judgment
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## Cyril and Another v Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service (186/2023) [2024] ZASCA 32 (28 March 2024)
Cyril and Another v Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service (186/2023) [2024] ZASCA 32 (28 March 2024)
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sino date 28 March 2024
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
###
Not
Reportable
### Case no:
186/2023JUDGMENT
Case no:
186/2023JUDGMENT
In
the matter between:
WALTER
ELEAZAR CYRIL
FIRST APPELLANT
LETISHA
CYRIL
SECOND APPELLANT
and
THE
COMMISSIONER FOR THE SOUTH
AFRICAN
REVENUE SERVICE
RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
Cyril and Another v The Commissioner for the
South African Revenue Service
(Case no 186/2023) [2024] ZASCA 32
(28 March 2024)
Coram:
GORVEN and KGOELE JJA and COPPIN, SMITH and KEIGHTLEY AJJA
Heard
:
13 March 2024
Delivered
:
28 March 2024
Summary:
Practice – Appealability – application to review ruling
on admissibility in criminal trial while trial still
pending –
leave given to complainant to intervene in review application –
test for appealability – no final and
definitive effect on
review application – does not dispose of any portion of relief
in review application – courts
opposed to piecemeal
adjudication – interests of justice not supporting
appealability – no jurisdiction to entertain
appeal – not
appealable.
### ORDER
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Gauteng Division of the High Court, Johannesburg
(Mahalelo J, sitting as court of first instance):
The appeal is struck from
the roll with costs, such costs to include the costs of the
application for leave to appeal, all of which
will include those
consequent on the employment of two counsel.
# JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Gorven
JA (Kgoele JA and Coppin, Smith and Keightley AJJA concurring)
[1]
This appeal arises from an application to intervene in
an application
to review and set aside the decision of a magistrate to admit certain
evidence in a criminal trial. The review application
was brought by
Mr Walter Cyril and Ms Letisha Cyril, the appellants (the Cyrils).
The Commissioner for the South African Revenue
Service, the
respondent (SARS) is the complainant in the criminal trial. The
Cyrils are charged with 41 counts of fraud and
41 counts of
contravening s 18A(9) read with s 80(1)
(o)
of the
Customs and Excise Act 9 of 1964 (the CEA) for allegedly diverting
cigarettes without paying duties or VAT, 41 counts
of
contravening s 84(1) of the CEA for allegedly making false
declarations and 41 counts of contravening s 83
(a)
read
with s 47A of the CEA for allegedly unlawfully causing goods not
entered for home consumption to be removed and/or dealt
with without
the payment of duty and VAT.
[2]
In
Gaertner
and Others v Minister of Finance and Others
,
[1]
the
Constitutional Court
upheld the
finding
of the Western Cape High Court, Cape Town that
sections 4(4)
(a)
(i)-(ii),
4(4)
(b)
,
4(5) and 4(6) of the CEA are inconsistent with the Constitution. It
suspended the declaration of invalidity to afford Parliament
the
opportunity of amending the CEA in a manner which achieved
constitutional conformity. Paragraph 2 of the order of the
Constitutional
Court read that ‘The declaration of invalidity
is not retrospective’. That conclusion was motivated along the
following
lines:
‘
It
is clear that an order of full retrospective effect would render
unlawful all searches under section 4(4) from when the Constitution
came into force. In the present circumstances, this approach
would be inconsistent with our jurisprudence.’
[2]
and
‘
The
declaration of invalidity should be suspended as, without the
suspension, SARS will not be able to conduct even regulatory searches
and a lacuna will be created. A suspension coupled with an
interim reading-in will afford Parliament an opportunity to craft
an
appropriate legislative solution to remedy the constitutional defect,
while – in the interim – ensuring that SARS
can properly
carry out its duties in terms of the Customs and Excise Act.
Leaving SARS without the necessary power to ensure
compliance with
the Act would simply not be in the public interest.’
[3]
[3]
Before the Constitutional Court handed down the judgment
in
Gaertner
,
SARS had inspected the bonded warehouse of Tish Maritime CC, a close
corporation under the control of the Cyrils. That search
brought to
light the contested evidence. It is common ground that it was
conducted pursuant to the sections of the CEA which were
subsequently
declared unconstitutional. This gave rise to the challenge to its
admissibility at the trial. The chief contention
of the Cyrils was
that the search, and others like it conducted prior to the
Constitutional Court judgment in
Gaertner
, was struck by the
order of invalidity. They argued that
Gaertner
invalidated
inspections conducted by SARS in terms of s 4(4) of the CEA in
‘all matters that had not yet been finalised
prior to the
declaration of invalidity’. The magistrate, after holding a
trial within a trial, ruled the evidence admissible.
[4]
After the evidence had been ruled admissible, and while
the criminal
trial was pending, the Cyrils applied to the Gauteng Division of the
High Court, Johannesburg (the high court) to
review and set aside
that ruling. This prompted SARS to seek leave to intervene in the
review application as the third respondent
(the intervention
application). It also sought to lead additional evidence in the
review application. SARS submitted that it had
a direct and
substantial interest in the outcome of the review application. It
argued that this was all the more so since the Cyrils
sought to
render unlawful all searches in that category, and not only the
search of their premises. The intervention application
was dealt with
separately and Mahalelo J granted SARS leave to intervene. This
appeal is against that order and is before
us with the leave of the
high court.
[5]
Two factors must be present in order to confer jurisdiction
on this
court to entertain an appeal. The first of these is that leave to
appeal must have been granted. Of this, Brand JA said:
‘
Leave
to appeal therefore constitutes what has become known, particularly
in administrative-law parlance, as a jurisdictional fact.
Without the
required leave, this court simply has no jurisdiction to entertain
the dispute.’
[4]
Section 17(1)
of the Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013 (the Act) sets out the grounds
on which leave to appeal can be granted:
‘
(1)
Leave to appeal may only be given where the judge or judges concerned
are of the opinion that—
(a)
(i) the
appeal would have a reasonable prospect of success; or
(ii) there is some other
compelling reason why the appeal should be heard, including
conflicting judgments on the matter under consideration;
(b)
the decision sought on appeal does not fall within the ambit of
section 16(2)
(a)
; and
(c)
where the decision sought to be appealed does not dispose of all the
issues in the case, the appeal would lead to a just and prompt
resolution of the real issues between the parties.’
This
jurisdictional fact is present because leave to appeal was granted.
However, the grant of leave to appeal is not decisive as
to the
appealability of the order. A second jurisdictional fact must be
present.
[6]
The second
jurisdictional fact is that the order constitutes a ‘decision’
as envisaged in s 16(1)
(a)
of the Act. There is no distinction between ‘a “decision”
of the high court “on appeal to it” in
terms of s
16(1)
(b)
of
the Act, or a “judgment or order” of the high court
“given on appeal to it” in terms of ss 20(1)
and 20(4) of
the [Supreme Court] Act’.
[5]
Until fairly recently, the accepted approach to appealability was
governed by
Zweni
v Minister of Law and Order
.
[6]
In
International
Trade Administration Commission v SCAW South Africa (Pty) Ltd
,
this approach was summarised as follows:
‘
. . . the decision must
be final in effect and not open to alteration by the court of first
instance; it must be definitive of the
rights of the parties; and
lastly, it must have the effect of disposing of at least a
substantial portion of the relief claimed
in the main
proceedings.’
[7]
[7]
Since then, there have been significant developments
in our law on
this point.
It
is now accepted that the
Zweni
requirements are not ‘cast in stone’
[8]
and a matter may be appealable if ‘the interests of justice
require it to be regarded as an appealable decision’.
[9]
This has been affirmed by the Constitutional Court in
United
Democratic Movement and Another v Lebashe Investment Group (Pty) Ltd
and Others
.
[10]
The Constitutional Court made it clear that the interests of justice
approach is not limited to the Constitutional Court but applies
equally to this court. In
Government
of the Republic of South Africa and Others v Von Abo
,
this court summarised the present approach to appealability of orders
in our law:
‘
It
is fair to say that there is no checklist of requirements. Several
considerations need to be weighed up, including whether the
relief
granted was final in its effect, definitive of the rights of the
parties, disposed of a substantial portion of the relief
claimed,
aspects of convenience, the time at which the issue is considered,
delay, expedience, prejudice, the avoidance of piecemeal
appeals and
the attainment of justice.’
[11]
[8]
It is common ground that the order on the intervention
application is
interlocutory to the review application. The fact that it is
interlocutory is not decisive as to appealability as
was explained in
Lebashe
:
‘
In deciding
whether an order is appealable, not only the form of the order must
be considered, but also, and predominantly, its
effect. Thus, an
order which appears in form to be purely interlocutory will be
appealable if its effect is such that it is final
and definitive of
any issue or portion thereof in the main action. By the same token,
an order which might appear, according to
its form, to be finally
definitive in the above sense may, nevertheless, be purely
interlocutory in effect.’
[12]
It
is significant that it must be ‘final and definitive of any
issue . . . in the main action’ and dispose of ‘a
substantial portion of the relief claimed’. The main action for
present purposes is the review application.
[9]
With those contours sketched, it is necessary to evaluate
the present
matter. Beginning with the
Zweni
trilogy, the order is final
in effect in that it is not susceptible to reconsideration by the
court of first instance which granted
it. However, it does not
dispose of any portion of the relief claimed in the review
application. It is likewise not definitive
of the rights of the
parties in the review application or, for that matter, the criminal
trial. Two out of the three criteria set
out in
Zweni
are thus
not met. As I discuss in more detail later, these two unmet criteria
are of particular significance in the context of
this case.
[10]
A further
factor to consider is the caution which our courts have voiced
against engaging in piecemeal litigation. Both this court
and the
Constitutional Court have held that this should not be
encouraged.
[13]
Since the
judges hearing any appeal from the criminal trial are entitled to
decide questions of admissibility of evidence, the
review application
itself amounts to piecemeal litigation. That piecemeal litigation is
further exacerbated by the Cyrils seeking
to appeal the order
granting SARS leave to intervene in the review application.
[11]
This, then, leaves for consideration whether the interests of justice
require
the order in the intervention application to be dealt with as
an appealable decision. The Cyrils mounted an attack on two fronts
in
this regard. In the first place, they relied on a dictum in the
matter of
Nedbank Limited and Another v Survé and Others
where it was said:
‘
In
a matter where no case was made out for an interim interdict and the
order accordingly ought never to have been granted in the
first
place, along with other relevant considerations, interests of justice
might well render an interim interdict appealable despite
the
Zweni
requirements not having been met. An analysis of the second issue in
this appeal, namely, whether the respondents made out a prima
facie
case for the interim interdict granted, demonstrates that this appeal
is one of those exceptional cases.’
[14]
That
reliance is misplaced. The interests of justice aspect was addressed
as follows in
Survé
:
‘
The
equality court found, albeit on a
prima
facie
basis, that Nedbank’s decision to close the respondents’
accounts was based on unfair racial discrimination. This is
a serious
charge. Racism is a scourge which has infected the fabric of our
national life for well over three hundred years. The
Equality Act was
specifically devised, in part, to address and eliminate this scourge.
Any order under this section of the Equality
Act requires a finding
that the entity against which the order is granted has unfairly
discriminated on the ground of race. A finding
of that nature has
obvious serious reputational repercussions, particularly considering
Nedbank’s standing as one of the
major banks in South Africa.
Where a case is properly made out for an order having this effect, a
party cannot be heard to complain.
However, where, as in this case,
the order ought never to have been made, justice requires that the
impugned decision is rendered
appealable and rectified.’
[15]
This
followed the approach of the Constitutional Court in
Lebashe
that the interests of justice dictated that an interim interdict
should be appealable where the fundamental right to freedom of
speech
was infringed by the order.
[16]
The Constitutional Court went on to endorse the approach of this
court that an order would be appealable ‘where a litigant
may
suffer prejudice or even injustice if an order or judgment is left to
stand’.
[17]
[12]
The present
matter differs fundamentally from those matters. In each of them, an
order had been granted against the person seeking
to appeal. No order
has been granted against the Cyrils. Not only that, but in the other
matters, the order in question prejudiced
the party against whom it
had been granted. That is also not the case with the Cyrils. The
order giving leave to SARS to intervene
in the review application
does not by any stretch of the imagination equate to such a
situation. SARS will have a say in the review
but this does not
affect the rights of the Cyrils to prosecute the review. As
indicated, even if the review application is dismissed,
in the event
that the Cyrils are convicted, it is open to them to argue on appeal
that the evidence was wrongly admitted and should
be excluded from
consideration. It is a factor to consider as to appealability that,
‘[there] may yet be another appeal on
the issues that have
still to be determined’.
[18]
Apart from their submission that it affects their right to a fair
trial, which will be addressed below, the Cyrils did not point
to any
form of prejudice or impact on any of their fundamental rights
resulting from the impugned order.
[13]
The Cyrils contended that, as with
Survé
, the order in
the intervention application ought never to have been granted. This
renders the matter appealable, they submitted.
Apart from the
distinctions mentioned above, the thrust of the argument of the
Cyrils was not that SARS does not have a direct
and substantial
interest in the outcome of the review application. It clearly does
have such an interest. The submission of the
Cyrils was that in a
criminal trial, the Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP) alone has
standing to protect that interest. Since
SARS does not have standing
to prosecute the Cyrils, it has no standing to intervene in what, the
Cyrils submitted, was effectively
part of the criminal trial.
[14]
In support
of this submission, the Cyrils relied on
Wickham
v Magistrate, Stellenbosch and Others
.
[19]
In that matter, the driver of a motor vehicle was charged with
culpable homicide for the death of the son of Mr Wickham and another.
The son was a passenger in a motor vehicle driven by the accused. Mr
Wickham obtained an expert report on her driving and submitted
it to
the prosecution. He engaged extensively with the prosecution on the
matter. The Director of Public Prosecutions (DPP) met
with his
attorney. Mr Wickham thereafter made written representations to
the DPP. He and his attorney met with the DPP. The
DPP indicated that
she was concerned that, without the plea and sentencing agreement,
the State might not obtain a conviction.
Mr Wickham disagreed and
motivated, with reference to the expert report, why he believed a
conviction could be obtained. Despite
these efforts, the DPP entered
into a plea and sentence agreement with the driver. Mr Wickham
requested an opportunity to address
the court. The DPP said that he
could prepare and hand in an affidavit addressing his concerns but
subsequently informed him that
this could not be done since it did
not qualify as a victim impact statement. The magistrate refused to
accept the affidavit since,
he ruled, Mr Wickham did not have
standing. The plea and sentencing agreement was accepted by the
magistrate in terms of
s 105A(7)
(b)
(i)
(bb)
of
the
Criminal Procedure Act 51 of 1977
and the driver was convicted of
two counts of culpable homicide. The magistrate imposed the agreed
sentence of a fine of R10 000
or 12 months’ imprisonment
suspended for 3 years, and a further 18 months of correctional
supervision. Mr
Wickham applied to the high court for the plea and
sentencing agreement to be set aside and for the matter to be
remitted to the
Magistrates’ Court for the driver to be tried
afresh. The Constitutional Court agreed with the high court that Mr
Wickham
lacked
locus
standi
to apply to have the plea and sentence agreement and consequent
convictions and sentence set aside.
[15]
One cannot by any stretch of the imagination equate the
position
of SARS in the review application with that of the father of
a victim of culpable homicide approaching a court to set aside a
criminal
court conviction and sentence. The order joining SARS in the
review application does not equate to it participating in the
criminal
trial or seeking to set aside the outcome of the trial.
[16]
The second ground of attack is that the order affects the fair trial
rights
of the Cyrils. In this, they call in aid the following passage
in
The State v Van der Walt
:
‘
Both
parties accept that the regional magistrate pronounced on the
admissibility of exhibits after the applicant had closed his
case.
This was when she handed down judgment on the question of guilt.
Undeniably, a timeous ruling on the admissibility of evidence
is
crucial. It sheds light on what evidence a court may take into
consideration and may even give an indication as to how much
weight
may be accorded to it. This enables an accused to make an informed
decision on whether to close her or his case without
adducing
evidence, or, where she or he does testify or adduce evidence, to
adduce further evidence to controvert specific aspects
of evidentiary
material. Without a timeous ruling on all evidence that bears
relevance to the verdict, an accused may be caught
unawares at a
stage when she or he can no longer do anything.’
[20]
In
seeking to rely on this
dictum
, the heads of argument
delivered on behalf of the Cyrils made the following bald submission:
‘
The
outcome of the review proceedings will determine the choices the
[Cyrils] make as accused persons in their criminal trial. And
because
the outcome of the review implicates the [Cyrils’] criminal
trial, SARS’ intervention implicates the [Cyrils’]
constitutional rights to a fair trial.’
This
submission was neither pressed nor elaborated on in argument before
us. It need hardly be said that a ruling on evidence given
after the
conclusion of a trial adversely affects the fair trial rights of an
accused person. In the present matter, however, nothing
done in the
review application would affect the rights of the Cyrils to make
informed decisions as to the conduct of their defence.
The review
application would have an additional party. That party would not be
able to unfairly influence the outcome of the review
application or,
more importantly, the criminal trial. The ruling of the magistrate on
admissibility will either be found to pass
muster or not. The leave
given to SARS to intervene in the review in no way undermines the
right of the Cyrils to a fair trial.
[17]
In the view I take of the matter, the order in the intervention
application
does not meet the appealability criteria arising from
Zweni
developed over the years as set out above. There is no
warrant for finding that the interests of justice require the
impugned order
to be dealt with as an appealable decision. That being
the case, the second jurisdictional fact is absent. This court,
accordingly,
has no jurisdiction to entertain the appeal. As such, it
must be struck from the roll.
[18]
Regarding costs, they should follow the result. Both parties utilised
the services
of two counsel. This was appropriate in the
circumstances and the costs of two counsel should be allowed. The
order granting leave
to appeal directed that the costs of the
application for leave to appeal were to form costs in the appeal.
Since the appeal will
not be heard, it is appropriate that those
costs be made part of the striking of the appeal from the roll.
[19]
In the result, the following order issues:
The
appeal is struck from the roll with costs, such costs to include the
costs of the application for leave to appeal, all of which
will
include those consequent on the employment of two counsel.
____________________
T
R GORVEN
JUDGE
OF APPEAL
Appearances
For
the appellant: A Katz SC with K
Perumalsamy
Instructed
by:
M Attorneys Incorporated, Sandton
Symington
De Kok Incorporated, Bloemfontein
For
the respondents: G Marcus SC with M Mbikiwa
Instructed
by:
VDT Attorneys, Pretoria
Phatshoane Henny
Attorneys, Bloemfontein
[1]
Gaertner
and Others v Minister of Finance and Others
[2013]
ZACC 38
;
2014 (1) SA 442
(CC);
2014 (1) BCLR 38
(CC) para 74 (
Gaertner
).
[2]
Gaertner
para 76.
[3]
Gaertner
para 78.
[4]
Newlands
Surgical Clinic
(Pty)
Ltd v Peninsula Eye Clinic (Pty) Ltd
[2015]
ZASCA 25
;
2015 (4) SA 34
(SCA);
[2015] 2 All SA 322
para 13.
[5]
S v Van
Wyk and Another
[2014] ZASCA 152
;
2015 (1) SACR 584
(SCA) para 20, fn 6. The
reference is to the now repealed Supreme Court Act 59 of 1959. See
also
Nova
Property Group Holdings Ltd and Others v Cobbett and Another
[2016]
ZASCA 63
;
2016 (4) SA 317
(SCA);
[2016] 3 All SA 32
paras 8–9.
[6]
Zweni v
Minister of Law and Order
[1992]
ZASCA 197
;
1993 (1) SA 523
(A) at 532J–533A (
Zweni
).
[7]
International
Trade Administration Commission v SCAW South Africa (Pty) Ltd
[2010]
ZACC 6
;
2012
(4) SA 618
(CC);
2010 (5) BCLR 457
para 49.
[8]
Moch v
Nedtravel (Pty) Ltd t/a American Express Travel Service
[1996]
ZASCA 2
;
1996 (3) SA 1
(A) at 10E–G.
[9]
Road
Accident Fund v Taylor and other matters
[2023] ZASCA 64
;
2023 (5) SA 147
(SCA) (
Taylor
)
para 26. See also
Philani-Ma-Afrika
and Others v Mailula and Others
[2009]
ZASCA 115
;
2010 (2) SA 573
(SCA) para 5.
[10]
United
Democratic Movement and Another v Lebashe Investment Group (Pty) Ltd
and Others
[2022] ZACC 34
;
2023 (1) SA 353
(CC);
2022 (12) BCLR 1521
(CC)
(
Lebashe
)
para 45.
[11]
Government
of the Republic of South Africa v Von Abo
[2011] ZASCA 65
;
2011 (5) SA 262
(SCA) para 17.
[12]
Lebashe
para 41.
[13]
Consolidated
News Agencies (Pty) Ltd (in liquidation) v Mobile Telephone Networks
(Pty) Ltd and Another
[2009] ZASCA 130
;
2010 (3) SA 382
(SCA);
[2010] 2 All SA 9
(SCA)
para 89.
Ascendis
Animal Health (Pty) Ltd v Merck Sharp Dohme Corporation and Others
[2019] ZACC 41
;
2020 (1) SA 327
;
2020 (1) BCLR 1
(CC) para 108.
[14]
Nedbank
Limited and Another v Survé and Others
[2023] ZASCA 178
;
[2024] 1 All SA 615
(SCA) para 18 (
Survé
).
[15]
Survé
para 30.
[16]
Lebashe
para 45.
[17]
Lebashe
para 46 referring to the matter of
Health
Professions Council of South Africa and Another v Emergency Medical
Supplies and Training CC t/a EMS
[2010]
ZASCA 65
;
2010 (6) SA 469
(SCA) para 25.
[18]
Health
Professions Council of South Africa and Another v Emergency Medical
Supplies and Training CC t/a EMS
2010
(6) SA 469
(SCA) para 21.
[19]
Wickham
v Magistrate, Stellenbosch and Others
[2016] ZACC 36
;
2017 (1) BCLR 121
(CC);
2017 (1) SACR 209
(CC).
[20]
S v Van
Der Walt
[2020] ZACC 19
;
2020 (2) SACR 371
(CC) para 25.
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