Case Law[2024] ZASCA 139South Africa
Naraidu v S (894/2023) [2024] ZASCA 139; 87 SATC 408 (16 October 2024)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
16 October 2024
Headnotes
Summary: Criminal law – Tax practitioner – claim for a refund under the Value-Added Tax Act 89 of 1991 (the VAT Act) – fraud – intent to defraud – knowledge of the fictious claim – statutory charges under s 59(1) of the VAT Act and s 269(6) of the Tax Administration Act 28 of 2011 – validity of the statutory charges.
Judgment
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# South Africa: Supreme Court of Appeal
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## Naraidu v S (894/2023) [2024] ZASCA 139; 87 SATC 408 (16 October 2024)
Naraidu v S (894/2023) [2024] ZASCA 139; 87 SATC 408 (16 October 2024)
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sino date 16 October 2024
FLYNOTES:
CRIMINAL
– Fraud –
VAT
refunds
–
Tax practitioner –
Intent
to defraud – Submitted false information – Validity of
statutory charges – Whether appellant was
complicit in
fraudulent scheme – No direct evidence that appellant had
any knowledge that documents were fictitious
invoices and that
claim was fraudulent – State failed to prove charge beyond
reasonable doubt – Conviction cannot
stand – Appeal
upheld – Value Added Tax Act 89 of 1991, 59(1) –
Tax
Administration Act 28 of 2011
,
s 269(6).
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Not
Reportable
Case
no: 894/2023
In
the matter between:
SESHIN NARAIDU
APPELLANT
and
THE STATE
RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
Naraidu v The State
(894/2023)
[2024] ZASCA 139
(16 October 2024)
Coram:
MOKGOHLOA, SMITH and UNTERHALTER JJA and MJALI and DIPPENAAR AJJA
Heard:
16 August 2024
Delivered:
This judgment was handed down electronically by circulation to the
parties’ representatives by email, publication
on the Supreme
Court of Appeal website and released to SAFLII. The date and time for
hand-down of the judgment is deemed to be
11h00 on 16 October 2024.
Summary:
Criminal law – Tax practitioner – claim for a refund
under the Value-Added Tax Act 89 of 1991 (the
VAT Act) – fraud
– intent to defraud – knowledge of the fictious claim –
statutory charges under s 59(1)
of the VAT Act and
s 269(6)
of the
Tax Administration Act 28 of 2011
– validity of the statutory
charges.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Gauteng Division of the High Court, Johannesburg
(Mabesele and Kumalo JJ sitting as court of appeal):
1
The appeal is upheld.
2
The order of the high court is set aside, and replaced with the
following order:
‘
(a) The
appeal is upheld.
(b) The
conviction of Mr Naraidu and sentence imposed upon him by the
Regional Court, Gauteng
under case no 41/337/14 is set
aside, and it is ordered that Mr Naraidu is acquitted of all the
charges brought against him.’
JUDGMENT
Unterhalter JA (Mokgohloa and Smith
JJA and Mjali and Dippenaar AJJA concurring):
[1] The appellant, Mr Naraidu, a
tax practitioner, was, together with two other accused, charged with
three counts of fraud,
and three alternative charges under the
Value-Added Tax Act 89 of 1991 (the VAT Act) read with s 269(9) of
the Tax Administration
Act 28 of 2011 (the TAA). The charges, in
essence, alleged that Serghony’s Shoes Fashion CC (SSF and the
first accused),
together with its sole member, Mr Mbom (the second
accused) and Mr Naraidu (the third accused) unlawfully, and with
intent to defraud,
misrepresented to the South African Revenue
Service (SARS) that SSF had incurred expenses and was entitled to
refunds under the
VAT Act, knowing that SSF was not entitled to any
such refunds and that the information submitted to SARS was false.
This caused
prejudice, actual or potential, to SARS.
[2]
The trial proceeded in the Regional Court, Gauteng (the regional
court). Mr Mbom and Mr Naraidu were convicted on the
three counts of
fraud. Mr Mbom did not return to court for sentencing, and has not
been arrested. Mr Naraidu was sentenced to six
years of imprisonment
without an option of a fine. Mr Naraidu appealed to the high court in
respect of his conviction. The high
court (per Mabesele
et
Kumalo JJ) dismissed the appeal. It found that the regional court had
correctly found that Mr Naraidu was aware that the documents
submitted to SARS supporting the claim for the VAT refund were false.
With special leave, Mr Naraidu appeals to this Court.
[3]
A number of issues are not contested in this appeal. First, there was
clear evidence that the documents submitted to SARS
to support the
claim of SSF for a VAT refund were false, and the claim constituted a
misrepresentation. The investigation undertaken
by SARS, the evidence
of which was led at trial, revealed that the invoices that were
submitted to SARS in support of the claim
for the VAT refund were
fictitious. The refund sought was substantial, amounting to
R2 748 037.51.
[4]
Second, it is a plain that filings were made by SSF on 14 September
2013, and again on 25 September 2013, on the e-filing
system used by
SARS, for a VAT refund. These were rejected. Mr Naraidu, on 28
October 2013, wrote an email to SARS, on behalf of
SSF, as a tax
practitioner, to query the delay in payment of the refund. The
relevant portion of the email reads as follows:
‘
Documents were submitted in the
branch office. Which is thus being lost. I had to resubmit the
documents again. Every time I call
I get told it is in the process.
But no one at SARS can tell me where in the process it is exactly.’
On
27 November 2013, Mr Naraidu again wrote to SARS on behalf of SSF:
‘
I want to query on the delay
for the VAT refund for period 2013/07 and 2013/09. Are there
supporting documents that’s required?
Does the bank detail need
to be updated? I have followed up at the call centre and sent a PCC
request, with still no success. Please
assist, client is frustrated.
I don’t know what excuse to give the client anymore.’
On
3 December 2013, Mr Naraidu wrote once more to SARS on behalf of SSF,
as follows:
‘
I want to query on the delay
for the VAT refund for the periods 2013/07 and 2013/09. Supporting
documents have being submitted,
bank detail are correct and valid? I
have followed up at the call centre and sent a PCC request, with
still no success. According
to the SARS e-filing the audits for both
periods have been finalised as per the refund dashboard. Please
assist, client is frustrated.
I don’t know what excuse to give
the client anymore.’
[5]
The regional magistrate found that Mr Naraidu acted with Mr Mbom in
‘a premeditated plan to defraud SARS’.
The high court
agreed. It reasoned that the enquiries directed by Mr Naraidu to SARS
concerning the VAT refund due to SSF meant
that he had ‘insight
of the fraudulent supporting documents’. Both courts thus
rejected the version advanced by Mr
Naraidu, at trial, that he was
merely making enquiries of SARS on behalf of SSF.
[6]
The evidence led at the trial showed that Mr Mbom, the sole member of
SSF, had registered SSF as a VAT vendor, and Mr
Mbom was registered
to use the e-filing system of SARS on behalf of SSF. The bank account
of SSF reflected no business transactions,
yet SSF was seeking a
sizeable VAT refund. The findings of the regional court that Mr Mbom
was guilty of fraud are incontestable.
Mr Mbom’s flight from a
final reckoning before the regional court suggests that he shared
this view. The issue for us is
whether the state discharged its onus
of proof to show that Mr Naraidu was complicit in Mr Mbom’s
fraudulent scheme to use
SSF to make fraudulent claims upon SARS for
a VAT refund.
[7]
Both the high court and the regional court placed much emphasis upon
the emails that Mr Naraidu sent to SARS. I have set
out the relevant
content of these emails. They convey two matters of importance.
First, that Mr Naraidu had resubmitted the documents
to SARS
supporting the claim by SSF for a VAT refund, and hence had sight of
these documents. Second, that, in order to do so,
Mr Naraidu must
have had access to the SARS e-filing system, since he records that he
resubmitted the documents. The SARS’
witnesses called by the
State could not say who had lodged the claim on the e-filing system,
but, Mr Naraidu’s emails indicate
that he had access to the
system and had, at the very least, resubmitted the documents.
[8]
Mr Naraidu’s evidence at his trial was as follows. He had
worked for SARS. In October 2013, he was a financial adviser
for
Liberty Life, an insurance and financial services company. A client
had given Mr Naraidu a referral list to call persons there
listed to
try to sell Liberty policies. On the list was a person described by
Mr Naraidu as the owner of SSF. This person was described
by Mr
Naraidu in the vaguest of terms as a ‘white guy’, and not
Mr Mbom. I shall call this person ‘the presumed
owner’.
They met, Mr Naraidu testified, at the Dross restaurant in Midrand in
October 2013. The presumed owner showed Mr
Naraidu his driver’s
licence and the registration papers of SSF. The presumed owner then
sought the assistance of Mr Naraidu,
as a tax practitioner, to pursue
a VAT refund claim, on behalf of SSF, with SARS. Mr Naraidu agreed to
do so. Of the emails that
he then wrote to SARS, Mr Naraidu had this
to say:
‘
I have just said that I had no
knowledge of what was happening. I was enquiring and hoping the
client once it was resolved would
sign a policy . . . that is how I
ran my Liberty business.’
Mr
Naraidu’s version was thus that he wrote the emails to prompt
SARS to pay the VAT refund, but that he had no knowledge
of the basis
upon which the claim was made. His incentive was to assist the
presumed owner in order to sell him a Liberty policy.
[9]
There is a great deal that is unsatisfactory about Mr Naraidu’s
evidence. How he came to be retained; that he was,
on his own
version, willing to engage SARS on behalf of a client he knew next to
nothing about; that he took an instruction without
any proper
mandate; and then pursue a claim in ignorance of the claim that was
being made – all of this suggests a reckless
disregard for his
duties as a tax practitioner. But that is not the charge he was
facing. The question is whether he made himself
party to the fraud
that Mr Mbom perpetrated upon SARS. And the primary evidence relied
upon by the State to make that case were
the emails sent to SARS by
Mr Naraidu on behalf of SSF.
[10]
What then do the emails establish? As I have explained, they convey
that Mr Naraidu had the documents used in support
of the claim of SSF
for a VAT refund, and that he had resubmitted these documents to
SARS. Mr Naraidu denied that he did so. The
SARS witnesses were
unable to say who had accessed the e-filing system to make the claims
on behalf of SSF. But, even if Mr Naraidu
must be held to what he
wrote in the emails, it does not follow that because he resubmitted
the documents in support of the claim,
he had any knowledge that
these documents were fictitious invoices and that the claim was
fraudulent. There was no direct evidence
of this. It was the
investigations undertaken by SARS that uncovered the fraud. This was
done by verifying whether there were true
sales that the invoices
purported to record. There were not. But there was no evidence that
Mr Naraidu knew this to be so. It cannot
be inferred that. because he
submitted the documents on behalf of SSF, he thereby represented that
they recorded transactions that
supported the VAT refund, knowing
that they were fictious. Once that is so, the State failed to prove
beyond reasonable doubt that
Mr Naraidu had the intent to defraud
SARS.
[11]
That Mr Naraidu acted recklessly is plainly the case. He lent his
efforts to secure the payment of a fraudulent claim.
But absent proof
beyond reasonable doubt that he knew the claim to be fraudulent, he
cannot be said to have made himself party
to the fraud. There is an
absence of proof that Mr Naraidu had the intention required to be
guilty of fraud. His conviction on
the charges of common law fraud is
thus unsafe, and must be set aside.
[12]
Little attention was given by counsel to the alternative statutory
charges. The charge sheet described these as contravening
s 59(1)
(d)
read with ss 1, 20, 23, 28 of the VAT Act, as amended, read with
s 269(6) of the TAA. These charges entail some complexity because
s
59 of the VAT Act was repealed by s 271 of the TAA. However, s 269(6)
of the TAA permits of the prosecution of statutory offences,
repealed
by this enactment, if they were committed before the commencement of
the TAA. The TAA commenced on 1 October 2012. The
statutory offences
with which Mr Naraidu was charged are alleged to have occurred in
2013 and 2014. It is thus doubtful that these
statutory charges are
valid in law. But as these matters did not arise for decision in the
regional court or in the high court,
and were not dealt with before
us, it suffices to observe that the statutory charges brought against
Mr Naraidu all allege an intent,
on his part, to secure a refund to
which SFF was not entitled. For the reasons given, while Mr Naraidu
sought to secure a refund
for SFF, the State did not discharge its
onus to prove that he intended to do so knowing that SFF was not
entitled to the refund.
Mr Naraidu thus cannot be convicted on the
alternative statutory charges.
[13]
In the result, the conviction of Mr Naraidu cannot stand. His appeal
is upheld, the order of the high court must be set
aside, and Mr
Naraidu is acquitted of the charges against him.
[14]
The following order is made:
1 The appeal is upheld.
2 The order of the high court
is set aside, and replaced with the following order:
‘
(a) The
appeal is upheld.
(b) The
conviction of Mr Naraidu, and sentence imposed upon him, by the
Regional Court, Gauteng under
case no 41/337/14 is set aside, and it
is ordered that Mr Naraidu is acquitted of all the charges brought
against him.’
D N UNTERHALTER
JUDGE OF APPEAL
Appearances
For the
appellant:
Adv M Witz
Riaan Louw
Attorneys, Kempton Park
Michael Du Plessis
Attorneys, Bloemfontein
For the
respondent:
Instructed by:
Adv L Jobo
Director of Public
Prosecutions, Johannesburg
Director of Public
Prosecutions, Bloemfontein.
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