Case Law[2023] ZASCA 29South Africa
United Manganese of Kalahari (Pty) Ltd v Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service (1231/2021) [2023] ZASCA 29; 85 SATC 529 (24 March 2023)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
24 March 2023
Headnotes
Summary: Section 105 of the Tax Administration Act 28 of 2011 – a taxpayer may only dispute an assessment by objection and appeal in terms of ss 104 to 107, unless the high court directs otherwise.
Judgment
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## United Manganese of Kalahari (Pty) Ltd v Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service (1231/2021) [2023] ZASCA 29; 85 SATC 529 (24 March 2023)
United Manganese of Kalahari (Pty) Ltd v Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service (1231/2021) [2023] ZASCA 29; 85 SATC 529 (24 March 2023)
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sino date 24 March 2023
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Not
reportable
Case
no: 1231/2021
In
the matter between:
UNITED
MANGANESE OF KALAHARI
(PTY)
LTD
APPELLANT
and
THE
COMMISSIONER FOR THE
SOUTH
AFRICAN REVENUE
SERVICE RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
United Manganese of
Kalahari (Pty) Ltd v Commissioner for the South African Revenue
Service
(Case no 1231/2021)
[2023] ZASCA 29
(24 March 2023)
Coram:
PONNAN, SALDULKER, MOTHLE and GOOSEN JJA and KATHREE-SETILOANE AJA
Heard
:
22 February 2023
Delivered
:
24 March 2023
Summary:
Section 105
of the
Tax Administration Act 28 of 2011
– a
taxpayer may only dispute an assessment by objection and appeal in
terms of
ss 104
to
107
, unless the high court directs otherwise.
ORDER
On
appeal from
:
Gauteng Division
of the High Court, Pretoria (Mabuse J, sitting as court of first
instance):
The
appeal is dismissed with costs, including those of two counsel.
JUDGMENT
Ponnan
ADP (Saldulker, Mothle and Goosen JJA and KATHREE-SETILOANE AJA
concurring)
[1]
On 24 March 2017, the respondent, the Commissioner for the South
African Revenue Service
(SARS), issued a letter to the appellant,
United Manganese of Kalahari (Pty) Ltd (UMK), indicating that an
audit will be conducted
in respect of the 2011, 2012 and 2013 income
tax years of assessment.
[2]
Following several requests for information from UMK, as well as
witness interviews,
SARS issued a letter of audit findings in terms
of s 42(2)
(b)
of the Tax Administration Act 28 of 2011 (TAA)
setting out the outcome of the audit and the grounds of SARS’
proposed additional
assessments. UMK was afforded 21 business days in
terms of s 42(3) of the TAA within which to respond in writing to the
facts and
conclusions set out in the letter of audit findings. UMK
and SARS thereafter agreed that considering,
inter alia
, the
complexities of the audit, the 21-day period would be extended to 30
August 2019. In the interim, UMK directed a letter to
SARS on 16 July
2019 requesting clarity regarding certain of the allegations and
findings in the letter of audit findings, to which
SARS replied on 30
July 2019. On 30 August 2019, UMK responded to the facts and
conclusions set out in the letter of audit findings,
as supplemented
by SARS’ reply.
[3]
The finalisation of the audit letter was subsequently issued five
months later on
31 January 2020 and accompanied by the additional
assessments. Pursuant to the finalisation of the audit, SARS made the
following
adjustments to UMK’s taxable income and levied the
following amounts of tax and interest in respect of the relevant
income
tax years of assessment:
Tax Period
Adjustment in terms
of s 31(2) of the Income Tax Act
Additional Income Tax
at 28% (s 31(2) of the Income Tax Act)
Dividend Tax at 15%
(s 31(3) of the Income Tax Act)
Understatement
Penalty at 50% (s 223(1) of the TAA)
Interest (s 89quat(2)
of the TAA)
2011
R79 977 814.00
R22 393 787.92
R19 765 034.72
2012
R169 694 577.00
R47 514 481.56
R22 653 108.82
2013
R299 645 099.00
R83 900 628.80
R44 946 765.00
R41 950 314.00
R67 910 383.65
Total
R549 317 490.00
R153 808 898.28
R44 946 765.00
R41 950 314.00
R110 328 527.19
[4]
By virtue of the provisions of s 31(2) of the Income Tax Act 58 of
1962 (ITA), SARS
further issued an assessment for dividend
withholding tax in respect of the deemed in specie dividend arising
from the adjustment
made to UMK’s 2013 income tax year of
assessment, as follows:
Adjustment in terms
of s 31(2) of the Income Tax Act
Deemed dividend for
purposes of s 31(3) of the Income Tax Act
Dividend Tax at 15%
R299 645 099.00
R299 645 099.00
R44 946 765.00
[5]
The additional assessments (in the amount of R351 034 504.47 in
total) provided
that payment by UMK to SARS was due by 29 February
2020. This excludes interest levied on the dividend tax assessment,
which SARS
intends to levy with effect from1 July 2015.
[6]
On 17 February 2020, notice was given on behalf of UMK as required in
terms of s 11(4)
of the TAA of its intention to institute legal
proceedings against SARS in the Gauteng Division of the High Court,
Pretoria (the
high court). In the application that followed, UMK
sought an order in these terms:
‘
1.
That the additional assessments raised by SARS in respect of the
Appellant’s
2011, 2012 and 2013 income tax years of assessment
. . . be reviewed and set aside.
2.
It be declared that in paragraph (d)(vA) of the “connected
person”
definition in section 1 of the Income Tax Act No. 58 of
1962 (as amended) (the “Income Tax Act”) the term
“managed
or controlled” means the exercise of actual
de
facto
management or the exercise of actual
de facto
control.
3.
That, insofar as it may be required, the following relief be granted
to the Appellant:
3.1
the Appellant is exempted from any obligation to exhaust any internal
remedy(ies) in terms
of section 7(2) of the Promotion of
Administrative Justice Act No. 3 of 2000; and/or
3.2
in terms of
section 105
of the
Tax Administration Act No. 28 of 2011
,
this court adjudicates all of the relief sought by the Appellant in
this application.’
[7]
Although several points
in limine
were raised by SARS in
opposition to UMK’s application, only one pertaining to
jurisdiction need presently detain us. It
was expressed thus in SARS’
answering affidavit:
‘
36.
I am advised that the jurisdiction of this Court is expressly
conditional, precisely to prevent
tax-related issues being raised in
this Court instead of the Tax Court, without the most careful prior
regulation by this Court.
Otherwise, litigants as seems to be the
case in this matter, would flout the careful distinction of functions
between this Court
and the Tax Court.
37.
The making or issuing of additional assessments is regulated under
section 92
of the [TAA] to correct the prejudice to SARS or the
fiscus
in respect of an assessment previously made based on
incorrect declarations. Chapter 9 of the [TAA], part B, particularly
section 105
thereof provides that:
“
105.
Forum for dispute of assessment or decision.
A taxpayer may only
dispute an assessment or “decision” as described in
section 104
in proceedings under this chapter, unless a high court
otherwise directs.”
38.
Therefore, the only forum in which assessments, including additional
assessments, may be
challenged is the Tax Court, unless a High Court
directs otherwise. I am advised that the High Court would only so
direct in circumstances
where a litigant has clearly pleaded and made
out a case for the High Court to deviate adjudication of issues in or
arising from
a tax dispute from the Tax Court to the High Court.
Neither does [UMK’s] founding nor its supplementary founding
affidavit
make out a case for such deviation.
39.
In the circumstances, this Court does not have the necessary
jurisdiction to hear a review
regarding the merits of an additional
assessment. No case has been pleaded (so that it could be explicitly
answered) for the relief
sought that the High Court should direct a
deviation in terms of
section 105
of the [TAA], neither has UMK made
out a case for such relief on pertinent facts justifying the
deviation (so that these could
be rebutted by SARS). The net effect
is that there is no justification for such direction to be made in
terms of
section 105
of the [TAA].’
[8]
The response in the replying affidavit was that:
‘
7.1
[UMK] denies that this Honourable Court does not have the necessary
jurisdiction to hear and decide
the prayers contained in [UMK’s]
Notice of Motion dated 24 March 2020;
section 105
of the TAA
explicitly reserves this Court’s concurrent jurisdiction. In
addition, it is respectfully contended that the Tax
Court does not
have the necessary jurisdiction to review and set aside
administrative action such as the impugned action(s) taken
by [SARS].
. . .
7.3
[SARS’] statement that “exceptional circumstances”
must be shown, in terms
of
section 105
of the TAA, is misplaced. I am
advised by [UMK’s] legal representatives that
section 105
does
not contain this threshold requirement contended for by [SARS]; in
deciding whether to exercise its discretion, this Court
may take into
account a host of considerations. In any event, [UMK] submits that a
proper case has been made for this court to
exercise its inherent
jurisdiction and to grant the prayers contained in [UMK’s]
Notice of Motion.’
[10]
The high court held:
‘
[11]
S 105
of the
TAA makes provision for disputes of assessment or decision to be
heard in the High Court subject to the proviso that the
High Court
directs that this is so. It is common cause, in this application,
that the High Court has not been approached to direct
that the
dispute about the additional assessment shall be heard by it, that is
the High Court.
[12] The High Court would
only so direct that a dispute of the assessment or decision in the
circumstances where a litigant has
clearly pleaded and made out a
case for the High Court to deviate adjudication of issuing in or
arising from a tax dispute from
the Tax Court to a High Court.
Nowhere in its affidavit does UMK make out a case for such deviation.
It is SARS’ case that
in the circumstances, this court lacks
the necessary jurisdiction to hear a review regarding the merits of
the additional assessment.
This is so because UMK has not pleaded a
case for the relief sought that a High Court should direct a
deviation in terms of
s 105
of the TAA. The application may therefore
only be dismissed on this point
in limine
.’
[11]
In that, the high court cannot be faulted. In
Commissioner
for the South African Revenue Service v Rappa Resources (Pty) Ltd
,
I recently
had occasion to express the view that:
‘
Section
105
is an innovation introduced by the TAA from 1 October 2011. It
has moreover been narrowed down by an amendment made in 2015. Its
purpose is to make clear that the default rule is that a taxpayer may
only dispute an assessment by the objection and appeal procedure
under the TAA and may not resort to the high court unless permitted
to do so by order of that court. The high court will only permit
such
a deviation in exceptional circumstances. This much is clear from the
language, context, history and purpose of the section.
Thus, a
taxpayer may only dispute an assessment by the objection and appeal
procedure under the TAA, unless a high court directs
otherwise.
This is reinforced by the
amendment of
s 105
in 2015. The original version read as follows:
“
A
taxpayer may not dispute an assessment or “decision” as
described in
section 104
in any court or other proceedings, except in
proceedings under this Chapter
or by
application to the High Court for review
.”
(Underlining for emphasis)
Pre-amendment, the
taxpayer could elect to take an assessment on review to the high
court instead of following the prescribed procedure.
That is no
longer the case. The amendment was meant to make clear that the
default rule is that a taxpayer had to follow the prescribed
procedure, unless a high court directs otherwise.
This understanding is
reinforced by the explanatory memorandum that accompanied the Tax
Administration Law Amendment Bill of 2015.
It described the purpose
of the amendment of
s 105
as follows:
“
The
current wording of
section 105
creates the impression that a dispute
arising under Chapter 9 may either be heard by the tax court
or
a High Court for review. This section is intended to ensure that
internal remedies, such as the objection and appeal process and
the
resolution thereof by means of alternative dispute resolution or
before the tax board or the tax court, be exhausted before
a higher
court is approached and that the tax court deal with the dispute as
court of first instance on a trial basis. This is
in line with both
domestic and international case law. The proposed amendment makes the
intention clear but preserves the right
of a High Court to direct
otherwise should the specific circumstances of a case require it.”’
The
purpose of
s 105
is clearly to ensure that, in the ordinary course,
tax disputes are taken to the tax court. The high court consequently
does not
have jurisdiction in tax disputes unless it directs
otherwise. . . .’
[1]
[12]
It follows that the appeal must fail and in the result it is
accordingly dismissed with costs
including those of two counsel.
V
M PONNAN
JUDGE
OF APPEAL
APPEARANCES
For
appellant: J
J Gauntlett SC QC with him P A Swanepoel SC
Instructed
by: Edward
Nathan Sonnenbergs Inc., Pretoria
McIntyre van der Post,
Bloemfontein
For
respondent: L
Sigogo SC with him M Masilo
Instructed
by: Ramushu
Mashile Twala Inc., Pretoria
Claude Reid Inc.,
Bloemfontein
[1]
Commissioner
for the South African Revenue Service v Rappa Resources (Pty) Ltd
[2023]
ZASCA 28
(24 March 2023) paras 17 – 20.
sino noindex
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