Case Law[2023] ZASCA 84South Africa
Commissioner for The South African Revenue Service v Free State Development Corporation (1222/21) [2023] ZASCA 84; 2024 (2) SA 282 (SCA); 86 SATC 289 (31 May 2023)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
31 May 2023
Headnotes
Summary: Application by taxpayer to withdraw statement of grounds of appeal and file amended statement – Tax Court granting order – test for appealability – Tax Court Rule 10(3) – taxpayer may not include in amended statement a ground of appeal that constitutes new ground of objection not raised under Tax Court Rule 7 – whether the amended ground of appeal foreshadowed in objection.
Judgment
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## Commissioner for The South African Revenue Service v Free State Development Corporation (1222/21) [2023] ZASCA 84; 2024 (2) SA 282 (SCA); 86 SATC 289 (31 May 2023)
Commissioner for The South African Revenue Service v Free State Development Corporation (1222/21) [2023] ZASCA 84; 2024 (2) SA 282 (SCA); 86 SATC 289 (31 May 2023)
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sino date 31 May 2023
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Reportable
Case No: 1222/21
In
the matter between:
THE
COMMISSIONER FOR THE SOUH AFRICAN
REVENUE
SERVICE APPELLANT
and
FREE
STATE DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
The Commissioner for
The South African Revenue Service v Free State Development
Corporation (1222/2021)
[2023] ZASCA 84
(31 May 2023)
Coram:
DAMBUZA AP, ZONDI AND WEINER JJA, MALI
AND UNTERHALTER AJJA
Heard:
22 February 2023
Delivered:
31 May 2023
Summary:
Application by taxpayer to withdraw statement of
grounds of appeal and file amended statement – Tax Court
granting order –
test for appealability – Tax Court Rule
10(3) – taxpayer may not include in amended statement a ground
of appeal that
constitutes new ground of objection not raised under
Tax Court Rule 7 – whether the amended ground of appeal
foreshadowed
in objection.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Free State Tax Court,
Bloemfontein (Musi JP sitting as court of first instance):
The
appeal is dismissed with costs including the costs of two counsel
where so employed.
JUDGMENT
Weiner JA (Dambuza
ADP, Zondi JA and Mali and Unterhalter AJJA concurring)
Introduction
[1]
Thi
s
appeal turns on whether
the
Free State Tax Court,
Bloemfontein
was
correct in granting an order, permitting the respondent, the Free
State Development Corporation (the taxpayer), to withdraw
its
statement of grounds of appeal (the original statement), filed in
terms of Tax Court Rule (TCR) 31 (2), and to file an
amended
statement of grounds of appeal (the amended statement) against
additional assessments levied by the appellant, the Commissioner
for
the South African Revenue Service (SARS).
[2]
The Tax Court granted the relief sought by
the taxpayer and granted it leave to file the amended statement
within 20 days. It also
granted leave to SARS to file a reply within
20 days of receipt of the taxpayer’s amended statement. Leave
to appeal to this
Court was granted by the Tax Court.
[3]
SARS sought to overturn the Tax Court’s
decision on the basis that the amended statement was premised on a
new ground of objection
not originally raised. Thus, it had breached
TCR 10(3) which provides that
a
taxpayer may not appeal
:
‘
On
a ground that constitutes an amended objection against a part or
amount of the disputed assessment not objected to under rule
7
.’
[1]
[4]
The
Tax Court
has
jurisdiction over tax appeals lodged under s 107 of the Tax
Administration Act (TAA)
[2]
.
In terms of s 117(3), it may hear interlocutory applications, or any
application in a procedural matter relating to a dispute
under
Chapter 9 of the TAA (the chapter dealing with disputes and appeals).
Its powers in relation to an assessment or a ‘decision’
under appeal, or in relation to an application in a procedural matter
referred to in s 117(3), are set out in s 129(2)
of the
TAA. It reads as follows:
‘
In
the case of an assessment or ‘decision’ under appeal or
an application in a procedural matter referred to in section
117 (3),
the tax court may –
a.
confirm the assessment or ‘decision’;
b.
order the assessment or ‘decision’
to be altered;
c.
refer the assessment back to SARS for
further examination and
assessment; or
d.
make
an appropriate order in a procedural matter.’
[3]
Appealability
[5]
The
parties were requested to deliver supplementary submissions on
whether the Tax Court’s order was appealable. The order
deals
with the granting of an amendment. Ordinarily, this would be a purely
interlocutory order, which does not dispose of
any issue in the
main appeal. In
Macsteel
Tube and Pipe, a division of Macsteel Service Centres SA (Pty) Ltd v
Vowles
[4]
this
Court held that:
‘
It
is true that the refusal of an amendment may have a final and
definitive effect because a party may be precluded from leading
evidence at the trial in respect of the aspects which were to be
introduced by the amendment of the pleadings. However, the granting
of an amendment does not, without more, have that effect.
Ordinarily, an order granting leave to amend is an interlocutory
order which is not final and definitive of the rights of the
parties.’
[5]
[6]
The
right to appeal a decision of the Tax Court falls under s 133(1)
of the TAA, which provides that ‘[t]he taxpayer
or SARS may in
the manner provided for in this Act appeal against a decision of the
tax court under sections 129 and 130’.
It is trite that, in the
ordinary course, t
o
be considered appealable, the order or decision must be ‘final
in effect; not susceptible of alteration by the court of
first
instance; definitive of the rights of the parties, and, the order
must have the effect of disposing of at least a substantial
portion
of the relief claimed in the main proceedings’.
[6]
[7]
SARS
contended that the decision was appealable because it was wrong. It
relied for this submission on the dictum in
The
Commissioner for the South African Revenue Services v Airports
Company for South Africa (ACSA)
[7]
where this Court per Windell AJA, held that:
‘
As
I have shown the tax court wholly misconceived the matter. As a
result, the order issued is plainly wrong and it can hardly be
in the
interests of justice to permit it to stand.’
[8]
Acsa
dealt
with an amendment to an objection, which was granted by the Tax
Court, despite there being no provision for such an amendment
in the
TAA. An objection is part of the pre-litigation administrative
process and is not a pleading. Thus it cannot be amended.
TCR 31, 32
and 33 statements constitute the pleadings which may be amended in
terms of TCR35.
[8]
Thus,
this Court in
Acsa
arrived at the decision that the order of the Tax Court was wrong as
the Tax Court had no power to grant the order which it did.
In the
present case, the TAA provides for the amendment of the statement of
grounds of appeal, in terms of TCR 35.
[9]
The taxpayer argued that
because
the order is not definitive of the rights of the parties, and does
not dispose of any of the relief claimed in the main
proceedings, it
did not conform to the principles set out in
Zweni
and thus was not appealable.
The
important distinction in the present matter is that the appeal of the
Tax Court’s order concerns the power of that court
to grant an
amendment in circumstances where, in the SARS’ view, it had no
such power. SARS submitted that:
‘
The
Tax Court has permitted the operation of what may be termed a
two-tiered tax system whereby a party sufficiently resourced to
access the Tax Court can lay out a case in the midst of proceedings
that contradicts its returns, its objections and its appeals,
thus
rendering that party untethered to the consequences of its own
actions. This procedure is not available to any taxpayer who
is bound
by its declarations. The appellant's case is that the taxpayer was
granted relief by the Tax Court that is not competent
in statute and
Rules and prejudices SARS in the process. …’.
[10]
In
TWK
Agriculture Holdings (Pty) Ltd v Hoogveld Boerderybeleggings (Pty)
Ltd,
[9]
this
Court held that:
‘
Where
the challenge concerns the jurisdiction of a court, and hence the
competence of a judge to hear the matter, the decision of
the court
is considered definitive, and appealable. This is consistent with the
principles enunciated in
Zweni
because the decision as to jurisdiction is considered final. This
position is entirely justified because an error as to jurisdiction,
if not subject to appellate correction, would permit the court below
to proceed with a matter when it had no competence to do so,
rendering what it did a nullity. That is plainly an undesirable
outcome.’
[11]
Thus,
the Tax Court’s order is
appealable
because it concerns the Tax Court’s powers to grant the order
which it did. SARS contends that such powers were
lacking in terms of
the Legislation and the Rules of the Tax Court. Questions of
competence are always treated as having a final
effect as a lack of
competence would vitiate the decision.
[10]
The Basis of the
appeal
[12]
The issue at stake is whether the ground of
appeal in the amended statement constitutes a new ground of objection
not previously
raised, as provided for in TCR 10(3). If it does, then
the Tax Court had no jurisdiction to grant the order which it did. In
other
words, was the ground in the amended statement foreshadowed in
the original objection filed in terms of TCR 7, as found by the Tax
Court? For this purpose, it is necessary to consider the nature of
the transactions that were concluded between the taxpayer and
the
Department of Trade and Industry (DTI), as this will assist in
determining whether the amendment was foreshadowed in the objection.
Transactions
[13]
It
is common cause that the taxpayer is a registered VAT vendor, in
terms of the VAT Act. It is the official economic development
agency
for the Free State province. In 2014, the Special Economic Zones Act
(SEZ Act)
[11]
came into force.
The objects of this Act are to provide for the designation,
promotion, development, operation and management of
Special Economic
Zones (SEZs) and the establishment of a single point of contact to
deliver the required government services to
businesses operating in
SEZs.
[14]
The SEZ Act provides that the licensee must
establish an entity to manage the SEZ, and to provide the resources
and the necessary
means to manage and operate the SEZ. On this basis,
the DTI identified the taxpayer as a public entity which would
further its
mandate of developing the SEZ.
[15]
The Department of Economic, Small Business
Development and Tourism and Environmental Affairs (DESTEA) wished to
establish a SEZ
within the Harrismith area of the Free State. It
identified land registered in the name of the taxpayer. DESTEA
requested the taxpayer
to apply for a SEZ licence from the DTI on its
behalf, on the understanding that the SEZ, when established, would be
transferred
into the name of the entity to be established under the
SEZ Act. The taxpayer would not be the entity that would manage the
SEZ.
For that purpose, the Maluti-a-Phofung SEZ was created in terms
of the SEZ Act and a permit was granted to it to operate and manage
the SEZ.
[16]
On or about 5 March, 2014, a Memorandum of
Funding Agreement (MFA) was concluded between the DTI and the
taxpayer. In terms thereof,
R4 500 000 was granted to the
taxpayer for the 2013/2014 financial year in order for the taxpayer
to plan and prepare
for the establishment of the SEZ hub in the
Free State Province.
[17]
On or about 15 December 2015, the taxpayer
entered into a Special Economic Zone Funding agreement (SEZFA) with
the DTI. Pursuant
thereto, an amount of approximately R240 million
was approved for the implementation by the taxpayer of the designated
Maluti-a-Phofung
SEZ for bulk structure development to facilitate
investments in the specific SEZ.
[18]
Since 2020, the taxpayer has been in the
process of transferring the land to the entity created under the s 25
of the SEZ Act.
The disputed
assessments
[19]
In
respect of the amounts paid to the taxpayer in terms of the MFA and
the SEZFA (the agreements), the taxpayer submitted VAT 201
returns
for the following tax periods: 07/2012, 02/2015, 10/2015, 12/2015,
07/2016, 02/2017 and 06/2017 (the disputed periods),
and declared the
output tax as zero-rated supplies.
[12]
[20]
SARS
found that the taxpayer had erroneously claimed that the supplies
were zero-rated and had therefore understated output VAT
for the
disputed tax periods. It therefore raised additional assessments in
terms of s 92 of TAA to correct the amount of VAT payable.
[13]
The total assessment amount for the disputed tax periods was
approximately R39 million.
[21]
SARS considered the taxpayer to be a
‘designated entity’ as defined in s 1 of the VAT
Act, which includes,
inter alia
,
a provincial government business enterprise. It concluded that the
transactions were subject to the standard VAT rate because
they were
supplies, in terms of s 7 of the VAT Act or ‘deemed supplies’,
in terms of s 8(5) of the VAT Act.
[22]
Section 7(1)
(a)
provides for the imposition of Value Added Tax (VAT). It provides:
‘
Imposition
of Value Added Tax
7.(1) Subject to the
exemptions, exceptions, deductions and adjustments provided for in
this Act, there shall be levied and paid
for the benefit of the State
Revenue Fund a tax, to be known as the value-added tax –
(a)
On the supply by any vendor of goods or services supplied by him on
or after the commencement date in
the course or furtherance of any
enterprise carried on by him calculated at the rate of 15%...on the
value of the supply concerned
or the importation as the case may
be.’
[23]
Supply is defined as including ‘performance
in terms of a sale, rental agreement and all other forms of supply,
whether voluntary,
compulsory or by operation of law, irrespective of
where the supply is effected, and any derivative of “supply”
shall
be construed accordingly’.
[24]
Section 8(5) of the VAT Act provides that:
‘
For
the purposes of this Act a designated entity shall be deemed to
supply services to any public authority or local authority to
the
extent of any payment made by the authority concerned to or on behalf
of that designated entity in respect of the taxable supply
of goods
or services by that designated entity.’
[14]
[25]
On
7 January 2019, the taxpayer, in terms of s 104 of the TAA,
read with TCR 7, objected to the additional assessments
by means of a
notice of objection.
[15]
The
taxpayer contended that, the transactions were zero-rated, in terms
of s 11, which provides:
(1) ‘Where, but for
this section, a supply of goods would be charged with tax at the rate
referred to in section 7(1), such
supply of goods shall, … be
charged with tax at the rate of zero per cent…
(2) Where, but for this
section, a supply of services would be charged with tax at the rate
referred to in section 7 (1), such supply
of services shall, …
be charged with tax at the rate of zero per cent where -
…
(t) the services are
deemed to be supplied in terms of section 8 (5A)’;
[26]
Section 8 (5A) read together with s
11(2)
(t)
deals
with the zero rating of a deemed supply by a vendor (excluding a
designated entity) in respect of a grant. Section 8 (5A)
provides
that:
‘
For
the purposes of section 11(2)(t), a vendor (excluding a designated
entity) shall be deemed to supply services to any public
authority,
municipality or constitutional institution listed in Schedule 1 to
the Public Finance Management Act, 1999 (Act No.
1 of 1999), to the
extent of any grant paid to or on behalf of that vendor in the course
or furtherance of an enterprise carried
on by that vendor.’
[27]
Having regard to the nature of the
transactions between the taxpayer and the Department of Trade and
Industry (DTI), the taxpayer
submitted that it was a mere conduit for
the funds and gained no financial benefit upon which VAT could be
levied. The objections
were disallowed by SARS in February 2019.
Dispute resolution failed.
In
terms of TCR 10, the taxpayer delivered a notice of appeal on
7 March 2019 and the appeal proceeded in the Tax
court.
The statements in
terms of Rule 31(2), 32(2) and 33 of the Tax Court Rules
[28]
In terms of TCR
31(2), SARS delivered its statement of ‘the grounds of
assessment and opposing the appeal’.
It
stated that, in terms of s 7(1)
(a)
and the definition of ‘supply’, the taxpayer was liable
for payment of VAT at the standard rate, for the actual supply
of
goods for consideration, as provided for in the agreements, read with
the provisions of s 7.
[29]
In its original statement, in terms of TCR
32(1), the taxpayer had stated that it was not in dispute that it had
rendered services
in accordance with the two funding agreements. It,
inter alia
,
was accountable for management of the funds granted to it, and was to
monitor the implementation of the project. There was, however,
no
reciprocity in the form of a supply of services of a corresponding
value, to the funds disbursed by the taxpayer. Such services
did not
attract VAT and were zero-rated.
[30]
The taxpayer contended that the agreements
specifically
stated
that
such proceeds
should
be
used exclusively
for
the development
and advancement
of the
SEZ
and not for the taxpayer. The taxpayer
did
not
derive
any
financial
benefit
from
the grant. It was just a conduit, which the
DTI had employed to realise the objectives of developing the SEZs.
The payment was not
linked to an actual supply of goods or services.
[31]
SARS responded to the TCR 32(2) statement
of the taxpayer, in terms of TCR 33. It contended that the
taxpayer was a ‘designated
entity’ and therefore did not
enjoy the zero-rating contemplated in s 8(5A) read with s 11 of the
VAT Act.
[32]
The taxpayer’s
original statement was based upon advice received from its erstwhile
legal advisors. In June 2022, the taxpayer
received a second legal
opinion. The opinion advised that the transactions were not
zero-rated but were, in fact, neither a ‘supply’
nor
‘deemed supply’ in terms of the VAT Act. This led to the
quest to withdraw its original statement and to file the
amended
statement,
claiming
that there was no ‘supply’ or ‘deemed supply’.
The admissions
that the transactions fell within the definitions of ‘supply’
and ‘deemed supply’, were legal
conclusions, made
erroneously.
It
was submitted that the amended statement was based upon the same
facts and transactions, but reached a different legal conclusion.
The
taxpayer argued that the issue traversed in the amended grounds was
covered by the substance of the objection, and it therefore
did not
contravene TCR 10(3).
[33]
The taxpayer denied
that it was
‘
designated
entity’. To be defined as a ‘designated entity’, it
was necessary to consider whether the supply of
goods and services
falls within the definition of ‘enterprise’ in terms of
the definition set out in paragraph (
b
)(i)
and to establish that the deemed supply was made ‘in the
furtherance of an enterprise carried on by that designated entity’.
[34]
The entities referred to in paragraph
(
b
)(i) of
the definition of ‘enterprise’ exist so that the
regulatory, administrative, stewardship or social functions
of
national and provincial government can be carried out. The taxpayer
submitted that the transactions were not carried out in
furtherance
of the taxpayer’s enterprise. They were made pursuant to the
two agreements, which did not form part of any enterprise
carried on
by the taxpayer. The taxpayer contended that the purpose of s 8(5) of
the VAT Act is to ensure that the entities in
which government has an
interest, do not have an unfair advantage over other vendors
participating in the market for the same or
similar goods or
services.
[35]
The taxpayer contended that the
transactions did not give it an unfair competitive advantage over
other vendors participating in
the market for the same or similar
supplies of goods or services. The payments made to the taxpayer by
the DTI were neither in
the furtherance of taxpayer’s
enterprise nor within the definition of paragraph (
b
)(i)
of an enterprise. Therefore, the deeming provisions in s 8(5) of the
VAT Act do not apply. Even if SARS’ contention that
the
taxpayer was a designated entity was correct and that the ‘deemed
supplies’ were made in the course of the taxpayer’s
furtherance of its enterprise, the taxpayer argued that it did not
receive any payments, or such payments were not made on its
behalf or
for its benefit. Such payments were not ‘received’ by the
taxpayer within the ambit of the VAT Act. The payments
received from
the DTI placed the taxpayer in the position of a conduit. There was
thus no ‘deemed supply’ as specified
in s 8(5) of
the VAT Act.
The amendment
[36]
TCR 35 provides that:
‘
(1)
The parties may agree that a statement under Rule 31, 32 or 33 be
amended.
(2)
If the other party does not agree to the
amendment, the party who requires same may apply to the Tax court
under Part F for an order
under Rule 52.’
[37]
In
its application to amend under TCR 52 (7),
[16]
the taxpayer endeavoured to show that the transactions were neither
‘supplies’ nor ‘deemed supplies’ for
the
reasons referred to above. SARS opposed the application on the basis
that the proposed amendment sought to introduce grounds
of appeal
which constituted amended grounds of objection against a part of the
assessments not previously objected to. It submitted
that the amended
ground of appeal that the amount paid does not constitute a taxable
supply, was not a ground of objection relied
upon. It also
contradicted the taxpayer’s VAT 201 returns (in which it
claimed that the supplies were zero-rated).
[38]
SARS submitted that the taxpayer is bound
by its own declarations that the supplies were zero-rated. In terms
of s 25(2) of the
TAA, a return is regarded as being true. The
taxpayer had not, prior to the application to amend, indicated that
this was not correct.
[39]
In
HR
Computek (Pty) Ltd v Commissioner for the South African Revenue
Services (Computek),
[17]
Ponnan JA stated that
‘
not
having raised an objection to the capital assessment in its notice of
objection, the taxpayer was precluded from raising it
on appeal
before the tax court’. In referring to this principle, the
learned judge noted that Corbett JA in
Matla
Coal Ltd. v Commissioner for Inland Revenue
[18]
stressed the importance of adherence to this principle, for otherwise
‘the Commissioner may be prejudiced by an appellant
shifting
the grounds of his objection to the assessment in issue’. He
noted that Corbett JA, also, indicated that in the
application of the
principle, a court should not be ‘unduly technical or rigid in
its approach’ and ‘should look
at the substance of the
objection and the issue as to whether it covers the point which the
appellant wishes to advance on appeal
must be adjudged on the
particular facts of the case’.
[19]
[40]
In the present case, the taxpayer raised
the objection in its notice of objection that the payment received
was not linked to a
supply, but relied upon an incorrect legal
conclusion in claiming that it was zero rated. It is thus
distinguishable from
Computek
.
In seeking to amend its grounds of appeal, the taxpayer claimed that
the transactions were not subject to VAT because the transactions
did
not involve a supply. The basis of the objection and the claim for
zero rating were similarly based on the nature of the transactions
and the fact that the payments were not linked to an actual supply of
goods or services. The amended grounds were thus clearly
foreshadowed
in the objection. The nature of the taxpayer’s objection to the
whole of SARS’s assessment has always
been (and continues to
be) the legality of imposing a VAT liability on the transactions
under consideration.
[41]
The
Tax Court found that the original statement of grounds of appeal was
based upon an erroneous legal conclusion. On a proper interpretation
of TCR 10(3) read together with TCR32(3), as a matter of law, the
taxpayer is not precluded from raising a new ground of appeal
in its
amended statement, in particular when the grounds were, in substance,
the same as those stated in the initial objection
under Rule
7(1).
[20]
I
therefore conclude that the Tax Court had the power to grant the
amendment because the grounds were foreshadowed in the objection.
[42]
It
is then necessary to consider the Tax Court’s discretion in
deciding whether to grant the amendment or not. In
Magnum
Simplex v The MEC Provincial Treasury,
[21]
this
Court referred to
Caxton
Ltd & others v Reeva Forman (Pty) Ltd & another
[22]
where
Corbett CJ stated at ‘Although the decision whether to grant or
refuse an application to amend a pleading rests in the
discretion of
the Court, this discretion must be exercised with due regard to
certain basic principles.’ These principles
include prejudice
to the other party;
that
the amendment is made in good faith; and that the granting of the
amendment will ensure that justice is done in deciding the
real
issues between the parties.
[43]
This discretion must be exercised
judicially. If an issue has been foreshadowed in the objection but
was not expressly stated, there
would be no real prejudice to the
other party and the amendment should be granted. The taxpayer’s
explanation was that it
was advised by its erstwhile attorneys that
the transactions between it and the DTI, were zero-rated for VAT
purposes. The taxpayer
thus completed the VAT 201 assessments in that
manner and on that advice. The taxpayer’s objection and
pleadings were also
drafted in accordance with the advice received.
This changed when the second legal opinion was received.
[44]
Applications
for amendments seeking to retract incorrectly admitted legal
consequences are normally granted by our courts (even
on appeal), for
‘the law would be prejudiced if cases were to be decided on
what parties might, in ignorance, have agreed
the law to be’.
[23]
A court is not even obliged to consider prejudice to the other side
in such circumstances.
In
Potters
Mill
it was held that:
‘
Where
a plaintiff alleges in a pleading that a particular law governs the
case, whereas that law may not, an admission by a defendant
that the
law referred to governs the case does not make it so. What the law is
has always been a matter for the court to determine,
and it is well
established that mistakes about the law which the parties make
are not binding on a court. Thus in
Paddock
Motors (Pty) Ltd v Igesund
1976
(3) SA 16 (A
)
the
court observed at 23F – G that it would be —
'an
intolerable position if a Court were to be precluded from giving the
right decision on accepted facts, merely because a party
failed to
raise a legal point, as a result of an error of law on his part.’
[24]
[45]
Even
if prejudice was to be taken into account, SARS has the opportunity
to file a further statement in terms of TCR 33, dealing
with the
amendment. It has the right to reply to any new grounds, material
facts or applicable law in the appellant’s amended
statement.
It admits that no further evidence was provided by the taxpayer in
seeking the amendment. As the taxpayer contended,
this was because
the amendment is based upon a legal conclusion, not a factual
scenario. SARS conceded that a court will not, even
where admissions
are withdrawn, regard itself as being bound by a mistake of law on
the part of a litigant.
[25]
The
taxpayer still bears the onus of proof in terms of s 102 of the TAA
to prove that the transactions were not ‘supplies’
or
‘deemed supplies’ as defined, and that they did not
therefore attract VAT. These issues will be dealt with in the
fullness of time.
[46]
In any event, any investigations which SARS
may have carried out in determining whether the ‘supplies’
were zero-rated
would have encompassed whether there was, in fact, a
‘supply’ or ‘deemed supply’ in terms of s
8(5) of
the VAT Act.
Behind both grounds, lies the question as
to whether a vatable transaction occurred when the taxpayer performed
in terms of the
agreements.
[47]
In
appropriate circumstances, a court will carefully scrutinize the
substance of a particular transaction to establish its true
nature.
The amendment will permit the true issue between the parties to be
ventilated
[26]
. This basic
principle of tax law is underscored by s 143(1) of the TAA, which
provides that SARS has a duty ‘to assess and
collect tax
according to the laws enacted by Parliament and not to forgo a tax
which is properly chargeable and payable.’
This principle must
also relate to the corollary - SARS’ obligation not to levy
taxes, which are not payable in terms of
the law. This could be the
situation if the amendment was not granted.
[48]
The taxpayer demonstrated that there would
be no prejudice to SARS, the amendment was sought shortly after the
second legal opinion
was received, but more importantly, the granting
of the amendment will allow the true legal issues between the parties
to be ventilated.
[49]
Accordingly, the appeal must fail.
Order:
The appeal is dismissed
with costs including the costs of two counsel where so employed.
_______________________
S
E WEINER
JUDGE
OF APPEAL
Appearances:
For
appellant: N
Snellenburg SC with DR Thompson.
Instructed by:
State Attorney,
Bloemfontein.
For
respondent:
PJJ Zietsman SC with MB Mojaki.
Instructed
by:
Rampai Attorneys,
Bloemfontein.
[1]
TCR
7 provides that a taxpayer may object to an assessment under s 104
of the Act.
[2]
The
Tax Administration Act 28 of 2011.
## [3]Subsection
129(2)(d)was inserted pursuant to an amendment to the TAA unders
19 of Act 22 of 2018 wef 17 January 2019; CfWingate-Pearse
v Commissioner of the South African Revenue Service(830/2015) [2016] ZASCA 109; 2017 (1) SA 542 (SCA) (1 September
2016), where Wallis JA dealt with the position prior to this
amendment:‘[c]onspicuously
absent from s 129(2) is any provision dealing with the Tax
Court’s powers when dealing with an interlocutory
matter under
s 117(3). … The absence of such an express provision is,
however, highly relevant to the question whether
any decision on an
interlocutory issue is appealable.’
[3]
Subsection
129(2)
(d)
was inserted pursuant to an amendment to the TAA under
s
19 of Act 22 of 2018 wef 17 January 2019; Cf
Wingate-Pearse
v Commissioner of the South African Revenue Service
(830/2015) [2016] ZASCA 109; 2017 (1) SA 542 (SCA) (1 September
2016), where Wallis JA dealt with the position prior to this
amendment:
‘
[c]onspicuously
absent from s 129(2) is any provision dealing with the Tax
Court’s powers when dealing with an interlocutory
matter under
s 117(3). … The absence of such an express provision is,
however, highly relevant to the question whether
any decision on an
interlocutory issue is appealable.’
[4]
Macsteel
Tube and Pipe, a division of Macsteel Service Centres SA (Pty) Ltd v
Vowles
[2021]
ZASCA 178
(17 December 2021);
Hassim
v Commissioner, South African Revenue Services
[2002]
ZASCA 140; 2003 (2) SA 246 (SCA);
[5]
Macsteel
para
12.
[6]
Zweni
v Minister of Law and Order
1993
(1) SA 523(A).
[7]
The
Commissioner for the South African Revenue Services v Airports
Company for South Africa (ACSA)
(785/2021)
[2022] ZASCA 132
; (7 October 2022) para 26
.
[8]
Acsa
Ibid
para 18-21.
[9]
TWK
Agriculture Holdings (Pty) Ltd v Hoogveld Boerderybeleggings (Pty)
Ltd and Another
(273/2022)
[2023] ZASCA 63
; (5 May 2023) (SCA).
[10]
TWK
supra;
para 41;
Moch
v Nedtravel (Pty) Ltd
1996
(3) SA 1
(SCA) at para 14.
[11]
Special
Economic Zones Act
16
of 2014.
[12]
In
terms of s 11 of the VAT Act.
[13]
Section
92
provides that if SARS is satisfied that an assessment ‘does
not reflect the correct application of a Tax Act to the prejudice
of
SARS or the
fiscus
,
SARS must make an additional assessment to correct the prejudice’.
Section 104(1) grants to the taxpayer the right to
object to the
assessment made.
[14]
“
designated
entity” means a vendor— (i) to the extent that its
supplies of goods and services of an activity carried
on by that
vendor are in terms of (b)(i) of the definition of 'enterprise'
treated as supplies made in the course or furtherance
of an
enterprise; (ii) which is a major public entity, national government
business enterprise or provincial government business
enterprise
listed in Schedule 2 or Part B or D of Schedule 3 of the Public
Finance Management Act, 1999 (Act No. 1 of 1999),
respectively;
(iii) which is a party to a 'Public Private Partnership Agreement'
as defined in Regulation 16 of the Treasury
Regulations issued in
terms of
section 76
of the
Public Finance Management Act, 1999
to
the extent that that party supplies goods or services in terms of
that Agreement to the 'institution' defined in that Regulation;
[15]
7.
Objection against assessment
A
taxpayer who may object to an assessment under section 104 of the
Act, must deliver a notice of objection within 30 days after
- (a)
delivery of a notice under rule 6(4) or the reasons requested under
rule 6; or (b) where the taxpayer has not requested
reasons, the
date of assessment. (2) A taxpayer who lodges an objection to an
assessment must (a) complete the prescribed form
in full; (b)
specify the grounds of the objection in detail including - (i) the
part or specific amount of the disputed assessment
objected to; (ii)
which of the grounds of assessment are disputed; and (iii) the
documents required to substantiate the grounds
of objection that the
taxpayer has not previously delivered to SARS for purposes of the
disputed assessment.’
[16]
TCR
52 (7) provides: A party seeking an amendment of a statement under
rule 35, may apply to the tax court under this Part for
an
appropriate order, including an order concerning a postponement of
the hearing.
[17]
HR
Computek (Pty) Ltd v Commissioner for the South African Revenue
Service
[
2012]
ZASCA 178
para
12.
[18]
Matla
Coal Ltd. v Commissioner for Inland Revenue
(22/85)
[1986] ZASCA 120.
[19]
Ibid
para 25.
[20]
The
Commissioner for the South Africa Revenue Services v Massmart
Holding
Ltd
(ITC14294[2018] ZATC 2 (11 July 2018) para 9-13.
[21]
Magnum
Simplex v The MEC Provincial Treasury
(556/17)
[2018] ZASCA 78
; (31 May 2018)
2018
JDR 0768 (SCA).
[22]
Caxton
Ltd & Others v Reeva Forman (Pty) Ltd & Another
1990 (3) SA 547 (A).
[23]
Potters
Mill Investments 14 (Pty) Ltd v Abe Swersky & Associates and
Others
[2016]
ZAWCHC 5
;
2016 (5) SA 202
(WCC) (
Potters
Mill
)
para 33.
[24]
Potters
Mill
para
11;
Trustees,
Burmilla Trust and Another v President of The Republic of South
Africa and Others
2022
(5) SA 78 (SCA).
[25]
Alexkor
Ltd and another v Richtersveld Community and others
[2003]
ZACC 18
para 43 as cited in
Mount
Edgecombe Country Club Estate Management Association II (RF) NPC v
Singh and Others
(323/2018) [2019] ZASCA 30.
[26]
Pienaar
Brothers (Pty) (Ltd)
v
The
Commissioner for the South Africa Revenue Services
[2017]
4 All SA 175
(GP) para 41.
sino noindex
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