Case Law[2023] ZASCA 125South Africa
Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service v Absa Bank Limited and Another (596/2021) [2023] ZASCA 125; 2024 (1) SA 361 (SCA); 86 SATC 195 (29 September 2023)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
29 September 2023
Headnotes
Summary: Tax law – General Anti-Avoidance Provisions – legality review of refusal to withdraw a notice issued in terms of s 80J of Income Tax Act - s 9 of Tax Administration Act –– subsequent assessments made in terms of s 80B of Income Tax Act – review of failure to withdraw s 80J notices academic – review of assessments not wholly question of law – high court lacking jurisdiction to adjudicate review.
Judgment
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## Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service v Absa Bank Limited and Another (596/2021) [2023] ZASCA 125; 2024 (1) SA 361 (SCA); 86 SATC 195 (29 September 2023)
Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service v Absa Bank Limited and Another (596/2021) [2023] ZASCA 125; 2024 (1) SA 361 (SCA); 86 SATC 195 (29 September 2023)
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sino date 29 September 2023
THE SUPREME COURT OF
APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Reportable
Case no: 596/2021
In the matter between:
THE COMMISSIONER FOR
THE SOUTH
AFRICAN REVENUE
SERVICE APPELLANT
and
ABSA BANK LIMITED
FIRST
RESPONDENT
UNITED TOWERS
PROPRIETARY
LIMITED SECOND
RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
The Commissioner for
the South African Revenue Service v Absa Bank Limited and Another
(596/2021)
[2023] ZASCA
125
(29 September 2023)
Coram:
DAMBUZA AP, SCHIPPERS, MATOJANE and GOOSEN JJA and
MALI AJA
Heard
:
8 March 2023
Delivered
:
29 September 2023
Summary:
Tax law
–
General
Anti-Avoidance Provisions – legality review of
refusal
to withdraw a notice issued in terms of s 80J of Income Tax Act - s 9
of Tax Administration Act –– subsequent
assessments
made in terms of s 80B of Income Tax Act –
review of failure to withdraw s 80J notices academic – review
of assessments
not wholly question of law – high court lacking
jurisdiction to adjudicate review.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Gauteng Division of the High Court, Pretoria
(Sutherland ADJP, sitting as court of first instance) reported
sub
nom Absa Bank Limited and Another v Commissioner for the South
African Revenue Service
[2021] ZAGPPHC 127;
2021 (3) SA 513
(GP):
1
The appeal is upheld with costs, including
the costs of two counsel.
2
The orders of the high court are set aside
and substituted with the
following order:
‘
The
application is dismissed with costs, including the costs of two
counsel.’
JUDGMENT
Goosen JA (Dambuza AP,
Schippers and Matojane JJA and Mali AJA concurring):
[1]
This appeal concerns the exercise of the
High Court's review jurisdiction in the context of a tax assessment
raised in terms of
s 80B of the Income Tax Act 58 of 1962 (the ITA).
The Gauteng Division of the High Court, Pretoria (the high court),
set aside
a decision by the Commissioner of the South African Revenue
Service (SARS), refusing to withdraw notices issued in terms of s 80J
of the ITA to the respondents, Absa Bank Limited (Absa) and its
wholly owned subsidiary, United Towers Proprietary Limited (United
Towers), respectively. It also set aside subsequent notices of
assessment, issued in terms of s 80B of the ITA. Leave to appeal
was
granted by the high court.
The facts
[2]
It is common ground that Absa and United
Towers entered into an investment arrangement which involved a series
of interlinked transactions,
the details of which are as follows.
Absa and United Towers subscribed for preference shares in PSIC
Finance 3 (Pty) Ltd (PSIC3).
Their investment was secured by other
entities in the ‘group’. PSIC3 used the proceeds of the
share issue to subscribe
for preference shares in PSIC Finance 4
(Pty) Ltd (PSIC4). In turn PSIC4 made a capital contribution to Delta
1 Finance Trust (D1 Trust).
D1 Trust applied the capital
contribution to make interest-bearing loans to Macquarie Securities
South Africa Ltd (Macquarie).
The D1 Trust invested the interest
earned on the Macquarie loans in Brazilian Government Bonds, which in
terms of the Double Taxation
Agreement between South Africa and
Brazil, provided a tax-free income stream to the D1 Trust. D1 Trust
distributed the income stream
to PSIC4. The latter paid this to PSIC3
as dividends, and PSIC3 in turn paid dividends to Absa and United
Towers.
[3]
SARS initiated an investigation of the
Macquarie Group investment scheme during 2016. Pursuant to this
investigation, it sought
and obtained information from Absa and
United Towers. In May 2018, SARS issued notices to Absa and United
Towers in terms of s
42 of the Tax Administration Act 28 of 2011 (the
TAA), signifying an audit of their tax affairs for the 2015, 2016 and
2017 years
of assessment. These notices stated that the audit would
relate to the tax treatment of the dividends received by Absa and
United
Towers from PSIC3. The audit notices included a request for
further information in terms of s 46 of the TAA. Absa and United
Towers
responded to these notices on 18 June 2018.
[4]
On
30 November 2018, SARS issued notices to Absa and United Towers in
terms of s 80J of the ITA. The notices were, essentially,
in
identical terms. They indicated that SARS had completed its
preliminary audit of the arrangement entered with entities in the
Macquarie ‘group’. The notices set out an intention to
raise assessments in terms of the General Anti-Avoidance Rule
(GAAR)
provisions
of the ITA.
[1]
Absa and United
Towers were afforded a period of 60 days to respond to the
preliminary audit findings.
[5]
The response period was extended, at the
request of Absa and United Towers, to 28 February 2019. On 15
February 2019, Absa and United
Towers submitted a request to SARS, in
terms of section 9(1) of the TAA, to withdraw the s 80J notices. Absa
and United Towers
also requested a further extension of the period
within which to respond to the notices, pending SARS's consideration
of its request
for withdrawal of those notices. SARS duly extended
the period to 31 March 2019. On 5 March 2019, SARS informed Absa and
United
Towers that it was not withdrawing the s 80J notices. It
stated that any objections they had to the notices should be raised
in
submissions made in their responses to those notices, as required
by s 80J.
Proceedings before the
high court
[6]
On 29 March 2019, Absa and United Towers
launched an application in the high court seeking an order reviewing
the decision not to
withdraw the
s 80 J notices and directing
that the decision be substituted with one withdrawing the notices,
alternatively that the request for
withdrawal be remitted to SARS
(the s 9 review). They simultaneously submitted their responses to
the s 80J notices to SARS in
terms of s 80J (2) of the ITA. The s 9
review proceedings continued while SARS was considering the responses
to the s 80J notices.
[7]
On 17 October 2019, SARS issued Letters of
Assessment and Additional Assessments to Absa and United Towers for
the 2014, 2015, 2016
and 2017 tax years. It determined that they
had participated in an avoidance arrangement and assessed their tax
liability
on the basis that their investment returns in the scheme
constituted taxable income. After these additional assessments were
raised
by SARS, Absa and United Towers applied for leave to amend the
notice of motion in the s 9 review, to extend its reach to include
the review and setting aside of the assessments (the assessment
review). The application was opposed. Leave was granted, however,
and
the application was broadened to include the assessment review.
[8]
The application was heard by the high
court, which
granted orders setting aside
the decisions not to withdraw the s 80J notices; withdrawing the
notices; and setting aside the additional
assessments. The high court
concluded that the decisions refusing to withdraw the s 80J notices
were subject to review based on
the principle of legality
notwithstanding that they were not final. It held, in relation to the
assessment review, that a taxpayer
is not obliged only to pursue the
remedies for disputing tax liability as provided by s 104 of the TAA.
The taxpayer may apply
directly to court for relief in exceptional
circumstances. Exceptional circumstances would include a dispute that
turned wholly
upon a point of law. The high court found that the s
80J notices were premised upon an acceptance that Absa and United
Towers were
ignorant of the terms of the arrangement or scheme. Upon
that premise they could not be parties to the avoidance arrangement.
It
held further, that since the notices of assessment were issued
upon the factual premise of the s 80J notices, the assessments were
tainted by an error of law. The high court concluded that the s 80J
notices and the assessments were inextricably linked and,
accordingly, set aside both sets of decisions.
The issues on appeal
[9]
The appeal concerns two distinct review
applications in a composite notice of motion. The first relates to
the refusal or failure
to withdraw the s 80J notices upon a request
made in terms of s 9 of the TAA. It was founded upon the contention
that SARS was
wrong in its view that the objections to the
s 80J
notices raised by Absa and United Towers, should be addressed in
their responses to the notices. It was also contended that
the
principle of legality was breached since the issuing of the notices
was based upon an error of law. The error was that Absa
and United
Towers were parties to an avoidance arrangement even though they had
no knowledge of the arrangement and had derived
a tax benefit from
it, to which they would otherwise not have been entitled.
[10]
The second review concerned the additional
tax assessments raised by SARS. This review engaged the exercise of
the high court’s
review jurisdiction to set aside the
assessments either under the Promotion of Administrative Justice Act,
Act 3 of 2000 (PAJA)
or the principle of legality. It was
founded upon the same grounds as the attack on the s 80J notices.
[11]
The following issues arise in relation to
these two reviews:
(a)
Is a ‘decision’ not to withdraw a s 80J notice reviewable
in terms of s 9 of the TAA, either
prior to or after the issuing of a
notice of assessment in terms of s 80B of the ITA?
(b)
Was the high court correct to characterize the challenge to
the assessments as wholly a question of law which
entitled it to exercise its jurisdiction in terms of s 105 of the
TAA?
(c)
Was the high court correct in its determination of the dispute?
The
GAAR provisions
[12]
Tax
avoidance, whether in part or in whole, is not
per
se
unlawful
or impermissible.
[2]
Sections
80A to 80L of the ITA deal with arrangements entered by a taxpayer
which have the effect of conferring a tax benefit through
the
avoidance of a tax liability that would otherwise accrue. These
anti-avoidance provisions confer upon SARS the authority to
investigate the transactions and to raise additional or compensatory
assessments to counteract the consequences of such avoidance
schemes
or arrangements. In terms of s
80A,
an ‘avoidance arrangement’ is defined as an impermissible
avoidance arrangement if its sole or main purpose was
to obtain a tax
benefit and,
‘
.
. .
(a)
in the context of business-
(i)
it was entered into or carried out by means of or
in a manner which would not normally be employed for bona fide
business purposes,
other than obtaining a tax benefit; or
(ii)
it lacks commercial substance, in whole or in part
…
(b)
…
(c)
in any context –
(i)
it has created rights or obligations that would
not normally be created between persons dealing at arm’s
length; or
(ii)
it would result directly or indirectly in the misuse or abuse of the
provisions of this Act.
’
[13]
Section 80B allows the Commissioner to
determine the tax consequences of any impermissible avoidance
arrangement. This is done by
making compensating adjustments to
assessments to ensure consistent treatment of all parties to the
arrangement. Section 80L defines
important terms. An ‘arrangement’
includes any ‘transaction, operation, scheme, agreement or
understanding, including
all steps therein or parts thereof.’
An ‘avoidance arrangement’ is one that results in a tax
benefit. A ‘party’
is any person, entity, partnership, or
joint venture who ‘participates in or takes part in an
arrangement.’
[14]
Section 80G(1) provides that an avoidance
arrangement is presumed to have been entered into or carried out for
the sole or main
purpose of obtaining a tax benefit. A party
obtaining a tax benefit is required to prove that, in the light of
the relevant facts
and circumstances, obtaining a tax benefit was not
the sole or main purpose of the avoidance arrangement. Subsection (2)
provides
that the purpose of a step in or part of an avoidance
arrangement may be different from a purpose attributable to the
arrangement
as a whole. In terms of s 80H, the Commissioner may apply
the GAAR provisions to steps in or parts of an arrangement.
[15]
Section 80J regulates the procedure to be
followed prior to the determination made in terms of section 80B. It
provides, in peremptory
terms that:
‘
(1)
The Commissioner must, prior to determining any liability of a party
for tax under section 80B, give the party notice that he
or she
believes that the provisions of this Part may apply in respect of an
arrangement and must set out in the notice his or her
reasons
therefor.
(2)
A party who receives notice in terms of
subsection (1) may, within 60 days after the date of that notice or
such longer period as
the Commissioner may allow, submit reasons to
the Commissioner why the provisions of this Part should not be
applied.
(3)
The Commissioner must within 180 days of
receipt of the reasons or the expiry of the period contemplated in
subsection (2) -
(a) request additional
information in order to determine whether or not this Part applies in
respect of an arrangement;
(b) give notice to the
party that the notice in terms of subsection (1) has been withdrawn;
or
(c) determine the
liability of that party for tax in terms of this Part.
(4)
If at any stage after giving notice to the
party in terms of subsection (1), additional information comes to the
knowledge of the
commissioner, he or she may revise or modify his or
her reasons for applying this part or, if the notice had been
withdrawn, give
notice in terms of subsection (1).
’
The
section 9 review
[16] Section 9(1)
of the TAA provides that:
‘
A
decision made by a SARS official or a notice to a specific person
issued by SARS under a tax Act, excluding a decision given effect
to
in an
assessment or a notice of assessment
that is subject to objection and appeal, may in the discretion of a
SARS official described
. . . at the request of the relevant person,
be withdrawn …’
[17] The
section appears in Part B of Chapter 2 of the TAA, under the heading
‘powers and duties of SARS and SARS
officials’. It serves
to describe discretionary powers which may be exercised by SARS
officials. It contains an internal
limiter. Decisions ‘given
effect to in an assessment’ may not be withdrawn. So too, a
notice of assessment that is
subject to objection and appeal. The
high court ventured a construction of the first category as relating
to ‘assessments
already given effect to.’ There is no
need to interpret this section. It was common cause that s 9
contemplates the withdrawal
of a notice such as one issued under s
80J. Indeed, s 80J(3) provides explicitly that such notice may be
withdrawn upon consideration
of the taxpayer's response to the s 80J
notice.
[18] The
review of the refusal to withdraw the s 80J notices was launched
simultaneously with the submission of responses
to the notices and
some months prior to the letters and notices of assessment issued in
terms of s 80B of the ITA. The application
was founded upon two
grounds. The first was that the Commissioner’s contention that
the objection to the notices ought to
be raised in the responses to
the notices was wrong in law. It was averred that this approach
impermissibly limited the ambit of
s 9 and that it denied a taxpayer
a remedy which was available to it. The second was that disagreement
about the interpretation
and application of GAAR perpetuated the
error of law in the issuing of the notices. Absa and United Towers
contended that since
the notices would have adverse effect
irrespective of the issuing of assessments, the decision not to
withdraw them was reviewable.
[19]
The high court accepted, correctly in my view, that the
decision
to
issue
a
s 80J notice was not a ‘final’ decision which placed
any adverse burden upon the recipient. It was, the high court held,
plainly not administrative action as contemplated by PAJA.
The
high court, however, found that a decision not to withdraw a notice,
even if not final, had adverse consequences. It held that
such a
decision ‘was plainly a decision by an organ of state
exercising a statutory power and its notional non-final attribute
is
not a bar [to review] precisely because it nevertheless had an
impact’. The high court relied, in support of the proposition,
upon two judgments of this Court, namely
Commissioner
for the South African Revenue Service v Langholm Farms (Pty) Ltd,
[3]
and
Commissioner
for the South African Revenue Service v United Manganese of Kalahari
(Pty) Ltd.
[4]
[20]
In those matters, however, the applicants sought declaratory relief
relating to the interpretation of statutory
provisions. The expressed
interpretation of the provisions by SARS was held to be sufficiently
definitive to warrant declaratory
relief despite the fact that no
final administrative decision had been taken. The circumstances of
this matter are wholly different.
In this case we are concerned with
a decision not to withdraw a notice. The question is what effect or
impact the decision has
upon the taxpayer concerned?
[21]
The short answer, it seems to me, is that such decision itself can
have no adverse impact or affect. Its effect
is to leave the s 80J
notice in place until the process contemplated by the section is
completed. If the issuing of a notice does
not constitute
administrative action susceptible to review then, as a matter of
logic, a decision to keep it extant cannot constitute
administrative
action.
[22]
Section 80J(3) sets out the powers and obligations of the
Commissioner in relation to the application of the GAAR
provisions.
It contemplates three possible decisions that might be taken by the
Commissioner in relation to a response submitted
in terms of s
80J(2). The Commissioner may request further information from the
taxpayer, thus deferring a final decision regarding
the application
of GAAR. In such a case, the s 80J notice necessarily remains extant
until the further information is received,
and the Commissioner takes
a final decision. There are two possible final decisions. The notice
may be withdrawn. In that event
the Commissioner must give notice to
that effect. The process of applying the GAAR provisions may be
re-commenced, but then only
upon the issue of a new s 80J notice. If,
as a matter of fact, the notice is not withdrawn, the Commissioner
must determine the
taxpayer’s liability for tax within the time
period stipulated by the section. Once the Commissioner has decided
the tax
liability under GAAR and has issued an assessment, the prior
notice issued to the taxpayer ceases to have any relevance, save to
the extent that its existence evidences the peremptory requirements
of s 80J. Its content may be relevant in proceedings consequent
upon
the issuing of the assessment. Apart from this, the s 80J notice, is
overtaken by events. At that stage the taxpayer is faced
with a final
decision to impose a tax liability by assessment. It must then be
dealt with in accordance with the prescribed dispute
resolution
procedure provided by s 104 of the TAA.
[23]
Section 80J(3) does not contemplate a separate decision not to
withdraw the notice as a precondition for the decision
to determine a
tax liability under
s 80B. The statutory power exercised by the
Commissioner is to determine a tax liability under the GAAR
provisions. Until that determination
is made the issuing of a s 80J
notice or a refusal to withdraw it, can have no adverse effect or
impact. These steps are not reviewable.
The high court, in my view,
lost sight of the provisions of s 80J(3). It ought to have found that
a decision not to withdraw the
notice is not subject to review
outside of a challenge to the decision to impose a tax liability
pursuant to s 80B of the ITA.
[24]
It is not necessary to decide the ambit of s 9 of the TAA and to
address the ‘jurisprudential bristles’
to which the high
court referred. As I have stated the s 9 review, accepting for the
sake of argument that it is competent, is,
on the facts of this case,
entirely academic. Furthermore, for reasons which I shall set out
below, the substantive basis of the
review of both the refusal to
withdraw the notices and the assessments is flawed, and the orders
made in relation to the s 9 review
cannot stand.
The
assessment review
[25]
Two questions arise: was the high court correct to characterise the
dispute as wholly a question of law, and therefore
exercise
jurisdiction in terms of s 105 of the TAA? A negative answer is
dispositive of the appeal since the high court then did
not have
jurisdiction to review the assessments. The second question, namely
whether the high court was correct in its findings
on the substantive
review, only arises if the first question is answered affirmatively.
[26] This
Court has recently stated the law in relation to the interpretation
and application of s 105 in unequivocal
terms. In
Commissioner
for the South African Revenue Service v Rappa Resources (Pty) Ltd
(Rappa Resources)
,
[5]
Ponnan JA stated that:
‘
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. In
Wingate-Pearse
it was put as follows: “Tax cases are
generally reserved for the exclusive jurisdiction of the tax court in
the first instance.
But it is settled law that a decision of the
Commissioner is subject to judicial intervention in certain
circumstances . . . In
its amended form, s 105 thus makes it plain
that “unless a High Court otherwise directs”, an
assessment may only be
disputed by means of the objection and appeal
process.”’
[27]
In this instance the high court recognised that it could only
exercise its jurisdiction in exceptional circumstances.
It considered
that a dispute concerning a question of law would constitute an
exceptional circumstance entitling it to exercise
its jurisdiction.
It held that the dispute regarding the refusal to withdraw the s 80J
notices and the legality of the assessments,
involved a question of
law. For this reason, it exercised its discretion to adjudicate the
dispute.
[28]
This Court in
Rappa
Resources
endorsed the high court’s approach to the exceptional exercise
of its jurisdiction in terms of s 105 of the TAA.
[6]
The question, however, is whether the high court was correct in its
characterisation of the nature of the dispute.
[29]
The high court took the view that the s 80J notices and the
assessments were ‘inextricably linked’.
It stated that
the factual basis upon which SARS decided to apply the GAAR
provisions was set out in the notices. It held that
SARS had accepted
the facts disclosed in the notices. On this basis, the high court
held that SARS did not dispute that Absa and
United Towers had no
knowledge of the arrangement in which they had participated. They
could therefore not have been parties to
an arrangement which,
unknown to them, had sought to avoid the payment of tax which they
would otherwise have been required to
pay. The high court therefore
found that the application of the GAAR provisions in circumstances
where they did not, as matter
of fact, apply, was irrational and
offended the principle of legality. Neither the assessments nor the s
80 J notices could stand.
[30]
The high court’s finding that SARS had accepted the facts as
stated by Absa and United Towers, and in particular,
their assertion
that they had no knowledge of the nature and ambit of the scheme or
arrangement, is incorrect. The notices
do not state that SARS
accepts the claim that Absa and United Towers had no knowledge of the
full ambit of the scheme. The notices
set out reasons for the belief
that the GAAR provisions apply, no more. They are not statements of
the accepted factual basis for
application of the GAAR provisions.
The correspondence relating to the s 80J notices pertinently states
that SARS disputes the
contentions raised by Absa and United Towers.
These statements form part of the reasons given by SARS as to why it
would not withdraw
the s 80J notices. These averments are set out in
the answering affidavits filed in opposition to the s 9 review. These
affidavits
were filed prior to the issuing of the notices of
assessment which are the subject of the assessment review.
There is accordingly
no room for the conclusion that SARS accepted
that Absa and United Towers were not parties to the avoidance
arrangement. In the
light of this the application of the GAAR
provisions was not solely a question of law.
[31]
On the common cause facts Absa and United Towers participated in
steps forming part of an ‘arrangement’,
the full ambit of
which was described in the
s 80J notices. Whether they had
knowledge of the full nature of the transactions which comprised the
arrangement, and whether their
sole or main purpose in participating
was to secure a tax benefit, are matters of disputed fact. Whether
the ‘arrangement’
constituted an ‘impermissible
avoidance arrangement’ is a factual enquiry. The same is true
in respect of the ‘tax
benefit’ requirement. Whether Absa
and United Towers obtained a tax benefit by avoiding an anticipated
tax liability that
might otherwise have accrued from the
transactions, is a question of fact. It is not a mere question of
law, determinable upon
the basis of the assessment as framed by SARS.
[32]
In
CIR v
Conhage
this Court held that the effect, purpose, and normality of a
transaction are essentially questions of fact.
[7]
What must be determined in every case is the subjective purpose of
the taxpayer.
[8]
In that matter
the court was dealing with s 103(1) of the ITA which contained an
anti-avoidance provision pre-dating the comprehensive
GAAR provisions
now set out in the ITA. Nevertheless, similar considerations relating
to the determination of the purpose and effect
of the transaction or
arrangement applied.
[33]
The high court predicated its finding that it had jurisdiction to
review the assessments on the basis that the
challenge to the
assessments involved solely a question of law. That, as I have
indicated, was incorrect. Since the dispute did
not involve solely a
question of law, no exceptional circumstances existed to justify the
high court assuming jurisdiction in the
matter. It follows that in
relation to the assessment review, it did not have the required
jurisdiction to deal with the matter.
The high court ought therefore
to have dismissed the application.
[34]
In the circumstances, the orders granted by the high court cannot
stand. The merits of any challenge to the notices
of assessment must
be adjudicated in accordance with the dispute resolution process
provided by s 104 of the TAA. The appellant
sought the costs of three
counsel. Such order will only be made in rare circumstances. This,
however, is not such a matter. The
employment of two counsel was
warranted.
[35]
I make the following order:
1
The appeal is upheld with costs, including the costs of two counsel.
2
The orders of the high court are set aside and substituted with the
following order:
‘
The
application is dismissed with costs, including the costs of two
counsel.’
____________________
G
GOOSEN
JUDGE
OF APPEAL
Appearances
For
the appellant:
A R Sholto-Douglas SC (with E W Fagan SC
and B E Mbikiwa)
Instructed
by:
State Attorney, Cape Town
State
Attorney, Bloemfontein
For
the respondents:
M Janisch SC (with S
Budlender
SC
and
L Mnqandi)
Instructed
by:
Allen & Overy, Sandton
Symington
De Kok Attorneys, Bloemfontein
[1]
These
are s 80A
to
L of the ITA aimed at preventing abuse of certain sections of the
Act through abnormal arrangements, schemes, or agreements
concluded
with the main aim of obtaining tax benefits, including the
avoidance, postponement, or reduction of liability for tax.
[2]
Commissioner
for Inland Revenue v Conhage (Pty) Ltd (formerly Tycon (Pty) Ltd)
1999 (4) SA 1149
(SCA) (
CIR
v Conhage
)
para 1, where Hefer JA said, ‘Within the bounds of any
anti-avoidance provisions in the relevant legislation, a taxpayer
may minimise his tax liability by arranging his affairs in a
suitable manner. If, for example, the same commercial result can
be
achieved in different ways, he may enter into the type of
transaction which does not attract tax or attracts less tax. But,
when it comes to considering whether by doing so, he has succeeded
in avoiding or reducing the tax, the Court will give effect
to the
true nature and substance of the transaction and will not be
deceived by its form.’
[3]
Commissioner
for the South African Revenue Service v Langholm Farms (Pty) Ltd
(1354/2018)
[2019] ZASCA 163
(29 November 2019).
[4]
Commissioner
for the South African Revenue Service v United Manganese of Kalahari
(Pty) Ltd
[2020] ZASCA 16; 2020 (4) SA 428 (SCA).
[5]
Commissioner
for the South African Revenue Service v Rappa Resources (Pty) Ltd
(Rappa Resources)
[2023] ZASCA 28
;
2023 (4) SA 488
(SCA) para 20. See also
United
Manganese of Kalahari (Pty) Ltd v Commissioner for the South African
Revenue Service
(1231/2021)
[2023] ZASCA 29
(24 March 2023).
[6]
Rappa
Resources
fn 5 above para 22.
[7]
CIR v
Conhage
fn 1 above para 12.
[8]
Ibid.
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