Case Law[2022] ZASCA 84South Africa
The Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service and Others v Dragon Freight (Pty) Ltd and Others (751/21) [2022] ZASCA 84; [2022] 3 All SA 311 (SCA); 85 SATC 289 (7 June 2022)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
7 June 2022
Headnotes
Summary: Administrative Law – review of decision to seize goods under s 88(1)(c) of the Customs and Excise Act 91 of 1964 (the Act) – transaction value of goods under-declared – decision lawful, reasonable and procedurally fair –interpretation of s 96(1)(a) of the Act – notice of legal proceedings – requirements peremptory – cause of action must be set out – notice in anticipation of decision not yet taken invalid.
Judgment
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## The Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service and Others v Dragon Freight (Pty) Ltd and Others (751/21) [2022] ZASCA 84; [2022] 3 All SA 311 (SCA); 85 SATC 289 (7 June 2022)
The Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service and Others v Dragon Freight (Pty) Ltd and Others (751/21) [2022] ZASCA 84; [2022] 3 All SA 311 (SCA); 85 SATC 289 (7 June 2022)
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sino date 7 June 2022
THE SUPREME COURT OF
APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Reportable
Case
No: 751/21
In
the matter between:
COMMISSIONER
FOR THE SOUTH
AFRICAN
REVENUE SERVICE
FIRST
APPELLANT
MINISTER
FOR TRADE, INDUSTRY
AND
COMPETITION
SECOND APPELLANT
SOUTH
AFRICAN APPAREL
ASSOCIATION
THIRD APPELLANT
APPAREL
AND TEXTILE ASSOCIATION
OF
SOUTH
AFRICA
FOURTH APPELLANT
SOUTHERN
AFRICAN CLOTHING AND
TEXTILE
WORKERS UNION
FIFTH APPELLANT
and
DRAGON
FREIGHT (PTY) LTD
FIRST
RESPONDENT
TIAN
LE TRADING ENTERPRISE CC
SECOND RESPONDENT
NEW
FEELING FASHION DESIGN (PTY) LTD
THIRD RESPONDENT
TINGTING
SECRET BEAUTY (PTY) LTD
FOURTH RESPONDENT
HIQ
PACIFIC TRADING CC
FIFTH RESPONDENT
FFB
IMPORT-EXPORT CC
SIXTH RESPONDENT
CALLA
TRADING (PTY) LTD
SEVENTH RESPONDENT
Neutral citation:
The Commissioner for the South African
Revenue Service and Others v Dragon Freight (Pty) Ltd and Others
(case no 751/21)
[2022] ZASCA
84
(7 June
2022)
Coram:
SCHIPPERS, PLASKET and HUGHES JJA and TSOKA and SALIE-HLOPHE AJJA
Heard:
24 May 2022
Delivered:
7 June 2022
Summary:
Administrative Law – review of
decision to seize goods under s 88(1)
(c)
of the Customs and Excise Act 91 of 1964 (the Act) –
transaction value of goods under-declared – decision lawful,
reasonable and procedurally fair –interpretation of s 96(1)
(a)
of the Act – notice of legal proceedings – requirements
peremptory – cause of action must be set out –
notice in
anticipation of decision not yet taken invalid.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Gauteng Division of the
High Court, Pretoria (Baqwa J sitting as court of first instance):
1
The application for intervention by the Southern African Textile and
Clothing
Workers’ Union is struck from the roll with costs.
Such costs shall include the costs of only one junior counsel.
2
The appeal is upheld with costs, including the costs of two counsel
where
so employed. Such costs shall be paid by the respondents
jointly and severally, the one paying the others to be absolved.
3
The order of the high court is set aside and replaced by the
following:
‘
The
application is dismissed. The applicants are directed to pay the
costs of the application, including the costs of two counsel
where so
employed, jointly and severally, the one paying the others to be
absolved.’
JUDGMENT
Schippers
JA (Plasket and Hughes JJA and Tsoka and Salie-Hlophe AJJA
concurring)
[1]
The
main issue in this appeal concerns the lawfulness of a decision taken
by the first appellant, the Commissioner for the South
African
Revenue Service (the Commissioner, or SARS), to seize 19 containers
of clothing (the goods), in terms of section 88(1)
(c)
of the Customs and Excise Act 91 of 1964 (the Act).
[1]
The goods were seized on the basis that the respondents had
under-declared their transaction value – the price actually
paid for the goods when sold for export to this country – which
enabled the respondents to pay less customs duty than they
were
lawfully required to pay. A related issue is whether the respondents
complied with s 96(1) of the Act which proscribes the
institution of
legal proceedings against the Commissioner, unless the litigant
delivers a written notice setting out its cause
of action at least
one month before instituting those proceedings. The appeal is before
us with the leave of this Court.
[2]
The second appellant, the Minister of
Trade, Industry and Competition (the Minister), intervened in an
application by the respondents
to review and set aside the
decision
by SARS on 13 August 2020, to seize the goods in terms of s 88(1)
(c)
of the Act (the impugned decision). The basic ground for the
Minister’s intervention is that
customs
fraud, particularly in relation to clothing imported from China, is a
systemic problem in South Africa. This problem is
illustrated in the
Minister’s affidavit: in 2018 the value of the exports of
textiles and clothing goods from China to South
Africa, as reported
by the General Administration of Customs of the People’s
Republic of China (GACC) to the United Nations,
was US$ 2.4 billion,
whereas the value of the imports of textiles and clothing goods into
South Africa from China, as reported
by SARS to the United Nations,
was US$1.5 billion – a difference of US$900 million, even
though the two values should be
substantially the same. Customs fraud
has significantly contributed to the displacement of locally
manufactured goods which has
resulted in the loss of domestic
production, market share, sales, profits and jobs.
[3]
The third appellant, the South African
Apparel Association (SAAA), and the fourth appellant, the Apparel and
Textile Association
of South Africa (ATASA), are employers’
organisations registered under the
Labour Relations Act 66 of 1995
.
They represent the labour interests of a large number of employers in
South Africa in the clothing and textiles industry. They
opposed the
review application on the ground that the values or prices of the
goods declared by the respondents on importation
– some 1000%
less than the prices of similar clothing declared to the GACC in a
previous consignment imported by the respondents
from the same
suppliers – are unrealistic and unattainable.
[4]
The first respondent, Dragon Freight (Pty)
Ltd (Dragon Freight), is a clearing agent. The second to seventh
respondents imported
the goods from China. Where appropriate, they
are collectively referred to as ‘the respondents’.
[5]
The impugned decision was reviewed and set
aside by Baqwa J in the Gauteng Division of the High Court, Pretoria
(the high court).
The court directed SARS
to immediately release the goods upon payment of the applicable
customs duties and fees, calculated in accordance
with the
respondents’ declared transaction values to SARS. The
appellants were ordered to pay the costs of the application,
jointly
and severally.
The
factual background
[6]
This litigation has its origin in an
earlier application which the respondents launched in the high court
in November 2019, in which
they successfully reviewed and set aside
SARS’ decision to seize 11 containers of clothing (the first
application). In that
application, which was decided by Tuchten J,
the respondents pre-emptively sought an order to review and set aside
a decision by
SARS to seize the goods, in the event of that decision
being taken. However, they did not persist in seeking that order
because
it concerned, as they put it, ‘future importations and
the containers were still on the water’.
[7]
It is not in dispute that the contents of
the containers in the first application were the same as the contents
of the 19 containers
in the present case, namely clothing and textile
goods imported from China, and that both consignments involved the
same exporters
and importers. The answering papers in the first
application stated that SARS had approached the Chinese customs
authorities for
assistance concerning the clothing exported in that
application. Tuchten J recorded in his judgment that when the first
application
was decided, the Chinese export authorities had not
responded to the request for information, and that SARS might still
be able
to produce evidence to contradict the respondents’
version.
[8]
In order to counter customs fraud and other
illegal activities, SARS uses a customs electronic system with
built-in risk and identification
analysis capabilities. This system
utilises information furnished in, amongst others, customs
declarations to identify potential
risks. For example, the system
compares the declared value of a product with the international price
of the yarn used to produce
the constituent materials of that
product. A declared customs value lower than the risk price will
automatically flag the consignment
on the SARS system for further
investigation. The 19 containers were so flagged and consequently
detained under s 88(1)
(a)
of the Act, between 4 November and 20 December 2019.
[9]
The goods were detained by SARS because it
suspected that the respondents had under-declared their value. SARS
proceeded to investigate
and engage with the respondents in order to
determine whether the goods were liable to seizure. They were
requested to complete
SARS’ standard Trader Questionnaire –
a request for information in terms of s 4 of the Act. The respondents
were asked
to furnish the following information:
‘
8.
How did the importer source this foreign supplier and establish a
trading relationship?
9.
Trips abroad to negotiate trade must be substantiated with a copy of
the importers/buyers
passport showing all his trips overseas to meet
with the suppliers.
Copies
of all correspondence with the foreign supplier in terms of
negotiating the price, quality and terms and conditions of sale
must
be presented.’
[10]
The respondents did not answer questions 8
and 9. They simply replied that the importer acquired suppliers
during his trips abroad
and that they were unable to obtain a copy of
passport evidence at the time. This failure to respond must be seen
in the light
of further allegations in the founding papers that
employees of the importers obtained clothing at reduced prices from
factories
in China which were closing down and trying to get rid of
stock; that they bought ‘old’ stock (clothing out of
season);
and that they also bought clothing, at substantially reduced
prices, from manufacturers and sellers whose orders had been
cancelled
at the last minute.
[11]
The respondents never provided any passport
evidence of the trips to China to purchase the goods. When questioned
on this issue,
they conceded that the goods were sourced from only
three suppliers that were named in the sale agreements. This
concession contradicted
the respondents’ initial explanation
that their employees had bought the goods at various markets in China
at very low prices.
[12]
On 21 January 2020 and in terms of a
customs mutual assistance agreement, the GACC, provided SARS with the
Chinese export declarations
submitted to the GACC in relation to
eight of the 11 containers in the first application (the export
declarations). These declarations
showed that the invoice prices
furnished by the respondents to SARS were impossibly low – the
prices stated in the export
declarations were 1000% more than the
prices declared to SARS. It was not disputed that the export
declarations relate to eight
containers that formed the subject
matter of the first application.
[13]
On 24 February 2020 the respondents
launched an application in the high court to review and set aside
SARS’ decision to detain
the 19 containers, and that it be
ordered to release the goods. They also sought an order that the
one-month period specified in
s 96(1)
(a)
(i)
of the Act be reduced so as to render the application compliant with
that provision, alternatively that non-compliance with
the time
period be condoned.
[14]
On
6 March 2020 the export declarations were furnished to the
respondents as attachments to notices of intent in relation to the
containers in the first application. The respondents were informed
that SARS intended to hold them liable for underpaid customs
duty and
VAT, to declare the goods liable to forfeiture under s 87 of the Act,
and to impose an amount in lieu of forfeiture in
terms of s 88(2) of
the Act. They were given an opportunity to submit evidence and make
submissions concerning the intended action.
Their attention was drawn
to the reverse onus provisions in s 102(4) of the Act, namely that in
any dispute as to whether the proper
duty has been paid, it shall be
presumed that such duty has not been paid, unless the contrary is
proved.
[2]
[15]
On 13 March 2020 SARS received a report by
Dr Jaywant Irkhede, an expert in textile technology. He was
instructed to examine and
compare samples of clothing taken from each
of the 19 containers with samples previously taken from eight
containers in the first
application, to determine whether they were
similar, and to assess their value. Dr Irkhede concluded that the
samples of the two
consignments were similar, and that the values
which he had determined were similar to or in the same range as the
prices or values
declared in the Chinese export declarations. Dr
Irkhede’s valuation was prepared independently of the export
declarations.
[16]
On 16 March 2020 the respondents were
issued with a second notice of intent concerning the 19 containers.
They were informed of
SARS intention to seize the goods in terms of s
88(1)
(c)
of the Act. As with the first notice of intent, the respondents were
given an opportunity to present evidence, make written submissions,
and referred to s 102(4) of the Act.
[17]
On 30 March 2020 the respondents’
attorney made written representations in respect of both notices of
intent. Statements and
affidavits by the Chinese suppliers were
attached to the representations. It was clear from these affidavits
that the Chinese suppliers
were willing to assist the respondents,
and the agreements allegedly concluded between the suppliers and the
importers were furnished
to SARS. The suppliers alleged that the
importers did not pay the higher values in the export declarations.
In their representations
the respondents contended that the export
declarations were ‘demonstrably false’ and ‘inadmissible
and irrelevant’
for various reasons.
[18]
The reason given by the respondents for the
vast difference between the Chinese export values and the values
declared to SARS, was
this:
‘
SARS
knows, or should know, for it is a notorious fact, that many Chinese
export agents inflate the pricing of exported goods when
declaring to
the General Administration of Customs of the People’s Republic
of China. The purpose of inflating the price
on the export
declarations is for applying for loans from the banks as well as
receiving national export tax rebates from the Chinese
government,
calculated at 16% of the declared export price on the export
declarations. In consequence, SARS should have been alerted
to the
prospect of this kind of fraud before jumping to the conclusions it
did before issuing its letters of intent.’
The
respondents went on to say:
‘
The
Importers are aware of the 16% export tax rebate and they are aware
that export agents sometimes inflate the value on the export
documents in order to obtain larger rebates. We enclose hereto an
affidavit of a Chinese/South African importer and exporter –
Mr
Li Xinzhu and wherein he describes in detail the inflation of the
value on exports from China in order for export agents to
obtain
export tax rebates from the Chinese government.’
[19]
In support of these assertions all three
Chinese exporters involved made affidavits in which they said:
‘
The
Chinese export agent industry
often “inflate[s]” the actual price of the commercial
invoices for the purposes of applying for loans from banks as
well as
receiving export tax rebates from our Chinese government.’
(Emphasis in the original.)
The
exporters gave general and similar explanations for the low selling
prices. These were that at the end of a season, unsold clothing
stock
is sold at reduced prices; overruns and order cancellations are also
sold cheaply; and ‘dead stock’ is often
sold at prices
well below the cost of production.
[20]
The difficulty with the respondents’
new explanation for the low prices of the goods – fraud by
Chinese export agents
– was immediately apparent. Any export
tax rebate would accrue to Chinese exporters, not their agents. That
much is clear
from Mr Xinzhu’s affidavit. He said that in
China, exported goods are subject to a zero tax rate and that VAT
paid to the
State by upstream enterprises during the domestic
circulation of export goods must be refunded to the export enterprise
at the
export stage. Further, it is unlikely that by committing
fraud, export agents would be able to obtain loans from banks.
[21]
SARS therefore, on 29 May 2020, requested
further particulars and documents from the respondents, which
included the following:
an explanation for the identical format, font
and terms of the written agreements in respect of both consignments
(the eight containers
relating to the export declarations and the 19
containers) concluded between three different suppliers and the
importers; the originals
or copies of each of the three agreements;
the particulars of the individuals who signed each agreement on
behalf of the Chinese
supplier and the importer, and their identity
and passport numbers; and details of the invoices issued by the
suppliers in respect
of each of the consignments and how they were
rendered to the importers.
[22]
In their reply dated 12 June 2020, the
respondents contended that the request for further particulars was
‘unlawful’.
They refused to provide an explanation for
the identical format, font and terms of the written agreements, the
particulars of the
sellers and buyers who signed them, and any
details regarding the invoices issued by the suppliers.
[23]
Upon receipt of the three agreements
furnished by the respondents, SARS engaged the services of Mr Jannie
Bester, a forensic document
examiner, to ascertain whether the
signatures on the agreements had been appended individually. Mr
Bester identified identical
handwriting similarities in the
signatures of the buyer and seller, and concluded that the agreements
originated from the same
source document, because they contain the
same spelling and spacing errors. Mr Bester’s reports were
given to the respondents
on 19 June 2020.
[24]
On 10 July 2020 the respondents provided
SARS with an affidavit by their own document examiner, Mr Ludwig Du
Toit. He considered
Mr Bester’s reports and concluded that the
identical signature of the buyer and seller, which appeared on each
of the agreements
of the different importers, was an electronic
signature. Mr Du Toit however did not challenge Mr Bester’s
conclusion that
all three agreements originated from the same source
document.
[25]
On 13 August 2020 SARS informed Dragon
Freight of the impugned decision. The reason given was that SARS had
considered the evidence
and submissions by the respondents and was
satisfied that the goods had not been entered as required by ss
38(1), 39(1), 40(1)
and (2) read with ss 65(1) and 66 of the Act.
Consequently, the goods and the containers in which they were
imported were liable
to forfeiture as contemplated in s 87(1) and (2)
of the Act. Dragon Freight was also informed that it was entitled to
written reasons
for the impugned decision. The respondents however
did not request written reasons for the decision.
[26]
On 10 September 2020 the respondents
delivered a supplementary affidavit in support of the relief
foreshadowed in paragraph 4 of
the notice of motion, namely that the
decision to seize any of the containers referred to in the founding
papers, where applicable,
be reviewed and set aside, and that SARS be
ordered to immediately release the 19 containers and the goods
contained therein. As
stated earlier, the high court granted these
orders, together with costs. The appellants contend that the orders
are incompetent
because the respondents failed to comply with the
peremptory provisions of s 96(1) of the Act.
Section
96(1) of the Act
[27]
Section 96(1) of the Act, so far as is
relevant, provides:
‘
(1)
(a)
(i)
No process by which any legal proceedings are instituted against the
State, the Minister, the Commissioner or an officer for
anything done
in pursuance of this Act may be served before the expiry of the
period of one month after delivery of a notice in
writing setting
forth clearly and explicitly the cause of action, the name and place
of abode of the person who is to institute
such proceedings (in this
section referred to as the “litigant”) and the name and
address of his or her attorney or
agent if any.
.
. .
(iii)
No such notice shall be valid unless it complies with the
requirements prescribed in the
section . . .’.
.
. .
(c)
(i)
The State, the Minister, the Commissioner an officer may on good
cause shown reduce the period specified in
paragraph
(a)
. . .
(ii)
If the State, the Minister, the Commissioner or an officer refuses to
reduce any
period as contemplated in subparagraph (i), a High Court
having jurisdiction may upon application of the litigant, reduce or
extend
any such period where the interests of justice so requires.’
[28]
The respondents did not deliver a s 96(1)
notice of their intention to review the impugned decision. Instead,
they relied on a notice
by Dragon Freight to SARS dated 17 February
2020, of its intention to bring legal proceedings against SARS (the
February notice).
It read:
‘
In
the event of the detained containers having been seized by SARS or at
any stage hereafter, the Applicants claim that such seizure(s)
be
reviewed and set aside and that it be ordered that the goods overseas
be released immediately by the Respondent.’
[29]
In the notice of motion, the respondents
asked for an order that the one-month period in s 96(1)
(a)
(i)
be reduced; alternatively, that their failure to comply with the
requirements of the section be condoned. The high court granted
this
relief. It made an order that the one-month notice period,
‘
be
reduced to such an extent that this application is then construed as
being compliant with section 96 of the Act; alternatively,
that
non-compliance with the time period specified in section 96(1)
(a)
(i)
be condoned’.
[30]
The
starting point for an understanding of the meaning and effect of
s 96(1) is the language of the provision, in the light
of its
context and purpose.
[3]
In this
regard the dictum of Unterhalter AJA in
Capitec
Bank Holdings Limited
,
[4]
bears repetition:
‘
The
much-cited passages from
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
(“
Endumeni
”)
offer guidance as to how to approach the interpretation of the words
used in a document. It is the language used, understood
in the
context in which it is used, and having regard to the purpose of the
provision that constitutes the unitary exercise of
interpretation. I
would only add that the triad of text, context and purpose should not
be used in a mechanical fashion. It is
the relationship between the
words used, the concepts expressed by those words and the place of
the contested provision within
the scheme of the agreement (or
instrument) as a whole that constitutes the enterprise by recourse to
which a coherent and salient
interpretation is determined.
As
Endumeni
emphasised,
citing well-known cases, “[t]he inevitable point of departure
is the language of the provision itself”.’
[31]
Section 96(1)
(a)
(i),
on its plain language, proscribes the institution of any proceedings
unless one-month’s written notice, ‘setting
forth clearly
and explicitly the cause of action’, is given to the
Commissioner. That is made clear by the introductory words
that no
process by which legal proceedings are instituted, may be served
before the expiry of the one-month notice period. It is
reinforced by
s 96(1)
(a)
(iii),
which states that a notice that does not comply with the requirements
of the section, is invalid.
[32]
In
Evins
v Shield Insurance
,
[5]
Corbett JA defined a cause of action as the ‘material facts
which must be proved in order to enable the plaintiff to sue’.
Applied to the present case, it means that when a notice under s
96(1) is delivered to SARS, the litigant must be able to make
out a
cause of action: it must assert facts which it would be necessary to
prove, if traversed, to support its right to the judgment
of the
court. The respondents however had no cause of action when they
delivered the February notice. That this is a prerequisite
is
underscored by the phrase ‘anything done in pursuance of this
Act’ in s 96(1)
(a)
(i)
– it clearly envisages action already taken.
[33]
The
purpose of s 96(1) is self-evident: to allow SARS, the organ of state
charged with the administration of the Act, to investigate
or review
the merits of the intended legal proceedings and decide what position
to adopt in relation thereto. It may, for example,
in an appropriate
case decide to resolve the dispute before the institution of legal
proceedings, so as to avoid unnecessary and
costly litigation at
public expense.
[6]
[34]
SARS
is a large and complex institution with extensive administrative
responsibilities and high workloads. Its functions are not
confined
to the levying of customs and excise duties under the Act, but
include the recovery of taxes under the Income Tax Act
58 of 1962 and
the administration of the Value-Added Tax Act 89 of 1991. The s 96(1)
notice enables SARS to ensure that a matter
is brought timeously to
the attention of the appropriate official for investigation or
review. In my opinion, s 96(1)
(a)
of the Act promotes the efficient and economic use of resources, in
accordance with the basic values and principles governing public
administration set out in s 195 of the Constitution.
[7]
[35]
The impugned decision had not been taken
when the February notice was delivered to SARS. It was thus
impossible for the respondents
to set out any cause of action in that
notice: there was none. Section 96(1)
(a)
(i)
of the Act does not permit a notice in anticipation of a decision not
yet taken, by the functionaries referred to in that provision.
Such a
construction would nullify its purpose and render the sanction of
invalidity in s 96(1)
(a)
(iii),
nugatory.
[36]
What is more, when the February notice was
delivered, no ‘administrative action’ as defined in the
Promotion of Administrative
Justice Act 3 of 2000 (PAJA), had been
taken. That definition includes a decision taken by an organ of state
when exercising a
public power or performing a public function in
terms of any legislation ‘which adversely affects the rights of
any person
and which has a direct, external legal effect’. This
merely reinforces the absence of any cause of action when the
February
notice was delivered.
[37]
In
SARS
v Prudence Forwarding
,
[8]
the facts were essentially the same as those in the present case. The
Commissioner detained a container of blankets imported from
China on
the basis that the transaction value of the goods had been
under-declared. The importers delivered a written notice in
terms of
s 96(1) of the Act, of their intention to apply to the high
court for an interim order directing SARS to release
the goods
against payment of a provisional amount of customs duty. The
importers launched that application in November 2013. Subsequently,
the Commissioner made a decision to seize the goods. The importers
then amended their notice of motion and sought an order reviewing
and
setting aside the seizure decision, without delivering a s 96(1)
notice in relation to that decision. The high court reviewed
and set
aside the seizure decision and ordered the release of the goods
against payment of a provisional amount of customs duty.
The
Commissioner appealed this order.
[38]
A full bench of the high court upheld the
appeal. The full court, correctly in my view, held as follows:
‘
It
was therefore incumbent upon [the respondents] to serve the relevant
notice and to obtain the agreement of the Commissioner or
the
sanction of the court to reduce the one-month period in respect of
the new cause of action involving a review of the seizure
decision.
This was not done. The respondents could not rely on the notice they
served to obtain the release of the goods from detention.
Section
96(1)
(a)
(i)
of the Act makes it plain that the notice must relate to a specific
cause of action, which is required to be set forth “clearly
and
explicitly” in the written notice. And section 96(1)
(a)
(iii)
provides that no notice shall be valid unless it complies with the
requirements prescribed in the section. Thus, since no
notice was
delivered in respect of the review, and neither the Commissioner or
the court agreed to a reduced period, the jurisdictional
conditions
precedent were not fulfilled, and the court accordingly lacked
jurisdiction to grant the final relief it granted, in
the form of an
order setting aside the seizure of the goods. For that reason alone,
the appeal must succeed.’
[9]
[39]
The high court however distinguished
Prudence Forwarding
on the basis that the February notice and the notice of motion
provided for the review of both the decisions to detain and seize
the
containers. However, the February notice did not comply with s
96(1)
(a)
(i)
of the Act, in that it did not, and could not, explicitly set out a
cause of action because the impugned decision had not been
taken. For
the same reason, the relief sought in the notice of motion that the
court reduce the one-month period specified in s 96(1)
(a)
(i)
in relation to the impugned decision, was incompetent. And there is
no power in the Act to condone non-compliance with this
provision.
[40]
In the notice advising the respondents of
the impugned decision, they were specifically informed of the
peremptory notice to SARS
in s 96(1) of the Act. They chose to ignore
it. The high court erred in its interpretation and application of s
96(1) of the Act
and on this basis alone, the appeal must be upheld.
The
decision to detain the goods
[41]
The high court reviewed and set aside SARS’
decision not to release the 19 containers and ordered SARS to
immediately release
those containers and the goods held in them. This
order should not have been granted because the decision to detain the
goods had
been overtaken by the impugned decision.
[42]
SARS’ powers of detention and
its powers of seizure are set out under different provisions of the
Act. Section 88(1)
(a)
provides:
‘
An
officer, magistrate or member of the police force
may
detain
any ship, vehicle, plant,
material or goods at any place for the purpose of establishing
whether that ship, vehicle, plant, material
or goods are liable to
forfeiture under this Act.’ (Emphasis added.)
[43]
By contrast, s 88(1)
(c)
reads:
‘
If
such ship, vehicle, plant, material or goods are liable to forfeiture
under this Act the Commissioner
may
seize
that ship, vehicle, plant,
material or goods.’ (Emphasis added.)
[44]
The power to detain and the power to seize
are discrete administrative acts, which require two separate
decisions. Detention is
a temporary assertion of control over the
goods, which does not necessarily result in any seizure with a view
to ultimate forfeiture.
The stated purpose of the power to detain in
s 88(1)
(a)
of the Act, is to establish whether the goods are liable to
forfeiture. The provision thus enables SARS to examine or secure the
goods, pending an investigation to establish whether they are liable
to forfeiture, as happened in this case. It is only once it
has
subsequently been established that the goods in question are liable
to forfeiture, that SARS may then seize the goods. Put
differently,
seizure flows from detention if liability for forfeiture is
established. The decision to detain the goods is then
overtaken by a
new decision to seize.
[45]
In
prayer 3 of the notice of motion the respondents sought an order that
the decision not to release the 19 containers (the detention
of the
goods under s 88(1)
(a)
),
be reviewed and set aside. In prayer 4 they sought an order reviewing
and setting aside the decision to seize any of the containers,
‘where
applicable’. Until there was a decision to seize the goods,
prayer 3 remained operative, as long as the goods
were detained for a
reasonable period of time in order to establish whether they were
liable to forfeiture.
[10]
[46]
The
high court conflated the decision to detain the goods with the
subsequent impugned decision. In so doing the court failed to
appreciate that once the impugned decision had been taken, the
separate issue of detention was rendered moot.
[11]
The fate of the goods then had to be decided with reference to
s 88(1)
(c)
of the Act and not s 88(1)
(a)
.
[47]
The only relevance of the detention relief
concerns the question of costs, but in the present case there is no
basis for a separate
costs award in relation to that relief. The
costs pertaining thereto should follow the result of the appeal.
The
review
[48]
In the founding papers the respondents
alleged that the decision to detain the goods was reviewable on ‘any
and all the grounds’
in s 6(2) of the PAJA, which tend to
overlap. These grounds include bias, ulterior purpose, procedural
unfairness, arbitrariness,
unreasonableness, and that the impugned
decision was otherwise unconstitutional and unlawful. However, the
challenge to the impugned
decision on the grounds that the
Commissioner was biased or that the decision was taken for an
ulterior purpose, has no basis in
the evidence.
[49]
The respondents’ case in the
supplementary founding affidavit was essentially that the impugned
decision fell to be set aside
on the ground of procedural unfairness,
irrationality and unreasonableness. It should be noted that when
these grounds were formulated,
the respondents did not have the
reasons for the decision. They chose not to ask for the reasons,
despite being informed of their
right to do so.
[50]
The attack on the ground of procedural
unfairness can be dealt with briefly. It has no merit. Throughout the
course of the complex
administrative process that led to the seizure,
the respondents were given adequate notice of the administrative
action that SARS
was considering taking and a reasonable opportunity
to make representations before any decision was taken.
[51]
The supplementary founding affidavit states
that the respondents were ‘left totally uninformed as to why
SARS made the decision
to seize the containers’, and that there
‘has been no fairness, accountability and transparency’.
In the supplementary
replying affidavit, the following allegation is
made:
‘
SARS
admits that it has taken an administrative decision and has failed to
provide the Applicants with any reasons therefor. The
decision to
seize the 19 containers is therefore unlawful and ought to be set
aside on review.’
[52]
These allegations are false. Detailed
reasons for the impugned decision are recorded in SARS’
supplementary answering affidavit.
The reasons, in sum, are these.
The Commissioner considered all the evidence and the respondents’
failure to respond to requests
for information, and concluded that
the written agreements submitted by the respondents could not be
relied upon as proof of the
prices actually paid for the goods. The
evidence demonstrated that the agreements were false and that the
values of the goods had
been under-declared. The evidence supporting
these reasons is dealt with below.
[53]
The
respondents, in their supplementary replying affidavit and heads of
argument, submitted that it was insufficient that the seizure
notice
informed them of their right to request written reasons, ‘as
both PAJA as well as the Constitution require SARS to
give reasons
when taking an administrative decision’, and that if there were
no reasons when the decision was taken, then
the decision is unlawful
since ‘[i]t is not permissible to retrofit reasons after the
event’. It was further submitted,
in reliance on s 5(3) of the
PAJA, that ‘on account of SARS’ admitted failure to
provide reasons and in the absence
of proof to the contrary’,
it should be presumed that the impugned decision was taken without
reason.
[12]
[54]
These
submissions are baseless. Section 5(1) and (2) of the PAJA make it
clear that the reasons for an administrative decision need
not be
given simultaneously with the notice of that decision to the affected
party.
[13]
And there is not a
shred of evidence to show that when the impugned decision was taken,
there were no reasons for it. In these
circumstances, the
respondents’ so-called retrofit argument is startling.
[55]
The
respondents’ challenge of irrationality is based on
s 6(2)
(f)
(ii)
of the PAJA, namely that the impugned decision is not rationally
connected to the purpose for which it was taken; the purpose
of
empowering provision; the information before the decision-maker; and
the reasons given for it.
[14]
The supplementary founding affidavit states that in the notices of
intent, the request for further particulars and the expert reports,
SARS relied on two new issues, namely the export declarations and an
expert’s opinion that the signatures on the agreements
were
forgeries.
[56]
The basic grounds for the irrationality
challenge may be summarised as follows. The export declarations are
‘inadmissible
and irrelevant’, illegible and
‘demonstrably false’. SARS’ request for further
particulars is not authorised
by the Act and unlawful. Had SARS in
fact considered all the evidence presented by the respondents, it
would have concluded that
the respondents’ evidence was a
rebuttal of SARS’ prima facie findings in the notice of intent
(that the respondents
dealt with the goods irregularly, thereby
rendering them liable to forfeiture).
[57]
The
notice of seizure states that the impugned decision was taken in
terms of s 88(1)
(c)
of the Act. In
Saleem
[15]
this Court held that an officer seizing goods in terms of s 88(1)
(c)
is required to hold a suspicion on reasonable grounds that such goods
are imported goods; that they have been imported without
compliance
with the provisions of the Act; and that they are liable to
forfeiture. The notice further states that the goods are
liable to
forfeiture as envisaged in s 87(1) and (2) of the Act, since
respondents failed to establish that the goods were imported
in
accordance with the provisions of the Act. Section 87(1) of the
Act provides that any goods imported or otherwise dealt
with contrary
to the provisions of the Act, are liable to forfeiture. In short,
goods brought into the country without declaring
them or paying the
necessary customs duty are liable to forfeiture.
[16]
Section 87(2) renders any ship, vehicle, container or other transport
equipment used in the carriage of goods, liable to forfeiture.
[17]
[58]
The
Constitutional Court has held that where a decision is challenged on
the grounds of rationality, ‘the decision must be
rationally
related to the purpose for which power was conferred’,
otherwise the exercise of the power would be arbitrary.
[18]
The question then, simply put, is whether the impugned decision is
justified, having regard to the purpose of s 88(1)
(c)
of the Act, the information before the Commissioner and the reasons
given for it.
[19]
[59]
The
impugned decision was taken because the agreements submitted by the
respondents and consequently, the transaction values of
the goods
declared, are false. In the result, the respondents failed to comply
with ss 38(1), 39(1), 40(1) and (2) read with ss
65(1) and 66 of the
Act. This conduct also constitutes an offence in terms of s 84 of the
Act. It provides that any person who
makes a false statement in
connection with any matter dealt with in the Act, or makes use of a
declaration or document containing
any such statement for the
purposes of the Act, shall be guilty of an offence.
[20]
[60]
As to the purpose of the empowering
provision, s 65(1) of the Act states that ‘the value for
customs duty purposes of any
imported goods shall, at the time of
entry for home consumption, be the transaction value thereof, within
the meaning of section
66’. Section 66(1) provides that ‘the
transaction value of any imported goods shall be the price actually
paid or payable
for the goods when sold for export to the Republic’.
[61]
Section 74A(1) of the Act provides that the
interpretation of ss 65, 66 and 67 of the Act shall be subject to the
Agreement on Implementation
of Article VII of the General Agreement
on Tariffs and Trade (the Customs Valuation Agreement), the
interpretive notes thereto,
the advisory opinions, commentaries and
explanatory notes, case studies and studies issued under the Customs
Valuation Agreement.
[62]
Generally,
the actual price paid or payable for imported goods should be
reflected on the invoices issued, which are held by the
importers.
Thus, the transaction value method is largely dependent on the
information that importers provide. However, importers
have an
obvious commercial incentive to manipulate the transaction value. The
possibility of customs fraud is therefore an inherent
risk in a
system of self-accounting and self-assessment upon which the Act is
based.
[21]
[63]
Article 17 of the Customs Valuation
Agreement is designed to address this risk. It provides that
‘[n]othing in this Agreement
shall be construed as restricting
or calling into question the right of customs administrations to
satisfy themselves as to the
truth or accuracy of any statement,
document or declaration presented for customs valuation purposes’.
It is precisely this
right that SARS has exercised in this case.
There is nothing in the Act or the Customs Valuation Agreement that
precludes SARS
from taking robust enforcement measures against
customs fraud.
[64]
That brings me to the reasons for the
impugned decision. In summary, they are the following. There was no
credible explanation for
the unbelievably low prices charged by the
suppliers of the goods. The initial explanation that an employee of
the importers bought
the goods at very low prices at various markets
in China is false. So too, the importers’ assertions that the
low prices
were obtained because they were able to exploit the ‘trade
war’ between the United States and China; that the goods
comprised old or ‘dead’ stock, or clothing not in demand
in China; and that the goods could be purchased at ridiculously
low
prices on the Alibaba website. The evidence of the expert,
Dr Irkhede, and that of SAAA and ATASA, makes it clear that
the
prices declared by the importers were unrealistic and unattainable.
[65]
The goods were allegedly bought from only
three separate Chinese suppliers, which contradicted the importers’
initial explanation.
No explanation was furnished for the identical
prices charged by the three suppliers. The importers’ claim
that they are
not related in any way was not borne out by the
evidence. Their modus operandi to source and buy clothing was the
same. They obtained
their stock from the same Chinese suppliers. The
agreements allegedly concluded with different Chinese suppliers are
identical.
The declared prices of clothing are in the same price
bracket. They used the same agents in China and the same clearing
agent in
this country. All of this cast serious doubt on the declared
prices of the goods.
[66]
The format, font and terms of the
agreements are identical. All the sale agreements record the payment
terms as 90 days after receipt
of the goods by the importer. This is
illogical since no exporter would render payment subject to
conditions over which it had
no control, in another country. The
respondents refused to provide information concerning the conclusion
of the sale agreements:
who signed them, and when and where they were
signed. When confronted with the expert’s report on the
agreements (by Mr Bester),
they said that the purchaser’s
signature on the agreements was electronically effected by Chinese
agents who represented
them ‘from time to time’. They
never mentioned Chinese agents before. And if the agreements were
electronically concluded,
there was no reason why they could not have
been concluded directly between the suppliers and the importers. The
ineluctable inference
is that the agreements were created by the
importers to support the entries, and the explanation regarding the
signatures, is false.
[67]
There is no evidence to support the
respondents’ claim that Chinese export agents inflated prices
on commercial invoices.
The importers refused to identify the Chinese
export agency which prepared and submitted the declarations to the
Chinese customs
authorities, or to furnish the export documentation
given by the suppliers to the export agents. The Chinese suppliers
were prepared
to assist the respondents, who were in a position to
provide objective evidence to support their assertion that the export
declarations
concerning the first application, were false. They
failed to provide this evidence.
[68]
And, of course, the true transaction values
of the goods could have been placed beyond question by simply
producing the export declarations
relating to the 19 containers,
submitted to the Chinese customs authorities by the three exporters.
The respondents failed to produce
this evidence, despite being called
upon to do so.
[69]
For all these reasons, the Commissioner was
satisfied that the respondents failed to prove that the goods were
entered as prescribed
by the provisions of the Act, as they were
required to do under s 102(4). Consequently, the goods and the
containers in which they
were imported, were liable to forfeiture.
Before us, counsel for the respondents conceded, correctly, that
s 102(4) applied
in the instant case.
[70]
In the circumstances, can it be said that
having regard to the purpose of s 88(1)
(c)
of the Act, the information before the Commissioner and the reasons
given, the impugned decision is unjustified? I think not. It
follows
that the decision was not arbitrary. The high court’s finding
that ‘it was common cause that SARS had been
presented with the
requisite documents by the applicants in terms of the Act’, is
incorrect. This was not common cause but
specifically disputed. SARS’
reasons for disputing the documents presented by the respondents were
amply explained. The high
court erred in disregarding not only the
evidence showing that the agreements were false, but also the reasons
for the impugned
decision, despite quoting those reasons verbatim in
its judgment.
[71]
The findings that the export declarations
‘were of poor quality and illegible’; that ‘they
had nothing to do with
the 19 containers’; and that ‘SARS
was wrong . . . to rely on the Export Declarations in order to reach
the seizure
decisions’, are unsustainable on the evidence. The
high court ignored the fact that the respondents were provided with
legible,
translated versions of the export declarations. Further, it
dismissed the respondents’ application to strike out the export
declarations on the basis that they were inadmissible. In so doing,
the court confirmed that the translator had been enrolled as
a sworn
translator from Chinese into English and vice versa, and
consequently, that the declarations were understandable.
[72]
The export declarations relating to eight
containers in the first application, were highly relevant to the
decision to seize the
goods. SARS was entitled to take those
declarations into account in arriving at its decision, and as a
specialist administrator,
to decide what weight should be given to
them, for the following reasons. The clothing covered by the export
declarations was materially
similar to the clothing in the 19
containers. It was not disputed that the export declarations reflect
the export values stated
therein – more than 1000% of the
values declared on importation into this country by the same
exporters and importers in
relation to similar goods. The
respondents’ explanation for this – fraud by Chinese
export agents – is false.
What is more, the respondents’
own import documentation corroborates the export declarations. The
Minister explained the
reasons for this in his supplementary
answering affidavit, to which was attached a schedule containing a
detailed analysis for
each of the eight containers. The respondents
did not deal with the Minister’s evidence in reply.
[73]
The high court’s conclusion
that the respondents provided the relevant information prior to
requests by SARS, and that they
‘responded copiously’ to
requests for information which SARS ‘chose to ignore . . . as
inadequate’, is
likewise incorrect. This conclusion is based on
a landscape table furnished by the respondents and reproduced in the
judgment.
However, a comparison between this table and SARS’
request for particulars and documentation, and the respondents’
replies (which form part of the reasons for the impugned decision),
shows that the respondents declined to answer or provide satisfactory
answers to a number of pertinent questions posed by SARS.
[74]
Given
that the impugned decision was not arbitrary, the respondents’
remaining challenge based on unreasonableness in terms
of s 6(2)
(h)
of the PAJA, must fail. The decision is not one that a reasonable
decision-maker could not reach.
[22]
[75]
Moreover,
SARS made the impugned decision in its capacity as a specialist
administrator with specific expertise in the levying of
customs
duties. It is a settled principle that the distinction between
appeals and reviews remains significant and that courts
should be
careful not to usurp the functions of administrative agencies.
[23]
In
Bato
Star
O’
Regan J described judicial deference as follows:
[24]
‘
[A]
judicial willingness to appreciate the legitimate and
constitutionally-ordained province of administrative agencies; to
admit
the expertise of those agencies in policy laden or polycentric
issues, to accord the interpretations of fact and law due respect;
and to be sensitive in general to the interests legitimately pursued
by administrative bodies and the practical and financial constraints
under which they operate. This type of deference is perfectly
consistent with a concern for individual rights and a refusal to
tolerate corruption and maladministration. It ought to be shaped . .
. by a careful weighing up of the need for – and the
consequences of – judicial intervention. Above all, it ought to
be shaped by a conscious determination not to usurp the functions
of
administrative agencies; not to cross over from review to appeal.’
[76]
For the reasons set out above, the high
court erred in holding that the impugned decision was unlawful and
thus reviewable. It follows
that the appeal must succeed.
The
intervention application
[77]
At the hearing of this appeal, an
application filed in this Court in August 2021 by the Southern
African Clothing and Textile Workers
Union (SACTWU), for leave to
intervene as an appellant in these proceedings, was refused with
costs. SACTWU was advised that the
reasons for that order would be
given in this judgment. These are the reasons.
[78]
SACTWU’s
intervention application is in effect a disguised application to this
Court for leave to appeal. It was a party in
the review application
in the high court. However, it failed to file an application for
leave to appeal that court’s order.
Its explanation for this
failure was that it needed to assess its financial position as a
result of the effects of Covid-19 on
its resources. This explanation
however is superficial and unconvincing. More fundamentally, the
refusal of an application for
leave to appeal under
s 17(2)
(a)
of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
, is a jurisdictional fact for
an appeal to this Court.
[25]
In terms of
s 17(2)
(b)
of that Act, this Court’s jurisdiction to grant leave itself is
dependent on the court below having refused leave to appeal.
[26]
Thus, s 17(2)
(b)
not only prescribes the proper procedure, but also defines the
jurisdiction of this Court to entertain an application for leave
to
appeal.
[79]
Apart
from this, SACTWU has not shown that it has a legal interest in the
subject matter of the appeal which may be affected by
the decision of
this Court.
[27]
This appeal is
against the high court’s order reviewing and setting aside the
impugned decision. Any order that this Court
might make will have no
effect on SACTWU or its avowed interest of protecting the local
clothing and textile industries. For these
reasons, SACTWU’s
intervention application could not be entertained and was thus
refused with costs.
The
order
[80]
In the result the following order is
issued:
1
The application for intervention by the Southern African Textile and
Clothing
Workers’ Union is struck from the roll with costs.
Such costs shall include the costs of only one junior counsel.
2
The appeal is upheld with costs, including the costs of two counsel
where
so employed. Such costs shall be paid by the respondents
jointly and severally, the one paying the others to be absolved.
3
The order of the high court is set aside and replaced by the
following:
‘
The
application is dismissed. The applicants are directed to pay the
costs of the application, including the costs of two counsel
where so
employed, jointly and severally, the one paying the others to be
absolved.’
A SCHIPPERS
JUDGE OF APPEAL
Appearances:
For
first appellant:
B H Swart SC (with him J A Meyer
SC)
Instructed
by:
Klagsbrun Edelstein Bosman & Du Plessis
Attorneys, Pretoria
Symington De Kok
Attorneys, Bloemfontein
For
second appellant:
A
Cockrell SC (with him M Stubbs)
Instructed
by:
Webber Wentzel, Pretoria
Symington De Kok
Attorneys, Bloemfontein
For
third and fourth
appellants:
E Webber
Instructed
by:
Norton Rose Fulbright, Pretoria
Lovius Block,
Bloemfontein
For
first to seventh
respondents:
A P Joubert SC (with him L F Laughland)
Instructed
by:
Richard Meaden & Associates, Pretoria
Webbers Attorneys,
Bloemfontein
[1]
Section
88(1)
(c)
states
that if goods are liable to forfeiture under the Act, the
Commissioner may seize those goods.
[2]
Section
102(4) of the Act states:
‘
If
in any prosecution under this Act or in any dispute in which the
State, the Minister or the Commissioner or an officer is a
party,
the question arises whether the proper duty has been paid or whether
any goods or plant have been lawfully used, imported,
exported,
manufactured, removed or otherwise dealt with or in, or whether any
books, accounts, documents, forms or invoices required
by rule to be
completed and kept, exist or have been duly completed and kept or
have been furnished to any officer, it shall
be presumed that such
duty has not been paid or that such goods or plant have not been
lawfully used, imported, exported, manufactured,
removed or
otherwise dealt with or in, or that such books, accounts, documents,
forms or invoices do not exist or have not been
duly completed and
kept or have not been so furnished, as the case may be, unless the
contrary is proved.’
[3]
Natal
Joint Municipality Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
[2012]
ZASCA 13
;
2012 (4) SA 593
para 18, affirmed by the Constitutional
Court in
Airports
Company South Africa v Big Five Duty Free (Pty) Ltd and Others
[2018]
ZACC 33
;
2019 (5) SA 1
(CC) para 29.
[4]
Capitec
Bank Holdings Limited v Coral Lagoon Investments 194 (Pty) Ltd
[2021] 3 All SA 647
para 25, footnotes omitted.
[5]
Evins
v Shield Insurance Co Ltd
1980 (2) SA 814
(A) at 838H-839A.
[6]
See
Mohlomi
v Minister of Defence
[1996] ZACC 20
;
1997 (1) SA 124
(CC) para 9, regarding the purpose
of a notice of intended legal proceedings under the Defence Act 44
of 1957.
[7]
Section
195(1)
(b)
of the Constitution provides that public administration must be
governed by democratic values and principles enshrined in the
Constitution, including the promotion of efficient, economic and
effective use of resources.
[8]
The
Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service v Prudence
Forwarding (Pty) Ltd
2015 JDR 2545 (GP).
[9]
Ibid
para 28.
[10]
Commissioner,
South African Revenue Service v Trend Finance (Pty) Ltd and Another
2007 (6) SA 117
(SCA) para 29.
[11]
Commissioner:
South African Revenue Service and Another v Alves
[2020] ZAFSHC 123
para 11.
[12]
Section
5(3) of the PAJA reads:
‘
If
an administrator fails to furnish adequate reasons for an
administrative action it must, subject to subsection (4) and in the
absence of proof to the contrary, be presumed in any proceedings for
judicial review that the administrative action was taken
without
good reason.’
[13]
Section
5 of the PAJA, in relevant part, provides:
‘
(1)
Any person whose rights have been materially and adversely affected
by administrative action and who has not been given reasons
for the
action may, within 90 days after the date on which that person
became aware of the action or might reasonably have been
expected to
have become aware of the action, request that the administrator
concerned furnish written reasons for the action.
(2)
The administrator to whom the request is made must, within 90 days
after receiving the request, give that person adequate
reasons in
writing for the administrative action.
[14]
C
Hoexter and G Penfold:
Administrative
Law in South Africa
(3 ed 2021) at 464-465 and 497.
[15]
.
Commissioner,
South African Revenue Service v Saleem
[2008] ZASCA 19
;
2008 (3) SA 655
(SCA) para 9.
[16]
CSARS
v Saleem
fn 14 para 9.
[17]
Section
87(2) reads: ‘(2) Any—
(a)
ship, vehicle, container or other transport equipment used in
removal or carriage of any goods liable to forfeiture under this
Act
or constructed, adapted, altered or fitted in any manner for the
purpose of concealing goods;
(b)
goods conveyed, mixed, packed, or found with any goods liable to
forfeiture under this Act on or in any such ship, vehicle, container
or other transport equipment; and
(c)
ship, vehicle, machine, machinery, plant, equipment or apparatus
classifiable under any heading or subheading of Chapters 84
to 87
and 89 of Part 1 of Schedule No. 1 in which goods liable to
forfeiture under this Act are used as fuel or in any other
manner,
shall be liable to forfeiture wheresoever and in possession of
whomsoever found.’
[18]
Democratic
Alliance v President of the Republic of South Africa
[2012] ZACC 24
;
2013 (1) SA 248
(CC) paras 27 and 29-32 (
Democratic
Alliance
);
Albutt
v Centre for the Study of Violence and Reconciliation and Others
[2010] ZACC 4
;
2010 (3) SA 293
(CC) para 51;
Minister
of Defence and Military Veterans v Motau
[2014] ZACC 18
;
2014 (5) SA 69
(CC) para 69 (
Motau
).
[19]
Democratic
Alliance
fn
18 paras 29 and 32;
Motau
2014 (5) SA 69
(CC) fn 18 para 69.
[20]
Section
84(1) of the Act provides:
‘
Any
person who makes a false statement in connection with any matter
dealt with in this Act, or makes use for the purposes of
this Act of
a declaration or document containing any such statement shall,
unless he proves that he was ignorant of the falsity
of such
statement and that such ignorance was not due to negligence on his
part, be guilty of an offence and liable on conviction
to a fine not
exceeding R40 000 or treble the value of the goods to which such
statement, declaration or document relates, whichever
is the
greater, or to imprisonment for a period not exceeding ten years, or
to both such fine and such imprisonment, and the
goods in respect of
which such false statement was made or such false declaration or
document was used shall be liable to forfeiture.’
[21]
First
National Bank of South Africa t/a Wesbank v Commissioner South
African Revenue Service and Another
[2002]
ZACC 5
;
2002 (4) SA 768
(CC) para 15.
[22]
Bato
Star Fishing (Pty) Ltd v Minister of Environmental Affairs and
Others
[2004] ZACC 15
;
2004 (4) SA 490
(CC) para 44.
[23]
Bato
Star
para 45.
[24]
Bato
Star
para 46.
[25]
National
Union of Metalworkers of South Africa v Jumbo Products CC
[1996]
ZASCA 87
;
1996 (4) SA 735
(A) at 740A-D;
Pharmaceutical
Society of South Africa and Others v Tshabalala-Msimang and Another
NNO
;
New
Clicks South Africa (Pty) Ltd v Minister of Health and Another
[2004] ZASCA 122
;
2005 (3) SA 238
(SCA) para 22.
[26]
Section
17(2)
of the
Superior Courts Act provides
:
‘
(a)
Leave to appeal may be granted by the judge or judges against whose
decision an appeal is to be made or, if not readily available,
by
any other judge or judges of the same court or Division.
(b)
If leave to appeal in terms of paragraph (a) is refused, it may be
granted by the Supreme Court of Appeal on application filed
with the
registrar of that court within one month after such refusal, or such
longer period as may on good cause be allowed,
and the Supreme Court
of Appeal may vary any order as to costs made by the judge or judges
concerned in refusing leave.’
[27]
Amalgamated
Engineering Union v Minister of Labour
1949 (3) SA 637
(A) at 659, affirmed
Pheko
and Others v Ekurhuleni Municipality (No 2)
[2015] ZACC 10
;
2015 (5) SA 600
(CC) para 56.
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