Case Law[2022] ZASCA 97South Africa
Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service v Capitec Bank Limited (94/2021) [2022] ZASCA 97; [2022] 3 All SA 641 (SCA); 2022 (6) SA 76 (SCA); 85 SATC 311 (21 June 2022)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
21 June 2022
Headnotes
Summary: Revenue – value-added tax – whether a tax fraction of loan cover payouts qualified for deduction in terms of s 16(3)(c) of the Value-Added Tax Act 89 of 1991 – whether loan cover qualified as a taxable supply – no consideration charged for the loan cover – loan cover supplied in the course of business of providing credit – loan cover qualified as an exempt supply – penalty imposed under s 213 of the Tax Administration Act 28 of 2011 remitted.
Judgment
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## Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service v Capitec Bank Limited (94/2021) [2022] ZASCA 97; [2022] 3 All SA 641 (SCA); 2022 (6) SA 76 (SCA); 85 SATC 311 (21 June 2022)
Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service v Capitec Bank Limited (94/2021) [2022] ZASCA 97; [2022] 3 All SA 641 (SCA); 2022 (6) SA 76 (SCA); 85 SATC 311 (21 June 2022)
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sino date 21 June 2022
THE SUPREME COURT OF
APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Reportable
Case No: 94/2021
In the matter between:
THE
COMMISSIONER FOR THE
SOUTH
AFRICAN REVENUE SERVICE
APPELLANT
and
CAPITEC
BANK
LIMITED
RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
Commissioner
for the South African Revenue Service v Capitec Bank Limited
(94/2021)
[2022] ZASCA 97
(21 June
2022)
Coram:
SALDULKER, MOCUMIE, MAKGOKA and
SCHIPPERS JJA and MUSI AJA
Heard:
10 March 2022
Delivered:
21 June 2022
Summary:
Revenue
–
value-added
tax – whether a tax fraction of loan cover payouts qualified
for deduction in terms of s 16(3)
(c)
of the Value-Added Tax Act 89 of 1991 – whether loan cover
qualified as a taxable supply – no consideration charged
for
the loan cover – loan cover supplied in the course of business
of providing credit – loan cover qualified as an
exempt supply
– penalty imposed under
s 213
of the
Tax Administration Act 28
of 2011
remitted.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Tax Court, Cape Town
(
Sievers AJ,
sitting as court of first instance):
1
The appeal is upheld with costs, including the costs of two counsel.
2
The order of the tax court is set aside and replaced with the
following order:
‘
2.1
The appeal is dismissed with costs, such
costs to include the costs of two counsel.
2.2
The assessment for the November 2017 VAT return is confirmed.’
3
Any penalty imposed
under
s 213
of the
Tax Administration Act
28
of 2011
read with s 39(1) of the
Value-Added Tax Act 89 of 1991
by SARS is
ordered to be remitted to Capitec Bank Limited.
JUDGMENT
Saldulker
JA (
Mocumie, Makgoka and Schippers
JJA and Musi AJA
concurring):
[1]
The appellant, the Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service
(SARS), appeals
against the judgment and order of the Tax Court, Cape
Town (the tax court), which upheld an appeal to it by the respondent,
Capitec
Bank Limited (Capitec), against the additional value-added
tax (VAT) assessment raised by SARS for the November 2017 VAT return.
In terms of the assessment, SARS disallowed an amount of R71
520 811.85 claimed by Capitec as a notional input tax deduction.
[2]
The tax court held that Capitec was entitled to deduct this amount
from its VAT liability
by virtue of s 16(3)
(c)
of the
Value-Added Tax Act 89 of 1991 (VAT Act), and it set aside the
additional assessment for the November 2017 VAT return. The
tax court
directed SARS to refund to Capitec the amount of R71 520 811.85,
together with interest at the prescribed rate
from date of payment to
date of refund. This appeal is with the leave of the tax court.
[3]
Capitec is a registered bank which conducts business as a retail bank
focussing on
providing essential banking services, such as
transactional banking (including savings and credit card facilities)
and unsecured
lending to its customers. The input tax deduction that
Capitec claimed relates to its unsecured lending business, in terms
of which
Capitec advances credit in the form of personal loans to
customers under term loan contracts. In terms of clause 13 of a
standard
loan contract entered into between Capitec and its
customers, Capitec provided its customers with loan cover, the
proceeds of which
were applied to settle or reduce the outstanding
loan amount due to Capitec in the event of the customer’s death
or retrenchment.
[4]
The loan cover was underwritten by Guardrisk Life Limited
(Guardrisk), commencing
on 1 May 2015, to whom Capitec paid premiums.
Before that, the loan cover was underwritten by Channel Life
Insurance Limited (Channel).
Under the insurance policies, Capitec is
the insured and becomes entitled to the benefits, if the loan is not
repaid on account
of the death or retrenchment of the borrower. In
essence, the loan cover was insurance taken out by Capitec, which
covered it against
the risk of outstanding amounts owing under the
unsecured loans becoming irrecoverable upon the borrower’s
death or retrenchment.
Thus, Capitec insured itself against the
unpaid amount, resulting in the loan being paid in full and Capitec
not suffering a loss
of credit.
[5]
During the VAT period from November 2014-2015, Capitec received
payouts and made corresponding
payments in respect of the loan cover
in the amount of R582 383 753.66. Capitec claimed R71
520 811.85 as a deduction,
which constituted the tax fraction of
the total insurance payouts recovered by Capitec from its insurers
and which Capitec used
to settle the outstanding loans owed by its
customers or their deceased estates in the event of their
retrenchment or death.
[6]
On 15 February 2018, SARS issued a VAT assessment in terms of which
it disallowed
the amount of R71 520 811.85 claimed by Capitec as
a notional input tax deduction in its November 2017 VAT return, on
the
basis that it did not qualify for deduction in terms of s
16(3)
(c)
of the VAT Act. Additionally, SARS also levied a 10%
late payment penalty for the resultant understatement of Capitec’s
VAT
liability.
[7]
According to SARS, the loan cover payments did not qualify for an
input tax deduction
in terms of s 16(3)
(c)
of the VAT Act,
because the supply of the loan cover did not constitute a ‘taxable
supply’. SARS contended that since
Capitec did not charge any
consideration for the loan cover, and because the loan cover was
supplied in the course of Capitec’s
business of providing
credit to its customers, it was an ‘exempt supply’. In
contrast, Capitec contended that since
the borrower had to pay
interest and fees, consideration was provided for the loan cover, and
alternatively that, even if the loan
cover was for no consideration,
it still levied a fee, termed a ‘taxable supply’, in
terms of s 10(23) of the VAT Act.
Furthermore, Capitec contended that
although it does not charge a distinct fee for its loan cover, the
loan cover was integral
to its unsecured lending business, and thus
to generating both interest income and fee income, and that the cost
of providing the
loan cover was recovered through that income.
[8]
The tax court held, inter alia, as follows:
‘
[34]
The clients contract for and receive no benefit over and above the
loan itself, apart from the loan
cover. Where no loan is advanced, no
initiation fee is payable and no service fee is levied. Furthermore,
as set out above in section
1 of NCA both “initiation fee”
and “service fee” are defined (with Regulation 44(3)) by
reference to the
types of costs incurred by the vendor and not by
reference to any particular service supplied to the customer. This is
emphasized
by the inclusion in the NCA of interest, initiation fee
and the service fee, as sub-components under the heading “costs
of
credit” in section 101 thereof. The fee income, which is
charged over and above interest in terms of a loan agreement, is
part
of the consideration payable for the provision of credit.
[35]
The loan cover promotes and is made in the course and furtherance of
an enterprise that includes
the making of taxable supplies. These
fees are a key component on the income side of Capitec’s
business model. It would be
uncommercial and inconsistent with
Retief’s evidence in this regard to accept that the loan cover
exclusively advances an
exempt supply.
[36]
The clients contracted to get a loan and not for
other separate distinct services. The taxable fees recover
costs to
the bank and not services to the client. The NCA includes these with
interest as being “costs of credit”.
All three are the
consideration paid for credit.
[37]
As the supply of loan cover advances the entire business of advancing
credit and this includes
a taxable supply, the loan cover advances a
taxable supply for consideration.
[38]
The requirements of section 16(3)(c) are thus satisfied and Capitec
qualifies for the deduction
provided for therein.’
[9]
The central question in this matter is whether the tax fraction of
the loan cover
payouts qualified for deduction in terms of s 16(3)
(c)
of the VAT Act. The determination of this issue is largely
dependent on whether the loan cover was a taxable supply, ie whether
it was supplied in the course or furtherance of an enterprise.
[10]
The applicable provisions which govern the issues in this matter are
as follows. In relevant
part, ‘input tax’ in s 1 of the
VAT Act is defined as:
‘
(a)
tax charged under section 7 and payable in
terms of that section by –
(i) a supplier on the
supply of goods or services made by that supplier to the vendor;
.
. .
where
the goods or services concerned are acquired by the vendor wholly for
the purpose of consumption, use or supply in the course
of making
taxable supplies
or, where the goods or
services are acquired by the vendor partly for such purpose, to the
extent (as determined in accordance with
the provisions of section
17) that the goods or services concerned are acquired by the vendor
for such purpose.’
[11
]
Section 16(3) of the VAT Act governs the
calculation of tax payable during each period.
Section
16(3)
(c)
of the VAT Act provides for a deduction of an amount equal to the tax
fraction of any payment made to indemnify another person
in terms of
any contract of insurance. The proviso in subparagraph (i) of s
16(3)
(c)
is that this paragraph shall only apply where the supply of that
contract of insurance is a ‘taxable supply’.
It
provides, to the extent relevant, as follows:
‘
(3)
Subject to the provisions of subsection (2)
of this section and the provisions of sections 15 and 17,
the amount
of tax payable in respect of a tax period shall be calculated by
deducting from the sum of the amounts of output tax
of the vendor
which are attributable to that period, as determined under subsection
(4), and the amounts (if any) received by the
vendor during that
period by way of refunds of tax charged under section 7(1)
(b)
and
(c)
and 7(3)
(a)
,
the following amounts, namely –
. . .
(c)
an
amount equal to the tax fraction of any payment made during the tax
period by the vendor to indemnify another person in terms
of any
contract of insurance: Provided that this paragraph
–
(i) shall only apply
where the supply of that contract of insurance is a taxable supply or
where the supply of that contract of
insurance would have been a
taxable supply if the time of performance of that supply had been on
or after the commencement date.’
[12]
Section 1 of the VAT Act defines the phrase ‘taxable supply’
as follows: ‘“taxable
supply” means any supply of
goods or services which is chargeable with tax under the provisions
of section 7(1)
(a)
, including tax chargeable at the rate of
zero per cent under section 11.’
[13]
Section 7 of the
VAT Act
is
the charging provision. Subject to exemptions and other exclusions,
it provides for the charging of tax on supplies of goods
and
services. It provides, in relevant part, as follows:
‘
(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 National 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 per cent on the value of the supply concerned or
the importation, as the case may be.’
[14]
Section 1 of the VAT Act defines the term ‘enterprise’ as
follows:
‘“
enterprise”
means
–
(a)
in the case of any
vendor, any enterprise or activity which is carried on continuously
or regularly by any person in the Republic
or partly in the Republic
and in the course or furtherance of which goods or services are
supplied to any other person for a consideration,
whether or not for
profit, including any enterprise or activity carried on in the form
of a commercial, financial, industrial,
mining, farming, fishing,
municipal or professional concern or any other concern of a
continuing nature or in the form of an association
or club;
.
. .
Provided
that
–
.
. .
(v)
any activity shall to the extent to which it involves the making of
exempt supplies not be deemed to be the carrying on of an
enterprise.’
[15]
An exempt supply is defined in s 1 of the VAT Act as a supply exempt
from tax under s 12. In
terms of s 12
(a)
, the supply of any
financial services shall be exempt from the tax imposed under s
7(1)
(a)
. Section 1 defines financial services to mean ‘the
activities which are deemed by section 2 to be financial services’.
Section 2 of the VAT Act provides, to the extent relevant, as
follows:
‘
(1)
For the purposes of this Act, the following
activities shall be deemed to be financial services:
.
. .
(f)
the provision
by any person of credit under an agreement by which money or money’s
worth is provided by that person to another
person who agrees to pay
in the future a sum or sums exceeding in the aggregate the amount of
such money or money’s worth;
.
. .
Provided
that the activities contemplated in paragraphs
(a), (b), (c), (d),
(f)
and
(o)
shall not be deemed to be financial services
to the extent that the consideration payable in respect thereof is
any fee, commission,
merchant’s discount or similar charge,
excluding any discount cost.’
[16]
‘Consideration’ is defined, in relevant part, in s 1 of
the VAT Act as follows: ‘in
relation to the supply of goods or
services to any person, [it] includes any payment made or to be made
. . . whether in money
or otherwise, or any act or forbearance,
whether or not voluntary, in respect of, in response to, or for the
inducement of, the
supply of any goods or services, whether by that
person or by any other person’.
[17]
Lastly, s 1 of the VAT Act defines the term ‘insurance’
as follows:
‘“
insurance”
means insurance or guarantee against loss, damage, injury or risk of
any kind whatever, whether pursuant to any
contract or law, and
includes reinsurance; and “contract of insurance”
includes a policy of insurance, an insurance
cover, and a renewal of
a contract of insurance: Provided that nothing in this definition
shall apply to any insurance specified
in section 2.’
[18]
Thus, the definition of ‘enterprise’ in s 1(1) is one of
the most important definitions
in the VAT Act as set out above. Its
main purpose is to delineate as clearly as possible the type of
persons, activities and supplies
which are intended to form part of
the tax base, as well as those that are meant to be excluded. In
terms of paragraph
(a)
of this definition, there is a general
requirement that enterprises participating in the VAT system must
charge a consideration
(or price) for the goods or services they
supply.
[19]
The general mechanism of the VAT Act has been conveniently set out by
the Constitutional Court
in the oft quoted judgment
Metcash
Trading Limited v Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service
and Another
[2000] ZACC 21
;
2001 (1) SA 1109
(CC);
2001 (1) BCLR
1
(CC) as follows:
‘
[13]
. . . The basic idea of VAT is that it is calculated on the value of
each successive step as goods
move from hand to hand along the
commercial production and distribution chain from their original
source to their ultimate user.
For present purposes it can be
accepted that the tax is calculated at the prescribed rate of 14% on
the price at which each successive
act of handing on takes place.
Furthermore, the tax is not only calculated on the value of each
successive supply, but is to be
paid at that time. As goods move
along the distribution chain, everyone making up the sales chain is
first a recipient, then a
supplier. The Act calls these
recipients/suppliers who are engaged in enterprises “vendors”
and section 23 makes provision
for them to be registered as such with
the Commissioner. Section 7(2) of the Act then renders each vendor
who supplies goods liable
to pay the VAT on that particular supply.
[14]
Being a tax on added value, VAT is not levied on the full price of a
commodity at each transactional
delivery step it takes along the
distribution chain. It is not cumulative but merely a tax on the
added value the commodity gains
during each interval since the
previous supply. To arrive at this outcome a supplying vendor, when
calculating the VAT payable
on the particular supply, simply deducts
the VAT that was paid when the particular goods were supplied to it
in the first place.
As a commodity is on-sold by a succession of
vendors, each payment of VAT by each successive supplier must then
represent 14% of
the selling price less the 14% of the price which
was payable when that commodity was acquired. According to the scheme
of the
Act the tax that is payable by a supplying vendor is called
output tax and the tax that was payable on the supply to that vendor
upon acquisition is called input tax.’
[20]
Moreover, this Court in
Commissioner for South African Revenue
Services v De Beers Consolidated Mines Ltd
[2012] ZASCA 103
;
2012
(5) SA 344
(SCA);
[2012] 3 All SA 367
(SCA), said:
‘
[39]
At this stage, it is necessary to set out the rationale behind and
method of application of VAT. On
this aspect we can do no better than
to cite an English case which deals directly with this aspect in
Customs and Excise Commissioners v
Redrow Group plc
[1999] 2 All ER 1
(HL)
at 9g-h:
“
These
provisions entitle a taxpayer who makes both taxable and exempt
supplies in the course of his business to obtain a credit
for an
appropriate proportion of the input tax on his overheads. These are
the costs of goods and services which are properly incurred
in the
course of his business but which cannot be linked with any goods or
services supplied by the taxpayer to his customers.
Audit and legal
fees and the cost of the office carpet are obvious examples.”
These
considerations apply equally to the VAT regime in this country and in
other comparable jurisdictions.’
And
further:
‘
[51]
The primary question requires that there be clarity as
to the nature of the “enterprise” because the
purpose of
acquiring the services and whether they were consumed or utilized in
making “taxable supplies” can only
be determined in
relation to a particular “enterprise”. What the
“enterprise” consists of is a factual
question. There
must be a particular activity which complies with all the
requirements in the definition. . . The purpose of the
words
following “including” is to make certain that the
specific categories of activity referred to are included in
the
definition of “enterprise”.’
[21]
In determining whether a vendor is entitled to deduct as input tax
the VAT paid on the respective
goods/services supplied to it, this
Court in
Consol Glass (Pty) Ltd v The Commissioner for the South
African Revenue Service
[2020] ZASCA 175
(SCA), said:
‘
[14]
Whether Consol was entitled to deduct as input tax the
VAT paid on the services supplied to it by local service
providers
depended upon whether these services were acquired by Consol for the
purpose of consumption, use or supply in the course
of making taxable
supplies. That enquiry raised two issues. First, for what purpose did
Consol acquire the services? Second, did
Consol do so in the course
of making taxable supplies. The relationship between the purpose for
which the services were acquired
and the use to which these services
were put lies at the heart of the matter.’
[22]
VAT is a tax that is ultimately meant to be charged upon the consumer
in the supply chain. Thus,
the obligation to recover or collect VAT
is placed on the vendors who are traders, and whose business it is to
add value on goods
and services; in this case, Capitec. The outgoing
supply that is made by the vendor, on which it must collect VAT, must
be matched
with the incoming supply which is supplied by other
vendors to Capitec, and in respect of which input tax is levied. In a
very
able argument, Mr Nxumalo, led by Ms Cane SC on behalf of SARS,
referred to this as the ‘matching principle’. Thus,
in
terms of the VAT Act a vendor who supplies taxable supplies is
required to collect the VAT on its taxable supplies, and the
total of
the output tax is collected and is paid out by the vendor on behalf
of the national revenue service. Correspondingly,
the input tax that
is charged to and paid by the vendor may be deducted and recovered
from the national revenue service. But, this
is conditional upon the
input tax in respect of the incoming supplies being used by the
vendor or acquired for the purpose of making
taxable supplies.
[23]
Mr Janisch SC for Capitec contends that because Capitec carries on
business as a single business
offering credit, and in the course of
such business it earns interest income which is exempt, and earns a
fee income which is taxable,
and because the loan cover was supplied
as part and parcel of the credit offering business, there was thus a
direct link between
the supply of the loan cover and the credit
supply. That is correct. However, what cannot be ignored is that
Capitec is in the business of providing
credit. It is not in the business of providing insurance. The
provision of credit is an
‘exempt supply’,
because
it is deemed a financial activity in terms of s 2(1)
(f)
of the VAT Act
.
A minor component of its business is in the form of fees, which is a
taxable supply. The question, therefore, is whether the entire
business activity of Capitec, which is largely exempt, should be
treated as a taxable supply.
[24]
As explained
in
Commissioner
for the South African Revenue Services v Tourvest Financial Services
(Pty) Ltd
[2021] ZASCA 61
;
2021 (5) SA 86
(SCA)
para
15:
‘
It
is so that the respondent carries on the activity of the exchange of
currency as envisaged in s 2(1), which is, on the face of
it, a
defined financial service under s 2(1)
(a)
and is accordingly an exempt supply by virtue thereof. If no fee or
commission were charged by the respondent as a consideration
for that
supply, the entire activity would be exempt, and no input tax could
therefore be deducted. The proviso to s 2(1) states
however that the
activity of the exchange of currency shall not be deemed to be
financial services ‘to the extent that the
consideration
payable in respect thereof is any fee, commission . . . or similar
charge.’ The effect of the proviso is thus
limited to ensuring
(in keeping with the intention, as expressed in the VAT Sub-Committee
report, of bringing financial services
into the VAT net) that any
commission or fee charged in respect of the activity of the exchange
of currency will attract VAT. To
achieve this, it is necessary to
carve out the activity from the definition of financial services for
the limited purpose of making
the provision of the goods or services
taxable to that extent.’
And at para 16:
‘
The
fact that, by virtue of the proviso, what would otherwise have been
an exempt financial service is to an extent treated as a
taxable
supply (so that the commission carries VAT) does not mean that the
activity loses its exempt nature entirely. It remains
an exempt
supply for all other purposes, while the taxable component carries
VAT. It follows that the proviso creates a mixed supply
out of an
identified activity, rather than causing the activity to lose its
exempt status in its entirety. Accordingly, the effect
of the proviso
in the present context is merely to add a taxable element to what is,
and at its core remains, an exempt financial
service. It turns the
activity into a partly exempt and a partly taxable supply. That being
so, any tax paid on goods and services
acquired by the respondent
must be apportioned and only the part attributable to the taxable
supply may be deducted as input tax.
The respondent’s attempt
to claim the entire VAT charge as deductible input tax must therefore
fail.’
[25]
Thus, it follows from
Tourvest
that where a vendor carries on the business of providing financial
services, that remains its main business. The fact that there
may be
some taxable fees that are earned in the course of its business which
can be carved out does not convert what is in essence
a taxable
supply (and what is in the main an exempt supply) into a taxable
supply. Thus, the fact that fees charged by Capitec
for its services
carry VAT does not mean that the activity of supplying credit loses
its exempt nature. Instead,
the minor part
of its business which is the earning of taxable fees may be carved
out as such and claimed accordingly.
[26]
Nevertheless, it remains to be determined whether these fees were, in
fact, charged by Capitec
in the supply of the
loan
cover to its customers.
This is because
although the loan cover is linked to Capitec’s main business of
supplying credit, for which the fees charged
may be taxable, SARS
contends that the loan cover was, in fact, supplied for no
consideration to the customers, and the fees applied
solely to the
provision of credit services by Capitec.
[27]
From the facts, the following emerges.
The
loan cover was supplied by Capitec to its customers for no
consideration for the following reasons.
Capitec
does not charge its clients for credit insurance. This is clear from
the following:
(i)
In terms of the loan contract entered into between
Capitec and its customers, the loan cover was supplied free of
charge.
The Pre-Agreement Statement and
Quotation for Credit Agreements expressly stipulates that ‘no
credit life insurance or optional
insurance is charged’.
(ii)
Clause 4 of the term loan contract stipulates, to the extent that it
is relevant, that:
‘
4
INTEREST AND FEES
4.1
. . . Interest will only be charged on
amounts actually lent and advanced to you. The interest rate
is a
fixed one.
4.2.
. . . The monthly service fee will be levied on
the same date as instalments as described in Section A of
this
agreement.
In
terms of Section A of the loan contract, the annual interest rate is
31.750% and the monthly service fee is R57.00
,
and that
‘
no credit life insurance or
optional insurance is charged.’
(iii)
Clause 13
of the term loan contract
provides for the loan cover and it
stipulates,
to the extent that it is
relevant, that:
‘
13
LOAN COVER
13.4
We do not charge any fees for the cover.’
(iv)
In terms of Capitec’s 2016 Integrated Annual Report, the chief
financial officer (CFO) states that, ‘[w]e continue
to insure
our book against events relating to retrenchment (non-government) and
the death of all our clients. The full value of
any outstanding loan
is insured. . . This insurance protects Capitec from bad debts, but
also benefits our clients. When retrenched,
our clients have a safety
buffer and in the case of death, Capitec does not claim against their
deceased estates.
We do not currently charge our clients credit
life or retrenchment insurance as this is built into the interest
rate we charge our
clients
. . .’. (Own emphasis.) This
emphatic assurance by the CFO that Capitec does not charge clients
for insurance cover again
evidences that the loan cover was supplied
for no consideration.
(v)
The supply of credit is regulated by the
National
Credit Act 34 of 2005
(the
NCA)
.
Section 101 of the NCA
[1]
provides for a description of the cost of credit. It states that,
‘[a] credit agreement must not require payment by the consumer
of any money or other consideration, except’ as provided for in
terms of this section. Thus, Capitec, as the credit provider,
may
only charge the consumer such fees as provided for in terms of the
NCA. Accordingly, the initiation fee and the service fee
in the
supply of credit by Capitec is regulated. Thus, these fees cannot
include or comprise an amount charged for insurance cover,
which is
separately provided for in terms of s 101(1)
(e)
read with s 106 of the NCA.
[28]
It is common cause that Capitec did not
provide credit insurance in terms of s 106 of the NCA. Instead,
Capitec opted to provide
insurance cover without charge to the
consumer. And so, it did not have to comply with the provisions and
regulations in terms
of s 106 of the NCA. Thus, the initiation fees
and the monthly service fees, as regulated under the NCA, could not,
in terms of
legislation (including regulations 43 and 44), constitute
charges for the loan cover. Had there been a charge for the loan
cover,
Capitec would have had to comply with s 106 of the NCA. It
avoided that obligation by electing not to charge for the loan cover,
and in this regard repeatedly reassured the customer that there is no
fee charged for the loan cover.
[29]
In view of all the aforegoing, the clear and unambiguous terms of the
loan contract indicate
that the client was to receive loan cover from
Capitec free of charge, ie no consideration was received by Capitec
in respect of
its supply of the loan cover. Therefore, in the absence
of a consideration, the supply of the loan cover did not qualify as
an
‘enterprise’ as envisaged in s 1 of the VAT Act. It
was therefore not chargeable with tax in terms of s 7(1)
(a)
of
the VAT Act – which charges tax on supplies in the course or
furtherance of an enterprise.
[30]
In terms of the definition of an enterprise
in the VAT Act, there is a general requirement that enterprises
participating in the
VAT system must charge a consideration (or
price) for the goods or services they supply.
Thus,
the implication of not meeting this requirement is that supplies made
for no consideration are not made in the course or furtherance
of an
enterprise, and hence, will not be a taxable supply. It is important
to correctly characterise a particular supply as being
taxable or
not, because the vendor will generally have a right to deduct the VAT
incurred on any goods or services acquired for
the purposes of making
taxable supplies, but will not be able to do so if the supplies are
exempt, out-of-scope, or in connection
with any other non-taxable
activities conducted by the vendor.
[31]
It is important to understand the true nature of the loan cover that
Capitec provided to its
clients, on the one hand, and the credit
insurance policy between Capitec and its insurers, Channel and
Guardrisk, on the other
hand. In reality, what the insurance
contracts show is that there is only one real ordinary insurance
contract, which is between
Capitec and its insurers. And the purpose
of the contract is to cover the credit risk that Capitec is exposed
to in terms of its
unsecured lending business. In this scenario the
insurance contract has only one consequence, but it benefits two
parties. Simply
put, the benefit is that in the event that Capitec’s
client dies or is retrenched, the risk becomes incurred for Capitec
and then Guardrisk needs to pay out the policy. Notably, that
indemnity payout, in the hands of Guardrisk, qualifies for deduction
in terms of s 16(3)
(c)
of the VAT Act, because Guardrisk is
the insurer undertaking the insurance business. While the payout of
the insurance contracts
benefits both Capitec and its customers –
since the payouts from the insurers is credited to the loan account
of the customer
– who no longer owes Capitec in this regard –
the benefit to the customer is incidental.
[32]
Furthermore, the Loan Book Cover Scheme Insurance Policy between
Capitec and Guardrisk provides
that ‘[a]ny Benefit payable in
respect of a Life Insured in terms of this Policy shall be paid by
the Insurer to Capitec
Bank (the Policy Owner) who will apply the
said Benefit towards settlement of the Life Insured’s loan that
is due and payable
to Capitec Bank’. This represents an
accurate recordal of the nature of the relationship between Capitec
and the insurer.
There is only one insurance contract, but with the
same benefit arising out of the single insurance contract to both
Capitec as
the insured and its customer in terms of the loan cover,
separately. Guardrisk paid output tax on the premiums it collected
from
Capitec. It was allowed a notional tax deduction in terms of s
16(3)
(c)
of the VAT Act in respect of its payout settlement
that it paid to Capitec. In this way the matching principle is
satisfied and
the books of Guardrisk are balanced.
[33]
With regard to Capitec, it was allowed an input tax deduction in
respect of the premiums it paid
to Guardrisk and when Guardrisk paid
out the indemnity payments it was deemed in terms of s 8(8) of the
VAT Act
[2]
to have supplied to
Capitec, Capitec was required to pay output tax on the indemnity
payment it received from Guardrisk. Thus,
the equilibrium was
achieved in Capitec’s books in that both the input tax
deduction and the output tax were accounted for.
However, Capitec
wants to treat that same deemed supply as a new notional input tax
deduction. If it does so, this will leave the
books of Capitec
skewed, as this would result in there being deductions of input tax
without any corresponding output tax, because
the output tax that is
deemed to have been received in terms of s 8(8) is immediately
reversed by this notional deduction. In any
event the obtaining of
the Guardrisk insurance as between Guardrisk and Capitec is not a
‘taxable supply’ vis-à-vis
Capitec’s
customer. The only supply between Capitec and its customers is the
supply of credit, which is exempt.
[34]
Furthermore, in terms of the credit insurance policies, Capitec was
insured against the ‘outstanding
loan amount’, which was
the loss of the capital amount of the credit provided and the
capitalised amount of interest and
fees. All this constituted the
provision of credit to its customers. Thus, on Capitec’s own
version the purpose of the loan
cover was to protect Capitec against
the risk that its customers would default on their loan, on account
of retrenchment or death.
The insurance policy settled that amount,
thereby extinguishing the credit risk to Capitec. This was the
purpose and effect of
the loan cover. Thus, because the provision of
credit is an exempt financial service, the loan cover was supplied in
the course
of making an exempt supply and was therefore not
deductible by Capitec in its VAT return. There is thus nothing to the
distinction
sought to be made between the loan cover between Capitec
and its clients and the insurance contracts between Capitec and
Guardrisk.
It is the same contract and benefits both Capitec and its
customers.
[35]
It is important to note that the fees charged by Capitec to its
customers, ie the initiation
fee and the monthly service fees, are
payable on accrual and are taxable supplies. If they are not paid
immediately, they become
capitalised and added to the balance of the
outstanding loan, which renders them exempt. When the bank raises the
monthly service
fees it immediately debits the customer’s
account. But, if for any reason the account does not have funds, then
that account
will fall into arrears and the amount of the fees will
be added to the balance outstanding. Once it is in the account, it
then
forms part of what is insured under the loan cover; it forms
part of the balance owing by the client, and because it has been
capitalised
it is additional credit in respect of the overdue fees
and the latter effectively becomes an additional loan. In this way,
the
only fees that will form part of the balance of the outstanding
loan amount are overdue fees. Those overdue fees, the moment they
become overdue, become additional credit advanced to the customer.
Thus, the loan cover relates exclusively to the supply of credit;
whether that credit pertains to the capitalised amount or the accrued
and capitalised interest fees, it is all credit.
[36]
In my view, SARS is correct when it contends that the fact that the
credit insurance policies’
benefit may include capitalised fees
in the circumstances where the client has fallen into default does
not mean that the loan
cover insured the earning of fees. It did not.
It insured the recovery of the credit advanced (which at times
included arrear capitalised
fees). The earning of fees was not
subject to credit risk, but the recovery or collection of arrear
amounts owed by the customers,
which included capitalised fees, was
subject to credit risk. The supply of services for which fees were
paid were completed by
the time the initiation fee was charged and
the debit for the monthly instalment (inclusive of that fee) was
raised. If the debit
order was returned unpaid, Capitec automatically
extended additional credit to the borrower in the amount of the
unpaid instalment,
which was a separate supply (of credit) and not a
supply of further services.
[37]
Thus, the loan cover was supplied in the course of making exempt
supplies, because the credit
insurance policies ensured the recovery
of the credit advanced to customers. The payouts from the credit
insurance policies settled
the credit balance owing, and extinguished
the credit risk arising in the event of retrenchment or death of the
customer. This
was the purpose and effect of the loan cover.
[38]
Mr Retief, who testified for Capitec, was driven to concede that the
customers of Capitec did
not pay any consideration for the loan
cover. That much was clear from the term loan contracts. Capitec made
an exempt supply of
credit available to its clients, which was not
deductible, and all other activities involved in doing so were
incidental to the
supply of credit, because the supply of the loan
cover was not a taxable supply in terms of s 16(3)
(c)
of the VAT Act. Therefore, the supply of
the loan cover was not a taxable supply as required by the first
proviso to s 16(3)
(c)
(i)
of the VAT Act. On this basis alone, the tax fraction of the loan
cover payouts did not qualify for deduction.
Consequently,
the main question in this appeal must be answered in favour of SARS.
[39]
Mr Janisch contended that because s 16(3)
(c)
of the VAT Act
deals with notional input tax deduction and not with actual input tax
deduction, the apportionment provision of
s 16 does not apply. I
disagree. Section 16 states clearly in its opening paragraph that s
16 is subject to s 17, and s 17 is the
apportionment provision of the
VAT Act for the apportioning of notional input tax deduction. Actual
input tax relates to the actual
amount of tax that was charged and
paid by the vendor, and which is subject to s 16(3). Section 16(3) of
the VAT Act is expressly
subject to s 17. Section 17(1) governs the
deduction of VAT incurred in acquiring supplies intended partly for
use in making taxable
supplies and partly for use in non-taxable
supplies (mixed supplies). In
C: SARS v De Beers Consolidated
Mines
, this Court stated that:
‘
[40]
. . . Where a vendor acquires goods or services partly
for use in making a taxable supply and partly for use in
a
non-taxable supply, section 17(1) dictates an apportionment based on
the ratio which the former intended use bears to both intended
uses.’
[40]
It is clear from
Tourvest
and s 17 of the VAT Act that where
the activity includes a small component of taxable supplies, a
deduction for input tax will
only be allowed to the extent of the
taxable portion. In some instances, apportionment instead of a full
deduction may be feasible.
Thus, the logical conclusion must be that
if it is a mixed supply, the vendor cannot claim the full amount of
the notional input
tax as Capitec has done in this case.
[41]
Furthermore, the legislature could not have intended that vendors who
have incurred actual input
tax would claim limited deductions in
respect of what they have actually incurred and paid, and those who
have not actually incurred
but have notionally incurred, would be
allowed a full deduction. The submission that there is no mechanism
in the VAT Act for apportionment
for notional input tax by Capitec is
thus misconceived.
[42]
In any event, Capitec did not apportion the deduction in its return,
nor did it plead apportionment
as a ground of objection to SARS’s
assessment or ground of appeal. In view of Capitec’s failure to
plead apportionment
as a ground of objection and of appeal, there
would be no basis to allow an apportionment and SARS was correct to
disallow Capitec’s
deduction of the whole amount, on this basis
alone.
The taxpayer bears the onus in the
tax court, and must prove apportionment. Capitec did not raise the
issue of a mixed supply in
the tax court. Thus, this Court cannot
decide this issue on appeal. Capitec adopted an all or nothing
approach. Capitec bore the
onus and did not discharge it.
[43]
Additionally, Capitec attempts to rely on paragraph 5.2.2 of SARS
Interpretation Note 70 (IN70)
to contend that the practice generally
prevailing was that ‘a supply made for no consideration in the
context of business
is generally regarded as a taxable supply’.
Capitec contends that paragraph 5.2.2 of IN70 constitutes a practice
generally
prevailing as defined in s 5(1) of the Tax Administration
Act 28 of 2011 (TAA). Section 5 of the TAA defines ‘practice
generally
prevailing’ as ‘a practice set out in an
official publication regarding the interpretation or application of a
tax
Act’. However, paragraph 5.2.2 of IN70 also states that
‘when exempt or other non-taxable supplies are made for no
consideration, no output tax is declared and no input tax is deducted
by the vendor’. Further, that ‘the general rule
will also
not apply when the supplies concerned are characterised as exempt or
out-of-scope for VAT purposes, because to that extent,
the supplies
are not made in the course or furtherance of the ‘enterprise’
(Refer, for example, proviso
(v)
to the definition of
“enterprise” in section 1(1) which specifically excludes
exempt supplies.)’.
[44]
It is thus clear that IN 70 does not seek to change the principle in
the VAT Act that no deduction
is permissible in respect of supplies,
whether for consideration or not, in the course of making exempt
supplies. On this basis,
reliance on the pleaded practice generally
prevailing by Capitec is misplaced.
[45]
Capitec has also based its argument on s 10(23) of the VAT Act, which
in my view is ill conceived.
The section provides in relevant part
that:
‘
Save
as otherwise provided in this section, where any supply is made for
no consideration the value of that supply shall be deemed
to be nil.’
The
purpose of s 10(23) of the VAT Act is merely to provide a valuation
rule which determines that the value of a supply will be
nil in
certain instances. The rule cannot be used to characterise a supply
as being taxable or non-taxable. In other words, the
valuation rule
does not have the effect of changing the character of a non-taxable
supply for no consideration into a taxable supply
for no
consideration just because the person happens to be a vendor in
respect of other (taxable) supplies made.
[46]
Lastly, the matter of the penalty levied on Capitec must be dealt
with. In terms of s 213 of
the TAA read with s 39(1) of the VAT Act,
SARS levied a 10% penalty on Capitec for the underpayment of VAT
arising from the deduction
of notional input tax in respect of the
loan cover payouts.
[47]
Section 217(3) of the TAA provides for the
remission of the penalty levied if certain requirements are met.
It
provides as follows:
‘
(3)
If a “penalty” has been imposed
under section 213, SARS may remit the “penalty”
or a
portion thereof, if SARS is satisfied that –
(a)
the “penalty” has been imposed in
respect of a “first incidence” of non-compliance, or
involved an amount
of less than R2 000;
(b)
reasonable grounds for the non-compliance exist;
and
(c)
the non-compliance in issue has been remedied.’
[48]
This was the first time a penalty had been imposed by SARS on Capitec
in the three years preceding
the relevant VAT return. In my view
there were reasonable grounds for Capitec claiming the deduction:
Capitec had obtained a favourable
opinion from a senior counsel; and
the only way Capitec could reasonably test the issue was to claim the
deduction in its tax return.
In such circumstances the penalty should
be remitted, as
it cannot be said that the
contesting of the amount was unreasonable.
[49]
For all of the aforegoing reasons, the appeal succeeds.
[50]
In the result, the following order is made:
1
The appeal is upheld with costs, including the costs of two counsel.
2
The order of the tax court is set aside and replaced with the
following order:
‘
2.1
The appeal is dismissed with costs, such
costs to include the costs of two counsel.
2.2
The assessment for the November 2017 VAT return is confirmed.’
3
Any penalty imposed
under
s 213
of the
Tax Administration Act
28
of 2011
read with s 39(1) of the
Value-Added Tax Act 89 of 1991
by SARS is
ordered to be remitted to Capitec Bank Limited.
H
K SALDULKER
JUDGE
OF APPEAL
APPEARANCES
For
appellant:
J M A Cane SC (with N K Nxumalo)
Instructed
by:
Ramushu Mashile Twala Incorporated, Sandton
Claude Reid Attorneys,
Bloemfontein
For
respondent: M W
Janisch SC (with S Miller)
Instructed
by:
Knowles Husain Lindsay Incorporated, Sandton
McIntyre Van der Post,
Bloemfontein
[1]
Section
101
of the
National Credit Act 34 of 2005
reads:
‘
(1) A
credit agreement must not require payment by the consumer of any
money or other consideration, except—
(
a
)
the principal debt, being the amount deferred in terms of the
agreement, plus the value of any item contemplated in
section
102
;
(
b
)
an initiation fee, which—
(i)
may not exceed the prescribed amount relative to the principal debt;
and
(ii)
must not be applied unless the application results in the
establishment of a credit agreement with that consumer;
(
c
)
a service fee, which—
(i)
in the case of a credit facility, may be payable monthly, annually,
on a per transaction basis or on a combination of periodic
and
transaction basis; or
(ii)
in any other case, may be payable monthly or annually; and
(iii)
must not exceed the prescribed amount relative to the principal
debt;
(
d
)
interest, which—
(i)
must be expressed in percentage terms as an annual rate calculated
in the prescribed manner; and
(ii)
must not exceed the applicable maximum prescribed rate determined in
terms of
section 105
;
(
e
)
cost of any credit insurance provided in accordance with
section
106
;
(
f
)
default administration charges, which—
(i)
may not exceed the prescribed maximum for the category of credit
agreement concerned; and
(ii)
may be imposed only if the consumer has defaulted on a payment
obligation under the credit agreement, and only to the extent
permitted by
Part C
of Chapter 6; and
(
g
)
collection costs, which may not exceed the prescribed maximum for
the category of credit agreement concerned and may be imposed
only
to the extent permitted by
Part C
of Chapter 6.’
[2]
Section
8(8) of the VAT Act provides:
‘
(8)
For the purposes of this Act, except section 16(3), where a
vendor receives any indemnity payment under a contract of
insurance
or is indemnified under a contract of insurance by the payment of an
amount of money to another person, that payment
or indemnification,
as the case may be, shall, to the extent that it relates to a loss
incurred in the course of carrying on
an enterprise, be deemed to be
consideration received for a supply of services performed on the day
of receipt of that payment
or on the date of payment to such other
person, as the case may be, by that vendor in the course or
furtherance of his enterprise:
Provided that this subsection shall
not apply in respect of any indemnity payment received or
indemnification under a contract
of insurance where the supply of
services contemplated by that contract is not a supply subject to
tax under section 7(1)
(a)
:
Provided further that this subsection shall not apply in respect of
any indemnity payment received by a vendor under a contract
of
insurance to the extent that such payment relates to the total
reinstatement of goods, stolen or damaged beyond economic repair,
in
respect of the acquisition of which by the vendor a deduction of
input tax under section 16(3) was denied in terms
of section 17(2) or would have been denied if these
sections had been applicable prior to the commencement date.’
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