Case Law[2022] ZASCA 142South Africa
Mobile Telephone Networks (Pty) Ltd v Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service (805/2021) [2022] ZASCA 142; [2023] 1 All SA 330 (SCA); 2023 (1) SA 420 (SCA); 85 SATC 235 (24 October 2022)
Headnotes
Summary: Tax law – Value-Added Tax Act 89 of 1991 – declaratory order – under which of ss 10(18) or 10(19) pre-paid vouchers fall – fact specific test – narrow basis for declaration of rights in tax matters – clear, uncontested facts necessary – no basis for declaration of rights.
Judgment
begin wrapper
begin container
begin header
begin slogan-floater
end slogan-floater
- About SAFLII
About SAFLII
- Databases
Databases
- Search
Search
- Terms of Use
Terms of Use
- RSS Feeds
RSS Feeds
end header
begin main
begin center
# South Africa: Supreme Court of Appeal
South Africa: Supreme Court of Appeal
You are here:
SAFLII
>>
Databases
>>
South Africa: Supreme Court of Appeal
>>
2022
>>
[2022] ZASCA 142
|
Noteup
|
LawCite
sino index
## Mobile Telephone Networks (Pty) Ltd v Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service (805/2021) [2022] ZASCA 142; [2023] 1 All SA 330 (SCA); 2023 (1) SA 420 (SCA); 85 SATC 235 (24 October 2022)
Mobile Telephone Networks (Pty) Ltd v Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service (805/2021) [2022] ZASCA 142; [2023] 1 All SA 330 (SCA); 2023 (1) SA 420 (SCA); 85 SATC 235 (24 October 2022)
Download original files
PDF format
RTF format
make_database: source=/home/saflii//raw/ZASCA/Data/2022_142.html
sino date 24 October 2022
FLYNOTES:
Tax – Value-Added Tax Act 89 of 1991 – Declaratory
order – Under which of ss 10(18) or 10(19)
pre-paid vouchers
fall – Fact specific test – Narrow basis for
declaration of rights in tax matters – Clear,
uncontested
facts necessary – No basis for declaration of rights.
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
### JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Reportable
Case
no: 855/2021
In
the matter between:
MOBILE
TELEPHONE NETWORKS (PTY) LTD
APPELLANT
and
THE
COMMISSIONER FOR THE SOUTH AFRICAN
REVENUE
SERVICE RESPONDENT
Neutral citation:
Mobile Telephone Networks (Pty) Ltd
v Commissioner for
the South African Revenue Service
(805/2021)
[2022] ZASCA 142
(24
October 2022)
Coram:
DAMBUZA
ADP, MAKGOKA and GORVEN JJA and WEINER and SALIE-HLOPHE
AJJA
Heard
: 9
September 2022
Delivered
: 24
October 2022
Summary:
Tax
law – Value-Added Tax Act 89 of 1991 – declaratory order
– under which
of ss 10(18) or 10(19) pre-paid vouchers
fall – fact specific test – narrow basis for declaration
of rights in
tax matters – clear, uncontested facts necessary –
no basis for declaration of rights.
### ORDER
ORDER
On
appeal from:
Gauteng Division of the High Court, Pretoria
(Hughes J, sitting as court of first instance):
The
appeal is dismissed with costs, including those of two counsel where
used.
# JUDGMENT
JUDGMENT
Gorven
JA (Dambuza ADP, Makgoka JA and Weiner and Salie-Hlophe AJJA
concurring)
[1]
This appeal
concerns the sale of certain vouchers by the appellant, Mobile
Telephone Networks (Pty) Ltd (MTN). The respondent is
the
Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service (SARS).
[1]
MTN provides a range of services to customers. As part of its
offering, MTN sells what it refers to in the papers as ‘pre-paid
multi-purpose vouchers’ (the pre-paid vouchers). Historically,
the sale of the pre-paid vouchers was dealt with by MTN as
falling
under s 10(19) of the Value-Added Tax Act 89 of 1991 (the Act).
On 15 November 2017, MTN sought a private
binding ruling
from SARS under s 41B of the Act, to the effect that the sale of
the pre-paid vouchers could thenceforth be
dealt with as falling
under s 10(18) of the Act.
[2]
On 4 April 2019, after an extensive exchange of
correspondence,
SARS issued a private binding ruling to the effect
that s 10(19), and not s 10(18), of the Act applied.
Aggrieved by
the ruling, MTN approached the Gauteng Division of the
High Court, Pretoria, (the high court) for the following relief:
‘
1.
Declaring that the supply by the Applicant of pre-paid tokens or
vouchers for a consideration
denominated in Rand, entitling the
holder to receive available services and products on the MTN mobile
network, as selected by
the holder, to the extent of the monetary
value stated on or attributed to the tokens or vouchers
(multi-purpose vouchers), constitutes
a supply as envisaged in
section 10(18) of the [Act].
2.
Declaring, accordingly, that the supply of such token or voucher is
disregarded
for the purposes of the [Act], except to the extent (if
any) that the consideration for the multi-purpose voucher exceeds the
monetary
value stated thereon.
3.
To the extent necessary declaring to be incorrect and/or setting
aside the ruling
issued by the Respondent on 4 April 2019,
to the effect that the pre-paid vouchers fall within the ambit of
section 10(19)
of the [Act] and that value-added tax must
accordingly be accounted for by the Applicant when the voucher is
sold to the subscriber.
4.
Directing the Respondent to pay the costs of this application.’
The
high court, per Hughes J, entertained the application for declaratory
relief but dismissed the application with costs. It is
against that
order that MTN appeals, with her leave.
[3]
The legislative backdrop to the matter frames the dispute.
Section 7(1)
of the Act levies a tax on ‘the supply by any
vendor of goods or services supplied by him’. And ss 10(18)
and
(19) provide:
‘
(18)
Where a right to receive goods or services to the extent of a
monetary value stated on any token, voucher or stamp (other than
a
postage stamp as defined in
section 1
of the
Postal Services Act,
1998
, and any token, voucher or stamp contemplated in subsection
(19)) is granted for a consideration in money, the supply of such
token,
voucher or stamp is disregarded for the purposes of this Act,
except to the extent (if any) that such consideration exceeds such
monetary value.
(19)
Where any token, voucher or stamp (other than a postage stamp as
defined in
section 1
of the
Postal Services Act, 1998
) is issued for
a consideration in money and the holder thereof is entitled on the
surrender thereof to receive goods or services
specified on such
token, voucher or stamp or which by usage or arrangement entitles the
holder to specified goods or services,
without any further charge,
the value of the supply of the goods or services made upon the
surrender of such token, voucher or
stamp is regarded as nil.’
The
former attracts VAT only at the time a voucher is used to procure
goods or services rather than at the time the voucher is supplied.
In
the latter instance, VAT is levied on the sale of a voucher but no
further VAT is levied when the voucher is ‘surrendered’.
[4]
MTN
submitted that two types of vouchers supplied by it fall under the
different sections concerned. The first type specifies the
goods
which can be obtained by using the voucher. An example given was a
data voucher. What is purchased is the right to use the
volume of
data purchased. It cannot be used to access anything else. This type
of voucher falls under
s 10(19).
The second type is the pre-paid
vouchers. These have a rand value and can be used to access a wide
range of services offered by
MTN. They are not limited to specific
services such as data. These are, MTN said, ‘typically referred
to as “
airtime
”
vouchers’.
[2]
These, it
contended, fall under
s 10(18).
[5]
MTN
analysed the key difference between the two provisions.
[3]
Under
s 10(18)
, the voucher specifies the value of goods or
services that may be selected rather than specifying the goods or
services which the
voucher may be used to acquire from the vendor.
Under
s 10(19)
, the particular goods or services to which the
holder is entitled are specified rather than their value. SARS
submitted that the
enquiry was therefore whether:
a)
Airtime (the voucher) itself constitutes ‘goods’,
alternatively whether what can be exchanged for the voucher
constitutes ‘goods or services’ that are specified by
usage or arrangement; or
b)
Airtime simply means the voucher itself, which is a form of
currency
that can be exchanged for an unspecified number of goods and
services, akin to a gift voucher.
SARS
contended that the pre-paid vouchers fall under the first of these
and MTN that they fall under the second. This is where the
lines were
drawn in the litigation.
[6]
In essence, this appeal relates to two main issues. The first is
whether
seeking a declaratory order was appropriate in the
circumstances. The second is whether, if so, the ruling of SARS was
incorrect.
[7]
As to the first issue, SARS submitted that the procedure utilised by
MTN
was impermissible. There were three bases to that contention. It
amounted either to a review, an appeal, or an objection to the
ruling, none of which are competent.
[8]
Prayer 3,
which followed the declarations requested in prayers 1 and 2, sought
to set aside the ruling. In general terms, decisions
of functionaries
may only be set aside on an application for the decision to be
reviewed. SARS submitted that no review application
was brought. In
any event, no review could lie against the ruling because the
definition of administrative action in s 1 of the
Promotion of
Administrative Justice Act 3 of 2000 (PAJA) requires the action in
question to have a direct, external and final effect.
[4]
In the present matter, the ruling would only have an effect once it
was applied to an assessment. As such, it did not fall within
the
definition of administrative action and could not be reviewed under
PAJA.
[9]
MTN
conceded that the ruling did not amount to administrative action as
defined in PAJA and was not reviewable. It submitted, however,
that,
if the declarators were granted and the ruling was not set aside, it
would remain intact. But such a ruling binds only SARS.
[5]
SARS can withdraw it at any time unless the withdrawal were to
prejudice MTN. That would not be the case in this matter where the
ruling was against the interpretation contended for by MTN. In any
event, SARS submitted that the ruling would be withdrawn if
it was
contrary to declarations made by a court. MTN accepted this to be the
case and, as a result, conceded that it was not entitled
to the
relief sought in prayer 3.
[10]
As regards the application amounting to an impermissible appeal, SARS
contended that the
ruling was not appealable, whether to the Tax
Court or the High Court. Section 32(1) of the Act specifies those
decisions of SARS
which are susceptible of objection or appeal.
Rulings under s 41B are not included. This much was also
conceded by MTN. It
submitted, however, that the application did not
amount to an appeal.
[11]
That leaves the question of an objection. SARS submitted that there
are no provisions in
the Act in terms of which to object to such a
ruling. This is correct. In terms of s 83(1) of the Tax
Administration Act 28
of 2011 (the TAA), the ruling only ‘applies’
to a taxpayer when it is put into effect. Once again, the ruling
would
be applied by SARS once a return had been submitted. Only at
that point could an objection be lodged.
[12]
SARS drew
attention to the special machinery created by the TAA for such
disputes between SARS and taxpayers. It submitted that
the
appropriate course to be adopted by MTN was to utilise that
machinery. It should submit a return which treats the supply of
the
pre-paid vouchers as falling under s 10(18). SARS would
presumably reject such a return and issue an assessment based
on the
pre-paid vouchers falling under s 10(19). MTN would then be
entitled to object to the assessment. If the objection
was turned
down, MTN could approach the Tax Court, which is a specialist court,
and lead full evidence in support of its contention.
If unsuccessful
before the Tax Court, an appeal might thereafter lie to the full
bench of the relevant High Court or to this Court.
[6]
[13]
MTN
conceded that this procedure was available to it. However, it
submitted that the application was not one which, in effect, objected
to the ruling but was a legitimate approach to the high court for a
declaration of rights. In this regard, it placed reliance on
the
matter of
Commissioner
for the South African Revenue Service v Langholm Farms (Pty) Ltd
.
[7]
In that matter, Langholm Farms had submitted a claim for diesel
rebates. This triggered an audit by SARS. Following the audit,
SARS
indicated that it would issue a revised assessment disallowing the
claim on grounds relating to the interpretation of s 75(1C)
(a)
(iii)
of the Customs and Excise Act 91 of 1964. Langholm Farms approached
the high court and succeeded in obtaining declaratory
relief. On
appeal, this Court set aside the declaratory order.
[14]
In dealing with an argument that the procedure of applying for
declaratory relief was not
competent, this Court held:
‘
SARS
made it clear that refunds may only be claimed on fuel that was
delivered, stored and dispensed from storage facilities on
the
premises of Langholm. In so doing SARS expressed a clear view as to
the proper construction of s 75(1C)
(a)
(iii).
Langholm disagreed and responded with the application, in an effort
to resolve this dispute. It is true that Langholm could
have waited
and provided SARS with the documents it required for a revised
assessment, and then challenged such an assessment,
and argued the
point of law at that stage. The issue is whether it was obliged to do
so. In my view there was nothing objectionable
in Langholm seeking
clarity on an issue of statutory interpretation that would clearly
influence the outcome of SARS’ audit.
If the court accepted
Langholm’s view of the proper interpretation of s
75(1C)
(a)
(iii)
of the Act, SARS would have had to return to the audit and re-assess
its position in the light of any further information
and debate with
Langholm. There was little point in Langholm entering into a debate
or providing further information when none
of it would be at all
relevant given SARS’ legal view. That is exactly the situation
for which declaratory orders are made
and seeking one in the context
of a taxing statute was endorsed by the Constitutional Court in
Metcash
.’
[8]
[15]
SARS conceded that declaratory relief is competent in tax
matters. Its contention,
however, was the ambit for the grant of
declaratory relief in such matters is narrow. It submitted that the
present matter did
not meet the required criteria. It is not
necessary to decide whether the application amounted to an
impermissible objection. This
part of the appeal must turn on whether
MTN made out a case for the high court to entertain the application
for declaratory relief.
[16]
It is correct that courts have jurisdiction to grant a declaration of
rights in tax matters
as was done in
Langholm Farms
.
Metcash
also made this clear:
‘
But
that does not mean that a court is prohibited from hearing an
application for interlocutory relief in the face of a pending
VAT appeal, or from granting other appropriate relief. Nor does
it mean that the jurisdiction is theoretically extant but
actually
illusory. A court would certainly have jurisdiction to grant
declaratory relief to such a vendor if, for instance, it
were to be
alleged that the Commissioner had erred in law in regarding the
applicant as a vendor; or had misapplied the law
in holding a
particular transaction to be liable to VAT; or had acted capriciously
or in bad faith; or had failed to apply the
proper legal test to any
particular set of facts.’
[9]
In
Metcash
,
Kriegler J referred with approval to the following dictum of
McCreath J in
Friedman
and Others NNO v Commissioner for Inland Revenue: In re Phillip Frame
Will Trust v Commissioner for Inland Revenue
:
[10]
‘
I
am in agreement with the finding of the Court in that case that where
the dispute involved no question of fact and is simply one of
law the Commissioner and the Special Court are not the only competent
authorities to decide the issue - at any rate when a declaratory
order such as that in the present case is being sought.’
[17]
It is worth
reviewing matters when the courts have exercised their jurisdiction
to entertain applications for declaratory orders
in tax matters. The
facts in
Langholm
Farms
[11]
were clear and uncontested. A discrete legal issue had arisen for
decision. No further factual information was necessary to resolve
that legal issue. The dispute was therefore ripe for a declaration of
rights. In
Friedman
and Others NNO
,
[12]
the high court was asked to determine the legal question whether a
testamentary trust was a person as defined in the Income Tax
Act.
There was once more an undisputed factual situation on which the
court was asked to pronounce. In
Chancellor,
Masters and Scholars of the University of Oxford v Commissioner for
Inland Revenue
,
[13]
the respondent did not dispute the facts put up by the appellant or
provide any additional material facts.
[14]
The matter turned on whether the appellant was liable to pay income
tax on income derived from the activities of its publishing
branch.
In
Commissioner
for Inland Revenue v Shell Southern Africa Pension Fund
,
[15]
no affidavits were filed by SARS in answer to the application for a
declaration. There was no factual dispute or lack of clarity.
The
issue was whether payment of a lump sum to a dependant of a member of
the pension fund at the discretion of the fund’s
committee
constituted gross income or remuneration. And, finally, in the matter
of
Shell’s
Annandale Farm (Pty) Ltd v Commissioner, South African Revenue
Service
,
[16]
the question was whether Shell was liable for payment of VAT on
compensation received for expropriation. SARS was content to argue
on
the facts put up by the applicant.
[18]
The matters
referred to above show that proceedings for declaratory relief in tax
matters are entertained only in limited circumstances.
All of them
dealt with applications where there were clear and uncontested facts.
That is the bare minimum requirement for a court
to entertain
declaratory relief. Even where that is the case, there are
circumstances where a court will nevertheless decline to
exercise its
discretion to grant a declaratory order. This was explained by Van
Dijkhorst J in
Family
Benefit Friendly Society v Commissioner for Inland Revenue and
Another
:
[17]
‘
When
a Court has to determine whether it should exercise its discretion in
favour of a declaratory order considerations of public policy
come into play. In matters like the present it is a weighty
consideration that the Commissioner for Inland Revenue is placed in
an invidious position. He is requested for a ruling, which he is not
obliged to give. He gives an opinion
ex gratia
. Should it
be favourable the taxpayer accepts it. Should it not be in his
favour and the taxpayer is free to approach the
Court to hear
the dispute, then there is a danger that the Courts may be flooded
with cases wherein entrepreneurs seek certainty
about their tax
liability before embarking on new ventures or schemes. The
Commissioner would be in an invidious position if he
is forced to
defend every tentative opinion he expresses in a Court of law.’
In
other words, there are considerations other than the question
concerning clear and uncontested facts which weigh with courts.
A
primary concern is the opening of the floodgates for applications to
court where certainty is sought from the court prior to
applying a
new strategy.
[19]
In the present matter, the first question is whether there is a
clear, uncontested, sufficient,
set of facts. The distinction between
s 10(18) and s 10(19) of the Act is clear. The latter applies where
the goods or services
to which the holder of the voucher is entitled
are specified on the voucher or, where not specified, where usage or
arrangement
entitles the holder to such specified goods or services.
On the other hand, s 10(18) applies where there is no specification
of
goods or services, either by indication on the voucher, or by
usage or arrangement. The factual enquiry is whether the pre-paid
vouchers fall into one category or the other. Without that enquiry
rendering a clear answer, the grant of declaratory relief would
not
be warranted.
[20]
SARS submitted that the factual position was far from clear. It said
that MTN dealt with
the application largely in the abstract. It had
not put up sufficient or clear facts to allow the court to finally
determine the
entitlement of MTN to apply s 10(18) rather than s
10(19). In particular, the facts were not clear as to precisely how
the
pre-paid vouchers functioned. MTN had provided no evidence of
‘how vouchers are purchased, what information is provided to
customers, and the manner in which vouchers are actually used by
customers’. In addition, the concept of ‘airtime’
has evolved over time due to technology and the use of data and the
like. In the result SARS submitted that, on the facts presented,
it
was not clear what ‘airtime’ actually connoted. Therefore
the matter did not fall within the narrow purview of when
a
declaratory order would be entertained in tax matters.
[21]
MTN submitted that the facts were common cause. It might be so that
certain explanations
were accepted by SARS. However, the sticking
point was the nature of what MTN termed ‘airtime’. The
assertion of MTN
was that airtime was not something in and of itself
– it should be construed as a right to the supply of services.
It explained
that the pre-paid vouchers are purchased for a rand
value. When activated, the subscriber:
‘
.
. . can access any services on the network, up to the value of the
voucher. As the selected services are used or acquired, they
are
charged to the subscriber at the then prevailing tariff, and paid for
through allocation or redemption of the available pre-paid
funds
attributable to the subscriber . . . The pre-paid
amount is effectively currency from which the subscriber
pays for the
services selected from time to time.’
In
support of that contention, MTN explained its administrative approach
to the pre-paid vouchers. When such a voucher is activated,
MTN
‘credits a sum of money equal to the face value of the voucher
to a ledger account linked to the relevant SIM card .
. .’.
This was referred to by MTN as the subscriber’s ‘main
wallet’. When the subscriber accesses a service
on the network,
MTN debits the cost of that service from the balance in the ‘main
wallet’.
[22]
MTN sought to compare the pre-paid vouchers to retail vouchers issued
by a shop or shopping
centre. Retail vouchers are issued for a value
and allow the purchase of any goods stocked at the shop or centre up
to that value.
They effectively function as currency when presented
for the purchase of the selected item. So, too, submitted MTN, the
pre-paid
vouchers. They are issued for a value. The holder can redeem
them for any services offered by MTN up to that value.
[23]
SARS submitted that this, and further explanations of MTN, were far
from clear. It referred
as an example to the terms and conditions
governing the pre-paid vouchers. These stated:
‘“
Airtime”
means the prepaid value which when loaded onto your mobile device
enables you to make or receive calls and/or send
or receive SMSs
and/or allows you to utilise internet services, or content services
on the MTN network.’
SARS
also pointed to the document put up by MTN to explain what was meant
by Digital Services:
‘
Digital
services consist of content subscription services that allow MTN
subscribers to subscribe to and consume Digital services
like Gaming,
Music, Video, Text based notification services etc in exchange for a
daily/weekly/monthly/once off fee settled via
airtime payment.’
[24]
These explanations, it said, appear to support the notion that
airtime is a commodity,
contrary to what MTN claimed. Airtime is what
is acquired by way of the pre-paid vouchers. It can then be utilised
to obtain the
other services offered by MTN. Hence the word ‘settled
via airtime payment.’ There was, accordingly, no clear
explanation
of what is meant by airtime or how it functions. It seems
to me that the submission of SARS concerning this lack of clarity has
considerable merit.
[25]
SARS contended that there was a further less than clear aspect. MTN
offers an extensive
range of ‘services on the network’ to
holders of the pre-paid vouchers. MTN submitted that the services
offered were
constantly expanding. In addition, it said that when a
particular service was accessed, the subscriber cannot expect the
cost to
be the same as when the airtime voucher was purchased. When
these were accessed, the current ruling cost would be deducted from
the subscriber’s airtime balance. As a result, the services
were not specified and did not fall under s 10(19).
[26]
But MTN put up some nine pages listing the services offered by it.
SARS submitted that
this tended to show that the pre-paid vouchers
fell within s 10(19). This was because, even though those
services were not
specified on the pre-paid vouchers, the vouchers
entitled them ‘to receive goods or services . . . which by
usage or arrangement
[entitled] the holder to specified goods or
services’. In the result, SARS submitted that it was not clear
that the services
to which holders of the pre-paid vouchers were
entitled were not specified by usage or arrangement. If they were so
specified,
the pre-paid vouchers would fall under s 10(19).
[27]
Considerable difficulty was experienced during argument in obtaining
clarity on the nature
of airtime as used by MTN and how the pre-paid
vouchers function in practice. This also applied to the question of
whether the
services offered were specified by usage or arrangement.
It seems to me that, at best, the factual position as to both of
these
aspects is distinctly opaque. This is not a matter where there
is a set of clear, sufficient, uncontested, facts. The present matter
therefore differs markedly from those mentioned above where our
courts have entertained applications for declaratory orders in
tax
matters. In that regard, the high court erred when it held that ‘no
. . . further facts or information would alter the
respondent’s
legal view’ and that ‘the applicant’s declaratory
application is properly before this court’.
[28]
In any event, even if the facts were clear and uncontested, it is
doubtful whether this
matter warranted the exercise of the discretion
of the high court to entertain the grant of declaratory relief. It
was a classic
case of MTN wishing to obtain clarity from the high
court on whether it could depart from its prior practice of treating
the pre-paid
vouchers as falling under s 10(19) and apply a new
approach of treating them as falling under s 10(18). It seems to
me
that the nature of the dispute lent itself more properly to
resolution by use of the special machinery of the TAA set up for that
purpose. To hold otherwise might well result in a deluge of similar
applications.
[29]
For these reasons, I consider that the application for declaratory
relief was not appropriate
in this matter. That being the case, the
second issue in the appeal as to whether the ruling was correct or
not need not, indeed
cannot, be decided. This all means that,
although the high court incorrectly entertained declaratory relief,
it was correct in
dismissing the application. The appeal must
therefore fail. Both parties agreed that the costs should follow the
result. The use
of two counsel was warranted.
[30]
In the result, the appeal is dismissed with costs, including those of
two counsel where
used.
T
R GORVEN
JUDGE
OF APPEAL
Appearances
For
appellant: M
W Janisch SC
Instructed
by: Werksmans
Attorneys, Sandton
Symington De Kok
Attorneys, Bloemfontein
For
respondent: A R
Sholto-Douglas SC (with him S Dzakwa)
Instructed
by: State
Attorney, Cape Town
State Attorney,
Bloemfontein
[1]
For the sake of convenience,
I
shall refer to the respondent as SARS despite the Commissioner of
SARS being the party. The rulings mentioned hereunder are
issued by
the Commissioner but SARS as an entity gives effect to the rulings.
I am mindful of the distinction between the Commissioner
and SARS
but this distinction is not material in this matter.
[2]
Their
emphasis.
[3]
SARS
used
slightly different wording but agreed on the distinction.
[4]
The
relevant parts of the definition of administrative action are:
‘
.
. .
any decision taken, or any failure to take a decision,
by-
(a)
an
organ of state, when-
(i)
exercising a power in terms of the Constitution or a provincial
constitution; or
(ii)
exercising a public power or performing a public function in terms
of any legislation; or
(b)
a
natural or juristic person, other than an organ of state, when
exercising a public power or performing a public function in
terms
of an empowering provision,
which
adversely affects the rights of any person and which has a direct,
external legal effect . . .’.
[5]
Section 82(1)
of the Tax Administration Act 28 of 2011 (the TAA) which provides:
‘
If
an “advance ruling” applies to a person in accordance
with section 83, then SARS must interpret or apply the applicable
tax Act to the person in accordance with the ruling.’
[6]
10
Lawsa
3
ed para 488 explains:
‘
An
appeal from the tax court lies to the full bench of the provincial
division of the High Court having jurisdiction in the
area
where the tax court sat, or in two circumstances to the Supreme
Court of Appeal. Those circumstances are where the court
was
initially composed of three judges and where the president of the
tax court grants leave for a direct appeal.’
As
authority for an appeal lying to the full bench rather than the full
court, the learned author says, in footnote 18:
‘
The
language of s 133(2) has not been amended to take
account of the
Superior Courts Act 10 of 2013
. As a result it
is unclear whether an appeal from a tax court may lie to the full
bench of a division sitting at a local seat
of that division. It is
submitted that it can in the light of
s 6(4)(a)
of
the latter Act.’
[7]
Commissioner
for the South African Revenue Service v Langholm Farms (Pty) Ltd
[2019] ZASCA 163.
[8]
Ibid
para 10. The reference is to
Metcash
Trading Limited v Commissioner South African Revenue Services and
Another
[2000] ZACC 21
;
2001 (1) SA 1109
(CC) para 44.
[9]
Metcash
para 71.
[10]
Friedman
and Others NNO v Commissioner for Inland Revenue: In re Phillip
Frame Will Trust v Commissioner for Inland Revenue
1991 (2) SA 340
(W) at 341I-J. The judgment of McCreath J was
confirmed by this Court in
Commissioner
for Inland Revenue v Friedman and Others NNO
[1992] ZASCA 190
;
1993 (1) SA 353
(A);
[1993] 1 All SA 306
(A). It
dealt with the merits of the declaration granted by him without
discussion of the point at issue here.
[11]
Footnote
6.
[12]
Footnote
9.
[13]
Chancellor,
Masters and Scholars of the University of Oxford v Commissioner for
Inland Revenue
[1995] ZASCA 157
;
1996 (1) SA 1196
(SCA);
[1996] 1 All SA 287
(A).
[14]
University
of Oxford
at 1202C-E.
[15]
Commissioner
for Inland Revenue v Shell Southern Africa Pension Fund
1984 (1) SA 672 (A).
[16]
Shell’s
Annandale Farm (Pty) Ltd v Commissioner, South African Revenue
Service
2000 (3) SA 564
(C).
[17]
Family
Benefit Friendly Society v Commissioner for Inland Revenue and
Another
1995 (4) SA 120
(T) at 126C.
sino noindex
make_database footer start
Similar Cases
Assmang (Pty) Ltd v Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service and Others (311/2024) [2025] ZASCA 121 (29 August 2025)
[2025] ZASCA 121Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa98% similar
BP Southern Africa (Pty) Ltd v Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service (801/2022) [2024] ZASCA 2; 87 SATC 34; 2025 (4) SA 59 (SCA) (12 January 2024)
[2024] ZASCA 2Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa98% similar
Pacific Solar Technologies (Pty) Ltd v The Commissioner of the South African Revenue Service (715/2021) [2022] ZASCA 166; 85 SATC 451 (29 November 2022)
[2022] ZASCA 166Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa98% similar
PFC Properties (Pty) Ltd v Commissioner for the South African Revenue Services and Others (543/21; 409/22) [2023] ZASCA 111; 2024 (1) SA 400 (SCA) (21 July 2023)
[2023] ZASCA 111Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa97% similar
Independent Communications Authority of South Africa and Others v Open Heaven Community Radio and Others (1133/2023) [2025] ZASCA 117; [2025] 4 All SA 321 (SCA); 2026 (1) SA 70 (SCA) (12 August 2025)
[2025] ZASCA 117Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa97% similar