Case Law[2022] ZASCA 153South Africa
CSARS v The Thistle Trust (516/2021) [2022] ZASCA 153; 2023 (2) SA 120 (SCA); 85 SATC 347 (7 November 2022)
Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa
7 November 2022
Headnotes
Summary: Revenue – capital gains tax – Income Tax Act 58 of 1962 – capital gains determined in respect of trusts’ disposal of assets vested in a resident trust beneficiary, who in turn made a distribution to its beneficiaries in the same year of assessment – whether s 25B or para 80(2) of Schedule 8 is applicable – whether the appellant was correct in imposing an understatement penalty of 50% and interest.
Judgment
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## CSARS v The Thistle Trust (516/2021) [2022] ZASCA 153; 2023 (2) SA 120 (SCA); 85 SATC 347 (7 November 2022)
CSARS v The Thistle Trust (516/2021) [2022] ZASCA 153; 2023 (2) SA 120 (SCA); 85 SATC 347 (7 November 2022)
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sino date 7 November 2022
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Reportable
Case
No: 516/2021
In
the matter between:
THE
COMMISSIONER FOR THE SOUTH AFRICAN
REVENUE
SERVICE
APPELLANT
and
THE
THISTLE
TRUST
RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
CSARS
v The Thistle Trust
(516/2021)
[2022]
ZASCA 153
(7 November 2022)
Coram:
DAMBUZA ADP and VAN DER MERWE and
HUGHES JJA and GOOSEN and DAFFUE AJJA
Heard:
2 September 2022
Delivered:
7 November 2022
Summary:
Revenue – capital gains tax – Income
Tax Act 58 of 1962 – capital gains determined in respect of
trusts’
disposal of assets vested in a resident trust
beneficiary, who in turn made a distribution to its beneficiaries in
the same year
of assessment – whether s 25B or para 80(2) of
Schedule 8 is applicable – whether the appellant was correct in
imposing
an understatement penalty of 50% and interest.
ORDER
On
appeal from:
The Tax Court, Gauteng
(Wright J sitting as a court of appeal):
1
The appeal succeeds with costs.
2
The order of the Tax Court, Gauteng, is set aside
and replaced with the following order:
(a) The appeal is upheld
only to the extent that the understatement penalty is set aside.
(b) There is no order as
to costs.’
JUDGMENT
Hughes
JA (
Dambuza ADP and Van der Merwe JA and
Goosen and Daffue AJJA
concurring):
[1]
This is an appeal against the decision of the Gauteng Tax Court (the
tax
court) upholding an appeal against an additional assessment
raised by the appellant (SARS) against the respondent (the Thistle
Trust). The appeal is with the leave of the tax court.
[2]
The circumstances giving rise to the additional assessments are as
follows.
The Thistle Trust is a beneficiary of various trusts that
comprised the Zenprop Group. The trusts, referred to as Tier 1 Trusts
comprised a group of ten vesting trusts that conduct the business of
the Zenprop Group, a group of property owners and developers.
In the
2014, 2015 and 2016 tax periods, the Tier 1 Trusts disposed of
certain capital assets. The capital gains so realised were
distributed,
inter alia
, to the Thistle Trust in the same tax
period. The Thistle Trust, in turn, in the same tax periods,
distributed the amounts it received
to its beneficiaries. It treated
the proceeds received as taxable in the hands of its beneficiaries.
[3]
SARS raised an additional assessment dated 21 September 2018 for the
period
2014, 2015 and 2016, taxing the amounts received by the
Thistle Trust as taxable in its hands. SARS also imposed an
understatement
penalty against the Thistle Trust and required it to
pay interest on the assessed liability.
[4]
The Thistle Trust filed an objection to the additional assessment.
The
main thrust of the objection was that:
‘
having
regard to the provisions of section 25B of the ITA and paragraph
80(2) of the Eighth Schedule to the ITA (“the Eighth
Schedule”), the capital gains . . . ought not to have been
taxed as our client derived no taxable income in this regard,
and
such gains were properly taxable in the hands of our client’s
beneficiaries under those provisions of the ITA.’
[5]
SARS disallowed the objection. In March 2021, the Thistle Trust
appealed
to the tax court. The tax court found that the vesting
trusts (ie, the Tier 1 Trusts) had disposed of capital assets and
made capital
gains. It held that the capital gains distributed to the
Thistle Trust and subsequently passed on to its beneficiaries,
constituted
‘amounts’ that fell within the purview of ss
25B(1), 25B(2), and paragraph 80(2) of the Eighth Schedule of the
Income
Tax Act 58 of 1962 (the ITA). Accordingly, the distribution to
the beneficiaries of the Thistle Trust was a distribution of capital
gains taxable in the hands of its beneficiaries. The tax court,
therefore, set aside the additional assessments.
The
issues
[6]
Two crisp issues arise. The first is whether the capital gains
accrued
as a result of the disposal of capital assets by the Tier 1
Trusts are taxable in the hands of the Thistle Trust or in the hands
of the beneficiaries of the Thistle Trust to whom those gains were
distributed. The second concerns the imposition of an understatement
penalty. It arises conditionally in the event that it is found that
the gains are taxable in the hands of the Thistle Trust. In
that
event, the question is whether the circumstances giving rise to the
tax treatment by the Thistle Trust of the further distribution
to its
beneficiaries, warrants the imposition of an understatement penalty.
The
statutory framework
[7]
The
taxation of trusts came about as a result of the decision of
CIR
v Friedman (Friedman
).
[1]
In
Friedman,
the court held that a trust was not a legal persona nor a taxable
entity. The practice had been that the trustees, as representative
taxpayers, were subject to the tax imposed on trust income that
accrued to the trust. The court found that since a trust was not
a
legal person and not a taxpayer, the trustee could not be a
representative taxpayer of the trust. Following this judgment, the
ITA was amended to include a trust in the definition of a ‘person’
in s 1 of the ITA.
[8]
Subsequently, s 25B was included in the ITA. The introduction of the
section
was to provide for the taxation of income accrued to trusts
and their beneficiaries. The qualifier was that the trust or
beneficiary
concerned would only be taxed if it had a vested right in
the ‘amount’ received or accrued. Put differently, in
terms
of s 25B, the trust or beneficiary had to have a vested right
in the ‘amount’ received or acquired, otherwise the
amount
would be taxable in the hands of the trust.
[9]
Section 25B of the ITA reads:
‘
(1)
Any amount (other than an amount of a capital nature which is not
included in gross income or an amount contemplated in paragraph
3B of
the Second Schedule) received by or accrued to or in favour of any
person during any year of assessment in his or her capacity
as the
trustee of a trust, shall, subject to the provisions of section 7, to
the extent to which that amount has been derived for
the immediate or
future benefit of any ascertained beneficiary who has a vested right
to that amount during that year, be deemed
to be an amount which has
accrued to that beneficiary, and to the extent to which that amount
is not so derived, be deemed to be
an amount which has accrued to
that trust.
(2)
Where a beneficiary has acquired a vested right to any amount
referred to in subsection (1) in consequence of the exercise by
the
trustee of a discretion vested in him or her in terms of the relevant
deed of trust, agreement or will of a deceased person,
that amount
shall for the purposes of that subsection be deemed to have been
derived for the benefit of that beneficiary.’
[10]
Capital
gains tax was first introduced by s 26A of the ITA.
[2]
The section provided that taxable capital gains were to be determined
in terms of the Eighth Schedule.
[3]
A capital gain is determined when the proceeds derived from the
disposal of an asset exceed that of its base cost.
[4]
[11]
Paragraph 80 of the Eighth Schedule provides for capital gain
attributed to a beneficiary
as follows:
‘
80(1)
Subject to paragraphs 68, 69 and 71, where a trust vests an asset in
a beneficiary of that trust . . .
who is a resident
, and
determines a capital gain in respect of that disposal or, if that
trust is not a resident, would have determined a capital
gain in
respect of that disposal had it been a resident—
(a)
that capital gain
must be disregarded for the purpose of
calculating the aggregate capital gain or aggregate capital loss of
the trust; and
(b)
that capital gain or the amount that would have been determined as a
capital gain
must be taken into account
as a capital gain
for
the purpose of calculating the aggregate capital gain or aggregate
capital loss of the beneficiary to whom that asset was so
disposed
of
.
(2)
Subject to paragraphs 64E, 68, 69 and 71, where a trust determines a
capital gain in respect of the disposal of an asset in
a year of
assessment during which a beneficiary of that trust (other than any
person contemplated in paragraph 62 (a) to (e))
who is a resident
has a vested right or acquires a vested right
(including a right
created by the exercise of a discretion) to an amount derived from
that capital gain but not to the asset disposed
of, an amount that is
equal to so much of the amount to which that beneficiary of that
trust is entitled in terms of that right—
(a)
must be disregarded for the purpose of calculating the aggregate
capital gain or aggregate capital loss of the trust; and
(b)
must be taken into account as a capital gain for the purpose of
calculating the aggregate capital gain or aggregate capital
loss of
that beneficiary.
’ (Emphasis added.)
Submissions
[12]
SARS argued that paragraph 80(2) of the Eighth Schedule applies
exclusively and that s
25B of the ITA does not apply. SARS argued
that capital gains tax is expressly dealt with in the Eighth
Schedule. These provisions
were introduced subsequent to the
amendments providing for the taxation of income accrued by trusts or
their beneficiaries. Section
26A, read with the Eighth Schedule,
provides for a specific form of tax and for the effect of the vesting
of such capital gains
as are realised in the hands of successive
trusts.
[13]
SARS further argued that the proceeds of the disposal of capital
assets by the Tier 1 Trusts
constituted capital gains in the hands of
the Tier 1 Trusts. Those trusts, however, distributed the capital
gains to the Thistle
Trust. Paragraph 80(2), therefore, applies. The
Thistle Trust acquired a vested right to the capital gains
distributed to it but
acquired no vested right to the disposed
capital assets. The Thistle Trust distributed the amount it received
to its beneficiaries.
In doing so, it did not determine a capital
gain in respect of the disposal of a capital asset as is required by
paragraph 80(2)
of the Schedule. Thus, insofar as the beneficiaries
of the Thistle Trust are concerned, the provisions of 80(2) do not
apply. Section
80(2) determines the tax position of the Thistle
Trust. The capital gains accrued upon the disposal of capital assets
by the Tier
1 Trusts are, therefore, taxable in the hands of the
Thistle Trust.
[14]
In so far as s 25B of the ITA is concerned, SARS argued that the
section does not apply
as its provisions concern the taxation of
income that accrues to trusts and their beneficiaries. It was argued
that the reference
to ‘amounts’ which accrues to trusts
does not include amounts or proceeds of a capital nature. Those are
dealt with
in the Eighth Schedule.
[15]
It was argued that the Tax Court had erred in finding that s 25B,
when read in conjunction
with paragraph 80(2) of the Schedule, had
the effect that the distributions to the beneficiaries of the Thistle
Trust were taxable
in their hands.
[16]
The Thistle Trust contended that both paragraphs 80(1) and 80(2) are
applicable. Both support
a ‘see-through’ approach when
dealing with the taxation of capital gains which arises from the
disposal of assets by
a trust to or for the benefit of the resident
beneficiaries. The gains attained are taxable in the hands of the
resident beneficiaries.
In making the argument, counsel for the
Thistle Trust submitted that this is evident on a reading of
paragraph 11(1)
(d)
, which provides that a disposal for capital
gains tax purposes includes the vesting of an interest in an asset of
a trust in a
beneficiary.
[17]
The Thistle Trust argued that paragraph 80(2) ought to be read with s
25B. It submitted
that ‘an amount’ in the said section is
inclusive of capital gains.
Discussion
[18]
The first
question involves the interpretation and application of the relevant
provisions of the ITA and the Eighth Schedule to
the ITA. Insofar as
the interpretation exercise is concerned, it is apposite to call to
mind what this Court said in
Commissioner,
South African Revenue Service v United Manganese of Kalahari (Pty)
Ltd
:
[5]
‘
It
is unnecessary to rehearse the established approach to the
interpretation of statutes set out in
Endumeni
and approved by the Constitutional Court in
Big
Five Duty Free
. It is an
objective unitary process where consideration must be given to the
language used in the light of the ordinary rules of
grammar and
syntax; the context in which the provision appears; the apparent
purpose to which it is directed and the material known
to those
responsible for its production. The approach is as applicable to
taxing statutes as to any other statute. The
inevitable
point of departure is the language used in the provision under
consideration.’
(Footnotes Omitted.)
[19]
When examining ss 25B(1) and 25B(2) to determine what ‘any
amount’ constitutes,
the sections must be read as a whole.
Section 25B(3) provides insight into the amount that the legislator
was concerned with in
the application of this section. That amount
was the ‘taxable income derived by way of any amount’.
Section 25B, read
in its entirety, demonstrates that the amount is of
a taxable income nature and not of a capital gains nature –
‘any
amount’ will thus not include capital gains.
[20]
It bears mentioning that s 25B was introduced by the legislature in
1991, while capital
gains tax came into existence in 2001. Logically,
if capital gains did not exist, s 25B could not have been
intended to apply
to capital gains. Further, the insertion of ‘other
than an amount of a capital nature which is not included in gross
income’
in the section after any amount, which came about after
capital gains was introduced, is yet another indicator that this
section
does not apply to an amount of the nature of a capital gains.
[21]
Recently
this Court in
Milnerton
Estate Ltd v CSARS
stated that:
[6]
‘
.
. . capital gains, the determination of the amount of any capital
gain falling to be included in the taxpayer’s taxable
income is
a matter dealt with in the Eighth Schedule to the Act . . . and on
its face the Schedule seems to provide a self-contained
method for
determining whether a capital gain or loss has arisen.’
[22]
When the provisions are read as a whole and in context, it is
apparent that the legislature
intended that s 25B be applied to the
taxation of income that accrues to a trust or its beneficiaries. In
contrast, the Eighth
Schedule is to be applied to the taxation of
capital gains that accrue to trusts or their beneficiaries. The tax
court accordingly
erred in finding that s 25B applied in this
instance.
[23]
Counsel for the Thistle Trust argued that the ‘conduit-pipe
principle’ was
applicable in this case. He argued from the
premise that the capital gains that the Tier 1 Trusts distributed to
the Thistle Trust
amounted to an asset which, in fact, vested in its
beneficiaries. Therefore, so it was contended, the Thistle Trust was
no more
than a conduit for the gain that flowed through it and is
accordingly not subject to be taxed on the gain.
[24]
In
Armstrong
v the Commissioner of Inland Revenue,
[7]
the conduit-pipe principle was discussed for the first time. The
principle became entrenched in our law in
Secretary
for Inland Revenue v Rosen
(
Rosen
).
[8]
Rosen
established
that an amount or dividend received by a trust and immediately passed
on to a beneficiary in the same year in which
it was received would
be regarded as having accrued to such beneficiary as opposed to the
trust that received it. The conduit-pipe
would thus be open, and the
trust would be no more than a conduit for the amount or dividend to
flow through. Trollip JA cautioned
in
Rosen
that while the principle was applicable for general application in
our tax system, it ought only to be applied in appropriate
circumstances to be determined on a case-by-case basis.
[25]
The facts of this case do not support the application of the ‘conduit
pipe principle’.
The Tier 1 Trusts vested the capital gains in
the Thistle Trust which accordingly held a vested right therein. The
distribution
to it of the accrued gains resulted in it receiving
those gains as of right. The Thistle Trust did not dispose of any
capital asset
nor determine a capital gain that was distributed to
its beneficiaries. Instead, it distributed monies that vested in it
as of
right. In these circumstances, the ‘conduit principle’
does not apply.
[26]
Paragraph 80 (2) of the Schedule, properly interpreted and applied,
requires that the capital
gains accrued upon the disposal of assets
by the Tier 1 Trusts are to be taxed in the hands of the Thistle
Trust and not its beneficiaries
to whom it distributed those gains.
In the circumstances, SARS was correct to raise the additional
assessment for the relevant
tax periods.
Understatement
of penalties
[27]
As
indicated earlier in this judgment, the second question arises in the
event that it is found that the assessment was correctly
raised. The
imposition of an understatement penalty arises when a taxpayer
submits a tax return that understates its taxable or
deemed taxable
income. In such circumstances, SARS is entitled to levy a penalty
based upon the circumstances giving rise to the
understatement. The
Tax Administration Act 28 of 2011 (the TAA) provides that the
penalty, as determined by the TAA, is payable
unless the
understatement arises from a
bona
fide
inadvertent error.
[9]
Section
223 of the TAA sets the relevant percentages, in a table format, to
be allocated for the different behavioural concerns
of a taxpayer.
These cover instances ranging from a taxpayer failing to take
reasonable care to instances where the taxpayer is
grossly negligent.
[28]
In this matter, SARS imposed an understatement penalty of R1 460 092,
which translated
to a penalty of 50% levied against the Thistle
Trust. As set out in the table, a penalty of 50% for a standard case
relates to
a taxpayer having ‘no reasonable grounds for the
“tax position” taken by the taxpayer’. It is common
cause
that the Thistle Trust had obtained a legal opinion which
another entity within the Zenprop Group had sought.
[29]
SARS initially adopted the position that, in the light of the legal
opinion, it should
be concluded that the Thistle Trust had
consciously and deliberately adopted the position it took when it
elected to distribute
the amounts of the capital gains as it did.
However, during the argument before us, counsel for SARS conceded,
correctly, that
the understatement by the Thistle Trust was a
bona
fide
and inadvertent error as it had believed that s 25B was
applicable to its case. Though the Thistle Trust erred, it did so in
good
faith and acted unintentionally. In the circumstances, it was
conceded that SARS was not entitled to levy the understatement
penalty.
Interest
[30]
Lastly, turning to the matter of interest, as the capital gains tax
assessment favours
SARS, the Thistle Trust would be liable for
interest accrued, in terms of
s
89
quat
(2)
of the ITA. If the taxable income exceeded, at the most, R50 000,
and the normal tax payable exceeds the credit amount
in that year,
interest would be payable by the taxpayer at the prescribed rate on
the amount by which normal tax exceeds the credit
amount.
[10]
In argument before us, counsel for the Thistle Trust correctly
conceded that SARS, if successful, would be entitled to the interest
claimed.
[31]
As a result, I make the following order:
1
The appeal succeeds with costs.
2
The order of the Tax Court, Gauteng, is set aside
and replaced with the following order:
(a) The appeal is upheld
only to the extent that the understatement penalty raised is set
aside.
(b) There is no order as
to costs.’
W
HUGHES
JUDGE
OF APPEAL
APPEARANCES
For
appellant:
M A Chohan SC
Instructed
by:
Madiba Motsai Masitenyane
& Githiri Inc., Johannesburg
Phatshoane Henney
Attorneys, Bloemfontein.
For
respondent:
T S Emslie SC
Instructed
by:
Werksmans Attorneys,
Johannesburg
Symington & De Kok,
Bloemfontein.
[1]
CIR v
Friedman and Others NNO
[1992] ZASCA 190
;
1993 (1) SA 353
(A) at 371D-F.
[2]
S
26A was inserted by
s 14
of the
Taxation Laws Amendment Act 5 of
2001
.
[3]
Section 26A
provides that:
‘
There
shall be included in the taxable income of a person for a year of
assessment the taxable capital gain of that person for
that year of
assessment, as determined in terms of the Eighth Schedule.’
[4]
Paragraph 3
(a)
of the Eighth Schedule.
[5]
See
C:SARS
v United Manganese of Kalahari (Pty) Ltd
[2020]
ZASCA 16
;
2020 (4) SA 428
(SCA) para 8.
See
also
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
[2012]
ZASCA 13
;
2012 (4) SA 593
(SCA);
[2012] 2 All SA 262
para 18;
Airports
Company South Africa v Big Five Duty Free (Pty) Ltd and Others
[2018] ZACC 33
;
2019 (5) SA 1
(CC) para 29;
Commissioner,
South African Revenue Service v Bosch and Another
[2014]
ZASCA 171
;
2015 (2) SA 174
(SCA) para 9
.
[6]
Milnerton
Estates Ltd v CSARS
[2018] ZASCA 155
;
2019 (2) SA 386
(SCA) para 22.
[7]
Armstrong
v Commissioner of Inland Revenue
1938 AD 343
at 348-349.
[8]
Secretary
for Inland Revenue v Rosen
1971 (1) SA 172
(A) at 190H-191A.
[9]
Section 222
(1) of the TAA provides:
‘
In
the event of an “understatement” by the taxpayer, the
taxpayer must pay, in addition to the “tax” payable
for
the relevant tax period, the understatement penalty determined under
subsection (2) unless the “understatement”
results from
a
bona fide
inadvertent error.’
[10]
Section 89
quat
(2):
‘
(2)
If the taxable income of any provisional taxpayer as finally
determined for any year of assessment exceeds –
(a)
R20 000 in the case of a company; or
(b)
R50 000 in the case of any person other than a company, and the
normal tax payable by him in respect of such taxable
income exceeds
the credit amount in relation to such year, interest shall, subject
to the provisions of subsection (3), be payable
by the taxpayer at
the prescribed rate on the amount by which such normal tax exceeds
the credit amount, such interest being
calculated from the effective
date in relation to the said year until the date of assessment of
such normal tax.’
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