Case Law[2022] ZASCA 166South Africa
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)
Headnotes
Summary: Customs and Excise Act 91 of 1964 – whether solar home system has the essential character of an energy source and power generation device or that of a lighting kit – product has a utility of its own – it constitutes a fully functioning lamp – classifiable under tariff heading 9405.40.21 of Part 1 of Schedule 1 to the Act.
Judgment
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# South Africa: Supreme Court of Appeal
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## 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)
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)
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sino date 29 November 2022
THE
SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
JUDGMENT
Reportable
Case
no: 715/2021
In
the matter between:
PACIFIC
SOLAR TECHNOLOGIES (PTY) LTD
APPELLANT
and
THE
COMMISSIONER OF THE SOUTH
AFRICAN
REVENUE SERVICE
RESPONDENT
Neutral
citation:
Pacific
Solar Technologies (Pty) Ltd v The Commissioner of the South African
Revenue Service
(Case no 715/2021)
[2022] ZASCA 166
(29 November 2022)
Coram:
PONNAN, GORVEN and MABINDLA-BOQWANA JJA
and BASSON and MASIPA AJJA
Heard:
15 November 2022
Delivered:
29 November 2022
Summary:
Customs and Excise Act 91 of 1964 –
whether solar home system has the essential character of an energy
source and power generation
device or that of a lighting kit –
product has a utility of its own – it constitutes a
fully functioning lamp – classifiable under tariff heading
9405.40.21
of Part 1 of Schedule 1 to the Act.
ORDER
On
appeal from
: Gauteng Division of the
High Court, Pretoria (Baloyi-Mere AJ, sitting as court of first
instance):
1
The appeal is dismissed with costs, including those of two counsel.
2
The order of the high court is amended by the addition of the
following:
‘
The
product is determined to be classifiable under tariff heading
9405.40.21 of Part 1 of Schedule 1 to the Customs and Excise Act
91
of 1964.’
JUDGMENT
Ponnan
JA (Gorven and Mabindla-Boqwana JJA and Basson and Masipa AJJA
concurring)
[1]
This is an appeal against an order made under s 47(9)
(e)
of
the Customs and Excise Act 91 of 1964 (the Act) by Baloyi-Mere AJ in
the Gauteng Division of the High Court, Pretoria (the high
court).
[2]
The amount of customs duty payable upon importation depends on the
tariff heading
(TH) or sub-heading in Part 1 of Schedule 1 to the
Act, under which the product is to be classified. The appellant,
Pacific Solar
Technologies (Pty) Ltd (Pacific Solar), imports five
different types of what are described as solar home systems (the
product),
which was entered under TH 8501.31. On 29 March 2018, the
respondent, the Commissioner of the South African Revenue Service
(the
Commissioner), made tariff determinations in respect of two of
the models imported by Pacific Solar, namely the PVES 20W and PVES
100W models. The Commissioner determined that both (being the only
two relevant for the purposes of this appeal) were classifiable
under
TH 9405.40.90.
[3]
Preliminarily, three observations need to be made. First, the
Commissioner explained
that the initial classification under TH
9405.40.90 was made in error and that the correct classification was
rather TH 9405.40.21.
Nothing turns on that, as the matter proceeded
and was argued on the latter basis before the high court. Second,
although Pacific
Solar had specifically sought an order that ‘[t]he
determinations made by the Commissioner that [the product] imported
by
[Pacific Solar] be classified under TH 9405.40 be set aside and be
substituted with a determination that the imported goods be
classified under TH 8501.31’, the high court merely dismissed
the application with costs including those of two counsel. In
so
doing, the court appears to have lost from sight that as the
application before it was a hearing
de novo
, it ought in that
regard to have made a formal determination and order. Before us, it
was accepted that when regard is had to the
judgment of the high
court as a whole, the absence of a formal determination was clearly
due to an oversight on the part of the
learned judge; we were
accordingly asked to rectify the shortcoming by adding the requisite
order. Third, as the only competing
headings were respectively ‘8501’
and ‘9405’, the reference by the high court to heading
‘9404’
(instead of ‘9405’) was one clearly in
error.
[4]
It is unnecessary for the purposes of this judgment to discuss once
again the general
principles of tariff classification. Those were
recently restated in
Samsung Electronics SA (Pty) Ltd v The
Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service
[2022] ZASCA
126.
[5]
The two competing tariff headings in this case are 8501.31 (as
contended by Pacific
Solar) and 9405.40.21 (as contended by the
Commissioner). They respectively provide:
‘
8501
– electric motors and generators (excluding generating sets)
8501.31
– Of an output not exceeding 750W.’
‘
9405
– Lamps and lighting fittings including searchlights and
spotlights and part thereof, not elsewhere specified or included;
illuminated signs, illuminated name-plates and the like, having a
permanently fixed light source, and parts thereof not elsewhere
specified or included.
9405.40
– Other electric lamps and lighting fittings.
9405.40.21
– Other light fittings, containing light emitting diodes (LED)
as a source of illumination.’
[6]
The Section Notes and Explanatory Notes to Section XVI of the
Harmonized Commodity
Description and Coding System dated 14 June 1983
provide:
‘
3.
Unless the context otherwise requires, composite machines consisting
of two or more machines fitted together to form a whole
and other
machines designed for the purpose of performing two or more
complementary or alternative functions are to be classified
as if
consisting only of that component or as being that machine which
performs the principal function.
4.
Where a machine (including a combination of machines) consists of
individual components (whether separate or interconnected by
piping,
by transmission devices, by electric cables or by other devices)
intended to contribute together to a clearly defined function
covered
by one of the headings in Chapter 84 or Chapter 85, then the whole
falls to be classified in the heading appropriate to
that function.’
[7]
Pacific Solar contends that ‘Other electric lamps and lighting
fittings’
in the tariff sub-heading 9405.40, refers to the
source of illumination, for example, the globe or LED. In order to
address this
argument, it is necessary that regard also be had to the
relevant explanatory note to tariff heading 94.05 and subheading
9405.40.
It provides:
‘
Lamps
and light fittings of this group can be constituted of any material
(excluding those materials described in Note 1 to Chapter
71) and use
any source of light (candles, oil, petrol, paraffin (or kerosene),
gas, acetylene, electricity, etc.). Electrical lamps
and lighting
fittings of this heading may be equipped with lamp-holders, switches,
flex and plugs, transformers, etc., or, as in
the case of fluorescent
strip fixtures, a starter or a ballast.’
[8]
The explanation that ‘lamps and lighting fittings . . . can . .
. use any source
of light’ and ‘may be equipped’
with any type of components alluded to, are destructive of Pacific
Solar’s
contention. TH 9405.40.21 gives further effect to the
provisions in the heading, as explained and supported by the
explanatory
note. It describes the lamps classifiable therein with
reference to both the lamp/light fitting and the light source. The
words
‘containing light emitting diodes (LED) as a source of
illumination’ make it clear that the product to be classified
is the ‘light fittings’.
[9]
As presented on importation, the product, which bears the description
‘Solar
Lighting Kit’, comprised the following three main
components: (a) a solar panel; (b) a power bank (battery and
controller);
and (c) LEDs (including the cabling). Although there are
some issues on which the experts do not agree, which relate in the
main
to finer technical aspects and not the fundamental features of
the product, it is not in dispute between them that, as presented
upon importation, the kits are fully functional lamps. It is also not
in dispute that the product is similar to that which formed
the
subject of the dispute in
Ellies
Electronics (Pty) Ltd v The South African Revenue Service
.
[1]
[10]
In that regard, Pacific Solar’s expert, Professor Fourie,
stated:
‘
[54]
I have compared the Ellies Product with the Solar Home System. The
Solar Home System has been discussed in detail above.
[55]
The Ellies Products are very similar to the Solar Home System. The
only clear difference is the power ratings or output. The
Solar Home
System has a much higher power rating, allowing a wider range of
electronics to be powered either alone or simultaneously
than the
Ellies Products.
[56]
I have physically verified that the Solar Home System can power
electronics in parallel with the LED lamps, or even when no
LED lamps
are present. From what I can gather from documentation, the Ellies
products can do the same.
[57]
Apart from the difference in power rating or output, the Solar Home
System and Ellies Product are very similar. I cannot verify
the exact
DC connectors on the Ellies Products, but it looks probable that the
Ellies lamp connectors use the very same DC connectors
as the Solar
Home System. In that case, lamps are completely interchangeable
between the Ellies and Solar Home System, which would
nullify any
claim that the lamps are dependent on their specific solar power
units. Even if the DC connector sizes differ, these
are all industry
standard.
[58]
As for the lamps: the Ellies Products and the Solar Home System
products all use the same standard E27 screw connector, so
that the
lamps can be directly interchanged between the Ellies Products and
the Solar Home System and they would work with any
of the devices.
The lamps were thus clearly not designed to be used specifically with
the products with which they are sold, but
are added as
standard
accessories
to the solar power generators for both the Ellies
Product and the Solar Home System.’
[11]
In the
Ellies Electronics
matter, Van der Westhuizen J
observed:
‘
The
point of dispute is a narrow one. The issue is whether the product is
merely a generator, or, a source of illumination as described
in
Tariff Heading 9405.40.21, as contended for by the respondent.
In
considering this dispute, what has to be determined is whether the
product can be described having an essential part, or whether
the
product has no essential part but is made up of different components,
all having no essential characteristics.’
[2]
[12]
The learned judge held:
‘
The
product as presented, and as described in the product manual or data
sheet supplied therewith, is in my view clearly aimed at
supplying an
alternative light source. It is irrelevant for what the end user may
use the product.
Further
in my view, had the product as presented not contained the lights,
the approach adopted by the applicant and as contended
for on its
behalf, may have been persuasive. However, the inclusion of the
lights, as part of the product, cannot be ignored .
. . The inclusion
of the lights have a purpose. That purpose is clearly defined by the
combination of the three main components
in the package and as
defined in the product manual or data sheet. The primary design and
use of the product is a solar panel light
kit.
The
primary design and use of the product being a solar power panel light
kit, the product as presented cannot fall under Tariff
Heading 85.01
“–
Electric motors and generators (excluding
generating sets
)” of Part 1 of Schedule No 1 to the Customs
and Excise Act.
The
more appropriate Tariff Heading, in my view, is that of “9405.40.21”
of Schedule 1, “
Lamps
and lighting fittings, including searchlights and spotlights and
parts thereof not elsewhere specified or included: Other
electric
lamps and lighting fittings: Other [light fittings], containing light
emitting diodes (LED) as source of illumination
.”.’
[3]
[13]
This accords with what was said by this Court (per Heher JA) in
Commissioner
for the South African Revenue Services v LG Electronics SA (Pty)
Ltd
.
[4]
In that matter, the respondent, LG Electronics, imported plasma
display screens from Korea. It also imported tuners (also described
as interface boards) from the same source. When the two were
appropriately combined, they constituted a television set. A tuner
is
the means by which television signals are received and converted to
an optical image on the screen. Absent a tuner, the screen
lacked the
essential character of a complete television set. The screens, which
were per se functional video monitors, were sold
and used as such.
Although the overwhelming use by retailers and the public of the two
items was in combination as a television
set, the respondent did not
itself assemble the screens and tuners into television sets, but sold
them separately. This Court accepted
that the modus operandi of the
respondent was what it purports to be, namely the importation of two
separate items, each having
its own commercial utility.
[14]
On that score, Heher JA reasoned:
‘
While
it is clear that each determination must be made according to the
salient facts attaching to the goods in question (and, in
particular,
its objective characteristics), and while in one case an engine may
properly be regarded as the essence of the goods,
in another a frame
or chassis may be sufficient to satisfy that test. In
Autoware
(Pty) Ltd v Secretary for Customs and Excise
, Colman J was
required to consider whether a vehicle was a panel van or an
incomplete station wagon on importation. The learned
judge found that
the relative simplicity and low cost of modification was not a
decisive criterion, because the enquiry does not
turn on what the
product was going to be or what it will be adapted to be. Rather, the
court must consider what the product was
at the time of importation.
Colman J held that that issue –
“
must
be decided on the basis of the presence or absence, in the unmodified
vehicles, of the essential features or components of
a station wagon
. . . What I mean by an essential feature of a station wagon is not a
feature which is important, for one reason
or another, or even one
which is essential for the proper functioning of a station wagon. I
mean a feature which is essential in
that it embodies the essence of
a station wagon, and differentiates such a vehicle from others which
are not station wagons.”
I
respectfully endorse that approach.
At
the time of entry the screens were, as the appellant concedes,
functional video monitors. They possessed an existence and utility
of
their own which did not include or require the incorporation of a
device capable of receiving high frequency radio waves and
converting
the signal into optical images. But without such a device the use of
the screens as ‘reception apparatus for television’
was
totally excluded. That the screen was designed to accept such a
device or could be easily modified to accept it, is, as, Colman
J
pointed out, of no consequence if the essential nature does not exist
at the time of importation. Nor does the ‘unnecessary’
addition of the ‘sophisticated’ features which are
embodied in the respondent’s screens, make up for the absence
of the means of receiving and converting signals albeit that it
strongly indicates an intention on the part of the importer that
the
product is to offer an alternative use to the ultimate purchaser. It
is the
primary
design and use which carries most persuasion.’
[5]
[15]
The corollary, so it seems to me, must be that if the screen and
tuner had been packaged and
presented, as here, in combination as a
composite machine, the product, upon importation, would have been
classifiable as a television
set. The product in this matter, as
presented at the time of entry, constituted a fully functioning lamp.
That is common cause.
Accordingly, by application of the principle in
the
LG Electronics
matter, the product falls to be
classifiable under TH 9405.40.21. Pacific Solar attempts to elide the
fact that, as presented, the
kits were fully functional lamps and, as
such, ‘possessed an existence and utility of their own’.
And, seeks to wish
away the presence of one of the main components of
the product, namely the LEDs and cabling connecting them to the power
bank.
It, of course, has to do so to establish a proper factual
foundation, upon which to rest its case.
[16]
In the result:
1
The appeal is dismissed with costs, including those of two counsel.
2
The order of the high court is amended by the addition of the
following:
‘
The
product is determined to be classifiable under tariff heading
9405.40.21 of Part 1 of Schedule 1 to the Customs and Excise Act
91
of 1964.’
V
M PONNAN
JUDGE
OF APPEAL
APPEARANCES
For
appellant:
A P Joubert SC and D Gintner
Instructed
by:
Harris Billings Attorneys, Johannesburg
Webbers, Bloemfontein
For
respondent:
J
A Meyer SC
and W N Mothibe
Instructed
by:
Klagsbrun Edelstein Bosman & Du
Plessis Attorneys, Pretoria
Symington De Kok
Attorneys, Bloemfontein.
[1]
Ellies
Electronics (Pty) Ltd v The South African Revenue Service
[2019]
ZAGPPHC 61.
[2]
Ibid
paras 17 &18.
[3]
Ibid
paras 21-24.
[4]
Commissioner
for the South African Revenue Services v LG Electronics SA (Pty) Ltd
[2010]
ZASCA 79
;
2012
(5) SA 439 (SCA).
[5]
Ibid
paras 15 and 16.
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