Case Law[2024] ZAGPJHC 580South Africa
MCG Express (Pty) Ltd v Owenair (Pty) Ltd (2023/069178) [2024] ZAGPJHC 580 (19 June 2024)
High Court of South Africa (Gauteng Division, Johannesburg)
19 June 2024
Headnotes
Summary
Judgment
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# South Africa: South Gauteng High Court, Johannesburg
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## MCG Express (Pty) Ltd v Owenair (Pty) Ltd (2023/069178) [2024] ZAGPJHC 580 (19 June 2024)
MCG Express (Pty) Ltd v Owenair (Pty) Ltd (2023/069178) [2024] ZAGPJHC 580 (19 June 2024)
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sino date 19 June 2024
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA,
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
1.
REPORTABLE:
NO
2.
OF INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES:
NO
3.
REVISED:
NO
CASE
NO: 2023 - 069178
In
the matter between:
MCG
EXPRESS (PTY) LTD
Applicant
and
OWENAIR
(PTY) LTD
Respondent
JUDGMENT
KRÜGER
AJ:
Summary
Application
claiming specific performance for payment due by the respondent for
the lease of an aircraft for charter. The respondent’s
defence
is that the provisions of sections 64 and 65 of the Value Added Tax
Act has not been complied with in that the consideration
for the use
of the aircraft did not state if it was inclusive or exclusive of VAT
and that, in consequence, the consideration recorded
in the contract
are deemed to be inclusive of VAT.
Order
[1]
In this matter, for the reasons set out below, I make the following
order:
Judgment
is granted against the respondent for:
(1)
Payment to the plaintiff in the sum of R
4 939 985.31
which is inclusive of VAT in the amount of R 644 345,91
;
(2)
Payment of interest on the amount of
R 4 295 639,40
at
the
prime rate of ABSA Bank Limited plus two per cent,
calculated and compounded monthly in arrears from 27 April 2023 to
date of payment
(3)
Costs
of suit.
Introduction
[2]
The applicant’s claim is for payment by the respondent of the
amount of R 4 939 985.31 plus interest at the prime
rate of ABSA Bank
Limited plus two per cent, calculated and compounded monthly in
arrears from 27 April 2023 to date of payment
and costs of suit.
[3]
On 20 June 2022 the parties concluded an Aircraft Lease Agreement
(“
the contract
”) in terms of which the respondent
from time to time would lease a Bombardier Global Express aircraft
for a specific period
of time at a minimum hourly rate of US$ 7000.
The applicant shall furnish the respondent with a tax invoice on the
last day of
each calendar month or as soon as practicable thereafter
setting out the fees and charges payable by the respondent. Invoices
rendered
will be paid within 7 days from date of the invoice. It was
signed by the parties’ respective representatives on 20 June
2022 at Lanseria.
[4]
On 22 March 2023 and pursuant to the contract, a further written
contract was concluded between the parties in terms of
which the
respondent would utilize the aircraft for the period 31 March 2023 to
11 April 2023 for charter, which it duly did. The
latter contract was
concluded via WhatsApp messages between Mr Wolpe, who as sole
director acted on behalf of the respondent, and
Mr Bester acting on
behalf of the applicant. In consequence of the utilization of the
aircraft, the respondent became indebted
to the applicant for payment
of consideration for the use of the aircraft as provided for in the
contract.
[5]
On 20 April 2023 the applicant sent its tax invoice for payment in
the total amount of R 4 939 985.31 to the respondent.
The amount is
the sum of R 4 295 639,40 plus VAT in the amount of R
644 345,91 which is recorded accordingly in
the tax invoice.
Payment was due by 27 April 2023, or any time thereafter.
[6]
When the respondent failed to make any payment to the applicant, the
latter’s attorneys eventually addressed a letter
dated 22 May
2023 to the respondent demanding payment in the amount of R
4 295 639.40 plus VAT in the amount of R 644 345,91
no
later than 31 May 2023, failing which steps will be taken as the
applicant may be advised. On 3 June 2023 during a telephonic
conversation Mr Wolpe informed Mr Coetzee, the applicant’s
General Manager of Aviation that he was awaiting proof of payment
of
one of the respondent’s clients upon which the respondent would
make payment to the applicant the following week. The
telephonic
conversation was confirmed in a WhatsApp message addressed by Mr
Wolpe to the applicant. No payment was forthcoming.
During a further
telephonic conversation on 19 June 2023, Mr Wolpe advised that
payment would be made within 48 hours despite which
no payment was
made.
[7]
It is common cause that to date no payment whatsoever has been made
to the applicant. In consequence, this application
was issued.
The
respondent’s case
[8]
Its case is that the respondent is not liable for payment of VAT in
the amount of R 644 345,91 because the consideration
and payment
for the use of the aircraft in the contract disclosed an hourly rate
that would apply, namely a minimum of US$ 7000
without specifying if
it was inclusive or exclusive of VAT.
[9]
According to the respondent, the applicant’s claim for payment
of VAT would offend against the provisions of Section
64 read section
65 of the
Value Added Tax Act
, 89 of 1991 (“
the VAT
Act
”):
“
64
Prices deemed to include tax
(1) Any price charged
by any vendor in respect of any taxable supply of goods or services
shall for the purposes of this Act be
deemed to include any tax
payable in terms of section 7 (1) (a) in respect of such supply,
whether or not the vendor has included
tax in such price.
(2) …
65
Prices advertised or quoted to include tax
Any price advertised
or quoted by any vendor in respect of any taxable supply of goods or
services shall include tax and the vendor
shall in his advertisement
or quotation state that the price includes tax, unless the total
amount of the tax chargeable under
section 7 (1) (a), the price
excluding tax and the price inclusive of tax for the supply are
advertised or quoted by the vendor:
Provided that-
(i) where the
price inclusive of tax and the price excluding tax for a supply are
advertised or quoted, both prices shall
be advertised or quoted with
equal prominence and impact;
(ii) price
tickets on goods need not state that the prices include tax if this
is stated by way of a notice prominently displayed
at all entrances
to the premises in which the enterprise is carried on and at all
points in such premises where payments are effected;
(iii) the
Commissioner may in the case of any vendor or class of vendors
approve any other method of displaying prices of
goods or services by
such vendor or class of vendors during a period approved by the
Commissioner which commences before and ends
after the commencement
date or, where the rate of tax is increased or reduced, the date on
which the increased or reduced rate
of tax takes effect;
(iv) a vendor
may not state or imply that any form of trade, cash or any other form
of discount or refund is in lieu of the
tax chargeable in terms of
section 7 (1) (a).
”
[10]
Mr Wolpe alleges that at the time of the conclusion of the
contract he was under the mistaken assumption that the applicant
was
not a VAT vendor in South Africa and that the transaction was VAT
exempt. Had he known that VAT was to be added, he would have
either
negotiated a better rate with the applicant, or would have amended
the quote to the respondent’s clients to provide
for the
addition of VAT.
The
applicant’s case in response
[11]
The applicant contends that the issue of compliance with the VAT Act
arose only in the respondent’s answering affidavit.
It had
never been raised before.
[12]
The contract was compiled by the respondent. According to the
applicant, the respondent was aware from before the conclusion
of the
contract that it was a South African registered company, had a VAT
number and was a VAT vendor. On the title page of the
contract the
respondent’s South African company registration number as well
as its VAT registration number is recorded. The
applicant contends
that the respondent’s reliance on the quoted section in the VAT
Act came as an afterthought. In an e-mail
dated 17 April 2023 the
respondent stated that, as the charter was an international flight,
it would be zero rated for VAT. On
19 April 2023 the applicant
responded in an e-mail recording that after an enquiry to SARS it was
confirmed that, as the applicant
leased equipment or provided a
service to the respondent and both are South African entities as well
as duly registered VAT vendors,
VAT was payable. Then, on 9 May 2023
an e-mail was received from Mr Wolpe on the letterhead of United
Charter Services suggesting
that the invoice be submitted to a
foreign company namely United Aviation Group Limited Mauritius to be
paid in Mauritius. The
applicant refused to be party to what it
contends constitutes an attempt to defraud the fiscus. It is after
these events that respondent
gave the undertakings during the
telephonic conversation of 3 June 2023 and its WhatsApp confirming
it, and its later undertaking
to effect payment within 48 hours. The
respondent in its answering affidavit does not deny that the
undertakings were given.
[13]
The respondent expressly does not deny that it is indebted to the
applicant for payment in the amount of R 4 295 639.40
and
the interest as agreed upon. Yet it has failed to make any payment of
such amount. This, the applicant contends, is indicative
of the
respondent being
mala fide
.
[14]
The applicant contends that it had, in any event, complied with the
requirements of section 65ii of the VAT Act in that
it has a notice
prominently displayed at the sole entrance to its premises which
reads:
“
MGC
EXPRESS (PTY) LTD
REGISTRATION NO.
2018/022703/07
VAT NO. 4560216071
NOTICE IN TERMS OF
SECTION 65 OF THE VALUE ADDED TAX ACT 89 OF 1991 (AS AMENDED)
ALL PRICES QUOTED
ON TRANSACTIONS CONDUCTED WITH THIS COMPANY SHALL BE EXCLUSIVE OF
VALUE ADDED TAX (VAT)
”
Analysis
and consideration
[15]
The
provisions of section 64(1) of the VAT Act apply for the purposes of
the Act. In the result, the South African Receiver of Revenue
is at
liberty to recover VAT from a supplier, whether or not it has in fact
charged VAT. In each case it is a factual issue whether
the price
agreed upon does actually include VAT. The sub section “…
merely
ensures that SARS would not be prevented from recovering VAT until
the parties have come to an agreement about possible price
disputes.
”
[1]
[16]
The respondent’s contention in its answering affidavit that the
applicant was tardy “…
in the manner in which they
framed the terms of the lease agreement
…” by not
explicitly excluding VAT from the hourly fee charged for the use of
the aircraft in consequence of which
it cannot be held to the
disadvantage of the respondent, is plainly incorrect. In the replying
affidavit the applicant comprehensively
debunks laying blame for the
absence of expressly having excluded VAT at the applicant’s
door because the contract was not
compiled by the applicant, but by
the respondent’s representative. This is clear from the
contents of an exchange of e-mails
between the parties’
respective representatives prior to the conclusion of the contract.
On 18 May 2022 the respondent’s
Mr Fourie sent an e-mail to the
applicant’s Mr Martin Bester wherein he declares that he is in
the process of drafting (the
Afrikaans words used in the e-mail is
“…
op te stel
…”) the contract. To
that purpose he requires the applicant’s registration number,
physical address, the commencement
date of the contract as well as a
“…
insurance met Owenair op die versekering
…”
In an e-mail on the same day the applicant provides its registration
and VAT numbers as well as undertaking to arrange
for the respondent
to be put in contact with the applicant’s insurance broker.
Upon an e-mail request from the respondent,
the applicant remedies
the omission of the applicant’s address in a further e-mail to
the respondent, also on 18 May 2022.
[17]
In consequence, it cannot be correct that the respondent was
unaware of the fact, at the time of the conclusion of the
contract,
that the applicant was a VAT vendor in South Africa. This is also
evidenced by the title page of the contract which records
not only
the applicant’s South African company registration number, but
also its VAT number.
[18]
Under
the heading “
Invoices
”,
clause 3.7.4.1 of the contract stipulates that the applicant shall
furnish the respondent “…
with
a tax invoice on the last day of each calendar month (or as soon as
practicable thereafter) during which the applicability
of these Terms
extends setting out the fees and charges payable by
[…the
respondent…]
in
terms hereof for all Agreements during each such calendar month
”.
The reference to a tax invoice is significant. Section 20 of the VAT
Act obliges a supplier making a taxable supply to
a recipient to
issue a tax invoice to the recipient. The form and content of the tax
invoice is prescribed. It must be in South
African currency and
contain, amongst others, the words “
tax
invoice”, “VAT invoice” or “invoice”,
the name, address and VAT registration number of the supplier
as well
as of the recipient, the value of the supply, the amount of tax
charged and the consideration for the supply, an individual
serialized number and the date upon which the tax invoice is issued
as well as the value of the supply, the amount of tax charged
and the
consideration for the supply.
[2]
It follows that the respondent, whose representative was the author
of the contract, knew that the contract was subject to payment
of
VAT.
[19]
In the founding affidavit the applicant alleges that despite demands
made for payment, the respondent failed to make
payment in the amount
claimed namely R 4 939 985,31. This is the total amount
which includes VAT claimed in the tax invoice.
It continues to allege
such amount is due, owing and payable. These allegations were not
disputed by the respondent in its answering
affidavit.
[20]
Taking the above into consideration, I am not persuaded of the
respondent’s version of events and in particular
the allegation
that it was of the view the transaction was VAT exempt. To the
contrary, it lends credence to the applicant’s
contention that
the respondent’s reliance on non-compliance with section 64
read with section 65 of the VAT Act came as an
afterthought. It seems
to me, on a balance of probability, that the parties had been in
agreement that VAT would be payable, hence
the inclusion of clause
3.7.4.1 of the contract which provides for the applicant to furnish
the respondent with a tax invoice.
[21]
Tellingly, Mr Wolpe on behalf of the respondent telephonically gave
an unequivocal undertaking to the applicant’s
Mr Coetzee that
the account would be paid. This was confirmed in writing by Mr Wolpe
in a WhatsApp message dated 3 June 2023 addressed
to and received by
the respondent’s Mr Coetzee. It reads as follows:
“
Hi Peter, as
discussed, I’m awaiting a proof of payment which I expect any
day i.e. Monday as per correspondence with one
of our clients for a
substantial amount and should be able to clear the account during the
week
”
It
is not disputed by the respondent that during a further telephonic
discussion between Mr Coetzee and Mr Wolpe, the latter advised
that
payment would be made within 48 hours from the date of the
conversation. In neither case did Mr Wolpe qualify the undertaking
to
make payment of the claimed amount minus VAT. Nor is there any
indication by Mr Wolpe that any VAT payable must be for the account
of the applicant.
[22]
The fact
that Mr Wolpe on behalf of the respondent gave the undertaking to
make payment as he did cogently indicates that it was
an actual term
of the contract for the respondent to pay VAT. Nowhere in the
respondent’s answering affidavit is it expressly
alleged that
the payment of VAT was for the applicant’s account. Instead the
respondent alleges that had it known the transaction
is subject to
VAT, it would have either negotiated a better rate or would have
amended its quotes to its clients “…
to
cater for the increase in VAT.
”
Clearly the thought had not occurred to the respondent’s
representatives at the conclusion of the contract that payment
of any
VAT would ever be for the account of the applicant. It follows it was
a tacit term, whether actual or imputed,
[3]
that VAT on the transaction would be for the respondent’s
account.
[4]
Importing such a
term into the contract will not offend against any of its express
terms. The nature and extent of the express
terms of the contract
leaves room for the inclusion of such a tacit term.
[5]
Had the question been asked at the time of the conclusion of the
contract as to which of the parties would pay VAT, objectively
and on
a balance of probability, the answer of an officious bystander would
have been that it was for the respondent’s account.
[6]
From the conduct of the parties after the conclusion of the contract,
as set out herein before, it is evident that it was the intention
of
the parties that VAT would not only be payable, but that it was for
the respondent’s account.
[7]
[23]
The attempt by a representative of the respondent to induce to
applicant to be part of a scheme whereby the payment of
VAT might
have been avoided is detrimental to the respondent’s case. On 9
May 2023 it was suggested to the applicant in an
e-mail that it raise
an invoice addressed to foreign based entity known as United Aviation
Group Limited Mauritius. In consequence
no VAT would have been
payable on the transaction whereby an aircraft was leased. This
entity would then pay the amount claimed
less VAT in Mauritius. The
applicant refused to be part of such a scheme. Such a scheme would
have been a fraud upon the fiscus.
It should not be countenanced by a
Court. The fact that it was suggested to the applicant weighs against
the credibility of the
respondent’s version.
[24]
By reason of the view I take of the matter, the provisions of section
64 and 65 of the VAT Act does not apply. If I am
wrong in doing so
and in so far as the provisions of section 65 of the VAT Act in any
event may apply, the applicant has complied
with sub-section 65ii by
having a notice referred to herein before at its sole entrance. The
nature of the applicant’s business
is such that it does not
have payment points as it is not a retailer such as a supermarket and
the like with various payment points
and tills where payment is
effected by a customer in cash or by presenting a credit or debit
card. Payment would have been done
by Electronic Transfer into the
bank account of the applicant.
Conclusion
[25]
The applicant does not pursue its claim for interest to be calculated
on the total amount of R 4 939 985.31. It now seeks
an order for
interest calculated on the amount of R 4 295 639.40.
[26]
For the reasons set out above, I make an order as in paragraph [1].
N.S.
KRÜGER
ACTING
JUDGE OF THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Delivered:
This judgment was prepared and authored by the Acting Judge whose
name is reflected and is handed down electronically
by circulation to
the parties / their legal representatives by email and by uploading
it to the electronic file of this matter
on CaseLines. The date of
the judgment is deemed to be
19 June 2024.
COUNSEL
FOR THE APPLICANT:
Adv.
N. Riley
INSTRUCTED
BY:
Darryl
Furman & Associates
COUNSEL
FOR THE RESPONDENT:
Adv.
I Mwanawina Attorney
INSTRUCTED
BY:
Tracey
Lomax Attorney
DATE
OF ARGUMENT:
17
May 2024
DATE
OF JUDGMENT:
19
June 2024
[1]
Juta’s
Value Added Tax
Revision Service 19 at 64-1
[2]
Section 20(4) of the VAT Act. Section 20(5) provides for
transactions where the supply does not exceed R 5000,00.
[3]
Wilkins
v Voges
1994 (3) SA 130
(A)
at 136I
:
“
A
tacit term, one so self-evident as to go without saying, can be
actual or imputed. It is actual if both parties thought about
a
matter which is pertinent but did not bother to declare their
assent. It is imputed if they would have assented about such
a
matter if only they had thought about it – which they did not
do because they overlooked a present fact or failed to
anticipate a
future one
.”
[4]
Alfred
McAlpine & Son (Pty) Ltd v Transvaal Provincial
Administration
1974 (3) SA 506
(A)
at 531
ff
[5]
Pan
American World Airways Inc v SA Fire and Accident Insurance Co Ltd
:
1965 (3) SA 150
(A)
at 175C: “
When
dealing with the problem of an implied term the first enquiry is, of
course, whether, regard being had to the express terms
of the
agreement, there is any room for importing the alleged implied
term.
”
[6]
Techni-Pak
Sales (Pty) Ltd v Hall
1
968 (3) SA 231
(W)
236–7: “‘
That
does not mean, in my view, that the parties must consciously have
visualised the situation in which the term would come into
operation. In Broome and Another v Pardess Co-operative
Society
[1940] 1 All ER 603
MacKinnon LJ, applying the test I
have quoted, referred to the hypothetical asker of the question as
“a more imaginative
friend”. It does not matter,
therefore, if the negotiating parties fail to think of the situation
in which the term would
be required, provided that their common
intention was such that a reference to such a possible situation
would have evoked from
them a prompt and unanimous assertion of the
term which was to govern it.
”
See also
Richard
Ellis South Africa (Pty) Ltd v Miller
:
“Ex hypothesi
neither
the respondent nor anyone on behalf of the appellant could have
given any cogent evidence regarding a term to which they
had not consciously directed their mind. At best they
could have attempted,
ex
post facto
and
with the point at issue clouding their objectivity, to furnish
information which can more readily be deduced from the surrounding
circumstances.
”
[7]
De
Lange v ABSA Makelaars (Edms) Bpk
[2010]
3 All SA 403
(SCA)
[20]: “
In
deciding whether the suggested term can be inferred, the court will
have regard primarily to the express terms of the contract
and to
the surrounding circumstances under which it was entered into. It
has also been recognised in some cases, however, that
the subsequent
conduct of the parties can be indicative of the presence or absence
of the proposed tacit term
”
See
Wilkins
v Voges
1994 (3) SA 130
(A)
at 143B-D: “
Another
consideration, which has a bearing on the probabilities, is the
defendant's failure to mention the alleged warranty at
the first
appropriate opportunity. Nowhere in the correspondence or in the
affidavits filed during the application which preceded
the trial is
there even a hint of reliance on a tacit term. What was raised was
the plaintiff's alleged fraud. Mention of the
alleged tacit term was
first made in the plea. The very fact that a term, supposedly so
obvious as to speak for itself, escaped
the attention of the
defendant at the earlier stages of the proceedings is an indication,
in my view a strong one, that it was
nothing more than an
afterthought when it was eventually mooted during the later stages
of the proceedings.
”
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