Case Law[2022] ZAGPJHC 755South Africa
Premier Plastics (PTY) Ltd v The Commissioner for the South African Revenue Services (9726/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 755 (28 July 2022)
Headnotes
the applicant liable for environmental levies, penalties and interest in the sum of R3 392 626.46 in respect of the plastic bags on the basis that they were disposed of in a manner inconsistent with, and in contravention of section 20(4), read with rule 54F.12 of the Act. It is alleged that the applicant removed the plastic bags from its manufacturing warehouse into the local market, without due entry and payment of environmental levy.
Judgment
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## Premier Plastics (PTY) Ltd v The Commissioner for the South African Revenue Services (9726/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 755 (28 July 2022)
Premier Plastics (PTY) Ltd v The Commissioner for the South African Revenue Services (9726/2021) [2022] ZAGPJHC 755 (28 July 2022)
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sino date 28 July 2022
REPUBLIC OF SOUTH
AFRICA
IN
THE HIGH COURT OF SOUTH AFRICA
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Case
No: 9726/2021
REPORTABLE:
YES
OF
INTEREST TO OTHER JUDGES: YES
REVISED.
2022/7/28
In
the matter between:
PREMIER
PLASTICS (PTY) LTD
Applicant
And
THE
COMMISSIONER FOR THE SOUTH AFRICAN
Respondent
REVENUE
SERVICE
JUDGMENT
WINDELL,
J:
INTRODUCTION
[1]
This is an appeal in terms of the provisions of section 47(9) of the
Customs and Excise Act 91 of 1964 (“the Act”),
against a
decision by the Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service
("SARS"). The products, which form the subject
matter of
the appeal, are plastic carrier bags and flat bags (“the
plastic bags”), manufactured by the applicant, Premier
Plastics
(Pty) Ltd. SARS held the applicant liable for environmental levies,
penalties and interest in the sum of R3 392 626.46
in respect of the
plastic bags on the basis that they were disposed of in a manner
inconsistent with, and in contravention of section
20(4), read with
rule 54F.12 of the Act. It is alleged that the applicant removed the
plastic bags from its manufacturing warehouse
into the local market,
without due entry and payment of environmental levy.
[2]
This is a wide appeal. The court determines the merits
de
novo
,
with or without additional evidence.
[1]
Premier Plastics relies on additional evidence in support of its
appeal. It contends it is not liable for the environmental levies
on
two bases. Firstly, the plastic bags were not environmental levy
goods, and, secondly, the disputed plastic bags were exported
to
Lesotho and Swaziland (now Eswatini), and thus not subject to
environmental levies.
[3]
Central to the determination of this appeal is whether the plastic
bags were environmental levy goods, as defined. The determination
of
this question is dispositive of the appeal.
ENVIRONMENTAL
LEVY ON PLASTIC BAGS
[4]
Plastic carrier bags and flat bags can be manufactured in varying
wall thickness. The wall thickness of plastic is measured
in microns.
The compulsory specification for plastic carrier bags and flat bags
is 24 microns. This is the standard specification
in terms of the
Compulsory Specifications for Plastic Carrier Bags and Flat Bags
Regulations issued under
section 22(1)(a)
of the
Standards Act 29 of
1993
.
[2]
In
terms of the Regulations
[3]
promulgated under section 24(d) of the Environment Conservation Act
73 of 1989, the manufacture, trade and commercial distribution
of
domestically produced and imported plastic carrier bags and plastic
flat bags, for use within the Republic of South Africa
(also hereinafter referred to as “the Republic”)
,
other than those which comply with paragraphs 4 and 5 of the
Compulsory Specifications, is prohibited. Paragraph 4.2 specify that
“
When
the film thickness of a plastic carrier bag or flat bag is measured
in accordance with 6.1, no individual thickness measurement
shall be
less than 24 µm”.
In
other words, the manufacture, trade and commercial distribution of
domestically produced and imported plastic carrier bags and
plastic
flat bags of less than 24 microns,
for
use within the Republic
,
is prohibited and anyone contravening this Regulation, shall be
guilty of an offence.
[4]
[5]
Plastic bags less than 24 microns may therefore be manufactured in
the Republic for use outside the Republic. This is consistent
with
SARS Interpretation Note, Excise External Policy: Environmental Levy
on Plastic Bags Manufactured in South Africa,
[5]
which states as follows:
"(d)
Manufacturing of plastic bags:
i)
Prohibited — Carrier and
flat bags, except those mentioned in paragraph (iii) below, of less
than 24 microns may be manufactured
locally but only for removal to
Botswana, Lesotho, Namibia, and Swaziland (BLNS) countries or export
to other foreign countries.
iii)
Allowed –
A)
The under-mentioned plastic bags have no restrictions with
regards to micron specifications when manufactured locally: I) Bread
Bags; II) Refuse bags; III) Bin liners; IV) Household plastic bags;
V) Primary packaging (e.g. barrier bags which is defined as
a thin or
flimsy bag, used to separate incompatible products at the final point
of sale, for health, hygiene or transport purposes);
and VI) Plastic
bags for export.
B) The only plastic
bags subject to the levy that are allowed on the local market are
those which are manufactured to the specific
legislative requirements
of material, thickness, printing, use and design as described in
Schedule 1 Part 3A – Subheadings
3923.21.07, 3923.21.17,
3923.29.40 and 3923.29.50.
[6]
This Interpretation Note recognises the export exception to the
prohibition covering the manufacturing of plastic bags for use
within
the Republic.
The Constitutional Court, in the decision of
Marshall
and Others v Commissioner, South Africa Revenue Service,
[6]
settled the status of SARS Interpretation Notes with regard to when a
court may consider or defer to an administrative body's
interpretation of legislation. It recognised the rationale for
consistent interpretation by those responsible for the administration
of legislation, and stated that it might “
conceivably
be justified where the practice is evidence of an impartial
application of a custom recognised by alI concerned, but
not where
the practice is unilaterally established by one of the litigating
parties.”
[7]
[7]
It is common cause that where the applicant made direct export to
Namibia of plastic bags of less than 24 microns, SARS did
not impose
any environmental levy. In terms of section 5(1) of the Tax
Administration Act ("TAA")", a "practice
generally prevailing" is defined as
"...a practice set
out in an official publication regarding the application or
interpretation of a Tax Act".
The TAA defines an "official
publication" to specifically include an Interpretation Note. In
the context of the TAA,
when a taxpayer is assessed in accordance
with a practice generally prevailing, SARS has to be consistent with
its interpretation
and application of the legislation and cannot make
a determination contrary to practice generally prevailing.
[8]
Section 54A of the Act provides that “
a
levy known as environmental levy
shall be leviable on such imported goods and goods manufactured in
the Republic as may be specified
in any item of Part 3 of Schedule
1.”
Part
3
of Schedule 1 of the Act provides that plastic carrier bags
with a wall thickness of 24 microns or more fall under the tariff
heading
"3923.21.07" and the environmental levy item number
"147.02.01". Plastic carrier bags and flat bags with a
thickness of 24 microns or more, excluding immediate packaging, zip
lock bags and household bags, including refuge bags and refuge
liner
bins fall under the tariff heading "3923.21.17", with an
environmental levy item number of "147.01.03".
[9]
The rate at which the environmental levy was imposed on plastic
carriers bags with a thickness of 24 microns or more, for the
period
in dispute, namely June 2017 to May 2018 was at a rate of R0,08 for
the period June 2017 to March 2018 and R 0.12 for the
period April to
May 2018 per plastic carrier bag.
[10]
‘Environmental levy’ means
any
duty leviable under Part 3 of Schedule 1 on any goods which have been
manufactured in or imported into the Republic. ‘Environmental
levy goods' means any goods specified in Part 3 of Schedule 1,
which have been manufactured in or imported into the Republic.
[8]
Plastic carrier bags and flat bags of less than 24 microns do not
fall under Part 3 of Schedule 1 and are not environmental levy
goods.
Additionally, there is no provision in the Act or the Schedules that
provide for environmental levy payable on plastic carrier
bags and
flat bags less than 24 microns.
[11]
Further, in terms of section 54B(2) of the Act, an environmental levy
is deemed to be a duty leviable under the Act except
for the purposes
of any customs union agreement. In terms of Article 18(1) and (2) of
the Southern African Customs Union (“SACU”)
agreement,
member countries (Lesotho, Eswatini, Botswana and Namibia, referred
to as “the BNLS Countries”) have a right
to impose
restrictions on imports or exports in accordance with national laws
and regulations. These restrictions include the regulation
of issues
relating to the environment. In the circumstances, national laws of
the BNLS countries, are not bound by the Compulsory
Specification
Standard prohibiting the manufacture or import for use of plastic
bags of less than 24 microns for use in the Republic.
In addition,
all SACU member states are bound by the World Trade Organisation's
agreement on ‘Technical Barriers to Trade’
("TBT").
The TBT requires that states must ensure that technical regulations
and standards do not create unnecessary
obstacles to international
trade. South Africa recognises these obligations. The Compulsory
Standard and the Plastic Bag Regulations
are therefore not applicable
to goods manufactured in the Republic that are exported and no
environmental levies are payable on
plastic bags exported to BNLS
countries.
BACKGROUND
[12]
The applicant is a registered and licensed manufacturer and producer
of various plastic products. The applicant is the owner
of a
registered manufacturing warehouse with number PTANM/00564. The
applicant manufactures plastic carrier bags and flat bags
both for
home consumption in South Africa, as well as exports to various
neighbouring states, predominantly in the South African
Development
Community (“SADC”). The applicant avers that the plastic
carrier bags and flat bags the applicant manufactures
for home
consumption in the Republic all have a wall thickness of 24 microns
or more and are thus subject to environmental levies.
It also avers
that the plastic carrier bags it manufactures for export are produced
at less than 24 microns and not subject to
environmental levies.
[13]
In the course of 2019, SARS conducted an environmental levy audit of
the applicant for the period June 2017 to May 2018. The
audit found
that the applicant manufactured plastic products falling under
Schedule 1, Part 3A to the Act (wall thickness of 24
microns or more)
and on its accounting records, marked the goods for export. It was,
however, established that the plastic bags
were not exported by the
applicant directly, but sold to three of the applicant’s local
customers namely Shoprite Checkers
Limited; Cedar Point (Pty)
Limited, t/a Ace Retail Solutions CC, previously trading as Ace
Packaging, (hereinafter referred to
as "Cedar Point"); and
the Pepkor Division of Pepkor Trading (Pty) Limited (hereinafter
referred to as "Pepkor Division").
No environmental levies
were paid to SARS in respect of the plastic bags.
[14]
On 19 September 2019, SARS issued a notice of intention to raise
environmental levies, interest and penalties on the plastic
bags sold
to the three entities. SARS informed the applicant that the plastic
carrier bags were removed from the manufacturing
warehouse without
due entry and that the applicant had thus contravened Section 20(4)
of the Act, read with Rule 54F.12.
[15]
On 8 November 2019, the applicant responded to SARS' letter of
intent, denying that any environmental levies were due on three
bases: the correct environmental levies due were paid; the time
expired goods were destroyed or made available for recycling; and,
the bags intended for export by the three entities were not leviable
goods and were exported by the customers from South Africa.
[16]
On 27 February 2020, SARS made a determination of the applicant's
liability for environmental levies reiterating its findings
in its
letter of intent. The only adjustment SARS made was to reduce the
liability by the direct exports made by the applicant
to Namibia, and
the time expired stock. The latter, SARS conceded had in fact been
sold to a recycler and any appropriate levy
was paid.
[17]
On 5 March 2020, the applicant filed an internal appeal against SARS'
decision in accordance with the provisions of Section
77 of the Act.
On 25 August 2020, SARS informed the applicant of the outcome of the
appeal, confirming its decision of 27 February
2020. The applicant
requested reasons for SARS' decision. On 11 September 2020, SARS
responded to the request for reasons, recording
that the declaration
for export made by the local entities, Shoprite Checkers, Cedar Point
and the Pepkor Division, did not qualify
as exports in terms of the
Act. On 18 December 2020, the applicant gave notice to SARS in terms
of the provisions of Section 96
of the Act of its intention to
institute these proceedings.
WERE
THE DISPUTED PLASTIC BAGS ENVIRONMENTAL LEVY GOODS?
[18]
As stated, central to the determination of this appeal is whether the
plastic bags were environmental levy goods. The applicant
contends
that the plastic carrier bags that the applicant manufactured and
produced for the three customers, Shoprite Checkers,
Cedar Point and
the Pepkor Division, in the period June 2017 to May 2018 were not
subject to environmental levies as all the plastic
carrier bags
manufactured in this period for these three customers had a wall
thickness of less than 24 microns.
[19]
The applicant has adduced additional evidence in this appeal. The
additional evidence relates both to the film thickness of
the plastic
bags and that the plastic bags were in fact exported from South
Africa to Lesotho and Eswatini. The applicant avers
that it retained
samples of the plastic bags in dispute, which were given to its
expert metrologist, Ms Yvette Volschenk, and in
that regard is able
to prove that the contended goods were of wall thickness of less than
24 microns.
[20]
SARS submits that there is no sufficient proof that the new
information is a contemporaneous record of the applicant’s
accounts in respect of environmental levies during the audit period.
It is submitted that the information relating to the samples
was not
provided to SARS at any time during the audit, nor was it thereafter
made available to SARS during its engagement with
the applicant. SARS
further contends that it in any event does not matter whether the
disputed plastic bags were more or less than
24 microns, as the
applicant removed the goods from its warehouse in contravention of
section 20(4) of the Act, read with Rule
54F.12.
[21]
I disagree. Whether the disputed plastic bags were more or less than
24 microns is relevant. If the disputed bags are less
than 24
microns, there is no environmental levy payable.
[22]
In
Pahad
Shipping CC
,
[9]
the Supreme Court of Appeal (“SCA”), held that where
further evidence is required to bring a dispute to finality, new
evidence has to be adduced. The applicant argues that the additional
documentary and expert evidence is material to the resolution
of the
dispute and will bring finality to it as the evidence will prove that
the plastic bags are not environmental levy goods
and therefore not
subject to environmental levies.
[23]
In
Levi
Strauss v the Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service
,
[10]
the court clarified the approach to appeals against SARS'
determinations in terms of the Act as follows:
"The
determinations are very much preliminary assessments done in the
forensically less exacting basis, by which SARS, an interested
party,
puts forward its account of the liability owing to it by its customs
debtor, the taxpayer. The determinations as noted in
the SCA in Pahad
Shipping are not preceded by any hearing. The very object of the de
novo appeal, as is reiterated by the Constitutional
Court in Kham, is
to permit a first instance hearing before an independent and
impartial tribunal at which it may seek reconsideration
on additional
facts and grounds.”
[11]
[24]
The judgment referred to by the SCA above was
Kham
and Others v The Electoral Commission and Others.
[12]
This matter concerned
the
Electoral Court’s powers to review any decision by the
Independent Electoral Commission. The
Constitutional Court held that it is “
the
widest possible type of review where the decision in question is
subjected to reconsideration, if necessary on new or additional
facts, and the body exercising review power is free to substitute its
own decision for the decision under review”.
[25]
In this appeal, the applicant is exercising a statutory
right and opportunity for a full evidential determination of the
correctness
of information put before SARS. Section 47(9)(c) of the
Act provides the power to a court hearing the appeal to substitute
its
decision for that of the Commissioner. In the circumstances of
this case, the court has a duty to hear the appeal
de novo
, as
a wide appeal and to substitute its decision for that made by SARS.
[26]
Ms Bragazzi is a director and employee of the applicant. She deposed
to an affidavit on behalf of the applicant. Her responsibilities
as
an employee of the applicant include the sales and marketing of the
applicant's products. She ascertains what the customer's
needs are,
provides the customer with a quotation, places the order for
manufacture and ensures that the manufactured and produced
goods are
either delivered to the customer or that customer's customer. She
also retains a sample of the plastic carrier bag manufactured
and
produced for a particular customer in its file, for the applicant's
internal records. This is to ensure that the customer's
requirements,
where a repeat order is placed, are met without delay.
[27]
Ms Bragazzi stated that environmental levy goods are only produced in
a licenced customs and excise manufacturing warehouse,
which are
subject to regulation and control. This includes the obligation on
the manufacturer to retain accurate record keeping
of stock, and the
safeguarding of dutiable goods. She stated that the applicant retains
accurate measuring equipment and ensures
that the plastic carrier
bags it produces not only meets the required standard in terms of the
compulsory regulations, but also
complies with the customer's
specification. All manufacturing processes are also subject to
official supervision. The applicant
is subject to regular unscheduled
inspections by the National Regulator for Compulsory Specifications
("NRCS") to ensure
that the plastic products manufactured
comply to the standards specified by the regulator. NCRS had always
been satisfied that
the plastic carrier bags complied with the
compulsory specifications standard.
[13]
Moreover, the South African Bureau of Standards ("SABS")
conducts laboratory reports for the testing of thickness of
plastics
and carrier bags from time, and the applicant, as one of the foremost
producers of plastic carrier bags in the country,
participates in
these tests conducted by the SABS. In the independent testing it has
conducted of the applicant's carrier bags,
the SABS has routinely
found that the carrier bags conform with the measurements recorded in
the applicant's records for each of
the products tested. The
applicant was however not in possession of a report which
specifically covers the entire period in dispute.
[28]
In the period June 2017 to May 2018, Ms Bragazzi retained a sample of
the plastic carrier bags manufactured, produced and sold
to each of
the entities Shoprite Checkers, Cedar Point and Pepkor Division for
export to Lesotho and Eswatini. She measured the
thickness of the
bags to ensure that they were less than 24 microns and met the
customers’ specifications. It is these samples
that the expert,
Ms Volschenk, utilised to conduct her independent verification.
[29]
Ms Bragazzi stated that each plastic carrier bag that the applicant
manufactures has a unique barcode. The barcode identifies
the
applicant's product code together with the date of manufacture as
well as on which machine it was manufactured. In addition,
on each
plastic bag the film thickness is printed. This is evident from the
photographs of the samples attached to the papers.
Mr Clifford
Mabusela was the extrusion manager during the period in dispute. He
deposed to a confirmatory affidavit. He received
the job cards,
copies of which are attached to the affidavit, and entered the
information into the extrusion machine that produced
the plastic
sheets from which the plastic bags are then manufactured. The gauge
or microns of the required plastic sheet is also
specifically entered
into the extrusion machine.
[30]
Ms Bragazzi stated that during the course of the audit, SARS only
requested descriptions of the various plastic bags measuring
24
microns and above. SARS never requested samples of the bags that are
the subject of this dispute. She, however, tenders these
samples to
SARS for verification of the plastic bag wall thickness should SARS
so require.
[31]
Ms Volschenk filed an affidavit wherein she confirmed that she
independently verified samples of the plastic carrier bags
manufactured for the three entities during the disputed period. She
first conducted an audit of the available documentation in respect
of
each retained sample plastic bag from the quotation recording the
required specifications, the purchase order, the invoices,
the
delivery note to the customer and the export documentation. She
established that the applicant retained accurate records of
the
transactions from the placing of the order to the delivery of the
manufactured plastic bags. She found that each of the plastic
bags
which form the subject matter of this appeal, had a wall thickness
below the dutiable level of 24 microns.
[32]
Ms Bragazzi further stated that she had subsequently extracted from
the applicant's records, a sample of the documents relating
to the
plastic bags for the period in dispute. This documentary proof, which
included the export documentation, clearly demonstrates
that the
products were in fact exported from South Africa to Eswatini and
Lesotho. Ms Volschenk also independently verified the
export
documentation evidencing the export of the plastic carrier bags to
Eswatini and Lesotho. This documentation was tendered
to SARS in the
course of the audit.
[33]
As stated in
Levi Strauss
, SARS' determinations are
preliminary assessments done on a forensically less exacting basis.
SARS did not measure the retained
samples, and SARS did not compare
any measurements with the applicant's contemporaneous records. SARS
further adduced no evidence
that the plastic bags were more than 24
microns and thus leviable goods. It is Ms Volschenk's opinion that
the disputed plastic
bags had a film thickness of less than 24
microns. Ms Volschenk's expert opinion is uncontested as the
respondent has elected not
to file its own expert report or engage
with the contents of her independent findings. Her opinion supports
the applicant's assertion
that the plastic bags are not environmental
levy goods.
[34]
In conclusion, this court is satisfied that contemporaneous records
were kept of the sales of the plastic bags to the three
customers in
the period June 2017 to May 2018. The records documented that none of
the carrier bags produced by the applicant and
sold to the three
entities had a wall thickness in excess of 24 microns. I am further
satisfied that the independent testing conducted
by Ms Volschenk
proves that the plastic bags had a film thickness of less than 24
microns. As a result, the plastic bags are not
environmental levy
goods subject to environmental levies. It is further clear from the
evidence that the plastic bags were manufactured
with the sole
purpose of being exported to Lesotho and Eswatini. Although the
applicant did not directly export the plastic bags
to these two
countries, it is undisputed that the plastic bags were in fact
exported to Eswatini and Lesotho.
WERE
THE GOODS REMOVED WITHOUT DUE ENTRY?
[35]
The conclusion above, in my
view, disposes of the appeal. But since a large part of the argument
in this court was devoted to two
further issues, I propose to deal
with them.
[36]
SARS alleges that the disputed bags were removed from the manufacture
warehouse without due entry and that the applicant had
thus
contravened Section 20(4) of the Act, read with Rule 54F.
[37]
Section 20(4) states that:
“
Subject
to section 19A, no goods which have been stored or manufactured in a
customs and excise warehouse shall be taken or delivered
from such
warehouse except in accordance with the rules and upon due entry for
one or other of the following purposes-
(a)
home consumption and payment of any
duty due thereon;
(b)
rewarehousing in another customs and
excise warehouse or removal in bond as provided in section 18;
(c)
...... [Para. (c) deleted
by s. 6 (b) of Act 84 of 1987.
(d)
export from customs and excise
warehouse (including supply as stores for foreign-going ships or
aircraft.)”
[38]
Relevant to the current dispute is subsection (a) and (d). SARS
contends that subsection (a) applies because the goods were
sold to
three local customers and thus entered the local market for “home
consumption”, As a result, so it is argued,
an environmental
levy must be paid. The applicant contends that subsection (d) applies
as applicant was an "exporter",
as defined in the Act, who
exported the plastic bags to Eswatini and Lesotho, alternatively, the
plastic bags were in fact exported
to these countries, and no
environmental duty is leviable.
Section
24(4)(a)
[39]
Section 24(4)(a) will only be applicable if the plastic bags were
removed from the warehouse for (a) home consumption in the
Republic
and (b) if they were environmental levy goods.
[40]
Subsection 4(a) is clearly not applicable in the current matter.
Firstly, the plastic bags were not subject to an environmental
levy
as they were not environmental levy goods. Secondly, the plastic bags
were not removed from the warehouse for “home
consumption”
in the Republic, but were exported to Eswatini and Lesotho.
[41]
Firstly, “home consumption” is defined in the Act as
“consumption or use in the Republic”. In
De
Beers Marine (Pty) Ltd v Commissioner, South African Revenue
Service,
[14]
the court distinguished between "home consumption" and
"foreign consumption". The court held:
“
[8]
The true antithesis of ‘home consumption’ is ‘foreign
consumption’. Foreign consumption (and hence ‘export’)
has two sequential elements: (a) physical removal from South Africa;
and (b) use or consumption not in South Africa.
Foreign use
or consumption postulates a foreign destination for further delivery
of the goods taken from the warehouse in South
Africa.”
[42]
The documentary evidence shows the entire supply chain
of the disputed plastic bags from the time the order was placed for
the manufacture
of bags with a film of less than 24 microns to the
actual delivery of the disputed plastic bags to Eswatini or Lesotho
for foreign
consumption. The plastic bags were not released into the
local market for “home consumption”.
[43]
Secondly, there is no definition for ‘export’ in the Act.
The Glossary of International Customs Terms published
by the World
Customs Organisation, however, defines "exportation" as
"the act of taking out or causing to be taken
out of any goods
from the Customs Territory. In accepting this definition, the SCA in
Levi
Strauss,
held that the Act is concerned with the physical movement of goods in
and out of South Africa, rather than the commercial transactions
underlying such movements.
[15]
The court further held that the declaration of origin was concerned
with the physical origin of the goods:
"An
appropriate statement as to the origins of the goods made, in
connection with the exportation, by the manufacturer, producer,
supplier, exporter or other competent person on the commercial
invoice or any other document relating to the goods."
'
[44]
The same principles ought to apply to the indirect exports in the
current matter. By application of the International Customs
terms,
binding on South Africa, the disputed plastic bags were exported. The
applicant, as a manufacturer, has met the objective
test that goods
entered as exports were actually consigned from South Africa into
BLNS countries. In any event, the additional
documentary evidence
shows that no environmental levy goods (with the film thickness of
less than 24 microns) were actually exported.
[45]
SARS also relies on the Rules promulgated under Section 54F.
[16]
The Rules under section 54F only applies to environmental levy goods
and does not take the matter any further. The plastic bags
in this
matter are below 24 microns and are not environmental levy goods.
Section
24(4)(d)
[46]
Section 24(4)(d)
is
applicable when goods are exported from a customs and excise
warehouse. As a secondary argument, the
applicant argues that
as the goods were manufactured for its local customers with the view
that the goods would be exported, the
applicant should be regarded as
an exporter for purposes of the Act.
[47]
The applicant
relies on the wider scope
of the definition of exporter in section 1 of the Act. The definition
identifies all the persons potentially
liable to pay duties:
'exporter' includes
any person who, at the time of exportation-
“
(a) owns any
goods exported;
(b) carries the risk
of any goods exported;
(c) represents that or
acts as if he is the exporter or owner of any goods exported;
(d) actually, takes or
attempts to take any goods from the Republic;
(e) is beneficially
interested in any way whatever in any goods exported;
(f) acts on behalf of
any person referred to in paragraph (a), (b), (c), (d) or (e).”
[48]
Prior to the introduction of the expanded definition of "exporter",
the definition was that of the ordinary meaning
of exporter, namely,
the person responsible for sending the goods out of the country. The
language of this section applies to the
removal of the goods from
South Africa not the identification of the exporter in relation to
the goods. I agree with the applicant
that the purpose of the
amendment appears to have been to clarify and possibly broaden the
scope of the concept of an exporter
in relation to goods being
exported from South Africa and extend the categories of the persons
liable to pay duties. In
Levi
Strauss
,
the SCA confirmed the interpretation of the word "exporter"
given in
Standard
General Insurance Co Ltd v Commissioner for Customs and Excise
[17]
where the court held as follows:
"Where the net
has been cast that widely upon the importation of goods (to include
alI those who might have an interest in
the import) we would expect
the net to be cast equally widely, to include alI those who might
have some interest in the export
when the goods are removed for
export before the duty has been paid, rather than that liability
would be limited to only a single
person and possibly his agent.”
[49]
In
interpreting
the definition of the word “exporter” the court must
attribute
meaning to the words used in the legislation, having regard to the
context provided, by reading the particular provision
or provisions
in the light of the document as a whole and the circumstances
attendant upon its coming into existence. Whatever
the nature of the
document, 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 and the apparent purpose to which it is
directed. Where more than one meaning
is possible each possibility
must be weighed in the light of all these factors. The process is
objective, not subjective.
A sensible meaning is to be preferred to
one that leads to insensible or unbusinesslike results or undermines
the apparent purpose
of the document. The "inevitable point of
departure is the language of the provision itself", read in
context and having
regard to the purpose of the provision and the
background to the preparation and production of the document.
[18]
In
City
of Tshwane Metropolitan v Blair Atholl Homeowners Association,
[19]
the SCA reiterated that a restrictive consideration of words without
regard to context has to be avoided and the words have to
be
interpreted sensibly and not have an unbusiness-like result. These
factors have to be considered “
holistically,
akin to the unitary approach”.
[20]
The wide definition of an exporter in section 1 of the Act must
therefore be interpreted as one unitary exercise, unlike the literal
meaning of the word exporter in isolation, as the respondent has
elected to do.
[50]
The applicant carries a number of risks in relation to the plastic
bags exported to end users in Lesotho and Eswatini. The
applicant, as
manufacturer and seller of the plastic bags carries the risks
associated with product liability. For example, product
liability may
arise from a quality defect of the product itself or its design or
process of manufacture or insufficient product
labels with regard to
environmental information. These and other factors may result in the
return of defective products to the
manufacturer. Such scenarios were
anticipated by Part 4 of Schedule 6 read with section 75(15) of the
Act which provides for the
re-export of plastic bags from the BLNS
countries. Consequently, the applicant, as the manufacturer,
maintains an interest in the
exported goods.
[51]
The wide meaning of "exporter" includes any person that at
the time of the exportation, “
(e) is
beneficially
interested
in any way
whatever i
n any
goods exported”.
The applicant has an interest in the sale
of the goods. The interest is not limited to the vested or contingent
interest of an owner.
The applicant, as a result of the above risks
and pecuniary interest, is beneficially interested in the goods. The
applicant is
thus an exporter within the meaning of the statute. Due
entry of the goods was made on removal from the applicant's
warehouse,
and the applicant did not contravene section 24(4) of the
Act.
CONCLUSION
[52]
It is clear from the evidence that the goods produced by the
applicant and sold to the three entities had a wall thickness
of less
than 24 microns and were in fact exported for consumption in Eswatini
and Lesotho. These plastic carrier bags were not
subject to
environmental levies.
[53]
In the result the following order is made:
1. The applicant's appeal
against SARS' decision of 27 February 2020 is upheld.
2. The respondent's
decision that the applicant was liable to pay the environmental
levies, together with penalties and interest
in the sum of R3 392
626,46 on the plastic bags manufactured in the period June 2017 to
May 2018 is set aside.
3. The respondent is to
pay the applicant's costs, such costs to include the employment of
two counsel.
L.
WINDELL
JUDGE
OF THE HIGH COURT
GAUTENG
LOCAL DIVISION, JOHANNESBURG
Delivered:
This judgement was prepared and authored by the 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 for
hand-down is deemed to be 28 July 2022.
APPEARANCES
Counsel
for the applicant:
Advocate C. Dreyer
Advocate D. Malungisa
Attorneys
for the applicant:
Fluxmans Inc.
Counsel
for the respondent:
Advocate D. Chabedi
Advocate M. Masilo
Attorneys
for the respondent:
Maponya Inc.
Date
of
hearing:
11 April 2022
Date
of judgment:
28 July 2022
## [1]Levi
Strauss v the Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service2021
(4) SA 76 (SCA) at paragraph [26].
[1]
Levi
Strauss v the Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service
2021
(4) SA 76 (SCA) at paragraph [26].
[2]
The Compulsory Specifications for Plastic Carrier Bags and Flat Bags
Regulations (notice R.867), Government Gazette number 25082,
dated
20 June 2003, issued under
section 22(1)(a)
of the
Standards Act 29
of 1993
. Compulsory Specification for Plastic Carrier Bags and Flat
Bags (VC8087 -2013) read with SANS 695 replaced the Compulsory
Specification
for Plastic Carrier Bags and Flat Bags issued under
the
Standards Act 1993
, published in Government Notice No R. 867
(Government Gazette 25082) of 20 June 2003 ICS 55.080; 83.140.01.
This provision remains
unaltered.
[3]
Department of Environmental Affairs and Tourism. Government Notice
No. R. 625, 9 May 2003. The Regulations were amended in April
2021.
See Government Notice 44421 dated 7 April 2021.
[4]
Regulation
3
[5]
SARS Excise External Policy: Environmental Levy on Plastic Bags
Manufactured in South Africa para 2 (2.1.)(d) (i). Effective
17 July
2019.
[6]
2019 (6) 246 (CC).
[7]
At paragraph [10].
[8]
Section
1 of the Act.
## [9]Pahad
Shipping CC v Commissioner for the South African Revenue Services[2010]
2 All SA 246 (SCA).
[9]
Pahad
Shipping CC v Commissioner for the South African Revenue Services
[2010]
2 All SA 246 (SCA)
.
[10]
Supra
footnote 1.
[11]
A
t
par 29.
[12]
2016 (2) SA 338
(CC) at para [41].
[13]
Reports
of the NCRS were attached to the founding affidavit.
## [14][2002]
3 All SA 181 (A) (20 May 2002).
[14]
[2002]
3 All SA 181 (A) (20 May 2002).
[15]
At paragraph [13].
[16]
No.
R. 684, 1 June 2004.
Rule
54F.12 (a) Any environmental levy goods removed from a customs and
excise manufacturing warehouse for any of the following
purposes
must be entered, in the case of- (i)export, including supply as
stores for foreign-going ships or aircraft, on forms
SAD 500 and SAD
502 or SAD 505 at the office of the Controller, before removal of
the goods so exported or supplied; (iii) removal
in bond to any
customs and excise storage warehouse for export as contemplated in
rule 54F.03 or to a duty free shop, on forms
SAD 500 and SAD 502 or
SAD 505 at the office of the Controller before each such removal.
(iv) removal to a consignee in a BLNS
country, on forms SAD 500 and
SAD 502 or SAD 505in accordance with the procedures prescribed in
paragraph (d). (b) The provisions
of paragraph (a) (i) apply mutatis
mutandis in respect of any goods exported from a customs and excise
storage warehouse contemplated
in rule 54F.03.
(c)
Where environmental levy goods are exported, removed in bond or
removed to a BLNS country by a licensee of a manufacturing
warehouse
or exported by a licensee of a storage warehouse, as the case may
be, and are wholly or partly carried by road, such
goods must,
except where the licensee uses own transport, be carried by a
licensed remover of goods in bond contemplated in section
64D.
[17]
2004 2 All SA 376 (SCA)
[18]
Natal
Joint Municipal Pension Fund v Endumeni Municipality
2012
(4) SA 593
(SCA) at [18].
[19]
[2019] 1 ALL SA 291
(SCA) at [61] to [68].
[20]
At par [61].
sino noindex
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