The Tax Court is a specialist court specifically equipped to adjudicate on tax-related matters pertaining to the lawfulness and correctness of disputed assessments.
By way of background, the South African Revenue Service (SARS) raised assessments against the applicant in respect of its 1998 to 2002 and 2004 to 2009 years of assessment, before raising an assessment for the 1997 years of assessment. According to the applicant, certain assessed losses arising from previous years were therefore not properly brought forward and taken into account in determining the applicant’s tax liability.Re-submission of returnsIn 2009, the applicant realised that its 1997 and 2003 returns had not been assessed (and that the losses from previous years were not brought forward) and decided to re-submit the 1997 and 2003 returns, but it did so only in 2011. However, SARS was not willing to entertain the taxpayer’s dissatisfaction.
The applicant subsequently approached the North Gauteng High Court for an order declaring all income tax assessments issued after 1997, null and void. The applicant contended that SARS acted ultra vires when issuing the assessments because it failed to take into account the assessed losses as provided for in s20 of the Act.
SARS opposed the application on the basis that the High Court does not have jurisdiction to entertain the application as the dispute between the applicant and SARS concerned the merits of the income tax assessments. SARS submitted that:
- the applicant never submitted its 1997 return;
- the applicant never objected in terms of the Act against the 1998 assessment for not reflecting the assessed losses;
- the three year period, as contemplated in s79 of the Act, had therefore lapsed;
- the assessments in question have therefore become conclusive;
- the applicant was not entitled to approach the High Court for an order declaring the assessments void, without exhausting the internal remedies or the remedies provided for in the Act;
- the Act makes it clear that the lawfulness and the correctness of an assessment must be dealt with by the Tax Court;
in dealing with the application, the High Court will inevitably have to deal with the merits of the assessment; and - the relief sought by the applicant is a final order as opposed to an interlocutory order.
The applicant submitted that:
- the Tax Court is a creature of statute and does not have inherent jurisdiction – it only has limited powers as derived from the Act;
- the Act does not confer upon the Tax Court the power to make declaratory orders on the status of income tax assessments; and
- the applicant had no internal remedies available to it because the three year period for objecting has lapsed and the only remedy would be to obtain an order on the validity of the administrative action, either by way of a review or a declaratory order.
Having regard to the submissions made by the parties, the court referred to the provisions of s81of the Act and the rules of the Tax Court: “a taxpayer who is aggrieved by an assessment may object to such an assessment in the manner and under the terms and within the period prescribed by the Act and the rules promulgated in terms of section 107A”.
Questioning assessments
The court further referred to the decision in Van Zyl NO v Master and Another 1991 (1) SA 874 (E) where Eksteen J confirmed that the only way in which assessments can be questioned is in the manner provided for in the Act. The Act specifically prescribes the procedure and entrusts the determination of the amount of tax to SARS (by way of objection), and on appeal, to the Tax Court. Eksteen J further confirmed that only the Tax Court can determine whether assessments were correctly made and that there was no intention to usurp that function of the Tax Court.
In the case of Metcash Trading Ltd v Commissioner, SARS 2001 (1) SA 1109 (CC) the court held that the Tax Court is a specialist court specifically tooled to deal with disputed tax cases and further found that the High Court has jurisdiction to adjudicate upon tax matters only in circumstances where the relief sought is of an interlocutory nature.
Based on the authorities mentioned above, the court held as follows:
- the lawfulness and correctness of disputed assessments must be dealt with by the Tax Court;
- the role of the High Court is to provide a judge as a member of the specialised Tax Court to hear appeals and not matters of first instance;
- the applicant failed to exhaust its internal remedies when it still had the time to do so and now wanted to circumvent the provisions of the Act by seeking a declaratory order in the High Court;
- the application for an order declaring assessments null and void cannot be entertained without assessing the merits of the case. The merits of the assessments fall within the competency of the Tax Court; and
- once an assessment has been made, the parties thereto are confined to the jurisdiction of the Tax Court and must exercise all their rights in the Tax Court – only once they have failed can the matter be referred to the Supreme Court of Appeal or the Constitutional Court.
In light of the above, the court held that the High Court does not have the necessary jurisdiction to grant the order sought. What is clear from the judgement is that courts discourage applications that come down to ‘forum shopping’ by the parties as it could not have been the legislature’s intention to create competing and concurrent forums for the resolution of tax disputes.