S.Africa: Important judgment on simulation handed down by Supreme Court of Appeal

Table of Contents

Important judgment on simulation handed down by Supreme Court of Appeal

On 9 November 2018, the South African Supreme Court Appeal (“SCA”) handed down an important judgment in which it upheld Sasol Oil (Pty) Ltd’s appeal against a judgment of the Gauteng Tax Court.

The facts of the case were complex, but concerned certain back-to-back supply transactions entered into by a number of entities, including Sasol Oil, which the South African Revenue Service (“SARS”) contended were simulated.

An Isle of Man company in the Sasol group (“SOIL”) sold oil to a UK group company (“SISL”) which, in turn, sold it to Sasol Oil in South Africa. If SOIL had instead sold the oil it had purchased directly to Sasol Oil in South Africa, the controlled foreign company rules may have applied to allocate taxable amounts to SOIL’s South African shareholder.

However, the controlled foreign company rules did not apply to these transactions for SOIL, since it did not sell the oil to a connected person who was a resident of South Africa (ie Sasol Oil). Instead, it sold the oil to SISL, a UK resident entity. The Commissioner therefore sought to disregard the sales by SOIL to SISL and instead treat SOIL as if it had sold the oil directly to Sasol Oil in South Africa.

In the alternative, SARS contended that, to the extent that the transactions were found not to be simulated, they fell within the provisions of section 103(1) of the Income Tax Act, 1962 (the “Act”) and should be disregarded.

In upholding Sasol Oil’s appeal, Lewis JA, writing for the majority of the court, confirmed a number of important principles relevant to the doctrine of simulation/“substance over form”, the application of section 103 of the Act (the previous anti-tax-avoidance provisions) and certain aspects pertaining to the general anti-avoidance rule.

Two further judgments were written:

  • one for a minority which would have found in favour of SARS, on the basis that the relevant agreements and transactions were not genuine and therefore simulated; and
  • a separate concurring judgment, emphasising the evidentiary requirements for a finding of simulation, and criticising the approach of the minority, and that of the tax court, in this regard.

We briefly discuss below the important principles confirmed by this judgment.

Simulation

Referring to C:SARS v NWK Ltd, Lewis JA stated that the law surrounding the test for simulation was not changed by the judgment in that case, quoting with approval from a previous judgment handed down by the Supreme Court of Appeal in C:SARS v Bosch where it was held that “simulation is a question of the genuineness of the transaction under consideration” and that if the transaction “is genuine it is not simulated and if it is simulated then it is a dishonest transaction”.
The majority of the court found that the transactions between SOIL, SISL and Sasol Oil were genuine transactions and had a legitimate purpose. It held that there were good commercial reasons for introducing SISL into the supply chain.

The majority of the court found that Sasol Oil had discharged the onus of proving that the supply agreements were genuine and not “false constructs”, precluding the conclusion that the supply transactions were simulated.

The separate judgment of Ponnan JA, in which the majority concurred, reemphasised that a finding of simulation requires evidence that the ostensible agreements are a pretence or that a secret or unexpressed agreement exists which is at odds with the apparent agreements.

Section 103 of the Act

SARS contended that the supply transactions must be disregarded in the assessment of Sasol Oil’s income tax liability in accordance with section 103 of the Act.

Sasol Oil contended that in order to fall foul of section 103(1) of the Act, the transactions must have the effect of getting out of the way of, escaping or preventing, an anticipated tax liability (in line with previous decisions in Smith v CIR and Hicklin v SIR).

Lewis JA posed the question: “If the parties had not entered into the impugned transactions, would Sasol Oil have had a liability for tax that is avoided, or escaped from, by entering into them?”

In order to answer this question, Lewis JA stated that it must be determined what liability Sasol Oil had avoided by entering into the supply transactions.

The majority of the court agreed that SARS failed to show that the transactions had the effect of avoiding a tax liability as required for section 103(1) of the Act to apply.

The majority of the court also held that the transactions were not abnormal, and therefore, held that SARS’ reliance on section 103(1) of Act was unfounded.

For more information, please contact ENSafrica’s tax department.

Shopping Cart
Scroll to Top

Compare Programmes

Choose the track that fits your practice focus. All programmes are practitioner-taught, cohort-based, and validated by Middlesex University.

Dimension Transfer Pricing International Taxation South African Tax Law
Jurisdictional audience Global audience, covers all jurisdictions Global audience, covers all jurisdictions South Africa specific, relevant to SADC region
Ideal for TP managers, advisors, in-house tax teams, analysts moving into TP Advisors and managers dealing with cross-border rules, treaties, planning Practitioners working with the SA Income Tax Act, cases, compliance
Core focus Methods, comparables, DEMPE, documentation, audits, dispute defence Treaties, source vs residence, anti-avoidance, PE, relief from double tax Statutory interpretation, case law, assessments, objections, local practice
Primary tools OECD TP Guidelines, UN Manual, BEPS Actions 8–10, 13, case law OECD and UN Models, MLI, BEPS 1.0 and 2.0, domestic rules, cases Income Tax Act, SARS practice notes, Tax Administration Act, SA cases
Assessment style Case-based assignments, file reviews, short written defences Problem questions, treaty interpretation, position papers Problem questions, statutory analysis, case commentary
Typical outcomes Build defensible TP files and strategies, improve audit readiness Design cross-border structures within rules, mitigate double tax Apply SA tax law accurately, manage reviews and disputes
Entry point Start with PG Certificate, progress to PG Diploma, then MSc, or enter later with suitable experience or credits.

Awards Ladder

Award Best for What you achieve Assessment highlights
PG Certificate Foundation to intermediate upskilling Core concepts, frameworks, and applied techniques Short case write ups, timed responses, applied tasks
PG Diploma Expanding technical depth and application Advanced analysis, risk management, documentation quality Integrated case assignments, policy memos, oral defence
MSc Leaders and specialists building authority Capstone project and research backed practice outcomes Research project, viva or presentation, publishable summary

IFF Certificate Courses

Practical, practitioner-led certificates designed for immediate on-the-job application. Each course can stand alone or act as a pathway into our postgraduate tracks.

Dimension Conducting a Transfer Pricing Trial Effectively Managing Tax Teams Indirect Taxation Tax Risk Management
Jurisdictional audience Global audience Global audience Global audience, with local adaptation Global audience
Ideal for In-house tax, TP managers, litigators, advisors preparing for audits, ADR, trial Heads of tax, managers, team leads, controllers, emerging leaders VAT, GST, customs, finance managers, AP, AR, compliance specialists Tax managers, risk officers, controllers, advisors building governance
Core focus Case theory, evidence files, expert reports, witness prep, courtroom strategy Operating models, KPIs, workflows, stakeholder management, coaching VAT design, place of supply, input credits, exemptions, WHT interactions Risk identification, controls, documentation, audit readiness, dispute playbooks
Delivery mode Online, live sessions plus guided self-study Online, live sessions plus guided self-study Online, live sessions plus guided self-study Online, live sessions plus guided self-study
Duration 16 weeks, part-time 16 weeks, part-time 16 weeks, part-time 16 weeks, part-time
Outcomes Confident litigation preparation and defence for TP disputes Stronger execution, clear roles, measurable team performance Reduced VAT errors, better cash flow, fewer surprises at audit Structured governance, fewer findings, faster dispute resolution
Prerequisites TP fundamentals recommended Supervisory experience helpful Basic VAT knowledge helpful General tax experience helpful
Pathway Progress to PG Certificate in Transfer Pricing Progress to Mechanics of Leading Tax Teams, PG Certificate (leadership) Progress to PG programmes, International Tax or SA Tax Law Progress to PG Certificate in International Taxation or Transfer Pricing
Assessment End of module progress assessment

5000-word assignment if PG-Cert option elected
End of module progress assessment

5000-word assignment if PG-Cert option elected
End of module progress assessment

5000-word assignment if PG-Cert option elected
End of module progress assessment

5000-word assignment if PG-Cert option elected