Rudolph and Another v Commissioner for Inland Revenue and Others (388/94) [1996] ZASCA 20; (1996 (2) SA 886 (SCA); [1996] 2 All SA 553 (A); (25 March 1996)

78 Reportability
Constitutional Law

Brief Summary

Income Tax — Authorization for search and seizure — Validity of authorizations issued under section 74(3) of the Income Tax Act 58 of 1962 challenged on common law grounds — Appellants sought interdicts against the Commissioner for Inland Revenue and officials regarding the execution of search powers — Appellants argued that authorizations were invalid due to perpetual use, improper delegation of authority, and vagueness — Court found that issues raised involved constitutional matters under section 24 of the Constitution — Appeal referred to the Constitutional Court for determination of constitutional validity of the authorizations and the jurisdiction of the Appellate Division.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


The proceedings were an appeal to the then Supreme Court of South Africa (Appellate Division) arising from an urgent motion application in which interdictory relief had been sought to restrain officials of the revenue authorities from exercising statutory search and seizure powers.


The parties were Glynn Rudolph (first appellant) and Glynn Rudolph & Co (Pty) Ltd (second appellant) on the one hand, and the Commissioner for Inland Revenue (first respondent) together with seven named revenue officials (second to eighth respondents) on the other. The revenue officials had acted under written authorisations issued in terms of section 74(3) of the Income Tax Act 58 of 1962.


In the court of first instance (the Witwatersrand Local Division), the appellants’ application for interdicts was dismissed with costs by Goldblatt J on 13 May 1994, following earlier urgent procedural directions made by Nugent J on 29 April 1994. The judgment in the court below was reported as Rudolph and Another v Commissioner for Inland Revenue and Others NNO 1994 (3) SA 771 (W). Leave to appeal was refused by the trial court, but granted on petition to the Chief Justice.


The general subject-matter of the dispute concerned the lawfulness and validity of the revenue authorities’ reliance on written section 74(3) authorisations to conduct searches and seize documents relating to the appellants’ tax affairs, and, at the appellate stage, the further question of constitutional jurisdiction and whether issues raised fell within the exclusive jurisdiction of the Constitutional Court.


2. Material Facts


It was common cause, and accepted as the factual context for the litigation, that the first appellant was a businessman who, for the tax years 1988 to 1992, had failed to render proper income tax returns. Despite numerous promises, he did not rectify this position. Information given to the Commissioner indicated that the first appellant’s financial affairs, and those of certain companies and trusts in which he had interests, were in a state of confusion.


On 20 October 1993, Mr C T Prinsloo, described as Chief Director of Administration in the Department of Finance and acting as the head of a special investigations division, issued fourteen written authorisations under section 74(3) to named officials (including the second to eighth respondents). These authorisations empowered them to exercise the statutory powers in relation to the appellants and certain other entities associated with the first appellant.


On 21 October 1993, acting under these authorisations, officials interviewed the first appellant at his house and seized documents. The documents then obtained did not, in the Commissioner’s view, suffice to unravel the first appellant’s affairs.


On 21 April 1994, the Commissioner received information that a large quantity of additional relevant documents was located at the business premises of one of the first appellant’s companies in Parktown, Johannesburg. On 22 April 1994, officials went to those premises and, acting under the original October 1993 written authorisations, searched for and found a substantial quantity of documents. The first appellant was not present but was represented. As a practical arrangement, the documents were placed in a storeroom on the premises while they were listed and while the first appellant could make copies of documents that would be removed.


The litigation was triggered by the culmination of discussions about removal procedures, including that the first appellant was informed the documents would be removed at 17h00 on 28 April 1994, whereafter the appellants launched an urgent application on 29 April 1994 seeking to restrain further exercise of the section 74(3) powers.


The Appellate Division recorded that the appellants’ challenge on appeal focused on what was presented as “common law grounds” of invalidity relating to the authorisations and their use, while also contending that section 74(3) itself was unconstitutional, a point which counsel accepted the Appellate Division could not itself decide.


3. Legal Issues


The central legal questions the court was required to determine did not involve finally deciding the validity of section 74(3) or the authorisations on their merits. Instead, the court had to determine whether, for the purposes of disposing of the appeal, it was necessary to refer constitutional issues to the Constitutional Court in terms of section 102(6) of the Constitution of the Republic of South Africa Act 200 of 1993.


More specifically, the court identified and formulated for referral the questions whether section 74(3) of the Income Tax Act 58 of 1962 was contrary to Chapter 3 of the Constitution and therefore invalid; whether, in light of the Constitution (and in particular section 24 on administrative justice), it was competent for the Appellate Division to adjudicate the so-called common law grounds of invalidity; and what further procedural directions should follow depending on the answer to the jurisdictional issue.


The dispute at this stage was primarily one of law, namely the allocation of constitutional jurisdiction between the Appellate Division and the Constitutional Court, and the implications of constitutional provisions governing the interpretation, protection and enforcement of fundamental rights, particularly where “common law” grounds substantially overlapped with constitutional rights to lawful and procedurally fair administrative action.


4. Court’s Reasoning


The court began from the premise that the appellants’ “common law” attacks on the authorisations and actions taken under them were, in substance, closely connected to constitutional protections in section 24 of Chapter 3 of the Constitution, which guarantees rights to lawful and procedurally fair administrative action where rights, interests, or legitimate expectations are affected or threatened. Counsel for the appellants conceded that, if the common law grounds were well-founded, they could constitute a breach of constitutional rights under section 24.


The judgment then placed the jurisdictional question within the constitutional scheme created by sections 98(2) and 101(5) of the Constitution. Section 98(2) vests the Constitutional Court with jurisdiction as the court of final instance over matters relating to the interpretation, protection and enforcement of the Constitution, including alleged violations or threatened violations of fundamental rights in Chapter 3. Section 101(5) provides that the Appellate Division has no jurisdiction to adjudicate any matter within the jurisdiction of the Constitutional Court.


Against this framework, the court addressed the appellants’ contention that the Appellate Division enjoyed a form of parallel jurisdiction to decide the common law grounds. The court was not satisfied that such parallel common law jurisdiction existed in the circumstances described. In any event, the court held that deciding whether the Appellate Division had jurisdiction in the manner contended for would require the court to interpret the Constitution, which the court considered it was not entitled to do in the given context, having regard to the constitutional allocation of jurisdiction.


The court then applied section 102(6) of the Constitution, which requires referral to the Constitutional Court where it is necessary, for the purposes of disposing of an appeal, for a constitutional issue to be decided. The court reasoned that this requirement was met on the facts because the appeal could not properly be disposed of without determining constitutional issues, including whether the “common law” grounds fell within the exclusive jurisdiction of the Constitutional Court and whether section 74(3) was constitutionally valid.


Finally, the court recorded that the referral was also made with reference to Rule 23(4) read with Rule 22(2) of the Rules of the Constitutional Court, and that it concluded it would be in the interests of justice that the issues, as formulated, be referred for decision.


5. Outcome and Relief


The Appellate Division made an order referring specified issues to the Constitutional Court in terms of section 102(6) of the Constitution read with Rule 23(4) of the Constitutional Court Rules.


The issues referred included the constitutional validity of section 74(3) of the Income Tax Act 58 of 1962; the question whether the Appellate Division could adjudicate the “common law grounds of invalidity” or whether they fell within the exclusive jurisdiction of the Constitutional Court; the directions necessary for disposal of the appeal depending on the answer; and, if exclusive jurisdiction lay with the Constitutional Court, whether the common law grounds were well-founded.


The costs of the hearing before the Appellate Division on 12 March 1996 were ordered to be costs in the cause.


Cases Cited


Rudolph and Another v Commissioner for Inland Revenue and Others NNO 1994 (3) SA 771 (W).


Legislation Cited


Constitution of the Republic of South Africa Act 200 of 1993, section 24.


Constitution of the Republic of South Africa Act 200 of 1993, section 98(2).


Constitution of the Republic of South Africa Act 200 of 1993, section 101(5).


Constitution of the Republic of South Africa Act 200 of 1993, section 102(5).


Constitution of the Republic of South Africa Act 200 of 1993, section 102(6).


Income Tax Act 58 of 1962, section 3(1).


Income Tax Act 58 of 1962, section 74(3).


Rules of Court Cited


Rules of the Constitutional Court, Rule 22(2).


Rules of the Constitutional Court, Rule 23(4).


Held


The Appellate Division held that, because the “common law” grounds of invalidity raised by the appellants were covered or also covered by section 24 of the Constitution, and because determining whether the Appellate Division had jurisdiction to decide those grounds would itself require constitutional interpretation, it was necessary for constitutional issues to be determined in order to dispose of the appeal. Accordingly, the matter was referred to the Constitutional Court under section 102(6) of the Constitution, with the costs of the appellate hearing to stand over as costs in the cause.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


The judgment applied the constitutional principle that where a dispute implicates the interpretation, protection, or enforcement of constitutional rights entrenched in Chapter 3, jurisdictional consequences follow from the constitutional allocation of authority to the Constitutional Court under section 98(2), coupled with the limitation on the Appellate Division’s jurisdiction under section 101(5).


It further applied the principle that challenges framed as common law administrative-law invalidity may nonetheless substantially overlap with, or be “covered or also covered” by, constitutional rights to lawful and procedurally fair administrative action under section 24, thereby raising constitutional issues that may trigger the Constitutional Court’s jurisdiction.


The court also applied the procedural principle embodied in section 102(6) of the Constitution that an appellate court must refer a matter to the Constitutional Court where it is necessary, for the purposes of disposing of an appeal, for a constitutional issue to be decided, and that the referral should be made where it is considered in the interests of justice, with reference to the Constitutional Court’s procedural rules governing referrals.

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[1996] ZASCA 20
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Rudolph and Another v Commissioner for Inland Revenue and Others (388/94) [1996] ZASCA 20; (1996 (2) SA 886 (SCA); [1996] 2 All SA 553 (A); (25 March 1996)

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(APPELLATE DIVISIONS)
In the matter between:
GLYNN RUDOLPH
First Applicant
GLYNN RUDOLPH & CO LTD
Second Applicant
and
THE COMMISSIONER FOR INLAND REVENUE
First Respondent
J F C HEYDENRYCH N O
Second Respondent
R JBEUKESNO
Third Respondent
J J HOLTZHAUSEN N O
Fourth Respondent
K STEYN N O
Fifth Respondent
PDU PLESSIS N O
Sixth Respondent
T J FRATES N O
Seventh Respondent
M M J VAN WYK N O
Eighth Respondent
ORDER OF COURT
For reasons to be filed later, the following order is made in this
matter:
(1) In this order the words "common law grounds of invalidity" mean the
contentions -
(a) that an authorization in terms of sec 74(3) of the Income Tax Act
58 of 1962, once issued and executed, may not be used in
2
perpetuity and that the use in April 1994 of the authorizations
originally issued and executed in October 1993 was an unlawful
administrative action;
(b)
that the power to issue such warrants was vested in the
Commissioner for Inland Revenue, that the delegation of this power to Mr C T Prinsloo under sec 3(1) of the Act was invalid and that,
therefore, the authorizations were invalid; and
(c)
that the authorizations were invalid on the ground that they were
too vaguely and imprecisely worded.
(2) In terms of sec 102(6) of the Constitution of the Republic of South Africa
Act 200 of 1993 ("the Constitution"), read with Rule 23(4) of the Rules
of the Constitutional Court, the following issues in this case are referred
for decision to the Constitutional Court, viz:-
(a)
whether sec 74(3) of the Income Tax Act 58 of 1962 is contrary to
the provisions of chapter 3 of the Constitution and accordingly
invalid;
(b)
in view of the provisions of the Constitution, and in particular sec
24 thereof, whether it is competent for this Court (the Appellate
Division) to adjudicate upon and determine on appeal the common
law grounds of invalidity or whether these matters fall within the
(a)
3
exclusive jurisdiction of the
Constitutional Court
;
(c)
if it is competent for the Appellate Division to adjudicate upon and
determine on appeal the common law grounds of invalidity, what
further directions for the disposal of the appeal should be given;
and
(d)
if the common law grounds of invalidity fall within the exclusive
jurisdiction of the
Constitutional Court
, whether these grounds, or
any of them, are well-founded.
(3) The costs of the hearing before the Appellate Division on 12 March 1996
shall be costs in the cause.
M M Corbett CHIEF JUSTICE
SMALBERGER JA) VIVIER

JA)
NIENABER JA) CONCUR
PLEWMAN AJA)
CG
CASE NUMBER: 503/94
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF
SOUTH AFRICA
(APPELLATE DIVISION)
In the matter between:
G RUDOLPH
First Appellant
GLYNN RUDOLPH &CO (PTY) LTD Second Appellant
and
COMMISSIONER FOR INLAND REVENUE
First Respondent
J F C HEYDENRYCH NO.
Second Respondent
R J BEUKES N.O,
Third Respondent
J J HOLTZHAUSEN N.O.
Fourth Respondent
K STEYN N.O.
Fifth Respondent
P DU PLESSIS N.O.
Sixth Respondent
T J FRATES N.O.
Seventh Respondent
M
M J VAN WYK N.O.
Eighth Respondent
CORAM:
CORBETT CJ, SMALBERGER, VIVIER,
NIENABER JJA et PLEWMAN AJA
HEARD ON:
12 MARCH 1996
REASONS FILED ON:
25 MARCH 1996
REASONS FOR JUDGMENT PLEWMAN A.IA
2
On 22 March 1995 this Court made an order in terms of sec
102(6) of the Constitution of the Republic of South Africa Act 200 of
1993 referring this case to the
Constitutional Court
. The reasons were
to be filed later. These are the reasons for the order.
The first appellant, a businessman, and the second appellant, a
company of which the first appellant is the sole director, applied on
motion to the Court below for interdicts restraining the respondents, the
Commissioner for Inland Revenue (the "Commissioner") and seven of his
officials, from exercising the powers of search given to the
Commissioner by sec 74(3) of the Income Tax Act 58 of 1962 (the "Act").
The facts are that first appellant had, during the years 1988 to
1992, failed to render proper returns of his income for income tax
purposes. He had also failed, despite numerous promises to do so, to
3
remedy this situation. Such information as he had given to the
Commissioner indicated that his financial affairs and those of certain of
the companies and trusts in which he was interested were in a state of
confusion.
On 20 October 1993 a Mr C T Prinsloo, Chief Director of
Administration in the service of the Department of Finance, who acted
as the head of what is described as "Afdeling Spesiale Ondersoeke by die
Tak Binnelandse Inkomste", issued fourteen authorizations in terms of
sec 74(3) of the Act to a number of named officials of the Revenue
Department, including the second to eighth respondents, authorizing them
to exercise, in relation to the appellants and various other of the first
appellants companies and trusts, the powers prescribed in the section.
Acting under these authorizations certain of the Commissioner's officials
interviewed the first appellant at his house on 21 October 1993 and
4
seized a number of documents.
The information thus obtained was not sufficient to enable the
Commissioner to unravel first appellant's affairs. On 21 April 1994 the
Commissioner received information that a large quantity of additional
documents relating to the first appellant's affairs were to be located at the
place of business of one of the first appellant's companies in Parktown,
Johannesburg. On the following day, Friday 22 April 1994, members of
the investigating team went to this place and acting under the authority
of the original written authorizations searched for and found a mass of
relevant documents. The first appellant was not present but he was
represented. As a practical step the documents were placed in a
storeroom on the premises to enable the respondents to list what had
been seized and to enable the first appellant to make copies of the
documents which were to be removed. There was then some discussion
5
and negotiation about the procedures to be followed. It is unnecessary to give an account of all these matters. The culmination of
the debate
was that the first appellant was informed that the documents would be
removed at 17h00 on 28 April 1994. On 29 April the application was
brought as a matter of urgency. It was called before Nugent J who made
an order giving procedural directions. This order took the form of an
agreement between the parties. After the filing of answering and
replying affidavits the matter came before Goldblatt J on 4 May 1994.
On 13 May 1994 he dismissed the application with costs. The judgment
has been reported. (See
Rudolph and Another v Commissioner for
Inland Revenue and Others NNO
1994 (3) SA 771
(W).)
Leave to appeal was sought and was refused but a petition to the
Chief Justice was successful. On appeal appellants' argument was
directed to an attack on the validity of the written authorizations on what
6
was said to be "common law grounds". Counsel for the appellants
contended that sec 74(3) of the Act was unconstitutional and invalid but
he recognized that this Court could not pronounce on that issue. Counsel
according asked that this Court, in terms of sec 102(5) of the
Constitution, adjudicate on the common law grounds of invalidity and if
appellants were to fail on these issues that this Court refer the issue of
the constitutionality of sec 74(3) to the Constitutional Court under sec
102(6) of the Constitution.
The so-called common law grounds, stated briefly, are -
(1)
that an authorization once issued and executed may not be used in
perpetuity and that in this case the use of the original
authorizations (issued and executed in October 1993) in April 1994
was an invalid procedure;
(2)
that the power to issue such authorizations was vested in the
(1)
7
Commissioner that the delegation of this power to Prinsloo under
sec 3(1) of the Income Tax Act was invalid and that, therefore, the
authorizations were invalid; and
(3) that the authorizations were invalid on the ground that they were
vaguely and imprecisely worded.
It is however apparent that these issues are covered or also covered
by sec 24 of Chapter 3 of the Constitution. Sec 24 under the heading
"Administrative Justice" provides, inter alia,that -
"Every person shall have the right to -
(a)
lawful administrative action where any of his or her
rights or interests is affected or threatened;
(b)
procedurally fair administrative action where any of
his or her rights or legitimate expectations is affected
or threatened; ..."
It is necessary to refer to sec 98(2) of the Constitution. This
provides -
"(2) The Constitutional Court shall have jurisdiction in the
8
Republic as the court of final instance over all matters
relating to the interpretation, protection and enforcement of the provisions of this Constitution, including -
(a) any alleged violation or threatened violation of any
fundamental right entrenched in Chapter
3;
Sec 98
must be read with sec 101(5) of the Constitution which
provides:
"(5) The Appellate Division shall have no jurisdiction to
adjudicate any matter within the jurisdiction of the
Constitutional Court
."
Counsel for the appellants conceded that the common law grounds
of attack upon the validity of the authorizations and any actions taken in
terms thereof could, if his arguments were well - founded, constitute a
breach of appellants' constitutional rights under sec 24 of the
Constitution. He contended however that this Court enjoyed some form
of parallel jurisdiction which entitled it to entertain the appeal.
I am not satisfied that this Court does indeed have a parallel common law jurisdiction in the circumstances I have outlined. But it
9
seems to me, in any event, that in order to decide whether this Court
would have a jurisdiction such as is contended for this Court would be
obliged to interpret the Constitution which it is not entitled to do.
Sec 102(6) of the Constitution requires that this Court refer an
appeal to the
Constitutional Court
where it is necessary for the purposes
of disposing of an appeal for a constitutional issue to be decided. This
is the case with the present appeal. It is for this reason that the order
above referred to was made. What I have said is also for the purpose of
Rule 23(4) read with Rule 22(2) of the Rules of the
Constitutional Court
this Court's reasons for concluding that it will be in the interests of
justice that the issues as formulated in the order be so referred.
C PLEWMAN AJA
CONCUR:
CORBETT CJ)
SMALBERGER JA)
VIVIER JA)
NIENABER JA)