Lewis Stores (Pty) Ltd v Minister of Finance and Another (368/2001) [2002] ZASCA 100 (6 September 2002)

80 Reportability

Brief Summary

Customs duty — Classification — Imported pots and pans — Dispute over whether items are plated with gold — Appellant, Lewis Stores (Pty) Ltd, contended for lower duty rate applicable to items not plated with precious metal, while Customs argued for higher rate applicable to gold-plated items — Court held that the pots and pans, primarily made of stainless steel with only minor gold plating on handles and knobs, do not qualify as gold-plated under the relevant tariff classification — Higher duty rate of 30% applicable.

Comprehensive Summary

Summary of Judgment


1. Introduction


This matter concerned an appeal to the Supreme Court of Appeal of South Africa about the tariff classification of imported cookware for customs duty purposes under the Customs and Excise Act 91 of 1964 and its Schedule 1. The dispute turned on whether the imported pots and pans could properly be described, for tariff purposes, as “plated with precious metal” (gold), which would affect the applicable rate of customs duty.


The appellant was Lewis Stores (Pty) Ltd, the importer of the goods. The first respondent was the Minister of Finance, who abided the result. The second respondent was the Commissioner of the South African Revenue Service, responsible for the levying and collection of customs duty (referred to in the judgment as “Customs”).


The appeal followed proceedings in which Conradie J had determined the correct tariff classification of the goods. Although additional, complex arguments were raised concerning the operation of section 47(11) (as it read in 1998) and whether a determination had in fact been made by Customs in relation to some of the goods, the parties ultimately agreed that the appeal could be disposed of solely on the classification question, making it unnecessary for the Supreme Court of Appeal to decide those further issues.


The general subject-matter of the dispute was the interpretation and application of the customs tariff headings and subheadings for stainless steel hollowware and the meaning and reach of the phrase “plated with precious metal” within the tariff structure.


2. Material Facts


It was common cause that the goods consisted of (i) a 12-piece set comprising a frying pan and 11 pots, and (ii) a 12-litre stock pot, of the same construction and design as the pots in the set. It was also not in dispute that the pots, pans, and lids were made of stainless steel, and that they were kitchen or table hollowware for purposes of the relevant tariff provisions.


A critical factual finding accepted and relied upon by the court was that the hollowware in the narrow sense—namely the body of the pot or pan, excluding the lid and handles—bore no gold plating. The gold plating was confined to the handles and lid knobs, which were made of bakelite, and which were partly gold plated. The court accepted that the gold plating was very thin, but that it existed.


The judgment recorded further factual features of the plating that informed the classification decision. The gold content was said to be about 0.0008% of the total mass of the pot and lid. The plating was said to cover roughly 10% of the external surface area of the pot and lid and roughly 5% of the total surface area (internal and external), with the judge noting that, to his eye, the percentages appeared even less. The court also noted that while the products were advertised as a “Gourmet Gold Cookware Set”, the packaging emphasised their stainless steel nature and described the benefits of stainless steel.


The core factual dispute was not about whether any gold plating existed at all, but whether the goods could properly be regarded, in tariff terms, as “plated with gold/precious metal”, given that only limited ancillary components (handles and knobs) were plated while the stainless steel hollowware body was not.


3. Legal Issues


The central legal question was whether the imported goods fell under tariff sub-subheading 7323.93.20 or 7323.93.90 in Chapter 73 of Part 1 of Schedule 1 to the Act, which both concerned articles of stainless steel, and where the classification depended on whether the goods were “plated with precious metal” (gold).


The dispute was primarily one of interpretation and application of law to fact. It required, first, an interpretation of the tariff expression “plated” (and, by implication, what degree and location of plating is required to make an article “plated with precious metal”), and secondly, an evaluative application of that meaning to the physical characteristics of the imported cookware (including the limited plating on handles and lid knobs).


A further legal issue, raised but not decided due to the parties’ approach, concerned the operation of section 47(11) (in its 1998 form) and whether Customs had made a “determination” in relation to certain goods. The court expressly confined its decision to the tariff classification question and cautioned against reading the court a quo as having decided more than that.


4. Court’s Reasoning


The court approached the classification question by applying established interpretive principles governing customs tariff schedules. It endorsed the structural explanation from Secretary for Customs and Excise v Thomas Barlow & Sons Ltd 1970 (2) SA 660 (A), emphasising that tariff classification must be determined by reference to the terms of the headings and subheadings and the relevant section and chapter notes, with titles serving only as aids to reference. It also relied on the General Rules for the interpretation of Schedule 1, including the rule that classification at subheading level is determined according to the terms of those subheadings and any related notes, applying the interpretive rules mutatis mutandis.


The court further treated as relevant the explanatory notes published by the World Customs Council (Brussels notes), because section 47(8)(a) provides that interpretation of a heading or subheading “shall be subject to” such notes. Consistently with International Business Machines SA (Pty) Ltd v Commissioner for Customs and Excise 1985 (4) SA 852 (A), the court did not treat the Brussels notes as peremptory commands but held that the interpretation must conform to them and not be contrary to them. One explanatory note relied upon stated that articles under heading 73.23 may be fitted with lids, handles, or other parts of other materials provided that they retain the character of iron or steel articles. The court used this to support the proposition that ancillary parts (such as handles and knobs) do not necessarily change the essential character of the hollowware itself.


In line with the three-stage approach described in International Business Machines—(i) interpretation of the relevant words, (ii) consideration of the nature and characteristics of the goods, and (iii) selection of the most appropriate heading/subheading—the court first considered the meaning of the expression “plated with gold”. It accepted that gold plating can occur through various processes, and that the basic notion is clear. However, it identified an interpretive difficulty: the tariff phrase did not specify whether an article must be wholly plated, or, if not wholly plated, how extensive or where the plating must be. In addressing that difficulty, the court reasoned from the ordinary meaning of the verb “to plate”, drawing on dictionary definitions emphasising the notion of covering articles with a coating of gold or silver. This informed the court’s view that ordinarily, to describe something as “plated” conveys that it is covered with the plating, rather than merely having minor plated elements.


Turning to the actual goods, the court placed weight on the fact that the stainless steel hollowware body—the pot or pan itself—had no gold plating. Only the bakelite handles and lid knobs were partly plated, and the resulting golden appearance was described as dim. On an overall impression of the goods, the court reasoned that an observer would be more likely to describe them as stainless steel pots with gold-plated decorative trimmings, rather than as gold-plated pots. The court added an evaluative consumer-oriented observation: if one had purchased the item expecting a “gold-plated pot”, receiving a stainless steel pot with only gold plating on peripheral parts would likely be regarded as unsatisfactory, which supported the conclusion that the article, in ordinary language, would not be called “gold-plated”.


The court also accepted an argument advanced for Customs based on the explanatory note about accessories: the pot itself was the essential article, and the plated handles and knob were ancillary. On this approach, plating confined to ancillary components could not “enoble” the whole article into being gold-plated for tariff purposes where the main stainless steel hollowware remained unplated.


The importer invoked certain American decisions, including Saji & Kariya Co et al v United States (No 1907) 9 Ct Cust Appls 78 (1919), suggesting that it could be enough if the plating was not an “insignificant or negligible” part. The court declined to treat those decisions as binding and noted differences in legislation. It also found, on the facts, that the plated area was negligible. In addition, the court framed the inquiry differently: given the ordinary meaning of “plated”, the correct approach was that unless the unplated area is insignificant, a product cannot properly be said to be plated. Since the unplated area (the stainless steel body) was plainly not insignificant, the goods could not properly be characterised as plated with gold for tariff purposes.


Having applied these principles to the nature and characteristics of the goods, the court concluded that the goods were more appropriately classified as stainless steel hollowware within the relevant sub-subheading that applied at the higher rate of duty.


Finally, on the procedural dispute about section 47(11) and whether a determination existed, the court noted that both counsel agreed that the tariff classification decision would dispose of the appeal. It therefore did not decide the complicated section 47(11) issues and cautioned that Conradie J should not be taken to have decided more than the tariff classification question.


5. Outcome and Relief


The Supreme Court of Appeal held that the correct tariff classification of the imported cookware was under sub-subheading 7323.93.20, with the result that the higher customs duty (30%) applied.


The appeal was dismissed. The court ordered the appellant to pay the respondents’ costs, including the costs of two counsel.


Cases Cited


Secretary for Customs and Excise v Thomas Barlow & Sons Ltd 1970 (2) SA 660 (A)


International Business Machines SA (Pty) Ltd v Commissioner for Customs and Excise 1985 (4) SA 852 (A)


Saji & Kariya Co et al v United States (No 1907) 9 Ct Cust Appls 78 (1919)


Legislation Cited


Customs and Excise Act 91 of 1964


Section 47(8)(a) of the Customs and Excise Act 91 of 1964


Section 47(11) of the Customs and Excise Act 91 of 1964 (as it was in 1998)


Schedule 1 to the Customs and Excise Act 91 of 1964, Part 1, Chapter 73, Heading 73.23 and subheading 7323.93 (including sub-subheadings 7323.93.20 and 7323.93.90)


Schedule 1 General Notes, “General Rule for the interpretation of this Schedule”, Rule A.1


Schedule 1 General Notes, Rule 6 (classification in subheadings)


Rules of Court Cited


No rules of court were cited in the judgment.


Held


The court found that the cookware was not properly described, for tariff purposes, as plated with precious metal, where the stainless steel hollowware body bore no gold plating and only limited, ancillary components (bakelite handles and lid knobs) were partly gold plated. On the facts and the interpretive framework applicable to customs classification, the limited plating was treated as insufficient to characterise the article as “plated”.


As a result, the court upheld the tariff classification adopted by the court a quo and confirmed that the goods fell under 7323.93.20, attracting the 30% duty. The appeal was dismissed with costs, including the costs of two counsel.


LEGAL PRINCIPLES


The interpretation of customs tariff classifications must proceed primarily from the terms of the headings and subheadings and the relevant section and chapter notes, with titles serving only as aids to reference. This principle was reaffirmed with reference to the structure of Schedule 1 and the interpretive rules governing classification.


The World Customs Council (Brussels) Explanatory Notes must be taken into account in interpreting tariff headings and subheadings, in the sense that the adopted interpretation must conform to those notes and not be contrary to them, while not necessarily treating them as peremptory commands.


Tariff classification involves a structured inquiry consisting of (i) interpretation of the relevant tariff wording, (ii) identification of the nature and characteristics of the goods, and (iii) selection of the most appropriate heading or subheading in light of the first two steps.


In determining whether an article is “plated” for tariff purposes, the court applied the ordinary meaning of “plated” as connoting being covered with a coating. Where plating is confined to ancillary parts (such as handles and knobs) and the main article retains the character of the base material, the ancillary plating does not, without more, convert the whole article into an article “plated with precious metal”. The court’s application of this principle was informed both by the explanatory notes concerning accessories and by an evaluative assessment of whether the article would ordinarily be described as “gold-plated” given the extent and location of the plating.

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[2002] ZASCA 100
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Lewis Stores (Pty) Ltd v Minister of Finance and Another (368/2001) [2002] ZASCA 100; 65 SATC 172 (6 September 2002)

IN
THE SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL OF SOUTH AFRICA
Case no 368/2001
REPORTABLE
In the matter between
Lewis
Stores (Pty) Ltd
Appellant
and
The
Minister of Finance
First Respondent
The Commissioner of the South African Revenue Service
Second Respondent
Before: Howie,
Schutz, Streicher, Brand JJA and Lewis AJA
Heard:
2 September 2002
Delivered: 6
September 2002
Customs duty – classification – whether pots and
pans plated with gold
_______________________________________________________________
JUDGMENT
_______________________________________________________________
SCHUTZ
JA
[1] The issue in this case is whether certain imported
pots and pans are plated with gold.
[2] The appellant is the importer,
Lewis Stores (Pty) Ltd (hereinafter ‘the importer’). The first
respondent is the Minister
of Finance. He abides the result. The
second respondent is the Commissioner for the South African Revenue
Service. He is responsible
for the levying and collection of customs
duty. I shall refer to him as ‘Customs’.
[3] Before setting out the statutory
provisions relevant to this case I would adopt a passage from the
judgment of Trollip JA in
Secretary for Customs and Excise v
Thomas Barlow & Sons Ltd
1970 (2) SA 660
(A) at 675D-F
explaining the structure of that part of the Customs and Excise Act
91 of 1964 (the Act) with which we are concerned.
Trollip JA stated:
‘
The duty which is payable is set out in Schedule 1 of
the Act. This Schedule is a massive part of the statute in which all
goods
generally handled in international trade are systematically
grouped in
sections
,
chapters
and
sub-chapters
,
which are given
titles
indicating as concisely as possible the
broad class of goods each covers. Within each chapter and
sub-chapter the specific type
of goods within the particular class is
itemised by description of the goods printed in bold type. That
description is defined in
the Schedule as a “
heading
”.
Under the heading appear
sub-headings
of the species of the
goods in respect of which the duty payable is expressed. The
Schedule itself and each section and chapter
are headed by “
notes
”,
that is, rules for interpreting their provisions.’ (Emphasis
supplied.)
[4] The sub-headings relevant to this
case appear in Chapter 73 of Part 1 of Schedule 1 to the Act in the
following context:
’
73.23 Table, Kitchen or Other Household Articles and
Parts Thereof, of Iron and Steel; Iron or Steel Wool; Pot Scourers
and Scouring
or Polishing Pads, Gloves and the Like, of Iron or
Steel:
………..
7323.10 Iron or steel wool ……..
………..
7323.93 Of stainless steel:
.20 Hollowware for kitchen or table use (
excluding
those plated with precious metal
) 30 %
.90 Other 20 %
……………’
(Emphasis supplied.)
[5] The item 73
.
23 above
is a heading and the succeeding item 7323.93 is a sub-heading. The
later sub-sub-headings 7323.93.20 and 7323.93.90 are
the ones
relevant to this case. The parties are agreed that the pots and pans
have to be classified under the one or other of these
sub-sub-headings. This is so because they are hollowware made of
stainless steel, the only question being whether they are plated
with
a precious metal – in this case gold. The percentages 30 % and 20
% reflect the different rates of duty applicable to the
two items.
Customs contends for the higher rate (item 20) and the importer for
the lower (item 90).
[6] The first ‘note’ that is of importance is
contained in Schedule 1 of the Act under the heading ‘General
Notes’. It is
numbered A.1 and reads in its setting:
‘
A
General Rule for the interpretation of this Schedule
Classification
of goods in this Schedule shall be governed by the following
principles:
1. The titles of Section, Chapters and sub-Chapters are
provided for ease of reference only; for legal purposes,
classification shall
be determined according to the terms of the
headings and any relative Section or Chapter Notes and, provided such
headings or Notes
do not otherwise require, according to the
following provisions: ………’
In the
Thomas Barlow
case
(above) Trollip JA commented upon these words (at 675H-676A):
‘
That,
I think, renders the relevant headings and section and chapter notes
not only the first but the paramount consideration in determining
which classification, as between headings, should apply in any
particular case.’
[7] Rule 6 under the ‘General
Notes’ deals with sub-headings in these terms:
‘
For legal purposes, the classification of goods in
the subheadings of a heading shall be determined according to the
terms of those
subheadings and any related subheading notes and,
mutatis matandis
, to the above rules, on the understanding
that only subheadings at the same level are comparable. For the
purposes of this Rule
the relative section and chapter notes also
apply, unless the context otherwise applies.’
[8] Also relevant to the interpretation of
the sub-headings are the ‘explanatory notes’ published by the
World Customs Council,
Brussels (formerly the Customs Co-operation
Council, Brussels). Section 47 (8) (a) of the Act provides that the
interpretation of
a heading or subheading ‘shall be subject to’
these notes. In
International Business Machines SA (Pty) Ltd v
Commissioner for Customs and Excise
1985 (4) SA 852
(A) Nicholas
AJA held (at 864A-C) that these notes are not to be regarded as
peremptory injunctions, as all that s47 (8) requires
is that an
interpretation should conform to, and not be contrary to, the
Brussels notes. One of these notes which is relevant to
this case
reads:
‘
These articles (falling under heading 73
.
23)
may be cast, or iron or steel sheet, plate, hoop, strip, wire, wire
grill, wire cloth, etc., and may be manufactured by any process
(moulding, forging, punching, stamping, etc.).
They may be fitted
with lids, handles or other parts or accessories of other materials
provided that they retain the character of
iron or steel articles
.’
(Emphasis supplied.)
[9] In the
International Business
Machines
case (above) Nicholas AJA further stated (at 863G-H):
‘
Classification
as between headings is a three-stage process: first, interpretation
– the ascertainment of the meaning of the words
used in the
headings (and relevant section and chapter notes) which may be
relevant to the classification of the goods concerned;
second,
consideration of the nature and characteristics of those goods; and
third, the selection of the heading which is most appropriate
to such
goods.’
[10] Taking interpretation first,
the expression hollowware for kitchen or table use, made of stainless
steel, is clear. The expression
‘plated with gold’ has been the
subject of argument. By whatever process it is achieved, the notion
of gold plating is plain
enough. But must the whole be plated and if
not the whole, where must the plating be? These questions, should
they arise, are not
answered by the exclusionary words used in
7323
.
93
.
20, ‘those plated with precious
metal’, because they tell of plating, but not of its location or
extent. However, I would think
that if one says that a thing is
plated the ordinary meaning conveyed is that it is all plated. The
SOED gives as the first two
meanings of the verb ‘to plate’ the
following: ‘1.
To cover
, or overlay with plates of metal,
for ornament, protection, or strength;
to cover
(ships,
locomotives, etc.) with armour-plates. 2.
To
cover
articles made of the baser metals with a coating of gold or silver;
also iron with tin’ (emphasis supplied). This second meaning
is
the one that must govern in this case. The provision in the Brussels
notes concerning lids, handles, other parts and accessories,
is of
assistance. But before proceeding it is necessary to describe the
goods. Such a description is relevant also to the second
and third
enquiries, as it is the essence of the second and necessary for an
approach to the third.
[11] The goods imported consist,
first, of a 12 piece set consisting of a frying pan and 11 pots, and,
secondly, of a 12 litre stock
pot, having the same construction and
design as the pots in a set. The pots and their lids and the pans
are made of stainless steel.
It is to be emphasised that the
hollowware in the narrow sense, that is the pot or pan without a lid
or handle, is made of stainless
steel and bears no gold plating. The
handles and lid knobs are made of bakelite and they are partly gold
plated, but overall the
aureate sheen is dim. The plating is very
thin, but that is of no matter as it is there. The mass of the gold
is some 0,0008 %
of the total mass of the pot and lid but, again, it
is there. The plating is said to cover roughly 10 % of the
external surface
area of the pot and lid and roughly 5 % of the total
surface area internal and external (although to my unskilled eye the
percentages
are even less). Although the pot sets are advertised in
print and by television as a ‘Gourmet Gold Cookware Set’, the
packaging
emphasises their stainless steel nature and expounds the
benefits of the same. So much for the second stage of the
classification,
the consideration of the nature and characteristics
of the goods.
[12] I come to the third stage, the
selection of the most appropriate heading. If I had first had sight
of one of the products with
an eye unbedevilled by learned argument,
I do not think that it would have occurred to me to call it
gold-plated. I think I would
have called it a stainless steel pot
and might have added that the handles and the knob on the lid were
decorated with gold plate.
And if I had bought one as a gold-plated
pot without first having seen it I would have been offended to have
received a steel pot
with some golden trimmings but no gold plating.
It would, in my opinion, be more appropriate to call the pot a steel
pot, albeit
with trimmings, than to call it a pot plated with gold.
[13] Mr Puckrin, for Customs, has
also placed emphasis on the note quoted in para [8] above. He
contends that the pot itself (the
hollowware) is the essential
article, and that it is not plated with gold at all. Ergo. I agree
with Mr Puckrin’s argument that
if only the handles and the knob
are plated, they are, in terms of the note, to be regarded as mere
ancillaries that cannot enoble
the character of the entire article.
[14] The importer relies on some
American decisions, to the effect that it is sufficient if the
plating is not an ‘insignificant
or negligible part’. See, for
instance,
Saji & Kariya Co et al v United States
(No
1907). 9 Ct Cust Appls 78 (1919). The legislation there considered
is not identical to that before us and in any event we are
not bound
by these decisions. When I look at the products before us, the
plated area is indeed negligible and, as I have said, it
would not
have occurred to me to call them gold-plated. But the case against
the importer is even stronger. Given the ordinary
meaning of the
word ‘plated’, the matter is to be approached the other way
round. Unless the unplated area is insignificant
a product could not
properly be said to be plated.
[15] Accordingly, I am of the view
that the correct tariff description is contained in 7323.93.20, so
that the higher duty of 30 %
is attracted.
[16] Very correctly, both counsel
agreed to play the ball instead of the man. By this I mean that they
agreed that if a decision
on the tariff classification went against
the importer that would dispose of the appeal. This had the effect
of rendering unnecessary
of decision some very complicated arguments
which were addressed to us and which I need not describe. At the
root of them was the
operation of s47(11), as it was in 1998. For
the importer it was argued before us that there had been no
determination at all by
Customs in respect of the goods still in
contention. However, much as the parties may have been at odds
below, everybody, including
the judge, was of the view that an appeal
against a determination was being argued. I say this merely to warn
that in the future
Conradie J should not be seen as having decided
any more than what he did decide – namely what the correct tariff
classification
was. In my opinion he was correct on that score, and,
that being so, his order was the correct one and does not need to be
disturbed
or altered in any way.
[17] The appeal is dismissed with
costs, including the costs of two counsel.
____________
W P SCHUTZ
JUDGE OF APPEAL
CONCUR
HOWIE JA
STREICHER JA
BRAND JA
LEWIS AJA