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UGANDA REVENUE AUTHORITY
v
CHINA JIEFANG (U)
LTD
HIGH COURT OF UGANDA AT KAMPALA
(COMMERCIAL COURT)
HIGH
COURT CIVIL APPEAL NO. 57 OF 1999
(BEFORE THE HON. JUSTICE RICHARD O.
OKUMU WENGI)
February 1, 2000
Taxation – Tax refunds – Refund of overpaid taxes made by
Appellant to Respondent – No interest paid on refund –
Appeal made
by Respondent to Tax Appeals Tribunal claiming interest – Tribunal
awarding interest – Whether interest payable
Appeals –
Appeal against decision of Tax Appeal Tribunal awarding interest on overpaid tax
– Law applicable – Whether
provisions of the law ambiguous –
Whether award of interest discretionary
The appellant, Uganda
Revenue Authority, appealed against the decision of the Tax Appeal Tribunal in
which an appeal brought by the
respondent seeking to claim interest on over paid
tax was allowed. The facts of the case are that in April 1997 the Internal
Revenue
Commissioner of the Appellant issued a presumptive tax assessment of
Shs. 77.6 million payable by the Respondent for the years 1994
to 1996. In June
1997 the Respondent paid a deposit of Shs. 28.8 million and carried out a tax
audit. The audit established that
the respondent’s liability together with
a penalty of Shs. 1.2 million was only Shs. 4.6 million. The Respondent demanded
a
refund for the over payment which was paid by the appellant in October 1998
without interest. The Respondent appealed to the Tribunal
seeking payment of
interest on the money which had been held by the Appellant for over 27 months.
The Tribunal ruled in favour of
the Respondent, and the Appellant lodged an
appeal to the High Court against this decision.
Held:
(i) Interest payable under the decree may be payable by the taxpayer to the revenue in cases of delayed or unpaid tax. It may also be interest payable on a refund as adjudged by a court, “Interest” is defined by section 2 of the Income Tax Decree as interest payable in any manner in respect of any loan, deposit, debt, claim or other right or obligation, and includes any premium or discount by way of interest and any commitment or service fee paid in respect of any loan or credit.
(ii) According to sections 2, 99(2)(a) and 111(1) of the Income Tax Decree as amended by Statute No.1 of 1992, interest is clearly payable on the money held by the Revenue Authority directly, or by deduction, or in excess of amount payable which is due to the taxpayer. In this case Court found that the payment of interest on the refund of overpaid taxes was not a discretionary decision by the Commissioner but was mandatory from the wording of sections 111(1) and 99(2) of the Decree;
Cases referred
to:
Allibhai v Commissioner Income Tax (1961) E.A 610
B v
Commissioner Income Tax Misc. (Tanganyika) Appeal No, 1 of 1954
Cape
Brandy Syndicate v Commissioner Inland Revenue IRC (1921) IKB 64 at
71
Dupot Steels Ltd case (1980) 1 AER at 529
Morgan Properties
Ltd v City of Winnipeg (1982) 2 DLR 1 493
Seaford Hot Esates Ltd v
Asher (1949) 2 AER
The Queen v Mclaren (1991) IFC
468
Legislation referred to:
Civil Procedure Act Section 26
o
Income Tax Decree 1974:
Income Tax Decree 1997 Section 111(1)
Income Tax Decree as amended by statute No.1 of 1992: Sections 2, 99(2), 100, and 111(1)
Tax Appeals Tribunals Act No. 12 of 1997, Sections
29(2), 43
Counsel for Appellant: Ms Kagwa Kasule
Counsel for
Respondent: Professor Sempebwa
JUDGMENT
OKUMU WENGI, J: This is a taxation appeal brought by the Uganda
Revenue Authority against the respondent a taxpayer. It arises from a decision
of
the Tax Appeals Tribunal made on July 9, 1999 by which the Tribunal allowed
an appeal brought by the taxpayer to claim interest on
over paid tax. The facts
of the case are sufficiently described by the Tribunal ruling and award. Briefly
they are as follows: In
April 1997 the Internal Revenue Commissioner of the
Uganda Revenue Authority issued a presumptive tax assessment by which a sum of
Shs. 77.6 million was payable by the tax payer for 1994 through 1996. To avert a
distress order accompanying the tax burden the taxpayer
in June 1997 deposited
Shs. 28.8 million pending an audit carried out at the instance of the Revenue
Authority. The audit established
that the tax payers liability together with a
penalty of Shs. 1.2 million having been imposed on the tax payer was only Shs.
4.6
million. The tax payer demanded a refund for the over payment which was not
forthcoming until October 1998 when the appellant paid
it to the tax payer.
However no interest was paid on this money which had been held by the Revenue
Authority for over 27 months.
The taxpayer insists that it was entitled to
interest on this sum and this was the thrust of the appeal to the Tax Appeals
Tribunal
which found for the taxpayer. The Revenue Authority is dissatisfied
with the ruling and award of the Tax Appeals Tribunal by which
the taxpayer
would collect Shs. 7.5 million payable as interest. From this ruling the Revenue
Authority has appealed to this court.
Five grounds of appeal were set out
in the amended memorandum of appeal filed on October 14, 1999 though only three
grounds were substantially
argued. These are firstly that the Tax Appeals
Tribunal had erred in holding that the Income Tax Act 1997 was applicable
to this matter. The second ground of appeal was that the Tax Appeals Tribunal
erred in holding that the taxpayer was
entitled to interest payment under
section 100 and 111 of the Income Tax Decree 1974. Finally it was
contended on appeal that the Tribunal wrongly held section 111 of the Income
Tax Decree 1974 to be ambiguous and inexplicit. In response the tax payer
cross appealed on two grounds which mainly related to the effective date
for
accrual of interest which the Tribunal set at February 1998 while the tax payer
sought to claim interest effective from July
1997. When this appeal came up for
hearing learned counsel for the Appellant Ms Kagwa Kasule argued that since the
over payment of
tax related to tax years prior to July 1997 the Income Tax
Act 1997 did not apply to this case. She however conceded that the Tribunals
view of this matter did not have any bearing on its ruling and
award even if
some post July 1997 taxes were recovered from the amount refunded to the
taxpayer.
Learned counsel then proceeded to deal with the second and
third grounds of her appeal. She submitted that the Commissioner General
of the
Uganda Revenue Authority had a statutory duty to refund any excess amount paid
by a taxpayer together with interest if such
interest payment was provided for
in the Income Tax Decree. Counsel submitted further that no where in the said
decree was a rate
of interest on refunds of overpaid tax provided; nor was there
a provision specifically stipulating when interest should be payable
to a tax
payer. She contended that while there was provision for the Revenue Authority to
levy interest on unpaid tax or underestimated
tax there was no provision for
payment of interest on tax refunds. Counsel thus argued that the law was silent
on the matter as none
of the numerous amendments to the Income Tax Decree
addressed the issue. Learned Counsel cited MAXWELL ON INTERPRETATION OF STATUTES
11th Edition at page 4 and cases Cape Brandy Syndicate v
Commissioner Inland Revenue IRC (1921) IKB 64 at 71; B v Commissioner
Income Tax Misc. (Tanganyika) Appeal No, 1 of 1954 and Allibhai v
Commissioner Income Tax (1961) E.A 610 to support the literal and strict
rule of interpreting statutes. She contended that a taxpayer making a claim for
relief
under a taxing statute must be able to fit it within the four covers of
the statute and contended that the Tax Appeals Tribunal was
not justified in
referring to the authorities as rather old. Counsel contended that the
dichotomous situation where the Revenue recovers
interest on unpaid, or
underpaid taxes while the tax payers do not earn interest on overpaid taxes must
only be addressed by the
Tax Appeals Tribunal or this court, in the face of a
tax statute which was silent on the matter. She further contended that the
Commissioner
General while implementing a tax statute could not unilaterally
pursue an equitable angle by authorising interest where the law did
not provide
for it. This she argued was not the case under the new Income Tax Act whose
provisions specifically and clearly mandate
payments of interest on refunds of
overpaid tax.
Learned Counsel for the Appellant then submitted that
Section 111(1) of the Income Tax Decree was not in any way ambiguous as
found by the Tax Appeals Tribunal. She contended that if there was any ambiguity
this perhaps related
to the silence in the law on interest claims on refunds of
overpaid tax. As such it did not amount to ambiguity, as a law may be
silent but
not necessarily ambiguous. She cited Dupot Steels Ltd case (1980) 1 AER
at 529 to support this view and argued that the circumstances in Morgan
Properties Ltd v City of Winnipeg (1982) 2 DLR 1 493 relied on by the
Tribunal were different since there was an ambiguity there unlike in the Tax
provision in this
case. She then prayed that the appeal be allowed as no
incident or rate for interest payments to a taxpayer existed in the Income
Tax
Decree. Alternatively counsel asked this court to find that the law only gave a
discretion to the Commissioner General of the
appellant to determine when
interest may be payable. Such a discretion was thus only questionable when
exercised unjudiciously. With
respect this contention is not only misconceived
but untenable and I reject it as it will become clear in the course of this
judgment.
In reply, Professor Sempebwa Learned Counsel for the Respondent
submitted that from the wording of Section 111 (1) of the Income Tax
Decree there was no discretion on the Commissioner General but that the
section made it mandatory for him to pay interest and the excess
of tax paid.
Counsel contended that the argument about discretion went counter to the rules
of interpretation in that the words were
clear and could not be overstretched to
mean that the Commissioner General could determine interest. He further argued
that the context
of the statute was to give justice to the taxpayer by refunding
excess and that it was only rational that interest is paid on money
that is held
by another. Learned Counsel then contended that there was nothing ambiguous in
the Decree and any such ambiguity had
to be construed in favour of the taxpayer.
That where silence became ambiguity then it should not be construed against the
taxpayer.
He cited Seaford Hot Esates Ltd v Asher (1949) 2 AER to argue
that a court faced with such a situation need not lament but should enforce the
tax payers right to property
(interest) in money held by the Revenue for so long
no matter whether the tax payer was a defaulting one. In this case counsel
argued
that the Tribunal or the Court could intervene to provide the interest
rate payable.
Learned counsel then urged this court to set aside the
order of the Tribunal fixing February 1998 as the date when interest became
payable as the determination did not flow from evidence. However in reply to
this point raised in Cross Appeal Ms. Kagwa learned
counsel for the Appellant
submitted that it was a question of facts only which could not be canvassed on
appeal to this court which
must be on questions of law only.
Before going into the merits of this case it will be useful to set out
the provisions of the law that have become the bone of contention.
Section 100
of the Income Tax Decree as amended by statute No.1 of 1992
reads:
“100 (1) where any amount of tax remains unpaid after the due date, an interest of ten percent higher than the rates of interest of the ruling Commercial Bank lending rate applicable to Commerce shall become due and payable on the tax due.
(2) Any interest charged under sub section (1) shall be deemed to be a tax for the purpose of collection.”
Section 101 of the Decree
then provides for interest collection on underestimated tax. While section 111
(1) provides
“111 (1) If it is proved to the satisfaction of the Commissioner that in respect of any year of income, any tax has been paid by or on behalf of any person, whether directly or by deduction or otherwise, which is in excess of the amount payable by that person as finally determined in respect of that year of income, the Commissioner shall refund the amount of such excess, together with any interest which may be payable thereon under this decree to the person entitled to such refund ”(emphasis added).
In the decree "interest" is defined in section 2 as
follows :
“interest” (other than interest charged on tax) means interest payable in any manner in respect of any loan, deposit, debt, claim or other right or obligation, and includes any premium or discount by way of interest and any commitment or service fee paid in respect of any loan or credit.”
This definition of course also encompasses the entire interest
question in income tax, an area of tax law where many complications
have arisen.
Such definition was nowhere in similar English tax legislation.
The
decree also provides for refund of balance of overpaid tax and the due dates
when taxes are payable, including in cases where
an objection to assessment is
made and the matter goes on appeal to the High Court Section 99 (2) then
stipulates that if the High
Court finally determines the assessment and it
is
“(a) less than the amount paid in accordance with this subsection then the amount overpaid shall be refunded under section 111 of this decree together with interest thereon at such rate as the court may order (emphasis added).
The issue of refund of overpaid tax is also to be found in
section 98 (6)(b) of the decree. It is also to be found in Section 29(2)
of the
Tax Appeals Tribunals Act No. 12 of 1997 which provides
“29 (l)........................
(2) Where the decision maker is required to refund an amount of tax to a person as a result of a decision of reviewing body, the tax shall be repaid with interest at the rate specified in the relevant law on the amount of the refund for the period commencing from the date the person paid the tax refunded and ending on the last day of the month in which the refund is made.”
And Section 43 of the same act
provides that
“43. This act applies to taxation decisions before the coming into operation of this act.”
Now it seems to this court that
the appellant considered that payment of interest was a discretionary decision
by the Commissioner
due perhaps to the phrase "any interest which may be
payable." But if it was the intention to give a discretion to the Commissioner
the words giving the discretion would have been added to signify such a
discretion. As it is the phrase refers to the interest itself
which becomes
payable on a delayed or underpaid tax or on a refund of an overpaid tax. Such
interest is the interest that accrues
on a tax and is payable thereon. At best
there could only be room for regarding the rate of interest to be paid, but the
decree makes
reference in other sections to bank rates of interest as a
guide.
As it is, the law is not as ambiguous as it would appear. The
interest payable under the decree may be payable by the taxpayer to
the revenue
in cases of delayed or unpaid tax. It may also be interest payable on a refund
as adjudged by a court, and the definition
of interest must be kept in mind
here.
As a result interest is clearly payable on the money held by the
Revenue which is due to the taxpayer. The problem arose in my view
due to the
misunderstanding of the words in the decree which give the impression that "may
be payable" was meant to describe a levy
or payment that the Commissioner was
empowered to decide on. However the correct interpretation is that it is the
interest itself
that is payable in certain circumstances. I see such interest
may be payable by the taxpayer who is also entitled under the decree
to recover
interest on overpaid tax from the revenue. Another way of looking at the issue
seems to be that since interest charged
on delayed or underpaid taxes amounts to
a tax then denying a taxpayer the right to accrual of interest on tax deposits
or money
overpaid by him, refund of which is mandatory, would constitute a levy.
Such a levy would equally be unsupported by the taxing legislation
in like
manner as the argument that the decree was silent on interest. To this extent
the taxpayer would be right to question the
legal or for that matter the
Constitutional basis for the levy or imposition of such a burden on him which
amounts to deprivation
of property or simply an unlawful tax. The court is in
any way entitled to pronounce on interest in exercise of its inherent powers,
and by virtue of interpreting the interest provisions in the Income Tax Decree
that have been cited herein above. The Court would
also invoke section 26 of the
Civil Procedure Act. On interest all these considerations are also
remedial to the taxpayer in the context of democratising the tax regime. This is
a
point that is advanced by the Canadian Authority of Morgan Properties v
City of Winnipeg (1982) (Supra) and The Queen v Mclaren (1991)
IFC 468 cited by the Tax Appeals Tribunal. But even without going into the
jurisprudence enunciated in these cases it is my
opinion that the clear words of
the decree are that a reference to "any interest" includes interest payable by
either the Revenue
Authority to the taxpayer or by the taxpayer to the Revenue
which forms part of or arises out of an excess or deficit in the tax
paid or
payable.This is found in sections 2, 99(2)(a) and 111(1) themselves. A reading
of those sections given their purposive interpretation
rule out any ambiguity or
inexplicity that has been argued to exist in them.
The payment of the
excess tax was made in June 1997. The tax burden was then finally established
after an audit, adjustments and penalty
(which is a form of interest) and a
refund for overpayment was made in October 1998. There is no explanation for the
delay or indeed
the torment of an exhorbitant assessment that became reduced
from Shs. 77 million to a mere Shs. 4.6 million. Even the deposit of
Shs. 28
million was exorbitant in the circumstances, in which the actual liability is
established at about 15% of the negotiated
collection. Perhaps the Revenue could
exercise restraint and professional discretion to avoid the accusations of being
extortionist
in its collection practices even when dealing with notorious
avoiders and defaulters. In this way it would be creating credibility
in the tax
regime. The lesson taught to the Respondent in this case apart, a balance ought
to be found between the ingenious and
stubborn taxpayers on the one hand and the
tax authority on the other. This is the clear dispensation in the Constitution
of Uganda
and the Tax Laws in place today. Timely action by the taxpayer, the
tax authority and the Appeals Tribunals is no longer an issue
of open ended
discretion but professional and speedy action.
The Cross Appeal sought to
extend backwards the due date for interest accruals in order to collect more
from the revenue. But I think
under the old law the due date would coincide with
the date when the final liability was established. Probably this is why the
Tribunal
set February 1998 for accrual of interest. In this respect I notice
that in the Tax Appeals Tribunal ruling and award there was a
serious error
stating a fact that the taxpayer paid to the Revenue a deposit of Shs. 28
million on June 2, 1999; and that the refund
to the taxpayer was effected on
October 2, 1998. This could not have been the case. But given the
sequence of events, I would disallow the Cross Appeal. For the reasons I have
also
given above I do also not allow this appeal by the Appellant. The decision
of the Tribunal is accordingly upheld without adhering
to the perspectives it
advanced to arrive at it. Accordingly both the Appeal and Cross Appeal are
dismissed. No orders to costs are
made for a number of reasons. Firstly each
party can bear the costs of this Appeal and Cross Appeal both of which have been
dismissed.
Secondly this appeal related to a tax decision reached under a
repealed law and issues raised only bear a historical interest. Thirdly
it
cannot be said that the appellant was not innocent in its conviction that the
law bent towards its own interpretation of it. The
issues are also of Landmark
significance in the cross cut between taxpayer rights and collection practices
of the Appellant in the
context of democratisation of the tax regime in the
twilight to the millennium. As such an important question of public interest
regarding the interpretation of a statute regarding the taxing powers of the
state has arisen. For these reasons this court would
order that each party bears
its own costs.
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