The ruling is a major win for the Fund—and a sharp rebuke of the South African Revenue Service’s (SARS) increasingly aggressive approach to disallowing input VAT claims by taxpayers. The court’s decision reinforces key principles around the relationship between contracting parties, making of taxable supplies, and claiming input tax.
The Background: Input VAT on Indemnity Premiums Sparks Battle
The Fund, a statutory body established to protect the public against dishonest conduct by legal practitioners, is required to issue fidelity fund certificates to practising attorneys. In order to do so responsibly, it procures professional indemnity insurance on behalf of those attorneys—covering them for claims arising from professional negligence.
Between 2018 and 2020, the Fund paid over R157 million in premiums to the Legal Practitioners Insurance Indemnity Fund. It then sought to claim the associated input VAT under section 16(3) of the Value-Added Tax Act (VAT Act). SARS initially allowed the claim for two periods in 2018 but later reversed its stance and denied the claims across four VAT periods. The Fund objected. SARS disallowed the objection. Litigation ensued.
The Core Legal Question
At the heart of the dispute was whether the Fund had acquired taxable services for the purposes of making taxable supplies and was therefore entitled to input VAT deductions.
This turned on several key provisions of the VAT Act, including:
- The definition of “services” and “enterprise” in section 1;
- The interpretation of section 16(3), which governs input tax deductions; and
- The question of whether the Fund was acting in its own right—or merely as an agent—for the legal practitioners.
SARS’s Arguments
SARS’s position rested on the claim that the Fund was not the true recipient of the services in question. Rather, it argued, the professional indemnity cover was rendered directly to the individual legal practitioners. In SARS’s view, the Fund acted merely as an intermediary or agent facilitating a transaction between the insurer and the practitioners.
This interpretation was central to SARS’s case: if the Fund was not the actual recipient of the service, it could not claim the input VAT. SARS further argued that the premiums were not linked to taxable supplies, that the Fund had failed to provide valid tax invoices or statements required by the VAT Act, and that the Fund had acted ultra vires by paying premiums from interest income and waiving contributions without authority to do so.
The Fund’s Response
The Fund maintained it acted as a principal when it procured the indemnity insurance. The insurance, it argued, was part of the package of benefits provided to legal practitioners in exchange for their annual contributions. This relationship, the Fund contended, fell squarely within its enterprise activities—namely, the issuance of fidelity fund certificates to practitioners, which constituted taxable supplies.
Crucially, the Fund also explained that any historic failure to invoice practitioners did not invalidate its VAT claims, especially as retrospective output tax adjustments had been made. It emphasised that the statutory framework under which it operated gave it discretion—not an obligation—to charge annual contributions and to procure insurance.
The Court’s Verdict: SARS Gets It Wrong
The Tax Court found in favour of the Fund on all key points.
It held that the Fund had indeed acquired services (the indemnity insurance) for use in its enterprise and that it was the principal party to the insurance contract. The court accepted that the services were rendered to the Fund itself, not the individual practitioners, and that the premiums were directly connected to the Fund’s taxable supplies.
The agency argument raised by SARS was rejected outright. The court noted that the facts and structure of the insurance arrangement supported the Fund’s position as principal.
Equally, the court dismissed the ultra vires claims, holding that the relevant legislation gave the Fund discretionary powers through the use of the word “may”—not “must.” The court found that the Fund had acted within its statutory mandate and that its actions, including any contribution waivers or premium payments, were entirely lawful.
As for the alleged documentary shortcomings, the court accepted that although there were some gaps, the Fund had substantially complied with the VAT Act. Retrospective corrections had been made to ensure that output tax was declared, and invoices were properly accounted for. These issues were not sufficient to disallow an otherwise lawful and substantively valid VAT deduction.
A Clear Message for SARS—and Taxpayers
This case is more than just a technical VAT dispute—it’s a win that underscores the importance of economic substance in tax matters. While SARS has shown an increasing willingness to challenge VAT input claims on procedural or formalistic grounds, this judgment serves as a reminder that such claims must be assessed in light of the underlying economic reality.
The Fund’s victory shows that where services are procured as part of a business’s enterprise activities—and the taxpayer acts within its statutory and commercial framework—input tax deductions should be allowed.
The Takeaway
This case reaffirms that SARS cannot rewrite commercial or statutory relationships to suit its narrative. When VAT-registered entities procure services as part of their taxable supplies—and comply substantively with the VAT Act—they are entitled to input tax relief.
Taxpayers should ensure that their arrangements are well-documented and that retrospective corrections are made where needed—but they should also know that the courts are willing to look beyond administrative missteps when the core facts support a legitimate VAT claim.