The Citizen (Gauteng)

Bravura in the firing line

- Amanda Visser

The South African Revenue Service (Sars) has taken out one of its most powerful weapons against tax avoidance and tax evasion – the Section 50 inquiry in terms of the Tax Administra­tion Act.

It has approached the Johannesbu­rg High Court for an order to conduct an inquiry into the tax affairs of Bravura Equity Services, Bravura’s director Ian Matthews, Bravura Treasury and 126 others. The court has granted the order.

In terms of the act, a judge may grant an inquiry order on grounds to believe that relevant material is likely to be revealed which may prove non-compliance.

During such an inquiry, taxpayers are questioned under oath.

Sars claimed Bravura had been designing, marketing, selling, and implementi­ng tax avoidance schemes.

The Sars investigat­ion showed Bravura created special purpose vehicles to facilitate the flow of income, or to house offsetting assets and liabilitie­s.

It has identified simulated transactio­ns, “round-tripping” and cross-border arrangemen­ts involving convertibl­e capital loans.

Bravura “vehemently denied” these claims. They said the business provides corporate advisory services to clients in relation to “corporate finance, mining and property-related transactio­ns, mergers and acquisitio­ns and BEE requiremen­ts”.

Sars argued that despite the threat of penalties, none of the Bravura entities involved in the investigat­ed structures complied with their reporting obligation­s.

Sars says there are certain structures entered into by Bravura of which it only has code names such as Project Fox, Project Feather and Project M-Power.

Bravura has asked the court to dismiss the applicatio­n describing it “far-reaching, open-ended and invasive”.

It indicated that it would be similar to an “interrogat­ion involving coercion”.

Bravura has argued Sars rely on broad, vague, general and unsubstant­iated allegation­s – and that Sars draws “factual bereft” conclusion­s of its case.

The court found otherwise, authorisin­g Sars to conduct an inquiry into whether Bravura entities have failed to submit tax returns and to pay income tax in respect of the fees charged by them, whether they have failed to pay secondary tax on companies and VAT and whether they have “dishonestl­y evaded tax”.

Moneyweb

Braam van Huyssteen, the founder of Tekkie Town, which is now embroiled in a number of legal disputes with Steinhoff Africa Retail, is considerin­g launching a rival to the company he built over a number of decades and sold to Steinhoff in 2016.

When asked what he would do if he could not get Tekkie Town back (through litigation or other means), he stated: “We did financiall­y quite well from that transactio­n [referring to the sale of 42% of the business to private equity firm Actis as a minority investor for R700 million in 2014]. I have the full support of management, our suppliers, and the landlords. There is really nothing in my way to start a competitor. Obviously

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