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A Cautionary Judgment for Taxpayers: Supreme Court Of Appeal Rules Tax Disputes Cannot Be Rebuilt On Appeal

Simon Osuji by Simon Osuji
March 9, 2026
in Taxes
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A Cautionary Judgment for Taxpayers: Supreme Court Of Appeal Rules Tax Disputes Cannot Be Rebuilt On Appeal
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In the Baseline Civil Contractors (Pty) Ltd v CSARS (893/2024) [2026] case, the SCA considered the proper interpretation of Rule 32(3) of the Tax Court Rules, and whether a taxpayer may introduce a fundamentally new ground of appeal during the Tax Court pleading stage.

The SCA’s answer was clear. While taxpayers may advance new arguments on appeal, they may not introduce an entirely new case directed at a different component of an assessment raised by SARS that was never objected to in the first place. The decision reinforces a critical strategic lesson in tax disputes and litigation: the grounds of objection define the dispute. If they are not properly framed at the outset, the opportunity to correct course later may be limited.

The Dispute in Focus: A Partnership Payment and an R11 Million Deduction

This tax dispute arose from Baseline Civil Contractors’ 2018 corporate income tax return. The company declared gross income exceeding R320 million and claimed deductions totalling approximately R73 million. Among these deductions claimed was an amount in excess of R11 million, which Baseline contended represented a profit distribution paid to a participating partnership entity.

SARS proceeded to disallow this deduction following an ensuing audit, taking the stance that the partnership payment did not qualify as expenditure incurred in the production of income under section 11(a), read with section 23(g) of the Income Tax Act, No. 58 of 1962 (“the Act”). Instead, SARS regarded the payment as a voluntary distribution of profits made after the income had already been earned, thus raising an additional assessment.

Baseline thereafter objected to SARS’ additional assessment on the basis that the payment was a deductible business expense. When the objection was disallowed by SARS, the taxpayer launched an appeal.

At that stage, however, Baseline’s litigation strategy changed.

The Attempted Shift: From Deduction to Non-Accrual

During the Tax Court pleading stage, Baseline sought to introduce a new ground of appeal. Instead of arguing only that the R11 million payment was deductible, Baseline advanced an alternative position: that the amount had never accrued to it at all, because it had effectively been received on behalf of the partnership.

This argument fundamentally altered the nature of this tax dispute, as under Baseline’s original objection, the disputed amount formed part of Baseline’s gross income, but was claimed as a deduction. However, under the new argument, the taxpayer averred that this amount never formed part of its gross income in the first place.

SARS disagreed, arguing that the taxpayer was attempting to raise an entirely new ground of objection to a different component of its additional assessment. Both the Tax Court and the High Court initially agreed with SARS before the matter ultimately reached the SCA.

Rule 32(3): The Limits of New Grounds of Appeal

The central issue before the SCA was the interpretation of Rule 32(3) of the Rules promulgated in terms of Section 103 of the TAA, which regulates the statement of grounds of appeal that a taxpayer may advance in the Tax Court. This rule permits taxpayers to raise new grounds of appeal, however this is not permissible where a new ground of objection is raised that was not previously contained in the original objection submitted to SARS.

The SCA explained that the distinction is drawn between:

  • new arguments attacking the same part of a disputed assessment, which are permitted; and
  • new cases directed at a different component of a disputed assessment, which are not allowed.

Rule 32(3) therefore allows a taxpayer to refine its legal reasoning, but not to fundamentally reshape the grounds of a dispute.

Consistency Is Key: Why the Taxpayer’s New Argument Was Impermissible

The SCA held that Baseline’s new argument was not simply a different or refined legal explanation for the same objection. Instead, it constituted an entirely new case.

The original objection accepted that the R11 million formed part of Baseline’s gross income and sought to deduct it as expenditure. The new argument, however, asserted that the amount had never accrued to Baseline at all, and therefore should not have been included in gross income. These two positions were fundamentally inconsistent.

As the Court observed, it is not possible to argue on one hand that an amount was incurred as expenditure in producing income, and on the other hand that the same amount never formed part of the taxpayer’s income.

Allowing this new argument would therefore have required the Court to entertain an entirely new objection that had never been raised during the objection stage, which is not allowed under Rule 32(3).

The Real Purpose of Rule 32

The SCA emphasised that Rule 32 forms part of a structured dispute resolution process under the TAA.

The objection and appeal framework in terms of the TAA is designed to:

  • crystallise the issues in dispute;
  • define the scope of the litigation; and
  • prevent parties to the tax dispute from shifting their case midstream.

Allowing taxpayers to introduce new grounds of objection during the Tax Court pleading stage would undermine this structure and could prejudice SARS by forcing it to confront a dispute that was never raised during the objection phase, as this serves to prevent ‘ambush litigation’.

The Strategic Lesson for Taxpayers and Advisors

The Baseline judgment highlights a practical point that many taxpayers underestimate. The notice of objection is not merely a procedural step, but rather defines the scope of the entire tax dispute.

Once the objection has been lodged, the boundaries of the litigation are largely fixed. While taxpayers may refine their legal arguments on appeal, they cannot introduce a fundamentally new case directed at a different component of the assessment.

For taxpayers and tax practitioners, the lesson is clear. Objections must be carefully framed from the outset by skilled and experienced tax specialists. Alternative grounds should be considered early, particularly where there is uncertainty about the legal characterisation of a transaction. Once a dispute reaches the Tax Court, the opportunity to reshape the case has likely already passed.





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