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SCA Confirms SARS’ Firm Approach to Penalties and Nil Returns

Simon Osuji by Simon Osuji
December 5, 2025
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SCA Confirms SARS’ Firm Approach to Penalties and Nil Returns
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The decision sends a strong message. When taxpayers submit incorrect returns, fail to substantiate their positions or abandon critical grounds of dispute, SARS is entitled to impose penalties and proceed with enforcement measures.

Background

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The taxpayer, an attorney, submitted nil returns for the 2008 to 2013 tax years. SARS audited his bank statements and found taxable income during the same period. Assessments were issued along with a 150 percent understatement penalty for intentional tax evasion.

Although the taxpayer later produced revised financial statements through new accountants, these revisions did not materially change the assessed liability or the penalties. During litigation, the taxpayer abandoned the relief aimed at challenging the correctness of the original assessments, effectively leaving the assessments final under section 100 of the Tax Administration Act.

The SCA’s Key Findings

 The Court confirmed that the understatement penalty was justified. SARS had identified income inflows, vehicle purchases and an affidavit in which the taxpayer claimed to have earned no income. In the absence of credible evidence of a bona fide error, the penalty for intentional evasion remained appropriate.

The Court also upheld SARS’ use of a ten percent private use adjustment on the taxpayer’s motor vehicles. The taxpayer provided no logbooks or records to prove a different split and SARS relied on an estimate proposed by the taxpayer’s own accountants.

The SCA further refused the attempt to introduce new evidence about the attachment of the taxpayer’s law firm’s bank account. The firm is a separate legal entity and not a party to the appeal, and the evidence would not have changed the outcome.

Why This Judgment Matters

 The judgment reaffirms that:

  • R-Nil returns must be supported by proper records;
  • A claim of inadvertent error requires real evidence;
  • Revised financials do not displace final assessments unless the challenge is properly prosecuted;
  • SARS may make estimated assessments when information is incomplete; and
  • Entities cannot be conflated to justify a set off against a personal tax debt.

For taxpayers, the decision is a reminder that procedural missteps can be as damaging as substantive errors. Once an assessment becomes final, challenging penalties becomes extremely difficult.

The Role of Specialist Tax Attorneys

 This case illustrates the risk taxpayers face when disputes are not managed strategically and supported with proper documentation. From penalty disputes to ADR, objections and appeals, specialist tax attorneys ensure that arguments are framed correctly, deadlines are met, and the correct remedies are pursued.

In the current enforcement climate, professional representation is essential to protect taxpayers against penalties, asset attachments and unnecessary financial exposure.





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