Civil Appeal No 172 of 2020 Pan African Energy Tanzania Limited Vs Commissioner General TRA
Civil Appeal No 172 of 2020 Pan African Energy Tanzania Limited Vs Commissioner General TRA
Civil Appeal No 172 of 2020 Pan African Energy Tanzania Limited Vs Commissioner General TRA
AT DAR-ES-SALAAM
(CORAM: MUGASHA. J.A.. KEREFU. J.A.. And MAIGE. J.A.)
VERSUS
COMMISSIONER GENERAL
TANZANIA REVENUE AUTHORITY................................................RESPONDENT
(Appeal from the decision Judgment and Decree of the Tax Revenue Appeals
Tribunal at Dodoma)
fMiemmas. J fRtd) Chairman.)
MUGASHA. 3.A.:
the decision of the Tax Revenue Appeals Tribunal (the Tribunal) which
struck out its appeal on the ground that before the Tax Revenue Appeals
Board (the Board), the appellant's appeal was preferred against a non-
appealable decision.
i
What underlies the present appeal is briefly as follows: The appellant
It also deals with the supply of natural gas to industrial and commercial
customers as well as the supply of compressed natural gas for use In motor
vehicles. On the other hand, the respondent is the Chief Executive Officer
Republic of Tanzania.
420838951 to the appellant for the year of income 2014 with the
lodged notices of objection against the assessment and applied for a waiver
of one third tax deposit required for the admission of the objection. The
respondent declined to grant the waiver for reasons that, the grounds
fronted by the appellant to apply the waiver were also pleaded in the
notices of objection and as such, could not be dealt with before the
Aggrieved with the refusal of waiver, the appellant lodged before the
Board, Appeals Nos. 149 of 2016; 187 and 188 of 2017 which were
consolidated and heard as one. The Board ultimately dismissed the appeal
on ground that the respondent was justified to refuse the grant of waiver.
Still undaunted, the appellant lodged an appeal before the Tax Revenue
Appeals Tribunal (the Tribunal) which was struck out for being
It is against the said backdrop, the present appeal found its way to
holding that the Tax Appeal No. 5 of 2019 before the Tribunal
holding that the Tax Appeals before the Board, Tax Appeal No.
149 of 2016 and Tax Appeals Nos 187 and 188 of 2017 were
3. That, the Tax Revenue Appeals Tribunal erred in law for failing
appealable decision.
To bolster their arguments for and against the appeal, parties filed
Messrs. Fayaz Bhojani and William Mang'ena, learned counsel whereas the
respondent had the services of Ms. Consolatha Andrew and Mr. Marcel
Busegano, both learned Senior State Attorneys and Messrs. Leyan Sabare
In the course of hearing the appeal, the learned counsel for each of
dialogue with the Court, Mr. Fayaz abandoned contents and all references
the waiver. Then, Mr. Fayaz commenced his address to the Court by
TAA) and the Tax Revenue Appeals Act [ CAP 408 RE.2002] (the TRAA) on
the tax payer's remedy in the event of the respondent's refusal to grant
waiver to deposit one third of the assessed tax in order to validate the
notice of objection. He pointed out that, while under section 50 (1) of the
TAA, the CG has discretion to make any tax decision including 'assessment'
or 'other decision7 or 'omission', in case of a grievance, section 51 of the
It was further contended that, the law mandates the respondent with
the tax payer, in case the waiver is refused, that is among the
Board in terms of section 53 (1) of the TAA because section 7 of the TRAA
the Tax Revenue Appeals Act instead of considering it together with the
This, it was argued, culminated into the striking out of the appeal which
Commissioner General.
Apart from attacking the limited appealable decisions as prescribed
argument of Mr. Fayaz that, there is no clarity as to how a tax payer can
(1), (3), 19 of the TRAA together with sections 50, 52, 53 (1) of the TAA,
Rules 2 and 6 of the Tax Appeals Board Rules and invoke a harmonious
Statutes, 4th Edition by Avtar Singh and Harpreet Kaur. Ultimately, the
appellants counsel urged the Court to allow the appeal and reverse the
supported the Tribunal's decision in striking out the incompetent appeal for
being preferred against a non-appealable decision before the Board. He
pointed out that, although section 7 of the TRAA clothes the Board with
this, it was argued that since section 2 of the TAA defines an objection
'omissions' of the respondent in terms of section 50 (3) and (4) of the TAA
16 (3) of the TRAA which regulates the service of the notice of appeal and
that it has nothing to do with the rejection to grant the waiver. Finally, the
uncalled for because the same was adequately addressed and determined
s
THE COMMISSIONER GENERAL TRA, Civil Appeal No. 121 of 2018
(unreported).
counsel as they relate to disputes which were wrongly filed in the High
Court which is not the case herein. Finally, the respondent urged the Court
In rejoinder, apart from Mr. Fayaz conceding that the appeal was
line with the standard forms used in filing appeals before the Board.
However, he submitted that the main concern of the appellant is about the
9
objection decision under section 2 of the TAA, he reiterated his earlier
prayer urging the Court to read the Act as a whole and make a harmonious
When probed by the Court on the settled position of the law on the
from either side, it is not in dispute that section 7 of the TRAA clothes the
a civil nature relating to the tax laws administered by the respondent and
that the appeals therefrom lie to the Tribunal. What is in dispute is whether
the refusal to grant waiver to deposit one third of the assessed tax is a tax
TRAA and TAA relating to what is in dispute, we begin with the four rules of
Statutory Interpretation to wit: the literal rule; the golden rule; the mischief
10
rule and the purposive approach. Which rule is the best? The golden rule is
that the words of a statute must prima facie be given their ordinary
statute are clear, plain and unambiguous, then the courts are bound to give
httD://www.lawctoDUS.com.canons.
We also deem it crucial to borrow a leaf from the Book which was
ii
But the whole o f what is enacted 'by necessary
implication can hardiy be determined without
keeping in the purpose o f object o f the statute. A
bare mechanical interpretation o f the words and
application o f legislative intent devoid o f concept or
purpose will reduce most o f the remedial and
beneficent legislation to futility....
construction of statutes when the words are unambiguous is not grey in our
ANOTHER, Criminal Appeal No. 355 of 2014 (unreported) the Court said:
12
interpolations, iest we stray into the exclusive
preserve o f the legislature under the cioak o f
overzeaious interpretation."
13
determination o f the Commissioner Generai under a
tax law that directly affects a person."
under section 50 of the TAA is considered to have been made in case of:
and any other tax decision where, the tax specifies a time by which the
General serves the affected person with written notice of the decision.
conclusive evidence that a tax decision has been made and the decision
is correct are: (i) self-assessment, the tax return that causes the
14
purporting to be a copy of the tax return; (ii) other assessments, the notice
purporting to be a copy of the notice; ( iii) any other tax decision, a written
between the phrases 'any tax decision' and Assessment' or 'other decision'
or 'omission' means that the former is a larger group which embraces the
means 'of the same kind'. The rule requires that: where in a statute there
are genera! words following particular specific words, the genera1 words
15
the maxim was defined as: "situation in which generai words follow specific
learned author has discussed as to when the rule of ejusdem generis can
16
words must apply not to different objects o f a widely
varying character but to words that convey things or
objects o f one class or kind.... Thus the restricted
meaning has to be given to words o f general import
only where the context o f the whole scheme o f
legislation requires i t "
In the light of the ejusdem generis rule, the phrase any tax decision
what precedes and what succeeds and not merely the clause itself and also
compare the clause with other parts of the law and the setting in which it
occurs. If we can apply the rule therefore, the phrases 'other decisions' or
'omissions' must be of the same nature as tax decisions and not otherwise.
Thus, in the light of the unambiguous and plain language used in section
50 (1) of what is a tax decision, we are satisfied that, refusal to grant the
We find the said decision still good law and as such, we decline the
prescribes the documents which must accompany the appeals to the Board.
Indeed, the said Rule was not brought to our attention and it was not
considered in the PAN AFRICAN case (supra) and as such, we shall now
18
"6. -(1) A person who institutes an appeai to the
Board shaii attach aii material documents which are
necessary including appealable decision, for the
proper determination o f the appeal.
19
(vi) a copy o f submission made by taxpayer in
response to the notice o f appeal, (if any);
20
Having scrutinized the plain language used in the cited Rule, the
objection; three, the appeal relates to refund drawback and four, the
refusal to register, any trader for the purpose of Value Added Tax. In this
regard, it is clear that, the refusal to grant waiver is not among the
decision. Besides, the waiver is excluded under the rule " expressio unius
est dusio a/teriuf which means, when one or more things of the same
class are expressly mentioned others of the same class are excluded. On
23 (supra) as follows:
21
statute. When a language is plain and
unambiguous and admits o f only one meaning
no question o f construction o f a statute arises,
for the Act speaks for itself It is not open to
first create on ambiguity and then look for
some principle o f interpretation. Courts
should not be overzealous in searching for
ambiguities or obscurities in words which are
plain.
[Emphasis supplied]
interpret the refusal to grant waiver a tax decision because since the
language used in the TRAA and TAA is plain, the legislative intent is vivid
interpolations which is not giving effect to the clear meaning of the statutes
provisions in question that the refusal to grant the waiver is neither a tax
22
the Board, we decline the appellant's counsel invitation to invoke the
We have also read the objects and reasons in the Special Bill
Administration Act which also amended several Tax legislation including the
Tax Revenue Appeals Act. The objects and reasons among other things,
We are aware that the Objects and Reasons in the Bill of the intended
prior to the enactment of TAA also happened to be under the TRAA. This is
section 50, 51, 52 and 53 governing the tax decisions, procedure to apply
waiver and objection decisions which are appealable to the Board subject to
complying with the TRAA. Besides, the refusal to grant the waiver was not
intention of a statute is the language used in the statute, the first and
found in the words used by the legislature itself. This was emphasized by
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I f the Legislature did intend that which it has not
clearly expressed: much more, if the Legislature
intended something very different; if the Legislature
intended pretty nearly the opposite o f what is said,
it is not forjudges to invent something which
they do not meet within the words o f the
text..."
[Emphasis supplied]
decline the appellant's counsel invitation to read and improvise what is not
the limitation imposed by the legislation rendering the refusal to grant the
25
inserting an appellate mechanism in the legislation as that is going beyond
TRAA and straying into the exclusive preserve of the legislature under the
aware that when words of a statute are clear and capable of giving a plain
language used and attention should be paid to what has been said and
what has not been said. Thus, the courts should not busy themselves with
We have gathered that in Uganda, whose tax laws are more or less
Tax Appeals Tribunal declined to determine the issue that was not within its
FUELEX case equally cements our position that, although the requirement
same are schemed under the TAA, that in itself does not clothe the tax
26
courts with jurisdiction to determine the propriety or otherwise of the
that the Tribunal was justified to strike out the appellant's appeal on
Thus, we find no cogent reasons to reverse the decision of the Tribunal and
S. E. A. MUGASHA
JUSTICE OF APPEAL
R.J. KEREFU
JUSTICE OF APPEAL
IJ. MAIGE
JUSTICE OF APPEAL
The Judgment delivered this 9th day of July, 2021 in the presence of
Mr. William mang'ena and Mr. Hamza Ismail both learned counsel for the
appellant and Mr. Marcel Busegano, learned Senior State Attorney for the