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High court upholds SARS' challenge to R10-million insurance deduction 


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High court upholds SARS' challenge to R10-million insurance deduction 

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High court upholds SARS' challenge to R10-million insurance deduction 

High court upholds SARS' challenge to R10-million insurance deduction 

2nd July 2026

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On 26 June 2026, the Western Cape High Court, in Commissioner for the South African Revenue Service v Meiring Citrus (Pty) Ltd, upheld SARS's appeal and held that a R10-million self-insurance deduction was not allowable. 

What began with a R10-million tax deduction claimed in Meiring Citrus' 2017 year of assessment ultimately resulted in years of verifications, a SARS audit, an objection, an appeal to the Tax Court and, finally, an appeal before the Western Cape High Court.

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The facts 

Meiring Citrus (Pty) Ltd (“Meiring Citrus”) carries on a citrus farming business in the Sundays River Valley in the Eastern Cape, exporting lemons, oranges, soft citrus and mandarins primarily to Europe, the Middle East and Canada. Like many citrus producers, it faces significant risks, including drought, frost and wind, as well as export-specific risks such as the pests Citrus Black Spot and False Codling Moth, either of which could result in an entire shipment being rejected and destroyed. It was against this backdrop that Meiring Citrus sought insurance cover. 

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Meiring Citrus entered into what it considered to be an insurance arrangement with Santam Limited (“Santam”). In terms of the arrangement, Meiring Citrus paid R10-million to Santam, which would hold the funds and provide an additional R2.4-million of cover, resulting in a total indemnity limit of R12-million. To facilitate the arrangement, Santam levied an underwriting fee of R400,000.00, which was deducted from the funds. The remaining R9.6-million was credited to an "experience account". 

Any insurance claims would effectively be paid from the funds standing to Meiring Citrus' credit in that account. The funds earned notional interest for the benefit of Meiring Citrus and upon 30 days' notice, Meiring Citrus could cancel the arrangement and have the balance of the account repaid to it. The arrangement had a significant tax effect. 

Meiring Citrus claimed the full R10-million as a deduction in its 2017 year of assessment, reducing its taxable income from approximately R13.5-million to R3.5-million.

One detail, however, would later become significant: although the deduction was claimed, the notional interest earned on the experience account was never declared. 

SARS had questions 

The substantial increase in insurance expenditure immediately attracted SARS' attention in the 2017 year of assessment. During the verification process, Meiring Citrus provided SARS with the application form and debit order authority. However, notably absent was the actual contract itself and the experience account statements. Only during the subsequent audit process, initiated in December 2020, was the complete agreement finally disclosed. Following the audit, SARS proceeded to disallow the R10-million deduction, include the notional interest in taxable income, in addition to reopening the prescribed assessment in terms of section 99(2) of the Tax Administration Act and further imposed a 10% understatement penalty.

But had the matter not prescribed?

This was one of the taxpayer's principal arguments. Ordinarily, once three years have passed, an assessment becomes final in terms of section 99(1) of the Tax Administration Act.

However, SARS relied on section 99(2), arguing that the incomplete disclosure of the arrangement and the omission of the notional interest constituted material non-disclosures and misrepresentations. The High Court agreed. 

Importantly, the court held that materiality lies in the non-disclosed fact itself, not necessarily in the value of the amount involved. Even though the notional interest was relatively insignificant, its disclosure would have revealed the true nature of the arrangement and may have led to a different assessment. Accordingly, SARS was entitled to reopen the assessment.

The court finds no insurance contract existed 

The central issue before the court was whether the arrangement constituted a valid contract of insurance in law. The court found that the Tax Court previously erred in not considering the validity of the insurance contract in place. In answering this question, the court revisited the essential characteristics of an insurance contract, namely an insurable interest, a risk of loss, an insurer assuming that risk, the spreading of risk amongst many insureds and the payment of a premium in return for that assumption of risk.

The court ultimately concluded that the arrangement did not satisfy these requirements. In particularly strong language, the court held that the agreement was: "draped as an insurance contract but in our view, in law it is not." The arrangement was described as an investment transaction disguised as insurance, self-insurance rather than true insurance and the antithesis of insurance because there was no transfer or spreading of risk.

The court found that the R9.6-million remained, in substance, Meiring Citrus' own money given that it earned interest for its benefit and it could be reclaimed on cancellation. Further to this the money  could be pledged as security and lastly claims were effectively paid from its own funds.

The court therefore concluded that only R2.4-million of risk had actually been transferred to Santam. The remaining R9.6-million was nothing more than a deposit into an investment account.

The R10-million deduction was not allowed 

The court concluded that Meiring Citrus’ deduction in terms of the Income Tax Act, 1962 (Act No. 58 of 1962) failed. Section 11(a) permits a deduction only where expenditure is actually incurred in the production of income, for the purposes of trade and not of a capital nature.

The court held that the R9.6-million was not expenditure actually incurred. There had been no real diminution in Meiring Citrus' assets. Instead, there had merely been a change in the form in which the asset was held. Substance, once again, prevailed over form. The court went even further and held that, even if expenditure had been incurred, it would nevertheless have been capital in nature because the taxpayer had acquired an income-producing asset in the form of the experience account. Accordingly, the deduction failed on both grounds.

The understatement penalty

The court also reinstated the 10% understatement penalty. By claiming a deduction to which it was not entitled and by failing to declare taxable interest income, Meiring Citrus had caused prejudice to the fiscus and met the requirements for a substantial understatement.

The significance of the judgment 

This judgment provides clarity on the distinction between genuine insurance and self-insurance arrangements when dealing with taxable deductions. Taxpayers should tread carefully, labelling an arrangement "insurance" does not make it insurance in law. Courts will look beyond the label and examine the substance of the arrangement. 

The consequences of getting it wrong can be significant, including the disallowance of deductions, audits, penalties and the reopening of assessments that may have otherwise prescribed. This case demonstrates why taxpayers should seek advice from experienced tax attorneys before implementing and claiming complex insurance or risk-mitigation arrangements as part of their deductions. 

 

Written by Charlotte McLaren, Tax Associate: Tax Controversy & Dispute Resolution at Tax Consulting SA; and Richan Schwellnus, Team Lead: Tax Controversy & International Tax at Tax Consulting SA

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