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Revenue income vs capital receipt: the validity of the basis for taxing receipts from mining operators in the hands of landowners

During the 1980’s and onwards, the Western Cape’s Tax and High Courts were inundated with cases relating to the capital vs revenue classification on receipts by landowners from mining operators. These cases became known, in the common parlance, as the Cape Sand Cases. The principles debated during t...

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Main Author: Krige, André Claude
Other Authors: Roeleveld, Jennifer
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Finance and Tax 2020
Subjects:
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access_status_str Open Access
author Krige, André Claude
author2 Roeleveld, Jennifer
author_browse Krige, André Claude
Roeleveld, Jennifer
author_facet Roeleveld, Jennifer
Krige, André Claude
author_sort Krige, André Claude
collection Thesis
description During the 1980’s and onwards, the Western Cape’s Tax and High Courts were inundated with cases relating to the capital vs revenue classification on receipts by landowners from mining operators. These cases became known, in the common parlance, as the Cape Sand Cases. The principles debated during these hearings, range from “corpus vs fructus” to “single transactions vs carrying on a trade” and “capital disposal vs productively employing a capital asset”. The general principles formed during the rulings on these cases, fell largely in favour of the tax authorities and served as a deterrent to taxpayers for incessantly challenging the status quo on the classification of receipts from similar sources. Recent review of contracts within the industry and landowner consideration for classifying income, still follow the guidance of these common law principles. This study examines some of these past cases to get a better understanding of the reasoning which has led to the outcomes previously derived. An assessment of the changes introduced to tax legislation is made in order to provide grounds for the potential deflection from the incumbent perceptions on the classification of receipts. The initial investigation leads to the focal point of this study, which is the introduction of the MPRDA (Mineral and Petroleum Resources Development Act, 2002). Relying on the MPRDA, along with court cases challenging some of its content, the position of landowners is distinguished from that held during the formation of the common law on the classification of their income. The common law principles are challenged and reasons given, for denying exclusive reliance on previous case law when adjudicating the classification of income. This study, along with possible restructuring of the contracts that underlie these transactions, serves as basis for challenging the current classification of income by landowners from mining operators, previously deemed to be revenue in nature.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:33:33.643Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2020
publishDateRange 2020
publishDateSort 2020
publisher Department of Finance and Tax
publisherStr Department of Finance and Tax
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source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/31472 Revenue income vs capital receipt: the validity of the basis for taxing receipts from mining operators in the hands of landowners Krige, André Claude Roeleveld, Jennifer taxation During the 1980’s and onwards, the Western Cape’s Tax and High Courts were inundated with cases relating to the capital vs revenue classification on receipts by landowners from mining operators. These cases became known, in the common parlance, as the Cape Sand Cases. The principles debated during these hearings, range from “corpus vs fructus” to “single transactions vs carrying on a trade” and “capital disposal vs productively employing a capital asset”. The general principles formed during the rulings on these cases, fell largely in favour of the tax authorities and served as a deterrent to taxpayers for incessantly challenging the status quo on the classification of receipts from similar sources. Recent review of contracts within the industry and landowner consideration for classifying income, still follow the guidance of these common law principles. This study examines some of these past cases to get a better understanding of the reasoning which has led to the outcomes previously derived. An assessment of the changes introduced to tax legislation is made in order to provide grounds for the potential deflection from the incumbent perceptions on the classification of receipts. The initial investigation leads to the focal point of this study, which is the introduction of the MPRDA (Mineral and Petroleum Resources Development Act, 2002). Relying on the MPRDA, along with court cases challenging some of its content, the position of landowners is distinguished from that held during the formation of the common law on the classification of their income. The common law principles are challenged and reasons given, for denying exclusive reliance on previous case law when adjudicating the classification of income. This study, along with possible restructuring of the contracts that underlie these transactions, serves as basis for challenging the current classification of income by landowners from mining operators, previously deemed to be revenue in nature. 2020-03-04T09:05:03Z 2020-03-04T09:05:03Z 2018 2020-03-04T09:02:43Z Master Thesis Masters MCom http://hdl.handle.net/11427/31472 eng application/pdf Department of Finance and Tax Faculty of Commerce
spellingShingle taxation
Krige, André Claude
Revenue income vs capital receipt: the validity of the basis for taxing receipts from mining operators in the hands of landowners
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Revenue income vs capital receipt: the validity of the basis for taxing receipts from mining operators in the hands of landowners
title_full Revenue income vs capital receipt: the validity of the basis for taxing receipts from mining operators in the hands of landowners
title_fullStr Revenue income vs capital receipt: the validity of the basis for taxing receipts from mining operators in the hands of landowners
title_full_unstemmed Revenue income vs capital receipt: the validity of the basis for taxing receipts from mining operators in the hands of landowners
title_short Revenue income vs capital receipt: the validity of the basis for taxing receipts from mining operators in the hands of landowners
title_sort revenue income vs capital receipt the validity of the basis for taxing receipts from mining operators in the hands of landowners
topic taxation
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/31472
work_keys_str_mv AT krigeandreclaude revenueincomevscapitalreceiptthevalidityofthebasisfortaxingreceiptsfromminingoperatorsinthehandsoflandowners