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[1999] ZASCA 55
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Commissioner for Customs and Excise and Another v Kemtek Imaging Systems Ltd (1/98, 2/98) [1999] ZASCA 55 (6 September 1999)
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THE SUPREME COURT OF APPEAL
OF SOUTH AFRICA
Case No. 1/98 and 2/98
In the matter
between:
THE COMMISSIONER FOR CUSTOMS
AND
EXCISE First Appellant
FIRST GRAPHICS (PROPRIETARY)
LIMITED Second
Appellant
and
KEMTEK IMAGING
SYSTEMS
LIMITED Respondent
Coram: VAN HEERDEN DCJ, HEFER, HOWIE, SCOTT and STREICHER, JJA
Customs and Excise - Tariff headings 37.01 and 37.02 in Schedule 1 - Classification of lithographic plate in rolls
JUDGMENT
STREICHER JA:
[1] Both the respondent and the second appellant supply
sensitised aluminium lithographic printing plates to the printing industry.
The
plates which are supplied by the second appellant are manufactured in South
Africa and those that are supplied by the respondent
are cut from an imported
product. In terms of s 47(9)(a)(i) of the Customs and Excise Act 91 of 1964
(“the Act”) the
first appellant determined that the imported product
should be classified under tariff heading 37.01, Part 1 of Schedule 1 to the
Act
attracting a 15% customs duty. On appeal to the Transvaal Provincial Division,
in terms of s 47(9)(e) of the Act, Mc Creath J
set aside the first
appellant’s determination and declared that the imported product fell to
be classified under tariff heading
37.02 attracting no duty. Mc Creath J
granted the appellants leave to appeal to this court.
[2] The imported
product consists of rolls of photosensitised emulsion on aluminium substrates
0,15 mm, 0,30 mm, 0,35 mm or 0,40
mm thick, up to 2 500 m long and 1 260 mm
wide. It is used in the lithographic industry after it has been decurled,
trimmed
and cut in appropriately sized individual sensitised plates. A
lithographic printing plate can then be produced by placing a negative
or a
positive film under vacuum in direct contact with the plate and exposing it to
light. Exposing it to light changes the characteristics
of the coating on the
plate only where it has passed through the transparent portions of the film.
This creates a positive image
on the plate.
[3] In terms of s 47(1) of the
Act duty is payable on all imported goods in accordance with the provisions of
Schedule 1 to the Act.
In Schedule 1 all goods generally handled in
international trade are systematically grouped in sections, chapters, and
sub-chapters,
which are given titles indicating the broad class of goods each
covers. Within each chapter and sub-chapter the specific type of
goods within
the particular class is itemised by a description of the goods printed in bold
type. That description is defined in
the Schedule as a “heading”.
Under the heading appear sub-headings of the species of the goods in respect of
which the
duty payable is expressed. The Schedule itself and each section and
chapter are headed by “notes”, that is, rules for
interpreting their
provisions. (See in these respects Secretary for Customs & Excise v
Thomas Barlow & Sons Ltd 1970 (2) SA 660 (A) at 675D - F.) In
addition, s 47(8)(a) provides that the interpretation of Part 1 of Schedule 1
shall be subject to the Explanatory
Notes to the Harmonized System and to the
Customs Co-operation Council Nomenclature issued by the Customs Co-operation
Council, Brussels,
from time to time.
[4] Chapter 37 bears the title
“Photographic or Cinematographic Goods”. In terms of the general
rules for the interpretation
of Schedule 1 the titles of sections, chapters and
sub-chapters are provided for ease of reference only and classification should
be determined according to the terms of the headings and relative section or
chapter notes and, provided such headings or notes do
not otherwise require,
according to certain other provisions.
[5] Tariff heading 37.01 reads:
“Photographic plates and film in the flat, sensitised, unexposed, of
any material other than paper, paperboard or textiles .
.
.”
Lithographic plates are specifically mentioned in some of the
subheadings.
Tariff heading 37.02 reads:
“Photographic film in rolls, sensitised, unexposed, of any material
other than paper, paperboard or textiles . . .”
[6] In terms of
Chapter Note 2 “photographic” “relates to a process which
permits the formation of visible images
directly or indirectly by the action of
light or other forms of radiation on sensitive surfaces”. It follows and
is common
cause between the parties that the finished lithographic plates which
the respondent and the second appellant supply to the printing
industry would,
if imported in that form, be classified as photographic plates under tariff
heading 37.01. However, the court a quo held that the imported product
fell to be classified under tariff heading 37.02 because, in the opinion of the
judge, the word “plates”
connoted flat material; the same intrinsic
products were covered by the two headings save that the form in which they were
imported
differed; there were indications that tariff heading 37.01 was intended
to apply to goods which were end products; and the legislature
did not intend to
exclude plate material from the term “photographic film in rolls”.
[7] The meanings of the words “plates” and “film”
are not defined in Schedule 1. The words therefore have
to be given their
ordinary meaning in the context in which they appear unless an indication to the
contrary is given.
[8] Dictionaries distinguish between plates and film in
the context of photography. The Oxford Dictionary contains the following
definitions:
“(Film) a thin pellicle or coating of collodion, gelatin, etc. spread on photographic paper or plates, or used by itself instead of a plate. Now esp. a thin, flexible, transparent material consisting essentially of a plastic base or support (formerly of celluloid, now commonly of cellulose acetate) coated on one side with one or more layers of emulsion and sold as a rolled strip and as separate sheets; . . .”
“(Plate) a thin sheet of metal, porcelain, or (now usually)
glass, coated with a film sensitive to light, on which photographs are
taken.”
In terms of the above definition of the word
“film” the coating as such or the coating together with its
substrate may
constitute a film.
Webster’s Third New International
Dictionary contains similar definitions of film and plate in the context of
photography.
They read:
“(Film) a thin flexible transparent sheet of cellulose acetate,
cellulose nitrate, or other plastic material that is used for taking photographs
and that is coated with a light-sensitive emulsion which when exposed and
developed contains negative or positive images in black,
silver or in
color.”
“(Plate) a sheet of glass, metal, porcelain, or other material
coated with a light-sensitive photographic emulsion; . . .”
[9] According to these dictionary definitions rigidity would seem to be
a distinguishing feature between film and plates. In tariff
heading 37.01 the
legislature also distinguished between photographic plates and photographic
film. There would have been no need
for the legislature to do so if it
considered them to be the same product intrinsically. Like the dictionary
definitions the distinguishing
feature the legislature possibly had in mind was
the rigidity of the substrate but the essential difference is uncertain. In this
case it need not be determined. It is common cause between the parties,
correctly so, that the imported product, once it has been
decurled, trimmed and
cut in appropriately sized individual sensitised plates, is a lithographic plate
and, in the terminology of
tariff heading 37.01, a photographic
plate.
[10] Having distinguished between photographic plates and
photographic film in tariff heading 37.01 one would have expected a reference
to
photographic plates in tariff heading 37.02 if the legislature intended
photographic plate or plates in coil form to fall under
tariff heading 37.02. I
disagree with the contention that, because the word “plates”
generally connotes flat material,
one would not speak of plate or plates in
rolls. A flat sheet of the imported product which can be cut into a number of
lithographic
plates is itself a lithographic plate and by coiling such a
lithographic plate for delivery or storage purposes the character of
that
lithographic plate is not changed. It remains a lithographic plate and can be
described as a lithographic plate in a roll, or,
more pertinently, as a
photographic plate in a roll. In the respondent’s own founding affidavit
its chairman speaks of “a
technique that had been developed for
manufacturing sensitized lithographic plate in lengthy coils or rolls”.
Furthermore,
in one of the respondent’s brochures it is stated that
“Polychrome GmbH has perfected the ability to ship high quality
coated
rolls of lithographic plate thus enabling Kemtek to finish these rolls to the
size requirements of the local market and Kemtek’s
export market”.
If lithographic plates are coiled two at a time it would in my view be correct
to describe them as photographic
plates in rolls. In terms of s 6 of the
Interpretation Act 33 of 1957 words in the plural include the singular. It
follows that if
the legislature intended photographic plate or plates in rolls
to fall under tariff heading 37.02 there was no reason for it not
to mention
photographic plate or plates in rolls under that heading. The fact that the
legislature did not is in my view a strong
indication that it did not intend the
phrase “in the flat”in tariff heading 37.01 to qualify film as well
as plates and
did not intend rolls of lithographic plate or plates to fall under
tariff heading 37.02.
[11] The respondent submits that the reference by the
legislature in tariff heading 37.01 to X-ray plates and in the explanatory
notes
to tariff heading 37.02 to X-ray film in rolls support its argument that
photographic plates and photographic film, within
the meaning of those words in
tariff headings 37.01 and 37.02, are intrinsically the same product and that the
difference between
the articles falling under tariff heading 37.01 and tariff
heading 37.02 is the form in which they are imported. I do not agree.
The
legislature not only distinguished between photographic plates and film in rolls
but distinguished between photographic plates,
film in the flat, and film in
rolls. This is borne out by the fact that “fluorographic plates and film
in the flat” for
X-rays are specifically mentioned under tariff heading
37.01 while it is stated in the explanatory notes to tariff heading 37.02
that
X-ray film in rolls is generally sensitised on both sides. There is no
indication to be found in the schedule that when the
legislature spoke of X-ray
film in rolls it had in mind X-ray plate material in rolls or an article
destined to be used as X-ray
film in the flat. The reference to X-ray plates,
X-ray film in the flat and X-ray film in rolls therefore do not indicate that
the
essential difference between tariff headings 37.01 and 37.02 lay in the form
in which the article in question was being imported.
[12] In the explanatory
note to tariff heading 37.02 it is stated that the film referred to in that
heading may be used, like the
photographic plates of tariff heading 37.01, for
amateur, professional photomechanical, scientific, radiographic, etc., purposes.
Contrary to the submission that one can deduce from this statement that the same
intrinsic product was intended to be covered save
in respect of the form in
which the product was imported, I am of the view that the statement indicates
that two different products
were intended. If the same intrinsic product was
intended it would have been unnecessary to say that the film of tariff heading
37.02
may be used for the same purposes as the photographic plates of tariff
heading 37.01. This is self-evidently the reason why no reference
to film in
the flat is made in this portion of the note.
[13] I also do not agree with
the finding of the judge a quo and the submission by the respondent that
there are clear indications in chapter 37 that tariff heading 37.01 was intended
to apply
to goods which were ready for use, end-products. Fluorographic plates,
film in the flat, instant print film of paperboard, offset
duplicating masters
and lithographic plates are categorised under tariff heading 37.01 and in some
cases the sub-categories are based
on the thickness of the plate or film. In the
explanatory note to tariff heading 37.02 it is said that photographic film not
cut
to usable sizes remains classifiable in this heading. The respondent submits
that the implication is that tariff heading 37.01 was
intended primarily to
cover plates and film cut to usable sizes. However, there can be no doubt that a
flat sheet of lithographic
plate which still has to be cut in usable sizes
should be classified under tariff heading 37.01. The inference contended for can
therefore not be drawn.
[14] Another indication that photographic plate
material is classifiable under tariff heading 37.02 is, according to the
respondent,
to be found in the explanatory note to tariff heading 37.02 to the
effect that the heading does not cover “unexposed photographic
plates and
film in the flat”. The reference to photographic plates would according
to the respondent not have been necessary
if plates or plate material was
intended to be excluded from the term “photographic film in rolls”.
There is no merit
in this contention. On this basis it can be argued that the
exclusion of “film in the flat” is an indication that it
would have
qualified as “film in rolls” had it not been for the exclusion. The
note simply states a fact which is self-evident.
[15] The respondent
concedes, as it is bound to do, that for it to succeed a wider meaning has to be
given to the word “film”
in tariff heading 37.02 than in tariff
heading 37.01. There is however a well known presumption that where the
legislature uses the
same word in the same enactment it would intend the word to
be understood, where no clear indication to the contrary is given, in
the same
sense throughout the enactment. This would apply with even greater force where
the word is used in two tariff headings the
one following upon the other (see
Minister of the Interior v Machadodorp Investments (Pty) Ltd 1957 (2) SA
395 (A) at 404 D-E).
[16] In my view there are no indications in Schedule 1
that the legislature intended to include rolls of lithographic plate or plates
to fall under “film in rolls”. The omission of any reference to
photographic plates in tariff heading 37.02 after having
mentioned them together
with film in the flat in tariff heading 37.01 therefore justifies an inference
to the contrary.
[17] The articles in question are lithographic plates and
the first respondent correctly determined that they should be classified
as
photographic plates under tariff heading 37.01. The court a quo erred in
upholding the appeal against such determination.
[18] In the result the
appeal is upheld with costs including the costs of two counsel. The order by the
court a quo is set aside and the following order is substituted
therefor:
“The appellant’s appeal is dismissed with costs including the
costs of two counsel.”
_____________________
P E STREICHER
JUDGE OF APPEAL
AGREE:
VAN
HEERDEN DCJ
HEFER JA
HOWIE JA
SCOTT JA