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<i>Ochberg v CIR</i>: No “Benefit” to the Benefactor


K Coetzee
P van der Zwan
D Schutte
H van Dyk
EM Stack

Abstract

This article analyses the South African case of Ochberg v CIR, which dealt with the question whether shares issued by a company to Ochberg, who was, for all intents and purposes, the sole shareholder, in consideration for services rendered and an asset provided to the company, constituted “income” in terms of the definition of “gross income” in section 7(1) of the Income Tax Act No. 40 of 1925 (as it then applied). Ochberg’s contention was that he had received no benefit from the additional shares issued as the value of all the shares issued had been the same both before and after the issue of the shares. Accordingly, there had been no increase in his wealth and thus no income had been received. The majority decision (two of the five judges dissenting) of the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court held that the shares were “income” and had to be valued at their nominal value. The article first provides a glimpse into the life of Isaac Ochberg, who was a substantial benefactor to charitable causes. It then presents a thematic analysis of the four separate judgments set down in the case, and finally, discusses certain tax principles arising from the judgments. In conclusion, the article considers to what extent Ochberg benefited from the transaction in terms of the Haig-Simons model of taxation and the economic reality of the transaction. The lasting value of the decision is demonstrated with reference to citations of Ochberg v CIR in a number of more recent landmark cases.

Keywords: Amount, Benefit, Capital, Corporate Persona, Economic Reality, Equity, Haig-Simons, Income, Income Tax Act, Intention of the Legislature, Ochberg, Objective, Purposive, Receive, Receipt, Subjective, Substance v Form


Journal Identifiers


eISSN: 1998-8125
print ISSN: 1561-896X