SARS Interpretation Note 25 Issue 3: Resident: Definition in relation to a natural person; physical presence test (source: https://www.sars.gov.za/lapd-intr-in-2012-25-resident-natural-person-application-physical-presence/)
INTERPRETATION NOTE: NO. 25 (Issue 3)
DATE: 12 March 2014
ACT : INCOME TAX ACT NO. 58 OF 1962
SECTION : SECTION 1(1)
SUBJECT : RESIDENT: DEFINITION IN RELATION TO A NATURAL PERSON –
APPLICATION OF THE PHYSICAL PRESENCE TEST IN THE YEAR OF
DEATH OR INSOLVENCY
Preamble
In this Note unless the context indicates otherwise –
• “person” means a natural person;
• “section” means a section of the Act;
• “the Act” means the Income Tax Act No. 58 of 1962; and
• any word or expression bears the meaning ascribed to it in the Act.
1. Purpose
This Note explains the application of the physical presence test in the year of
assessment that a natural person, who is not ordinarily resident on the Republic, dies
or becomes insolvent. The implications of a double taxation agreement have not
been taken into account in this Note.
Issue 2 of this Note, dated 8 February 2006, is hereby replaced.
2. Background
Persons who are residents of the Republic of South Africa are subject to tax on their
worldwide taxable income. A person is a “resident” as defined in section 1(1) if that
person is –
• ordinarily resident in the Republic; or
• physically present in the Republic for a specified number of days during the
relevant (current) year of assessment as well as during each of the five years
of assessment immediately preceding the current year of assessment (the
physical presence test).
This Note must also be read in conjunction with Interpretation Note No. 4 (Issue 4)
dated 12 March 2014 “Resident: Definition in Relation to a Natural Person – Physical
Presence Test” as well as Interpretation Note No. 8 (Issue 3) dated 28 August 2013
“Insolvent Estates of Natural Persons”.
3. The law
For ease of reference the relevant sections of the Act are quoted in the Annexure.
4. Income tax implications
4.1 The physical presence test
There are three requirements that must be met when applying the physical presence
test before a natural person is regarded as a resident in the Republic for tax
purposes under paragraph (a)(ii) of the definition of a “resident” in section 1(1).
The three requirements are that the person must have been physically present in the
Republic for –
(i) more than 91 days in total during the current year of assessment;
(ii) more than 91 days in total in each of the five years of assessment
immediately preceding the current year of assessment; and
(iii) more than 915 days in total during those five immediately preceding years of
assessment.
All three of these requirements must be satisfied, or the person will not be a resident
for the current year of assessment. Refer to Interpretation Note No. 4 (Issue 4) for a
detailed discussion on the application of the physical presence test.
A person who dies or becomes insolvent will generally have a year of assessment of
less than 12 months in the year of death or insolvency.
4.2 The year of assessment in which a person dies
Proviso (a) to section 66(13)(a), read with the definition of a “year of assessment” in
section 1(1), provides that the year of assessment for a person who has died –
• commences on the first day of the year of assessment (usually 1 March
unless the person was born during the year); and
• ends on the date of death.
The “more than 91 days” requirement in the physical presence test for the year of
assessment during which a person dies, is applied in the normal way, and is not
scaled down to account for the year of assessment being less than 365 or 366 days.
For example, a person who dies on 30 April and that person was physically present
in the Republic as from 1 March, will not meet the “more than 91 days” requirement
during the current year of assessment because that person would have been
physically present in the Republic for only 61 days (1 March to 30 April).
Proviso (A) to the definition of a “resident” in section 1(1) provides that, when
calculating the number of days for purposes of the physical presence test, a day
includes a part of a day. A person would have been alive, and therefore physically
present, in the Republic for part of the day on which that person dies, and the day of
death therefore counts towards the number of days of physical presence in South
Africa.
Example 1 – Death
Facts:
Y, a resident of Utopia (with which South Africa does not have an agreement for the
avoidance of double taxation) is not ordinarily resident in the Republic. Y was
physically present in the Republic for the following periods during the 2014 year of
assessment:
a) 2 June 2013 to 19 June 2013.
b) Y arrived at Cape Town International Airport at 23:40 on 10 November 2013.
c) Y passed away at 20:00 on 21 January 2014.
During the five preceding years of assessment Y was physically present in the
Republic for the following number of days:
Year of assessment Number of days
2009 155
2010 188
2011 201
2012 181
2013 191
Result:
Y’s year of assessment for 2014 runs from 1 March 2013 to 21 January 2014. During
that period Y was physically present in the Republic for 91 days in aggregate,
determined as follows:
Period Number of days
2 June 2013 to 19 June 2013 18
10 November 2013 to 21 January 2014 73
Number of in aggregate 91
Since Y does not comply with the first requirement of the physical presence test,
namely, that Y must be physically present in the Republic for a period or periods
exceeding 91 days in aggregate during the year of assessment (1 March 2013 to
21 January 2014), Y is not regarded as a resident for income tax purposes in the
2014 year of assessment.
Example 2 – Death
Facts:
The facts are the same as in Example 1, except that Y died 6 hours later, at 02:00 on
22 January 2014.
Result:
Y’s year of assessment would have been for the period 1 March 2013 to
22 January 2014.
Y would have been physically present in the Republic for a period or periods
exceeding 91 days in aggregate during the period of assessment in question, that is:
Period Number of days
2 June 2013 to 19 June 2013 18
10 November 2013 to 22 January 2014 74
Number of days in aggregate 92
Y would therefore have been regarded as a resident because Y would have been
physically present in the Republic for –
• more than 91 days in total during the current year of assessment;
• more than 91 days in total in each of the five years of assessment
immediately preceding the current year of assessment; and
• more than 915 days in total during those five immediately preceding years of
assessment.
4.3 The year of assessment in which a person is declared insolvent
The periods of assessment, when the estate of a natural person is sequestrated, is
determined, in the case of –
(a) the insolvent person, for the period from 1 March up to the day before the
date of sequestration;
(b) the insolvent person, (a new taxpayer for tax purposes 1) for the period from
the date of sequestration to the last day of February; and
(c) the insolvent estate 2 (a new person for tax purposes 3), from the date of
sequestration to the last day of February. 4
The insolvent person will be assessed as a natural person for the period before
insolvency, as well as for the period subsequent to insolvency, should any income
accrue to that person in his or her personal capacity.
The physical presence test must be applied each year of assessment. A year of
assessment includes a period of assessment. 5 In the case of a sequestration where
there are two periods of assessment, the physical presence test must be applied to
each of these periods of assessment. The first period (in (a) above) will be regarded
as an immediately preceding year of assessment in relation to the second period ((b)
above).
The insolvent persons before and after sequestration are separate taxpayers but the same natural
person. See also ITC 349 (1936) [9 SATC 66] at 69.
Defined in section 1(1) to mean an “insolvent estate” as defined in section 2 of the Insolvency Act
No. 24 of 1936.
A “person” as defined in section 1(1) specifically includes an insolvent estate.
The income tax treatment of insolvent estates is discussed in paragraph 3 of Interpretation Note
No. 8 (Issue 3), and will not be discussed in this Note.
The definition of a “year of assessment” in section 1(1) refers to any year “or other period”.
The first period of assessment (referred to in (a) above) ends the day before the date
of sequestration. In the case of –
(i) a voluntary surrender of an estate, this is the date that the debtor’s application
for acceptance of the surrender is lodged with the High Court, if the court
accepts the surrender; and
(ii) a “compulsory” sequestration, being an application for sequestration of a
debtor by a creditor, this is the date of the provisional order of sequestration,
if the provisional order of sequestration is made final by the court.
The second period of assessment (referred to in (b) above) commences on the date
of sequestration and ends on the last day of that year of assessment, which is the
last day of February.
Example 3 – Insolvency
Facts:
Z, a resident of Utopia (with which South Africa does not have an agreement for the
avoidance of double taxation) is ordinarily resident in the Republic. Z was physically
present in the Republic for the following periods:
a) 12 April 2013 to 25 June 2013.
b) 31 July 2013 to 16 September 2013.
c) 15 December 2013 to 15 March 2014.
On 2 September 2013 the court issued a provisional order placing Z’s estate in
sequestration. This order was later made final. As a result of the provisional order of
sequestration issued on 2 September 2013, Z will have two periods of assessment,
namely:
• First period of assessment – Period before insolvency
The period of assessment commenced on 1 March 2013 and ended on
1 September 2013, the day before the order of sequestration was issued.
• Second period of assessment – Period from insolvency
The period of assessment commenced on 2 September 2013 (the day on which
the provisional order of sequestration was issued) and ended on the last day of
February 2014.
During the five preceding years of assessment, Z was physically present in the
Republic for the following number of days:
Year of assessment Number of days
2009 110
2010 335
2011 185
2012 181
2013 117
Result:
Period of assessment before insolvency (1 March 2013 – 1 September 2013)
Z was physically present in the Republic during the first period of assessment
(1 March 2013 to 1 September 2013), as follows:
Period Number of days
12 April 2013 to 25 June 2013 75
31 July 2013 to 1 September 2013 31
Number of days in aggregate 106
Z was resident in the Republic during the first period assessment because of the
physical presence in the Republic for –
• more than 91 days in total during the current year (or period) of assessment;
• more than 91 days in total in each of the five years of assessment
immediately preceding the current year of assessment; and
• more than 915 days in total during those five immediately preceding years of
assessment.
Period of assessment from insolvency (2 September 2013 – 28 February 2014)
Z was physically present in the Republic during the second period of assessment
(2 September 2013 – 28 February 2014), as follows:
Period Number of days
2 September 2013 to 16 September 2013 15
15 December 2013 to 28 February 2014 76
Number of days in aggregate 91
Z does not meet the first requirement of the physical presence test during the second
period (from insolvency) because Z is not physically present for a period exceeding
91 days in aggregate during that period of assessment.
The second period is treated as a new year of assessment, and the “current year of
assessment” for purposes of the physical presence test. The 106 days that Z was
present in South Africa during the first period of assessment is considered as one of
the five previous years of assessment for purposes of the second and third
requirements of the physical presence test.
Separate tax returns are required to be submitted for both periods of assessment
when a person is declared insolvent. 6
Proviso (b) to section 66(13)(a) read with section 25 of the Tax Administration Act No. 28 of 2011.
The effect of the setting aside of an order of sequestration is to terminate the
existence of the insolvent estate ab initio. The setting aside of the order of
sequestration will mean that the first requirement of the physical presence test,
namely, more than 91 days in the current year of assessment, will be determined in
relation to the full year of assessment, that is, from the first day of March to the last
day of February the following year.
5. Conclusion
In the event of death or sequestration, the first requirement of the physical presence
test (namely, physical presence exceeding 91 days in total for the current year of
assessment) is applied in the normal way, notwithstanding that the year of
assessment is for a period covering less than a full calendar year. The first
requirement is therefore not scaled down to account for the fact that the “year of
assessment” is less than a full year.
An insolvent person will be assessed as a natural person for the period before
insolvency, as well as for the period subsequent to insolvency, should any income
accrue to that person in his or her personal capacity. The physical presence test
must be applied to each of these two periods of assessment. The first period will be
regarded as an immediately preceding year of assessment in relation to the second
period.
Legal and Policy Division
SOUTH AFRICAN REVENUE SERVICE
Date of first issue: 26 March 2004
Date of second issue: 8 February 2006
Annexure – The law
Section 1(1) Definition of the term “date of sequestration”
“date of sequestration” means—
(a) the date of voluntary surrender of an estate, if accepted by the Court; or
(b) the date of provisional sequestration of an estate, if a final order of sequestration is
granted by the Court;
Section 1(1) Definition of the term “resident”
“resident” means any—
(a) natural person who is—
(i) ordinarily resident in the Republic; or
(ii) not at any time during the relevant year of assessment ordinarily resident in the
Republic, if that person was physically present in the Republic—
(aa) for a period or periods exceeding 91 days in aggregate during the relevant
year of assessment, as well as for a period or periods exceeding 91 days
in aggregate during each of the five years of assessment preceding such
year of assessment; and
(bb) for a period or periods exceeding 915 days in aggregate during those five
preceding years of assessment,
in which case that person will be a resident with effect from the first day of that
relevant year of assessment: Provided that—
(A) a day shall include a part of a day, but shall not include any day that a
person is in transit through the Republic between two places outside the
Republic and that person does not formally enter the Republic through a
“port of entry” as contemplated in section 9(1) of the Immigration Act, 2002
(Act No. 13 of 2002), or at any other place as may be permitted by the
Director General of the Department of Home Affairs or the Minister of
Home Affairs in terms of that Act; and
(B) where a person who is a resident in terms of this subparagraph is
physically outside the Republic for a continuous period of at least 330 full
days immediately after the day on which such person ceases to be
physically present in the Republic, such person shall be deemed not to
have been a resident from the day on which such person so ceased to be
physically present in the Republic; or
(b) person (other than a natural person) which is incorporated, established or formed in
the Republic or which has its place of effective management in the Republic,
but does not include any person who is deemed to be exclusively a resident of another country for
purposes of the application of any agreement entered into between the governments of the Republic
and that other country for the avoidance of double taxation: Provided that where any person that is a
resident ceases to be a resident during a year of assessment, that person must be regarded as not
being a resident from the day on which that person ceases to be a resident.
Section 1(1) Definition of the term “year of assessment”
“year of assessment” means any year or other period in respect of which any tax or duty
leviable under this Act is chargeable, and any reference in this Act to any year of assessment ending
the last or the twenty-eighth or the twenty-ninth day of February shall, unless the context otherwise
indicates, in the case of a company or a portfolio of a collective investment scheme in securities be
construed as a reference to any financial year of that company or portfolio ending during the calendar
year in question.
(2) Unless the context indicates otherwise, a word or expression to which a meaning has been
assigned in the Tax Administration Act bears that meaning for purposes of this Act.
Section 66(13)
66. Notice by Commissioner requiring returns for assessment of normal tax under this
Act.
(13) The return for normal tax to be made by any person in respect of any year of assessment
shall be a return—
(a) in the case of a person (other than a company), for the whole period of twelve months
ending upon the last day of the year of assessment under charge: Provided that
where—
(a) a person dies, a return shall be made for the period commencing on the first day
of that year of assessment and ending on the date of death;
(b) the estate of a person is sequestrated, separate returns must be made for the
periods—
(i) commencing on the first day of that year of assessment and ending on
the date preceding the date of sequestration; and
(ii) commencing on the date of sequestration and ending on the last day of
that year of assessment;