Record Details

The Cohen and Kuttel Stories: Is the Place Where I Hang my Hat Still Relevant to Determine my Residence for Tax Purposes?

Southern African Business Review

View Archive Info
 
 
Field Value
 
Title The Cohen and Kuttel Stories: Is the Place Where I Hang my Hat Still Relevant to Determine my Residence for Tax Purposes?
 
Creator Arendse, J
Stark, K
Renaud, C
 
Subject Residence, Ordinarily Resident, Outward-bound Expatriates
 
Description Determining the residence of a taxpayer is one of the most important aspects of modern tax systems. For an individual taxpayer who migrates, a common trend in the modern world, the questions are where the person is ordinarily resident and whether the place of ordinary residence can change. The two key cases in South African jurisprudence that are cited whenever the question of residence or ordinary residence is raised are Cohen v CIR and CIR v Kuttel. These cases form the foundation of this article as they examine the meaning of “resident” and “ordinary” resident” in the modern milieu. The article provides the historical background to these two seminal cases, extracts the key principles handed down in each of the judgments and evaluates these principles against definitions of “resident” used in other countries with a view to evaluating whether the definition of “resident” for South African tax purposes, premised on the fundamental principles from these two historic cases, is still relevant and appropriate. The article queries whether the concept of “ordinary resident”, with its connotation of permanence, should be updated to reflect the modern reality of transience and mobility. The conclusion reached is that the existing definition of “resident” may be in need of updating to accommodate global trends and to bring the South African tax legislation more in line with modern developments and the introduction of an objective test could provide more certainty to both taxpayers and the fiscus, but this benefit should be weighed against the possible cost of a loss to the tax base.Keywords: Residence, Ordinarily Resident, Outward-bound Expatriate
 
Publisher College of Economic and Management Sciences (UNISA)
 
Contributor
 
Date 2015-08-26
 
Type info:eu-repo/semantics/article
info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion
Peer-reviewed Article
 
Format application/pdf
 
Identifier http://www.ajol.info/index.php/sabr/article/view/121264
 
Source Southern African Business Review; Vol 19, No 1 (2015): Special Edition; 1-24
1998-8125
1561-896X
 
Language eng
 
Relation http://www.ajol.info/index.php/sabr/article/view/121264/110693
 
Rights Copyright to the journal content belongs to the College of Economic and Management Sciences