Relevant judgment for Stamp Act as applicable in Uttar Pradesh
1.
Stamp
Act, 1899 - Section 47A (4)--Stamp duty--Deficiency--Penalty--Penalty imposed
equivalent to amount of deficient duty--Merely because stamp duty paid by petitioner found to be
deficient--Cannot by itself be ground for imposing penalty--Particularly in
absence of any finding that there was intention to evade proper stamp duty--No
reason assigned for imposing penalty of that quantum--No reflection of acting
judicially--Penalty order quashed held in MANU/UP/2446/2011 Equivalent Citation: 2011 4 AWC3865 IN
THE HIGH COURT OF ALLAHABAD: C.M.W.P. No. 20357 of 2011 Decided On: 07.04.2011
Appellants: Smt.
Sonia Jindal Vs. Respondent: State of U.P. and others Hon'ble Judges:
Pankaj Mithal, J.
Subject: Civil
Subject:
Property Acts/Rules/Orders: Indian Stamp Act - Section 47A(4), Indian Stamp Act -
Section 47A(4A) Disposition: Petition allowed
2.
Single
judge of Hon'ble Allahabad ad High court has ruled
"The sine qua
non for invoking the provisions of Section 47-A(3) of the Act is that the
Collector has reason to believe that the stamp duty has not been properly set
forth in the instrument as per market value of the property. Once the instrument is
registered and the prescribed stamp duty as prescribed by the Collector as has
been paid, the burden to prove that the market value is more than the minimum
as prescribed by the Collector under the rules, is upon the Collector. The
report of the Sub Register or Tahsildar itself is not sufficient to discharge
that burden."
Reference may also be
taken of judicial pronouncement of Division Bench of Hon'ble Allahabad High Court in Kaka
Singh v. Addl. Collector, AIR 1986 All 107 and it was held as follows in
Para 17 of the report:
"We find force
also in the argument of the petitioner's learned counsel that since Section 47A
does not empower the Collector to Impose penalty in the event of his finding
that the market value was not truly set forth in the instrument, such an order
imposing the same would be beyond Section 47A. For imposing penalty in a case
like the present, power was specifically to be conferred. In the absence of a
specific provision made in that respect. It is not possible to uphold the
contention of the standing counsel that penalty could be imposed whenever and
wherever the Collector under Section 47A finds that the value set forth was not
true. Section 47A as stated above, was brought in recently to cover a case of
evasion. While enacting
Section 47A, the Legislature although empowered the Collector to determine the
market value of the property, which is the subject of conveyance and the duty
payable thereon, it did not make any provision empowering the Collector to
impose penalty."
3.
The
same question was again
considered by another Division Bench in Jugul Kishore v. State of U. P., AIR
1992 All 194 which after expressing agreement with the view taken in
Kaka Singh (supra) held as follows in Paras 4 and 5 of the report :
"From a mere
glance at sub-section (4) of Section 47A it is apparent that the Collector
(A.D.M. Finance in the present case) does not have any power to Impose penalty
in these proceedings.....
It is worthy of note that while enacting Section 47A, the
Legislature did not authorise the Collector to impose any penalty. Under this
provision the only power vested in the Collector was to determine the market
value of the property and if he finds that the duty paid on the instrument in
question is less than that payable on the correct market value of the property,
he may order that the difference may be realised from the party to the
Instrument."
4.
A
bench of three judges of the Allahabad High Court answered the specific
question having discussed various judgments
1) Whether in proceedings under sub-section (4) of
Section 47A of the Act, penalty can also be imposed if the Collector holds that
the market value of the property has not been truly set forth in the instrument
and consequently, there is deficiency in stamp duty? in Girjesh Kumar
Srivastava And ... vs State Of U.P. And Others on 8 December, 1997 Equivalent
citations: 1998 (1) AWC 403, (1998) 1 UPLBEC 437 http://www.indiankanoon.org/doc/1989748/
says at Para 9:
"The law
regarding fiscal matters being well settled, power to impose penalty must be
conferred by the Statute itself. The language of Section 47A alone can be seen and such a power cannot
be inferred by implication or by reference to some general words contained in
the Rules. In absence of a specific provision to that effect the
Collector is not empowered to impose penalty. The question is, therefore,
answered in favour of the applicants and against the State."
- The
relevant part of the judgment of AIR 2001 SC 600 (Dr. Vijay Laxmi Sadho Vs. Jagdish) which
is also reported in 2001 (2) SCC 247, being paragraph-33 is extracted
below:
“33. As
the learned Single Judge
was not in agreement with the view expressed in Devilal
case it would have been proper, to maintain judicial discipline, to refer the
matter to a larger Bench rather than to take a different view. We
note it with regret and distress
that the said course was not followed. It is well-settled that if a Bench of coordinate
jurisdiction disagrees with
another Bench of coordinate jurisdiction whether on the
basis of “different arguments” or
otherwise, on a question
of law, it is appropriate that the matter
be referred to a larger Bench for resolution of the issue rather than to leave
two conflicting judgments to operate, creating confusion. It is
not proper to sacrifice certainty of law. Judicial decorum, no less than legal
propriety forms the basis of judicial procedure and it must be respected at all
costs.”