Tax Stamp - Law Dictionary Search Results
Home Dictionary Name: tax stamptax stamp
tax stamp : a stamp affixed to an item as evidence that a tax on it has been paid ;esp : one that the dealer of a controlled substance is required to purchase by payment of a tax according to a state law [an additional count of failure to purchase a tax stamp] ...
revenue stamp
revenue stamp : a stamp for use as evidence of a tax (as on a package of cigarettes, a proprietary article, or a mortgage or deed) : tax stamp ...
stamp tax
stamp tax : a tax collected by means of a stamp purchased and affixed (as to a deed) ...
Stamp duties
Stamp duties, a branch of the revenue. They are a tax imposed on all parchment and paper whereon certain legal proceedings and certain private ins-truments re written; and on licences for various purposes.The consolidating Stamp Act, 1870, superseded the very numerous older enactments [in great part repealed by the (English) Inland Revenue Repeal Act, 1870 (33 & 34 Vict. c. 90)] in regard to the duty on the various classes of instruments, but by s. 17 of the Stamp Act, 1870 (re-enacted by s. 14 of the Stamp Act, 1891), reversing the former law, see Buckworth v. Simpson, (1835) 1 CM&R 384, the stamp to be affixed to an unstamped document to render it admissible in evidence was not the stamp in accordance with the law at the time of affixing it, but the stamp in accordance with the law in force at the time when the document was first executed.Very important alterations in the law of stamps were effected by the Customs and Inland Revenue Act, 1888. Prior to that Act it was no offence not ...
Bond
Bond [fr. binda, band, bunden, A. S., to bind], a written acknowledgement or binding of a debt under seal. See DEED. No technical form of words is necessary to constitute a bond; see Gerrard v. Clowes, (1892) 2 QB 11; Strickland v. Williams, (1899) 1 QB 382. The person giving the bond is called the obligor, and he to whom it is given the obligee. A bond is called single (simplex obligatio) when it is without a penalty, but there is generally a condition added, that, if the obligor does or forbears from some act, the obligation shall be void, or else shall remain in full force, and the bond is then called a double or conditional one; see Dav. Prec. Vol. V., pt. Ii., p. 268. When a bond contains a penalty, which is generally double the amount of the principal sum secured, only the sum actually owing, with interest, can be recovered, and in no case can this exceed the amount appearing on the face of the bond. See 8 & 9 Wm. 3, c. 11, s. 8; Re Dixon, (1900) 2 Ch 561.Although it is unnecessa...
Duly stamped
Duly stamped, an instrument can be said to be duly stamped only if it bears stamps of the amount and description in accordance with the law of the State concerned, the law including not only the Act, but also the rules framed under the Act, New Control Jute Mills Co. v. State of West Bengal, AIR 1963 SC 1307 (1311): (1964) 1 SCR 535. [Uttar Pradesh Stamp Rules, 1942, R.3]As applied to an instrument, means that the instrument bears an adhesive or impressed stamp of not less than the proper amount and that such stamp has been affixed or used in accordance with law for time being in force in India. [Indian Stamp Act, 1899, s. 2 (11)]Levy of duty, the duty is levied under the statutory provision and not under the discretion of the authorities under the provision, Khoday India Ltd. Anekal v. State of Karnataka, 2007 (3) Kar LJ 162...
I.O.U
I.O.U., a written acknowledgement of a debt, so called because it commences with those letters, which custom has substituted for the words I owe you, because they have the same sound. It ordinarily runs thus:-'To Mr. A.B., I.O.U. twenty rupees. C.D January 1st, 2008.'If in the above form, it requires no stamp, being neither receipt, agreement, not promissory note. If it contains a promise to pay the money, it must be stamped as a promissory note, or as an agreement, if it contains terms of agreement the subject of which is of the value of 5l. It should be addressed to the creditor by name, but that is not essential to its validity. It is evidence of an account stated with the creditor, if named; if he is not named, it is prima facie evidence of an account stated with the person producing it. It is not negotiable....
Inland revenue
Inland revenue. That portion (by far the largest) of the public revenue (which is derived from the taxation of home commodities and duties on property and income, houses, stamps, probates, legacies, etc., as distinguished from the portion derived by customs duties (see CUSTOMS) from imported commodities-such as foreign wine and spirits, tea, etc. It is supervised by (English) Inland Revenue Commissioners (the number of whom, now four, is not limited by statute, and the quorum of whom is two), and a large number of enactments relating to its regulation are contained in the consolidating Inland Revenue Regulation Act, 1890 (53 & 54 Vict. c. 21). By s. 39 of that Act 'inland revenue' means 'the revenue of the United Kingdom collected or imposed as stamp duties, taxes, and duties of excise.' (see that title), 'and placed under the care and management of the Inland Revenue Commissioners.' By 8 Edw. 7, c. 16, the management of excise duties were transferred to the Commissioners of Customs an...
Revenue
Revenue, income, annual profit received from land or other funds; also money at the disposal of the Crown, i.e., the executive. The chief sources are (1) Crown property, surrendered to the nation; (2) taxation--income tax, death duties, customs and excise, stamp duties; (3) certain managed enter-prises, such as the Post Office, and Lands, Woods and Forests and miscellaneous holdings such as shares in the Suez Canal, and other profits or fiscal prerogatives of the Crown.See Halsb. Encycl. Laws of England, tit. 'Revenue'; Chitty's Statutes, tits. 'Customs,' 'Property Tax,' 'Death Duties,' 'Stamps,' and 'Revenue.'Revenue causes were peculiarly within the province of the court of Exchequer; the practice of which Court in matters of revenue was regulated by the Queen's Remembrancer Act, 1859 (22 & 23 Vict. c. 21), ss. 9 et seq., and the Crown Suits Act, 1865 (28 & 29 Vict. c. 104).The jurisdiction of the Court of Exchequer was transferred to the High Court of Justice ((English) Jud. Act, 18...
Measure
Measure [fr. mensura, Lat.], that by which anything is measured; the rule by which anything is adjusted or proportioned. See WEIGHTS AND MEASURES and DISTANCE. s. 13 (1) of the Weights and Measures Act, 1904 (4 Edw. 7, c. 28), enacts that the denomination of a length measure must be stamped upon it, s. 28 of the Act of 1878 having already prescribed the stamping upon a measure of capacity. The 25th chapter of Magna Charta prescribes one measure of wine, ale, and corn 'though our realm.'Also an enactment of the National Assembly of the Church of England (q.v.)...
- << Prev.
- Next >>
Sign-up to get more results
Unlock complete result pages and premium legal research features.
Start Free Trial