Full text: Secretarial practice

STAMP DUTIES 
359 
which the transfer relates has been carried out by the dealer 
in the ordinary course of his business (see also Appendix A). 
In all these cases the duty is 10s. 
A transfer of shares or stock which after being executed 
in the United Kingdom is sent unstamped to the Colonies or 
abroad for completion and return is allowed to be stamped 
without penalty if it is presented for stamping within thirty 
days after its return. This is a slight relaxation of the 
precise terms of s. 15 of the Act of 1891, which allows instru- 
ments first executed abroad and received in the United 
Kingdom for the first time after execution to be stamped 
within thirty days. The concession was made by the Com- 
missioners of Inland Revenue in the year 1896 in view of the 
risk of the loss of a stamped document in transit, and of 
course only applies on due proof that the transfer is presented 
for stamping within the thirty days. 
There is a provision in s. 115 of the Act of 189r which 
enables a company to enter into an agreement with the 
Commissioners of Inland Revenue for the payment of a 
half-yearly composition in lieu of the duty on the transfers 
of the stock of the company. The entering into such an 
agreement is, however, subject to the absolute discretion 
of the Commissioners, and for some years past no such 
agreement has been entered into with a company. 
The stamp duty payable on a share warrant is a duty equal Share 
to three times the amount of ad valorem duty which would be Warrants 
chargeable on a deed transferring the share or shares or stock “© ©arer 
specified in the warrant if the consideration for the transfer 
were the nominal value of the share or shares or stock. 
The duty was extended in 189g to any instrument to bearer 
issued by a company formed or established in the United 
Kingdom and having the effect of a share warrant. 
Loan capital when not represented by debenture stock is Marketable 
usually secured by bonds or debentures. These may either Securities. 
be transferable on a register or may be bearer securities. 
The charge of duty was in 1862 made applicable to securities 
by or on behalf of any foreign state or government or foreign 
or colonial municipal body, corporation or company, bearing 
date or signed after June 3, 1862, if made or issued in the 
United Kingdom, or if the interest is payable in the United 
Kingdom and they are transferred or negotiated in the 
United Kingdom. The charge was extended in 1885 to 
securities of this character which, although originally issued 
abroad, are subsequently offered for subscription and delivered 
to a subscriber in the United Kingdom. This extension 
Composition 
of Duty.
	        
Waiting...

Note to user

Dear user,

In response to current developments in the web technology used by the Goobi viewer, the software no longer supports your browser.

Please use one of the following browsers to display this page correctly.

Thank you.