Full Judgment Text
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 1 of 11
PETITIONER:
R. RATILAL & CO.
Vs.
RESPONDENT:
NATIONAL SECURITY ASSURANCE CO. LTD.
DATE OF JUDGMENT:
16/12/1963
BENCH:
SARKAR, A.K.
BENCH:
SARKAR, A.K.
SHAH, J.C.
DAYAL, RAGHUBAR
CITATION:
1964 AIR 1396 1964 SCR (5)1047
ACT:
Indian Stamp Act (II of 1899), s. 35, Sch. 1 Art. 47-Un-
stamped letter of cover of fire insurance-If and when
admissible in evidence.
HEADNOTE:
The appellant filed a suit on a duly completed policy of
fire insurance and an unstamped letter of cover in respect
of the same kind of insurance, issued by the respondent, to
recover from it the loss suffered as a result of the
destruction of the insured goods by fire. The respondent
admitted liability on the policy but with regard to the
letter of cover it contended that the letter was not
admissible evidence for want of stamp.
Held : Per Sarkar and Shah JJ. (i) A letter of cover no
doubt contains a contract of insurance but it is not a
policy of insurance and cannot be admitted in evidence as
such under s. 35 of the Stamp Act.
The Citizens Insurance Co. of Canada v. William Parsons, 7
A.C. 96.
(ii) The proper construction of the General Exemption in
Art. 47 of schedule 1 of the Stamp Act is that a letter of
cover is not exempt from duty only when it is used for
compelling the delivery of the policy mentioned in it. If
it is used for any other purpose it is not exempted. When
it is not so exempt it is an instrument chargeable with duty
under s. 3 of the Stamp Act and admissible
1048
on evidence on payment of the requisite duty and penalty
under 35 of the Act.
Per Raghubar Dayal J. (dissenting):- Section 35 contemplates
letters of cover to bear the necessary stamp at the time of
execution and that any subsequent affixing of requisite
stamp on an unstamped letter of cover will not make it a
document which can be used for any purpose including the
basing of a claim. Theproviso to the General Exception
cannot be construed to mean that subsequent to the
execution of a letter of cover anyplace standing to
gain thereby may just put the requisite stamp on it and
thereafter use it for enforcing any claim for any
purpose.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 2 of 11
Narayanan Chettiar v. Karuppathan, I.L.R. 3 Mad. 251.
JUDGMENT:
CIVIL APPELLATE JURISDICTION : Civil Appeal No. 382 of 1961.
Appeal from the judgment and decree dated May 24, 1960, of
the Calcutta High Court in Appeal from Original Decree No.
144 of 1958.
B.K. Bhattachargee, D.K. De and S.N. Mukherjee, for the
appellant.
N.C. Chatterjee and D.N. Mukherjee, for the respondent.
December 16, 1963. The Judgment of A.K. Sarkar and J.C.
Shah JJ. was delivered by Sarkar, J. Raghubar Dayal J.
delivered a dissenting Opinion.
SARKAR J.-The appellant filed a suit in the Original Side of
the High Court at Calcutta on a duly completed policy of
fire insurance dated March 15, 1951 and bearing No. 26625,
and an unstamped letter of cover dated November 5, 1951 in
respect of the same kind of insurance issued by the respon-
dent, to recover from it the loss suffered as a result of
the destruction of the insured goods by fire. The
respondent admitted liability on policy No. 26625 but with
regard to the letter of cover it contended that the letter
was not admissible in evidence for want of stamp. As it did
not contest liability on that letter on any other ground nor
on the policy, the only question in this appeal is whether
the letter of cover can be admitted in evidence. That
question depends on some of the provisions of the Stamp Act,
1899, to which reference will be made in due course.
1049
The letter of cover which bore the description ’Interim
Protection Note’ provided. that the appellant "Proposing to
effect insurance against fire and having agreed to pay
Tariff Premium thereon, the property is hereby held insured
to the extent of Rs.1,00,000 in the manner, specified
below." Then followed a description of the goods and the
statement that the risks to be covered were to be as per the
said policy No. 26625 for twelve months from November 5,
1951. Thereafter it was stated,, "The protection is in
force for thirty days or until the Company’s Policy is
prepared unless the Insurance is declined". The fire on
which the claim is based, occurred on the night of November
5, 1951 or during the early hours of the morning of the next
day. It is not in dispute that the appellant offered to pay
all premium due on the letter of cover.
It will be useful at this stage to refer to two of the
provisions of the Stamp Act and they are s. 35 and Art. 47
in Schedule 1. Section 35 provides,’ "No instrument
chargeable with duty shall be admitted in evidence for any
purpose unless such instrument is duly stamped: Provided
that--(a) any such instrument not being an instrument
chargeable with a duty not exceeding ten naye paise only, or
a bill of exchange or promissory note, shall,subject to
all just exceptions, be admitted in evidence on payment of
the duty with which the same is chargeable together with a
penalty of There is no dispute that the letter of cover is
an "instrument". Schedule 1 of the Act specifies the duties
payable on various instruments. Article 47 of the Schedule
specifies the duties chargeable on various kinds of policies
of insurance. Section B of this article deals with fire
insurance policies and specifies various duties as payable
in respect of various kinds of policies of fire insurance
for diverse amounts, the minimum duty chargeable on a policy
of insurances under this article being fifty naye paise: Now
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 3 of 11
this article contains at the end a general exemption which
is in these words:
1050
"GENERAL EXEMPTION.
Letter of cover or engagement to issue a
policy of insurance: Provided that, unless
such letter or engagement bears the stamp
prescribed by this Act for such policy,
nothing shall be claimable thereunder, nor
shall it be available for any purpose, except
to compel the delivery of the policy therein
mentioned."
It seems to us clear that the words ’such policy’ in the
proviso to the General Exemption in Art. 47 refer to the
kind of policy with which a letter of over or engagement to
issue a policy mentioned in the first part of the exemption,
is concerned. In the present case, therefore, the words
"such policy" would indicate a policy of fire insurance.
This does not appear to be disputed.
It was said on behalf of the appellant that the letter of
cover was really a policy of insurance and would be
admissible in evidence on payment of the duty chargeable on
a policy of fire insurance and penalty under the provisions
of s. 35 proviso (a) of the Act. It was next said that even
if it was not a policy of insurance but a letter of cover
only, it would still be admissible in evidence under that
section as an instrument chargeable with duty as it was
neither a bill of exchange nor a promissory note nor an
instrument chargeable with duty not exceeding ten naye
paise.
The learned trial Judge held that the instrument was not a
letter of cover but it was in reality a policy of insurance
because it contained a contract of insurance. It is not in
dispute that if this view is correct, then on payment of the
duty and the penalty the instrument would be admissible in
evidence under s. 35. The Appellate Bench of. the High
Court, however, was unable to accept the view of the learned
trial Judge and, we think, in this the Appellate Bench was
right. The fact that a letter of cover contains a contract
of insurance cannot make it a policy of insurance. As the
learned Judges of the Appellate Bench rightly pointed out,
the letter of
1051
cover was granted a general exemption from the liability to
the duty specified in Art. 47, that is to say, it was
exempted from duty which would, but for such exemption, have
been payable on it under that article. Now under Art. 47
duty was payable on various policies of insurance. It would
follow that a letter of cover would have been liable to duty
as a policy of insurance if the exemption had not been
granted. The letter of cover had, therefore, to contain a
contract of insurance for it would not otherwise have been
liable to duty under Art. 47. But it did not thereby become
a policy of insurance only for then the exemption and the
article would have been in conflict with each other. We may
also mention that the word ’cover’ itself indicates that
property is held insured or covered by it against certain
risks.
What then is a letter of cover ? How is it to be
distinguished from a policy of insurance? The Act contains
no definition of it or of an ’engagement to issue a policy
of insurance’. but the terms are well known in trade. The
Act is dealing with businessmen and with mercantile
documents well known to them. It may be shortly stated that
a letter of cover no doubt contains a contract of insurance
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 4 of 11
but it is not a policy of insurance in the common under-
standing of that word in the trade. It is well known that
in order to obtain an insurance against the risk of fire the
assured has first to send a proposal to the insurer and then
the insurer takes a little time in making enquiries as to
whether it would accept the proposal and undertake the
obligation of covering the risk. He issues a policy only
after he is satisfied that it would be a prudent business
proposition to do so. Experience of trades people has
however shown that some kind of protection for the interim
period when the insurer is making, the enquiries is
necessary. This protection is given by what is called a
’letter of cover’. It is expressly a contract granting
insurance for the period between its date and until a policy
is prepared and delivered if one is eventually issued or
otherwise upto a date mentioned in it, just as a period of
thirty days is mentioned in the Interim
1052
Protection Note issued in this case: see The Citizens
Insurance Co. of Canada v. William Parsons(1). We think
that the present Interim Protection Note satisfies the
conditions which would make it a letter of cover in this
sense. It gives protection for a period of thirty days or
the period upto the date of the issue of the policy. An
engagement to issue a policy means, it seems to us, more or
less the same thing as a letter of cover. A letter of
cover, therefore, cannot be admitted in evidence under s. 35
as a policy of insurance.
The next question is whether a letter of cover is itself an
instrument chargeable with duty under the Act. It is not
disputed that if it is not so chargeable, it cannot be
admitted in evidence under s. 35 by subsequent payment of
duty and penalty. Now s. 3 specifies instruments which are
chargeable with duty under the Act. It says, "Subject to
the provisions of this Act and the exemptions contained in
Schedule 1, the following instruments shall be chargeable
with duty of the amount indicated in that Schedule as the
proper duty therefor respectively, that is to say,-(a) every
instrument mentioned in that Schedule
which..................... is executed in India on or after
the first day of July 1899". July 1, 1899 is the date on
which the Act came into force.
Now the contention of the respondent is that a letter of
cover is not an instrument chargeable with duty because the
General Exemption in Art. 47 of the Schedule exempts it from
such duty. This contention was accepted by the learned
Judges of the Appellate Bench of the High Court who pointed
out. "It is significant that the words used are not that
such letter is chargeable with duty. The words used are
’bears the stamp prescribed by the Act for such policy’. On
a proper interpretation this means that such letter of cover
is not chargeable with duty as such under the Act but if it
bears the stamp prescribed by the Act for a policy of
insurance, then it will shed its inability and will become a
competent document on which a claim for loss could be made."
(1) 7 C. 96.
1053
They further observed, "as no stamp is fixed for such a
letter of cover being not a document chargeable with duty,
the statute uses the significant words or ’bearing the
stamp’ and indicates the rate by saying that the stamp must
be the same for such a letter of cover which is prescribed
for a policy of insurance under the Act"’. In this Court
Mr. Chatterjee for the respondent also advanced the same
argument.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 5 of 11
We are unable to accept the view which found favour with the
Appellate Bench of the High Court. The matter was put in
two ways. The first was that an instrument which is
exempted from duty by Schedule 1 is not chargeable with duty
under s. 3 and a letter of cover is so expressly exempted.
No doubt, if an instrument is exempted by the Schedule from
duty, then it cannot be chargeable. But we do not think
that a letter of cover is for all purposes exempted from
duty by the General Exemption. We think the proper
construction of the General Exemption clause is that the
exemption is to apply only if the letter of cover is used
for compelling the delivery of the policy mentioned in it.
If it is used for any other purpose, then it is not
exempted. That is why a proviso has been employed in the
provision and the effect of that is to take the letter of
cover out of the exemption in all other cases. If it is
taken out of the exemption, then, of course, the present
argument fails. We are unable to see how a letter of cover
can be said to have been exempted for all purposes, if
certain things cannot be claimed under it for the sole
reason that it does not bear a stamp. If it were exempted
for all purposes, it would be fully enforceable even without
a stamp. When a letter of cover is not stamped, then
nothing is claimable under it except the delivery of a
policy. If, however, it bears the stamp prescribed for the
appropriate policy, a claim can be made under it. It seems
to us that if an instrument bears a stamp, it has incurred
the liability for the stamp duty; it has not then been
exempted. Therefore it cannot be said that a letter of
cover is exempted from duty in all cases. When
1054
it is not exempted, it is an instrument chargeable to duty.
The other way in which the contention was put is based on
the use of the words ’bears the stamp prescribed by this
Act’. It was said that if an instrument is made to bear a
stamp, it is not thereby made chargeable to stamp duty. We
are wholly unable to see how an instrument can bear a stamp
prescribed by the Act unless it is chargeable to duty under
the Act for the Act deals only with instruments chargeable
to duty under it. It is difficult to appreciate the
argument that what the proviso meant by the use of the words
’bears the stamp prescribed by this Act for such policy’ was
only to indicate the amount of the duty. No doubt the rate
is there, but the instrument has to bear a stamp of that
rate. The Act nowhere says anything as to how an instrument
is to bear a stamp. Section 17 says that all instruments
chargeable with duty shall be stamped before or at the time
of execution. If the letter of cover was not chargeable to
duty but has only to bear a stamp as the respondent
contends, s. 17 would not apply to it. There would then be
no provision to prevent an instrument which is not
chargeable to duty but is required to bear a certain stamp,
from having that stamp affixed to it at any point of time.
The result would then be that where an instrument has only
to bear a stamp, the stamp can be affixed even at the
hearing before the instrument is tendered. That, of course,
would not assist the respondent at all and would, in our
view, introduce an anomaly in the Act which would be the
result of putting an unnatural construction on the words
’bears the stamp’. We think that by the use of the words
’bears the stamp’ the legislature intended to convey that a
letter of cover would be chargeable to duty in all cases
except for compelling delivery of a policy.
A letter of cover is, in our opinion, therefore, an
instrument chargeable to duty under the Act and so
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 6 of 11
admissible in evidence on payment of the requisite duty and
penalty under s. 35 of the Stamp Act as
1055
it is neither an instrument chargeable to duty not exceeding
ten naye paise nor a bill of exchange or a promissory note:
It seems to us, though we do not base our judgment on it,
that the idea of exempting a letter of cover from payment of
duty in the first instance was to avoid the hardship of
payment of duty twice over on the same insurance, for the
policy issued after the letter of cover had to insure the
goods from the time that the letter of cover itself insured
them and the policy had to be stamped. If the policy
insured the goods from a date after the expiry of the
insurance by the letter of cover, the latter would then be
an independent policy of insurance, may be for a shorter
time; it would not then be an interim cover and, therefore,
not a letter of cover at all. It may also be stated that in
very few cases it would be necessary to enforce the letter
of cover as an insurance for it is unlikely that in many
cases the fire would have occurred during the period covered
by it.
We have now to state that the appellant had paid the duty
and penalty as required by s. 35. There is no objection any
more to the admissibility of the letter of cover in
evidence. The only defence that was taken by the respondent
to the claim of the appellant, therefore, fails and the
appeal should succeed.
We wish, however , to observe that we have in this judgment
dealt only with a letter of cover concerning fire insurance
and our remarks on the interpretation of the proviso in the
General Exemption in Art. 47 of Schedule 1 to the Act have
been made in that context only. Whether those remarks would
apply in the case of a letter of cover concerning other
varieties of insurance was not a matter for our con-
sideration and on that question we have expressed no
opinion.
We would for these reasons allow the appeal and pass a
decree in favour of the plaintiff-appellant for Rs.
93,628/81- and costs with interest thereon from the date of
the’ judgment of the learned trial Judge at six per cent.
1056
RAGHUBAR DAYAL J.-I agree that the interim protection note
does not amount to a policy of insurance and that it is a
letter of cover or engagement to issue a policy of
insurance. I do not agree that it can be subsequently
stamped in view of the proviso (a) to s. 35 of the Indian
Stamp Act, hereinafter called the Act.
The interim protection note, being a letter of cover, is
exempted from stamp duty under the general exception to art.
47 of Schedule 1 of the Act. it can be used to base a claim,
or for any other purpose, only if it bears the stamp
prescribed by the Act for the policy which is to be issued
in pursuance of the letter of cover. The trial Court
admitted this letter of cover on the appellant’s paying the
requisite duty and penalty under s. 35 of the Act. The High
Court has held that this could not be done as the provisions
of s. 35 of the Act were not applicable to documents which
were not chargeable with duty under the Act. The
correctness of this view is challenged for the appellant.
The general exception, together with the proviso reads:
"Letter of cover or engagement to issue a
policy of insurance:
Provided that, unless such letter or engage-
ment bears the stamp prescribed by this Act
for such policy, nothing shall be claimable
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 7 of 11
thereunder, nor shall it be available for any
purpose, except to compel the delivery of the
policy therein mentioned."
Section 35 of the Act, omitting the provisos
other than (a), reads:
"No instrument chargeable with duty shall be
admitted in evidence for any purpose by any
person having by law or consent of parties
authority to receive evidence, or shall be
acted upon, registered or authenticated by any
such person or by public officer, unless such
instrument is duly stamped:
1057
Provided that-
(a) any such instrument not being an
instrument chargeable with a duty not
exceeding ten. naye paise only, or a bill of
exchange or promissory note, shall, subject to
all just exceptions, be admitted in evidence
on payment of the duty with which the same is
chargeable, or in the case of an instrument
insufficiently stamped, of the amount required
to make up such duty, together with a penalty
of five rupees, or, when ten times the amount
of the proper duty or deficient portion
thereof exceeds five rupees of a sum equal to
ten times such duty or portion;"
It is clear that an unstamped letter of cover or engagement
to issue a policy of insurance can be used only for
compelling the delivery of the policy therein mentioned, and
can neither be used for any other purpose nor can any claim
be based on it. A claim can be based on it if it bears the
stamp prescribed by the Act for the policy contemplated by
the letter of cover or engagement. The question then is
whether the proviso contemplates the letter of cover to bear
the stamp prescribed for the policy at the time it is
executed or can take in a letter of cover which is not so
stamped at the time of its execution but is subsequently
stamped by any person interested in stamping it or under any
orders under the Act. I am of opinion that it contemplates
letter of cover to bear the necessary stamp at the time of
execution and that any subsequent affixing of requisite
stamps on an unstamped letter of cover will not make it a
document which can be used for any purpose including the
basing of a claim.
The various provisions of the Act provide for the subsequent
stamping of the document only when that document is
chargeable with duty, under the provisions of s. 3 of the
Act. The Act does not, ,and naturally, could not have dealt
with orders for subsequent stamping of documents which at
the time of execution are not liable to stamp duty. They
I/SCI/64-67
1058
are good valid documents without any stamp duty and
therefore no question can arise in future about ,.their
being stamped under the orders of Court or a public officer.
There is no such provision either ,in the Act, though a
number of sections deal with the subsequent charging of the
deficit duty and penalty as well. No penalty can be
contemplated on account of a document being not stamped when
it required no stamp under the provisions of the Act and was
therefore not chargeable with stamp duty.
It is pertinently remarked in. Narayanan Chetti v. Karuppathan
(1)
:
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 8 of 11
"It appears to me that the levy of a penalty
authorized under the proviso, on the admission
of an insufficiently stamped document,
implies, a punishment for neglect in failing
to affix the proper stamp at the time of
execution...... The levy of a penalty shows
that the date of execution is that which is
regarded in the use of the word ’chargeable’,
and that chargeable therefore, means not
chargeable under the Act of 1879, but
chargeable under the Act in force at the date
of execution."
The view expressed in this case was affirmed by the Full
Bench in a reference from the Board of Revenue to the Madras
High Court under s. 46 of the ACt(2).
The provisions of s. 35 apply to such instruments which were
chargeable with duty. Such instruments, if not properly
stamped, were not to be admitted in evidence for any
purpose, nor could they be acted upon, registered or
authenticated by any person or ,by any public officer.
Certain instruments which are not duly stamped can be
admitted in evidence if they fall under any of the provisos
of the section. The provisions of this section will not
apply to instruments which are not chargeable with duty.
’Chargeable’, according to s. 2(6), means ’chargeable’ as
applied to an instrument executed or first executed after
the commencement of the Act, chargeable
(1) I.L.R. 3 Mad. 251, 253.
(2) I.L.R. 5 Mad. 394.
1059
under the Act and as applied to any other instrument,
chargeable under the law in force in India when such
instrument was executed or, where several’ persons executed
the instrument at different times, first executed. The
expression ’chargeable under the- Act’ indicates that the
chargeability would be the ultimate result of the various
provisions of the Act.
Section 3 of the Act provides that subject to the
provisions of the Act and the exemptions contained in
Schedule 1, the instruments mentioned within its clauses
(a), ( b) and (c) would be chargeable with duty of the
amount indicated in that Schedule as the proper duty
therefor. This means that instruments which are exempted
under any provision of the Act cannot be said to be
chargeable with duty even though in the absence of the
exemptions those instruments would have fallen under any of
the articles of Schedule 1. A policy of insurance is
chargeable with duty under Art. 47 of Schedule 1, but a
letter of cover is not chargeable with duty in view of the
general exemption to this article. It follows that the
letter of cover is a document which, as such, is not
chargeable with duty.
A document chargeable with duty and executed by any Person
in India is to be stamped before or at the time of execution
: vide s. 17. If the letter of cover is intended by either
the insured or the person offering to make an insurance to
be used for making a claim thereunder and therefore to be
treated as a policy, it is incumbent on that person to have
the letter of cover properly stamped with the requisite
stamp for that policy. If they do not so intend and desire
the letter of cover to remain as a letter of cover on the
basis of which only the delivery of the policy mentioned
therein can be enforced, they may take the advantage of the
general exception and need not stamp it. The decision to
stamp it or not to stamp it is to be taken at the time when
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 9 of 11
it is to be executed. If it is not then stamped, it is a
mere letter of cover which requires no stamp duty. It is a
valid and
1060
complete document. No provision of the Act for its being
stamped subsequently either by any of the parties to it or
by any public servant exists. The provision in the proviso
to the general exception about the letter of cover being
used to found a claim or for any other purpose when it bears
the stamp prescribed by the Act for such, policy, cannot be
construed to mean that subsequent to its execution any party
standing to gain thereby may just put the requisite stamp on
it and thereafter use it for enforcing any claim or for any
purpose. Such a construction of the proviso would be
against public policy and may defeat one of the objects of
the Act. It is true that the Act is a revenue measure, but
at the same time the stamping of documents gives a certain
formality to the transaction and to the preparation of the
document. The letter of cover is exempted from stamp duty
because as unstamped it cannot be used for any purpose
except for enforcing delivery of the policy. If subsequent
stamping of such document, in order to convert the letter of
cover into a real policy, be left at the sweet will of the
party standing to gain on account of the uncertain event
having occurred, it would be against public policy because
thereby a party who is sure to gain by fixing the requisite
stamp, whose value is bound to be negligible compared to the
monetary gain it stands to gain, will not mind the fixing of
the necessary stamp and parties in general would like to
avoid payment of the stamp duty in the first instance when
the document is executed. Further, the letter of cover is
issued by the insurer and, on the happening of the uncertain
event, it would be the person insuring who would like to
affix the requisite stamp and thereafter claim the amount of
damages incurred within the limits of the policy. The
executant of the letter of cover may thus be forced to abide
by the terms of the document as a policy when he, at the
time of executing the document, did not intend to be so
bound. When a letter of cover is not stamped at the time of
execution, both the parties stand to lose what they are to
gain monetarily on its basis. The person insuring stands to
lose the
1061
recovery of any loss he may incur prior to the issue of the
policy. The insurer-company stands to lose the recovery of
the premium for the limited period, i.e., the period between
the date of the cover note and the date when loss occurs to
the proposer. Both the parties take risk of loss by not
stamping the letter of cover and thus not making it a
document on which the claim other than the delivery of the
policy can be based.
In this connection, reference may be made to s. 47 of the
Act which provides for a subsequent stamping of certain
documents in certain circumstances. But this too deals with
certain documents which, though chargeable with duty, are
not covered by proviso (a) to s. 35.
Section 62(1)(b) makes it penal to execute or sign otherwise
than as a witness, any instrument chargeable with duty and
not included in cl. (a), without it being duly stamped. Any
subsequent stamping of a letter of cover with the requisite
stamp would lead to the parties avoiding the penalty pres-
cribed by s. 62(1)(b), as the letter of cover is not
chargeable with duty and the subsequent stamping would mean
that it becomes a policy of insurance, a document which
could be enforced on account of being properly stamped.
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 10 of 11
Section 29 provides that in the absence of an agreement to
the contrary, the expenses of providing the appropriate
stamp shall be borne in the case of a policy of fire-
insurance by the person issuing the policy. Though there is
no definite provision in the Act as to who should stamp the
document, in view of the provisions of s. 62, the person to
suffer for non-stamping a document chargeable with duty is
the executant. The insurer will not like to stamp the
letter of cover subsequently and specially when the
uncertain event had taken place. Subsequent stamping by the
assured in such circumstances, could not have been
contemplated by the Legislature.
Further, in view of the proviso to the general exception to
art. 47, nothing could be claimed under
1062
an unstamped letter of cover. This means that no suit can
be-instituted for the recovery of any amount alleged to be
due to the plaintiff. When the suit itself cannot be
instituted, no question of taking action under s. 35(a) of
the Act can arise , as that action is to be taken subsequent
to the institution of the suit and at the time of admitting
the document in evidence.
It is suggested for the appellant that the provisions of the
general exception indicate that the letter of cover was
exempted from stamp duty as the Legislature did not intend
that the stamp duty be paid twice over, once on the letter
of cover and a second time when the policy was issued. If
the Legislature had really intended so, it could have simply
provided that if a letter of cover bears the requisite
stamp, the policy need not be stamped. The Legislature,
however, spoke differently. It exempted the letter of cover
and provided that a letter of cover without stamp could be
used only for enforcing the delivery of the policy mentioned
therein. The object behind the exemption therefore appears
to be the very limited purpose for which the letter of cover
can be used. The Legislature was aware of a letter of cover
usually containing material which would make it a policy for
a limited period and therefore further provided that it can
be used to found a claim or for any other purpose if it
bears the requisite stamp for a policy. The reasonable
inference is that the Legislature left it to the discretion
of the parties concerned to have the letter of cover stamped
or not according to the use they intended to make of it, and
therefore it would be wrong to construe the provision to the
effect that any subsequent stamping of the document in any
circumstance would change the nature of the document and
make it available for purposes for which it was not intended
to be used at the time of execution.
Reliance has been placed for the appellant on the case
reported as Tricamji Damji & Co. v. Virji Kanji (1).
(1) [1922] 24. B.L.R. 820.
1063
In that case the plaintiff had claimed damages on the bases
of an unstamped protection note with respect to a contract
of sea-insurance. Marten J., held that the expression
’unless such letter or engagement bears the stamp prescribed
by this Act for such policy’ in. the general exception to
art. 47 meant affixation of the stamp before or at the time
of execution, as provided by s. 17 and that s. 35(a ) must
be read subject to the express direction in the proviso to
the general exception in art. 47. His view was not
accepted, wrongly I think, by the Appellate Bench, which
held the protection note to be a policy which could be
received in evidence after necessary action under s. 35 of
the Act is taken. We have already held the protection note
http://JUDIS.NIC.IN SUPREME COURT OF INDIA Page 11 of 11
in the present suit to be not a policy.
I am therefore of the opinion that the High Court was right
in holding that the interim protection note, not properly
stamped as a policy at the time of its execution, cannot be
subsequently stamped with the requisite stamps in pursuance
of the provisions of s. 35(a) of the Act and that the
appellant cannot base his claim on the interim protection
note in suit. I would, accordingly, dismiss the appeal with
costs of this Court and the High Court and modify the decree
of the High Court to the effect that the suit for Rs.
93,628-8-0 be dismissed with proportionate costs in the
trial court.
ORDER
In accordance with the opinion ’of the majority the appeal
is allowed, decree in favour of the plaintiff, appellant for
Rs. 93,628/8/- is passed, and costs with interest thereon
from the date of the judgment of the learned trial judge at
six per cent.
1064