Judgment regarding a dispute over stamp duty on an agreement to sell property. Ramesh Mishrimal Jain, the appellant, challenged an order that upheld the impounding of his agreement to sell for insufficient stamp duty, arguing that the agreement did not constitute a conveyance under the Bombay Stamp Act, 1958, because possession was not transferred as part of the sale. Avinash Vishwanath Patne, the respondent, contended that the agreement was a “deemed conveyance” because the appellant was already in possession as a tenant, and the agreement stipulated eventual transfer of ownership possession. The court affirmed the lower court’s decision, stating that the legal position dictates stamp duty is levied on the instrument itself, and the existing possession, even if as a tenant, satisfied the conditions for the agreement to be considered a conveyance, thus requiring proper stamp duty and penalty. The ruling clarifies that the object of the Stamp Act is to levy duty at the earliest stage when substantial conditions of a conveyance, including possession, are met.
Bombay Stamp Act, 1958, Section 34; Article 25, Schedule I, Explanation I – Deficit stamp duty – Impounding of document – Challenge as to – Agreement to sell – Held that the legal position is very clear that the stamp duty is on the instrument and not on the transaction – It is immaterial, whether the possession of the property has been handed over at the time of execution of the agreement to sell or whether it has been agreed to transfer the possession – Agreement to sell executed between the appellant and mother of the Respondent No.1, specifically states that “this property is in your occupation on rental basis and it will not be part of the sale transaction – After completion of sale transaction, the possession of the said property will be given to you on the ownership basis – This makes it very clear that the suit property was occupied by the appellant on a rental basis and it would not be a part of the sale transaction – Further, there was a clause, by which, timeline was given for execution of sale deed – Since the possession was admittedly given to the appellant even before the date of agreement, implying acquisition of possessory rights protected under Section 53A of the Transfer of Property Act, the same requires payment of proper stamp duty – The agreement to sell includes a clause stating that physical possession had already been handed over to the appellant, regardless of the basis of such possession – This satisfies the requirement to treat the instrument as a ‘conveyance’ within the meaning of Explanation I to Article 25 of Schedule I of Bombay Stamp Act, with only the formality of executing the sale deed remaining – Held that Courts below impounded the document and directed the same to be sent to the Registrar of Stamps for recovery of deficit stamp duty and penalty as per law, by the orders impugned which is perfectly correct – Until the defect is cured by satisfying the requirements under Section 34, the document impounded cannot be used in evidence – Do not find any reason to interfere with the orders passed by the Courts below.
(Para 9, 11 to 13)
Ramesh Mishrimal Jain V. Avinash Vishwanath Patne
Supreme Court: 2025 INSC 213: (DoJ 14-02-2025)




