Stamp Duty
Stamp duty is a tax levied on a variety of written
instruments specifies in the First Schedule of Stamp Duty
Act 1949. In general, stamp duty imposed to legal,
commercial and financial instruments.
The Assessment and collection of Stamp Duties is sanctioned
by statutory law now described as the Stamp Act 1949.
TYPES OF DUTY
There are two types of duties:
a. Ad volerem Duty
Duty varies in amount in some specified proportion to the
amount or value of some obligation incurred or discharged or
some property affected by the instruments.
The Stamp Act 1949 provides for:-
The imposition of ad valorem Duties (that is, according to
the value) on:
i.
instruments of transfer (implementing a sale or gift) of
property including marketable securities (meaning loan
stocks and shares of public companies listed on the Bursa
Malaysia Berhad), shares of other companies and of non
tangible property (e.g. book debts, benefits to legal rights
and goodwill);
ii.
instruments creating interests in property (e.g. Tenancies
and Statutory Leases);
iii.
instruments of security for monies including instruments
creating contracts for payment of monies or obligation for
payment of monies (generally described as `Bond`); and
iv. certain capital market instruments (e.g. Contract Notes)
b. Fixed Duty
The Imposition of Fixed Duties on:
i. a number of other legal, commercial, mercantile or
capital market instruments (e.g. Power or Letter of
Attorney, Articles of Association of a Company, Promissory
Notes, Policy of Insurance etc); and
ii. a duplicate or a subsidiary or a collateral instrument
when it can be shown that the original or principal or
primary instrument has been duly stamped.
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