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State whether a document compulsorily registerable but not registered can be admitted in evidence and if so, for what purpose? [2002 A.P.P.S.C]
1. State whether a
document compulsorily registerable but not registered can be admitted in
evidence and if so, for what purpose?
Answer:
There are several
documents which are not compulsorily register able under Section 17 of the
Registration Act.. Some of them require high stamp duty under the Karnataka
Stamp Act and some of them do not. Even the ones which require high stamp duty,
if they are under stamped, can be rectified later by paying a penal amount 10
times the original amount. Non payment of stamp duty does not make the document
void or otherwise invalid. The consequences of under stamping as per the stamp
act are 1. to make the document inadmissible for evidence before any authority
capable of receiving evidence of before any public authority. 2. The document
can also be impounded for enforcing the payment of full stamp value. An under
stamped instrument can be admitted as evidence in court if penal stamp duty 10
times the value of the original amount is paid.
The
following are the list of documents that do not require registration:
·
Power of attorney that is given except
power to sell property
·
Development agreement
·
Agreement of sale given by a land owner
to a developer
·
Lease agreement
·
Lease deed for less than one year
·
Memorandum of oral partition
·
recording a past transaction.
Power
of Attorney:
Registration: In
many cases, a general or specific power of attorney need not be registered. The
question of registration arises only if a power is given for the sale of
immovable properties. The Indian Registration Act does not make a power of
attorney compulsorily registerable. However, the Supreme court has recently
ruled that a power of attorney given to sell immovable properties should be registered.
It should be done at the office of the sub registrar within whose jurisdiction
the person giving the power resides. If the person resides abroad, the power
should be attested by the Indian consulate in that country. Such power of
attorney should be used within 3 months from the date of its execution.
Stamp duty: The Karnataka Stamp
Act prescribes the stamp duty to be paid on different types of power of
attorneys. A power given to a close relative needs only Rs. 100/- stamp paper,
even if it is to sell property. A power given to a person who is a non relative
will attract a stamp duty of 2% of the market value of the property, which can
be adjusted in the stamp duty payable on the sale deed. A power of attorney
given to a developer will attract stamp duty at the rate of 4% on the market
value of the property which is subject to a maximum of Rs 4 lakhs. This amount
is not adjusted at the time of executing subsequent sale deeds
Consequences
of under stamping
The power of attorney:
Can a sub registrar refuse to register a sale deed if the power of attorney
produced by the person executing the sale deed is not properly stamped? Yes,
the sub registrar can refuse to accept such a document for registration,
provided he immediately gives the reason to be recorded in writing.
Revocation of power of attorney: It is now settled law that an irrevocable
power of attorney given for consideration cannot be revoked.
Development agreement and Agreement to sell between landowner and developer:
A development agreement is not required to be registered. This includes all
construction contracts given to a developer. However it attracts a stamp duty
of 4% of the market value of the property, subject to a maximum of Rs. 4 lakhs.
If the developer properly stamps the agreement, then the power of attorney
which is executed by the land owner in favored the developer is exempted from
stamp duty and requires only Rs. 100/-.The Stamp Act says that agreements of
sale or M.O.U. given to a developer for construction, development, sale or
transfer (in any manner whatsoever) of any immovable property in Karnataka
attracts a stamp duty of 4% of the market value of the property subject to a
maximum of Rs. 4 lakhs. Agreements of sale between the developer and the land
owner should be made out as a simple agreement of sale accompanied with a
separate contract to build between two parties which require only Rs. 200/-
stamp paper. Possession should be taken separately and at a later date by the
developer from the land owner.
An
agreement to sell coupled
with possession in the
agreement itself will attract the same duty as a conveyance. The duty payable
is adjusted later in the stamp duty towards the sale deed.
Registration: A development agreement and an agreement of sale need not be
registered under the Registration Act. It is hardly surprising therefore that
there are hardly any development agreement or agreements of sale that are
properly stamped. As already stated, an under stamped document is not an
invalid document. But want of registration cannot be cured, so documents that
require compulsory registration should always be registered.
Lease
agreements and lease deed for less than one year:
An agreement to lease
without possession and a lease deed for less than one year need not be registered.
However, if a lease for more than one year is drafted as a leave and licence
deed or if the lease is found to commence from the date of agreement itself and
if possession is found to be handed over, then the agreement to lease operates
as a lease deed and should be registered if the period of lease is over 1 year.
The
new rent control act
has practically removed
all statutory protection of tenants, but thehigh cost of stamp duty of a lease
agreement or lease deed of less thanone year continues to deter full stamping
of such documents.
Stamp
duty
on agreement to lease
and lease deed: Leases for more than one year attracta stamp duty of 5% on the
average annual rent and 14.5% on the deposit. This duty can be reduced by
showing some of the amounts in a separate amenitiesagreement which need not be
registered. Agreements to lease and lease deedsfor less than one year also
require the same stamp duty as above but asthey do not require registration,
they never get properly stamped.
Partition
deed: A memorandum oral
partition recording a past transaction need notbe registered. A partition deed
effecting partition in the deed itself required registration but the stamp duty
is nominal and amounts to Rs. 200 to Rs.1000 per share, depending on its
location and nature of land. It is better to register a partition deed an it
gives notice of the partition to everyone and the title is better protected.
In conclusion always register a document which is compulsorily register able or
for which stamp duty is not high. Documents for which stamp duty is high and
which do not require registration do not become invalid for want of proper
stamp duty alone. But the rights of both parties should be protected in case of
default, so consult a lawyer. Always give possession separately and never in
the documents itself.
Importance
of Registration
Registration of a
document gives publicity and public exposure to documents thereby preventing
forgeries and frauds in regard to transactions and execution of documents. It
gives solemnity of form and perpetuates documents which are of legal importance
or relevance by recording them, where people may see the record and enquire and
ascertain what the particulars are.
Registration
Act, 1908
In India, Registration
Act, 1908, (the “Act”) was enacted with the object of providing orderliness,
discipline and public notice in regard to transactions relating to immovable
property and protection from fraud and forgery of documents of transfer.
Section 17 of the Act, therefore, requires compulsory registration of certain
types of documents and provides for consequences of non-registration. The scope
of Section 17 covers any document (other than testamentary instruments) which
purports or operates to create, declare, assign, limit or extinguish whether in
present or in future “any right, title or interest” whether vested or
contingent of the value of Rs. 100 and upwards to or in immovable property.
Notably, Section 49 of the same Act provides that no document required by
Section 17 to be registered shall, affect any immovable property comprised
therein or received as evidence of any transaction, unless it has been
registered. Section 49 bars the reception in evidence of a document of transfer
which is required to be registered under Section 17 of the Registration Act or
under the Transfer of Property Act, but is not registered.
Admissibility
of Unregistered Document
It is well settled that
an unregistered document cannot be received in evidence of any transaction
covered by registered document However, such unregistered document can
be used as an evidence of collateral purpose, as provided
in the proviso to Section 49 of the Registration Act. The aforesaid law in
based on the premise that such document maybe required in evidence to prove the
factum of a transaction, though not of its content. Furthermore, such an
exception does not apply unless the transaction has been reduced to a document
form. There is plethora of cases which has firmly laid down that under the
proviso to Section 49 of the Act, an unregistered document can also be admitted
into evidence for a collateral fact/collateral purpose. However, in order to
admit such document even for collateral purpose, the document so tendered must
be duly stamped or should comply with the requirements of Section 35 of the
Stamp Act, without which, such document cannot be received in evidence unless
duty and penalty are paid under Section 35 of the Stamp Act. In G.
Balakishtiah vs. B. Ranga Reddy, it was held that unregistered lease deed can
be admissible in evidence for proving appellant’s (who was owner of the land in
dispute) title to the leased property. Similarly in Hemanta Kumari Debi v.
Midnapur Zamindari Co., Privy Council had held that the admission of title in
the unregistered lease deeds can be admissible as evidence. More recently
in Shibani Basu v. Sandip Ray, Supreme Court held that non-registration of
a rent note did not debar use of a document that was to be compulsorily
registered, for collateral purposes.
Requirement
for Compulsory Registration
Expanding the scope of
the requirement for compulsory registration, the Apex Court in Raghunath
v. Kedarnath, held-
“by the enactment of
Act 21 of 1922 which by inserting in Section 49 of the Registration Act the
words “or by any provision of the Transfer of Property Act, 1882” has made it
clear that the documents in the supplemental list i.e. the documents of which
registration is necessary under the Transfer of Property Act but not under the
Registration Act fall within the scope of Section 49 of the Registration Act
and if not registered are not admissible as evidence of any transaction affecting
any Immovable property comprised therein, and do not affect any such immovable
property.”
Accordingly it was held
that the document in question was not admissible as evidence of any transaction
affecting the immovable property. However, the above rule does not lay down any
prohibition in respect of transfers required to be registered under another
document. For instance, in Piru Charan Pal and Anr. v. Minor Sunilmoy Nemo
and Anr., it was held that as the document in question was required to be
registered under the Bengal Tenancy Act, the prohibition contained in Section
49 of the Registration Act did not apply to it and the document was held to be
admissible in evidence for purposes other than proving the title.
Meaning
and Scope of ‘Collateral Purpose’
The term “collateral
purpose” is often used along with the expression ‘collateral transaction’.
Explaining the meaning of the expression, ‘collateral transaction’, the Bombay
High Court in Ramlaxmi vs. Bank of Baroda, observed that such an
expression “is used not in the sense of an ancillary transaction to a principal
transaction or a subsidiary transaction to a main transaction. The root meaning
of the word ‘collateral’ is running together or running on parallel lines. The
transaction as recorded would be a particular or specific transaction. But it
would be possible to read in that transaction what may be called the purpose of
the transaction and what may be called a collateral purpose, the fulfilment of
that collateral purpose would bring into existence a collateral transaction, a
transaction which may be said to be a part and parcel of the transaction but
none the less a transaction which runs together with or on parallel lines with
the same.” However, it is to be noted that the precise meaning and
examples of collateral purpose is not exhaustively defined. The meaning of
‘collateral purpose’ may vary depending on the nature of the agreement or
document. For instance, in case of lease deed, the term ‘collateral purpose’
would mean proving the nature and character of possession and the purpose of
leasing out. Similarly, an unregistered sale deed would be admissible
in evidence for collateral purpose to limited extent of showing possession of a
party to suit. In Ratan Lal and Ors. v. Harisankar and Ors., it was
observed that collateral purpose has a limited scope and meaning and it cannot
be used for the purpose of saying that the deed created or declared or assigned
or limited or extinguish the right to immovable property. If a mortgage deed is
not registered, the mortgagor cannot use it to prove his right of redemption
for that is not a collateral purpose. However, the simple devise of
calling it a “collateral purpose”, a party cannot use the unregistered document
in any legal proceedings to bring about indirectly the effect of which it would
have had if registered.
Whether
Terms of an Unregistered Document Admissible in Evidence
It is to be noted that
if a document is inadmissible in evidence for want of registration, none of its
terms can be admitted in evidence and that to use a document for the purpose of
proving an important clause would not be using it as a collateral purpose. For
instance, in Haran Chandra Chakrvarti v. Kaliprasanna Sarkar, it was held
that the terms of a compulsorily registerable instrument are nothing less than
a transaction affecting the property comprised in it. It was also held that to
use such an instrument for the purpose of proving such a term would not be
using it for a collateral purpose and that the question as to who is the tenant
and on what terms he has been created a tenant are not collateral facts but
they are important terms of the contract of tenancy, which cannot be proved by admission
of an unregistered lease-deed into evidence. Later Supreme Court in Bajaj
Auto Limited v. Behari Lal Kohli, held that if a decree purporting to create a
lease is inadmissible in evidence for want of registration, none of the terms
of the lease can be admitted in evidence and that to use a document for the
purpose of proving an important clause in the lease is not using it as a collateral
purpose. In M/s Jiwan Industries (P) Ltd. v. Smt. Kamlesh Rani Budhiraja,
it was held that-
“an unregistered lease
deed can be looked into only for collateral purpose and collateral purpose
cannot be interpreted to include therein the terms and conditions by which
parties are related to each other as landlord and tenant. Collateral purpose
basically is to show the nature of possession i.e. tenant has not illegally
entered into possession but has legally entered into possession. All other
terms and conditions between the landlord and tenant as stated in the
registered lease deed whether it be for the period of lease, or the rate of rent
or area of tenancy or other terms and conditions, the same cannot be looked
into in view of the specific bar of Section 49 of the Registration Act.”
However,
the Hon’ble Supreme Court in SMS Tea Estates Pvt. Ltd. vs. Chandmari Tea
Company Pvt. Ltd. held that-
“An arbitration
agreement does not require registration under the Registration Act. Even if it
is found as one of the clauses in a contract or instrument, it is an
independent agreement to refer the disputes to arbitration, which is
independent of the main contract or instrument. Therefore having regard to the
proviso to Section 49 of Registration Act read with Section 16(1)(a) of the Act,
an arbitration agreement in an unregistered but compulsorily registrable
document can be acted upon and enforced for the purpose of dispute resolution
by arbitration.”
Accordingly, an
arbitration agreement in an unregistered but compulsorily registrable document
can be acted upon and enforced for the purpose of dispute resolution by
arbitration.
Judicial
Approach
In case of deciding the
question of raising an objection against the admissibility of an unregistered
document which needs to be registered, the Privy Council in Connecticut
Fire Insurance Co v. Kavanagh held that the court should not allow the
question to be raised unless it can be disposed off without deciding questions
of fact in considering which the court is in a much less advantageous position
than the courts below. The Privy Council in ME Moolla Sons Ltd v.
Burjorjee refused to allow an objection to the non registration of an agreement
of sale to be raised when the agreement had been admitted throughout the
litigation and had been treated as valid and no question affecting immovable
property was involved in the appeal.
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