ABUJA – The Federal High Court in Abuja, on Thursday, stopped
the Nigerian Postal Services, NIPOST, from further collecting N50 on stamp
duty.
The court held that such revenue drive by NIPOST does not
enjoy the backing of any extant law in the country including the Stamp Duties
Act 2004. The court Judgement followed a suit the Nigerian bottling company,
NBC, filed against NIPOST and a private firm, Kasmal International Services.
Justice Gabriel Kolawole who gave the verdict, held that
having carefully gone through the Stamp Duties Act 2004, he could not see where
NIPOST was empowered by the law to impose stamp duty tax on the bottling
company, banks and other establishments.
According to the Judge, whereas the Act recommended 2kobo
stamp to be affixed on certain categories of documents, NIPOST, lacked the
power to arbitrarily increase the amount to N50 without firstly securing an
amendment of the Act through the National Assembly. “A law is a law and has to
be obeyed or implemented as it is.
Section 89 of the Stamp Duties Act which recommended the use
of adhesive 2 kobo stamp on certain categories of receipts and document is the
law in force.
“The NIPOST as a defendant in this suit acted unlawfully,
illegally and ultra-vire by unilaterally increasing the 2 kobo stamp to N50
without any back up law and under the guise that 2 kobo stamps are no longer in
circulation in Nigeria.
“Under section 89 of this Act, the NIPOST has no power to
compel the plaintiff (NBC) to affix N50 stamp on its receipts and other
documents. “By this, NIPOST has no business or authority in sending Kasmal
International Services on illegal errand to compel the plaintiff on the N50
stamp duty tax”.
Consequently, the court issued an order of injunction
against the NIPOST and Kasmal International Services, stopping them from
further harassing, embarrassing, intimidating, coercing or disrupting the
business operation of the plaintiff in the name of unlawful stamp duty tax
until the extant laws are reviewed.
It said: “The extant law is for 2 kobo stamp. No law has
amended the Stamp Duties Act 2004 to increase it to N50. At any rate, NIPOST is
not a tax collecting establishment and as such, cannot exercise any power not
expressly donated to it by law”.
More so, Justice Kolawole recalled that the Lagos Division
of the Court of Appeal had earlier delivered judgment on the same issue. He
said the Federal High Court, being a lower court, cannot afford to depart from
the precedent of a Superior Court as regards the judgment until such a
precedent has been set aside by the highest court in the country.
Basically, NBC had through its counsel, Mr. Ayokunle
Adesomoju, dragged NIPOST and Kasmal International Services before the court,
praying for an order to declare the stamp duty tax as illegal, unlawful and
ultra-vire.
The plaintiff also applied for a perpetual order of
injunction stopping the two defendants from invading, harassing, embarrassing
and disrupting its business operations across the country on the pretext of
seeking internal revenue for the federal government.
NIPOST had through its counsel Mr. Salihu Wakawa, prayed the
court to dismiss the suit, insisting that granting reliefs sought by the
plaintiff would occasion great injustice and jeopardise the revenue drive of
the Federal Government.
Vanguard reports
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