commanding the collector to assess and accept payment of the stamp duty payable in respect of the transfer of the land calculated upon a consideration of the value of £50,000. The application was refused, the collector giving an undertaking which was recited in the court's order as being that he would give a reply within twenty-one days to the applicant's request for an expression of opinion under sec. 32 as to whether the transfer was chargeable with duty, and, if so, what the amount of the duty should be,
Held, on appeal to the High Court, that the writ as sought was rightly (VICT.).
refused: its mandate would be an interference with the collector's discretion under sec. 32 and (Rich J. dissenting) that in the circumstances of the case a mandamus should not issue commanding the collector to perform his duty under sec. 32. The recital in the order appealed from of the collector's under- taking was varied SO as to express the undertaking precisely in terms of the
R. v. War Pensions Entitlement Appeal Tribunal; Ex parte Bott, (1933) 50 C.L.R. 228, referred to.
Decision of the Supreme Court of Victoria (Martin J.) affirmed subject to
APPEAL from the Supreme Court of Victoria.
Cuming Campbell Investments Pty. Ltd., a company incorporated in Victoria, was formed in 1931 for the purpose of purchasing property from Edward Campbell. The capital of the company was £80,003, of which Edward Campbell held 80,000 fully paid £1 shares. The other three shares were allotted to three of his sons. On 17th September 1931 Edward Campbell agreed to sell, and the company agreed to purchase, the real and personal property set forth in the schedule to the agreement. No money passed between the vendor and the company, but the 80,000 shares above mentioned were allotted to Edward Campbell and accepted by him in satisfaction of the purchase money payable under the agreement. In the schedule to the agreement, and in the resolution of the company that the property be purchased by the company from the vendor, values were attributed to the six parcels of land included in the transaction, the total value SO attributed being £50,000. The remainder of the property transferred consisted of shares, Common- wealth bonds, and certain deposits, which made up the balance of £80,000 which was stated as the price or value of the property in both the agreement and the resolution. The agreement of 17th September 1931 was not stamped. Edward Campbell, the vendor,