Page:The wealth of nations, volume 3.djvu/284

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
276
The Wealth of Nations

and takes place only in certain districts. But if any person sells his land, in order to remove out of the territory, he pays ten per cent upon the whole price of the sale.[1] Taxes of the same kind upon the sale either of all lands, or of lands held by certain tenures, take place in many other countries, and make a more or less considerable branch of the revenue of the sovereign.

Such transactions may be taxed indirectly by means either of stamp duties, or of duties upon registration; and those duties either may or may not be proportioned to the value of the subject which is transferred.

In Great Britain the stamp duties are higher or lower, not so much according to the value of the property transferred (an eighteen-penny or half-crown stamp being sufficient upon a bond for the largest sum of money) as according to the nature of the deed. The highest do not exceed six pounds upon every sheet of paper or skin of parchment; and these high duties fall chiefly upon grants from the crown, and upon certain law proceedings, without any regard to the value of the subject. There are in Great Britain no duties on the registration of deeds or writings, except the fees of the officers who keep the register; and these are seldom more than a reasonable recompense for their labor. The crown derives no revenue from them.

In Holland[2] there are both stamp duties and duties upon registration; which in some cases are, and in some are not proportioned to the value of the property transferred. All testaments must be written upon stamped paper of which the price is proportioned to the property disposed of, so that there are stamps which cost from threepence,


  1. "Memoires concernant les Droits," etc., tome i. p. 157.
  2. Id., pp. 223, 224, 225.