Validity of Digital Contracts in India and implications of the Stamp Act

It is close to 20 years since India passed the Information Technology Act and notified it with effect from 17th October 2000. It enabled digital contracts to be recognized in law and established a “Judicially recognized Digital Society”. (For this reason, Naavi has been calling for celebration of 17th October as the Digital Society Day of India).

When the IT Act was passed, the legal recognition to electronic documents under Section 4 extended all current laws to the domain of Cyber Laws by replacing the “Written” document with an “Electronic Document”. Hence under the Indian Contract Act, offers and acceptances in writing could be replaced with offers and acceptances with the use of Electronic documents. “Signing” was also extended to electronic documents by introducing the system of “Digital Signature”.

In 2008 version, provision was made for other forms of electronic signature and in 2015 we came across the notification of e-sign as one of the other forms of authentication of an electronic document along with the digital signature.

With these, an electronic document with digital signature or e-sign could be considered as equivalent to a written and signed document. Hence if such documents are used for communication of proposals or acceptances, it would form a valid digital contract.

Section 10A also provided the clarity that communication of proposals and acceptances through electronic document can lead to valid contract formation.

Exclusion of Documents from ITA 2000

The excluded documents under the then Section 1(4) which is now listed under Schedule-I,  exempted Negotiable Instruments, Trust deed, Will, Power of Attorney and a contract of sale or transfer of any interest in immovable property from the legal recognition under the Act. Hence all other documents which were in electronic form could be considered as “Included” in ITA 2000.

The exclusions of these types of documents were also adopted in other countries which at that time had adopted similar laws. At the time when Draft  E Commerce Act 1998, the Information Technology Bill 1999 and then the Information Technology Act 2000 was under discussion in professional circles, we had observed that the Indian law did not within the Act provided a justification for the inclusion of these documents under the “Excluded Category”. However the law had adopted the provisions from the then Malaysian law, Singapore law, Utah law etc. Unless we go through the minutes of the meeting at that time in the Drafting Committee or unless Mr T. K Vishwanathan the person who was responsible for the actual drafting of the act comes up with his memories on the issue, we will have to do with my memories in this regard.

According to my memory, some of the Countries including Pakistan (It had an ordinance similar to our bill), had specified the reasons why they kept out the immovable property transactions from the recognition. (See my comments on this bill on January 17, 2002) The ordinance had clearly said as follows:

Section 9: Stamp Duty. — (1) Notwithstanding anything contained in the Stamp Act, 1899 (II of 1899), for a period of two years from the date of commencement of this Ordinance, stamp duty shall not be payable in respect of any instrument executed in electronic form.

(2) The Provincial Governments shall, within the period specified in sub-section (1), devise and implement appropriate measures for payment of stamp duty through electronic means before or at the time of execution of the instrument in electronic form.

It was clear that the exemption was considered because of lack of proper method for collection of stamp duty. I am sure that the reasoning here as well as in other laws of that time was that stamp duty is not payable on electronic documents for reasons that were relevant at that point of time.

It was also considered (my interpretation), that India wanted to disallow property documents  because electronic documents were not considered stable enough to be retained for more than 5 years and the requirement of property documents extended to retention for hundreds of years. A similar 5 year upper limit can be observed with respect to retention of certain aspects of digital signature records.

Finally, ITA 2000 did not specify the reasons for exemption of some documents and whether one of the reasons was to do with the Stamp duty issue. Hence today we are confused whether Stamp Duty is payable on electronic contracts or not.

Readers may refer to some of the articles I have provided in the “Reference Articles”  at the end of this article, written by many expert advocates and my own earlier articles. Some of them try to take the Maharashtra State Government amendment of the State Stamp Act to say that since a procedure for payment of stamp duty is now available, we should consider that Electronic contracts are also to be considered as coming under the Stamp duty.

The article of Uthara Priyadarshini in Bar and Bench appears to hold out the most acceptable analysis.

Types of E Contracts

Not all contracts which we call as “E-Contracts” are formed with a specific offer and acceptance or a common agreement so that they can be printed out or Stamp duty paid at the time of signing. Incidentally I disagree with one of the authors in the articles below who considers typing the name or placing a picture of signature etc as electronic signatures under Section 3A of ITA 2000.

The only valid Section 3A electronic signature is the e-Sign. There are other forms of e-contracts such as Click Wrap, Browse Wrap or Shrink Wrap which experts often refer to.

As regards the “Click Wrap” contracts, since a “Click” cannot be considered as a “Digital Signature”, the document cannot be considered as a “Signed document”. However, the “Click-Wrap” can still be considered for formation of an “Implied Contract” since ITA 2000 did not bar the formation of contract as provided under Indian Contract Act which included both Oral and Implied contracts.

The “Click-Wrap” contract comes under the category of “Un-Negotiated”, “Dotted Line or Standard form” Contract and the principles of “Unconscionable contracts” as laid out in the CERC Vs LIC Of India Supreme Court case apply. Accordingly the “Dominant party” has to ensure that onerous clauses are sufficiently highlighted and  there is a “Meeting of Minds” between the two parties to agree on the terms of the clause which may otherwise be considered as “One Sided”.

The “Browse-Wrap” contract where there is a contract some where hidden on a website which says, if you continue browsing, you are deemed to have accepted the terms of this contract is also a “Deemed or Implied Contract”. Similarly the “Shrink-Wrap” contract also tries to bind a person to the contract even before he has the full information of the terms in that part, an implied, standard form contract only.

Hence the “Click-Wrap”, “Shrink-Wrap” or “Browse-Wrap” types of electronic contracts donot fall into the category of “Written Contracts” under Indian law.

If however the offer and acceptance documents are digitally signed with a digital certificate issued by the Indian certifying authority and was valid at the time of signing, then the document can be considered as a valid contractual documents and subject to the exemptions that it is not a Bill of Exchange or Promissory Note (Cheques are included after the 5th February 2003 amendment), or a Trust deed or a Will or a Power of Attorney or a document that transfers title in an immovable property.

Now the question comes about the lack of Stamping of the document at the time of execution.

We must appreciate that “Stamping” of a document to make it valid or to make it invalid if not stamped is a requirement of revenue generation for the Government. If the Government wants to continue generating revenue on online contracts, they need to institute a proper methodology for payment of stamp duty, generating an acknowledgement and noting that on the document.

Also, if the Indian Stamp Act has defined that the Stamp Act is applicable for only paper documents then the State Governments cannot make their own amendments contrary to the Central law by introducing new instruments under the Act.

If “Electronic Documents” are recognized as an Exclusive category of documents which are neither “Oral” not “Documentary”, then the powers under Section 90 of ITA 2000 to the States should not be extended to create a new kind of “Instrument” under the State Stamp Acts which is inclusive of “Electronic Documents”. The Indian Evidence Act under Section 17 clearly identifies three kinds of statements for admission where there is a distinction between “Oral”, “Documentary” and “Contained in electronic form”, which substantiates this view. Hence “Electronic Records” are a new kind of documents other than “Oral” and “written” and Stamp act cannot create a new instrument for the purpose of collecting revenue.

The amendments of the State Governments of Maharashtra and other Governments such as Delhi, Gujarat, Rajasthan and Karnataka mentioned in the article in Lex Counsel by Seema Jhingan and others appear ultra-vires the powers of the State.

Legislative Intent

The legislative intent of introducing ITA 2000 to facilitate E Commerce was to ensure that commercial contracts could be carried on with the use of Electronic Documents exchanged over the network as “Offer E Mail” and a “Acceptance E Mail” leading to formation of contracts since there was a way of signing the offer and acceptance, there was determination of attribution, time and place of message etc.

Under “Section 4 of the Draft E Commerce Act 1998” it was stated as under:

c) In relation to this Act, electronic records shall not be liable to stamp duty under the Stamp Act, 1899.

It also added as comments:

Comments: It is not feasible to give broad legal recognition to all documents that are signed with an electronic signature because, under Indian Law, hand written signatures are more appropriate for certain categories of agreements. Therefore, the purpose of limiting application of this Act is to acknowledge the intent of relevant laws that mandate the use of pen and ink for some documents.

For example, in the case of negotiable instruments, the current state of technology does not adequately provide a reliable mechanism for the transfer or negotiation of electronic records to holders in due course beyond an originator and an initial recipient of the electronic record.

Additionally, this section provides authority to the Central Government to amend, as appropriate, the limitations set forth in this section.

Further, the application of the Stamp Act has been limited to recognize the intangible nature of electronic records, based upon precedent set in the Depositories Act, 1996.

It can therefore be construed that the Legislative intent behind ITA 2000 was clearly to exempt the Electronic Contracts from the Indian Stamp Act.

Cancellation of Stamps

Beyond all the above arguments there is also a need to look at how “Cancellation” of a stamp in the electronic scenario has to be recorded. For Stamping to be valid, the document has to be stamped at the time of its execution and has to be cancelled in an appropriate form. Does the procedure of making a payment to the treasury and noting the payment transaction number in the document constitute a valid cancellation in the absence of a specific mention in the procedures lead down by the State Governments will be a moot point.

The mother of all ITA 2000 like laws was the UNCITRAL Model law on E Commerce adopted as a resolution in UN.  The UNCITRAL model law confined itself to the commercial contracts but did make mention about “Stamping” in a different context where “Stamping” is considered as a “Signature”. It noted that “alongside the traditional handwritten signature, there exist various types of procedures (e.g., stamping, perforation), sometimes also referred to as “signatures”, which provide various levels of certainty.” It also said “the concept of a signature adopted in that context is such that a stamp, perforation or even a typewritten signature or a printed letterhead might be regarded as sufficient to fulfill the signature requirement. “

These description of “Signature” were in a different context but has a connotation in the “Cancellation of Stamps” since one of the methods of cancellation is to write the date of the instrument or sign across the adhesive stamp.

Desirability of Stamping E Contracts

Not withstanding the right of the State Government to impose Stamp Act on E Contracts, and their ability to introduce the required procedures, the desirability of such a measure needs to be examined from the point of view of commercial feasibility and ease of doing business.

This is a call that the Central Government and the State Governments should take together. If the challenges are too harrowing, companies could shift the contract execution to a “Stamp Tax Haven” (virtually) using the available provisions of ITA 2000 and avoid the stamp duty.

We are presently on the threshold of a “Personal Data Protection Act” (PDPA) and this act will impose huge penalties for non compliance that cannot be ignored by E-Business organizations. In determining the obligations under the Act, the “Consent” is a critical element. The PDPA expects that the “Consent” passes the test of the Indian Contract Act. If read along with the validity of contracts under the Indian Stamp act, then all the “Consents” will fail to be valid contracts both because they may not be digitally signed or they may not be stamped under the Indian Stamp Act.

The only option for such digitally signed, un-stamped memorandum of understanding is to use the “CEAC-DROP BOX” concept which creates the witnesses to establish the evidentiary value of the memorandum of understanding without a “Documentary Contract”.

For the sake of ease of business however, this issue needs to be clarified in law so that the business entities are not kept in the dark. One option available now is through the PDPA which is still in the Bill stage, which can clarify that “Consent” can be provided without a digitally signed or Stamped document provided there is a necessary collateral evidence confirming the intention of the parties.

The above are my personal views and readers may also read the articles referred to below to get a comprehensive view of the issue.

I invite the views of others so that we can collate the views of the fraternity both from the field of Advocates, Technology professionals and the Data Protection professionals.

Naavi

Reference Articles:

1.Electronic Contracts-Applicability of Stamp Duty: Seema Jhingan, Neha Yadav and Saniya Kothari published at Mondaq.com

2. Stamp duty implications on E-Agreements: Ishika Agarwal, Vinod Kothari Consultants

3. E Contracts in India: Commercial law Blog

4. Are E Contracts amenable to Stamp Duty ?: Anuj Agarwal/Uttara Priyadarshini:  Bar and Bench:

5. Redefining the scope of ITA 2008.. in the amendments..

6. Stamp Duty on Electronic Records

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EU parliament member’s data breached ?

In an embarrassing revelation, an Indian security firm “Shadowmap” promoted by Yash Kadakia, has revealed that data about 1200 accounts of elected officials and staff and another 15,000 accounts of EU affairs professionals were disclosed on the web along with the encrypted passwords.

This is being highlighted here not because we are happy that the data has been exposed, but to indicate to politically motivated ethical hackers like “Elliot Alderson” or “Robert Baptiste” that instead of worrying about the data breach incidents in their own country, they are trying to spread false rumors of data breach in India whether in the Arogya Setu or Aadhaar.

If Indian hackers work with similar motivation as Mr Baptiste to defame foreign Governments, perhaps many other Governments EU can also be embarrassed. But I suppose Indian hackers are not largely interested in such unproductive attacks (Except perhaps on Pakistan!).

The entire world is grappling with data security and need to make Internet more trustworthy. I therefore urge that the talented hackers who call them “Ethical”, should help the community to defeat the dark web and criminals who operate therefrom, rather than going after defaming the Government officials who may not be as much talented.

An academic question that arises in this case is “Who is liable under GDPR for this breach?”

Since the EU parliament is headquartered in France, (or is it still Belgium? or Luxembourg?)  it has to come under the jurisdiction of the French Supervisory authority and Mr Baptiste should directly contact the supervisory authority of his country and question them. Technically however, the breach is attributed to whom so ever was responsible as a “Data Controller”. It could be some department of the EU Parliament like our own NIC being a part of the Government. Will it be considered as a separate entity and notice issued? … We will wait and see how committed is the EU Parliament for the cause of data protection.

Perhaps the Internet Freedom Foundation and other similar friends of  Baptiste should issue a notice to the EU Parliament committee to take action.

Naavi

P.S: Also see here:

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Live Cyber Law Courses will be back

In the next few weeks, Naavi would be conducting two virtual programs on Cyber Laws .

The coverage would be similar to what Cyber Law College covered during the offline programs with BMS Law College and St Joseph’s Law College some time back.

The first program would be exclusive for a group of IT and IS professionals. The second program would be open to all.

Watch out for the details.

Law Colleges who want to avail this opportunity may make use of bulk discounts which would be made available.

Naavi

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India is a haven for black money

Despite the efforts of our honourable Prime Minister to eliminate Black Money in India there is a formidable opposition which is fighting to defeat his efforts.

I draw the attention of the readers to a video containing the views of Dr Subramanya Swamy in this regard .

At the same time, I would like to point out that the biggest support to Black Money comes from the “Digital Black Money” in the form of Bitcoin. Unless we all realize that Bitcoin is the biggest villain and is trying to trap Mr Narendra Modi in a Chakra Vyuha like Abhimanyu was trapped during Kurukshetra. If others donot rush to the help of Mr Modi, he is likely to be defeated in his efforts because there are multiple entities who will surround him and shoot arrows from behind.

I therefore request Amit Shah, in particular as the Home Minister and Mrs Nirmala Sitharaman as the Finance Minister, Mr Ravishankar Prasad as both the Law Minister and the IT Minister, Mr Shaktikant Das as the RBI Governor and other erudite Ministers like Smrithi Irani, Piyush Goyal etc to realize that they cannot stand outside the Chakra Vyuh and ringing  their hands and pointing out to a Jayadratha/Saindhava to abdicate their responsibility to go to the aid of Mr Modi.

We also want the Baba Ramdev and Sadguru to assist Dr Subramanya Swamy who is fighting a lone battle himself, to express their solidarity to the “Remove Black Money from India” campaign and Mr Arnab Goswamy to lend his voice.

I have lost faith in the honourable Supreme Court to be of any assistance to control Black money because Bitcoin has been blessed by a three member bench of the Supreme Court. The CJI is oblivious to the damage the Supreme Court has done to the cause of eliminating black money through its judgement of March 4, 2020 on the Bitcoin exchange operations in India and would hide behind the technicalities of when he can order a review of a judgement to a larger bench and when he cannot. The truth is that either he has not appreciated the damage caused by the “Bollywood Judgement” or does not want to enter the battlefield and let the Country go to dogs.

We therefore want people to raise up and demand from Mr Modi himself why he has not opened his third eye on this issue.

I also warn the IT industry not to support Bitcoin because it is a product of technology. Recently, it is understood that Cognizant had to pay a huge ransom through bitcoins and will perhaps continue to pay more in the coming days. Several other companies have paid such ransom and will continue to pay in the future. Had we all fought for the elimination of the Bitcoin and Crypto Currencies, even if the hackers had succeeded in infecting Cognizant with a ransomware, they ought to have got their ransom in some legit currency system which could have been traced and recovered.

Bitcoin is therefore the main supporting pillar for Cyber Crimes. It is also the support for terror funding, illegal arms trade, illegal drugs trade and all that is evil in the dark web.

I donot believe that all that I have written above is not known to the gentlemen mentioned above who govern our country and regulate our monetary system. They are either conniving with this Bitcoin system or shameless cowards.

Mr Narendra Modi, Mr Amit Shah… Mr Shaktikant Das, Honourable Justice Bobde…. Are you listening?.. Bitcoin is the funding source which will eventually kill India if you donot wake up from your slumber.

Naavi

 

 

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Cryptocurrency in India is emerging like the TikTok  said Nischal Shetty, CEO of WazirX.. Thanks to this judgement..

The Bitcoin industry is gloating with the cryptocurrency platforms seeing nearly three times new users in the last two weeks.  (Refer this article in ET).

The industry should thank the judgement of the following three Gentlemen Judges, the honourable V. Ramasubramanian, Aniriddha Bose and Rohinton Fali Nariman for this happy state of affairs.

Their judgement of 4th march 2020 was a masterful art in the writing of judgements and a text book for Law students. It chastised RBI for drafting a circular banning the Bank’s support to Bitcoin exchanges as a “Disproportional Exercise of available powers” and quashed it. It was a demonstration of the commitment to the principles of good Governance of regulatory authorities and would be making all regulators more responsible in future while exercising any powers given to them under the law.

The Bitcoin industry should also thank the Ministry of Finance, the RBI and the Ministry of Home Affairs who have not so far moved to challenge the judgement.

The Bitcoin industry should also thank the Corona Virus which has given an excuse to Mr Amit Shah, Nirmala Sitharaman and the RBI Governor to take it easy to let the Financial Corona virus called Bitcoin to spread itself far and wide in India.

I suggest that the Bitcoin industry take steps to thank all these gentleman for enabling them  help convert the hard earned savings of so many of Indians which were lying in Banks into the form of an anonymous wealth called Bitcoins so that they can escape the tyranny of the tax department in India.

Naavi

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Preparing for Security disruption through Quantum Computing

Some times back, I have tried to place before the readers of this blog who are mainly followers of Cyber Law, Information Security and Data Protection some thoughts on the impact of Quantum Computing on Cyber Laws through a series of articles. (indicated at the end of this article).

The essence of the discussions so far presented here is that Quantum Computing changes the way we process data today in classical computing.

In Classical computing, a data holding element can assume the state of Zero or One and will be stable in that state unless it is changed. A combination of such data states read together is what we call as “Data” and give it a meaning as text, sound or picture etc.

In Quantum computing, the data holding element is not a miniaturized transistor or a charged area of a magnetic surface. Instead the data holding element is a sub atomic particle such as an electron or a nucleus. For the time being we shall simply call this as “Qubits” (Quantum bits).  In Quantum computing, processing is carried out in an unstable Qubit state where a Qubits may exist in either a zero or one state and it’s state can only be measured in probabilistic terms.

For certain application, the probabilistic processing is good enough and in certain applications, the Qubits may have to be held in a stable state for a short period when processing happens in a near absolute zero temperature environment so that processing can proceed.

In the last article on this subject in this blog, I highlighted the research which one of my classmates is pursuing in US, on a new kind of sub atomic particles called “Majorana Fermions” which takes the thinking to a level even more minute than the electrons.

Fermions are a class of particles which have a spin state equal to half instead of zero or plus one or minus one. (If you are interested in Physics, explore here)

Majorana Fermions are a class of particles different from the common system of particles called Deric fermions. Deric fermions exist in two states “Particle” and “Anti Particle” with a positive and negative charge (Example Electron and positron).  The Majorana Fermions are like the proverbial Ardha Nareeshwara and they are both particles and anti particles themselves. (Beyond this let us not confuse ourselves at this point of time).

These particles called Majorana Fermions whose existence has now been proved, are expected to be the building blocks of the new Qubits replacing the “Phosphorous Nuclei” which is being used now in construction of Quantum Computers. While the present versions of Qubits are now in the labs and expected to be commercially available in the year around 2030, the Qubits built with Majorana Fermions are expected to reach commercial exploitation beyond 2040.

There is no doubt that the issues raised by this development are issues of the future like the “Global Warming” etc..But in law, they will strike earlier because the “Uncertainty” of data states which these developments represent will render the evidentiary aspects of data suspect in the Courts of law.

Fortunately, the Indian system of admissibility of electronic evidence under Section 65B of Indian Evidence Act is constructed in such a way that electronic evidence created and processed out of the Quantum Computing system whether they are using Qubits created out of nucliei or Deric fermions or Majorana fermions.

Despite the practical difficulty of processing with Qubits, it enables computer processing to be done at a speed which makes all the current security related encryption vulnerable for brute force attacks. This is the biggest disruption that we may see to the classical computer system and the Information security technology. In simple words the use of  crypto systems with RSA or ECC algorithms may no longer be considered as “reliable”.

All our security assumptions including the “Reasonable Security” that we consider as adequate  legal obligation now needs to be revised now.

This document “Preparing Enterprises for the Quantum Computing Cyber Security Threats” from Cloud Security Allianceis an excellent reading material to understand the likely developments in this field. The document is so well written that it does not require any further explanation from my side.

I am aware that the developments discussed here are out of the normal orbit of a Cyber Law or an Information Security or a  Data Security professional. It may also be more relevant beyond our life time and has been provided as a point of record here assuming that Naavi.org will survive beyond our life time. However I am bringing it up here so that young professionals in the age group of 25-30 who are working in the field of Cryptography can start looking at researching in this area so that by the time they turn 60, they will be global thinkers of repute and can take India ahead in cyber security to match the Chinese and US security specialists.

In particular, I invite  our educational institutions such as Manasa Gangothri and more particularly the Physics department or the IISC to take the lead in initiating some research on building Qubits with the sub atomic particles so that we may not be lost out of the race to build the secure computers of the next generation.

Before I end, I want to reiterate that Cyber Laws and more particularly the Computer processing and Data are all concepts which have originated from the branch of science called “Physics” and people like the undersigned who graduated with a study of Physics and are now roaming the field of Law and Computer science can claim to be relevant in this domain as “Computer Science theoreticians”.

Naavi

 

Earlier articles:

Quantum Cmputing takes a step further: may 10, 2020

Quantum computing and Emerging Cyber Law Challenges… Are we ready? : March 10, 2018

Section 65B in the Quantum Computing Scenario: March 16, 2018

Theory of Dynamic Personal Data: March 31, 2018

In the wornderland of Quantum Cyber Law, Physics is part of the Law specialization: April 3, 2018

The Vast and Far Reaching Applications of Quantum Computing- June 20, 2018

China working on achieving Quantum Supremacy: July 5, 2018

China may be developing its own unbreakable encryption system through Quantum Computing: July 5 2018

Is it the beginning of the Chinese domination of the Globe?…Mr Modi to take note: July 5, 2018

10000 years=200 seconds in Sycamore Processor: October 24, 2019

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