Muldoon,
J:—This
is
an
appeal
by
the
plaintiff
from
a
decision
of
the
Tax
Review
Board,
rendered
on
October
26,
1982.
By
consent,
the
transcript
of
the
previous
proceedings
was
filed
as
Exhibit
A,
and
an
agreed
book
of
documents
was
filed
as
Exhibit
B.
A
ticket
in
“The
Provincial”
lottery
whose
number,
was
entered
in
draws
on
April
30,
1978
and
May
28,
1978,
was
bought
by
some
unknown
one
of
the
three
members
of
the
plaintiffs
family,
either
himself,
his
wife
Edith,
or
their
daughter
Evelyn.
The
ticket
bore
a
winning
number,
4132507,
for
which
the
sum
of
$1,000,000
was
paid
by
the
Interprovincial
Lottery
Corporation.
The
issue
to
be
determined
is:
whether
the
sum
of
$49,458.91
earned
in
the
1978
taxation
year
as
interest
on
term
deposits
and
for
which
T-5
statements
of
investment
income
were
issued
by
the
paying
banks
in
the
plaintiffs
name
as
recipient
was
interest
income
taxable
in
his
hands
only;
or
whether
it
was
he,
his
wife
and
their
daughter,
who
are
each
taxable
equally
on
one-third
of
the
interest.
In
reassessing
the
plaintiff
for
the
1978
taxation
year,
the
Minister
of
National
Revenue
assumed,
inter
alia
(a)
at
all
material
times
the
plaintiff
was
the
owner
and
holder
of
“The
Provincial”
lottery
ticket
No
4132507,
(b)
on
May
28,
1978,
the
plaintiff
won
$1,000,000
in
the
draw
as
owner
of
the
winning
ticket,
(c)
on
May
30,
1978,
the
Interprovincial
Lottery
Corporation
issued
a
cheque
drawn
payable
in
favour
of
the
plaintiff
in
the
said
amount,
(d)
that
cheque
was
deposited
by
the
plaintiff,
during
the
1978
taxation
year,
in
a
thirty-day
term
deposit
in
his
own
name
with
the
Royal
Bank
of
Canada,
(e)
when
the
above
mentioned
deposit’s
term
matured,
the
plaintiff,
still
during
the
1978
taxation
year,
invested
the
sum
of
$1,000,000
in
a
term
deposit
in
his
own
name
with
the
Toronto-Dominion
Bank,
(f)
in
the
1978
taxation
year
the
plaintiff
received
interest
income
from
the
$1,000,000
lottery
prize,
as
follows:
Royal
Bank
of
Canada
|
—
|
$
6,452.05
|
Toronto-Dominion
Bank
|
—
|
$43,006.86
|
TOTAL
|
|
$49,458.91
|
(g)
in
the
1978
taxation
year
the
plaintiff
received
the
full
amount
of
$49,458.91
as,
on
account
or
in
lieu
of
payment
of,
or
in
satisfaction
of,
interest,
(h)
in
the
1978
taxation
year
the
plaintiff
had
the
absolute
and
unrestricted
right
to
the
$49,458.91
interest
income.
By
contrast,
and
despite
the
Minister’s
assumptions,
it
is
contended
by
the
plaintiff
that
the
winning
ticket,
the
million-dollar
prize
it
yielded
and,
accordingly,
the
interest
income
of
$49,458.91
were
all
and
always
the
common
property
of
the
Drescher
family.
The
plaintiff
contends
in
consequence
that
only
one-third
of
the
interest
income
should
be
attributed
to
the
plaintiff
because,
as
he
contends,
his
wife
Edith
had
one-third
of
it
as
her
income,
and
their
daughter
Evelyn
had
the
remaining
one-third
of
it
as
her
income.
It
is
incumbent
upon
the
plaintiff
to
point
to
the
facts
which,
by
themselves
or
by
inference,
support
his
contention
and,
either
alone
or
with
others,
or
by
logical
inferences,
demolish
the
Minister’s
assumptions.
In
this
the
plaintiff
succeeds
on
this
appeal.
By
way
of
background
it
is
noted
that
the
plaintiff,
or
the
plaintiff
and
his
wife,
had
been
successfully
in
business
for
23
years
prior
to
the
hearing
before
the
Tax
Review
Board
—
or
since
about
1959
—
after
coming
to
Canada.
Elmcrest
Furniture
Ltd
was
one
of
their
enterprises
operating
quite
successfully
in
Winnipeg.
Its
shares
were,
at
the
material
time,
owned
in
the
following
proportions:
65
per
cent
by
the
plaintiff,
30
per
cent
by
his
wife,
and
five
per
cent
by
their
daughter.
The
plaintiffs
wife
Edith
worked
alongside
him,
at
and
in
Elmcrest
Furniture
Ltd,
being
its
secretary-treasurer
and
doing
“95
per
cent
of
all
the
banking
things”
according
to
the
plaintiffs
estimate.
As
she
did
previously
and
has
done
since,
Edith
Drescher
worked
at
Elmcrest
Furniture
Ltd
throughout
the
1978
taxation
year
and
earned
a
gross
salary
of
$24,000
in
that
year.
Daughter
Evelyn
also
earned
a
salary
from
Elmcrest
Furniture
Ltd
and
was
on
the
premises
from
time
to
time
when
not
pursuing
her
studies
at
the
university.
She
was
over
18
years
of
age
in
1978.
The
plaintiff
and
his
wife
came
to
Canada
from
Germany.
They
married
in
1954.
The
tenor
of
the
evidence
indicates
a
close,
sharing
couple
and,
after
the
arrival
of
their
daughter
Evelyn,
a
close,
sharing
family.
They
were
close
and
sharing
obviously
by
choice,
because
the
family
property
regime
in
Manitoba
at
the
material
time
was
one
of
separation
of
family
property
until
the
family
—
meaning
the
marriage
—
were
dissolved
either
by
death
or
decree.
Thereupon
certain
forced
sharing
provisions
of
legislation
would
come
into
operation
but
they
are
of
no
concern
here.
While
separation
of
property
during
the
currency
of
the
family’s
legal
integrity
was
and
is
the
norm,
it
did
and
does
not
prevent
spouses
and
their
offspring
from
maintaining
closer
sharing
arrangements
according
to
their
choice
and
their
own
concept
and
perception
of
themselves
as
a
family.
That
this
was
the
Dreschers’
concept
and
perception
of
themselves
is
abundantly
clear
from
the
evidence,
falling
short
only
of
a
written
general
declaration
to
that
effect,
of
which
there
is,
not
surprisingly,
no
evidence.
There
were
however
certain
kinds
of
specific
written
“declarations”
to
that
effect.
Thus,
the
three
Dreschers
were
the
equal
shareholders
and
owners
of
an
investment
corporation,
Royal
Elm
Canada
Ltd
and
those
three
were
also
equal
partners
in
Elmcrest
Stables,
a
registered
partnership.
There
was
a
further
corporation,
Royal
Upholsterers
(1965)
Ltd
in
which
the
plaintiff,
his
wife
and
their
daughter
were
equal
shareholders.
The
Dreschers
were
habitual
lottery
ticket
buyers
starting
in
Germany
before
the
two
adults
came
to
Canada.
They
continued
to
buy
lottery
tickets
of
all
kinds,
as
a
regular
practice
over
the
years.
In
addition
to
the
plaintiff’s
testimony
on
this
subject,
Edith
Drescher
testified
that
both
she
and
daughter
Evelyn
over
the
years
had
purchased
all
types
of
tickets
such
as
Winsday,
Lotto,
Provincial,
football
and
community
club
tickets.
At
first
the
tickets
were
bought
at
various
locations,
sports
clubs,
business
clubs
and
government
agencies
and
outlets
which
sell
lottery
tickets.
Then,
along
came
Ron
Bunio
who
started
work
as
credit
manager
of
Elmcrest
Furniture
Ltd
in
1977.
He
was
a
booster
of
the
Winnipeg
Jets
hockey
club.
Indeed
Ron
Bunio
“had
a
facility”
from
the
Jets
Booster
Club
to
sell
lottery
tickets,
which
he
proceeded
to
do
approximately
three
or
four
months
after
coming
to
work
at
Elmcrest.
In
the
1977
and
1978
taxation
years.
Mr
Bunio
was
selling
basically
three
types
of
lottery
tickets:
Super-Lotto,
The
Provincial
and
Winsday.
These
tickets
were
in
effect
bearer
tickets
in
that
the
purchaser’s
name
(or
purchasers’
names)
did
not
need
to
be
recorded,
and
were
not
recorded
by
the
vendor.
The
tickets
differed
in
price
being
$10,
$5
and
$1
respectively.
The
Provincial
lottery
tickets
were
the
primary
ones
sold
by
Mr
Bunio
and
he
usually
sold
those
tickets
once
per
month.
Mr
Bunio
testified
that
the
winning
Provincial
ticket,
4132507,
must
have
been
sold
by
him
because:
the
stamp
on
the
ticket
specified
that
it
was
a
Jets
Booster
Club
ticket;
and
he
was
the
only
one
in
the
building
occupied
by
Elmcrest
Furniture
Ltd
who
had
access
to
lottery
tickets
as
a
vendor.
Mr
Bunio
further
testified
that
he
sold
tickets
only
to
the
people
at
Elmcrest
Furniture
Ltd
in
the
Elmcrest
building.
The
Dreschers
usually
bought
lottery
tickets
once
a
month
from
Ron
Bunio.
On
different
occasions
he
was
paid
for
the
tickets
by
each
one
of
the
three
Dreschers,
but
less
often
—
“seldom”,
indeed
—
by
Evelyn
the
daughter.
Mr
Bunio
would
take
a
quantity
of
tickets
in
pouches
in
a
box,
usually
to
the
plaintiffs
office
on
the
premises,
but
sometimes
to
Edith
Drescher’s
office.
If
the
plaintiff
or
his
wife
or
their
daughter
were
present
they
would
all
join
in
to
select
tickets.
But,
about
half
of
the
time
he
would
leave
the
tickets
in
one
or
other
of
the
offices
—
usually
the
plaintiffs
—
and
afterwards
one
of
the
Dreschers
—
usually
either
the
plaintiff
or
Mrs
Drescher
—
would
come
out
of
the
office
and
give
Mr
Bunio
the
money.
He
could
not
know
from
whom
the
money
was
coming
when
the
tickets
were
purchased.
Mrs
Drescher
testified
that
oftentimes
the
selection
of
tickets
would
constitute
their
lunchtime
recreation.
It
is
just
possible
that
daughter
Evelyn
was
present
when
the
winning
ticket
was
bought,
likely
prior
to
April
30,
1978,
according
to
the
witnesses.
Mrs
Drescher
testified
as
follows:
Q.
So,
during
that
period
of
time,
the
three
or
four
months
before
that
period
of
time,
your
daughter
Evelyn
would
have
been
at
school.
That
would
be
a
fair
statement?
She
was
at
the
university
at
that
period
of
time
or
attending
university?
A.
She
was
attending
university,
but
then
you
are
not
there
8
hours
a
day.
The
learned
member
of
the
Tax
Review
Board
made
the
correct
finding
on
this
matter
when,
as
reported
in
[1982]
CTC
2769;
82
DTC
1769
at
2770;
1770,
he
wrote:
The
evidence
of
Mr
Bunio,
together
with
that
of
both
the
Appellant
and
his
wife,
points
to
a
conclusion
that
the
purchaser
of
the
winning
ticket
can
never
be
identified
with
certainty.
Mr
and
Mrs
Drescher
both
testified
they
did
not
know
who
bought
it.
It
might
have
been
any
one
of
the
three
members
of
the
family.
The
uncertainty
arises
from
the
fact
that
all
three
were
habitual
buyers
of
lottery
tickets
and
that
all
three
made
a
practice
of
placing
the
tickets
which
they
had
purchased
on
a
clip
kept
in
the
family
home.
None
of
them
made
any
attempt
to
identify
or
differentiate
between
tickets
bought
by
any
one
member
of
the
family
as
opposed
to
the
other
two.
That
is
the
proper
conclusion
in
this
matter:
no
one
can
ever
know
which
of
the
three
Dreschers
selected
the
winning
ticket.
It
is,
however,
as
certain
as
can
be
that
one
of
them
did.
During
the
1978
taxation
year
all
three
Dreschers
resided
at
841
Chalmers
Street,
in
Winnipeg.
All
tickets
and
coupons
purchased
by
either
the
plaintiff
or
Edith
Drescher
or
Evelyn
Drescher
were
placed
on
a
clip
(presumably
some
device
which
grasped
papers
between
spring-powered
jaws
or
pincers)
in
the
family
room
of
the
house,
where
there
is
a
wall-unit.
In
one
corner
of
the
wallunit
there
was
a
certain
place
[the
clip]
where
all
tickets
were
placed
so
that
access
could
be
had
to
them
on
draw
days.
No
note
or
registration
or
record
was
kept
by
the
Dreschers
of
which
particular
tickets
were
purchased
by
which
of
the
three
family
members.
The
winning
lottery
ticket
was
kept
on
the
clip
in
the
family
room;
it
could
have
been
either
the
plaintiff
or
Mrs
Drescher
who
placed
it
there.
Over
the
years
small
prizes
of
about
$10
or
$25
had
been
won
and,
when
asked
what
had
been
done
with
the
proceeds
of
those
prizes,
the
plaintiff
testified:
“Mostly
we
reinvested
them’’.
He
testified
that
by
“we”,
he
was
“referring
to
the
family”.
They
never
really
expected
to
win
a
big
prize,
because
chances
of
winning
were
so
little.
So,
perhaps
it
is
not
surprising
that
the
plaintiff
and
his
wife
and
their
daughter
never
expressly
discussed
among
themselves
what
would
happen
if
they
won
anything
of
significance.
Then,
one
day
after
May
28,
1978,
the
plaintiff
was
looking
through
the
daily
newspaper
which
published
the
number
of
the
winning
ticket
in
the
Interprovincial
lottery,
and
he
found
that
the
winning
ticket
was
reposing
on
the
clip
in
the
family
room.
The
next
morning
the
plaintiff
called
by
telephone
to
the
Lottery
Commission
and
verified
that
number.
The
plaintiff
and
his
wife
Edith
together
went
down
to
the
Lottery
Commission
office.
At
that
time
Evelyn
Drescher
was
writing
an
examination
at
the
university
and
she
could
not
come
along
with
her
parents.
They
were
interviewed
by
the
media
at
the
lottery
office,
and
their
picture
was
taken
and
published.
(Ex
B-3)
There
was
no
discussion
between
the
plaintiff
and
Edith
Drescher
as
to
whose
name
should
be
put
on
the
stub
of
the
winning
ticket.
At
the
lottery
office,
the
plaintiff
printed
his
name
on
the
stub
(Ex
B-2,
second
page)
without
asking
his
wife,
but
she
“did
not
see
any
reason
why
he
shouldn’t”
do
just
that,
according
to
her
testimony.
The
plaintiff
was
asked
by
lottery
officials,
or,
the
plaintiff
and
Edith
Drescher
were
asked,
to
whom
to
make
out
the
cheque
for
the
$1,000,000
prize,
and
the
answer
was,
“Rolf
Drescher”.
The
Provincial
Lottery
Commission
inevitably
paid
any
prize
to
the
holder
of
the
corresponding
winning
ticket
and,
by
regulation
“holder”
was
defined
as
“a
person
or
persons
having
possession
of
a
ticket
sold
under
a
lottery”.
At
that
time,
of
course,
the
Dreschers
had
not
entered
into
any
written
syndicate
agreement
as
could
have
been
made
available
to
them
for
the
buying
of
tickets
and
the
sharing
of
prizes.
The
Provincial
Lottery
Commission
informed
the
plaintiff
and
his
wife
that
the
cheque
for
$1,00,000
would
be
on
an
Air
Canada
flight
from
Toronto,
later
that
day.
All
three
Dreschers
went
to
the
Winnipeg
airport
to
receive
the
cheque,
Mrs
Drescher
circling
about
in
the
auto
while
father
and
daughter
went
inside
to
obtain
the
cheque
—
which,
he
testified,
was
placed
into
and
almost
lost
in
the
garbage!
Now,
as
is
clear
upon
the
evidence,
that
cheque
(Ex
B-1)
was
drawn
payable
in
favour
of,
and
endorsed
by,
the
plaintiff,
Rolf
Drescher.
It
did
not
enter
into
the
minds
of
the
Dreschers
that
the
cheque
should
be
made
out
to
anybody
else.
Mrs
Drescher
testified
that
she
knew
the
cheque
would
be
payable
to
Mr
Drescher
because
“it
is
the
national
[sic,
presumably
reporter’s
error
for
natural]
thing”.
She
also
said
there
were
no
discussions
on
the
point,
“I
would
think
it
would
go
to
Rolf
because
that’s
the
way
it’s
done.’’
The
plaintiffs
explanation
about
why
the
cheque
was
drawn
in
his
favour
was
that,
“This
is
the
very
custom,
say
in
European
families,
that
even
the
assets
belong
to
the
family
and
the
head
of
the
family
is
named
in
most
money
matters
or
other
matters.
It
is
just
the
habit
of
doing
it.”
Again,
Edith
Drescher
testified
on
this
point
thus:
Q.
Now,
you
said
that
—
the
cheque
issued
to
your
husband
and
the
way
it
was
done,
what
about
the
money?
What
were
your
thoughts
on
the
money?
A.
On
the
money
I
can
only
say
that
it
was
ours.
Q.
Why
is
that?
A.
Because
all
the
things
we
do
is
for
us.
Finally
in
cross-examination
the
plaintiff
testified
as
follows:
Q.
When
you
went
down
to
the
lottery
office,
at
that
particular
time
did
you
make
any
disclosure
to
them
that
anybody
other
than
you
owned
the
ticket?
A.
Well,
in
all
our
comments,
in
all
our
conversation
with
the
press
and
everybody
else
it
was
always
“we
won
that
$1
million.”’
Now,
the
Minister’s
witness
Edward
Reger,
director
of
administration
of
the
Western
Canadian
Lottery
Foundation,
did
testify
that
sometimes
ticket
stubs
are
filled
out
“Mr
&
Mrs”,
and
that
in
such
instances
the
cheque
is
issued
exactly
as
it
reads.
“We
do
not
put
their
given
names
in.
We
just
make
it
out
to
‘Mr
and
Mrs
Whatever’.”
No
doubt
that
testimony
is
true.
Indeed,
if
they
had
known
that,
or
stopped
to
think
about
it,
maybe
the
senior
Dreschers
would
have
accepted
that
option,
despite
their
old
world
customs.
(Then,
the
issue
might
well
have
been
as
to
their
daughter’s
inclusion
in
the
windfall
and
its
interest
income
in
1978.)
However,
the
undoubted
reality
of
that
option
does
not
in
the
least
detract
from
the
undoubted
credibility
of
the
senior
Dreschers’
version
of
their
intentions
and
of
the
events
of
that
time.
The
day
after
the
cheque
was
received,
the
plaintiff
telephoned
the
manager
of
his
branch
of
the
Royal
Bank
of
Canada
and
said:
“Look.
I
won
$1
million.
What
should
I
do
with
it?
We
have
no
plans
.
.
.”.
It
was
Mrs
Drescher’s
testimony
that
the
Dreschers
together
discussed
the
investment
of
the
prize
money.
Under
cross-examination,
she
was
most
emphatic
that
the
plaintiff
did
not
do
what
he
alone
saw
fit,
and
that
it
was
not
only
he
who
invested
the
money.
“We
invested
the
money”,
she
asserted.
(Ex
A,
pages
65-66)
As
a
result
of
the
discussion
in
the
family
and
with
the
bank
manager
the
plaintiff
put
the
money
into
a
30-day
term
deposit
with
the
Royal
Bank
in
his
own
name
alone.
Neither
Mrs
Drescher
nor
Evelyn
Drescher
signed
anything
for
that
term
deposit.
In
due
course
the
plaintiff
received
from
the
Royal
Bank
of
Canada
a
T-5
statement
of
investment
income
for
$6,452.01,
issued
again
in
his
own
name
alone.
(Ex
B-4)
Upon
the
expiration
of
the
30-day
term
deposit
in
the
Royal
Bank,
according
to
the
plaintiff
on
cross-examination,
“We
made
the
decision
to
take
it
out
of
the
Royal
Bank”,
and
“We
purchased
a
term
deposit
with
the
Toronto-
Dominion”.
Once
again
the
term
deposit
was
taken
out
in
the
name
of
Rolf
Drescher
alone
and
neither
Edith
nor
Evelyn
Drescher
signed
anything.
This
deposit
was
maintained
until
the
end
of
1978.
The
plaintiff
testified
that
“the
term
deposit
was
supposed
to
be
registered
under
the
name
of
Edith,
Evelyn
and
Rolf
Drescher”,
however
the
plaintiff
never
really
testified
that
he
had
given
instructions
to
that
effect.
(Ex
A,
pages
36
and
37)
The
1978
form
of
T-5
issued
by
the
Toronto-Dominion
Bank
disclosed
earned
interest
to
be
$43,006.86,
and
it
too
was
issued
in
the
plaintiffs
name
alone.
Upon
receiving
this
T-5
the
plaintiff
instructed
the
bank
to
change
the
T-5
to
name
all
three
Dreschers
but
that
was
not
done,
and
the
plaintiff
apparently
did
not
insist
upon
it.
Both
sides
submitted
documentary
evidence
which
was
originally
created
after
the
1978
taxation
year,
as
it
seems.
As
a
result
of
a
written
request
by
the
plaintiff,
the
1979
form
of
T-5
(Ex
B-6)
was
issued
in
all
three
names
by
the
Toronto-
Dominion
Bank
where
the
money
earned
further
interest
in
1979.
Finally
the
money
was
lent
to
Royal
Elm
Canada
Ltd,
the
shares
of
which
are
owned
equally
by
the
three
Dreschers,
and
the
loan
was
recorded
as
being
advanced
in
equal
amounts
by
them.
Again,
probably
subsequent
to
the
1978
taxation
year,
there
was
a
declaration
of
trust
(Ex
B-7)
drawn
up
by
the
plaintiffs
late
solicitor
who
indicated
that
there
could
be
complications
about
the
prize
money,
among
which
were
the
tax
laws.
In
this
regard,
the
learned
member
of
the
Tax
Review
Board
wrote
at
[1982]
CTC
2772;
82
DTC
1772,
thus:
Having
regard
to
the
confusion
as
to
who
bought
the
lucky
ticket
and
won
the
money,
it
might
have
been
an
entirely
proper
solution
to
resolve
the
question
of
ownership
of
the
prize
money
by
agreement
made
after
winning
it.
In
fact,
a
written
Declaration
of
Trust
was
prepared
and
signed
in
1979.
Interestingly
enough,
that
document
recites
not
that
the
lottery
tickets
had
been
held
in
trust
for
all
three
and
that
the
prize
had
been
collected
by
the
Appellant
as
trustee
for
all
three,
rather
it
recites
that
“*.
.
.
it
is
expedient
to
construe
the
pooled
lottery
tickets
as
purchases
on
behalf
of
all
of
them
jointly
in
equal
shares”.
[Emphasis
added]
The
learned
member
recounts
and
concentrates
on
the
recital
in
the
preamble
of
Exhibit
B-7
about
it
being
expedient
to
construe
.
.
.
etc.
But
that
trust
declaration,
if
it
has
any
vitality
in
these
proceedings,
has
more
vitality
than
that
which
appears
in
the
singularized
passage.
Apparently
overlooked
was
the
preamble’s
very
next
recital:
AND
WHEREAS
the
said
Rolf
Drescher
.
.
.
did
receive
a
cheque
in
the
same
of.
.
.
($1,000,000.00)
which,
for
convenience,
was
taken
in
the
name
of
the
said
Rolf
Drescher
only,
but
on
behalf
of
himself,
his
wife
.
.
.
and
their
daughter
.
.
.
[Emphasis
added]
The
operative
provisions
are
to
the
same
effect
and
disclose
that
the
plaintiff
was
“not
the
beneficial
owner
of
the
entire
sum
.
.
.
but
holds
one-third
of
same
.
.
.
in
trust
and
as
nominee
of
and
for
his
wife
.
.
.
and
holds
one-third
of
same
.
.
.
in
trust
and
as
nominee
of
and
for
his
daughter
.
.
.”
[Emphasis
added].
Further
provisions
recite
the
plaintiffs
willingness
to
account
to
his
wife
and
their
daughter
and
upon
demand
of
either,
to
convey
to
her
her
undivided
one-third
interest
in
the
principal
and
the
interest.
Appended
is
a
form
of
consent
signed
by
Edith
and
Evelyn
Drescher
releasing
the
plaintiff
from
any
liability
which
he
may
incur
for
having
their
share
of
the
sum,
but
holding
him
“responsible
for
his
proportionate
share
of
any
loss
or
liability
incurred”.
So,
if
the
learned
member
of
the
Tax
Review
Board
descried
a
weakness
in
one
preamble,
it
must
nevertheless
be
noted
that
the
entire
instrument
appears
to
be
quite
robust
enough
to
stand
firmly
for
its
stated
purpose.
However,
having
been
drawn
up
and
executed
so
long
after
the
date
(June
1,
1978)
which
the
plaintiff
wrote
therein
for
his
own
satisfaction
(and
perhaps
as
an
aide-mémoire)
the
best
use
of
it
in
this
case
would
be
only
to
demonstrate
the
continuity
of
the
Dreschers’
intentions;
but
the
important
question
revolves
around
their
intentions
from
the
beginning.
On
this
evidence
there
is
virtually
no
doubt
that
in
obtaining
the
cheque
and
in
taking
out
the
two
term
deposits
in
his
name
alone,
the
plaintiff
was
acting
as
the
agent,
the
amanuensis,
the
nominee
and
trustee
of
the
group
consisting
of
himself,
Edith
Drescher
and
Evelyn
Drescher.
Any
other
conclusion
goes
against
the
evidence,
the
weight
of
evidence,
logic,
reason
and
human
nature.
On
this
evidence,
had
the
plaintiff
balked
at
according
his
wife
and
their
daughter
their
equal,
equitable
and
now
legal
shares,
there
is
no
doubt
that
they
would
have
a
formidable
right
of
action
which
could
be
pursued
successfully
to
judgment
in
law
and
in
equity
in
their
favour.
Evidence
of
the
three
Dreschers’
prior
conduct
would
be
virtually
conclusive
against
any
one
of
them
who
might
have
acquired
merely
the
apparent
legal
title
and
control
of
the
prize
money,
as
the
plaintiff
did,
and
who
would
have
refused
to
disgorge
in
favour
of
the
whole
family.
The
opposite
conclusion
is
of
necessity
legalistic,
but
unreasonable
and
illogical.
If
one
regards
only
the
filling
up
of
the
ticket
stub
and
the
placing
of
the
two
term
deposits
in
1978,
and
disregards
all
of
the
surrounding
evidence
one
would
legalistically
conclude
that
the
plaintiff
acted
as
if
he
alone
was
the
winner
and
the
investor.
The
evidence
here
lacks
one
main
ingredient
which
alone
could
make
it
consistent
with
such
conclusions:
the
plaintiffs
stealth
in
all
this,
of
which
there
was
not
only
no
evidence
but
plainly
opposite
and
contrary
evidence.
In
all
of
the
circumstances
of
a
close,
sharing
family
so
amply
demonstrated
in
the
evidence,
the
plaintiff
could
be
considered
to
be
acting
solely
on
his
own
behalf
only
if
he
had
obtained
the
prize
stealthily
and
only
if
he
had
taken
out
the
term
deposits
secretively.
He
certainly
did
not
behave
in
that
manner.
In
fact,
the
plaintiff
and
his
wife
went
together
to
the
lottery
office,
and
then
all
three
Dreschers
went
together
to
the
airport
to
retrieve
the
cheque.
There
was
no
stealth
at
all,
and
that
constitutes
a
salient
gap
in
the
evidence.
The
Tax
Review
Board
and
this
Court
both
concurrently
find
that
while
one
of
the
three
Dreschers
selected
and
probably
also
bought
the
winning
ticket,
it
is
impossible
to
determine
which
of
the
three
did
that.
The
learned
member
of
the
Board
found
and
concluded
that
one
of
the
three,
that
is
to
say
the
plaintiff,
arrogated
to
himself
alone
the
interest
income
from
the
prize
during
the
1978
taxation
year.
If,
in
this
situation
of
uncertainty,
it
were
reasonably
possible
to
say
that
some
unknown
and
unknowable
one
of
the
three
Dreschers
solely
owned
the
winning
ticket,
the
prize
and
the
proceeds,
then
one
would
be
forced
to
conclude
that
there
was
two-thirds
likelihood
that
the
plaintiff
did
not
own
that
ticket
and
only
a
one-third
possibility
that
he
did.
One
has
then,
in
effect,
to
find
that
the
plaintiff
was
wrongfully
reckless
as
to
whether
or
not
he
was
confiscating
the
possible,
nay
probable,
property
of
one
of
the
other
two
Dreschers,
in
order
to
come
to
the
conclusion
that
the
plaintiff
alone
owned
the
prize
and
the
interest.
That
is
not
a
reasonable
conclusion
on
the
evidence
presented.
In
light
of
all
this
evidence,
to
make
a
finding
and
to
arrive
at
a
conclusion
which
would
purport
to
have
the
plaintiff
behaving
both
unlawfully
and
against
his
demonstrated
nature,
are
simply
illogical
and
unreasonable.
It
is
a
contorted
conclusion
too,
for
if
the
plaintiff
really
did
own
the
ticket
he
might
have
put
it
in
his
wallet,
instead
of
permitting
it
to
be
placed
in
the
clip
in
the
family
room.
The
plaintiff
invokes
the
doctrines
of
equity
to
demonstrate
the
proper
determination
of
this
matter.
His
counsel
cite
several
passages
from
Snell’s
Principles
of
Equity,
28th
Ed,
1982,
(Baker
&
Langan)
Sweet
&
Maxwell,
London,
England
at
and
between
37
and
40,
thus:
8.
Equality
is
Equity.
It
has
long
been
a
principle
of
equity
that
in
the
absence
of
sufficient
reasons
for
any
other
basis
of
division,
those
who
are
entitled
to
property
should
have
the
certainty
and
fairness
of
equal
division;
for
“equity
did
delight
in
equality”.
The
maxim
is
“equality
is
equity”,
and
this
has
been
applied
in
a
variety
of
ways.
(a)
Presumption
of
tenancy
in
common.
The
maxim
has
long
been
illustrated
by
equity’s
dislike
of
a
joint
tenancy.
On
the
death
of
one
joint
tenant,
the
whole
estate
belongs
to
the
survivor,
and
the
representatives
of
the
deceased
take
nothing.
There
is
here
no
equality
except,
perhaps,
an
equality
of
chance.
Equity
therefore
leans
in
favour
of
a
tenancy
in
common.
(3)
Partnership.
Where
partners
acquire
property,
they
are
presumed
to
hold
it
as
beneficial
tenants
in
common.
Jus
accrescendi
inter
mercatores
locum
non
habet
[The
right
of
survivorship
has
no
place
among
merchants
(ie
among
partners
in
venture)]
(c)
Equal
division
(1)
The
principle.
In
addition
to
equity’s
ancient
dislike
of
a
joint
tenancy,
the
maxim
“equality
is
equity”
may
be
illustrated
by
a
number
of
more
modern
instances.
In
general,
the
maxim
will
be
applied
whenever
property
is
to
be
distributed
between
rival
claimants
and
there
is
no
other
basis
for
division.
“I
think
that
the
principle
which
applies
here
to
Plato’s
definition
of
equality
as
a
‘sort
of
justice’:
if
you
cannot
find
any
other
equality
is
the
proper
basis.”
(Jones
v
Maynard
[1951]
Ch
572
at
575,
per
Vaisey,
J.
9.
Equity
looks
to
the
intent
rather
than
to
the
form.
“Courts
of
Equity
make
a
distinction
in
all
cases
between
that
which
is
matter
of
substance
and
that
which
is
matter
of
form.;
and
if
it
find
that
by
insisting
on
the
form,
the
substance
will
be
defeated,
it
holds
it
to
be
inequitable
to
allow
a
person
to
insist
on
such
form,
and
thereby
defeat
the
substance.”
Thus
if
a
party
to
a
contract
for
the
sale
of
land
fails
to
complete
on
the
day
fixed
for
completion,
at
law
he
is
in
breach
of
his
contract,
and
will
be
liable
for
damage,
eg,
for
delay.
Yet
in
equity
it
will
usually
suffice
if
he
is
ready
to
complete
within
a
reasonable
period
thereafter,
and
thus
the
other
party
will
not
be
able
to
avoid
performance.
Again,
whether
equity
will
regard
an
agreement
as
being
negative
depends
not
on
the
precise
language
but
on
the
substance
of
the
agreement.
This
maxim
also
lies
at
the
root
of
the
equitable
doctrines
governing
precatory
words,
mortgages,
penalties
and
forfeitures,
all
of
which
are
fully
considered
in
the
later
chapters
of
this
book.
Another
aspect
of
the
maxim
is
shown
by
equity’s
impatience
with
mere
technicalities.
Equity
was
never
much
impressed
by
a
deed
.
.
.
.
The
maxim
that
“equality
is
equity”
is
a
fundamental
principle
which
was
recently
invoked
by
the
Manitoba
Court
of
Appeal
in
Ranjoy
Sales
&
Leasing
Ltd
v
Down
et
al,
[1983]
1
WWR
213.
There,
in
analogous
circumstances
of
uncertainty
of
ownership
but
no
uncertainty
of
the
identity
of
the
whole
group
of
claimants,
the
former
Chief
Justice
of
Manitoba,
Freedman,
CJM,
with
whom
the
present
Chief
Justice,
Monnin,
JA
(as
he
then
was)
concurred
held
as
follows
(at
218):
In
the
light
of
the
facts
emerging
from
that
extract,
it
would
be
grossly
unfair
to
give
a
preferred
position
to
those
who
happened
to
have
been
allocated
“good”
mortgages,
and
a
subordinate
position
to
those
who
were
allocated
“bad”
mortgages.
Our
disposition
of
the
controversy
should
reflect
two
things
—
(1)
the
intention
of
the
parties
when
the
transactions
were
entered
into,
and
(2)
the
necessity
for
fairness
in
the
ultimate
result.
Concerning
the
first,
it
cannot
be
doubted
that
if,
on
the
day
before
the
bubble
burst,
the
investors
had
all
been
asked
whether
each
of
them
stood
on
the
same
level
as
the
others,
the
answer
would
assuredly
have
been
in
the
affirmative.
An
answer
suggesting
that
the
investors
stood
on
different
levels
would
have
been
inconsistent
with
the
intention
both
of
the
investors
and
of
the
companies.
As
for
the
second,
to
make
preferred
creditors
out
of
those
who
by
sheer
luck
received
“good”
mortgages
would
be
to
make
ourselves
slaves
to
contingency
and
to
deny
ourselves
the
power
to
do
justice
in
accordance
with
the
maxim
that
equality
is
equity.
I
would
treat
all
the
investors
equally
by
pooling
the
available
assets
and
dividing
them
among
the
investors
according
to
their
respective
claims
as
proved.
In
the
circumstances
revealed
by
the
evidence
the
intention
of
the
three
Dreschers
is
clear.
Moreover,
in
such
circumstances,
since
equity
exacts
that
they
take
an
equal
proprietary
interest
in
the
prize
money,
any
purported
investment
of
it
by
the
plaintiff
in
his
name
alone
will
be
regarded
as
constituting
either
an
express
or
an
implied
trust
for
all
three.
Indeed
the
continuation
of
their
intention
is
demonstrated
by
their
subsequent
and
last
disposition
of
the
money
in
a
loan
to
Royal
Elm
Canada
Ltd
and
is
perfectly
consistent
with
the
reality
of
three
equal
beneficial
owners
in
common.
Thus
it
is
apparent
that
while
the
plaintiff
was
not
the
sole
beneficial
owner
of
the
winning
ticket,
he
was
its
rightful
“holder”
in
so
far
as
the
lottery
foundation
was
concerned.
In
fact
it
was
concerned
not
to
have
an
adverse
claimant,
but
given
that
the
three
Dreschers
were
acting
in
sweet
accord,
the
foundation
was
not
concerned
about
their
respective
shares
or
interests.
In
any
event,
it
is
quite
certain
that
payment
of
the
prize
money
to
the
holder
in
no
way
voided,
reduced
or
otherwise
affected
the
proprietary
interests
which
other
persons
—
Edith
and
Evelyn
Drescher
—
had
in
the
prize
money.
(See
Re
Wozney
and
Wozney
et
al
(1974),
44
DLR
(3d)
637
—
Man
QB.)
Counsel
for
the
defendant
cites
the
case
of
Frank
Sura
v
MNR,
[1962]
CTC
1;
62
DTC
1005,
a
1961
decision
of
the
Supreme
Court
of
Canada.
She
cites
it
as
authority
for
the
proposition
that
the
basis
of
taxation
is
not
ownership
of
property,
but
rather
who
gets
the
income,
asserting
that
Rolf
Drescher
got
the
income
according
to
the
T-5
forms
in
the
1978
taxation
year.
The
Sura
case
is
instructive
in
two
ways.
First
is
the
statement
in
its
original
French
by
Mr
Justice
Taschereau
for
the
court,
at
4
[1011],
to
the
effect
that:
Rien
.
.
.
ne
change
le
principe
que
ce
n’est
pas
la
propriété
d’un
bien
qui
est
taxable,
mais
que
la
taxe
est
imposée
sur
un
contribuable,
et
est
déterminée
par
le
revenu
que
l’emploi,
les
entreprises,
les
biens,
ou
la
propriété
procurent
à
celui
qui
en
est
le
bénéficiaire
légal.
[Emphasis
added]
That
means
that
the
tax
is
determined
by
the
income
which
.
.
.
goods
or
property
yield
to
him
(or
her)
who
is
the
legal
beneficiary
of
them.
Once
the
application
of
equitable
principles
has
sorted
out
the
beneficiaries’
interest
in
the
property,
as
in
the
instant
case,
each
may
properly
be
regarded
as
the
legal
beneficiary
of
the
property,
in
the
words
of
Taschereau,
J.
Taschereau
there
was
construing
the
import
of
the
community
of
property
marital
regime
in
the
context
of
the
private
law
of
Québec.
He
was
not
there
concerned
with
making
nice
distinctions
between
rules
of
law
and
principles
of
equity
such
as
have
been
raised
in
the
case
at
bar.
He
meant
by
“bénéficiaire
légal”
the
real,
effective
or
genuine
owner
who
is
entitled
to
the
income
yielded
by
the
goods
or
other
property.
In
that
sense,
the
Sura
judgment
rather
begs
the
question
here
—
at
least
until
the
finding
is
made
that,
along
with
the
plaintiff,
his
wife
and
their
daughter
the
beneficial
co-owners
of
the
ticket,
the
prize
and
its
interest
income.
That
they
clearly
were.
Surely
Edith
and
Evelyn
Drescher
are
comprehended
in
the
expression
of
the
cited
statement.
The
other
instructive
aspect
of
the
Sura
case
is
that
the
determination
of
interests
in
the
goods
or
property
is
established
according
to
the
law
of
property
(including
equity
where
applicable)
of
the
province
in
which
the
goods
or
property
are
located.
Manitoban
jurisprudence
is
of
persuasive
authority
here.
Law
and
equity
are
both
applicable
in
Manitoba
to
the
determination
of
a
question
of
property
and
interest
in
a
winning
ticket
leading
to
property
and
interest
in
the
prize
money
and
interest
generated
thereby.
Consideration
of
the
then
existing
state
of
family
property
law
of
the
province,
and
the
private
common
property
arrangements
which
it
did
not
forbid,
as
for
example
the
pooling
of
prospects
and
realizations
in
lotteries,
is
germane
to
the
question.
Quite
appropriate
too
is
consideration
of
equitable
jurisprudence
in
the
courts
of
Manitoba,
in
which
principles
and
maxims
of
equity
are
judicially
applied
to
analogous
circumstances.
The
invocation
of
the
doctrines
of
equity
and
trusts
here
is
accordingly
unexceptionable,
even
though
the
operation
of
income
tax
law
per
se
is
said
to
be
quite
unconcerned
with
and
free
of
equitable
principles.
In
order
to
succeed
in
a
case
such
as
this,
it
is
crucial
that
the
Minister’s
be
correct.
If
not
his
defence
fails.
In
conclusion
it
is
apparent
that
assumptions
(a)
and
(b)
fail
because
the
plaintiff
was
not
the
owner
of
the
winning
ticket,
even
though
he
was
the
holder,
and
he
alone
did
not
win
the
prize
as
is
amply
demonstrated
by
the
evidence.
Assumption
(c)
about
the
issuance
of
the
cheque
drawn
payable
in
favour
of
the
plaintiff,
in
so
far
as
it
is
not
merely
an
innocuous
statement
of
fact,
fails
to
support
the
Minister’s
reassessment
because
in
obtaining
the
cheque
the
plaintiff
was
the
amanuensis
of
the
group
of
which
he
was
himself
a
member.
The
same
must
be
said
of
assumptions
(d)
and
(e)
about
the
two
term
deposits
in
the
plaintiffs
own
name.
Assumption
(f)
about
the
plaintiffs
purportedly
receiving
the
interest
income,
likewise
fails
if
it
is
intended
thereby
to
imply,
as
is
also
assumed
in
(g)
and
(h),
that
the
plaintiff
alone
had
the
absolute
and
unrestricted
right
to
the
interest
income.
He
was
a
trustee
of
convenience
for
and
with
the
knowledge
and
consent
of
his
wife
and
their
daughter.
At
worst,
he
was
a
trustee
de
son
tort,
but
that
is
hardly
so,
given
the
aforesaid
knowledge
and
consent.
If
the
Dreschers
had
articulated
their
intentions
in
a
crystallized
written
form,
early
in
their
course
of
buying
lottery
tickets,
this
case
would
not
have
arisen.
Like
most
quite
normal
and
ordinary
people
they
did
not
think
to
do
so
because
they
always
understood
among
themselves
that
all
gains
are
“for
us”,
meaning
all
three,
as
Mrs
Drescher
testified.
Without
such
a
written
entente
it
takes
a
great
deal
more
time
and
effort
to
determined
their
intentions
from
evidence
of
their
conduct.
That
is
what
has
been
required
here.
The
plaintiff
is
required
therefore
to
include
in
his
return
of
income
for
1978
only
one-third
of
the
interest
income
of
$49,458.91
for
that
taxation
year.
The
plaintiff
is
entitled
to
his
costs
of
this
action
to
be
paid
after
taxation
by
the
defendant.