Collier,
J:—In
the
taxation
years
under
review
here
(1964
to
1967)
the
appellant
says
it
was
the
general
partner
in
a
limited
partnership
with
five
family
trusts
as
the
other
partners.
Whether
there
was
in
fact
or
in
law
such
a
partnership
is
in
dispute.
The
appellant,
in
the
years
in
question,
included
in
its
income
one-sixth
only
of
the
net
profits
realized
from
the
business
carried
on
by
the
alleged
partnership.
The
remaining
profits
were
allocated
to
the
trusts
in
equal
shares
and,
speaking
generally,
returns
were
filed
by
the
trusts
declaring
the
one-
sixth
amounts.
The
respondent
issued
reassessments
against
the
appellant
adding
to
the
appellant’s
income
the
other
five-sixths
of
the
profits.
There
are
substantial
sums
involved.
The
question
for
me
to
decide
is
whether
the
reassessments
of
the
appellant
are
correct.
As
I
understand
it,
no
reassessments
of
the
trusts
nor
of
the
beneficiaries
of
them
were
issued
excluding
the
share
of
income
allocated
from
the
partnership.
In
my
view,
the
question
to
be
decided
is
dependent
primarily
on
the
facts
and,
to
make
these
reasons
understandable,
it
is
necessary
to
review
the
evidence
in
some
detail.
George
E
Shnier
&
Company
Ltd
was
incorporated
on
April
22,
1948.
From
that
time
on
it
was
engaged
in
the
distribution
and
manufacturing
of
flooring,
rubber
and
building
products.
Its
name
was
changed
to
G
E
Shnier
Co
Limited
on
December
27,
1963
and
by
further
letters
patent
issued
November
7,
1969
to
Kingsdale
Securities
Co
Limited,
the
present
appellant.
Prior
to
December
31,
1961
the
shareholdings
of
the
company
were
as
follows:
|
George
E
Shnier
|
40%
|
|
Norman
Shnier
|
20%
|
|
Irving
Shnier
|
20%
|
|
Cecil
Shnier
|
20%
|
The
four
Shniers
were
brothers.
Another
brother,
Allan,
operated
a
similar
business
in
Winnipeg.
His
company
was
Eagle
Distributing
Co
Limited.
For
a
number
of
years
there
had
been
dissension
among
the
shareholders
of
George
E
Shnier
&
Company
Ltd.
These
differences
were
resolved
in
1961.
I
shall
not
go
into
lengthy
detail
but
as
of
January
1,
1962
a
partnership
had
been
formed
to
operate
the
businesses
formerly
carried
on
by
George
E
Shnier
&
Company
Ltd
and
Eagle
Distributing
Co
Limited.
The
partners
were
five
corporations
each
having
an
equal
interest.
These
corporations
were
owned
as
follows:
George
Edward
Corporation
Ltd
(George
E
Shnier)
Phil
Shnier
Limited
(Phil
Shnier)
Eagle
Distributing
Co
Limited
(Allan
Shnier)
Norman
Shnier
Limited
(Norman
Shnier)
Irving
Shnier
Limited
(Irving
Shnier)
This
corporate
partnership
carried
on
business
under
the
name
of
G
E
Shnier
Co
and
Eagle
Distributing
Co.
On
July
27,
1962
George
E
Shnier
died
and
Wabash
Enterprises
Ltd
(owned
by
Cecil
Shnier)
became
a
partner.
The
interest
of
George
Edward
Corporation
Ltd
in
the
partnership
was
bought
by
the
other
corporate
partners.
Earlier
in
time
the
wives
of
certain
of
the
brothers
had
purchased
interests
in
the
now
appellant
company.
After
George
Shnier’s
death
ownership
of
that
company
was
in
the
wives
of
the
five
remaining
brothers.
In
June
of
1963
the
federal
government
introduced
a
budget.
it
was
indicated
that
there
might
be
some
serious
taxation
changes
affecting
associated
companies.
The
legal
and
accounting
advisers
of
the
Shnier
brothers
were
concerned
about
the
implications
vis-a-vis
the
Shnier
businesses,
as
were
the
Shnier
brothers
themselves,
and
in
July
and
later
proposals
were
put
forward
chiefly
by
the
legal
advisers
as
to
setting
up
a
new
structure
to
carry
on
the
business.
While
there
were,
from
time
to
time,
some
variations
in
the
proposed
schemes
for
restructure,
the
dominant
theme
was
to
continue
the
business
as
a
partnership
and
to
bring
in
as
partners
family
trusts
with
limited
liability.
Evidence
was
given
at
trial
on
behalf
of
the
appellant
that
one
of
the
objects
in
the
change-over
was
to
develop
the
aspects
of
family
and
estate
planning,
and
that
was
the
reason
for
the
setting
up
of
trusts.
In
my
opinion
that
aspect
was
minor;
the
main
purpose
was
to
try
and
reduce,
within
legal
bounds,
the
impact
of
tax
that
might
result
from
the
budget
proposals*
The
legal
advisers’
letter
of
July
19,
1963
to
a
firm
of
accountants,
with
copies
to
Norman
and
Cecil
Shnier,
sets
out
the
initial
proposal.
I
quote
these
excerpts
from
Exhibit
54:
If
you
will
take
a
look
at
my
letter
to
you
of
May
15,
1963,
setting
out
the
matters
which
must
be
resolved
before
December
31,
1963,
and
consider
the
question
of
re-organization
to
avoid
serious
tax
implications
in
Gesco
for
1964,
I
would
be
happy
to
have
you
set
a
date
for
my
trip
to
Toronto
to
make
some
decisions
with
you.
.
.
.
On
the
subject
of
Gesco
re-organization,
as
you
know
I
had
come
to
Toronto
armed
with
a
program
to
stop
the
tax
effect
immediately
of
what
was
then
the
associated
corporation
amendment
to
The
Income
Tax
Act.
As
I
advised
you
on
the
telephone,
this
involved
the
immediate
disintegration
of
the
corporate
partnership
and
the
transplanting
of
same
into
a
special
or
limited
partnership
consisting
of
one
corporation
and
several
Trusts
as
limited
partners.
I
discussed
the
solution
with
Norman,
Irving
and
Phil
at
some
length
and
they
were
interested
in
the
possibilities,
certainly
from
an
income
tax
point
of
view,
as
well
as
the
extra
benefit
of
estate
planning
that
would
arise
from
such
a
plan.
Therefore,
I
am
going
to
proceed
to
map
out
some
sort
of
a
plan
along
these
lines
and
submit
it
in
complete
detail
at
the
August
Board
of
Directors
Meeting,
and
naturally
I
will
want
to
do
so
in
co-operation
with
you
and
with
your
concurrence.
As
far
as
I
can
see,
the
corporate
partnership
which
we
formed
in
1961
has
been
more
than
valuable
to
Gesco.
That
is,
as
you
and
I
are
both
well
aware,
it
saved
them
approximately
$40,000.00
in
tax
in
1962,
and
will
likely
save
them
at
least
another
$40,000.00
in
1963.
Therefore,
all
the
fuss
and
trouble
has
been
well
worth
it.
However,
because
of
the
serious
implications
of
the
new
legislation,
I
feel
that
it
has
served
its
purpose
and
should
now
be
abandoned.
The
plan
!
envision,
will
not
require
any
major
internal
changes,
nor
any
internal
embarrassment.
That
is,
I
still
plan
to
operate
a
partnership
known
as
“G
E
Shnier
Co”
and
“Eagle
Distributing
Co”
but
same
will
no
longer
be
owned
by
the
five
corporations,
it
will
now
be
owned
by
Trusts
for
children
and
wives.
As
I
say,
I’ve
tried
to
work
it
out
every
whichway,
and
no
matter
which
technique
I
try,
I
still
keep
running
into
the
dangers
of
Section
21
and
22
and
all
their
horrible
sub-sections,
as
well
as
some
of
the
problems
of
Section
63(2).
My
proposal
for
re-organization,
basically,
is
as
follows:
fc
4.
In
the
next
few
months,
each
of
the
five
Gesco
individuals,
namely,
Irving,
Norman,
Phil,
Cecil
and
Allan
will
each
cause
to
be
created
a
“leaping
discretionary
Trust”.
That
is,
a
Trust
will
be
created
for
the
wife
and
children
of
each
of
them
which
would
have
three
Trustees,
being
the
male
parent
and
two
strangers.
2.
The
nature
of
the
proposed
Trusts
for
the
infants
and
wives
in
each
case
will
be
almost
identical.
The
Trust
will
have
extremely
broad
powers
of
investment,
with
the
Trustees
having
almost
unfettered
discretion.
There
will
be
no
Settlor,
merely
a
Declaration
of
Trust
using
the
money
loaned
by
each
male
parent
to
the
wives
and
children
(the
Dunkelman
case
would
seem
to
clear
us
on
this
point).
There
will
be
no
gifts
or
settlements
made
upon
the
Trusts
but
all
funds
which
the
Trust
may
require
(if
any)
will
be
provided
by
loans
to
the
Trusts.
The
Trust
will
provide
that.
unless
the
Trustees
unanimously
otherwise
decide,
in
each
year,
the
income
of
the
Trust
will
be
allocated
(but
not
necessarily
paid)
to
be
beneficiaries
of
the
Trust
in
equal
proportions.
The
trust
will
be
discretionary,
in
the
sense
that
the
Trustees
(acting
unanimously
only)
will
be
entitled
to
add
beneficiaries
to
the
Trust,
drop
beneficiaries,
and
vary
the
proportions
of
beneficiaries
from
time
to
time,
provided
that
under
no
circumstances
can
the
Trustees
name
themselves
as
beneficiaries.
(c)
That
is,
George
E
Shnier
&
Co
Ltd,
who
has
now
taken
over
ownership
of
“G
E
Shnier
Co/”,
momentarily,
will
now
enter
into
a
limited
partnership
to
carry
on
that
business
with
the
five
Trusts.
Gesco
Ltd,
will
contribute
its
capital,
being
the
business,
and
each
of
the
limited
partners
(being
each
of
the
Trusts)
will
contribute
the
sum
of
$5,000.00
to
constitute
the
capital
of
the
limited
partnerships.
The
profits
of
the
limited
partnership
will
be
split
equally
amongst
all
of
the
partners.
The
question
of
Board
of
Directors
etc,
voting
etc,
and
control,
will
be
settled
in
a
later
memorandum.
9.
The
obvious,
and
incidental
tax
effect
of
this
is
fairly
obvious.
Take
the
Irving
Shnier
Trust,
for
example,
because
he
has
only
two
children,
while
Norman
has
three,
Phil
has
four
and
3/5ths,
Allan
has
three,
and
Cecil
apparently
has
an
indeterminate
number
of
children,
the
effect
on
Irving
Shnier’s
family
is
a
good
guide.
Since
the
Trust
itself
is
taxed
as
an
individual,
it
can
earn,
say
$12,000.00
for
itself,
and
earn
$12,000.00
for
each
of
Eleanor
and
the
two
children,
therefore,
each
Trust
can
earn
a
minimum
of
$48,000.00
and
still
be
taxed
effectively
at
about
21%
and
of
course,
Gesco
Ltd,
can
be
taxed
at
23%
up
to
$35,000.00.
Thus,
this
arrangement
would
permit
the
Gesco
organization
to
earn
$275,000.00
per
year
and
still
be
taxed
at
an
approximate
rate
of
22%.
11.
I
recognize
that
there
are
many
refinements
that
can
be
put
into
this
plan,
one
of
which
being
the
possibility
that
the
men
should
re-take
ownership
of
George
E
Shnier
&
Co
Ltd
to
assure
themselves
of
absolute
control,
notwithstanding
that
they,
in
fact,
control
the
five
Trusts.
I
will
be
very
interested
to
have
your
comments
on
the
question
of
other
refinements
that
you
might
suggest.
12.
As
I
suggest,
there
will
be
no
external
changes,
as
far
as
the
trading
public
or
the
office
staff
or
accounting
divisions
are
concerned,
because
there
will
be
still
“G
E
Shnier
Co”
and
“Eagle
Distributing
Co”
but
the
only
change
will
be
that
the
partners
will
now
be,
instead
of
the
five
corporations,
one
corporation
plus
five
Trusts
for
wives
and
children.
This
will
provide
an
excellent
source
of
cash
for
the
wives
to
tax
free
payout
their
husbands
their
various
indebtednesses
and,
of
course,
provides
an
excellent
estate
planning
device.
We
propose
to
draft
a
very
tight
and
detailed
partnership
agreement
which
would
provide
for
expulsion
of
partners
and
Trusts
non-voting
partners
etc
etc,
to
prevent
any
kind
of
an
uprising
among
the
natives.
I
will
go
into
this
in
greater
detail
at
our
Toronto
meeting.
On
October
7,
1963
the
legal
advisers
sent
a
detailed
document
to
the
accountants
and
to
the
five
Shnier
brothers
(Exhibit
39)
outlining
the
steps
to
be
taken.
This
memorandum
proposed
that
the
five
Shniers
would
each
immediately
constitute
a
trust
by
a
declaration
of
trust,
that
three
trustees
would
be
appointed,
the
principal
one
being
the
Shnier
brother,
and
that
beneficiaries
would
be
named.
The
object
was
that
the
wives,
children
and
other
relatives
would
become
cestuis
que
trust.
A
limited
partnership
was
then
to
be
formed
consisting
of
the
five
trusts
and
G
E
Shnier
Co
Limited
(now
the
appellant).
The
five
trusts
were
to
contribute
$75,000
each
to
the
partnership
and
the
interest
of
G
E
Shnier
Co
Limited
in
the
existing
business
was
to
be
reduced
in
a
certain
manner
to
a
similar
sum
of
$75,000.
The
corp-
orate
partner
was
to
be
the
general
partner
and
the
trusts
to
be
limited
partners.
The
partnership
was
to
trade
under
the
same
name
as
before.
At
page
20
of
the
Exhibit
an
illustration
gives
the
tax
effect
which
might
result.
I
emphasize
that
at
the
date
of
this
memorandum
“declaratory”
trusts
were
contemplated,
and
not
“settled”
trusts.
A
meeting
of
the
Shnier
brothers
was
held
in
Toronto
on
October
20,
1963
at
which
the
setting
up
of
trusts
was
discussed,
and
it
is
from
this
point
on
there
is
a
serious
conflict
in
the
evidence.
A
key
question,
to
my
mind,
is
whether
these
trusts
were,
in
fact
and
in
law,
created
by
January
1,
1964.
Trust
deeds,
bearing
date
December
2,
1963,
were
filed
in
evidence.
There
is
no
doubt
the
documents
were
in
fact
not
signed
until
March
or
April
1964.
The
appellant’s
case
is
largely
founded
on
the
premise
that
the
trusts
came
into
existence
prior
to
January
1,
1964,
that
a
limited
partnership
as
described
was
entered
into
and
became
effective
on
that
date.
Declarations
and
certificates
of
limited
partnership
(purportedly
effective
January
1,
1964)
as
required
by
the
provincial
statutes
were
filed
with
the
appropriate
authorities
in
British
Columbia,
the
prairie
provinces
and
Ontario.
If
the
trusts
did
not
exist
in
fact
and
in
law
on
the
date
in
question,
then
no
limited
partnership
came
into
existence,
regardless
of
what
all
the
subsequent
documentation
may
indicate.
It
is
necessary
to
examine
the
evidence
in
some
detail.
Cecil
Shnier,
called
on
behalf
of
the
appellant,
testified
that
at
the
October
20
meeting
it
was
decided
to
have
non-resident
persons
as
settlors
of
the
trusts
and
a
different
settlor
for
each
trust.
He
at
one
time
had
lived
in
Oklahoma
City
where
another
brother,
Jack
Shnier,
lived.
Jack
had
married
his
cousin
Esther.
Her
mother,
Anne
Rose,
also
lived
in
Oklahoma
City.
There
was
another
relative,
Peggy
Cooper,
a
second
cousin.
Her
husband,
Aubrey
Cooper,
a
dentist,
had
been
a
friend
of
Cecil
before
the
Coopers
had
married.
Cecil
said
that
shortly
after
the
Toronto
meeting
he
telephoned
his
brother
Jack
and
explained
in
some
detail
what
was
proposed:
that
for
the
future
of
the
families
and
for
family
planning
these
trusts
would
be
set
up
for
the
benefit
of
the
wives
and
children,
certain
property
of
the
Shnier
brothers
would
be
transferred
to
the
trusts
and
part
of
the
brothers’
interest
in
the
business
would
be
put
into
the
trusts.
Cecil
said
he
spoke
with
Esther
Shnier
as
well
and
he
asked
Jack
to
speak
to
Anne
Rose
along
the
same
lines.
It
was
also
Cecil’s
evidence
that
he
made
at
least
one
subsequent
telephone
call
approximately
one
month
later
and
either
after
the
first
or
second
call
it
was
understood
that
Jack
and
the
various
settlors
would
make
the
necessary
gift
to
the
trustees
to
constitute
the
trusts.
(This
later
appeared
to
be
the
sum
of
$50.)
He
further
said
in
one
of
these
conversations
he
asked
his
brother
to
send
cheques.
There
was
to
be
a
bar
mitzvah
in
Regina
in
the
latter
part
of
December,
and
Jack,
his
wife
and
the
Coopers
were
going
to
attend.
According
to
Cecil,
Jack
said
he
would
bring
the
money
with
him
to
Regina.
Ultimately
the
Coopers
were
unable
to
attend.
Jack
(according
to
Cecil)
said
the
Coopers
would
send
their
money
with
him.
Cecil
said
he
had
similar
telephone
conversations
with
the
Coopers
explaining
the
proposed
trusts
and
obtaining
their
consent
to
act.
In
the
deeds
of
trust,
Jack
Shnier
appears
as
settlor
for
the
Irving
Shnier
trust,
Anne
Rose
for
the
Allan
Shnier
trust,
Aubrey
Cooper
for
the
Cecil
Shnier
trust,
Esther
Shnier
for
the
Norman
Shnier
trust
and
Peggy
Cooper
for
the
Phil
Shnier
trust.
In
each
deed
of
trust
the
preamble
states
“..
.
the
Settlor
has
requested
the
Trustees
to
become
Trustees
.
.
.”.
In
each
deed
of
trust
there
are
three
trustees,
one
of
whom
is
a
Shnier
brother
and
the
remaining
two
are
persons
selected
by
the
Shnier
brothers.
The
evidence
of
the
Oklahoma
relatives
was
taken
on
commission
by
the
respondent
and
read
in
at
the
trial.
They
were
not,
as
one
might
perhaps
have
expected,
called
as
witnesses
by
the
appellant
at
the
hearing
of
this
case.
The
evidence
of
all
five
settlors
is
clear
that
they
did
not
sign
these
documents
until
the
spring
of
1964.
The
deeds
of
trust
were
at
some
time
signed
as
well
by
the
trustees.
None
of
the
settlors
can
recall
whether
or
not,
when
they
received
the
documents,
the
other
signatures
had
been
affixed.
Jack
Shnier
said
his
brother
Cecil
spoke
with
him
by
telephone
in
the
fall
of
1963
and
asked
him
and
his
wife
to
be
settlors
and
said
the
matter
would
be
explained
further
at
the
bar
mitzvah
on
December
26,
1963
in
Regina.
He
testified
further
that
the
other
settlors
were
selected
at
Regina
and
not
in
Oklahoma
City
by
telephone.
Jack
said
he
had
no
prior
discussion
with
the
Coopers
or
Anne
Rose
concerning
these
trusts
until
the
documents
themselves
were
received
in
the
spring.
Jack
Shnier’s
evidence
is
clear
he
had
not
agreed
to
anything
before
going
to
Regina,
even
as
to
becoming
a
settlor.
He
may
have
mentioned
the
telephone
conversation
to
his
wife
but
he
had
no
discussion
of
trusts
with
the
Coopers
or
Anne
Rose
before
leaving
Oklahoma
City.
Esther
Shnier
testified
she
first
heard
of
a
proposed
trust
at
the
bar
mitzvah
in
Regina,
and
her
knowledge
came
from
her
husband.
Anne
Rose
said
a
trust
was
not
mentioned
to
her
at
Regina,
and
the
first
she
had
to
do
with
it
or
the
documentation
of
it
was
when
she
signed
the
deed
at
Jack’s
request
in
the
spring
of
1964.
Aubrey
Cooper
said
his
first
knowledge
of
any
trust
or
of
acting
as
a
settlor
was
when
Jack
brought
up
the
deed
of
trust
to
him
in
the
spring
of
1964
for
his
signature
and
explained
it
to
him.
Peggy
Cooper’s
evidence
is
to
the
same
effect
as
her
husband’s.
It
was
brought
out
in
cross-examination
of
Cecil
Shnier
that
he
had
gone
to
Oklahoma
City
just
prior
to
the
taking
of
the
commission
evidence
and
had
endeavoured
to
refresh
the
memory
of
the
Oklahoma
relatives,
presumably
to
accord
with
his
version
of
what
had
occurred.
I
cannot
accept
Cecil’s
evidence
of
his
telephone
conversations
with
Esther,
Aubrey
and
Peggy
requesting
them
to
act
as
settlors.
His
solicitors,
in
a
letter
dated
October
29,
1963
(Exhibit
64A)
to
the
auditors,
with
a
copy
to
all
of
the
Shnier
brothers,
stated:
1.
For
each
trust
we
are
going
to
have
a
non-resident
Settlor.
We
will
use
Jack
Shnier
who
is
resident
in
the
United
States
and
has
been
for
some
25
years
and
proposes
to
continue
living
in
the
United
States.
The
settlement
will
be
$50.00
on
each
trust
and
each
trust
will
purchase
Government
Bonds
with
that
to
make
the
settlement
sum
always
identifiable.
2.
George
E
Shnier
&
Co
Ltd,
will
be
an
equal
partner
with
the
5
trusts
in
order
to
avoid
complications.
In
my
view
Jack
Shnier’s
testimony
is
to
be
preferred
and
I
think
he
describes
the
situation
as
it
really
was,
certainly
prior
to
the
bar
mitzvah:
A.
The
gist
of
it
was
that
they
were
contemplating
setting
up
these
family
trusts
and
that
they
would
like
to
have
me
as
a
Settlor
and
my
wife
as
a
Settlor.
They
would
explain
it
to
me
further
because
they
knew
l
was
planning
on
being
in
Canada
that
winter
and
that
is
the
way
it
came
up.
.
.
.
A.
What
do
you
mean
by
“specific?”
Q.
Well,
you
haven’t
been
very
specific.
You
have
said
that
it
was
simply
mentioned
to
you
by
Cecil
but
that
this
had
been
in
the
minds
of
those
people.
Now
was
there
anything
else
said
to
you,
was
there
any
arrangement
made,
any
terms
settled,
anything?
A.
No.
At
that
time
it
was
a
matter
of—we
would
get
together
and
discuss
it
when
the
other
brothers
arrived
and
we
all
got
together..
..
I
find
that
as
of
the
date
of
the
bar
mitzvah
the
five
alleged
settlors
had
not
agreed
to
anything
and
had
not
at
that
date
any
intention,
in
the
legal
sense,
to
create
a
trust.
For
reasons
which
I
shall
subsequently
outline,
I
find
that
the
trusts
were
not
in
fact
created
until
the
settlors
actually
signed
the
printed
documents
at
some
date
in
March
or
April
of
1964.
I
shall
briefly
review
the
evidence
as
to
what
occurred
in
Regina.
Again
there
is
some
conflict.
It
is
suggested
that
Jack
Shnier
took
$250
to
Regina
on
behalf
of
himself
and
the
other
settlors,
in
order
to
make
the
gift
of
$50
to
the
trustees
of
each
trust.
That
is
not
his
evidence.
He
said
he
goes
to
Canada
frequently
and
he
has
always
found
it
much
easier
and
cheaper
from
an
exchange
rate
point
of
view
to
obtain
Canadian
currency
in
Oklahoma
before
he
leaves
on
a
trip.
He
followed
that
same
pattern
in
December
of
1963.
He
took
four
or
five
hundred.
dollars
in
Canadian
money
with
him.
At
some
stage
he
gave
$250
of
his
own
money
to
someone
in
Regina.
It
eventually
found
its
way
into
the
hands
of
the
solicitor
who
was
also
present,
and
who
apparently
gave
it
to
Phil
Shnier.
Phil
had
to
leave
the
bar
mitzvah
early
to
return
to
Toronto.
The
solicitor
and
Cecil
Shnier
say
there
was
a
draft
trust
deed
brought
to
Regina,
and
the
nature
of
the
trust
and
its
terms
were
explained
to
the
three
settlors
who
had
gone
to
Regina.
I
accept
Jack
Shnier’s
evidence
that
any
discussions
were
with
him
alone,
other
than
what
he
may
have
told
his
wife,
and
that
he
did
not
see
a
draft
trust
deed.
I
reject
the
evidence
of
witnesses
called
on
behalf
of
the
appellant
who
testified
otherwise.
In
my
view,
all
that
really
transpired
at
Regina
was
that
Jack
Shnier
was
told
of
the
general
nature
of
the
proposed
trusts,
that
he
would
endeavour
to
have
his
wife,
his
mother-in-law
and
the
Coopers
act
as
settlors,
that
the
documents
would
be
eventually
sent
to
him,
and
if
everyone
were
agreeable,
they
would
be
signed.
I
quote
from
his
evidence:
Q.
Now
then
what
happened
there
with
reference
to
the
Irving
Shnier
Family
Trust?
A.
It
was
discussed
that
these
trusts
would
be
set
up,
that
we
would
find
these
Settlors
and
myself
would
be
one
of
the
Settlors,
my
wife
would
be
another,
my,
mother-in-law,
Anne
Rose,
would
be
a
third
Settlor,
Peggy
and
Aubrey
Cooper
would
be
Settlors.
Q.
Were
the
Coopers
at
that
Bar
Mitz’vah?
A.
No.
Q.
Was
your
wife,
Esther,
there?
A.
Yes.
Q.
And
was
Anne
Rose
at
the
Bar
Mitz’vah?
A.
Yes.
Q.
Was
she
present
at
these
discussions?
A.
No.
Q.
So
do
I
have
it
at
the
time
the
money
was
paid
over
at
the
Bar
Mitz’vah,
none
of
those
people
knew
that
they
would
act
as
Settlors
or
had
consented
to
do
so?
A.
Well,
possibly—I
wouldn’t
say
for
sure
because
I
discussed
it
with
my
wife.
Q.
All
right,
let’s
exclude
your
wife
for
the
moment,
how
about
the
others?
A.
No,
I
don’t
think
so.
Q.
In
fact,
did
you
know
whose
family
you
were
settling
at
that
time?
A.
That
I
was?
Q.
Yes.
A.
I
figured
possibly
I
would
be—from
the
discussion
that
I
would
be
an
Irving
Settlor,
a
Settlor
on
his.
Q.
Well,
had
that
been
finally
decided
or
is
that
something
that
you
presumed?
A.
Well,
in
the
matter
of
explanation
and
discussing,
it
was
possibly
brought
up
and
maybe
it
was
named
but
I
can’t
specifically
say
that
it
was
said.
We
discussed
this
and
discussed
who
would
be
the
Settlors
for
each
but
for
me
to
say
actually
it
was
set
up
ahead
that
now
we
agreed
on
this
and
we
agreed
on
that,
at
the
time
l
couldn’t
remember
just
exactly
whether
that
was
said
or
not.
Q.
Now
as
far
as
Aubrey
and
Peggy
Cooper
are
concerned,
the
first
they
ever
heard
about
their
participation
in
the
trusts
was
actually
when
you
came
back
from
Regina?
A.
Yes.
We
had
discussed
it
and
I
told
them
I
didn’t
think
there
would
be
any
problem
in
having
them
sign
as
Settlors.
Q.
You
had
discussed
this
with
your
brothers?
A.
With
my
brothers.
It
was
my—during
the
discussion.
Q.
Well,
that’s
all
right
but
let’s
now
talk
about
the
Coopers—A.
Yes.
Q.
—when
you
came
back
from
the
Bar
Mitz’vah,
this
was
the
first
knowledge
they
would
have
had?
A.
I
would
say
so.
I
am
satisfied
that
these
settlors
had
no
part
in
the
selection
of
the
trustees
who
were
ultimately
named.
In
fact
some
of
the
settlors
testified
they
still
do
not
know
who
some
of
their
trustees
were
or
what
they
did.
I
am
also
satisfied
the
settlors,
up
to
the
time
of
receiving
the
deeds,
did
not
know
the
name
of
the
particular
family
for
which
they
were
creating
a
trust.
Jack
Shnier
was
never
repaid
$50
by
any
of
the
other
settlors
for
whom
he
allegedly
advanced
funds.
Receipts
dated
December
19,
1963,
signed
on
behalf
of
the
particular
family
trust
by
the
particular
brother,
in
favour
of
the
five
settlors,
were
filed
as
exhibits.
That
date
is,
to
my
mind,
meaningless,
as
is
the
case
with
the
dates
on
many
other
documents
filed
as
exhibits
in
this
litigation.
Jack
Shnier
says
he
was
never
given
any
receipts.
Those
filed
as
exhibits
at
trial,
I
was
told,
did
not
come
from
the
possession
of
any
of
the
settlors.
Before
turning
to
the
actual
signing
of
the
trust
deeds
by
the
settlors,
I
point
out
there
is
no
evidence
from
the
co-trustees
that
as
of
January
1,
1964
they
had
agreed
to
act
or
had
been
requested
by
the
settlors
to
act
as
such.
The
five
trust
deeds,
each
73
pages
in
length,
were
sent
from
Winnipeg
by
Cecil
to
Jack.
Before
any
of
the
settlors
signed
them,
Jack
had
his
own
attorney
review
them.
That
is
a
significant
fact.
From
the
testimony
of
Jack
Shnier
and
Aubrey
Cooper,
I
think
a
strong
inference
can
be
drawn
that
none
of
the
settlors
would
have
signed
the
document
if
the
attorney
had
advised
against
it.
I
quote
from
the
evidence
of
Cooper:
Q.
Can
you
tell
me
where
it
was
signed?
A.
To
the
best
of
my
knowledge,
it
must
have
been
in
Oklahoma
City.
Q.
And
how
did
the
document
come
to
you?
A.
Well,
Mr
Jack
Shnier
approached
me
and
said—and
tried
to
explain
what
a
trust
was
and
all
that
and
said
that
they
needed
some
people
from—they
needed
some
relatives
to
sign
this,
they
needed
me
to
sign.
I
don’t
know,
they
might
have
needed
more
to
sign
up
from
the
city.
He
said
he
had
checked
with
his
attorney,
who
was
in
Norman,
Oklahoma,
and
that,
you
know,
it
was
all
right
to
sign.
The
female
settlors
merely
followed
the
advice
of
Jack
and
signed
the
deeds,
not
really
knowing
their
contents
or
effect.
To
create
a
trust,
the
settlor
must
have
intended
the
trust
property
be
held
in
trust
for
ascertainable
beneficiaries
(Snell,
Principles
of
Equity,
26th
ed,
pp
127-8;
Underhill,
Law
of
Trusts
and
Trustees,
12th
ed,
p
19;
Lewin
on
Trusts,
16th
ed,
p
41).
Here,
on
the
facts
as
I
see
them,
and
I
so
hold,
the
settlors
did
not
evince
any
intention,
either
in
fact
or
in
law,
to
create
the
trusts
relied
on
in
this
case
until
the
date
they
signed
the
deeds.
Counsel
for
the
appellant
submitted
that
if
I
arrived
at
that
conclusion,
then
“declaratory
trusts”
came
into
being
prior
to
January
1,
1964.*
On
December
24,
1963
Shnier
opened
five
bank
accounts
for
the
family
trusts,
depositing
$10
in
each.
On
December
30
a
further
$40
was
deposited
in
each
account
(the
$250
received
from
Jack
Shnier
less
the
earlier
$50).
On
December
31
the
bank
credited
each
family
trust
bank
account
with
$75,000.
I
shall
not
go
into
the
details
of
how
the
$75,000
found
its
way
into
each
account.
It
was
allegedly
for
the
purpose
of
buying
into
the
partnership.
In
my
view,
it
was
in
reality
a
bank
book-keeping
transaction
giving
the
appearance
of
substituting
family
trusts
for
the
corporate
partners.
It
is
contended,
as
I
understand
it,
that
by
becoming
trustees
and
opening
these
bank
accounts
and
controlling
these
sums
on
behalf
of
beneficiaries,
the
brothers
and
their
co-trustees
created
a
trust.
In
my
opinion
no
so-
called
“declaratory
trusts”
came
into
existence.
In
any
event,
these
are
not
the
trusts
relied
upon
in
this
case,
nor
are
they
the
trusts
relied
upon
in
all
the
documents
tendered
to
support
the
limited
partnership
in
question.
The
declarations
of
limited
partnership
are
based
on
the
“settled
trusts’,
not
some
vague
“declaratory
trusts”.
In
view
of
my
findings
expressed
earlier,
I
hold
that
no
limited
partnership
as
contended
came
into
existence
and
the
appeal
must
therefore
fail.
Counsel
for
the
respondent
argued
alternatively
that
if
in
some
manner
the
settled
trusts
did
come
into
existence
by
January
1,
1964,
then
the
alleged
legal
result
of
all
the
documentation
(a
valid
and
real
limited
partnership)
did
not
actually
occur.
In
view
of
the
reasons
I
have
expressed
above,
it
is
not
necessary
to
review
the
evidence
and
argument
on
this
alternative
submission.
I,
however,
must
say
I
am
in
general
agreement
with
the
respondent’s
contention.
The
appeal
is
dismissed
with
costs.