Then comes sub-sec. 7 couched in terms markedly different
from the provision under which Jsles's Case (1) was decided. It
is limited to cases where, under a settlement made before Ist
July 1910, or under a will of a testator who died before that
day "the beneficial interest," which I take to mean the whole
beneficial interest "in any land," which means the physical
substance, as is shown by the succeeding words " or in the income
therefrom," is for the time being shared among a number of
persons, "all of whom" are relatives of the settlor or testator, rath
such a way that they are taxable as joint owners " - that is, if they
answer the description of "' joint owners " in sec. 3. If those condi-
tions exist, then a certain legal result is enacted to follow, viz., for
the purpose of "their joint assessment as such joint owners," a
deduction - one deduction only - is to be made from the gross un-
improved value of the land, that is, as owned by all the joint owners,
the whole land. The single deduction ordinarily applying - namely,
£5,000 - is not in this case to be the deduction. There is substituted
another single deduction, which, however, is to be the aggregate
of certain subordinate factors, each of which, is ascertained by
reference to every joint owner's respective original share, and to be
either £5,000 or another sum mentioned proportionally, whichever
is the less. Having ascertained each subordinate factor separately,
the whole are collected, and, when aggregated, the sum total forms
the " deduction " from the unimproved value. The difference is to be
the taxable value for the purpose of the one joint assessment, and
all the joint owners are looked to, as the one primary taxpayer for
the tax payable on the basis of that net unimproved value. Then a
proviso is added to sub-sec. 7 by the Act of 1912. It suggests,
on the face of it, that in working out the Act some special case or
cases have been presented to the taxing authorities and need pro-
vision. "' Settlement" may be read in the plural (Acts Interpretation
Act 1901, sec. 23). A settlor may have made two settlements, or a
settlement and a will, which in combination include all the parcel
of land taxed, and all beneficial interests in it, except such as are