after the letter of 23rd April 1931, it would be proper to draw the
inference that the deceased was satisfied to accept the bank's views,
and to rely on his threat that any daughter who touched the principal
would be cut out of his will as a sufficient safeguard against a daughter
attempting to dispose of any portion of the bonds during his life-
time. The direction by the deceased to pay the interest from the
bonds into his own accounts was a right given to the deceased by
the terms of the deposits. Mrs. Lyon received the same allowance
as she would have received if the interest from the bonds in the
eustody of the Chartered Bank had been paid direct to her account.
Apart from the allowance to the sister of the deceased, the other
two daughters received, though in unequal shares, the same benefits
from the interest from the bonds in the custody of the Bank of New
South Wales as they would have received if it had been paid into
their accounts. There can be little doubt that the dominant inten-
tion of the deceased was that his three daughters, all of whom were
living in England, and not himself, should be, in every substantial
sense, the beneficiaries of the interest from the bonds during his
lifetime. The several right to dispose of the bonds was a right to
adeem the gifts in whole or in part by withdrawing the bonds in
whole or in part from the joint tenancy. But, until withdrawn, they
remained subject to the joint ownership and it is the beneficial interest
in the joint ownership that is caught by the sub-section. Hach joint
tenant holds the whole and holds nothing, that is, he holds the whole
jointly and nothing separately: See Halsbury's Laws of England,
2nd ed., vol. 27, p. 659, note ¢, citing Coke on Littleton, 186 (a), where
it is pointed out that for many purposes this is equivalent to a
moiety at law. Such a holding cannot be in a beneficial sense of
the same value as an absolute ownership. The greater the number
of joint owners, the more apparent this becomes. For these reasons
I am of opinion that the value of the beneficial interests held by the
deceased in the bonds immediately prior to his death was equal to
one-half of their value at the date of death. This conclusion accords
with that reached by Schutt J. in In re Boyle (1).