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Selling a house by raffle
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Is it legal to sell off a mortgaged house by raffle? Can it be done without special permission from the lender? (One doesn't normally need a lender's permission to go on the market..)
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.All lotteries are unlawful unless they fall within the provisions of the Lotteries and Amusements Act 1976 (as amended).
Authorised lotteries must be 'incidental to exempt entertainments' (e.g. at a local fete), 'private' (e.g. restricted to people who work at the same place of employment), 'local' (i.e. promoted by a local authority) or 'societies� lotteries'. Societies' lotteries must be primarily for one of the following purposes:
(a)charitable purposes;
(b)participation in or support of athletic sports or games or cultural activities;
(c)purposes which are not described in paragraph (a) or (b) above but are neither purposes of private gain nor purposes of any commercial undertaking.
Anyone conducting any other lottery faces a prison sentence of up to two years, with the possible forfeiture of anything associated with the lottery (in your case, that includes the house).
http://www.opsi.gov.uk/RevisedStatutes/Acts/uk pga/1976/cukpga_19760032_en_1
Chris
Authorised lotteries must be 'incidental to exempt entertainments' (e.g. at a local fete), 'private' (e.g. restricted to people who work at the same place of employment), 'local' (i.e. promoted by a local authority) or 'societies� lotteries'. Societies' lotteries must be primarily for one of the following purposes:
(a)charitable purposes;
(b)participation in or support of athletic sports or games or cultural activities;
(c)purposes which are not described in paragraph (a) or (b) above but are neither purposes of private gain nor purposes of any commercial undertaking.
Anyone conducting any other lottery faces a prison sentence of up to two years, with the possible forfeiture of anything associated with the lottery (in your case, that includes the house).
http://www.opsi.gov.uk/RevisedStatutes/Acts/uk pga/1976/cukpga_19760032_en_1
Chris
To get round the law, you run it as a competition.
This one had the question "What grows on apple trees"
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/cambridgesh ire/4607419.stm
This one had the question "What grows on apple trees"
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/cambridgesh ire/4607419.stm
This has been tried before but does anyone know how successful this approach has been. I can't trecall any success stories but I remember reading about such raffles/competitions that flopped because of lack of sales, and there's a big risk that if all the tickets aren't sold you lose a lot on the sale. A seller should probably take legal advice to get the competetion rules right.
This one:
http://www.winadevonpropertywithfishing.co.uk/ index.php
has sold all 46,000 tickets much more quickly than expected, and has therefore brought the draw date forward (fingers crossed for me - I have 2 tickets!).
I understand that it had to be a 'competition' rather than just a draw - this one had a very easy question to answer.
If I remember rightly, in the event that all tickets weren't sold, the owners were going to take 35% of the funds raised, and the remainder of the cash was to be given to the winner drawn.
http://www.winadevonpropertywithfishing.co.uk/ index.php
has sold all 46,000 tickets much more quickly than expected, and has therefore brought the draw date forward (fingers crossed for me - I have 2 tickets!).
I understand that it had to be a 'competition' rather than just a draw - this one had a very easy question to answer.
If I remember rightly, in the event that all tickets weren't sold, the owners were going to take 35% of the funds raised, and the remainder of the cash was to be given to the winner drawn.