Shopping & Style1 min ago
Raffle Drawing Rules
I help run a large Community Raffle and when we draw the tickets we have been returning tickets belonging to those who have already won a prize.
This to our minds helps to ensure a greater spread of prize winners but a query has been raised that this might not be legal if the holder of the ticket is not present to give permission to discard or return their ticket.
Please can someone advise us on this issue. Thanks.
This to our minds helps to ensure a greater spread of prize winners but a query has been raised that this might not be legal if the holder of the ticket is not present to give permission to discard or return their ticket.
Please can someone advise us on this issue. Thanks.
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by megfitz. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.All tickets sold in a lottery must be sold at the same price and have an equal chance of winning a prize. (So, for example, it's unlawful to sell tickets at "25p each or a strip of five for a pound"). Tickets won't have an equal chance of winning a prize if they become invalidated when their purchaser has already been awarded a prize, so your current way of doing things is clearly unlawful. (It would also appear to breach general contract law too).
Have you got a licence to run your 'community raffle'? You require a licence to run a raffle unless it's incidental to an event (e.g. at a fete or dance, where tickets are only sold at the event and not elsewhere), restricted to members of a society (or those on the society's premises), restricted to customers of a business (where tickets are only sold on those business premises), restricted to people in a common workplace or restricted to people living at the same premises.
Have you got a licence to run your 'community raffle'? You require a licence to run a raffle unless it's incidental to an event (e.g. at a fete or dance, where tickets are only sold at the event and not elsewhere), restricted to members of a society (or those on the society's premises), restricted to customers of a business (where tickets are only sold on those business premises), restricted to people in a common workplace or restricted to people living at the same premises.
no OG....person A wins a prize. they bought 5 tickets. when the second of that 5 tickets is also drawn and wins a prize then the organisers don't allow person A to have two prizes and they draw again for the prize that person A would have won with the second ticket. Yes its illegal, its also liable to annoy the hell out of your ticket buyers...as Corby says, if you will only allow people to win one prize then only sell them one ticket.
We had a raffle on our section a fair few year ago (can't mind on whether someone had to be picked to do something or other.) Anyway we had a strip of five tickets each and the plan was to draw a strip out the hat.
One woman wasn't having that and insisted that each ticket from the strips had to go in otherwise it wouldn't be fair.
Needless to say she wasn't the brightest bulb on the section...
One woman wasn't having that and insisted that each ticket from the strips had to go in otherwise it wouldn't be fair.
Needless to say she wasn't the brightest bulb on the section...
TCL:
The lady was quite right if there was more than one prize to be won. (If you've only got a single strip entered into the draw, you can only win one prize. If you've got 5 individual tickets entered into it, you can win up to 5 prizes). However if there was only one prize then the probability of having a winning ticket would be the same as that of having a winning ticket.
The lady was quite right if there was more than one prize to be won. (If you've only got a single strip entered into the draw, you can only win one prize. If you've got 5 individual tickets entered into it, you can win up to 5 prizes). However if there was only one prize then the probability of having a winning ticket would be the same as that of having a winning ticket.
I do a raffle every month at our U3A general meeting each month. I sell the tickets for 50p a strip of five tickets. At the draw the strip is divided up to five separate tickets. Usually if someone has two of their tickets drawn they say draw it again. Apart from one person who has won three prizes at the same meeting.
This causes bad feeling but she will not be moved on it.
This causes bad feeling but she will not be moved on it.
Related Questions
Sorry, we can't find any related questions. Try using the search bar at the top of the page to search for some keywords, or choose a topic and submit your own question.