Close X
Monday, November 25, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. Appeal Court Rules Lottery Winner Must Be Paid Back $600,000 Loan

The Canadian Press, 21 Jun, 2018 01:11 PM
    VANCOUVER — A dispute over whether $600,000 was a loan or a gift from a lottery winner has been settled by the British Columbia Court of Appeal in favour of the gambler.
     
     
    Enone Rosas won $4.1 million in a lottery in 2007 and loaned the $600,000 to her friend Hermenisabel Toca so she could buy a home.
     
     
    A lower court judge had determined the loan was to be paid back without interest in a year, but Rosas didn't sue for seven years and the B.C. Supreme Court judge ruled the time limit had run out to force the money's return.
     
     
    But that verdict was overturned in a unanimous decision posted Wednesday from the three appeal judges who ruled that every time Toca told Rosas she would pay her back next year, that extended the time for repaying.
     
     
    Toca stopped asking for the extensions in 2013, which the court says was well within the six-year limit of filing legal action.
     
     
    Writing for the panel, Chief Justice Robert Bauman said in the ruling that when parties vary terms, that change should be enforceable and he ordered Toca to repay the money, plus interest.
     
     
    "It has been famously said that 'hard cases make bad law.' Sometimes, however, hard cases make new law," Bauman said in the ruling. "Or, at least, they very much encourage the court to do so lest we give credence to Mr. Bumble’s lament in Oliver Twist: 'If the law supposes that, … the law is a ass.' " 
     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    CEO Of Royal Canadian Mint To Resign, Citing Desire To Find More Balance

    CEO Of Royal Canadian Mint To Resign, Citing Desire To Find More Balance
    Sandra Hanington says she will leave the mint on July 1, after serving just three years of her five-year term.

    CEO Of Royal Canadian Mint To Resign, Citing Desire To Find More Balance

    Rain, Melting Snow Pose Flooding Concerns Across B.C. As Evacuations Lift

    Rain, Melting Snow Pose Flooding Concerns Across B.C. As Evacuations Lift
    Many people forced from their homes by flooding in southern British Columbia have been allowed to return, but officials say there are still areas of concern in many parts of the province.

    Rain, Melting Snow Pose Flooding Concerns Across B.C. As Evacuations Lift

    B.C. Files Constitutional Challenge Of Alberta's Fuel Restriction Law

    B.C. Files Constitutional Challenge Of Alberta's Fuel Restriction Law
    The British Columbia government filed a constitutional lawsuit Tuesday countering an Alberta government bill that would limit fuel being sent to the province.

    B.C. Files Constitutional Challenge Of Alberta's Fuel Restriction Law

    Piano Teacher In Coquitlam, B.C., Charged With Sexual Assault, Interference

    Piano Teacher In Coquitlam, B.C., Charged With Sexual Assault, Interference
    Police in Coquitlam, B.C., say additional charges have been laid against a piano teacher accused of sexually assaulting his students.

    Piano Teacher In Coquitlam, B.C., Charged With Sexual Assault, Interference

    Two Police Officers Injured During Arrest In Victoria, B.C.

      The Victoria Police Department says patrol officers were called to a residential building in the city's downtown on Sunday after a man reportedly tried to kick in the door of a suite.

    Two Police Officers Injured During Arrest In Victoria, B.C.

    Surrey Mayoral Elections: Let The Race Begin

    Surrey Mayoral Elections: Let The Race Begin
    “Surrey evolve from a modest suburb into the region’s second metropolitan centre and a globally recognized leading edge city.”

    Surrey Mayoral Elections: Let The Race Begin