AUSTRIAN HOME LOTTERY WINNER DRAWN (Update)
23 January 2009
Successful alternative to selling a home...but
perhaps not in New Zealand
The German woman who resorted to Internet lottery
tactics when she had difficulty getting a fair price for
her home in Austria (see previous InfoPowa report) has
announced the successful conclusion of her project and
the winner.
Traude Daniel put up 9 999 tickets priced at Euro 99
($128) each on the Internet and reveals that these were
sold out within days in early December, raising almost
Euro 990 000 ($1 280 000). This exceeded the estimated
value of the luxury 400 metre villa by almost Euro 160
000. Daniel claims that enquiries came in from around
the world, including Brazil and the United States.
"The response was amazing. ... We got e-mails from
around the world," she said.
The winner of the home is Walter Egger, an Austrian
who's ticket was drawn Tuesday in the southern city of
Klagenfurt.
Reports indictate that the success of Daniel's pilot
scheme has fired up other house sellers in a difficult
market, but according to the New Zealand Herald
newspaper, similar plans in that country are unlikely to
be approved.
Christchurch real estate couple Brad and Janice Maxwell
are trying it out in New Zealand, putting a $100 price
tag on their online tickets which would give a limited
number of winners the opportunity to bid on a home.
Although Maxwell characterises the scheme as an auction,
he has been warned by the government's Department of
Internal Affairs that the scheme is illegal. The
Department's Gambling Compliance Manager, Debbie Despard,
said that under New Zealand gambling law such a scheme
would be illegal on several grounds.
"There is a huge element of chance in this so-called
auction in which people pay to participate," she said.
"It is also online gambling, which the [Gambling] act
defines as 'remote interactive gambling'. Gambling with
prizes exceeding $500 can only be conducted by societies
raising money for authorised charitable purposes, but
this sales scheme is conducted by a private person for
personal profit and cannot be licensed by the
department," she explained.
Maxwell claimed he had received significant public
support for his project, with sellers offering around
$20 million in properties for auction under the scheme.
He said the Internal Affairs stance would not kill his
idea, although if it needed modification he would be
happy to work with the appropriate government officials.
He said if he were forced to shut down the auction, he
would. "But what I would really like is an opportunity
to work with the [department] to see how we may modify
the system."
Online Casino News Courtesy of
Infopowa
More news here.
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