Road rules0 min ago
Lotto Jackpot
Answers
No best answer has yet been selected by Ace001. 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.For any draw, an alloted percentage of the total prize fund is allocated to each winning combination.
Should there be more than one winning tickets, the fund for that prize level is divided by the number of winning tickets. So if there are five jackpot winning tickets (all six numbers), the prize share is a quarter each.
Note that it is winning tickets - not claimed prizes. Camelot know straightaway how many winning tickets there are (it's all on their computer) so if there are four jackpot winning tickets, but only three claims (someone lost their ticket / didn't realise they had won etc.), then this final qurter share of the jackpot prize fund will be signed over to the 'good causes' fund and not divided amongst the winning claimants.
So yes, Ace001, your two winning tickets will earn you two shares of a divided jackpot.
This happened there was a court case about it.
A syndicate leader bought a ticket personally using one of the numbers used by the syndicate "because she liked the look of the numbers"
The number came out - this effectively halved the jackpot payout of the syndicate members who tried to sue the syndicate leader.
I can't find a reference to this but I distinctly remember reading it. Personally I find it very dubious and wouldn't be surprised if the leader claimed to have bought an Identical number to try to pocket a larger share.
Anybody else remember this?
I thought they were trying it on at first too although on reflection I suppose if somebody else in the syndicate came up with the numbers you could make a case that the choise of those numbers was propriatary to the syndicate.
I don't think you'd have a hope of winning but I guess you could base a case on that