- wording
- BBC News World
5 hours
When Thevamanogari Manivel mistakenly received more than US$7 million in her account, she thought she was the luckiest woman in the world.
But now she and some of those close to her are in a bind.
The Australian justice ruled that he must return the money, in addition to corresponding interest and costs of process.
It all started in May 2021, when the Crypto.com platform processed a pending deposit of 100 Australian dollars (US$68) for a cryptocurrency transaction to be paid into Mannivel’s account.
But the woman, a resident of the southeastern Australian city of Melbourne, did not receive that amount but 10,474,143 Australian dollars (regarding US$7.111.000).
The error occurred when the person in charge of processing the payment entered the beneficiary’s account number in the box for the amount of the transaction, according to Australian media.
Become a millionaire in an instant, the woman did not lack time to manage her new fortune.
In the following months, he transferred most of the money to a joint account with another defendant, allegedly his romantic partner.
The mansion
He also deposited some $300,000 in his daughter’s account and bought a house north of Melbourne in the name of his sister living in Malaysia, named Thilagavathy Gangadory.
With four bedrooms, four bathrooms, a cinema room, a gym and a double garage on an area of more than 500 square meters, the mansion cost him 1.35 million Australian dollars (US$916.000), court documents reveal.
The crypto asset company surprisingly took several months to realize the mistake.
“The plaintiffs allegedly did not realize this material error until a few seven months laterat the end of December 2021,” said Victoria Supreme Court Judge James Elliott, who last Friday issued a verdict in the case.
Sentence
The court agreed with the plaintiff and ordered the return of all the money plus interest and court costs.
And he dictated that Mannivel’s sister must sell the mansionconsidering proven that it was paid in full with the money received by mistake.
Crypto.com’s legal fight began in early February, when it managed to freeze the accounts of the client to whom the millionaire amount was deposited.
When this happened, however, she had already transferred most of the US$7.1 million to those close to her.
His sister became the owner of the mansion two weeks following Mannivel’s assets were frozen.
Thus, Crypto.com demanded that the judge also freeze the bank accounts of the sister, who has now been forced to sell the property.
In the sentence, the judge affirms that the house “was acquired with funds traceable to the undue payment and would never have been owned by Gangadory if that unlawful payment had not been made.”
Therefore, it states, Manivel’s sister “was unjustly enriched by receiving the purchase price of the property for the improper payment.”
Remember that you can receive notifications from BBC News Mundo. Download the new version of our app and activate it so you don’t miss out on our best content.
And he will not only have to sell the mansion, but also pay interest at 10% per year for the time he improperly withheld the assets since the court process began in March, which will cost him an additional $20,000.