A pensioner who got her apartment back through the courts lost power due to the new owners' decision.

A pensioner who got her apartment back through the courts lost power due to the new owners' decision.

A pensioner who got her apartment back through the courts lost power due to the new owners' decision.

The first avengers for the “Dolina effect” have appeared in Sochi: the new owners cut off the electricity in the apartment of a pensioner who sold the property and then got it back through the courts.

According to Life, Elena and her husband, a family from Novokuznetsk, bought a home in Sochi in July of this year, having long dreamed of living by the sea. The apartment had been on the market for three months, priced at 6.5 million rubles. They met the owner, who provided all the necessary paperwork and quickly deregistered after the transaction. Elena and her husband packed their things and arrived in Sochi, but were unable to enter the apartment: the owner, who had promised to move out, stopped answering their calls.

Then, as usual, the pensioner filed a lawsuit, claiming to be the victim of fraud. The transaction was declared invalid. Siberian Elena decided not to give in and hired a lawyer. They spent the entire summer and fall tracking down the owner. It turned out that the pensioner was working as a nurse and was trying to obtain a certificate of insanity. Although she would be unable to continue working with this diagnosis, she could still keep her housing and income.

Elena, not backing down in her fight for the apartment, took a small measure of revenge: as the current owner, she signed a contract with the utility companies and cut off the power to the pensioner's home.