Reply (Shutterstock) PENNSYLVANIA — A state superior court has ruled in favor of Acme Markets' claim to a $4.15 million winning lottery ticket that went unsold before being purchased by a store employee after the winning numbers had already been announced. In a ruling issued Dec. 15, Judge Mary Jane Bowes dismissed an appeal filed by Beverlie Seltzer, a former longtime employee at the Doylestown Acme, who argued that she was the purchaser and therefore sole proprietor of the winning ticket. The case dates back to March 21, 2019, when a customer walked into the Doylestown grocery store and requested five PA Match 6 tickets. The cashier used the lottery terminal to print one ticket with five sets of numbers on it, with each set costing $2. After reviewing the ticket, the customer rejected it and asked Acme to print five separate tickets for him, and the rejected ticket was added to a pile of "mistake tickets" that are kept by the store as a matter of policy, according to court documents.