If the driver hadn’t been drinking and driving, he wouldn’t have hit them, especially since they were arguing on the sidewalk, which wouldn’t have affected the vehicular lane even if there was so physical altercation, so it’s only fair that the drunken driver bears full responsibility for the accident.
Therefore, in the end, the court ordered the driver to pay Zhang Liang 200,000 yuan in civil compensation. Since Zhang Liang’s elderly parents were still at ho, the money was given to the Zhang Family mbers who ca to claim the body. As for the Gong Family mbers he was arguing with, they had to bear secondary liability, which involved being detained at the Police Station for half a month. They could leave at any ti if they paid a fine.
The eldest brother of the Gong Family felt wronged. He had been injured himself, so why didn’t he receive a single yuan of the compensation, and on top of that, he had to pay a fine?
The reason given was even more ridiculous: the cri of obstructing public safety. Who did he obstruct? Besides not getting the money, he was also fined one thousand yuan?
Whom could he even talk to about this?
Perhaps it was because Zhang Liang had died that the Gong Family realized just how cold and ruthless Gong Mingxia could be. They had initially thought they could use their mother, but now the Old Lady was nowhere to be found. In the end, they could only curse and leave.
The scumbag was gone, and justice had been served, but Gong Mingxia’s mood did not improve.
Although the news coverage made her a sowhat famous local figure and her restaurant business bood more than before, the severe breach of personal information brought her a lot of trouble. For instance, many parents ca to her, talking about how Xiao Xiao’s classmates’ parents did this or that, wanting to get on good terms with her. So even ntioned they had several properties, suggesting Xiao Xiao could try to get along with their children in the future, which scared her to death.
She had seen anxious people, but never this anxious. How old was their Xiao Xiao to be making reservations for her future this early? Weren’t they just chard by the fact that she owned property in Beijing and wanted to take advantage of her?
Gong Mingxia couldn’t be bothered to clarify the truth behind this information, letting them talk. After all, if she said it was false, they would think she was lying. If she admitted it was true, they would start to doubt her. Since either response could lead to unnecessary trouble, why bother explaining at all?
Fortunately, the heat of the situation rose quickly and subsided just as fast. By the end of 2009, they gradually returned to their normal lives.
At the beginning of 2009, the Beijing property was ready to be handed over, but she was too busy at the ti, so it was ng Xiuying who helped rent it out. Renting it out was simple; all she needed to do was find an agency. To sign the lease, she just had to show her face, let them see all the docunts, and the property was rented out.
All eighteen properties were rented out within a year. Despite the size of each apartnt being small, their pri location was ideal for the working professionals in the area, especially since the rent was affordable, at 1,800 yuan a month. These desirable elevator apartnts quickly attracted a stream of potential tenants as soon as they were listed. Who wouldn’t want to live in a new apartnt? The office workers, in particular, valued this, which is why the apartnts rented out so quickly, even without furniture.
She earned a yearly rental inco of 32,400 yuan from her fifteen apartnts, plus a 1,000 yuan deposit from each, totaling 47,400 yuan.
Only rent was collected for the apartnts; tenants were responsible for utilities such as water, electricity, gas, heating, and property managent fees.
In addition, the other three apartnts brought in 72,000 yuan, not including the inco from the smaller apartnt because Gong Mingxia gave all earnings from the small apartnt to ng Xiuying as a hardship allowance. She also occasionally bought clothes and treats for Duoduo, treating her almost like a goddaughter. After all, if not for ng Xiuying’s help in Beijing, her life wouldn’t have been so worry-free.
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