A woman who transferred a BD 91,684 property to a relative to keep debt collectors from seizing it has lost her bid to reclaim it, after the court ruled that the transfer was a legitimate business deal and upheld the dismissal of her case on appeal. She had argued the sale was just on paper, meant only to keep the property safe while she dealt with a lawsuit demanding BD91,684.356 from her. The BD60,000 price recorded in the contract, she insisted, had never been paid. She also claimed there was an understanding that the property would be given back once the legal dust had settled. Instead, she alleged, her relative transferred it to her father-in-law, setting off the dispute. Client Lawyers Baqer Marhoon and Abdulla Al Qadiri, representing the first defendant, said their client was sued alongside her husband, his father, and the Survey and Land Registration Bureau. The plaintiff asked the court to dig into the matter, arguing she had an agreement with the defendants to transfer ownership as a temporary fix. She also sought to prove that the BD60,000 stated in the contract was never handed over.