Nigerian lawyers seek £1m from Oxford Varsity for ‘wrong definition’

Some Nigerian lawyers are seeking one million pounds from the University of Oxford, over alleged wrong definition of the words “Mortgagee and Mortgagor”.
The said words are as contained in the Oxford mini reference dictionary and Oxford English mini dictionary.
The lawyers, Messrs Ogedi Ogu, and Emmanuel Ofoegbu, have sent a letter of notice of intention to sue to the Registrar, University of Oxford, Wellington, London, demanding the sum of 1 million pounds for the losses they suffered in their transactions, when they relied on the said wrong definition of the words.
The lawyers asserted that the Oxford English mini dictionary and the Oxford mini reference dictionary defined the word “Mortgagee” to mean a borrower and the word “Mortgagor to mean a lender.
They further contended that the said dictionary definitions were wrong and misleading as in a mortgage transaction, the word “mortgagee” connotes a lender while a “mortgagor signifies a borrower.
Consequently, the lawyers are demanding that the University of Oxford pays to them the sum of 1 million pounds for the wrong definitions of words in the said dictionaries for which they acted to their own detriment.
In addition, they asked that the University of Oxford and Oxford University Press, issue a worldwide notice of the errors complained of within seven days from the date of the said notice.
The said notice was conveyed to the Registrar of the University of Oxford on November 9, 2016.