Metro

Man finds $1M lotto winner in Hurricane Sandy leaves

Money does grow on trees!

A landscaper picking up grimy leaves on a Long Island street after Hurricane Sandy stumbled upon a million-dollar winning lottery ticket.

“This was someone else’s luck, but my ticket!” Marvin Martinez, 27, told The Post.

“My co-worker was blowing the leaves and I was collecting them when I saw the ticket hiding between wet leaves,” he said of his November 2012 find in Bayville. “I still don’t know what made me pick it up.”

But he did and saw that all three numbers on the “Win $1,000 a Week for Life” scratch card appeared to be winners.

“Whoever threw it away probably didn’t realize there was a prize,” said Martinez, who still lives with his mother in a Sandy-ravaged home in Hicksville. “I took it home and showed it to my mom but she didn’t believe it.” It was so wet that they could barely read the ticket “so I left it to dry underneath a lamp,” Martinez said.

He tried to verify he had a winning ticket at a New York Lottery customer service center on Long Island — but the lottery office had lost its power because of Sandy.

When it finally reopened, he explained what happened. “They asked me a lot of questions and said they would have to ­investigate. I forgot about it,” he said.

Three weeks ago, he got a call to meet with Lottery officials because no one else had claimed the ticket — and in this case, “finders keepers” applies.

“A standard and thorough internal security investigation found no reason to believe that the ticket wasn’t rightfully the property of Mr. Martinez,” a spokesman for the New York State Gaming Commission said. “There was no ­report of theft or of a ticket being misplaced.”

“In instances such as these, it’s standard practice for the Lottery to require a one-year waiting period before awarding the prize in case anyone else comes forward.”

But no one else came forward.

Martinez’s win was announced Friday at a Lottery press conference. He got married last month, before he knew he had won — and didn’t tell his wife of his good fortune until Friday, after reporters came to his home. “She’s in shock,” he said.

“I can’t believe. I can’t believe it,” said Miriam Benitez, 24, who works at a Subway sandwich shop.

Martinez elected to take a lump-sum payment of $779,106. After taxes, it’s still a cool $515,612.

“This won’t change the way I live my life,” he said. “I’m still going to keep working six days a week.”

Martinez, who came to America from El Salvador six years ago, plans to send money back home, buy a house for him and his wife, help his mother pay off Sandy repairs “and maybe switch jobs and become a truck driver.”

“My wife and I didn’t go on a honeymoon, so maybe we’ll take a trip to Miami or something,” he said. “I want to keep living a normal life. This won’t change us.”