The company that purchased the rights to convert Newton's home into "Graceland West" filed a lawsuit this week in Las Vegas
against Newton, his wife and her 76-year-old mother that claims the
family unreasonably delayed the project to ensure it never opens.
The Newton family
claims the lawsuit is a preemptive strike because they had planned to
sue the company for breach of contract after multiple construction
delays. The family plans to file a counter lawsuit challenging the
allegations made by CSD, LLC.
The
legal wrangling paints an uncertain future for Newton's 40-acre estate
featuring South African penguins, Arabian horses, Impressionist
paintings by Pierre-Auguste Renoir and 17th-century antiques collected
from European castles.
Newton's lawyer, J. Stephen Peek, dismissed CSD's allegations as "salacious" lies and said the Newtons had nothing to do with the project's delayed opening.
"The real substance will come out in time," he told The Associated Press in a brief telephone interview.
The
lawsuit seeks to have the Newton family immediately vacate their lavish
estate, Casa de Shenandoah, and allow the $50 million project honoring
the Las Vegas legend's music career to move forward. Construction plans
for the museum called for an exhibition space, theater, zoo, visitors'
center and other attractions.
Peek said the woman had been fired and described the accusations as an attempt to "obtain financial gain."
Under the terms of the museum deal, Newton, his wife and his daughter agreed to move to a newly constructed $2 million home on the estate so their mansion could be converted into a museum initially scheduled to open in late 2011. The lawsuit claims the family refused to relocate or turn over personal memorabilia.
"It is quite clear that it was always their intention to remain in the Mansion regardless of the terms of the agreement," the lawsuit alleges.
The
company claims Newton's home was in a "sad state of disrepair" when it
purchased the land for $19.5 million in June 2010, with his horses
uncared for and 6-feet-tall animal manure piles covering the grounds.
Peek countered
that the home couldn't have been in disrepair because the TV show "The
Amazing Race" filmed its season finale there in 2009.
He
said CSD failed to obtain necessary building permits, causing emergency
officials to halt construction of the visitor center. The company also
allegedly bullied its employees.
The
Newton family released a statement from Geneva Clark, a partial owner
of the museum, who denounced the allegations made by CSD's manager,
Steven Kennedy.
"He is wrongly accusing the Newtons and mismanaging his role of leadership," Clark said in the statement. Continue Reading
No comments:
Post a Comment