A “legally” haunted New York house is on the market again.
Former owner Helen Ackley — who lived in the Queen Anne Victorian at 1
LaVeta Place in Nyack, from the 1960s to the late 1980s — publicly
asserted the presence of various poltergeists who hailed from the
Revolutionary War era and regularly shook beds, slammed doors and
traipsed the halls with their phantom footsteps.
Her home, which dates back to the 1890s and fronts the Hudson River
just 25 miles northwest of Manhattan, is about to list for $1.9 million
with Nancy Blaker Weber of Better Homes and Gardens Rand Realty.
It has a spooky history, sure, but also a litigious and star-studded one.
It started when Ackley put the allegedly possessed property on the
market in 1989. When she began the process of selling the 15-room,
single-family dwelling to Wall Street bond trader Jeffrey Stambovsky,
she failed to disclose the spectral situation within.
In a lawsuit that would make headlines around the globe and set a
precedent for future real estate transactions, Stambovsky sued Ackley
over the deliberate omission and fought to obtain his deposit while
backpedaling out of the purchase.
Then, in 1991, New York’s Supreme Court ruled that the home was
officially haunted and, in favor of Stambovsky, decreed that Ackley had
the responsibility to disclose the property’s apparent apparitions to
future buyers.
Ghosts be damned, the stylish manor was subsequently scooped up by
film director, screenwriter and actor Adam Brooks, who lived there for
20 years. Brooks reportedly never detected the presence of ghosts.
The home’s current owner, Jewish singer and rapper Matisyahu, also hasn’t reported any supernatural sightings.
“It’s a fun backstory to this gorgeous home,” says Weber, “but none
of the previous three owners over the last few years have seen any
ghosts.”
Read Full Story: NY Post
No comments:
Post a Comment