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Judge considers fate of L.A. convent Katy Perry wants to buy

Katy Perry, pictured in July 2015. Adam Bettcher / Getty Images

LOS ANGELES — A judge says he believes the sale of a hilltop convent to a businesswoman who wants to turn it into a hotel is invalid.

Los Angeles’ archbishop wants to sell the property to pop singer Katy Perry. But the sale is opposed by the Sisters of the Most Holy and Immaculate Heart of the Blessed Virgin Mary, the order of nuns who own the convent.

Superior Court Judge James C. Chalfant made the comments about the disputed sale but he did not immediately order businesswoman Dana Hollister to vacate the convent.

Chalfant will consider whether to allow Perry or Hollister to pay rent on the property while it is tied up by lawsuits.

Perry has agreed to pay $14.5 million for the convent and an adjoining house of prayer used by priests.

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The “Roar” singer did not attend the hearing.

Another hearing was set for Sept. 15.

The Sisters of the Most Holy and Immaculate Heart of the Blessed Virgin Mary has owned the property for more than 40 years.

For weeks, lawyers for Archbishop Jose H. Gomez, the nuns and Hollister have lobbed accusations of dirty dealings over the convent that sits atop a hill in the Los Feliz neighborhood near Hollywood.

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“It’s a great Los Angeles story and totally unprecedented in terms of all the players,” said Adrian Glick Kudler, senior editor of the real estate blog Curbed LA.

Before it was a convent, the property was a private residence, rarely photographed, and few have ever seen it up close. “It’s really a beautiful, old Hollywood estate,” she said. “You can certainly see why there’s a fight over it. The fight is unique, too. I’ve never seen anything like this.”

Kudler said Hollister’s plan for a hotel is likely to meet opposition from the property’s wealthy neighbors, while Perry wouldn’t be the only star to call the area home.

The archdiocese and nuns agree the property, which was bestowed to the sisters by a devout Catholic who wanted them to keep him in their prayers, should be sold. The two sides are fighting over the control of the sale’s proceeds and whether Perry or Hollister are suitable buyers. The singer, whose parents are protestant ministers, is only tangentially involved in the case and hasn’t filed any motions.

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Filings in the case are full of references to civil codes, religious governance documents and even one lawyer’s paraphrasing of Shakespeare to reflect displeasure with the archbishop’s preference to sell to Perry.

“Something is rotten in the City of Los Angeles,” wrote Hollister’s attorney Randy S. Snyder in a riff on Hamlet. So far, though, no one has quoted the Bible, or any of Perry’s hits.

Yet the filings contain details that could be fodder for screenwriters who toil in the entertainment mecca that sprawls far below the convent.

In May, at the archbishop’s request, the nuns met with Perry to see if a compromise could be worked out. At least two of the five surviving nuns – who had already searched for Perry’s music videos and weren’t pleased with what they saw – continue to oppose the singer purchasing the convent.

The filings also describe a meeting between Gomez and the nuns in which they say he gave them the impression they could control the sale. “Exasperated, the archbishop threw his arms above his head and told the sisters … they could sell the (convent,)” the filings state. “He said, `whatever you want to do I’ll do, but see me first.'”

The church’s lawyers point to discord and management problems within the order a decade ago, which prompted changes that now require the archbishop’s approval of the convent’s sale. Religious doctrines govern the case, the archbishop’s lawyers argue. The nuns counter that only members of their sisterhood can make decisions for the order and civil laws governing property sales are on their side.

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