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‘Godfather’ Horse-Head Mansion Enters Protection Program

‘Godfather’ Horse-Head Mansion Enters Bankruptcy Protection Program

(Bloomberg) -- A storied $125 million mansion in Beverly Hills that was featured in “The Godfather” is in bankruptcy protection.

Real-estate investor and attorney Leonard Ross filed for Chapter 11 protection for the business that holds title to the estate on Sunday, listing $75 million in liabilities. A hearing is scheduled Tuesday in Los Angeles Superior Court where creditors are seeking the appointment of a receiver for the property in a separate lawsuit.

Known as the Beverly House, the mansion was built in 1927 for Milton Getz, executive director of the Union Bank & Trust Co. In 1946, it was bought by William Randolph Hearst who lived there with Marion Davies until his death in 1951.

‘Godfather’ Horse-Head Mansion Enters Protection Program

The house sits on 3.7 acres and includes a 50-foot entry hall, a living room with 22-foot detailed ceilings, a library with hand-carved woodwork, a billiards room, two projection rooms, 19 bedrooms and 29 bathrooms, a commercial kitchen, outdoor terrace seating for 400, an art-deco nightclub, and a seven-bedroom guest house with its own tennis court.

It’s where John F. Kennedy and his wife Jacqueline spent their honeymoon.

And in the 1972 Francis Ford Coppola movie, it’s where “consigliere” Tom Hagen visits a Hollywood studio mogul to persuade him to give a movie role to Don Corleone’s godson, Johnny Fontane. When reason doesn’t prevail, the studio boss wakes up in the morning with the severed head of his favorite stallion in his bed.

The house was put on the market last year, listing for $135 million, according to the website Curbed Los Angeles. The property had also been listed in 2016 with a price tag of $195 million, Curbed Los Angeles said.

Ross has been embroiled in a dispute with private lenders who hold a mortgage on the property. He sued them in September, claiming he was manipulated into a loan agreement four years ago. According to his complaint, the lenders took advantage of Ross, 74, when he was going through a personal tragedy after the loss of his daughter.

The lenders filed a cross-complaint and asked for the appointment of a receiver because, they said, the mansion is filled with period furnishings and artwork that is part of the collateral for the loan and is easily removed. The lawsuit will likely be put on hold as a result of the bankruptcy filing.

--With assistance from Dawn McCarty.

To contact the reporter on this story: Edvard Pettersson in Los Angeles at epettersson@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: David Glovin at dglovin@bloomberg.net, Joe Schneider

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