Like President Obama taking on the Little Sisters of the Poor over their religious objection to Obamacare, pop singer Katy Perry now finds herself in a legal battle with a Catholic convent to buy their $10 million property.
Once housing the Sisters of the Immaculate Heart of Mary, the Los Feliz Villa in Los Angeles became a hot commodity when Katy Perry offered $14.5 million to buy it. After further research into Katy Perry's lifestyle, the sisters did not like the idea, prompting a legal battle of ownership with the archdiocese.
The nuns most objected to Perry's past visit to Salem where she participated in spells and witch walks, and visited the town's oldest witchcraft store.
"[I would] not be very happy at all if Perry got the property," said Sr. Rita Callanan. "I do not like Katy Perry's lifestyle."
"I gave a lot of the things from the internet to show the archdiocese what kind of woman she was," Callanan continued. "Some of the things she does are disgusting."
Sr. Callanan has now employed the highest judicial authority in the Vatican to sue Gomez over property ownership in civil court.
"Perry is reportedly willing to pay $10 million in cash for the property, and an additional $4.5 million to buy and renotave a house on the property currently housing priests," reports CM. "The sisters want to sell the property to a restaurateur, Dana Hollister, who has dished out $10 million for a grant deed and is willing to pay up to $5.5 million to the archdiocese to buy out the lease on the priests' home. But concerns revolve around zoning if the land is turned into a commercial property."
Judge Stephanie Bowick of the L.A. Superior Court is expected to hand down a ruling within two weeks. A status conference is scheduled to take place April 4.


