Thursday, 4 December 2014

CHINESE BUSINESS MAN SUING THE KARDASHIANS

Sticky situation: A Chinese businessman, Jianxiang Huang, is suing his realtor after they let the Kardashians film in his vacant home for an episode of their reality show

According to Daily mail , a Chinese man is alleging that the Kardashians stayed in his newly purchased Calabasas home and filmed an episode of Keeping Up With The Kardashians there without his permission.
Jianxiang Huang and wife Li Weihong are now suing their property manager who they say they asked to take care of the house - which they bought in 2012 - while they stayed in China.

owls were not stacked the way the couple had left them, the salt, pepper and sugar had all but disappeared, oil was splattered on the kitchen backsplash and a bedsheet was missing with a new set of sheets folded on one of the beds.
To top it off, the couple also discovered a pair of Pittsburgh Steelers slippers in a closet and found that the utility bills were extraordinarily high with a gas bill of more than $300 one month and a water bill higher than $300 another.
Huang was then alerted by another neighbour that they'd recognised his house in an episode of KUWTK titled All That Jazzzzzzz.
To add insult to injury, when Huang watched the episode in question he saw Khloe and Kourtney viewing the interior of his home and commenting on the 'bad feng shui', and therefore humiliating him on TV in front of millions of viewers.
At the time of filming, Khloe was going through her separation drama with husband Lamar Odom and looking for somewhere temporary to stay. She decided to look at a vacant home next to her sister's house as it was so convenient.
Huang and his family were staying in Asia until they were ready to make the move to the US where they planned to live after their children's English was fluent enough to attend school. 
Huang and Weihong's attorney said in a statement: 'They were shocked that someone had been allowed to apparently set up camp in their new family home.
'We have asked for a jury trial, to determine money damages owed to plaintiffs, and to expose this type of conduct and deter it from happening to others.' 
Huang is now suing the realtor for a variety of things including breach of contract, not acting fairly or in good faith, breach of fiduciary duty, trespassing and aiding and abetting a trespass.


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