Jackie Chan's billion-dollar mansion was auctioned. The company responded: the incident is in litigation stage

Jackie Chan

Wonderful barrage, all on the client side &xe61d;

reported on September 5 According to Hong Kong media reports, Jackie Chan’s "Naga" mansion in Shanghai’s East District was discovered last month. It will be "foreign auction" at the end of this month, with a market value of about 100 million yuan and a starting price of 71.9 million yuan.

According to the media, the mansion originally sold for 33.6 million yuan, but Jackie Chan was paid 20.6 million yuan as the image spokesperson for the project, which was finally offset by his endorsement remuneration, so he only had to pay another 13 million yuan to buy the house.

The media stated that the builders negotiated with Jackie Chan in private at the time. Because the transaction volume was too low, they were afraid that the digital exposure would be “not good-looking” after being found out by the outside world. Therefore, they hoped not to transfer the ownership. Jackie Chan also agreed. The 100 million luxury house was jointly auctioned, but Jackie Chan has filed a lawsuit to prove that the house is owned by Jackie Chan with the original transaction contract. Jackie Chan admitted to the outside world that the incident was true, saying that the incident was in the litigation stage and involved legal content, so it was not convenient to talk about it.

According to reports, last year Jackie Chan’s company filed a lawsuit to stop the enforcement of the unit. At that time, the court decided to stop the enforcement of the unit involved. However, in June this year, some companies refused to accept the judgment and demanded to revoke the first-instance judgment. Although the luxury house has not been transferred, they still signed a contract for the house transaction, indicating the transaction amount, and proving that it was indeed a purchase.

Over the past ten years, Jackie Chan and his family, including his wife Lin Fengjiao and his son Fang Zuming, have fixed their residences in Beijing. During this period, they also paid water, electricity, and coal fees.

(responsible editor: Hu Mengyao_NK5655)