Billionaire couple win refund after paying $40 million for a Notting Hill mansion infested with moths

Authored by businessinsider.com and submitted by one_brown_jedi
image for Billionaire couple win refund after paying $40 million for a Notting Hill mansion infested with moths

A billionaire couple won a refund for a moth-infested London mansion they bought in 2019.

The buyers accused the seller of concealing the moth infestation.

A High Court judge ordered the seller to refund much of the cost of the house as well as damages.

A judge ordered a refund for a billionaire couple who paid £32.5 million (about $40 million) for a mansion with a "severe moth infestation."

A UK High Court judge ruled that Iya Patarkatsishvili, daughter of the Georgian billionaire tycoon Badri Patarkatsishvili, and her husband Yevhen Hunyak, can hand the home back to the seller, the property developer William Woodward-Fisher.

Patarkatsishvili and Hunyak purchased Horbury Villa in Notting Hill, west London, in May 2019. However, the judgment states that within days of moving in, they started noticing moths flying around and landing on their cutlery.

The couple found moths in clothes, wine glasses, and toothbrushes and swatted away hundreds a day, the judgment stated.

Pest control companies found that insulation in the ceiling was the source of the issue. The works to replace the insulation cost £270,000, the hearing heard.

The claimants accused Woodward-Fisher of knowingly selling the house with the moth infestation. He was found to have known about the issue since early 2018 but failed to inform Patarkatsishvili and Hunyak.

Woodward-Fisher told the court he had been informed that moths were not vermin and "therefore not relevant to this inquiry."

The judge ruled that Patarkatsishvili and Hunyak should be refunded much of the house's cost, minus £6 million for the time they lived there, plus substantial damages. Woodward-Fisher was ordered to pay the couple £4 million in damages, including £15,000 for their moth-damaged clothes and £3.7 million they paid in stamp duty.

Chris Webber, an attorney at the firm Squire Patton Boggs who represented Patarkatsishvili and Hunyak, said the couple "hope the case will serve as a warning to unscrupulous property developers who might seek to take advantage of buyer beware to sell properties by concealing known defects," The Guardian reported.

Patarkatsishvili is a theater director. Her father, who died in the UK in 2008, was once Georgia's richest man worth $12 billion, per Forbes. Some of his assets passed to Patarkatsishvili.

Woodward-Fisher is a former rower who competed for the UK in the 1970s.

Horbury Villa was built in the mid-1800s and spanned 2,800 sq ft. After being extended, the property covered 11,000 sq ft and featured a pool, spa, cinema and gym in the newly created basement, according to the website of architect Anthony Paine.

gottadance on February 12nd, 2025 at 06:25 UTC »

I moved into somewhere with wool carpets infested wth moths. They destroyed my clothes, shoes, blankets, knitted gifts from my mother, anything that the cat slept on etc. It wasn't just wool, silk and leather either. They chewed through synthetic fabrics to get to protein fibres or when they ran out of them.

I had to deep clean basically daily for several months and either freeze or heat anything they might have laid eggs on to mostly get rid of them and even then, I have brought them with me to every house I've lived in subsequently and every so often, I'll find holes in a wool scarf or something.

The feeling of having an infestation is awful. It makes your skin crawl and you end up obsessed with eradicating them. I definitely think a major infestation is something you should tell a buyer when you sell a house.

trifkograbez on February 12nd, 2025 at 04:36 UTC »

Consumer protection is consumer protection.

ohreallynowz on February 12nd, 2025 at 04:29 UTC »

I mean, Eat the rich ofc but fuck the original sellers if they lied about the house disclosures