Victoria Beckham had been in love at the first sight with a 200-acre French estate. It was an overgenerous desire to buy still by Victoria's standards.
Being rarely seen at their Domaine Saint-Vincent mansion, Victoria and David decided to put the mansion on the market for a price value of £3 million.
This decision of sale came after the couple had spent a £5 million used to renovate the 19th Century property in order to match the whole house according to her preferences.
Actually, with the sum up of a combined £210 million fortune, the Beckhams doesn't really necessitate to carry on from the sale of the French estate - dubbed Beckingham Palace-sur-Mer - in order just to finance the Cotswolds project. But fashion designer Victoria has at last accepted that paying for workers to preserve the French mansion's enormous expanse of land in their extended nonappearance is an meaningless misuse of money.
It is the newest progress in the Beckhams' property collection, as they recently moved into the stunning £31.5 million home in Holland Park, West London that they had been refurbishing for two years.
The Beckhams paid money for their six-bedroom possessions in the sunny French village of Bargemon, near the Cote d'Azur, for an amount of £1.5 million in 2003. But on Sunday a fellow citizen inform The Mail: 'They are never here anymore. When their children were smaller they used it often but now they are never in France during the school holidays.'
The popular couple attempted to use the vacations to be in Los Angeles if possible. Their children - Brooklyn, 16, Romeo, 13, Cruz, ten, and Harper, four - believe America is their home away from home, following David's career with LA Galaxy. The family likes going there as supposed to visiting France. Just last week the family was spotted in California buying Halloween decorations.
But there may perhaps be a spooky explanation for the sale of Domaine Saint-Vincent, too, as it was formerly reported that the mansion is haunted by the ghost of a previous owner, who took his own life in the study.