
Nipomoās Aaron Adams thought heād found his dream home when he moved into Maria Vista Estates, an 84-acre hilltop development complete with dazzling views of the valleyās lush rolling hills.
That was in July of 2007. Today, as he walks through his neighborhood of vacant million-dollar homesāthe sidewalks cracked and yards overgrown with weedsāhe wonders what could have been.
āItās like being in the Twilight Zone,ā Adams said. āThatās the best way I can describe coming out here. Itās really eerie.ā
Itās like a real-life ghost town or the set of a post-Apocalyptic film: Half-completed, furnished homes stand silent, occupied only by the occasional barn owl or hawk. Gophers have dug holes in the once-pristine landscaping, causing soil to flow out from under foundations into the street.
From his own home, Adams is constantly on the lookout for vandals and thieves, whoāve broken windows and made off with microwaves, stoves, dishwashers, lighting fixtures, and in one case, a water heater.
āThis is a prime example of toxic assets,ā he said. āItās kind of sad to see such a nice subdivision going to hell, but it is what it is.ā
The unfinished houses and leftover building materials still stacked on empty lots serve as testaments to a failed partnership of two businessmen: Santa Maria resident Erik Benham and his associate, Mark Pender.
After more than a decade of planning, Benham began developing Maria Vista Estates in 1999 as an affordable, but upscale, gated community. The project came about in the midst of the hottest real estate market to hit the area in years, and, according to court documents, Benham and Pender counted on the good times to last.
The first phase of the developmentās construction was completed in 2006. Benham built three different models of homes, ranging from 2,100 to more than 4,000 square feet. The homes had an average asking price of $825,000. However, before any of them could be sold, Benham and Pender ran into legal problemsāthe first of many that would plague the partnership.
The Nipomo Community Services District refused to turn on the water meters in the finished Phase I homes, citing unmet design requirements. Maria Vistaās builders had installed sewage cleanouts that matched state requirements, but not those of the district.
In March of 2007, Benham sued the Nipomo Community Services District in San Luis Obispo County Superior Court to get the water turned on. He lost, and the company was forced to fix the sewer lines.
Benham and Pender couldnāt close any home sales until the work was done, and the delay was costly in more ways than one. The company was forced to default on two construction loans, totaling $23.65 million, from L.A.-based Security Pacific Bank. To forestall foreclosure on the development, Maria Vista filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy, listing about $35 million in debts.
The company hoped to sell the homes and pay back its creditors, but by the time the Nipomo Community Services District finally set up the water meters to the completed homes in July, the damage had been done. To make matters worse, the sub-prime mortgage crisis was already underway and multiple sales at Maria Vista fell through due to buyers being unable to secure loans, according to court documents.
Only three lots were sold at Maria Vista Estates by September, including the Adamsā lot, and Pender and Benham faced separate civil lawsuits related to the developmentās postponement.
Work on the project halted with only 25 of the 77 planned homes completed; 15 more under construction, at about 70 percent complete.

In 2008, Security Pacific sued Benham and Pender and a summary judgment was issued against the partnership for the amount of the two loans. Benham also filed for personal bankruptcy, listing Maria Vista among his assets and further muddying the issue.
Pender filed a proposal in U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the companyās reorganization in May. Court documents revealed the development had been appraised at more than $44 million, and Pender planned to auction off the remaining properties and have a trustee take over.
Two months later, Bankruptcy Court Judge Robin Riblet converted the companyās bankruptcy to Chapter 7. The so-called āstraight bankruptcyā allowed Maria Vista to continue operating under the direction of a court-appointed trustee, Santa Maria lawyer Jerry Namba. Riblet also ruled the bank could foreclose on Benham and Pender. Namba appealed the judgment, but was denied.
The saga took another strange twist in November 2008. Security Pacific Bank failed. The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation seized all of the bankās assets, but the question of who owns Maria Vista Estates remains up to the courts to determine.
In an e-mail, FDIC spokeswoman LaJuan Williams-Young said Benham is currently the propertyās owner, however the FDIC is involved in a lawsuit regarding the matter. Eric Early, a Los Angeles lawyer representing the FDIC, wouldnāt discuss any pending litigation.
Benham, who disputes the validity of the lien on Maria Vista, was reached at his Santa Maria office but declined to comment immediately on the developmentās history or current status.
The Sun was unable to locate Pender for comment.
Several bids have been made to purchase the property in the past year. In September, Namba proposed a property sale to Nipomo Acquisition LLC, a Delaware company. According to court papers, Benham opposed the sale for being āprocedurally improper.ā
Adams, who paid more than $700,000 for his home, currently has it listed for sale online at $400,000. He said heās seen a steady stream of contractors and appraisers recently visiting the property and thinks a sale could be in the works. However, heās through waiting.
āIt looks like it might happen, but weāve just heard that so damn many times,ā he said.
Adams still believes the development was a āgreat planā and doesnāt hold any ill will toward Benham or Pender. He said nobody could have foreseen the housing market collapse, though he does have regrets of his own.
āNeighbors would have been nice,ā he said. āWe just kept hanging on, hoping that eventually they would work their way through the litigation and get another developer in here to finish it up.
Ā āIf I had it to do over again, I wouldnāt do it,ā he added. āBut hell, hindsightās 20-20.ā
Contact Staff Writer Jeremy Thomas at jthomas@santamariasun.com.
This article appears in Feb 4-11, 2010.

