In our May issue of Home On The Course, our free monthly newsletter, attorney Michelle Tanzer, who has worked with scores of golf community developers, wrote about the importance of understanding the covenants and other documents that relate to a development in which you are considering a purchase.  In recent days, two legal judgments provide real life examples of the consequences of reading the fine print -– or not.

        According to one of our favorite sites, GolfDisputeResolution.com, courts in New Jersey and Texas dealt with similar issues of golf course owners’ responsibilities to the residents of adjacent real estate.  In the New Jersey case, the owner of the Ramblewood Golf Club in Mount Laurel thought the Township erred when, in 2006, it passed an ordinance compelling that the 50-year-old golf course be “preserved as a commercial golf course or similar open space activity.”  In 1961, an ordinance granted permission to build the golf course if it was never to be subdivided for home building; however, a “final plat” was never submitted by the developer, and today’s owners suggested, therefore, that no prohibition was in place.  The court did not buy it and rejected the course owner’s suit.

        In Texas, the circumstances were only slightly different but the judgment the opposite.  A jury there found that no legal promise had been made by owners of the Atascocita Country Club, who closed the club two years ago after they failed to find a buyer for it.  Some residents of adjacent properties brought suit, seeking to force the owners to continue operating the club’s golf course on the basis that requirements to operate the property as a golf course were “implied.”  The jury disagreed by a vote of 10 to 2.

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        The next issue of Home On The Course, our free monthly newsletter, will be out in a matter of days.  You can sign up by clicking the box at the top of this column.  Our June edition will make the case that this is a good time to pull the trigger for those contemplating the building of a new home in a golf community.  Entertaining the construction of a house is not for the faint of heart, but the current environment could make it more financially feasible, if not easier.  Sign up today to ensure you receive the June edition when we publish it within the next week.  And, by the way, if you find yourself dreaming about actually building a home on a golf course, we have some nice properties listed for sale at GolfHomesListed.  More properties and homes are being added frequently, so check back often.

        Jim Justice, who rescued the legendary Greenbrier Resort from bankruptcy three years ago and has since pumped hundreds of millions of dollars into its revitalization, including a new underground casino, has purchased the Wintergreen Resort, located an hour west of Charlottesville, VA.

         The timing could not be better for the thousands of property owners and club members at the ski and golf community that abuts the Blue Ridge Highway. Wintergreen, with one of the only viable ski areas within three hours of Washington, D.C., and two diverse and finely conditioned golf courses, nevertheless faced severe financial problems of its own earlier this year when Bank of America suddenly pulled the line of credit it had been making available to Wintergreen for a decade –- shortly after the resort had suffered through one of its warmest winters ever. To its credit, the Wintergreen homeowners association communicated the predicament quickly and clearly to the golf community’s residents and made the tough decisions to cut expenses significantly, including employment.

Wintergreenphotofromdeck

The views from many of the backyards at Wintergreen Resort, including this one from the deck of a condo, are just one of the many "amenities" in the ski and golf community. Photos by Larry Gavrich.

 

          “We intend to take this property to the next level and see tremendous opportunities as we work with the Wintergreen management and staff in developing new membership programs and vacation packages,” said Justice in a prepared release. “The Wintergreen facilities are spectacular and the entire Resort has a tremendous impact on the local and regional tourism industry." Justice’s organization also owns and operates The Glade Springs Resort in Tennessee.

          Wintergreen, in our opinion, has hid its light under a bushel for years, not uncommon for a golf community owned by its residents who sometimes do not appreciate the influence of marketing and branding and are not willing to invest in either. Wintergreen is not on the radar, for example, in the New England market where there are plenty of golfers who ski but two

Wintergreen is not as well known as it deserves to be. That should change under Greenbrier-style ownership.

distinct seasons. At Wintergreen, where the Rees Jones 27-hole course at the bottom of the mountain remains open all year, it is possible to ski and play golf on a single day in January. (The more scenic Ellis Maples designed Devil’s Knob course at the top of the mountain closes annually before Thanksgiving.) To an active baby boomer couple looking for one retirement location, Wintergreen checks almost all the boxes. As a large resort, it is loaded with amenities, including the skiing, snowboarding, and golf, as well as a tennis center with three indoor courts and 19 outdoor clay courts, a full-service spa with 13 treatment rooms, a fitness center, and multiple dining options. Other amenities include the customary swimming pools, a lake and 40,000 square feet of indoor and outdoor meeting space (in case you have a large family or business).

           Retirees and vacationers looking for a private community populated with a small circle of friends and country club services should look elsewhere. But for those who are looking for a reasonably priced vacation or retirement home in an active community within an easy day's drive of New York, Pittsburgh or even Chicago, Wintergreen is worth a look. And now with some Greenbrier pedigree and financial backing from big Jim Justice –- he’s 6 foot 7 inches – the community is on the map.

           Good for them.

           Editor's Note:  For a nice selection of properties for sale at Wintergreen across a range of prices and types, check out our other web site, GolfHomesListed.

WintergreenStoney1lake

One of the three nines on the Rees Jones layout opens with a few hazards, softened by a beautiful view from the elevated tee box. The views from the Devil's Knob course on top of the mountain are even more impressive.