Tuesday, April 26, 2022

The golf course was there when they bought the house, though - right?

 
Erik and Athina Tenczar moved to the Indian Pond Estates house in April 2017. Since that time, they have collected nearly 700 balls from their property.
The $750,000, four-bedroom, 3,000-square-foot house on Country Club Way is in the direct line from the 15th tee of the Indian Pond Golf Course. Flying golf balls have smashed their windows and obliterated the siding of their house, causing costly damages. The couple and their three young daughters have been scared for their safety . They said calls to the country club resulted in little to no response. 

In December 2021, a jury awarded the Tenczars $3.5 million (with interest it totals $4.9M) for damages, and mental and emotional suffering The  country club's lawyer said the club tried many suggestions to fix things. In March 2022, lawyers for the country club filed a notice that it would seek to appeal the case. The homeowners will lose on appeal, because - like I said - the course was there when they bought the house, and they'll lose because they're fuckin' idiots. Juss' sayin'... 

As it happens, I live on (well, actually I'm adjacent to) a golf course, 
and yes - golf balls do ocassionally hit my house. I guess I can sue the course too, right. Nope - I can't. 
Know why? 'CAUSE I'M NOT A JERKOFF... 

... 

... 




3 comments:

  1. And they can now use all that money to buy a house next to an other golf course.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Maybe the course can build a huge, solid fence between it and the house in question. That should solve the problem.

    ReplyDelete
  3. They will move next to the airport then complain about the noise form planes.

    ReplyDelete

The Greek genius you never heard of...

Eratosthenes (l. c. 276-195 BCE) was a Greek astronomer, geographer,  mathematician, and poet best known for being the first to calculate th...