Dan Reiner

dreiner@lohud.com

SCARSDALE - Quaker Ridge Golf Club will have to pay a homeowner about $7,300 for errant golf balls, a Westchester judge ruled last week.

The second hole on the golf course runs parallel with homes on Brittany Close, where Leon and Gail Behar moved into their $3.7 million home in 2007. A 2010 lawsuit filed by the Behars alleged nuisance, trespass and negligence against the club for the dozens of balls that flew into their yard each year.

"All of a sudden, we were bombarded by golf balls," the Behars claimed in court documents.

After two justices initially rejected the plaintiffs' claims on four separate occasions, a panel of New York state appellate court judges reversed the lower court decisions in June 2014. A nine-day trial was held in Westchester Supreme Court between March 3-15 this year.

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According to the court decision, Quaker Ridge counted 103 balls sent into the Behar property over 87 days in 2011.

Both the Behars and the club made attempts to remedy the issue. The Behars spent about $150,000 in 2011 to plant 45-foot trees on their property, said attorney Julius Cohn, who represented the family. In 2015, the club spent nearly $1 million on modifications to the hole No. 2, including moving the tee box and trees to block off the Behar yard, according to club president Marc Friedman. A 40-foot net was also erected on the course's property in 2010.

The club stationed an employee at the second hole for 118 days in 2015 to secure an accurate count of ball incursions on the Behar property; the count found 40 balls may have entered the yard, which equates to about one ball every three days.

"Quaker Ridge has always been good neighbors to the surrounding homes around our golf course," Friedman said. "The significant steps we took to reduce the number of golf balls entering this yard were successful."

Designed by renowned golf course architect A.W. Tillinghast, Quaker Ridge opened in 1918 and annually ranks among the top courses in the country.

The Behars hired valuation expert Daniel Sciannameo to assess temporary damages, whose claims were declared "exaggerated, hyperbolic, and unreliable" by Judge Charles Wood.

"Both at trial and in his report, Sciannameo made wild, sweeping conclusions without any basis," Wood said in his decision.

A letter sent to Quaker Ridge club members said the Behars were seeking in excess of $3.3 million for punitive damages. Wood's Oct. 4 ruling awarded the plaintiffs $7,323.75.

“It should not be unexpected that any house abutting a golf course, including the Behar’s house, would from time to time, receive three, four, five, or more balls on a given particular day of poor swings, and that there could be no liability on the part of a golf course for trespass, nuisance or concomitant damages," Wood said.

Cohn said the Behars "vehemently disagree with the court's decision" and that the family plans to appeal.

Twitter: @reinerwire