The battle for the future of the Dominion Club in Western Henrico is moving from the courtroom to the negotiation table.
An entity tied to the golf and country club’s founder and owners has agreed to lend it $1.5 million while the club works through Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection.
The Dominion Club, a private country club with more than 700 members, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy after it was unable to refund millions of dollars in initiation deposits owed to current and former members. (You can read more about that in the original RBS story here.)
Lawyers from both sides confirmed Tuesday that an order has been submitted to allow the Dominion Club to access up to $1.5 million in debtor-in-possession financing.
The financing will be provided by Loch Levan Limited Partnership. The Dominion Club is currently paying monthly rent of $92,700 for the use of the land under the golf course, which it doesn’t own, to Loch Levan, according to court documents.
“The debtor will have funds to make sure it can operate,” said Vernon Inge, an attorney with LeClair Ryan representing the debtor club.
Tyler Brown, an attorney with Hunton & Williams, is representing the creditors.
Dominion Club, along with the related Wyndham community, was built by HHHunt. Hary Hunt owns 4.5 percent of the club, according to court records. HHHunt Corp. owns 0.5 percent, and the Hunt Family Trust owns 95 percent.
With that financing in place, the two sides will begin the process of negotiating how best to manage the club down the road.
“What really matters now is getting negotiations going,” Inge said. “It’s going to be Loch Levan on one hand and the members or the committee representing the members on the other hand negotiating a long-term lease.”
The majority of the creditors in the bankruptcy filing are current and former Dominion Club members, and one of the potential outcomes, both sides have stated, is for the members to take ownership of the club.
“Now it’s a matter of hopefully getting a deal done and a plan filed to transition to a member-managed club,” Inge said.
Michael Schwartz is a BizSense reporter. Please send news tips to [email protected].
The battle for the future of the Dominion Club in Western Henrico is moving from the courtroom to the negotiation table.
An entity tied to the golf and country club’s founder and owners has agreed to lend it $1.5 million while the club works through Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection.
The Dominion Club, a private country club with more than 700 members, filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy after it was unable to refund millions of dollars in initiation deposits owed to current and former members. (You can read more about that in the original RBS story here.)
Lawyers from both sides confirmed Tuesday that an order has been submitted to allow the Dominion Club to access up to $1.5 million in debtor-in-possession financing.
The financing will be provided by Loch Levan Limited Partnership. The Dominion Club is currently paying monthly rent of $92,700 for the use of the land under the golf course, which it doesn’t own, to Loch Levan, according to court documents.
“The debtor will have funds to make sure it can operate,” said Vernon Inge, an attorney with LeClair Ryan representing the debtor club.
Tyler Brown, an attorney with Hunton & Williams, is representing the creditors.
Dominion Club, along with the related Wyndham community, was built by HHHunt. Hary Hunt owns 4.5 percent of the club, according to court records. HHHunt Corp. owns 0.5 percent, and the Hunt Family Trust owns 95 percent.
With that financing in place, the two sides will begin the process of negotiating how best to manage the club down the road.
“What really matters now is getting negotiations going,” Inge said. “It’s going to be Loch Levan on one hand and the members or the committee representing the members on the other hand negotiating a long-term lease.”
The majority of the creditors in the bankruptcy filing are current and former Dominion Club members, and one of the potential outcomes, both sides have stated, is for the members to take ownership of the club.
“Now it’s a matter of hopefully getting a deal done and a plan filed to transition to a member-managed club,” Inge said.
Michael Schwartz is a BizSense reporter. Please send news tips to [email protected].