Judge asked to block golf course

A company disputing ownership of the land where the 2016 Olympic golf course will be built has asked a judge to annul all contracts and block construction on the land.
Elmway Participacoes said Thursday it doesn't want the city of Rio de Janeiro and its partners making any deals related to the golf course until a higher court decides who owns the land.
The city previously said it reached an agreement with the other developer who says he owns the land, but after being served a search warrant last week it denied having signed any contracts because the golf course will be a private undertaking.
The course construction was scheduled to begin in October and the goal was to finish it in time for test events early in 2015. But a final ruling on the land ownership, which is in the hands of Brazil's Higher Court of Justice, could take months or even years. The city has been saying it has no Plan B in case the dispute drags on longer.
The course, designed by American Gil Hanse, will host the first Olympic golf tournament in more than 100 years. Hanse will team up with Hall of Fame player Amy Alcott to build the course. The sport was dropped following the 1904 St. Louis Games. Organizers picked Hanse Golf Design over seven other finalists.
Elmway's request asked the judge to ''suspend'' previous deals and to keep the city ''from reaching any future agreements'' with partners who will build the golf course, as well as to ''prevent the defendant from performing any construction'' on the land.
There is no timeline on when the judge may make a decision. The judge may deny the urgency request made by lawyer Sergio Antunes Lima Jr. and ask for the city to present its defense before making a final ruling on the case.
Messages to the city's legal department were not immediately answered.
The city publicly announced in March the deal made with developer Pasquale Mauro and a local construction company to have the course built on the land. The city said it would alter some of the building requirements in the area and, in exchange, Mauro and the construction company would pay for the $30 million course.
A court last week issued a search warrant for the contracts on behalf of Elmway, saying it had the right to see the documents related to the land, which the city said didn't exist.
Local Olympic organizers said they expect the contracts for the course to be finalized by the end of June, and that the city wouldn't be directly involved even though it was responsible for choosing the land and facilitating the agreement. The contracts are expected to involve the Rio 2016 Committee, which will oversee the course, Mauro and the construction company.
A good impression in Rio will be critical in keeping the sport in the games beyond 2020. A decision on that is scheduled to be made by the International Olympic Committee in 2017.