Mike:
That's great stuff. Looks like your case was Malouf v. Dallas Athletic Club, 837 S.W.2d 674 (Tx. App. 1992).
The Ohio case you referenced appears to be Patton v. Westwood Country Club, 18 Ohio App.2d 13 (1969), in which the court noted: "One nationally known amateur, Judge Don C. Miller, of Notre Dame's famed ‘Four Horsemen,’ employs such an educated slice regularly. It is a matter of common knowledge that he can curl a drive around a Thujopsis dolobrata one hundred and fifty yards out and split the fairway ahead of it. This is one of his things of life. An uneducated slice apparently is a thing of life for some Westwood members or guests."
For what it's worth, the Malouf court ruled for the golf course and held that the plaintiff failed to prove trespass or negligent redesign (though from a GCA standpoint, the latter is debatable), and the Patton court held that the homeowner, who bought the property and built the house despite knowing that a golf course abutted her land, had come to the nuisance and was not entitled to injunctive relief.