Patricia Kluge: Billionaire's Ex-Wife Faces Foreclosure

Patricia Kluge, the 1980s society queen and ex-wife of billionaire media mogul John Kluge, has fallen on some hard times. Kluge was famously awarded the largest divorce settlement in history (a reported $1.6 million a week) but she seems to have figured out a way to spend it – and then some.
She's allegedly in default of nearly $23 million on her gilded mansion in Virginia, which made headlines for its outlandish $100 million price tag when it first hit the market in October 2009. Sotheby's didn't get that asking price, nor the drastically reduced $24 million it was eventually priced at. Instead, on Feb. 16, the 23,538-square-foot home will be auctioned on the Albemarle County courthouse steps.
Kluge's house isn't the only possession she's losing: Her antiques and jewelry have already been auctioned through Sotheby's. Her winery was foreclosed on and its inventory also sold off at auction. On top of that, several lots in the Vineyard Estates subdivision she devised for her property were also auctioned.
The Hook reported that according to court records, Kluge borrowed a whopping $66 million for the house, winery and subdivision.
How could Kluge have blown through her fortune and now lost it all?
An Outsized Ambition
From the sound of it, ambition got the best of the nude-model-turned-landed-gentry.
Kluge entered the Virginia wine industry in 1999, flush with cash and an outspoken desire to be the most prestigious winery on the East Coast. That kind of hubris irritated the rest of the Virginia wineries who aimed to promote the state's wines as a whole. Kluge wasn't looking for friends; instead she pumped a reported $50 million into developing the winery. Of that, $27 million was said to be spent on state-of-the-art equipment alone. In comparison, a source at one well-regarded winery down the road says they haven't spent that much in their 30-plus-year history.
Kluge spared no expense. She also lured renowned consultants and a winemaker from France whose salary was rumored to be $1 million. And while most Virginia wineries produce about 5,000 cases a year, Kluge tried to bottle 50,000 to 60,000 cases. But those in the wine industry say her unrealistic timeline is most likely where Kluge went wrong.
As one insider puts it, "The old saying goes: 'how do you make a small fortune in wine? You start with a big one.' But you can't spend like a drunken sailor because it's already expensive.
"You plant three years before you get useable fruit...it takes a decade just to figure out what you're doing," the source says. "The problem wasn't with the grapes or the winemaking, it was bad business."
Interestingly, Kluge's wines were well received. Kluge Estates was a regular winner in the state's Governor's Cup wine awards. But one of her many business missteps was in her pricing. The Kluge Estates New World Red, a Bordeaux-style red blend, was originally priced at $75 a bottle. That's steep for Virginia wine, no matter how good it is.
Bob Kocher, owner of Once Upon a Vine wine shops in Richmond, Va., sells more Virginia wine than any other retailer and is intimately familiar with the challenges of the industry. "The problem with Virginia wines is the first thing they build is a huge, beautiful tasting room that costs a million-and-a-half and they want you to pay for it by charging a high price for their wine. Napa started in barns, they didn't start in tasting rooms. [Kluge Estates] was trying to make a fast dime when they should have made a slow nickel."
The price of the New World Red was reduced several times until it ultimately went for $22 a bottle.
"I don't think she was a person that really knew the wine industry in general and I think she just went overboard telling people she would go global before even she went Virginia-wide," Kocher says. "I think she just overspent."

The Beginning of the End
The winery's debts piled up and Kluge did what she could to save it. She took out multiple mortgages on Albemarle House (above), the home she built with ex-husband Kluge and had lavishly decorated with rare antiques from around the world. In a January 2010 interview, Kluge told Luxist that she and third husband, William Moses, were looking to downsize. What she didn't mention was the true dire financial straits she was in.
A month later the price of Albemarle House was chopped in half, to $48 million. By April, Sotheby's announced it would be auctioning the contents of the estate in its first home auction in 20 years. The auction, which included a $3.8 million Imperial Chinese clock and custom $300,000 sporting guns, was estimated to bring in $14 million. The resulting sale exceeded that, earning $15.2 million. Next on the auction block was Kluge's jewelry. In late April 2010, Sotheby's auctioned her personal jewelry collection, a sure sign of the coming apocalypse for Kluge. That sale earned $5 million.
All was quiet on the Kluge front for the next six months while Kluge struggled to stave off creditors. Until October, when Kluge Estate Winery was hit with foreclosure. Last month the 960-acre winery and vineyards were auctioned but failed to sell when no one stepped up to top lender, Farm Credit, and its $19 million bid. So for now the winery stays in the hands of Farm Credit. Bill Shmidheiser, a lawyer with Farm Credit, said the bank hopes to sell the property and that $19 million is a good deal for any buyer considering the $50 million Kluge and Moses spent creating the winery.
Most recently the winery's inventory was sold at auction. Due to Virginia alcohol laws, only licensed sellers were able to attend. Much to the dismay of the state's wine industry the wine sold at bargain-basement prices and even had to be stopped after one case sold for just $2. A Virginia wine insider says that upset the other wineries who are now expecting a flood of inexpensive Kluge wines to hit the market, devaluing their wines. "It makes us all look amateurish."
The most recent foreclosure to wallop Kluge is that of her Vineyard Estates subdivision. Much to the displeasure of the rest of tony Albemarle County -- which is filled with multi-acre plantations including Thomas Jefferson's Monticello -- Kluge launched a plan to subdivide a portion of her 300 acres into the luxury "Vineyard Estates." The development would offer plots from $1.5 to $13 million and offer a selection of pre-screened architectural plans as well as a "global concierge" service.
Five lots in the 24-lot subdivision -- it's first phase -- went into foreclosure when the partner on the deal, First Colony Corporation from North Carolina, went bankrupt. The subdivision's 122 acres are assessed at $6.9 million and Vineyard Estates LLC owes $8.2 million, according to a property auction notice. Only one house was built in the subdivision as a spec house. In an interesting twist, Kluge and Moses bought that house back at the foreclosure auction: They were its only bidders. The home, Glen Love Cottage, is 6,600 square feet and assessed at $2.76 million. They paid $3.675 and currently live there.
"Vineyard Estates has suffered from a lack of sales as have many other real estate projects during the recent economic downturn," Bill Moses said in a statement.
The Final Straw
In an interview with The Hook, Moses outlined the fall of the winery. Apparently in 2008 an equity investor was lined up to partner with the winery when, on the eve of the banking collapse, Farm Credit called in its $34.8 million loan. Moses says it was a non-monetary default. The winery had simply not met its 2007 sales projections. Kluge and Moses' outsized ambitions had gotten the best of them.
"There was no way we could immediately repay the loan," Moses told The Hook. "We had over-leveraged the company."
And while they tried for a year-and-a-half to desperately to save the company -- negotiating with the bank and selling their belongings -- it still wasn't enough. In the end, Moses said, "it was like swimming laps with lead weights."
Carrie Culpepper blogs about design and travel at CultureFix.wordpress.com.
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Reader Comments (Page 7 of 20)
jlsntx Jan 25th 2011 10:01AM
This line from the article sums it up nicely: "From the sound of it, ambition got the best of the nude-model-turned-landed-gentry" Remember all you rich folks and all you who win large sums of money: You can pull a person out of the trash heap of life, but you can't always pull the life heaped with trash out of the person.
cowgirlpage1 Jan 25th 2011 10:01AM
She's just not too smart is she?
aj Jan 25th 2011 10:01AM
I always hate to hear anyone losing their home but even I have a hard time feeling sorry for her. Will she still get the 1.6 mil a month?
travellindad Jan 25th 2011 10:01AM
Hey, don't hate her. All that money she lost was pumped back into the economy. Lots of tradesmen to build that mansion, how many people were employed building the winery, golf course, etc. The money went back to the people. Better than her sitting on her millions "polishing her nails" around the pool. Money comes and money goes. Those who spend it keep the economy rolling, stupid or not! The only ones who are out are the big banks who called in the loans.
Vlado Jan 25th 2011 10:05AM
Siriusly do we care?!! Easy come easy go and all that money went back to smart people and welfare is back in closet. Gold diggers will have shawl not gold.
Vlad Jan 25th 2011 10:08AM
The only magazine she could do a nude shot for is Field and Stream ...... and It would be the "Game Dog" issue at that ; P
pozboys Jan 25th 2011 10:14AM
The level of discourse here, as usual, never sees the human side to all this,that rich and poor ,no matter their worth,s, are hurting because of this economy!The schemes that she developed, in another economy, probably would have done the usual "money begets money" thing, but ,again, this economy would not allow it! The amount of suffering is becoming common place in every income strata,and the government, taking aim at "to big to fail" financial and insurance business's,with OUR tax money ,bailing out the very institutions that caused this mess,and them then, turning around and instituting draconian methods, to regain leverage over the country, by either charging "juice loan" interest rates,or foreclosing on distressed properties,are not in the least concerned with relief towards those who "saved them!! We are witnessing Capitalism, against Democracy, at its best!!!
thoththebuilder Jan 25th 2011 10:15AM
Anyone who thinks that this lady will go from her former lifestyle to eating Ramen Noodles is a fool. She's not broke! Not broke like regular people go broke. Wealthy people do this all of the time, remember when Donald Trump was allegedly broke because the media took one story and ran with it?
James Jan 25th 2011 10:18AM
Greed will get you every time.
wpattp88 Jan 25th 2011 10:17AM
I have more money then you now..But I will still marry you.
quantmlp71 Jan 25th 2011 10:19AM
This is a modern-day version of the story of the Prodigal Son. Only for her there is no financial forgiveness.
Patricia, welcome to the working class! Or should I say "Patricia, welcome to poverty!"
This goes to show that even otherwise mature adults can be extreme financial fools.
Tanya Jan 25th 2011 10:25AM
MICHEAL and brain don't mix!!!
Oprah, Martha Stewart, the many wives who were the forces behind men making money, the top CEO's who were the most successful through the reccession were WOMEN..........................
Educate yourself idiot! as much as it pains you to join the rest of cilization. How's that cave coming along???
If this person- who happens to be a woman, married a guy who crushed people for money, they both were aweful people then and now- money or not. Kuge was married to her when they spent endless amounts of money in that mansion that could have supported a whole population. A true reflection of evil narcasism!
patricknearbeer Jan 25th 2011 10:25AM
oooohhhh.......i feel so sorry for her. Well i guess i'll be seeing her on the unemployment line.
gabillyjacks Jan 25th 2011 10:29AM
This women sincerely does not know how to handle money & in reality don't need any.
amle1311 Jan 25th 2011 10:31AM
She had no knowledge of to how to be a business woman and clearly did not know what she was doing. What a shame, she could have just lived on the money and had a comfortable life. She is a stupid, greedy, arrogant woman who she deserves her fate.
onthemovenow2 Jan 25th 2011 10:36AM
ALL I CAN SAY IS THIS........... DFC! THOSE WHO HAVE ONE, KNOW THE MEANING.
mama5844 Jan 25th 2011 10:36AM
Playboy is always ready to do spreads on older women...she can go back in the biz.
CAV44 Jan 25th 2011 10:37AM
Be very nice to the people you meet on the way up, because you're going to meet the same people on your way back down........HA!
Babette d'Yveine Jan 25th 2011 10:45AM
Why do I not feel sorry for her?
babette Jan 25th 2011 10:48AM
Why do I not feel sorry for her?