ultrarunner
Well-known member
- Joined
- Nov 26, 2001
- Posts
- 4,322
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Verdicts like this get overturned all the time. A DFR case is incredibly technical, and an appeals panel is likely to see things quite differently than a jury of 12 laymen was. And that's assuming that the second jury even awards them any money in the first place.
Verdicts like this get overturned all the time. A DFR case is incredibly technical, and an appeals panel is likely to see things quite differently than a jury of 12 laymen was. And that's assuming that the second jury even awards them any money in the first place.
Lee Moak says no members are going to be assessed...so it must be true!
What do you expect him to say? If he said, "hey, this might bankrupt ALPA" it would be a self-fulfilling prophecy, as every major pilot group runs for the doors.
As far as the comment that APA is who screwed the TWA pilots, that may be true in a philosophical sense but absolutely not in a legal sense. APA had no legal duty to the TWA pilots.
When you belong to a union, you are together for better or worse. You reap the benefits together (gotta love those insurance discounts!) and you pay together.
The judge could have overturned it already. He hasn't. He's letting it go forward. There is a TON of weight when a jury convicts. Especially 12-0. They've heard all the evidence and ruled. Very, very rarely will any verdict of this magnatude get completely overturned.
When you sue your insurance company, you aren't suing your union brothers and sisters. That should mean something. Sorry, but I don't feel it's right to take money out of your fellow union members' pockets.
Spellacy v. ALPA, overturned as a matter of law.
While certainly true in this particular case, this almost never happens (and in Spellacy, as in most of these cases, it was the trial judge who set aside the verdict, something this particular trial judge neglected to do).
The US Court of Appeals, Second Circuit, reviewed the case de novo and affirmed the judgment of the district court. As you know, under the de novo review the case is effectively retried. In Spellacy's case by the Second Circuit.
Courts as you know give a wide degree of latitude to unions with regards to their duty of fair representation. DFR cases rarely succeed, about 5%.
Here you're making it seem like someone else overturned the verdict. As I said, the trial judge himself (Weinstein, I believe) set aside the verdict on a matter of law. The Court of Appeals only affirmed his actions after the plaintiffs appealed that decision. As I said, this is how it usually goes, and it didn't happen in the ALPA/TWA verdict.
Here you're mixing apples with oranges to further muddle the argument. "DFR cases rarely succeed, about 5%," is what you said, implying that ALPA has a 95% chance of overturning this verdict. Baloney. Even if your 5% number is true (personally, I've never seen such a statistic), that would refer to the total cases initiated, NOT cases already won at a jury trial and then later overturned.
Is it still possible that ALPA will prevail and get the verdict set aside? I suppose it's possible. However, it's not anywhere near as likely as you and PCL seem to think.
Bubba
The end is near - I agree with Bubba.
....
Once again I will point out you and your union's lack of integrity. Baghdad Bob? Pot met kettle.Reminds me of Baghdad Bob!
Ahhh... here's the crux of the matter. If an entity screws you financially, you can have that addressed. .....
Even with "entities," I'm generally very opposed to these sorts of suits. For example, I absolutely despise suits against doctors and hospitals for malpractice. It's the incredibly rare case where it's actually justified. I prefer government regulation to avoid these sorts of problems in the first place, rather than relying upon citizens suing corporations and relying upon the courts to sufficiently punish companies and organizations enough to discourage behavior.
Call me crazy, but I am embareassed at the behavior of the union I belong to, I hope it stings because I don't want it to ever happen again.
Just curious.....have any of the people on this thread telling us about all the evils ALPA supposedly committed against the TWA pilots even read the court transcript in its entirety?
Probably none. Most of them probably only read that crap briefing written by Seham that was posted ages ago and wasn't even allowed to be admitted by the judge because it was clear that he wasn't an "expert" as he claimed.
Even with "entities," I'm generally very opposed to these sorts of suits. For example, I absolutely despise suits against doctors and hospitals for malpractice. It's the incredibly rare case where it's actually justified.