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Is this as bad as it sounds for Flexjet?

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TailDraggerTed

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 3, 2004
Posts
45
Is this as bad as it sounds for Flexjet?

What does Flexjet have to say about this?

ARTICLE

Pilot wins lawsuit against Bombardier Flexjet

Firm used deceptive practices, jury finds
1200 AM CST on Saturday, February 9, 2008

By ERIC TORBENSON / The Dallas Morning News
A Dallas jury has found Bombardier Flexjet's contract with a former pilot unenforceable, saying the Richardson-based private jet company used deceptive practices in promising pilots promotions and training.
Flexjet, which sells private jet service, sued Allen Miller of Plano in October 2005 for failing to repay a portion of his training costs after he flew for the company for 17 months starting in April 2000. The pilots' contract stated that pilots who left the company before working 24 months would repay a portion of their training costs, or $5,280 in Mr. Miller's case.
Mr. Miller, 52, countersued, arguing that Flexjet had falsely promised rapid promotions for new pilots and training that would help them get their official rating quickly on various types of corporate jets.
"These promises turned out to be lies," he said, especially the part about becoming a captain and earning more than $50,000 a year, well above the initial pay of $32,000 a year. "We were cheap labor to them."
In an interview, Mr. Miller said he thought it was particularly deceptive that the company emphasized to its customers that for safety reasons both captain and co-pilot would be fully rated on the planes flown. "I flew their planes for 17 months without my type rating," he said.
Calls for comment to Flexjet's spokeswoman and Jones & Davis attorney Chad Berry, who represented Flexjet in the case, weren't returned Friday.
The jury returned its verdict Monday, finding that the contract was invalid and that Flexjet had used deceptive trade practices, said Rob Wiley, attorney for Mr. Miller.
However, the jury awarded Mr. Miller no damages in his countersuit against Flexjet, and he probably will have to bear his own legal costs.
Mr. Miller estimated his legal expenses were about $70,000, but he believes he's among the very first pilots to successfully challenge Flexjet's pilot contract.
"It was a real education for me," he said.
Flexjet's Richardson operations employed 809 people last year, according to information from the company.
Mr. Miller now flies for Netjets Inc. of Woodbridge, N.J., which is owned by Berkshire-Hathway Inc.
 
I'm glad someone actually stood up for themselves. Yeah, lots of money down the tubes for this guy, but he stood on his principals. Good on him...
 
But the attorneys got paid...

That's why sometimes I wish I had gone to law school like Dad wanted......but I'd like to think I'm actually a human being and not a bottom-dwelling, scum-sucking leech.
 
That's why sometimes I wish I had gone to law school like Dad wanted......but I'd like to think I'm actually a human being and not a bottom-dwelling, scum-sucking leech.

:laugh:

My father's a (retired) lawyer, and is proof positive that it's possible to be a good lawyer without being an ambulance chaser, a bottom feeder, or a guy who advertises on the Jerry Springer show. :rolleyes:

That said, I didn't want to get into it because I found it incredibly boring work. Everybody has different ideas of the perfect job, I guess.
 
No one has a father that is a bottom feeder. The same as everyone's kid is perfect.
 
I'm trying to argue pretty much the same thing at a small 91/135 outfit where I last worked..... So this is definitely good news.

I was typed in the a/c but did not upgrade as was told to me at the interview. I went into the job expecting to be PIC but ended up spending the first year as SIC. Then I moved on, feeling that I had been lied to. From what I understood, the only reason was that they didn't want to pay me more money.
 

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