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Siblings sue airline over weighty issue
[font=arial,helvetica,sans-serif]June 30, 2004
AP
SANTA FE -- A brother and sister from northern New Mexico are suing Southwest Airlines for humiliation after an airline employee told them, in front of other passengers, that they had to buy extra tickets because their weight would cause "comfort and safety" problems for others.
Andrea Kysar of White Rock and Martin McLaughlin of Espanola were booked to fly from Indianapolis to Albuquerque in July 2002 when the incident occurred, according to the lawsuit filed recently in state district court.
The siblings, along with Kysar's husband and daughter, had flown to Indianapolis on Southwest to attend memorial services for their mother. The airline did not invoke the policy requiring additional tickets when they flew to Indianapolis.
The confrontation and the ordeal in general "caused extreme humiliation and severe emotional trauma ... especially to the minor child [Kysar's daughter]," according to the lawsuit, which seeks unspecified damages.
A Southwest Airlines representative did not immediately return a call Tuesday seeking comment.
The company has 30 days to respond to the lawsuit.
An airline representative said in 2002 that the company "regrets any inconsistency in the application of its customer of size policy." A spokesman also said customers sometimes are asked to buy additional tickets on only one leg of a flight, depending on how full flights are.
The airline said gate employees determine whether to enforce the policy, aimed at keeping overweight or large passengers from causing discomfort to passengers seated next to them.
The family ended up returning to New Mexico by bus.
The airline refunded them the cost of their return fare.
According to the lawsuit, Kysar and McLaughlin are "morbidly obese" and called Southwest Airlines before traveling to see whether they needed additional tickets. They were reportedly told they did not.
According to the lawsuit, a Southwest employee told Kysar and McLaughlin they would have to buy additional tickets and "she did not care" that the family had no available cash to do so.
The lawsuit alleged that after the confrontation in front of other passengers, the gate supervisor also refused to let Kysar's daughter and husband, both "average height and weight," to board the plane and return to New Mexico. AP
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