CallawayGolf
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US won this case in the lower court based on a valid interpretation of the law. The appellate court overturned the lower court's decision based on a different interpretation of the same law (or giving preference to an individual over the deeper pockets of the company). The point is that the trustees of the employees' medical insurance fund acting under a federally-mandated fiduciary responsibility requirement had enough justification of their position to get the case into federal court and prevail in that jurisdiction. That means that failing to take this case to court would have been a failure of fiduciary responsibility and the federal government vial the DOL could have taken action against the trustees for a failure of protecting employee funds held in trust. Not only that, but the employees who would have been harmed by this fiduciary failure could have brought a class action lawsuit against the trustees for e same thing. How difficult is that to understand? As I said before not a single dime of the money regained via this lawsuit would have enriched the corporate officers or the shareholders because of how the DOL structured the self-funded insurance program. Corporate greed has nothing to do with this. If you have ever been appointed as fiduciary with a federally mandated responsibility to protect someone else's money, you wouldn't be trying to turn this into an attack on Doug and Scott because you would actually understand the implication of a failure of that duty.They did get spanked in court. I, for one resent the notion presented here by some that it was his "High Priced Lawyer" who got him something he didn't deserve. If you read the decision and some of the underlying case laws, US Airways was trying to gain what the court called a "Windfall" and under most legal doctrine that's wrong.
As I said earlier, the fact that US went after him id yet another clue piled upon the mountain of evidence which accurately displays US Airways Senior Management's attitude towards employees.
I'm not sure what you would call a lawyer who takes $40-60k in fees from a $10k injury settlement, but I certainly wouldn't classify him as having the best interests of his client in mind. Remember the $100k came from an under insurance fund which probably resulted in filling out a form and sending it in to be reviewed by a independent panel. Not a lot of lawyering needed for that big payout.