Skip to main content

Advertisement

Advertisement

Australian seated beside overweight passenger sues Etihad

BRISBANE — Etihad Airways said today (July 31) that it will continue to fight a lawsuit by a passenger who says he was left with back pain because he was seated beside an overweight man on a 14-hour flight from the United Arab Emirates to Sydney.

An Airbus A380 rolls out of a paint hangar during a branding ceremony of Etihad Airways at the German headquarters of aircraft company Airbus, in Hamburg-Finkenwerder. Photo: Reuters

An Airbus A380 rolls out of a paint hangar during a branding ceremony of Etihad Airways at the German headquarters of aircraft company Airbus, in Hamburg-Finkenwerder. Photo: Reuters

Follow TODAY on WhatsApp

BRISBANE — Etihad Airways said today (July 31) that it will continue to fight a lawsuit by a passenger who says he was left with back pain because he was seated beside an overweight man on a 14-hour flight from the United Arab Emirates to Sydney.

Mr James Bassos, of Brisbane, is suing the Abu Dhabi-based airline in the Queensland state District Court over a permanent back injury he says he suffered while trying to avoid his fellow passenger on the 2011 flight. The 38-year-old interior designer is claiming A$227,000 (S$227,393) for medical expenses and lost earnings.

Etihad predicted in a statement today (July 31) that a court-ordered medical assessment would bring the case to a swift end.

“Etihad Airways will continue to oppose the action and now that Mr Bassos will finally face a medical assessment in December 2015 ... we believe that the matter will proceed to an early conclusion,” the airline said.

The airline this week failed to have the lawsuit thrown out of court. In refusing the application, Judge Fleur Kingham said Wednesday she was not convinced that Bassos had no chance of winning. She ordered Mr Bassos’s medical examination in Brisbane.

Mr Bassos says he was forced to twist and contort his body to avoid touching the “grossly overweight” passenger, who was spilling into Mr Bassos’s side of the dividing arm rest.

Mr Bassos says that after five hours, he felt pain and discomfort in his back and asked to be moved, but was told the flight was full.

Half an hour later as the pain became worse, Mr Bassos asked again to be moved and was allowed to sit in a crew seat at the back of the plane, his claim said.

But Mr Bassos said he twice had to return to his allocated seat, including for the final 90 minutes before landing, for safety reasons.

Etihad said in a statement that it was common for a passenger to be seated next to an overweight passenger on a fully booked flight.

Mr Bassos’s claim, filed in 2012, states he suffers back pain, and that his sleep and concentration had been affected and he had been forced to take time off work.

Mr Bassos could not be immediately contacted today. AP

Read more of the latest in

Advertisement

Advertisement

Stay in the know. Anytime. Anywhere.

Subscribe to get daily news updates, insights and must reads delivered straight to your inbox.

By clicking subscribe, I agree for my personal data to be used to send me TODAY newsletters, promotional offers and for research and analysis.