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Multi-million Dollar Missing Pants Lawsuit Goes to Appeal

Jim_S

Gone But Not Forgotten
GOLD Site Supporter
Remember the guy who sued the dry cleaners over some lost pants? He's still at it.

Multi-million Dollar Missing Pants Lawsuit Goes to Appeal

A former D.C. administrative judge is back in court this week, but he wasn't on the bench: he is bringing his infamous multi-million dollar lawsuit against a small dry cleaner for losing a pair of his pants before the D.C. Court of Appeals.

Plaintiff Roy Pearson is resurrecting his $54 million lawsuit against the now-defunct Custom Cleaners and its owners, the Chung family, who allegedly lost a pair of Pearson's pants three years ago, prompting him to sue them for $67 million.

Pearson lost the case, and soon afterwards, his job.

Pearson appeared Wednesday before a three-judge appellate panel, more than a year after a D.C. Superior Court judge rejected his claim that he was defrauded by a "satisfaction guaranteed" sign in the store.

D.C. appeals court judges questioned Pearson about whether he thought the sign offered an unconditional guarantee to whatever damages he believed were appropriate.

They also asked whether the South Korean immigrants who owned the business made a good faith effort to accommodate Pearson. Christopher Manning, the Chung's lawyer, argued, "Does it mean what means to a reasonable person? Which is: if there's a problem, we'll try to fix it and if we can't fix it we'll give the value of the garment. Or, does it mean what Mr Pearson thinks it, which is an conditional unlimited guarantee of satisfaction."

Pearson maintained that his lawsuit has merit under consumer protection laws.

Most people, save perhaps only the plaintiff himself, see the case as the epitome of frivolous litigation. For the Chungs, who have had to sell one of their two dry cleaning stores, Pearson's frivolity has substantially affected their livelihood. "No one wins, everyone loses," said Manning.

Pearson has hardly profited from the case either: he is currently filing suit in federal court to get his job back, alleging that he was improperly dismissed. In that suit, however, he is only asking for $1 million in damages.

One commenter noted, "It's just puzzling to see a person go to that extent and then to see the system back it up. It's a lot of nonsense." And another adds, "It's a waste of something. It's a waste of good sense, for one thing."
 

CityGirl

Silver Member
SUPER Site Supporter
Sounds like he presided over one too many frivolous lawsuits and tried to cash in, himself.
 
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