
CHICAGO, Dec. 17 (UPI) -- A law professor says United Airlines can't be sued for serving wine to a couple that wound up brawling in the customs line at the San Francisco airport.
James Speta told the Chicago Tribune that in the lawsuit filed by the Japanese couple he expected United to ague that the laws that hold bars liable for damages caused by drunken patrons do not apply in international airspace.
Despite such questions, the couple is forging ahead with its lawsuit, the Tribune said Wednesday.
Yoichi Shimamoto and Ayisha are suing over an embarrassing incident in which an intoxicated Yoichi struck his wife six times amid a quarrel while they waited to go through Customs in 2006.
The couple claimed the flight attendants on their long trip from Osaka to the United States kept serving them complimentary glasses of wine when they were well past their limit.
Legal experts said the case would be a slam-dunk if the drinking had occurred in a restaurant or bar; however international law limits airline liability while in international airspace, and might not apply since the Shimamotos' fracas occurred in the airport and not on the plane.