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Aug 14 at 1:30 history edited Franck Dernoncourt
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Aug 7 at 14:55 comment added Fattie quite right @GiacomoCatenazzi ..
Aug 7 at 14:54 comment added Fattie @FranckDernoncourt - nothing is binding with airlines :/
Aug 7 at 13:03 history became hot network question
Aug 7 at 8:10 history edited Willeke CC BY-SA 4.0
Made header more concise.
Aug 7 at 6:48 comment added Giacomo Catenazzi And legal binging is difficult. IIRC in the generic rules of aviation, they can refuse baggage on any reason, if it is for safety (no space on the plane). It it similar that they can refuse passengers (e.g. if a seatbelt broke and so not safe to have the passenger). Law is complex and there is (nearly always) a contradictory rule (if you look at details) or more generic rules which take precedence (if you are rich, so with a good lawyer, it is your card "free from prison"
Aug 7 at 6:10 comment added Franck Dernoncourt @NateEldredge thanks, agreed.
Aug 7 at 5:42 answer added Nate Eldredge timeline score: 7
Aug 7 at 5:31 comment added Nate Eldredge Note that even if it's "their problem" in some legal sense, they can certainly make it your problem in the short term, by simply refusing to carry your baggage. You might in principle be able to sue them for any resulting damages, but the resolution would happen long after your vacation or business trip had been ruined.
Aug 7 at 5:02 history asked Franck Dernoncourt CC BY-SA 4.0