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Tomdarkness | 3 years ago

As someone from the UK I'm a bit confused why he can't seem to get the college to pay him? If a court has ruled that the college has to pay how can they avoid this? In the UK if a company failed to pay a debt then ultimately you can apply to the court for a winding up petition which if they didn't resolve the situation the company would be liquidated by the court.

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drewbeck|3 years ago

Ya it's only been two days since the state supreme court ruling. Oberlin could keep appealing to the feds, which they may do. Imo the "when will we see our money" is a bit silly; an emotional appeals when this process always entails a ton of legal appeals before the …final_final_forReal.PDF decision is handed down.

ifsothen|3 years ago

Only appeal from a state supreme court decision is directly to the US Supreme Court, which is generally not very interested in those kinds of appeals.

tengwar2|3 years ago

From a UK perspective, it is not obvious that they can keep appealing. Here there needs to be a legal basis for an appeal. I am not sure about civil cases, but the criminal case grounds for appeal appear to be:

* new evidence - but only under a set of conditions including that there was a reasonable explanation for the failure to adduce it;

* appeal against sentence.

Notably there doesn't seem to be an option for "we don't like the verdict". A judge must grant a certificate of appeal before the case can go ahead - someone can't decide unilaterally that they will appeal. Appeals are nowhere near as common here as in the USA

coffeeblack|3 years ago

Ah, that makes more sense. So they are still open routes for appeals and the ruling isn’t final yet.

neaden|3 years ago

It looks like the Ohio supreme court just declined to hear the case yesterday, and before that they were appealing the ruling. IANAL but I would assume that it's only now that Gibson's will be able to really go after them for the money.

tptacek|3 years ago

She will in fact get the college to pay her, because the college has no choice. The story is deeply misleading on this point.