Marjorie Taylor Greene Is Plotting Something Totally Insane Against Speaker Johnson
How Congress Is Planning to Screw Around With Trump's Anti-Narco-Terrorist Campaign
CNN Host: No Evidence That Trump's Wannabe Assassin Was...Anti-Trump
J6 Pipe Bomb Suspect Had This Online Obsession. It's Not What You Think.
Here's What Former-Anti-Trump Special Counsel Jack Smith Is Up to Now
Children Forced to View Pornographic 'Art' in Class – ACLJ Files a Federal...
Disgraced Wisconsin Judge Hannah Dugan's Trial Begins Monday
Wisconsin Gubernatorial Mandela Barnes Just Lost a Key Endorsement
Turns Out the COVID Vaccine Critics Were Right All Along
Wisconsin Supreme Court Seeks to Defy Federal ICE Detainers. There's Just One Problem.
First Lady Melania Trump Teases New Legislative Initiative in 2026
Don't Go Wobbly on China
Patriot Blasts Somali's: 'We Don't Share an Allegiance Because I'm Black. I'm an...
Karoline Leavitt Shredded The Liberal Media Over Their Fake Concern on the Economy
Student Loan Forgiveness: A Band-Aid on a Trillion-Dollar Wound
Tipsheet

Ridiculous Lawsuit Nominee - Fired Lawyer Sues Firm for $77 Million

A first-year lawyer who was fired from his firm after he burned too many bridges is now suing the firm for $77 million, alleging that they interfered with his job while he was there and hurt his career prospects by letting him go.

Advertisement

The plaintiff says he “immediately began doing superlative work” (his words) and decided that he should take on additional responsibility. So he naturally emailed the partners asking for more, saying “it has become clear that I have as much experience and ability as an associate many years my senior, as much skill writing and a superior legal mind to most I have met” (again, his own words).

The firm calls the suit frivolous, and says that the fired associated was given a severance package. The plaintiff says it wasn’t enough, adding “there's simply no room in a big law firm for an intelligent, creative lawyer with real-world experience, and I had to find that out the hard way” (more of his own words).

In a competitive job market, there’s a right way and a wrong way to distinguish yourself. Alienating your coworkers and bragging to your bosses that you’re smarter than most everybody else at the firm within the first year is probably the wrong way. And filing a high-profile lawsuit against your former employer certainly isn’t the best way to market yourself to potential future employers.

Advertisement

Is this the Most Ridiculous Lawsuit of the Month? Or is it one of these:

Plaintiff who filed over 160 ADA lawsuits caught on tape hiking despite supposed end-stage emphysema.

Young adults sue mother for sending cards without gifts and playing favorites

Xbox Live user claims Microsoft owes him $500 billion for not responding to his legal notice.

Woman struck by fan-thrown football at training camp sues team.

Vote at FacesOfLawsuitAbuse.org.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement