
Flight Attendant's Slip Sparks $11M Legal Firestorm
A European getaway ended in trauma for one New York couple after an unexpected burn injury at 30,000 feet turned their vacation into a legal battle — and now they're asking for millions.
The Incident Mid-Flight
On April 3, 2024, Aymara Corbo, 78, and her husband Giuseppe, 86, boarded Scandinavian Airlines Flight SK 1464, traveling from Copenhagen to Oslo. The retired couple, en route to a British Isles cruise, likely expected coffee to help them shake off jet lag. Instead, a flight attendant allegedly spilled an "excessively" hot cup of coffee into Aymara's lap, according to court documents reported by PEOPLE.
The result? Severe burns, permanent scarring, and a vacation largely confined to hotel rooms. Aymara's husband Giuseppe described them as being "pretty much room bound" during what was supposed to be a two-week holiday of a lifetime, according to NDTV.
The Legal Claim
Aymara has filed a $10 million lawsuit against Scandinavian Airlines, claiming the coffee was excessively hot and that its spillage caused her not only physical injuries but also emotional and financial damages.
The lawsuit leaned on international aviation treaties, including the Warsaw and Montreal Conventions, which govern liability for injuries that occur on international flights. It also asks the court to waive standard liability caps typically applied to such cases.
Giuseppe is seeking an additional $1 million for the loss of companionship and economic support stemming from his wife's injuries.
The McDonald's Connection
If this story sounds familiar, that's because it echoes the now-infamous 1992 McDonald's hot coffee case. Back then, Stella Liebeck, 79, suffered third-degree burns from a drive-thru coffee that was served at temperatures up to 190 degrees Fahrenheit — hot enough to cause skin damage in mere seconds.
Liebeck initially asked for $20,000 to cover medical bills, but when McDonald's refused, the case went to trial, and a jury awarded her nearly $3 million in damages before a judge reduced the total to under $650,000.
That case became a lightning rod in the debate over personal responsibility versus corporate accountability, especially after evidence showed that more than 700 previous complaints had been filed about McDonald's coffee being dangerously hot.
A Broader Trend?
The Corbos' case isn't an isolated one. In September 2023, a Southwest Airlines flight saw a 4-year-old child suffer second-degree burns after a flight attendant allegedly spilled hot coffee on him.
A similar lawsuit was filed against Delta Airlines in December 2023 after a woman was burned by hot coffee on a flight from Paris to Seattle, sustaining first- and second-degree burns on her side and abdomen.
These incidents raise concerns about airline beverage safety and whether crew training and equipment are sufficient to prevent serious injuries.
Awaiting Answers
So far, Scandinavian Airlines has not responded to media requests for comment, and Aymara's attorney, Jonathan Reiter, has shared limited details beyond the complaint.
Regardless of the final verdict, one thing is clear: for the Corbos, the aftermath of that morning coffee will last much longer than the flight itself.
References: Woman Sues Airline for $10 Million After Flight Attendant Allegedly Spilled Scalding Hot Coffee on Her: Lawsuit | NYC Woman Sues Airline for $10M Over 'Excessively' Hot Coffee Spilled on Her Lap | US Woman Burned By Hot Coffee On Flight, Sues Airline For $10M | McDonalds' Hot Coffee Case - Read the Facts NOT the Fiction