<font face="Verdana, Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif" size="2">Originally posted by nsx:
If I were a judge, I'd let the two sides bid for a buyout of the other to establish the value of any asset, including FF miles. Simple, really. If one side wanted to claim they have no value, I'd agree and order them transferred to the other side with zero dollar credit to the donor of the miles. As you can see, I have a low tolerance for tricky and dishonest legalisms. (This *proves* that I'm not a lawyer.)
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OK, here is a question. How exactly do you "transfer" them to the other side when they are, by definition, non-transferable? I think by common sense rules, if you have an item that is non-transferable and cannot have a dollar sign applied to it, then it should remain where it is. And besides, the person who sat on the flights is the one that earned them, not the other way around. I dont think miles should be in the same category as a savings account.