AITAH for sueing my entitled brother?

A 25-year-old aviation enthusiast experienced a nightmare when his brother allowed three young children to climb on and vandalize his newly purchased Cessna 150. The small two-seater plane, bought with years of savings, sustained over 17,000 euros in repairs after the kids pulled controls, ripped off parts, and jumped on critical components—all while the parents watched without intervening.

The incident quickly escalated to police involvement, and now the owner is considering legal action against his entitled brother. This shocking display of disrespect has sparked debates about property rights, parental responsibility, and family consequences.

‘AITAH for sueing my entitled brother?’

The proud new plane owner invited his brother for an exclusive sightseeing flight in his prized Cessna 150.

So for context me (25 M) just bought my first plane a used cessna 150 and it was my pride and joy it cost me about 70.000€ and a had...

So what happened was I invited my brother to come and fly around in my plane with me basically a sight seeing flight, he ended up bringing his wife and...

What makes the story more complicated is the brother’s unexpected arrival with his entire family, ignoring the plane’s clear two-seat limit.

leo (5 M) Samantha (7 F) and Thomas (11 M) and when I asked him why (I was confused because I have told him the plane is a 2 seater),

he responded with "they're your family be grateful I brought them along" to witch I responded with "the only person that will be flying with me today is you" because...

and all 3 of his kids through a temper tantrum at the same time I ignored them and prepared the plane for engine start before starting the engine I had...

once I came back I was petrified in shock as all 3 of his kids where all over ver my plane Samantha was inside the cockpit pulling and pushing on...

The situation spiraled out of control during a brief absence, resulting in severe damage while the parents remained passive.

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Leo was climbing up the wing strut and treating the plane like a jungle gym griping on to the peto tube and ripping it off,

Thomas was jumping on the elevator trying to break it in witch he succeeded all while my brother and his wife where sitting theyr watching them,

I stopped all of them and screamed at my brother to help me he just said "c'mon kids behave" I screamed at him again Screamed at him to do something...

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I called the cops witch hepled me contain the chaos a plane mechanic said the damages where over 17k and now I'm thinking of sueing him. AITAH?

This incident represents a blatant disregard for personal property and safety, compounded by poor parenting and entitlement. The brother’s decision to bring uninvited guests despite knowing the plane’s capacity, followed by his refusal to supervise or intervene as his children caused destruction, shifts full responsibility onto him. Allowing kids to treat an aircraft like playground equipment not only risks expensive repairs but endangers lives—damaged components like pitot tubes and elevators can make a plane unflyable.

Some might view suing family as extreme or divisive, especially if parents pressure for forgiveness to keep peace. However, the documented police report and mechanic’s assessment provide strong evidence, and absorbing a 17,000-euro loss would reward negligence while teaching no accountability.

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In wider terms, stories like this expose dynamics where “golden children” avoid consequences into adulthood, often at others’ expense. Legal action here serves dual purposes: recouping justified costs and enforcing boundaries. Aircraft ownership demands respect for complex, high-stakes machinery—treating it casually invites disaster. Pursuing damages through court, if voluntary payment fails, is a reasonable step to protect hard-earned investments and deter future entitlement.

Check out how the community responded:

Many users strongly encouraged legal action, stressing the brother’s negligence and the need for accountability.

Beneficial-Cow9724 − NTA. Your brother and his family were extremely disrespectful and caused significant damage to your property. You have every right to sue him for the damages.

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Tar-Nuine − NTA. You have the incident documented with the police, and your mechanic has documented the damage as well.

Only a soft spined moron would let $17,000 of damage slide. Somehow your brother has gotten this far in life without feeling responsible for his family, time for him to...

CarpeCyprinidae − NTA. ripping off the pressure sensor tubes isnt just damage, its making the aircraft potentially unflyable.

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He didnt respect anything about your property that day because he hasnt encountered consequences. Make him encounter some.

Few-Mine7009 − NTA - Sounds like your brother was pissed and just let them on purpose. I would definitely take him to court.

BeardManMichael − NTA Insist that he pay for damages. If he won't help you, then I would sue him.

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A few offered cautionary support, warning against family pressure while urging firmness.

[Reddit User] − YTA if even consider to not sue him. NTA Get the money OP. And not only for damaging your property,

but for failed parental duty ( no idea what the English word is and too lazy to google). He let his children jump ON your plane. Could’ve fallen down and...

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GaidinDaishan − NTA I'd sue them too, if I were you. Don't let up. Don't drop the suit. Your parents might try to convince you not to do it. But...

Some added skeptical or safety-focused remarks to highlight the severity.

CzipiCzapa − Y know he did it on purpose, right?

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chibbledibs − This seems kind of hard to believe to be honest.

Exotic-Army4006 − Nta does he realize how dangerous to allow children to play with a plane? ???? That should be child endangerment

In the end, the plane owner returned from a quick break to find his brother’s unsupervised children causing extensive damage to his cherished Cessna, with the parents offering no real help. Faced with repair costs exceeding 17,000 euros and police documentation, pursuing legal recourse against his brother appears justified to cover the losses.

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Cases like this often divide opinions on family loyalty versus accountability: Would you sue a sibling over property damage caused by their kids? How do you handle entitlement from “golden child” relatives? At what point does forgiveness become enabling bad behavior?

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