I have to say I think that is the funniest post I have ever read on any Internet forum anywhere.It is a truly wonderful outcome and Judge Godsmark, credit where it is due,appears to have reached a fair, albeit obscure from non legalese interpreters point of view, judgment
You can almost hear the cog wheels turning in Sallie Nae's poor excuse for a brain as he/she reads that judgment over and over again. Each time Sallie Nae reads it Sallie Nae marvels how what appears to be written in plain English, what appears to suggest that Tom was unsuccessful, what looks like doom and gloom could actually mean entirely the opposite. Sallie Nae knows he/she would, as a non-legalese interpreter, normally have been fooled into thinking that Tom had lost his case. But, fortunately those wonderful graduates of the University of YouTube are on hand to put him/her right. Sallie Nae will be forever impressed how legalese interpreters can sift through court documents and identify that "no" means "yes", "yes" means "no", "without merit" means "with merit", "without foundation" means "with foundation", "legally misconceived" means "legally sound" and "no real prospect of success" means "success guaranteed". To Sallie Nae the judgment appears "obscure". Not so to those who can read plain English.