I have just had an FOS investigator's decision on a dispute case I raised regarding the claim of a refund from my bank under Section 75 rules for a family package holiday which was never provided, and I would appreciate any advice on its validity and how I can argue against it.
A summary of my situation and actions to date:
In 2019 my wife and I organised an expensive package holiday for 7 family members including ourselves, to be taken in 2020. The deposit payment was made with my credit card and the flights portion with her debit card. She was named as Lead Traveller as only one traveller can be named as such.
Due to the covid outbreak the travel agency requested that we postpone to a later date, which we agreed to. We then agreed to a second postponement. On request by the agency for a third postponement to an unknown future date we refused and requested a full refund as per our entitlement under the Package Travel and Linked Travel Arrangements Regulations 2018. The agency refused to provide a refund, citing that our only option was postponement.
I then submitted a Section 75 claim to my bank / credit card issuer for a full refund as I had partly funded the purchase with my credit card and all of the Section 75 criteria (item purchase price between £100 and £30,000, etc.) were valid. The bank denied my claim, stating the following two arguments:
1. The package holiday agreement is in my wife's name and I have only funded the agreement which therefore makes me the financing party only.
2. Only immediate family members are counted as part of a claim and therefore the bank is not liable for additional travellers that are non-related.
I then raised a dispute claim against the bank with the Financial Ombudsman Service.
The FOS investigator decided that the bank has acted unfairly toward my claim and I should be compensated. However, they have interpreted a certain clause in the Terms and Conditions of our package holiday agreement to mean that each traveller has their own individual contract therefore the bank is only liable to repay me for my individual portion of the holiday which is one-seventh of the total amount we paid to the travel agency.
The paragraph in the agreement T&Cs is as follows and I have highlighted in bold the part which I believe is relevant:
Lead Name:
The lead name on any booking with us accepts the full responsibility of collecting the full
balance payable for the booking and indemnifies <the travel agency> against any loss from
any individual failing to pay within your group. The lead name of the group is also responsible
for ensuring that all group members are aware they are bound by our terms and conditions. The
lead name is also responsible for the completion of the online guest list on behalf of all persons
on the booking. It is understood that those booking via email or telephone agree to, and accept
our terms and conditions.
I appreciate that the contractual T&Cs must be applied to all members of the group but I fail to see how this clause can be interpreted as each traveller having an individual contract in terms of financial liability and therefore the bank is only liable to compensate me as an individual traveller, especially if the FOS decision should be based on what is fair and reasonable.
Furthermore, I feel that the debtor-creditor-supplier agreement was for the entire single purchase transaction of the package holiday, thus the Section 75 claim should apply to the entire amount.
Can you please advise on the interpretation of this clause from a legal and/or a "fair and reasonable" standpoint, and offer any other arguments which I can present to the FOS? I will soon need to make a decision on whether to accept the investigator's decision (which I strongly object to) or to disagree with it and have the case taken by an Ombudsman -- with a risk that their decision will be for either less compensation or none at all.
Also, from a legal standpoint is there any legal precedence for the Package Travel and Linked Travel Arrangements Regulations 2018 (or any other regulation) to override the T&Cs of a contract in terms of my situation with the Section 75 refund claim? It would be nice if there is something I can use which negates the need for the above clause to be interpreted in the first place!
If you need any further details please let me know.
A summary of my situation and actions to date:
In 2019 my wife and I organised an expensive package holiday for 7 family members including ourselves, to be taken in 2020. The deposit payment was made with my credit card and the flights portion with her debit card. She was named as Lead Traveller as only one traveller can be named as such.
Due to the covid outbreak the travel agency requested that we postpone to a later date, which we agreed to. We then agreed to a second postponement. On request by the agency for a third postponement to an unknown future date we refused and requested a full refund as per our entitlement under the Package Travel and Linked Travel Arrangements Regulations 2018. The agency refused to provide a refund, citing that our only option was postponement.
I then submitted a Section 75 claim to my bank / credit card issuer for a full refund as I had partly funded the purchase with my credit card and all of the Section 75 criteria (item purchase price between £100 and £30,000, etc.) were valid. The bank denied my claim, stating the following two arguments:
1. The package holiday agreement is in my wife's name and I have only funded the agreement which therefore makes me the financing party only.
2. Only immediate family members are counted as part of a claim and therefore the bank is not liable for additional travellers that are non-related.
I then raised a dispute claim against the bank with the Financial Ombudsman Service.
The FOS investigator decided that the bank has acted unfairly toward my claim and I should be compensated. However, they have interpreted a certain clause in the Terms and Conditions of our package holiday agreement to mean that each traveller has their own individual contract therefore the bank is only liable to repay me for my individual portion of the holiday which is one-seventh of the total amount we paid to the travel agency.
The paragraph in the agreement T&Cs is as follows and I have highlighted in bold the part which I believe is relevant:
Lead Name:
The lead name on any booking with us accepts the full responsibility of collecting the full
balance payable for the booking and indemnifies <the travel agency> against any loss from
any individual failing to pay within your group. The lead name of the group is also responsible
for ensuring that all group members are aware they are bound by our terms and conditions. The
lead name is also responsible for the completion of the online guest list on behalf of all persons
on the booking. It is understood that those booking via email or telephone agree to, and accept
our terms and conditions.
I appreciate that the contractual T&Cs must be applied to all members of the group but I fail to see how this clause can be interpreted as each traveller having an individual contract in terms of financial liability and therefore the bank is only liable to compensate me as an individual traveller, especially if the FOS decision should be based on what is fair and reasonable.
Furthermore, I feel that the debtor-creditor-supplier agreement was for the entire single purchase transaction of the package holiday, thus the Section 75 claim should apply to the entire amount.
Can you please advise on the interpretation of this clause from a legal and/or a "fair and reasonable" standpoint, and offer any other arguments which I can present to the FOS? I will soon need to make a decision on whether to accept the investigator's decision (which I strongly object to) or to disagree with it and have the case taken by an Ombudsman -- with a risk that their decision will be for either less compensation or none at all.
Also, from a legal standpoint is there any legal precedence for the Package Travel and Linked Travel Arrangements Regulations 2018 (or any other regulation) to override the T&Cs of a contract in terms of my situation with the Section 75 refund claim? It would be nice if there is something I can use which negates the need for the above clause to be interpreted in the first place!
If you need any further details please let me know.
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