I am a bit ashamed to start this thread after reading so much about Gobby's holiday situation, but I suppose one person's great suffering doesn't negate my very slight woes.
Sorry it's a bit long and thanks for the patience of anyone who reads it all the way through!
The history of this is as follows:
1. I booked a holiday for my wife and small daughter, flying in November to Turkey with what now turns out to be a very poor quality tour operator, through a direct selling travel agency (not one of the evil Teletext-only operators, but a national firm with something of a better reputation). The deposit of around £300 was paid by credit card; the remainder was paid by cheque.
2. The tour operator cancelled the holiday with 5 weeks to go.
3. The travel agent phoned me to say what had happened. They didn't offer a replacement holiday (and nor did the tour operator); they did attempt to sell me a completely different (and far more expensive) equivalent holiday but I wasn't having that. Eventually they refunded me all the money paid (but not a penny more).
4. I asked the travel agent where my compensation was. They claimed not to be responsible/not to have a clue/whatever.
5. I wrote to the travel agent asking them for my compensation. I was asking for the contractual amount of compensation for cancellation by the tour operator - a measly £10 per passenger or £30 in total.
6. After a month, I got a letter back from the tour operator, via the travel agent, saying "we've refunded you the price of the holiday and that's all you are entitled to". No explanation for why the contractual terms don't apply.
7. I complained to the credit card provider under s.75 CCA asking them to refund me the £30. They temporarily credited my account, failed to bother to sort it out with the tour operator or travel agent, and then re-debited my account.
So now, 6 months later, I have obtained precisely no redress and no compensation.
Bear in mind that, the whole time, I've only been seeking the £10 per head contractual cancellation compensation - not the cost of buying another holiday at 5 weeks' notice which would have been significantly more. In fact, we travelled in January to Tunisia instead and the total holiday cost was probably only slightly more.
The credit card company have been appalling throughout. I've written to them several times, phoned them several times, been lied to them*, and still got nowhere.
* The last time I phoned their main call centre, they told me that they'd spoken to the travel agent and the travel agent had agreed to refund me. The travel agent's call logging system shows no contact from the credit card company since last year.
The credit card company keep asking for supporting documentation - but, in this case, there is virtually none. The whole transaction was done on the phone. I've already sent them a copy of the tour operator's Ts & Cs (but they could have got these online themselves anyway).
I am somewhat despairing of what to do. I have thought about a LBA with an attachment of all the documentation once again. Does anyone have any other suggestions?
I know it's only £30, but it's the principle at this stage. If I was really stroppy I should have been seeking the cost of an alternative, last minute, holiday, but I'm not trying to be that difficult at all!
PS - the only possible legal justification that I can see for the tour operator not to pay the compensation is that their Ts & Cs exclude them from having to compensate where the cancellation is due to force majeure. I honestly don't believe that this is the case - I 100% believe that they chose to cancel the charter flight because they hadn't sold enough tickets. But even given that, they could have flown us from another airport, or on another airline, so it's a very feeble reason to fail to supply our holiday.
Both the tour operator and the travel agent are in breach of the ABTA code because they failed to attempt to provide a substitute holiday, but I get the impression that ABTA are a waste of space and don't really want to go down that route if it's going to be a waste of time and effort.
Sorry it's a bit long and thanks for the patience of anyone who reads it all the way through!
The history of this is as follows:
1. I booked a holiday for my wife and small daughter, flying in November to Turkey with what now turns out to be a very poor quality tour operator, through a direct selling travel agency (not one of the evil Teletext-only operators, but a national firm with something of a better reputation). The deposit of around £300 was paid by credit card; the remainder was paid by cheque.
2. The tour operator cancelled the holiday with 5 weeks to go.
3. The travel agent phoned me to say what had happened. They didn't offer a replacement holiday (and nor did the tour operator); they did attempt to sell me a completely different (and far more expensive) equivalent holiday but I wasn't having that. Eventually they refunded me all the money paid (but not a penny more).
4. I asked the travel agent where my compensation was. They claimed not to be responsible/not to have a clue/whatever.
5. I wrote to the travel agent asking them for my compensation. I was asking for the contractual amount of compensation for cancellation by the tour operator - a measly £10 per passenger or £30 in total.
6. After a month, I got a letter back from the tour operator, via the travel agent, saying "we've refunded you the price of the holiday and that's all you are entitled to". No explanation for why the contractual terms don't apply.
7. I complained to the credit card provider under s.75 CCA asking them to refund me the £30. They temporarily credited my account, failed to bother to sort it out with the tour operator or travel agent, and then re-debited my account.
So now, 6 months later, I have obtained precisely no redress and no compensation.
Bear in mind that, the whole time, I've only been seeking the £10 per head contractual cancellation compensation - not the cost of buying another holiday at 5 weeks' notice which would have been significantly more. In fact, we travelled in January to Tunisia instead and the total holiday cost was probably only slightly more.
The credit card company have been appalling throughout. I've written to them several times, phoned them several times, been lied to them*, and still got nowhere.
* The last time I phoned their main call centre, they told me that they'd spoken to the travel agent and the travel agent had agreed to refund me. The travel agent's call logging system shows no contact from the credit card company since last year.
The credit card company keep asking for supporting documentation - but, in this case, there is virtually none. The whole transaction was done on the phone. I've already sent them a copy of the tour operator's Ts & Cs (but they could have got these online themselves anyway).
I am somewhat despairing of what to do. I have thought about a LBA with an attachment of all the documentation once again. Does anyone have any other suggestions?
I know it's only £30, but it's the principle at this stage. If I was really stroppy I should have been seeking the cost of an alternative, last minute, holiday, but I'm not trying to be that difficult at all!
PS - the only possible legal justification that I can see for the tour operator not to pay the compensation is that their Ts & Cs exclude them from having to compensate where the cancellation is due to force majeure. I honestly don't believe that this is the case - I 100% believe that they chose to cancel the charter flight because they hadn't sold enough tickets. But even given that, they could have flown us from another airport, or on another airline, so it's a very feeble reason to fail to supply our holiday.
Both the tour operator and the travel agent are in breach of the ABTA code because they failed to attempt to provide a substitute holiday, but I get the impression that ABTA are a waste of space and don't really want to go down that route if it's going to be a waste of time and effort.
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