A canceled flight, a missing refund

Question: I don’t know if this is a lost cause, because it happened more than two years ago. But I thought I’d ask. We booked a roundtrip ticket for our son to fly from Dallas to Boston through Travelocity on ATA Airlines in July 2005.

His outbound flight was in September and his return would have been in December. But that fall, ATA discontinued its Boston-Dallas route and canceled the return ticket.

After many e-mails and hours on the phone, Travelocity told us that it was up to the airline to process the refund, but that the money would be refunded to Travelocity, which would then credit us.

We have since received many promises that the refund was on the way, both by phone and e-mail. But we still don’t have the refund. We inquired about it again last week, to which we received a form letter saying our “issue detailed requires further research by our Consumer Relations Department.”

Travelocity asked for a copy of the actual billing statement from my card issuer along with my son’s trip ID or ticket numbers. “Once received, we will be able to investigate and will contact you directly,” they assured us.

Our e-mail included all past messages from them, which had the original confirmation and price of the ticket ($276). What should we do? – Niel Bratteli, Paris, Texas

Answer: I think you’ve already done enough. It’s time for ATA and Travelocity to return your money. Now.

Under ATA’s rules, also known as its contract of carriage, you were entitled to an immediate refund of the unused fare. I say, “were” because in the meantime, ATA has gone out of business entirely.

Travelocity didn’t live up to its promises, either. Its much-publicized Travelocity Guarantee leaves you with the impression that this should have been handled much differently. “If we learn of an issue from any of our partners or customers that might make your trip less enjoyable – like hotel construction, a hurricane, or an airport closure – we’ll contact you before your trip and help make other arrangements,” it says.

As I review the account of your son’s flight, it seems you weren’t contacted, you weren’t offered an alternate flight, and Travelocity simply kept your money. That’s disappointing.

I think you could have gotten a better answer from Travelocity, if not ATA. I list customer service contacts on my Web site to whom you could have appealed your case. Working the phones on a refund request doesn’t make much sense. Everything needs to be in writing.

Of course, that’s no guarantee that you won’t get caught in a form-letter loop. When I contacted Travelocity on your behalf, it also asked me for your reservation number, even though I had already included it in your file. I guess they wanted to be sure.

After I re-sent your son’s reservation information, a Travelocity representative contacted you and apologized for the delay, adding, “This is not our usual customer service.”

I think that goes without saying. A check for $119, which covers the return portion of your son’s flight, is in the mail.

  • Jim J

    $119 is all that they received from Travelocity? I would think that Travelocity would give them additional cash or travel vouchers as compensation for all of the aggravation that they caused by not issuing a prompt refund or providing a seat on another airline.

  • Josh M

    In this kind of case, right at the time I’d call Travelocity, give them once chance to process a refund, then call my credit card company to dispute/chargeback the fare. Since Travelocity claims to be an agent of the airline (which is why the refund from the airline was supposed to go to them and not the purchaser), let them refund the money and pursue the refund from the airline themselves.

  • http://www.victimsofexpedia.com/mycase.htm John

    I don’t think that travelocity would reimburse more than 119 U$D. In my opinion. Travelocity was attempting to get that money in a very unethical way. He was lucky to get that money back (only because of Mr Elliot).
    I wasn’t so lucky when EXPEDIA tried to scam me (click on my name to read about my case).
    I didn’t receive a penny from EXPEDIA as compensation for thousands of dollar I lost due to their attempt to scam me, and it seems that Mr Elliot couldn’t do anything (or he didn’t want to do anything).
    Anyway, if you book through any of these big travel agencies, you are on your own.

  • Joe Farrell

    All Travelocity’s guarantee states is:

    “During Your Travels: Everything about your booking will be right, or we’ll work with our partners to make it right, right away.”

    Travelocity actually promises nothing. Their ‘promise’ is that they will ‘work with someone else’ to see if it can be made right. Further, the actual promise is that the booking will be right. guess what – the booking they made correctly. In this case, the guarantee is worthless. They did what they promised.

    Now, they certainly ADVERTISE a guarantee that is far above the actual guarantee but the big print giveth and the fine print taketh away has been standard in business since the Romans sold swords in the Trajan Forum.

    Looking at what the actual guarantee says, it is no guarantee at all. And it doesn’t take a lawyer to figure it out.

  • BeFair

    This seems like a big effort for $119. I realize that sometimes, “it’s the principle”, but ……..