Did Mickey take my SUV for a spin?

Question: I recently stayed at the Grand Floridian Resort & Spa at Walt Disney World, and something happened to my SUV that I parked through the hotel’s valet service.

Two days after I checked in, I called the valet number to get my vehicle. But they couldn’t find my keys, and after half an hour of searching, a manager offered to pay for a cab to Disney’s Animal Kingdom, where we were supposed to meet our party.

I was told that I would be called as soon as they found our keys. We visited Animal Kingdom and waited several hours but never received a call. When we returned to the Grand Floridian, I asked why no one had phoned. They said they lost our number.

When I asked how they found our keys, I was told that someone had filled out the envelope incorrectly — using my first name instead of my last. When I pressed further, an attendant admitted that my keys weren’t in the original envelope and that no one knew why my keys were ever removed from it.

At this point, I became suspicious. When they pulled the vehicle around, I noticed that my son’s car seat had been unlatched. I was sure someone else had used my SUV. We also discovered that the movie my son had been watching on the way to Disney World had been moved.

I’m beyond disappointed. When I spend almost $1,000 to stay somewhere for two days I expect that my vehicle will be kept safe. Do I have any recourse? — Lynn Seehafer, Winter Park, Fla.

Answer: When you hand your keys to a hotel valet, you should expect your car to be parked somewhere safe.

Coincidentally, I valet parked my car at a Disney World resort yesterday, and right on the stub they hand you when you surrender your keys, it says they’re liable for … well, nothing.

“Please remove any valuables from your vehicles,” it reads. The company, it adds, “does not assume any responsibility for the loss of any valuables.” In fact, neither Disney nor the company it contracts to handle valet parking services at its resorts is responsible for loss or property damages, according to the disclaimer.

I think a court may see your hotel’s liability a little differently. Just because it says it isn’t responsible doesn’t mean that it isn’t, although I have to tell you, I don’t think you’re going to be the test case.

You did the right thing by appealing to a manager while you were still at the hotel. But you probably could have pushed your case more forcefully. If you believe Mickey had taken your SUV for a joyride and watched your son’s movie, simply expressing your disappointment may not have been enough. You have to tell someone what it will take to make things right.

After you checked out, a brief, polite letter to the hotel might have helped, but resolving this case after the fact would have been problematic. There was no documentation that someone messed with your car (no photos or mileage logs) and no one had taken anything from the car. Where’s the damage?

I contacted Disney on your behalf. A representative called you and apologized for your experience. She insisted that your car didn’t leave the parking lot and that an associate had just turned off your son’s movie when he parked the car. To make up for your trouble, Disney sent you four park tickets and a $50 gift card.

  • Passing Through

    Four park tickets? They’re making up for something… thats for sure.

  • Chicky

    Just goes to show you why it’s a good idea to take out your handy-dandy cell phone camera and take a photo of the odometer right before you hand over the keys. Remember what happened with the Porsche in “Ferris Bueller’s Day Off”?

    It’s a shame you have to be so suspicious these days.

    Disney can afford four park passes. They do understand the concept that goodwill is more valuable than good advertising, and reaches a lot more people. Heck, those park passes didn’t cost a tenth of what they spend on one TV spot.

  • Genna R.

    I appreciate Chicky’s suggestion that you take a photo of the odometer. My husband had this happen once in a hotel in Wash, D.C. He was driving his sporty BWM M3 (which may have been his mistake.) For a variety of specific reasons (including odometer irregularities), he was certain that his car had been driven during his stay. Conveniently, the hotel investigation concluded that security camera had been ‘out of focus’ for that period. Without concrete proof, there was nothing he could do. He’ll be ‘documenting’ the odometer reading from now on.

  • Victor

    When I was in college, I worked as a parking valet and bellman at the Omni International Hotel (now the Sheraton Norfolk Waterside) in Virginia. I can tell you that perhaps 87% off all the horror stories you’ve heard about valets are true. We’d race through the parking garage at blistering speeds, blasting the radio, burning rubber, and having near-collisions on an almost-daily basis. Of course, now I regret having done this, but it was the culture of the place at the time. If someone brought in a fancy sports car, we’d keep it near the front until another sports car came in, and then we’d have a little drag race for about a quarter mile along Waterside Drive on route to the garage. If you drive a boring old SUV, however, you probably don’t have too much to worry about.

  • Lyngengr

    Rather than take a picture of your odometer with a cell phone camera, which may or may not come out, why not write down your mileage on the claim ticket they give you? Make a big deal out of it – when they hand you the ticket, sit back down in the drivers seat, jot down the odometer reading, and then let them know you don’t expect more than a tenth of a mile difference when you pick it up.

  • Chicky

    Or, do both. Even if the photo doesn’t come out, if the valet sees you taking a photo of the odometer AND writing the mileage on the claim check, he or she will be much less likely to do anything with your car other than park it.

    However, on my cell phone, I can immediately see whether the photo is clear or not, and can opt to delete it and take another one. Most phones have this feature, I believe. With the claim check and a time-stamped photo from the cell phone, you’ve got two sources of solid backup — just in case.

  • Matt

    I cant say much at this point as there is pending legal action. But i was the victim of this…the only difference is that the SECURITY GUARD at the hotel i was staying at STOLE my car.

    I will say this. The hotel CAN be held liable, as can the valet company if it is an overt action by one of its employees.