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by Jenn S. Posted Thu August 30, 2007 @ 5:09 PM
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I hope your father is doing better. That is the most important thing.
I can't see any reason for the airlines to provide you with any form of refund or credit.
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by Rhet Canter Posted Thu August 30, 2007 @ 4:43 PM
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Did you stop and think about the responses you were going to get before your wrote this letter? Must not have, but even before I read the responses, I already knew what they were going to be. And was I right. Shame on you. Tiss, tiss, tiss for thinking you could.....blah, blah, blah.
It's like you set yourself up for this one. And it doesn't take much to do that on this site. Myself included. Sorry!
Think about that the next time you write a letter on this thing. Unless of course, you like "I told you so!"
BTW.....how's your Father doing? I hope much better. Bless you for taking the time out of your life to take care of him. More of us should do stuff like that. We'd be better people if we did. Myself included.
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by lj Posted Wed August 29, 2007 @ 8:28 PM
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First, I'm sorry about your father. That is always hard and you probably were not even thinking about the ticket during a time like that. Unfortunately, a year is a year and it expired. You had the year to use it and if you felt you were not going to be able to use it, you should have contacted the airline. I have never known any airline to refund a customer for an expired ticket. Sorry and good luck!
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Expired means expired. If a restaurant served you a big meal of expired food, you'd be (quite rightly) outraged.
Purchasing a ticket is a contract, and you didn't keep your side of the bargain by using it in the alotted time. They owe you nothing.
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Purchasing an airline ticket is like signing a contract; you pay to reserve a seat and they expect you to be there for the flight. They were very generous in giving you a full year to use your ticket.
Next time, I would recommend reading the fine print. There's always fine print.
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by S. Brown Posted Mon August 27, 2007 @ 4:04 PM
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You entered into a contract when you originally purchased the ticket and one year is one year - - end of story.
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by Jeanie Posted Mon August 27, 2007 @ 12:47 PM
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As you so pointed out, there is a one-year time frame in which you can use a credit. Stop being such a special snowflake, put your big girl panties on and deal with it.
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Hehe
by ColoradoCOP Tue August 28, 2007 @ 11:30 AM
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Oh no the money she works so hard to earn......oh please...none of us do that.
Drama Queen, admit it, you goofed, suck it up
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by myswtghst Posted Sun August 26, 2007 @ 8:28 PM
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You stated yourself, in plain language, the exact reason why your complaint is pointless. While I sympathize that there was a family illness and you were unable to make your trip, America West has a policy that I highly doubt was not given to you with your ticket, and which you accepted when you purchased your ticket, stating that you have a full year to re-route the funds in your ticket. To me, that seems like a very generous policy.
It is not their fault your father fell ill, and it is not your fault that you forgot about the ticket in your drawer. They did provide the service, you simply did not show up to collect. Therefore, they owe you nothing. Part of receiving what you paid for when you purchase a ticket for a flight or a show is showing up when it says to on the ticket. If they cancelled the flight, you'd have reason to complain. However, you do not.
As a final note, obviously this money is not as great a loss as you seem to note it is above, otherwise you never would have let the ticket languish for that long. I think you forgot, plain and simple, and when you found it, you were disappointed that they made you follow the rules.
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by - Leanne- Posted Sun August 26, 2007 @ 7:09 AM
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This reminds me of a conversation I had with my sis in law who was very angry while she discussed her new mortgage. She insisted to me that if she hurts her back and can't work, the mortgage company must and WILL understand if she cannot make that month's payment, even if it's for six or more months. In other words, too bad. She was even madder when I told her it won't work that way.
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YES
by TwinkleToes Sun August 26, 2007 @ 12:06 PM
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That is probably because she probably has.
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by Firebrat Tracy Posted Sat August 25, 2007 @ 11:20 PM
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As a travel agent, I get fussed at on an almost daily basis by people like you who let their ticket expire.
I'm sure you probably read the agent who informed you of YOUR mistake the riot act, and took it out on her personally. Of COURSE she sounded like a robot!! Do you know how many times a day she probably gets screamed at because of a passengers poor planning?
Welcome to my world, boys and girls...I get to deal with people like THIS every.single.day.
And ya'll wonder why I'm nuts? ;)
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Oh Tracy
by (i still come around so don't get too uppity) vc Sun August 26, 2007 @ 4:38 AM
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by Angelic Princess:) Posted Sat August 25, 2007 @ 11:04 PM
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They won't refund you for an over 2 year old ticket. Get real.
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by Tom S. Posted Sat August 25, 2007 @ 10:54 PM
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"I think keeping customers money without providing a service is dishonest and lacks honor."
Oh please. Let's have a little reality check here, shall we?
You bought a ticket for a seat on a specific flight at a specific date and time. The airline provided that flight for you. YOU chose not to use it after it was provided for you. The airline was not at fault in what happened. YOU were.
The airline, however, was nice enough to allow you to reuse the ticket on another flight for up to a year after the flight YOU bought. The airline was under NO legal obligation to do that for you - and actually stood to lose money on this offer as it already had provided and paid the cost for the original flight and now would be providing and expending money on the second flight. YOU failed to take advantage of the airline's offer. Again, the airline is not at fault.
Learn from this and remember to read the terms of sale of future tickets and to follow those terms if you cannot make your flight. But if you choose not to, take responsibility for your own actions and quit trying to play the victim.
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by DSG12 Posted Sat August 25, 2007 @ 10:26 PM
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Sounds to me like this is entirely YOUR fault.
Yes, I know things come up in life (i.e illness of a family member), but how did you go 18 MONTHS just forgetting about $270 that you never really got anything for??
Why didn't you "cancel" or whatever your ticket shortly after you discovered you wouldn't be able to use it for your planned wedding trip???
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by Blackrack Posted Sat August 25, 2007 @ 10:25 PM
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Expired has a meaning. It means no longer of any value. Therefore, if they refunded you the value of the ticket, it would come to a balance of $0.00.
Case closed.
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by p d Posted Sat August 25, 2007 @ 8:34 PM
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How is it dishonest and how does it lack honor?
You were unable to use it and it expired. They didn't provide the service because you didn't take the flight.
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by donno Posted Sat August 25, 2007 @ 8:03 PM
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In 1997 I was unable to use a ticket I had purchased. I knew at the time it had to be used within year ( I checked because it cost $300, and that was a lot of $ to throw away ).
Like you, I put it in a drawer and forgot about it. I can't remember the airline, but the policy seemed to be similar across airlines.
Like you, I forgot about it until a year and a half went by. I looked at the terms again, and reluctantly threw it in the trash can.
I didn't call the airline, didn't try to get a credit or refund. The policy was clearly stated on the ticket.
I am sure that they get MANY calls like yours from people who have the final reckoning their $ may have flown the coup (I couldn't resist), and I am sure that many people have a hard time accepting facts. It must be very unpleasant for the CSR to break this news to the customer. You ARE their customer, but this is the way airline tickets work.
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by KamenRiderOsaka Posted Sat August 25, 2007 @ 7:39 PM
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I'd like to know why America West was not contacted when you discovered you couldn't go to Mexico? I mean, I understand a sick parent is involved, but this is $270.00. I would have definitely contacted them for cancellation and refund.
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by Fred Flintstone Posted Sat August 25, 2007 @ 6:57 PM
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Maybe you should consider hitch-hiking; you could save $268.25 on each trip and meet some very interesting people in the process.
Get real pal; sounds like you are complaining just to hear yourself complain! An expired ticket is just that EXPIRED!
In closing, if you want to buy something that doesn't expire, go to the post office and get some of those "forever" stamps; 2 years from now you can still use them, maybe you could buy enough and mail yourself somewhere.
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by Cor H Posted Sat August 25, 2007 @ 6:31 PM
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The OP has had the ticket for over two years now. Most merchants will not accept a coupon that has been expired for one year. It is unfortunate the OP failed to use the ticket on time, but the airline is not obligated to honor.
I am certain the customer service representative has had to explain this many times. In this country, we seem to have no comprehension of the meaning of the word "expired".
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your ticket expired over 18 months ago. Did you assume it wouldn't ever expire? You could have contacted the airline at the time to find out how long you had to use it or lose it.
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