In this case, the contract was from A to B to C and the airline offered an alternative of A to C. You can always refuse an offer of an alternative, (ie overbooking etc.) but if the original is no simply no longer available to you and you still refuse the alternative, then the airlines liability is limited to non-provision of the original service.
Common sense when offered an alternative that isn’t convenient is to say it isn’t convenient and discuss other options. “I have a reason to go to B but I can live with being late. Maybe you can get me a later flight to B and upgrade me from B to C?” The airline will usually try to look after you but don’t expect a free round-the-world ticket because a flight was late taking off. It is a negotiation where both sides would like to end up happy, but are only going to try so hard.
Don’t demand your rights or insist on special treatment or you will just discourage the person you are negotiating with from trying to help you. Service personnel have been through this before and will be again. They know your rights better then you do and they know how many people they will have to deal with after you. They do want to help you but a surprising number of people don’t seem to realize that when you are rude or annoying to service personnel, they stop wanting to help you and start wanting to get rid of you.
A ticket is a contract with the airline that they will get you from A to B; if they offer to do that (by any reasonable route, without a substantial delay) and you refuse, they likely don’t have any further obligations to you. You can either take the alternative flight, or refuse it and make your own way.
If you got a refundable or changeable ticket or the replacement ticket would get you to B significantly later than your original ticket, you might be able to change or cancel it for a refund, depending on the exact terms and applicable laws.
Credit:stackoverflow.com‘
4 Mar, 2024
4 Mar, 2024
4 Mar, 2024