Originally Posted by Reindeerflame
Sounds good, except ordinary persons cannot reasonably be held to know what's in the fine print. The minor transgression likely would be offset by the carrier not doing due diligence to verify that the customer is eligible for a discount. If this is really important to the carrier, they need to be more proactive, such as reading the contract terms to the customer before the customer signs.
Reindeerflame:
Are you a lawyer? May be you are correct, a good lawyer may win such a case... but you are on very thin ice... at the end of the day, a "reasonable" judge might argue that it was "fraud" giving false information, using an AWD ...
Have I used "wrong" AWD's - Yes.
Was it correct - No.
I stopped using "wrong" AWD's - I stopped using Avis after I found out, that US-residents charged 40% more than European residents..