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Old Jan 19, 2017, 10:33 am
FlyerTalk Forums Expert How-Tos and Guides
Last edit by: ffay005
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When seeking claims from AY, use this form: https://www.finnair.com/int/gb/infor...vices/feedbackAY will not accept claims by email, phone or in person.

Past decisions of the Court of Justice of the European Union (CJEU) relating to Regulation 261/2004 (by judgment date in chronological order):
  • Sturgeon v Condor (Case C-402/07): Passengers who reach their final destination at least 3 hours late because their flight was delayed are entitled to the amount of compensation laid down in Article 7 of the Regulation.
  • Wallentin-Hermann v Alitalia (Case C-549/07): ‘Extraordinary circumstances’ (which release airlines from their obligation to compensate passengers) do not include aircraft technical problems (unless the problem stems from events which, by their nature or origin, are not inherent in the normal exercise of the activity of the air carrier concerned and are beyond its actual control). See also van der Lans v KLM below.
  • Rehder v Air Baltic (Case C-204/08): Passengers can file a legal claim either in the jurisdiction of the place of departure or the jurisdiction of the place of arrival
  • Rodríguez v Air France (Case C-83/10): The term ‘cancellation’ in the Regulation includes the situation where the aircraft took off but had to return to the departure airport and passengers were transferred to other flights.
  • Eglītis v Latvijas Republikas Ekonomikas ministrija (Case C-294/10): At the stage of organising the flight, the airline is required to provide for a certain reserve time to allow it, if possible, to operate the flight in its entirety once the extraordinary circumstances have come to an end.
  • Nelson v Lufthansa (Case C-581/10): The Court reaffirmed its previous decision (Sturgeon v Condor).
  • Folkerts v Air France (Case C-11/11): Passengers on directly connecting flights who arrive at their final destination at least 3 hours late are entitled to compensation.
  • McDonagh v Ryanair (Case C-12/11): Even where a flight delay/cancellation is caused by ‘extraordinary circumstances’, the airline continues to be under a duty to provide care (in the form of accommodation, meals, transfers between the airport/hotel, telephone calls)
  • Finnair v Lassooy (Case C–22/11): The term ‘denied boarding’ in the Regulation covers cases where boarding is denied because of overbooking, as well as other reasons.
  • Moré v KLM (Case C-139/11): The time limit for filing a legal claim is based on the rules governing limitation periods in the Member State where the claim is filed.
  • Rodríguez Cachafeiro v Iberia (Case C 321/11): The term ‘denied boarding’ in the Regulation includes a situation where, in the context of a single contract of carriage (PNR) on immediately connecting flights and a single check-in, an airline denies boarding to some passengers because the first flight had been delayed and it mistakenly expected those passengers not to arrive in time to board the second flight.
  • Germanwings v Henning (Case C 452/13): The concept of ‘arrival time’, which is used to determine the length of the flight delay, refers to the time at which at least one of the doors of the aircraft was opened, as long as, at that moment, passengers were actually permitted to leave the aircraft.
  • van der Lans v KLM (Case C-257/14): ‘Extraordinary circumstances’ (which release airlines from their obligation to compensate passengers) do not include aircraft technical problems which occur unexpectedly, which are not attributable to poor maintenance and which are also not detected during routine maintenance checks.
  • Mennens v Emirates (Case C 255/15): Where passengers are downgraded on a particular flight, the ‘price of the ticket’ refers to the price of that particular flight, but if this information is not indicated on the ticket, the price of that particular flight out of the total fare is calculated by working out the distance of that flight divided by the total distance of the flight itinerary on the ticket. Taxes and charges are not included in the reimbursement of the ticket price/fare, unless the tax/charge is dependent on the class of travel.
  • Pešková v Travel Service (Case C‑315/15): A bird strike constitutes 'extraordinary circumstances'. However, even if a flight delay/cancellation is caused by an event constituting 'extraordinary circumstances', an airline is only released from its duty to pay compensation if it took all reasonable measures to avoid the delay/cancellation. To determine this, the court will consider what measures could actually be taken by the airline, directly or indirectly, without requiring it to make intolerable sacrifices. Further, even if all of these conditions are met, it is necessary to distinguish between the length of the delay caused by extraordinary circumstances (which could not have been avoided by all reasonable measures) and the length of the delay caused by other circumstances. For the purpose of calculating the length of the qualifying delay for compensation, the delay falling into the former category would be deducted from the total delay.
  • Krijgsman v SLM (C‑302/16): Where a passenger has booked a flight through a travel agent, and that flight has been cancelled, but notification of the cancellation was not communicated to the passenger by the travel agent or airline at least 14 days prior to departure, the passenger is entitled to compensation.
  • Bossen v Brussels Airlines (C‑559/16): On a flight itinerary involving connecting flights, the distance is calculated by using ‘great circle’ method from the origin to the final destination, regardless of the distance actually flown.
  • Krüsemann v TUIfly (C‑195/17): The spontaneous absence of a significant number of flight crew staff (‘wildcat strikes’) does not constitute 'extraordinary circumstances'.
  • Wegener v Royal Air Maroc (C‑537/17): The Court reaffirmed its previous decision (Folkerts v Air France).
  • Wirth v Thomson Airways (C‑532/17): Where there is a 'wet lease' (with the lessor carrier providing an aircraft, including crew, to the lessee airline, but without the lessor bearing operational responsibility for the flight in question), the lessor carrier is not responsible under the Regulation.
  • Harms v Vueling (C‑601/17): For the purpose of calculating the ticket price, the difference between the amount paid by the passenger and the amount received by the air carrier (corresponding to the commission collected by a person acting as an intermediary between those two parties) is included in the ticket price, unless that commission was set without the knowledge of the air carrier.
  • CS v České aerolinie (C‑502/18): For a journey with 2 connecting flights (in a single reservation) departing from an EU member state and to a final destination outside the EU via an airport outside the EU, a passenger who is delayed by 3 hours or more in reaching the final destination because of a delay in the second flight which is operated as a codeshare flight by a non-EU carrier may bring an action for compensation against the EU air carrier that performed the first flight.

European Commission's Interpretative Guidelines (note that this policy document is persuasive, but only the CJEU's interpretation of Regulation 261/2004 is authoritative and binding): http://eur-lex.europa.eu/legal-conte...XC0615%2801%29. National courts do not have to follow the European Commission's Interpretative Guidelines (but are obliged to follow the CJEU's case-law). For example, although the European Commission takes the view that 'missed connecting flights due to significant delays at security checks or passengers failing to respect the boarding time of their flight at their airport of transfer do not give entitlement to compensation' (para 4.4.7 of the Interpretative Guidelines), the Edinburgh Sheriff Court took a different view in Caldwell v easyJet. Sheriff T Welsh QC held that 'the facts proved can properly be characterised as denied boarding because of the operational inadequacies of Easyjet ground staff’s management of the Easyjet queues on 14 September 2014 and their failure to facilitate passage through security check, customs and passport control when asked, in circumstances, where it was obvious the passengers were in danger of missing their flight'.

When AY+ Flight Reason AY Offered AY explanation Won/Lost, How, Time

Summer13 no status (HKG-)HEL-LHR Prior to landing, LHR was closed as the fire services there were unavailable, so the flight was diverted and landed in LTN, where passengers were offloaded. However, the plane then flew from LTN to LHR with luggage in the hold, so passengers had to make their own way to LHR to retrieve their luggage (as AY provided no ground transport arrangements), eventually arriving at LHR and reclaiming baggage over 6 hours later than the scheduled arrival time. Requested 600€ plus transport and phone call costs incurred, but AY only agreed to reimburse transport and phone call costs AY claimed that 'the delay of this flight happened in extraordinary circumstances' Filed claim through ESCP in the County Court in England. AY contested the claim. The Court ruled against AY. In its judgment, the Court cited CJEU's decision in Eglitis and Wallentin-Hermann and rejected AY's defence as the flight diversion only caused a small initial delay. AY failed to discharge its burden of proof that it took all reasonable measures, as evidenced by proper contingency plans and steps to assist passengers at LTN. The delay in arrival at LHR was significantly lengthened by this factor. AY eventually paid the damages and costs awarded by the Court.

Summer13 no status (LHR-)HEL-HKG Technical fault Requested 600€ plus phone call costs incurred, but AY only agreed to reimburse phone call costs AY initially claimed that the technical fault was not foreseeable Filed claim through ESCP in the County Court in England. AY conceded the claim and eventually paid 600€ + phone call costs + court costs.

Fall15 AYG HEL-LHR-US HEL-LHR late, miss connect 200€ voucher, reroute 3,5 hours requested 600€, re-offered 400€ due to <4 hours -> accepted.

Nov15 AYS HEL-AMS Equip swap -> rerouting 3+ hours 400€ cash (as per EC261) or 550€ voucher offered in 2 days accepted

Jan16 AYP KUO-HEL ATR crew shortage, cancelled 50€ voucher Claimed EU 261 + taxi + hotel. NO -> paid taxi+hotel -> escalated to KRIL -> NoRRA offered 250€ voucher. Accepted

Jan16 AYS WAW-HEL "extraordinary crew shortage" 50€ voucher raised to "kuluttajaoikeusneuvoja". They state that crew shortage can usually not be declared an extraordinary -> escalated to KRIL -> AY offered 150€ -> declined -> AY offers 200€ voucher -> Accepted. 8 months to resolve the matter!

Jan16 AA Platinum = OWS BKK-HEL delay, no equip combined 300€ voucher (for 2 pers) extraordinary manufacturing fault of A350 declined offer -> escalated to KRIL -> AY offered 680€ voucher / 400 cash (for 2 pers) -> declined -> KRIL decision Feb18 = AY should compensate 300€ / pax

Q1/16 ?? JFK-HEL diverted back to JFK ?? technical fail, new equip escalated to KRIL -> 600€ offered, accepted

Feb16 ?? (LHR-)HEL-PEK cancelled, re-routed, arrived at PEK with 20 hr delay and, because of this, missed seeing dying grandfather by a few hours ?? 'extraordinary circumstances' due to pilot sickness, AY refused compensation -> filed small claim in England and won (see Guardian article)

Feb16 ?? HEL-PEK 6h delay 150€ voucher manufacture fail of A350 ??

Q1/16 AYG LHR-HEL A350 broke up 50€ voucher ??

?? OWE HKG-HEL 6h delay (A350) 600€*2pers ?? 2 weeks wait only for compensation

?? ?? BKK-HEL 13h delay 600€ cash / 800€ voucher ?? Just 2 days to get compensation, accepted 800 voucher

Q1/16 ?? BKK-HEL misconnect, 6h delay 400/€550€ misconnect raised the discance to apply 600 -> offered 600€ cash / 800 voucher

Mar16 AYP PVG-HEL cancel, reroute, 12h delay 600/800€ cancel&reroute 800€ voucher accepted

?? ?? ?? cancelled, long delay 600/800 technical fault accepted

Mar16 ?? HEL-HKG 8h delay 200€ voucher extraordinary fail A350 escalated to KRIL -> no info

Nov16 OWE (LHR-)HEL-TLL overnight delay nothing NoRRA pilot shortage Claim for EUR 400 filed in the England and Wales small claims track (not ESCP), AY admitted the whole of the claim a few days before the hearing (details)

???16 AYS PEK-HEL cancelled 100/200€ sick pilot, no overtime declined -> escalated to KRIL. No info yet.

Feb17 OWE BKK-HEL-LHR 2h delay in BKK, misconnect in HEL 600€ cash / 800€ voucher ?? Submitted compensation request, AY responded around one week later, accepted 800€ voucher (details)

Feb 2017 AYP KUO-HEL 06:00 cancelled ATR shortage HEL-LHR was missed, at LHR 6 h late €400 in cash or €550 AY voucher. Returning HEL-KUO 23:40 cancelled ATR shortage rerouted to JOE, bus to KUO, at KUO 2h 40min late €250 in cash or €350 AY voucher.

Apr 2017 OWE TLL-HEL-LHR AY118 delayed from TLL-HEL "crew rest" then later, "Try Norra, not us" €400 claimed. Rejected. MCOL in UK. Disputed by AY. County Court civil case, Oxford (10/11/17) Judgement : AY was the operating carrier under EC2111/2005, compensation and costs and expenses awarded.

Apr 2017 OWE TLL-HEL-LHR AY118 delayed from TLL-HEL "crew rest" then later, "Try Norra, not us", then "Delayed due to weather" €400 claimed. Rejected. 2 seperate agencies tried but gave up on the case. European Small Claims Procedure started at Den Haag sub-district court, AY didn't defend. Judgement (11/6/2019): compensation, costs and interest awarded.

Dec 2017 AY Gold AY HEL-KOK operated by Norra canceled due to crew shortage, delay due to reroute >3 hours EUR 250 claimed. Accepted by AY and an alternative of a EUR 350 voucher offered.

May 28 2017 AYP, AY 380 KUO-HEL was cancelled due to lack of planes (admitted by Finnair - Flightradar 24 gold is an invaluable tool for this sherlockholmesing: one KUO flight was cancelled in the previous evening as OH-LKM had broken in HAM and it should have taken care of the next morning KUO-HEL flight 7:30, OH-LKP arrived late from GVA 23:40 and took off to KUO well after midnight being there 01:33, OH-LKP should have flown KUO-HEL flight 6:15 but crew rest prevented this, OH-LKP flew KUO-HEL 7:30 flight instead). Missed LHR connection. Arrived at LHR 5 h 54 min later than planned. EUR 400 or voucher of EUR 600 was offered without any resent.

Dec 2018. HEL-LPA delayed 4 hours because routine maintenance took longer than expected. Pax AY Plat. Compensation paid within 24 hours (offered €400 cash or €550 voucher).

Some more cases from earlier history can be read HERE (unfortunately only in Finnish)

List of National Enforcement Bodies (NEBs) in EU/EEA Member States and Switzerland published by the European Commission (updated: April 2018): https://ec.europa.eu/transport/sites...ent_bodies.pdf

European Commission's guidelines with criteria for determining which NEB is competent for handling complaints (updated: April 2017): https://ec.europa.eu/transport/sites...procedures.pdf

If you decide to engage a claim agency/lawyer to pursue your claim, please first read the Information Notice published by the European Commission (updated: March 2017): http://ec.europa.eu/transport/sites/...gencies_en.pdf

To file a court claim, the CJEU stated in Rehder (see above) the criteria for determining which Member State's court has jurisdiction. If you booked a package combining flight(s) and accommodation, Advocate General Sharpston stated in her Opinion in Flight Refund v Lufthansa (Case C‑94/14) at paras 9 and 59-60 that a consumer claiming compensation under Regulation 261/2004 can file a court claim in the jurisdiction where he/she habitually resides, as an alternative to filing a court claim in the jurisdiction of the airport of departure or arrival.

You can file a claim at a court with jurisdiction to rule on your case either through the national procedure or through the European Small Claims Procedure (ESCP). The ESCP is a primarily written procedure and is available where the claimant and defendant are domiciled in different EU Member States (with the exception of Denmark) for claims up to EUR 2,000 (increasing to EUR 5,000 with effect from 14 July 2017).
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Finnair and EC 261 compensation

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Old Jan 14, 2017, 10:47 pm
  #181  
R2
 
Join Date: Mar 2000
Posts: 938
Originally Posted by HJP
Today AY906 INN-HEL was operated as MUC-HEL. Can someone access information regarding the real reason for this airport change, I will advise my friend to claim for EU261 comp.
What was the reason AY gave for this? It may well be the real reason. They must have communicated something to pax affected.
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Old Jan 15, 2017, 5:16 am
  #182  
HJP
 
Join Date: Apr 2014
Location: HEL
Programs: AY+ Gold
Posts: 428
Originally Posted by R2
What was the reason AY gave for this? It may well be the real reason. They must have communicated something to pax affected.
Pilot was sick, and replacement pilot didn't have permission to fly to INN. They diverted to MUC, and there was some additional delay due to ATC restrictions / poor weather.
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Old Jan 15, 2017, 5:21 am
  #183  
 
Join Date: May 2013
Location: HEL
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Posts: 3,157
Originally Posted by HJP
Pilot was sick, and replacement pilot didn't have permission to fly to INN. They diverted to MUC, and there was some additional delay due to ATC restrictions / poor weather.
I think this would actually be considered as an extraordinary circumstance, for real.
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Old Jan 15, 2017, 6:08 am
  #184  
 
Join Date: Mar 2015
Location: HEL
Programs: AY+ Plat and several other cards
Posts: 645
Originally Posted by lkrt
I think this would actually be considered as an extraordinary circumstance, for real.
There are a couple of airports in Europe requiring special qualification, Innsbruck and Funchal for instance. To maintain such a qualification the pilot must fly certain number of flights in certain time, so practically only a handful of pilots can have it valid, making lkrt's view of it being extraordinary circumstance quite possible.
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Old Jan 15, 2017, 6:18 am
  #185  
 
Join Date: Jun 2014
Location: HEL
Programs: AY+ Gold (OWS)
Posts: 528
Originally Posted by lkrt
I think this would actually be considered as an extraordinary circumstance, for real.
Most likely not. Under the current CJEU practice, extraordinary means that the event has to be completely beyond the control of the airline, i.e. something systematic. This event was very unlikely and unfortunate, but it was not beyond the airline's control to roster someone certified to fly into INN as a cover pilot.
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Old Jan 15, 2017, 5:47 pm
  #186  
 
Join Date: Nov 2015
Location: HEL
Programs: AY GOLD, HH GOLD
Posts: 411
Originally Posted by deissi
Most likely not. Under the current CJEU practice, extraordinary means that the event has to be completely beyond the control of the airline, i.e. something systematic. This event was very unlikely and unfortunate, but it was not beyond the airline's control to roster someone certified to fly into INN as a cover pilot.
+1

There's at least one ruling in UK stating that crew illness is not extraordinary.

And what comes to the INN certification, one should have a certified pilot on standby like they have standby pilots for certain types of planes as well.

So keep on pushing and don't settle for anything less than 400€
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Old Jan 17, 2017, 4:39 am
  #187  
 
Join Date: Jul 2009
Programs: AY Plus Silver
Posts: 17
Originally Posted by deissi
There is no point using external help. Based on this thread, Finnair will give increase their offer to you incrementally as the case progresses in KRIL. If you frequently fly Finnair, a good settlement would be to get a EUR 600 voucher for Finnair flights. A voucher is obviously much better for them than cash settlement, so they may be willing to agree to it.
In my previous communication with Finnair I've already said so but still being denied by Finnair. After that I submitted my complaint to kril.
freeice is offline  
Old Jan 17, 2017, 4:45 am
  #188  
 
Join Date: Jul 2009
Programs: AY Plus Silver
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Thank you reflektia! Good to know!
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Old Jan 19, 2017, 10:27 am
  #189  
 
Join Date: Nov 2013
Location: HEL
Programs: AY, SK, TK
Posts: 7,595
For a while again, sent a 250€ claim from a cancelled NORRA flight. Proposed them to save me my nerves and time from a typical BS answer and nicely just deposit money on Nalles account.
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Old Jan 19, 2017, 10:48 am
  #190  
 
Join Date: Nov 2013
Location: HEL
Programs: AY, SK, TK
Posts: 7,595
And again hating AY refund policy so much that I started pulling together a WIKI of the cases here in this thread. Just to support people here to track and push for EC261 claims towards AY! Keep posting!
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Old Jan 19, 2017, 11:01 am
  #191  
 
Join Date: Nov 2013
Location: HEL
Programs: AY, SK, TK
Posts: 7,595
ffay005, it took me pages to find out your resolution which had taken 8 months, amazing! A question for detail in the WIKI, did you have AYGold at that moment (now you are Plat) IIRC?

Now I am back to post #30 if someone else wants to work on this crazy WIKI. I need a pause
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Old Jan 19, 2017, 2:02 pm
  #192  
 
Join Date: Nov 2013
Location: HEL
Programs: AY, SK, TK
Posts: 7,595
Now I got to bed. #100 posts reviewed into WIKI with some 10 cases. Remaining posts later.
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Old Jan 19, 2017, 3:25 pm
  #193  
 
Join Date: Sep 2005
Location: HEL
Programs: AY Platinum, TK Elite, BT VIP, AA, BA, SK, DL, NT, WB + hotels
Posts: 8,745
Originally Posted by FFlash
ffay005, it took me pages to find out your resolution which had taken 8 months, amazing! A question for detail in the WIKI, did you have AYGold at that moment (now you are Plat) IIRC?
I was actually Silver when I made the claim and when the matter was resolved. Gold shortly after.

There was a plane, their only E70, idling at HEL that night so the CXL was due to pilot shortage. I edited the Wiki.

The funny thing here is that I was actually to fly HEL-WAW as the last leg of a long trip, and then back from WAW on the same plane, using the second and last leg of my initial positioning flight. I planned to have a quick bite at the lounge (they've got great food there!) and buy cheap vodka and cigarettes

Anyway, since HEL-WAW was cancelled, the return was of course cancelled as well. I made the choice of seeking compensation for my cheap Y flight as AYS first, and planned to seek the second compensation as AYG travelling in J when the first matter was resolved.

When we finally reached the agreement after 8 months, I then sent the other claim for HEL-WAW, J class, AY Gold. Got the exact same €50 offer and a reminder that they do not compensate if you seek more than 6 months after the flight as this is "Nordic contractual law". This of course is complete BS. Anyway, I took the €50 because otherwise it would have landed on the same Norra person's desk, and I wanted to avoid explaning to her what the point of travelling back and forth on the same plane is, except for trying to cash in €500 in compensation money of course
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Old Jan 20, 2017, 4:23 am
  #194  
 
Join Date: Jun 2014
Location: HEL
Programs: AY+ Gold (OWS)
Posts: 528
Originally Posted by ffay005
When we finally reached the agreement after 8 months, I then sent the other claim for HEL-WAW, J class, AY Gold. Got the exact same €50 offer and a reminder that they do not compensate if you seek more than 6 months after the flight as this is "Nordic contractual law". This of course is complete BS.
What the heck. 1) EC261 is certainly not "Nordic contractual law"; 2) "Nordic contractual law" does not apply here (Finnish law does to a certain extent); 3) Finnish law provides that a monetary claim becomes time-barred in three years, and not six months.

Claiming that they are not liable to pay when the matter is open to interpretation is one thing, but this is very, very disappointing behavior from AY.
deissi is offline  
Old Jan 20, 2017, 5:53 am
  #195  
 
Join Date: Nov 2013
Location: HEL
Programs: AY, SK, TK
Posts: 7,595
Originally Posted by deissi
What the heck. 1) EC261 is certainly not "Nordic contractual law"; 2) "Nordic contractual law" does not apply here (Finnish law does to a certain extent); 3) Finnish law provides that a monetary claim becomes time-barred in three years, and not six months.

Claiming that they are not liable to pay when the matter is open to interpretation is one thing, but this is very, very disappointing behavior from AY.
+1.
I did actually push one >1 year old case and they came to me with this BS 6 months, and I told them exactly as deissi points out and they started khm, ööö, ähhh, okay, this time only
They really treat their customers like a bunch of stupid sheep
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