Go Back  FlyerTalk Forums > Miles&Points > Mileage Run Deals > Mileage Run Discussion
Reload this Page >

[PREM FARE GONE] UA: NCL-EWR 600 DKK (mistaken fare) DOT ruled; see wiki for link

Community
Wiki Posts
Search
Old Feb 11, 2015, 11:49 am
FlyerTalk Forums Expert How-Tos and Guides
Last edit by: drewguy
If you've never gone through this process read this before posting!
Note: Please consider that with high probability, United is monitoring this thread, so please pay attention on what you post!

DOT Investigation UpdatesNews Media Updates:

-------

According to USA Today, Ben Mutzabaugh:
United is voiding the bookings of several thousand individuals who were attempting to take advantage of an error a third-party software provider made when it applied an incorrect currency exchange rate, despite United having properly filed its fares. Most of these bookings were for travel originating in the United Kingdom, and the level of bookings made with Danish Kroner as the local currency was significantly higher than normal during the limited period that customers made these bookings.
Note that United has also accidentally cancelled "legitimate" tickets paid for in USD, purchased in USD from LHR... Please check your other tickets if purchased today to ensure they were not unilaterally cancelled.

However, there is no chance at all that you can have your tickets re-instated if you complain to DOT on the basis of DOT rule § 399.88:
§ 399.88 Prohibition on post-purchase price increase.

(a) It is an unfair and deceptive practice within the meaning of 49 U.S.C. 41712 for any seller of scheduled air transportation within, to or from the United States, or of a tour (i.e., a combination of air transportation and ground or cruise accommodations), or tour component (e.g., a hotel stay) that includes scheduled air transportation within, to or from the United States, to increase the price of that air transportation, tour or tour component to a consumer, including but not limited to an increase in the price of the seat, an increase in the price for the carriage of passenger baggage, or an increase in an applicable fuel surcharge, after the air transportation has been purchased by the consumer, except in the case of an increase in a government-imposed tax or fee. A purchase is deemed to have occurred when the full amount agreed upon has been paid by the consumer.
Form for filing DOT complaint. File complaint as soon as your ticket is cancelled.

Link to PDF of enforcement bodies for European customers affected. File complaint as soon as your ticket is cancelled.


Tips for DOT Complaint:
  • File on DOT for every ticket number affected.
  • If you have one reservation with four people traveling (four tickets) file 4 DOT complaints, one per ticket.
  • If you have separate reservations, file a DOT complaint for each.
  • The DOT complaint website may take several minutes to load, depending on demand.
  • When you go to upload a file, be careful as it will reset all your radio buttons. So, if you want a copy of the complaint, make sure you double check that "Yes" is still selected before submitting, especially if you upload a file.

Template For Complaint:
United has unilaterally cancelled my ticket without my consent.

Facts:
1. The ticket was ticketed (had a ticket number).
2. I received a confirmation number, ticket number, and emails stating both
3. The ticket was paid for and my credit card charged.

United must reinstate the ticket within its original cabin. This trip is for travel TO the United States.

At no time during the booking process was any other fare than the Danish Krone equivalent displayed. As a reasonable, prudent consumer, I believed I was paying the price displayed to me on the website. United never sent or displayed the equivalent fare in any other currency.

Trip Details
Ticket #: 016XXXXXXXXXX
PNR: XXXXXX
Routing: LHR-EWR-LAX-HNL

Attachments: Attached is a document showing the ticket, routing, and providing proof that the reservation was ticketed.

Filename: Cancelled - UA Reservation - LHR-EWR-LAX-HNL - XXXXXX - 016XXXXXXXXXX.pdf

+-------------------------------------------------------+
| Relevant Law |
| http://www.law.cornell.edu/cfr/text/14/399.88 |
+-------------------------------------------------------+
§ 399.88 Prohibition on post-purchase price increase.

(a) It is an unfair and deceptive practice within the meaning of 49 U.S.C. 41712 for any seller of scheduled air transportation within, to or from the United States, or of a tour (i.e., a combination of air transportation and ground or cruise accommodations), or tour component (e.g., a hotel stay) that includes scheduled air transportation within, to or from the United States, to increase the price of that air transportation, tour or tour component to a consumer, including but not limited to an increase in the price of the seat, an increase in the price for the carriage of passenger baggage, or an increase in an applicable fuel surcharge, after the air transportation has been purchased by the consumer, except in the case of an increase in a government-imposed tax or fee. A purchase is deemed to have occurred when the full amount agreed upon has been paid by the consumer.

+-------------------------------------------------------+
| Relevant FAQ |
| http://airconsumer.ost.dot.gov/rules/EAPP_2_FAQ.pdf |
+-------------------------------------------------------+
Does the prohibition on post-purchase price increases in section 399.88(a) apply in the situation where a carrier mistakenly offers an airfare due to a computer problem or human error and a consumer purchases the ticket at that fare before the carrier is able to fix the mistake?

Section 399.88(a) states that it is an unfair and deceptive practice for any seller of scheduled air transportation within, to, or from the United States, or of a tour or tour component that includes scheduled air transportation within, to, or from the United States, to increase the price of that air transportation to a consumer after the air transportation has been purchased by the consumer, except in the case of a government-imposed tax or fee and only if the passenger is advised of a possible increase before purchasing a ticket. A purchase occurs when the full amount agreed upon has been paid by the consumer. Therefore, if a consumer purchases a fare and that consumer receives confirmation (such as a confirmation email and/or the purchase appears on their credit card statement or online account summary) of their purchase, then the seller of air transportation cannot increase the price of that air transportation to that consumer, even when the fare is a “mistake.”
-----
Tips for retrieving your ticket number:
  1. paste(right click copy link location first) following link into your web browser
  2. change XXXXXX next to COPNR= for your reservation number and LASTNAME next to LN= for you SURNAME
  3. go to the webpage address you have just created

https://www.united.com/web/en-US/app...NRCD=2/11/2015


Originally Posted by MatthewLAX
Originally Posted by MatthewLAX View Post
R E L A X

Breathe deep.

Congrats on all who got in.

Now comes the fun part.

1. Discovery - mistake fare is posted on FT. Novices frantically checks how much vacation time they have and if the dates of availability mesh with their schedules. Experienced FTers just book it and worry about contacting spouses or their boss later. Word spreads like wildfire.

2. Excitement - Tickets purchased, confirmation emails received and dates of travel shared with other FTers. Discussions of what to see and do and where to stay crop up in other threads. Novices contact source to change seats or inquire about upgrades, Seasoned FTers sit back and enjoy reading the discussion threads.

3. Stress Stage 1 - Concern over paper ticket delivery - Novices Frantically check otheFedEx website every few hours, constant monitoring of driveway for FedEx truck. Seasoned FT veterans sit back and relax.

4. Glee and happiness - Paper tickets in hand, vacation request submitted, spouses finally informed, hotel reservations made and bragging to friends and co-workers begins. Both novices and experts get very excited.

5. Stress Stage 2 - Rumors of fare not being honored, discussion threads about the airline and ticketing agency ensue. Rumors crop up like crabgrass at this stage. Many FTers begin to worry excessively about whether or not the trip will happen. Novices make non-refundable and financial committments to their trip. Seasoned FTers make mixed drinks (and maybe a sandwich) and is patient.

6. Reality Check - Accurate information is obtained - usually takes place a week to 10 days after mistake fare is published. Confirmed information from the source as to whether or not tickets will be honored.

7a. Pure Joy (Icelandair style- Fare is Honored) - Lots of happy people, FT threads on shared information regarding hotels, restaurants, tours, etc. Jealousy from others sets in. First "FT guinea pigs" embark, post confirmation threads that all is ok.


7b Hostile Feelings (Copa Airlines Style - fare is not honored) - Many angry and disappointed FTers. Refunds are issued. Novices have multiple discussion threads of lawsuits and hostile correspondence, FT pros mutter "c'est la vie" and look for the next fare mistake.

8a Success (Honored) - Trip Report thread becomes very active


Freedom of Information Act Request
File #2015-147, Office of the Secretary of Transportation - Receipt acknowledged 3/13/15

http://www.dot.gov/individuals/foia/office-secretary-foia-information

Relevant excerpt from my request on 2/24/15. There no need for multiple requests for the same thing, though feel free to request more or different information obviously. I'll post any updates as I get them.

"Under the Freedom of Information Act, 5 U.S. C. subsection 552, I am requesting access to any and all records of correspondence, including electronic, between anyone working for, or on the behalf of, United Airlines and its subsidiaries, and with anyone working for, or on the behalf of, the Department of Transportation; specifically this would include only the date range beginning on February 11th, 2015 through and including February 24th, 2015.

In addition, I am requesting access to any and all internal records and correspondence in relation to coming to the decision made on February 23rd, 2015 regarding the Office of Aviation Enforcement and Proceedings Determination Regarding United Airlines Mistaken Fare, with the exception of any of the consumer submitted complaints via phone, email, website, or letter. Specifically, this would be any records beginning on February 11th, 2015 through and including February 24th, 2015."
Print Wikipost

[PREM FARE GONE] UA: NCL-EWR 600 DKK (mistaken fare) DOT ruled; see wiki for link

Thread Tools
 
Search this Thread
 
Old Feb 19, 2015, 6:39 am
  #4531  
 
Join Date: Sep 2007
Programs: Yorkshire Coastliner
Posts: 1,278
Originally Posted by LH4116
My pending charges have been dropped now. Guess I'm out of luck in the unlikely event that the DOT decides to rule against United.
Why would this make any difference?
patgarrett is offline  
Old Feb 19, 2015, 6:42 am
  #4532  
 
Join Date: Mar 2014
Location: Londinium
Programs: BAEC
Posts: 930
Originally Posted by DaBom
All, I've been reading all the comments and I just want to point out one thing... When I booked my Danish Fare, although I had options at 546 DKK for the route I wanted to fly, there were other options at rates of 30K+ DKK, so if it was in fact a conversion rate mistake, how come some flights were dirt cheap while others were at the correct price (same route, same currency, same airlines, etc..), makes no sense to me??
Speaking of, at the same time I booked the LH flights, I was also looking at LHR-MUC return in business for this coming weekend but didn't book it because I couldn't commit. That fare was 999 DKK, or Ł100. Why was SH twice the price of LH?
SCSA is offline  
Old Feb 19, 2015, 6:55 am
  #4533  
 
Join Date: Nov 2012
Location: Washington, D.C.
Programs: AA Platinum, DL Silver, Marriott Lifetime Titanium, Hyatt Globalist, Hilton Diamond
Posts: 174
Originally Posted by patgarrett
Why would this make any difference?
Agreed. If the ruling somehow comes in our favor, that shouldn't make a difference.
MarylandFlyer244 is offline  
Old Feb 19, 2015, 7:42 am
  #4534  
Suspended
 
Join Date: Jul 2001
Location: Watchlisted by the prejudiced, en route to purgatory
Programs: Just Say No to Fleecing and Blacklisting
Posts: 102,095
Originally Posted by DaBom
All, I've been reading all the comments and I just want to point out one thing... When I booked my Danish Fare, although I had options at 546 DKK for the route I wanted to fly, there were other options at rates of 30K+ DKK, so if it was in fact a conversion rate mistake, how come some flights were dirt cheap while others were at the correct price (same route, same currency, same airlines, etc..), makes no sense to me??
I noticed the same thing. I was trying to book a ticket from CPH to NYC or WAS with some onward segments and I was seeing prices well over even 5460 DKK for economy class in the dead of winter. Is UA counting such tickets in the "several thousand" whose flight coupons it voided?
GUWonder is offline  
Old Feb 19, 2015, 8:10 am
  #4535  
 
Join Date: Feb 2015
Location: The best place on Earth.
Posts: 59
Originally Posted by rachcollins
The fare doesn't need to have been filed like that, it could be a coding issue, and I suppose it could be at either end, so the DKK 48,000.00 becomes DKK 48.00000.

I'm just pointing out that the calculation is out by X1000 and I'm suggesting that a decimal mark being inserted in place of a delimiter also results in everything being out by the same margin.

I'm not saying that it's impossible for the exchange rate used to be out by the same factor, just that it's far less likely IMHO for that to be the reason here.

In which of these examples is the mistake more obvious

48.000.00 vs 48,000.00

or

.0100621 vs 10.0621
Close. It's very simple what happened. In most currencies (excluding Denmark) the comma is the delimiter representing the thousandth place, and the period represents the delimiter between whole currency (one pound) and fractional currency (pence). So to write five thousand pounds and zero pence in the UK you write:

Ł5,000.00

However in Denmark the same value, five thousand Kroner is written as:

5.000,00 kr

So obviously, if the site is Danish and treats comma as the delimiter of the whole currency (i.e., everything to the right of the delimiter is fractional) place, then it reads Ł5,000.00 as 5 kr.

This is a software bug which does not parse numbers correctly.

Last edited by TelAvivLife; Feb 19, 2015 at 8:18 am
TelAvivLife is offline  
Old Feb 19, 2015, 8:25 am
  #4536  
FlyerTalk Evangelist
 
Join Date: Aug 2000
Location: London
Programs: Hilton, IHG - BA, GA, LH, QR, SV, TK
Posts: 17,008
Originally Posted by RTW1
Isn't that just a fact of life that most regulations are a bit behind the times....
Look at what has happened with EC261. The idea is a good one, the result maybe a bit favoring the consumer but the enforcement is totally lacking making it a mockery. And the proposed changes in 2013 seem to be stalled as well.

Doesn't mean that what is there at this time shouldn't be enforced. Right or wrong, it's the only thing both parties should be able to rely on.
You're absolutely correct. Environmental, technological and social developments overtake original legislation. EC261 has evolved with the accretions of case law: for better or worse it has moved some way beyond the limited protection it offered. It is still limited in scope and the scale of compensation; and rulings are only slowly repairing the poor initial drafting.

On the other hand the DOT regulation remains stuck in its original form. We don't want it changed, want it to protect us absolutely from having mistake fares (however absurd) being taken away from us.

On the other hand, the second player, the airlines, are desperate to limit their exposure to the fall-out from the inevitable mistakes they'll make.

So DOT is in an uncomfortable position: it can't "interpret" its rules without getting howls from mistake aficianados and the frothy-mouthed, but it is losing the support of airlines and getting beaten up by their lobbyists.

Political pressure might help either side: but I find it hard to believe the court of public opinion is much fussed either way. On balance I imagine folk have difficulty dredging up much sympathy for those of us refused our $100 first-class fares, but quickly see that fines and/or buckling to our demands is a cost to airlines passed on in higher fares.

I've got no particular sympathy for DOT. The regulator seems to be paying the price of producing a badly-drafted consumer-lobby pleaser. But it seems that on balance that interpretation of the regulation will favour the airline, as will any change.

I'll be sad to lose my ticket. But I'm trying to be a realist.
IAN-UK is offline  
Old Feb 19, 2015, 8:28 am
  #4537  
FlyerTalk Evangelist
 
Join Date: Mar 2005
Location: 60137
Posts: 10,498
Originally Posted by TelAvivLife

This is a software bug which does not parse numbers correctly.
...and the vendor picks the contractor and elects whether to monitor the contractor's performance in realtime.

#ReinstateMyPNR
sonofzeus is offline  
Old Feb 19, 2015, 8:35 am
  #4538  
 
Join Date: Feb 2015
Location: The best place on Earth.
Posts: 59
Originally Posted by sonofzeus
...and the vendor picks the contractor and elects whether to monitor the contractor's performance in realtime.

#ReinstateMyPNR
^^^^^^^^^^^
TelAvivLife is offline  
Old Feb 19, 2015, 8:52 am
  #4539  
 
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: Berlin
Posts: 1,765
Just dropped in to see we are still debating decimal points and commas. Holy smokes.
largeeyes is offline  
Old Feb 19, 2015, 8:53 am
  #4540  
 
Join Date: Nov 2014
Location: BQH
Programs: United Airlines F for Fudge You Fanclub
Posts: 40
Originally Posted by IAN-UK
. EC261 has evolved with the accretions of case law: for better or worse it has moved some way beyond the limited protection it offered. It is still limited in scope and the scale of compensation; and rulings are only slowly repairing the poor initial drafting.
Is it interesting how regulations and rules are able to evolve within the European and US systems.

The funny thing about EU261 is that flight delay compensation only became available because the airlines were playing silly buggers in a blatant attempt to avoid the regulation

If you have a read of the regulation you'll see that compensation is not payable in cases of flight delay.

One of the airlines decided that instead of cancelling flights they'd simply say that they were delayed, that decision was fought through the courts, by the flying public and not the actual regulators, until eventually coming before the European Court of Justice (ECJ).

Sturgeon v Condor

The ECJ saw through their little ploy and ruled that compensation was payable, the precedent set by that ruling means that every legal system in the EU must now award payment in cases of flight delay despite the regulation itself still stating that compensation isn't due in such circumstances.

One has to wonder if the US airlines who employed the devious pricing strategies, which in turn caused the DoT rules to be rewritten, now regret making some of those 'commercial' decisions

Last edited by rachcollins; Feb 19, 2015 at 9:01 am
rachcollins is offline  
Old Feb 19, 2015, 8:58 am
  #4541  
 
Join Date: Apr 2014
Location: BWI<MCI< PHL<DEN<SCL<EZE<CHO<PHL<ABE
Programs: UA Silver / FA
Posts: 939
Originally Posted by largeeyes
Just dropped in to see we are still debating decimal points and commas. Holy smokes.
^

Ridiculous. There's something about a dead horse.

Considering my first booking is this weekend.. I don't think I'm going to make it. Nor do I have the stones to book a positioning flight just to be turned away.
Tblack15 is offline  
Old Feb 19, 2015, 8:59 am
  #4542  
 
Join Date: Nov 2008
Location: LHR
Programs: Ex-NWA Plat
Posts: 1,480
Has anyone realized that its been a full week since D-Day?

7 days and 4500 posts later, UA has still not bothered to give us an update?
gottaluvNW is offline  
Old Feb 19, 2015, 9:03 am
  #4543  
Hyatt Contributor Badge
 
Join Date: Jul 2010
Location: Between AMS and BRU
Posts: 8,852
Originally Posted by gottaluvNW
7 days and 4500 posts later, UA has still not bothered to give us an update?
Why should they? They cancelled and sent an e-mail.... And now they are hoping that's the end of it.
RTW1 is offline  
Old Feb 19, 2015, 9:03 am
  #4544  
 
Join Date: Mar 2014
Location: Londinium
Programs: BAEC
Posts: 930
They gave us an update last week. If you're not sure what it was, think about the the monogram of the protagonist/villian in House of Cards
SCSA is offline  
Old Feb 19, 2015, 9:09 am
  #4545  
 
Join Date: Nov 2008
Location: LHR
Programs: Ex-NWA Plat
Posts: 1,480
Originally Posted by SCSA
They gave us an update last week. If you're not sure what it was, think about the the monogram of the protagonist/villian in House of Cards


Oh... to be a fly on the wall on the offices of their insurance providers!
gottaluvNW is offline  


Contact Us - Manage Preferences - Archive - Advertising - Cookie Policy - Privacy Statement - Terms of Service -

This site is owned, operated, and maintained by MH Sub I, LLC dba Internet Brands. Copyright © 2024 MH Sub I, LLC dba Internet Brands. All rights reserved. Designated trademarks are the property of their respective owners.