MEL_Traveller
Veteran Member
- Joined
- Apr 27, 2005
- Posts
- 29,848
The departing airport was Guangzhou. To Singapore the flight time is a little over four hours.
That definition has been added since my reservation.
The inclusion of the eight hour definition for "significant change" actually makes their interpretation of s. 9.2 even more messed up. When I referred the agent to the clause she told me that it does not apply as the time change does not result in the new flight time being more than 24 hours before the originally scheduled flight time. That information was reflected in Bankwest's letter to me ("Specifically, as the flight change . . . was a change of less than 24 hours"). But now Scoot has added in the eight hour definition. By their interpretation Scoot is actually giving themselves 24 hours leeway, not eight (remember I was told s. 9.2 didn't apply because the change was less than 24 hours difference). It actually reinforces the lay reader's interpretation of the section as it stood: if a change is made to a flight and that change is made more than 24 hours before the flight, then s. 9.2 applies.
I'm going around in circles a bit here trying to say what I want to but, now, the section can now be more clearly interpreted as 'If a change is made to your flight and that change is made more than 24 hours before your departure and the change is more than eight hours difference' then s. 9.2 applies. Of course, if Scoot's logic from March is applied to this clause, it would mean that 'if a change is made that results in your flight being brought forward by 24 hours and that change is more than eight hours' which clearly doesn't make sense. To put it another way, again applying their March interpretation, if the flight change was a departure of 10 hours prior, s. 9.2 still wouldn't apply because it's not more than 24 hours prior.
And as I've mentioned before, there's no cover, under their March interpretation, if your flight is put back; the clause, by their reasoning, only covers changes that result in the new departure being 24 hours or more sooner.
The Scoot agent, and bankwest are both wrong in their interpretation of the terms and condtions, either the ones in operation now, or the ones in operation at the time you made you booking.
An agent of Scoot cannot override the written terms and conditions. So it is easy enough for you to challenge this up the line to management if you wanted to.
However, even if management had a look, even if you took it to court, would the outcome be different?
Under your terms and conditions (applicable at the time you bought the ticket), a flight change has to be 'significant'. A change of 2 hours is unlikely to be significant.
Under the current terms and conditions the change has to be 8 hours or more. Which your's isn't, so again no coverage.
Either way it really doesn't matter. yes, the agent at Scoot is incorrect in their reasoning. Without doubt. But that doesn't change anything.