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European airline taken to task over no-show rules

04 Oct 2017
Comments | 0

THE Belgian consumer

protection organisation

Test Aankoop is taking

legal action against

Brussels Airlines for its noshow

rules. The organisation

says it is unfair to penalise

travellers for missing one leg

of their journey by refusing

them boarding for the rest of

the trip.

Test Aankoop cites an

example where one client

had a ticket Brussels-MaltaMunich-Berlin-Brussels.

He missed the flight from

Munich to Berlin as a result

of a strike, and decided

to take the train instead.

However, the airline refused

to let him board the last

leg of his trip from Berlin to

Brussels.

Patrycja Gautier,

Enforcement Officer at

BEUC, the European

Consumer Organisation

explains: “For years we

have been pushing for a

ban of no-show clauses in

airline contracts. It is high

time that the European

Union took action to protect

consumers from these unfair

and unjustified contract

terms.”

The European ban of

such clauses was already

(partially) proposed by the

European Commission as

part of a proposal to revise

the Air Passenger Rights

Regulation (EU Regulation

no 261/2014) but the

proposal was blocked by EU

member states.

Several EU member

state courts have already

partially prohibited the use

of the no-show clauses. For

example, German (highest

court), Austrian (highest

court), Spanish and Italian

courts have ruled (partially)

that those clauses are unfair

contract terms.

They have based their

reasoning on the following

points:

yThe loss of the entire

ticket as a result of the

choice not to use part

of it is disproportionate

and lacks plausible

justification;

ySuch clauses create a

significant imbalance

between the consumer

and the airline in that

the consumer does not

receive any proportionate

or additional benefit for the

curtailment of their right to

not travel;

ySuch clauses constitute an

impermissible ‘surprise’

for consumers, since no

justification for denied

boarding would exist.

However, for the time

being, no policy or legislative

solution is in sight.

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