Brian Noble
Gratefully in Recovery
- Joined
- Mar 23, 2004
- Messages
- 18,885
Very much so. Perhaps we've seen who's more willing to walk away.Should be interesting....

Very much so. Perhaps we've seen who's more willing to walk away.Should be interesting....
The only reasons I can think of they would are that getting such an exception approved would be more important than it was worth and that if they did do it a lot of people would likely go back and complain, rightfully so. I think they should have and could have done it in such a way to not create either problem with the means at their disposal, maybe a few extra tickets or the like.I can't believe they would walk away from it for $400. Like they wouldn't get that back from him in 1 trip with his family!!![]()
As I read more about this situation, the more I think to myself "how in the world does the guide not understand the promotion"? Or "how can they even generate the paperwork for the offer if a certain promotion is not applicable".
I can understand a purchaser walking in and telling the guide "and I qualify for the Steve Harvey promotion - correct"? Now, the purchaser may not be aware of the terms associated with that promotion, but by golly, the salesperson who put the offer together in writing had better be.
Does anyone here believe that this purchaser was the first one this guide ever had which asked for the Steve Harvey promotion on 100 points? Again, I'm finding this very difficult to believe.
I see a couple of things here.
1. It was an offer, it was not a contract, so all those who posted about the 'contract' are incorrect in their wording. A contract is legally binding, but an offer is not.
2. It was a mistake, unintentional. It was not like a department store that mislabeled an item. In the suit example, if the store accidently posted a suit at 200% off instead of 20% off, would you expect to get it free, AND have them give you in cash the equivelent amount of the suit's retail price? The same goes if a store ad is printed incorrectly in a newspaper. If Wal*Mart has an ad saying HD TV's normally $1995 on sale for $17.95 would you argue they have to sell it to you for eighteen bucks? No, and they probably have a notice in the store somewhere stating the ad was incorrect and sorry for the inconvenience.
Even though a downpayment was made, it's still an offer only and not a legal contract. You could be purchasing anything, a car, a house, a TV set, whatever. If a mistake is made in the offer, there is no obligation of the seller to actually complete it as a contract. Just like the Wal*Mart example, DVC only needs to say that there was a mistake made in the offer and you were quoted the wrong price. Then it's up to the buyer to decide if they still want to purchase or not. You can't get the TV above for 18 bucks, but maybe the $200 off is still a good deal and you'll buy it for the $1795 the ad was meant to read.
In absolutely no way was this a "Bait and Switch".
Just .02
Regardless of all the legal nuances, this is the thought that keeps nagging at me. I find it VERY hard to believe that this was an isolated innocent mistake.As I read more about this situation, the more I think to myself "how in the world does the guide not understand the promotion"?
On the other hand, Seneca urges us to "never ascribe to malice that which can be explained by stupidity."My favorite fraud cliche is: "Fraud looks a lot like stupid." It's been my experience that when someone tries a sly trick and gets called on it, they play stupid.