What about the people who have called and booked directly thru a rep? And the people who have called and been put on hold while a supervisor was consulted as to the validity of the code to be used by "anyone", and been told "no ID is required" several times? Is it their fault if they get called to task? ( I have never called and hope people are done doing so, but these responses make me believe I have a case if I get called on this). I agree, if it was clearly stated that it is NOT OK to use the code, I surely wouldn't, but I think it is still "unclear" at best. The ins. doesn't affect me, because I am covered, but the $150 I'm saving over the 10 days does, so I'm willing to give it a shot, while keeping a backup ressie elsewhere. It all comes down to what you are personally comfortable with, and I do hope everyone has a wonderful vacation whatever you decide!!
In the legal system, ignorance is not a defense. If it is a private code that requires identification, the rental agency has every right to enforce it, whether it is mentioned on a reservation or not. Whether they win will have to be determined in court if that is the route choosen by the renter. In the meantime, you will be stuck with the charge on your bill to deal with. Holding up the line as one argues is not going to intimidate the agent if they want to dig in their heels. All they have to do is call the police/security. Is any of this likely, probably not, but these are the extremes the rental company will go to if they feel like it. With large Florida's tourism industry, rental car case law is already established. I only supervised a small portion of the book of business at my company and Florida was not one of the states or I could provide further insight on the specifics for that state.
Anyone who is comfortable using the code should go ahead and use it. Likely nothing will happen, at least I doubt it in the near future. If National has a chance to catch on to it and decides to do something about it, any decision on how to handle it will be done at the advise of their legal staff with regards to outstanding reservations involving the code. Any action they take will have been looked at legally. Just proceed knowing that National has the power in the end, whether they have a legal basis to do so or not.
As far as calling about a code, if I am unsure about whether I am elible for the code, I will never hesitate to call, especially when conflicting information is posted. In the end, I want to make sure that I am entitled to the code because ignorance is not a defense. I will post my findings if I am in fear of a fellow poster running into a problem that may eventually impact their vacation. If the code gets pulled, then it was not one I should have been using in the first place.
For the poster who questioned a reservation taken over the phone with assurances from the agent that the code was valid to use, I think you have a great argument and I would be extremely mad if National pulled the rate for the code. In the end, I think odds are in your favor but, again, there are no guarantees. It should be a good will gesture on National's part to concede when it is a "he said, she said" situation.
Again, I am providing the worse case scenario so you all know what you could be up against. Best of Luck!