This subject is often used as a scare tactic by those opposed to renting on these boards. The fact is, anyone who causes the damage is ultimately responsible for it. However, that won't prevent Disney Vacation Development from sending you the bill per their user agreement. At which point you would sue the renter and recover those costs (but I suspect a "friendly" request for reimbursement on a lawyers letterhead would do the trick if it came to that).If the renter damages the room?
Unless your name is Larry Page, Sergey Brin or Bill Gates your pockets aren't deep enough.If the renter gets hurt in the room?
Does DVC get sued? Do I as the "owner"?
bicker said:Having to sue the renter to recover what I was charged by DVC is a pretty strong deterrant for me; I won't be renting my points again anytime soon.
Funny, the anti-renter faction never seems to direct their venom at owners who are subletting to family. I think we'd all be better served if they did.WebmasterDoc said:...not a rental per se, but it was a room being used by a family member...
rinkwide said:Funny, the anti-renter faction never seems to direct their venom at owners who are subletting to family. I think we'd all be better served if they did.
rinkwide said:I'm seeing lots of chicken-little's but not enough falling sky.
In this particular case I think there were some charges the guest (BIL) made to the room key that WDW came after the owner for. I thought the owner received a response from DVC MS that it was policy that a DVC member would not be responsible for a "guest's" room charges.WebmasterDoc said:... and the point of offering that report as an example is that if it can happen when a family member is staying at a DVC resort using a member's points, it can certainly happen when a renter is staying using a member's points. In this case, the member had no difficulty getting his BIL to ultimately take care of the issue - but just imagine how long it could have taken if it was an internet renter - especially when the member's account was effectively inacessible while the matter was resolved.
The actual facts were that the BIL left his credit card imprint at the front desk for all charges to his room, but the front desk folks made a mistake and never billed his card. Quite some time later, the DVC owner tried to make a ressie and was told he could not do so because of an unpaid bill on his account. It was a DVC screw-up -- not a mistake or malicious act by the BIL --but it still put the DVC owner in a bind.Johnnie Fedora said:In this particular case I think there were some charges the guest (BIL) made to the room key that WDW came after the owner for.
I'd put the risk more on-par with getting into a car accident.another meteor could come along and wipe us all out