WebmasterDoc said:
I know of one instance when a member, in their eagerness to complete a rental, made a reservation for arrival within 30 days - without even so much as a deposit from the renter. They sent the confirmation letter to their renter and all requests/demands for payment went ignored. The member compounded his problems by maintaining the continued expectation of payment from his renter. Knowing that cancellation would result in the points going into the Holding Account, the member was reluctant to cancel - still trusting that payment would arrive. He sustained that expectation right up until the time his renter checked into the resort and never received payment.
Once check-in had occurred, the reservation was complete and the member had lost all control of the situation.
DVC couldn't do anything to assist and the member had no recourse.
Protect yourself at all times - members do fully control the reservation (up until check-in) and should have a firm policy regarding payment and cancellation - and should follow that policy to the letter if their renter does not comply.
The member certainly DOES have recourse in this situation. Since the "tenant" actually stayed using that ressie, the situation you describe is theft under Florida law (FS 812). If it is between $300 and $20,000, which I am sure it was, it is Grand Theft 3rd degree - a felony punishible by up to five years in prison.
I believe WDW is in the jurisdiction of the Osceola County Sheriff's Office. They have a fraud section (may be called property crimes). While DVC may not provide documentation to the owner, they will certainly provide it to the Sheriff's Department under subpoena (which is a very simple process done every day). All the DVC owner will have to do is supply an affidavit outlining the facts and any documentation they may have.
The owner may also be required to appear in court and testify against the thief, and they should NOT file a police case unless they are willing to do so. Law enforcement agencies enforce laws, not collect bad business deals, so the owner should be willing to prosecute.
If you know that owner and they want to pursue this, have them PM me and I will give them a contact at Osceola SO. I have two of their fraud detectives in an investigative course I am teaching this week.
Very often in situations like this, the State Attorney's Office (prosecutor) will send the prospective defendant what is called a "prior-to" letter. This letter explains that a case has been filed and a warrant is about to be issued. "Prior to" that happening, the SAO will give the crook a chance to explain their side of the story. Those letters often stimulate immediate cashier's checks to the aggrieved party.
If they don't clear things up, a warrant is issued. If they live locally, they will be arrested. If they live within Florida, they will probably be arrested. And if they live out of state, they get a nasty surprise the next time they have any contact with any law enforcement officer.
This entire process has nothing to do with a civil lawsuit. It is a criminal case, and costs the DVC owner
not one single penny.