Royston Vasey
Established Member
I have spent thousands of pounds with Trainsplit over the years and this is the first time I am in dispute with them. They are charging a fee when I believe I am entitled to a full refund due to partial abandonment.
Journey was Newcastle NCL - Kings Cross KGX - St Pancras STP - Farringdon ZFD - Stratford SRA - Ipswich IPS - Cambridge CBG. The long way round, sure, but the one I wanted to take and saved a few pounds.
Tickets:
NCL-KGX Advance Single booked with LNER in July. Planned arrival 13.09.24 at 1248. Train arrived 47 minutes late.
STP-CBG via SRA and IPS, Advance LU Z1-3 to Cambridge booked last week with Trainsplit. Thameslink and Elizabeth Line connections. Planned departure SRA 1337. Trains ran to time. £15.90.
Connection at STP was missed and I would have been delayed 60 minutes into Cambridge (hourly service)
With exactly this sort of potential dispute in mind, I replaced the journey with another on Trainsplit, direct to Cambridge (which was more expensive), in case they would only replace the journey, for a fee, and this is indeed what they offered.
I destroyed the tickets whilst en route to London and requested a full refund of the Z1-3 to Cambridge ticket due to disruption.
However I have now had a long exchange with customer service who have said their final and best offer is £10.90 for a replaced journey, which is net of a £5 admin fee. They state that since the two bookings to and from London were not in a single transaction, they are unrelated and they are contractually absolved.
Clearly, a delay to one leg of my journey is the reason I could not complete my journey as booked.
Please help me understand why they are so adamant here, as I am of the opinion this is in breach of NRCoT:
- The Railway delayed me and my rights should be retained on a split ticket, regardless of where each portion was booked. As per the NRCoT Condition 14.1, I am entitled to make a single journey on split tickets. As such my NCL-LON-SRA-IPS-CBG itinerary was one single journey, which I abandoned in London due to the delay.
- The connection between tickets I had booked was a legal connection and this is not in dispute.
- NRCoT Conditions 28.4: In other circumstances disruption to train services may mean that you are entitled to compensation or a refund on your Ticket. Part F explains your rights to refunds and compensation. "Disruption to train services" is not limited to those trains booked on one ticket.
- NRCoT Condition 29.2: In such cases, a deduction from your refund in the case of part-used Tickets, will normally be calculated on the cost of the journey(s) actually made. An administration charge may also be made, which will not exceed £10 per Ticket; however, if the administrative charge and/or other deductions exceed the refund amount no refund will be payable. If a delay or cancellation on any leg of your journey is the reason you could not complete your journey, you are entitled to a full refund on any Tickets held for that journey under condition 30.1
- NRCoT Condition 30.1 Conditions 30.1 - 30.4 … also apply if you have begun your journey but are unable to complete it due to a delay to, or cancellation of, your service. In such cases, you are permitted to return to your point of origin and still get a refund. You may return an unused Ticket to the original retailer or Train Company from whom it was purchased, where you will be given a full refund with no administration fee charged, if you decide not to travel because the train you intended to use is: • cancelled, or • delayed
- In addition, article 15 of the Passenger Rights Obligation also states: Where there is a reasonable expectation that a delay that will lead to arrival at the final destination 60 minutes or more late, passengers may either choose to have a:
Who is right?
@Raileasy
Journey was Newcastle NCL - Kings Cross KGX - St Pancras STP - Farringdon ZFD - Stratford SRA - Ipswich IPS - Cambridge CBG. The long way round, sure, but the one I wanted to take and saved a few pounds.
Tickets:
NCL-KGX Advance Single booked with LNER in July. Planned arrival 13.09.24 at 1248. Train arrived 47 minutes late.
STP-CBG via SRA and IPS, Advance LU Z1-3 to Cambridge booked last week with Trainsplit. Thameslink and Elizabeth Line connections. Planned departure SRA 1337. Trains ran to time. £15.90.
Connection at STP was missed and I would have been delayed 60 minutes into Cambridge (hourly service)
With exactly this sort of potential dispute in mind, I replaced the journey with another on Trainsplit, direct to Cambridge (which was more expensive), in case they would only replace the journey, for a fee, and this is indeed what they offered.
I destroyed the tickets whilst en route to London and requested a full refund of the Z1-3 to Cambridge ticket due to disruption.
However I have now had a long exchange with customer service who have said their final and best offer is £10.90 for a replaced journey, which is net of a £5 admin fee. They state that since the two bookings to and from London were not in a single transaction, they are unrelated and they are contractually absolved.
Clearly, a delay to one leg of my journey is the reason I could not complete my journey as booked.
Please help me understand why they are so adamant here, as I am of the opinion this is in breach of NRCoT:
- The Railway delayed me and my rights should be retained on a split ticket, regardless of where each portion was booked. As per the NRCoT Condition 14.1, I am entitled to make a single journey on split tickets. As such my NCL-LON-SRA-IPS-CBG itinerary was one single journey, which I abandoned in London due to the delay.
- The connection between tickets I had booked was a legal connection and this is not in dispute.
- NRCoT Conditions 28.4: In other circumstances disruption to train services may mean that you are entitled to compensation or a refund on your Ticket. Part F explains your rights to refunds and compensation. "Disruption to train services" is not limited to those trains booked on one ticket.
- NRCoT Condition 29.2: In such cases, a deduction from your refund in the case of part-used Tickets, will normally be calculated on the cost of the journey(s) actually made. An administration charge may also be made, which will not exceed £10 per Ticket; however, if the administrative charge and/or other deductions exceed the refund amount no refund will be payable. If a delay or cancellation on any leg of your journey is the reason you could not complete your journey, you are entitled to a full refund on any Tickets held for that journey under condition 30.1
- NRCoT Condition 30.1 Conditions 30.1 - 30.4 … also apply if you have begun your journey but are unable to complete it due to a delay to, or cancellation of, your service. In such cases, you are permitted to return to your point of origin and still get a refund. You may return an unused Ticket to the original retailer or Train Company from whom it was purchased, where you will be given a full refund with no administration fee charged, if you decide not to travel because the train you intended to use is: • cancelled, or • delayed
- In addition, article 15 of the Passenger Rights Obligation also states: Where there is a reasonable expectation that a delay that will lead to arrival at the final destination 60 minutes or more late, passengers may either choose to have a:
- refund of the fare when the journey will no longer serve the passenger's originally planned purpose. The refund will include the return journey where appropriate
Who is right?
@Raileasy