Ryanair stunned by Spanish court decision

Thursday, 2 October 2008

Ryanair was last night stunned to hear a Spanish court backed an online travel agent against its policy of only accepting flight bookings from its own website.

Yesterday, a court in Madrid sided with Spanish online travel website Rumbo, who in August applied for an injunction to prevent the low-cost carrier from going ahead with its plans to cancel flight bookings made through third-party websites.

Madrid's Mercantile Court No 1 granted Rumbo's application and has banned Ryanair from cancelling tickets booked by passengers through the Spanish website.

The ruling also asks Ryanair to remove its 'screenscraper' warning from its website and to refrain from making statements discrediting other websites.

When informed of the ruling last night, Ryanair said it had not received anything from the courts in Spain and it did not have representation there. A spokesperson said the airline now has to review the decision of the Spanish court.

Back in August, the low-cost airline announced that it would not honour tickets or give refunds for flights which were not booked directly on its website, alleging the bookings were in breach of its terms and conditions.

And yesterday's ruling is the first of several expected in the coming weeks in cases brought by on-line travel agents and consumer bodies in Spain against the airline.

Rumbo's Managing Director Jose Rivera welcomed the news and said the measures ordered by the court effectively prevent Ryanair from going ahead with its ticket cancellation policy.

As MD of an online travel agency in Spain, I really don't know what baffles me most; Ryanair's decision to put an end to online travel agencies as effective distribution channels for their flights, or the Spanish court's somewhat partisan decision to try to prevent them from doing so.

The question is one of ownership. The inventory belongs to Ryanair and in the absence of a contractual relationship with the OTA's (online travel agency) such as Rumbo and Co., they should be perfectly within their rights to encourage direct sales through their web, regardless of whether this goes against the marketing logic of online travel distribution.

Mark Walker
visithuelva.com


Posted by Mark Walker | 03.10.08, 10:01 GMT

Post a complaint

Please note Name and E-mail are required.

Contact details

In Pictures: CIPR PRide Awards

In Pictures: CIPR PRide Awards

Pub of the Year Awards

Digital Advertising Awards Gala

Digital Advertising Awards Gala

Digital Advertising Awards Gala

Carbon Rankings - UK's Top 100 Firms

Click here for rankings and video

TeleBest: World's most powerful logos

eleBest: World's most powerful logos

Click here to launch gallery

NI's Top 100 Companies 2011

Top 100 Companies

Who's up and who's down in 2011

In pictures: Doing the business

  • PMST Apprentice of the Year 2011
  • Graham Dillon of Tandragee, Co Armagh (centre), accepts the Adult Apprentice Award: Best Attendance at the PMST Apprentice of the Year 2011 ceremony held this week in Belfast City Hall. Also pictured are Keith Poole (left) of CHC Group, Craigavon, who employ Graham, and Nick Hayward of category sponser ATL
  • Ciara Walls of Whitehead, Co Antrim (centre), accepts the Adult Apprentice Award: Most Consistently High Exam Results, at the PMST Apprentice of the Year 2011 ceremony held this week in Belfast City Hall. Also pictured is Professor Jackie McCoy (right) of the University of Ulster, the category sponsor, and Nicola Cherry of Fusion Heating of Killyleagh, Co Down, who employ Ciara

Cream of the crop in the business world

BT Business TV


Business Digest by Email


Sign up for your free weekly business newsletter

Latest Comments