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Daily Mirror
Daily Mirror
Business
Levi Winchester

'I've helped consumers get back £10,000 so far this year by complaining'

Complaining has become a way of life for consumer champion Scott Dixon - and it has helped him claw back thousands of pounds for disgruntled customers who've been at the mercy of shoddy service.

In the first five months of 2023 alone, he estimates he has saved people over £10,000 on everything from a kitchen refund, to unfair parking fines and a burst watermelon.

He told The Mirror: “What started as a hobby based on a lifetime of unique and bad experiences has turned into a passion in helping consumers in raising awareness of consumer rights.

“These are life-changing amounts of money for people and my knowledge isn't common knowledge.”

Scott says you don’t need to have a background in law to fight for your rights and has published a book to help others.

He also helps others recognise when they could be due money back through his The Complaints Resolver blog.

Here are his biggest successes so far in 2023.

Kitchen refund - £8,100

The biggest win for Scott this year comes after a customer struggled to get a refund for a kitchen that was riddled with various faults.

Scott was able to get involved after a mutual connection tagged him into a tweet the complainer posted on Twitter.

“One of my followers tagged me in and I cross-referenced various paragraphs from the Consumer Rights Act 2015 against her complaint,” explained Scott.

“She was able to quickly secure a full refund by quoting chapter and verse from the Consumer Rights Act 2015 in her complaint letter.”

The woman was originally offered a £5,500 refund until she approached Scott for advice and secured a full refund.

“Never accept the first offer unless you believe it is fair,” said Scott.

“Firms often use this as a tactic to close complaints and deny you a full and proper remedy.”

Parking tickets - £940

There are two different types of parking tickets and their names can look confusingly similar.

Parking tickets issued by local authorities and councils are called Penalty Charge Notices. These are legally enforceable.

Tickets handed out by private firms - such as an independent parking ticket company on behalf of a bigger business - are called Parking Charge Notices.

If you think you've been unfairly fined, appealing it is free to do. Scott has helped people cancel more than a dozen parking fines this year.

Some of the most common reasons drivers have been able to successfully appeal fines include:

  • Road signs were hidden
  • You entered the wrong number plate into a machine
  • The meter was broken
  • You were minutes out of time
  • Your vehicle had broken down

Sharing one of his success stories from this year, Scott said: "One of my followers contacted me on Twitter as her elderly Mother overstayed in a local car park by 11 minutes.

"The car park only allows you 45 minutes to park and shop, which is unfair on elderly and disabled drivers who need more time to read the Terms and Conditions of the signage and to do their shopping.

"These unscrupulous private parking operators prey on consumers not knowing what I know, which is why I do what I do in raising awareness of consumer right."

Scott explained how customers need to be given sufficient time to read any Terms and Conditions on signs.

In another example, Scott helped a driver cancel a fine after they accidentally entered the wrong location code on the RingGo parking app.

MOT scare - £750

Scott was forced to intervene when a garage refused to let a driver take his car home after an MOT.

The motorist had paid £89 upfront for a service and MOT - but the car failed its MOT and the garage said it would charge the driver £749 to fix the fault.

The owner of the car disputed this, as he had not agreed for the work to be done - but the garage tried to keep hold of his vehicle until he paid up.

Scott advised him to issue a letter of Before Action, threatening to take the company to the small claims court if they don't release the car.

He said: "They tried to keep the car and wouldn't release it until he paid their extortionate invoice.

"A look at the reviews online demonstrated a consistency with their unscrupulous tactics and behaviour.

"I cross-referenced the complaint against various paragraphs within the Consumer Rights Act 2015 with advice and the steps to take to secure a full refund."

Tesco Clubcard vouchers - £120

Scott also helped one Tesco customer get her Clubcard points back after she made a mistake when trying to redeem them against a Hotel.com booking.

Tesco lets you redeem your Clubcard points at triple their value if you use them against a "Rewards Partner" - although this is being reduced to double their value next month.

The woman wanted to use her Clubcard points to book multiple rooms and admits she didn't realise you could only make one booking per code.

This meant she ended up losing £120 worth of Clubcard vouchers.

After failing to secure a refund through the Tesco customer service team, she contacted Scott.

Explaining how he helped, Scott advised the shopper to email the Tesco CEO.

He added: "The CEO probably won't read it but the escalated complaints team will.

"Say that you are a loyal customer and upset at how your complaint has been handled."

Bus fine - £70

A driver was able to cancel a £70 bus fine based on poor signage thanks to some very niche advice from Scott.

Scott says he spotted that the bus lane was wrongly marked as a "bus only route" - stating that buses need a 45 degree dotted taper line to filter traffic into an adjacent lane.

"This is impossible on a one-way street," he explained.

Burst watermelon - £10

Finally, after a burst watermelon caused a mess for his mum and dad, Scott managed to secure a £10 goodwill gesture from Asda.

He explained how his dad had pressed the watermelon to see if it was edible, only for it to burst and spray foul liquid over his mum's coat.

Scott contacted Asda citing the Consumer Rights Act 2015, which states goods ought to be fit for purpose, as described, satisfactory quality and services ought to be carried out with due care and skill.

"I had to press hard on that as they only offered £5 originally, which I rejected. You rarely accept the first offer unless you are happy with it and consider it reasonable.

"They doubled it after I pushed back saying it simply wasn't good enough in light of the distress caused and cited customer loyalty. What does £5 buy you these days?"

  • Scott is the author of How To Complain: The Consumer Guide to Resolve Complaints and Motoring Disputes

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