Avis is a private company. If you don’t like their practices go to another company. Trying not to be harsh but we are Capitalistic Society. If one companies does not another one will for the right price.
In many instances, I would agree with you, but in this case, they deliberately led the customer on by not notifying him from the outset.
“Capitalism” is not an excuse large enough to cover fraud. Charging a “no show” fee, when he did show and they refused to serve him, is fraud.
You don’t understand the problem. Re-read.
You are confusing capitalism with theft by deception. There is no state in which any variation of the UCC allows a vendor to charge for a service that was not provided.
A little too Business Socialist....I see
The Freeper already had a contract with Avis once they approved his card and reservation....then reneged and kept some of his money. That is not only breach of contract....but Fraud.
Freeper should report incident to his state consumer agency or consumer agency in state where transaction occurred