Survivor, the OP said he had a voucher for $284. How can it be relevant when he bought the ticket or between what cities? It's like if I take a $100 bill to pay my taxes, in order to assess the value of my $100 the cashier asks me when and where I got this $100 bill. It cannot matter whether I got it from my employer or whether my granny gave it to me. It says $100 and that's what it's worth.
An Air Canada voucher for $284 must mean exactly that - $284 value for air travel. The history of when and where it came from has come to an end by the issue of the voucher.
Air Canada would need to explain why he cannot use it to purchase a $193 ticket
Last edited by HoustonFlyer; Dec 3, 2010 at 2:47 PM.
|