» LILY A 24-YEAR-OLD finance company project manager living in London , returned home to her apartment around 11.30pm after meeting friends for dinner . She unlocked her door , but the latch wouldn ’ t open . She did an online search for an emergency locksmith , avoided calling the cheapest ones , and opted for one with a price list . In hindsight she says these prices were “ complete fiction ”.
A locksmith sent out a subcontractor . The tradesman , who wasn ’ t wearing any branded clothing , turned up around 30 minutes later . Before he started , Lily asked how much the job would cost and was told £ 200 . The tradesman repeatedly told Lily that that he ’ d attended lots of jobs like this and that her landlord would pay her back as the lock is faulty . The job only took around
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30 minutes . The tradesman spent a long time writing out the invoice before he presented Lily with a bill for £ 1465 . He once again said : “ I 100 % guarantee your landlord will pay ”.
When she woke the next day , Lily couldn ’ t forget about how much she ’ d been charged . On investigating , Lily quickly learnt there ’ s no Government body within the industry thanks to an article she found on the Master Locksmiths Association website . She got in touch with an approved MLA member who told her how much the job should ’ ve cost , which was between £ 250- £ 350 . Lily also unearthed lots of negative reviews on Trustpilot about the same company .
She got in touch with the company - they washed their hands of it and said that as the job had been carried out by a sub-contractor , she ’ d have to take her complaint
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up with them . She emailed and called them , but they didn ’ t respond . She called the tradesman direct , but he didn ’ t answer .
Lily approached Citizens Advice for help . They provided her with a template letter , so she got back in touch with the company that had invoiced her and threatened to report them to Trading Standards . They initially offered her
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a partial refund of £ 80 + VAT , which Lily refused , so they increased the offer to £ 125 + VAT . Lily is still awaiting the refund . She admits it ’ s a negligible amount – she doesn ’ t even know how they ’ ve arrived at the figure as it doesn ’ t relate to anything on the invoice – but she has reluctantly accepted to get at least something back and for closure on the matter . |